BROTHER SILAS
"So is your last name really
Butt-house?" asked Steve Jones as the bus door wheezed shut behind them.
The other boy set his jaw and
knotted his brows.
"No, but that's the sort of
name you've got to expect from ignorant jackasses when your name is Butzehauser,"
said Bazzell. He hefted his pile of books as they started down the street.
"My dad says there've been Butzehausers in Gothenberg since forever, but
hardly anybody seems to know how to say it anymore. Even when they're not just
calling names."
"Well, at least nobody makes
that mistake with Jones." Steve adopted mocking tones. "'How do you
do, Mr. Joons? Or is it Joe-knees?'"
"My cousin's family just got
tired and gave up. Even they say 'Bootshouse' these days. But I figure if you
got a weird name you might as well fight for the right way.
Boot-ze-HOW-zer."
"It's not that hard."
"Mr. Benson mispronounces it
every time, and you should see the stink-eye he gives me when I correct him
every time. In fact, you probably will."
They came to the turn into a side
street, and to Bazzell's surprise, Steve turned too.
"You live on the Loop?"
"We just moved in. To
Riverside Apartments."
"We're almost neighbors. Why
did you transfer in the middle of the year?"
"It's not so late,"
Steve corrected. "It's only about a month in. Dad's a pilot; he goes where
they need him, he says. That's the Air Force base in San Antonio, now."
"That's a long drive from
Gothenberg," Bazzell said. He added, casually, "My Pop works at the
steel mill."
"Only about half an hour. He
says it's worth it, not to live in a crowded old city." He looked at the
tree-shaded lane and overgrown empty lots they passed through. "Not a lot
of gangs and graffiti out here."
"Not a lot of anything. Do
you know there's not a single bookstore in Gothenberg? I get most of my stuff
off of racks in Baenecker's grocery and Sac-n-Pacs."
"Is that where you got the
Peanuts?"
Bazzell pulled the paperback off
the top of his books. Its huge letters proclaimed "You're Something
Special, Snoopy!"
"Yeah, it's usually not a
good idea to bring anything personal to school, unless you watch it every
second of the day, 'cause somebody will steal it, good country folk
notwithstanding. But I got to have something to read between stuff." He
proferred the book. "I'm done reading it. You want to borrow?"
"Wow, cool. Thanks."
Steve took the book, flipped a few pages, and carefully put it in his book bag.
"It won't be long before the Great Pumpkin rolls around. I watch that
every year, no matter where we go."
"Me too." Bazzell
stopped in front of lot with a gray and white ranch house set back from the
road. "Well, this is our house."
Steve squinted through the shady
ash trees at the covered porch. "Who's that sitting there?"
Bazzell laughed.
"Oh, that's Brother Silas. Come
up and meet him."
They crunched up the gravel
driveway.
"He's awful still. Is he
okay?"
"Good as he ever is."
They walked out of the glare of
the afternoon sun into the shade. Steve stopped and turned accusingly to
Bazzell.
"Hey, man, that's just a
dummy!"
Bazzell laughed. "We make
him every year. Come up and have a look at him."
"I hate dummies...Aw,
shit!" he cried in horror as the scarecrow stirred and seemed about to
rise up out of its lawnchair. A black cat, that had blended in with the
figure's dark coat, jumped off its lap and zipped away towards the back yard.
"You all right, man?"
Bazzel dropped his books on the bottom step. "That's just Dodger, he likes
to sleep there."
"Damn," said Steve,
breathless. "Why do you have that creepy thing at your front door?"
"Well, he keeps the
Jehovah's Witnesses away." Bazzell joked wryly. "Come on up and have
a look."
Steve followed cautiously.
Brother Silas up close proved to be mostly a long sleeved shirt and work pants,
tied shut and stuffed with fallen leaves, and supplied with broken boots and
old work gloves. What really made him an alarming personality was his long
black formal coat, spotted with mold, and the ragged plastic Halloween mask
that was his face. This was a scowling wolfman, painted with ghoul-green
highlights and fringed with curling black plastic hair.
"Brother Silas, this is
Steve." The figure crackled as Bazzell patted its shoulder, then moved his
hand to its neck.
"'Hi, Steve,'" he
growled huskily as he puppeted the scarecrow's head, swivelling it to stare
directly at Steve with blank eyes. "'Can you spare a bite...of your
FLESH?'"
"That's just disturbing,
man. What's holding that mask up?"
"I made a crappy old pinata
in second grade out of a balloon. You know the kind you make with glue and
newspapers? I never could get the candy to fill it. But it's a perfect skull
for old Brother Silas here. See? It's stuck on a broom handle. His arms are
held in place with string."
Steve didn't come any closer. He
wrinkled his nose.
"Why 'Brother Silas'? There
wasn't a real Brother Silas, was there? Is that the coat he was buried
in?"
Bazzell laughed.
"Heck no. It's from Scooby
Doo. You know, 'Here lies Silas Long, Half Man and Half Wolf.'" He
laughed again, then a thought seemed to strike him. "I don't know why we
started calling him Brother. Just part of the family, I guess."
He shrugged it off. "Want to
come in a minute?"
"Naw, I better get on. My
mom's expecting me home pretty soon."
"See you at school tomorrow.
The apartments are pretty nice, I heard. They've got that swimming pool, though
I suppose it won't be swimming weather for very long. Watch out for the
doberman at the trailer house on the way. He won't come out of his yard, but
it's better to just walk on the other side of the road."
"Okay, thanks. I'll get that
Snoopy back to you as soon as I can."
"See you tomorrow."
They saw each other the next day,
and the last of September, and into early October. Steve had a hard time making
other friends; the cliques at middle school had already solidified by then, and
some had cores that went back to kindergarten. He hung out mostly with Bazzell,
and he found that didn't help with the other kids, either. They called Bazzell
weirdo and holy-roller.
"What does that mean?"
Steve asked at lunch.
"We're Old Rite Lutheran, in
the sense that that's the church we're not attending right now." Bazzell
was reluctant to talk about it. He pulled a sandwich out of his lunch bag.
"They're pretty strict. No holidays, no birthday parties. In fact, you'll
hear the Baptists call us the 'Always Right' Lutherans." He took a bite
and chewed in silence.
"You guys don't seem like
that," said Steve. He had met the rest of the Butzehausers by now, Mina
the superior older sister and Kevin the little brother, Mrs. Butzehauser, nice
but always a little anxious, and the elusive Pop, who came and went erratically
because of his trucker's job for the mill.
"Mom put a stop to the
ultra-observant bit when Mina was in third grade. Mrs. Rappaport thought it was
un-American, and they got in a big fight. Mom upheld her rights, but after that
she laid down the law to Pop that we could participate socially. Not that it
really helped. We were already branded as weirdos."
He took another bite, and a slug
of milk. Now that he had started talking about it, it seemed easier.
"After that, we didn't go to
church so much. Pop was a little embarassed, 'cause Oma and Opa are really
hard-line. Our church may be the only Old Rite Lutherans in Texas, and they
don't want to see it die out. Mom wasn't raised O.R. and had gone along so they
could get married, but she wasn't about to see her kids ostracized."
"'Ostracized,'" said
Steve. "You keep coming out with these double-jointed words, but you had
to have Vogelbaum explain what 'fuck' meant so he'd be sure you knew how much
he had insulted you."
Bazzell blushed. Vogelbaum had
explained it, in crude and explicit terms, using his parents as examples.
"Don't tell Mom that. I
don't need another civil rights case."
"You really are Linus Van
Pelt, you know? Strapped to the Great Pumpkin." He clicked open a can of
soda. "So what do your grandparents think of Brother Silas, then?"
"They never come around in
fall. Lest their eye offend them, I guess. They'd probably think he was a false
idol."
"If it would make you get
rid of Brother Silas, I'd agree with them." He shuddered. "How can
you sleep at night with that outside your window? Just knowing it's down the
road sometimes creeps me out."
"Nah, it's actually kind of
reassuring, like having somebody always on watch," said Bazzell.
"Brother Silas really bothers you, doesn't he?"
"Anything that looks human
but ain't, does," Steve said, his mouth grim. "Ventriloquist dummies,
department store mannequins, scarecrows--they always look like they're up to
something, behind your back. You ever watch Twilight Zone?"
Just then the bell rang, and it
was time to drop the intricacies of real life and attend once more to the
mysteries of mathematics. Steve was glad. He didn't want to discuss it any
more.
Bazzell was glad Steve was good
at math. Steve helped him with Math and Science, and he helped Steve with
Language and History. Under the guise of study sessions, they did quite a lot
of visiting. They listened to the Beatles and Bob Dylan at Steve's, and Johnny
Cash and Merle Haggard at Bazzell's. They swam in the apartment pool twice
before the first coldfront came in, and polefished off the pier with Bazzell's
poles. Bazzell taught Steve how to write runes from The Hobbit, for
secret messages. Steve tried to interest him in airplane lore, but it didn't
really take. They exchanged comics constantly, and offered reviews and
defenses.
It was a homework session that
brought Steve up to the Butzehauser home one Saturday in mid-October. The
cartoons were over, and it was time to work on a History report. As he passed,
he waved casually at the doberman, who had come to accept him as part of the
block routine. The sun was high, and he wasn't thinking too much about Brother
Silas as he came up the driveway. In fact he tried not to think of him at all
as he sidled past its garish scowl. He got to the door and reached for the
bell.
"Give me your blood,"
rasped a voice from the figure.
"Je-sus!" he yelled,
jumping back and falling off the porch into the Chinese jasmine. Almost
immediately there was laughter, and the face of Mina at the windowscreen behind
Brother Silas.
"Gotcha!" she yelled
between laughs.
"You asshole!" he
screamed back. The front door squealed open quickly, and Bazzell poked his head
out.
"What's all the
cussing?" he hissed. "If Mom hears that, both our butts are
toast!"
"It's your goddam sister and
that goddam Brother Silas," Steve rage-whispered back. "I swear to
God I'm gonna burn that dummy one of these days!"
"Never mind that, just get
in here. And tone it down, will ya?"
Bazzell hustled them back to the
kitchen, and they set up their books on the table. He poured a couple of
glasses of iced cherry Kool-Aid and they sat down to it.
"So what is Bohemian Days,
and how are we supposed to know about it? I looked through the textbook, and
there's nothing."
"That's 'cause it's
local," said Bazzell. "You've heard about Oktoberfest? It's kind of
like that. The part in the schoolbook that applies is German Immigration. You
see, when Gothenberg was founded...what is it, Kevin?"
His little brother had inched in
behind the table and was staring at them with soulful blue eyes.
"Want some Kool-Aid."
"Well, ask Mom, why don't
you?"
"Can you get it?" He
looked bashfully at Steve. "Hi."
"Hello, Kevin."
"Oh, poop." Bazzell got
up and dashed him out a cup. "Now leave us alone."
"What ya doin'?"
"Homework. Now beat
it."
Kevin slurped his drink. A red
ring appeared around his mouth.
"Momma says I gotta stay in
the kitchen with Kool-Aid."
"Lord John help us. Come on.
Let's go to the cornfield. No one will bug us there."
They put their glasses on the
sideboard, picked up their books and papers, and headed out back.
The cornfield was twelve rows of
stalks in half of the backyard garden where Mr. Butzehauser recreated his rural
boyhood among small town suburbs, fenced in by their neighbor's lots. The
cornstalks stood, picked and parching in the autumn air, next to a growing burn
pile, sharing the plot with the sad remains of tomato frames and pepper plants
nearing their end. A pitchfork stood abandoned at the end of a line of
potatoes. Once the boys were in the stalks, it felt private and almost hidden.
"Here we go," said
Bazzell as they sat down crosslegged on the packed dirt between the rows.
"The only one who'll bother us out here is the Corn Ghost."
"Corn Ghost? Now what the
heck is that?"
Bazzell laughed. "Just
something I made up. You know that the Corn Ghost is passing by when he rustles
the leaves."
As if on cue a momentary breeze
started up. The stalks bent their heads slightly, as if bowing, and the leaves
rattled shushing together.
"See? It's just the wind.
That's all the Corn Ghost ever does, as it goes from field to field, over the
whole world. Just checking on things."
"You guys come up with some
weird things."
"Wait till I tell you about
the Little Hoofer that lives in the closet..."
"Don't. I have enough
traumas for one lifetime. Now, what about Bohemian Days?"
"That started about World
War Two, but really its roots go back to when Gothenberg was founded."
Bazzell pulled out some sheets of paper, neatly typed and stapled, but
dog-eared and a little crumpled. "Here's Mina's famous award-winning essay
from two years ago. This has everything we need to know."
"Sweet! Can we just copy
it?"
"No, I'm pretty sure Mrs.
Richter will remember it. But I bet with a little finagling and a bit of
cannibalizing we can come up with a passing grade. And we won't have to do all
the research that Mina did."
He flipped the papers, doing a
quick review.
"Okay, so basically what you
need to know is that both Germans and German-speaking Poles founded Gothenberg
in 1840. Blah-blah-blah, started celebrating Deutscheland Days in 1899,
blah-blah-blah, World War One, anti-German feeling, changed to Bohemian Days in
compromise between German and Polish inabitants."
"Why Bohemian? Isn't that
hippies and Beatniks?"
"Bohemia was an old country,
before the German states united. Plenty of Poles and Germans there. Bohemian
Days saw an upsurge during World War Two, to show solidarity between neighbors
after the Nazis took Warsaw. They wanted people to see not all Germans were
nasty."
"You know a lot about
it."
"I had to listen to Mina's
essay read out loud about a zillion times. She even read it on the radio, for
the festival. She won a copy of Under the Old Pecan Tree, by our local
historian. That's why we've got to handle this like plutonium, or it'll blow up
in our faces."
"So what's your family?
German or Polish?"
"It's complicated."
Bazzell grimaced. "We're from a slice of land that was on the border,
Silesia. The family was ethnic German, under Polish management, really a mix of
both. Opa calls it Lord John's Land."
"Who he?"
"Nobody will tell me when I
ask. Probably they don't know. Maybe somebody in Baron von Gothenberg's family.
That's the guy who was in charge of the immigration and settlement."
"So is Bazzell a Silesian
name?"
"Bazzell is the name you get
when your great-grandmother likes the name Basil but can't spell, and then
names your father's favorite uncle that."
"Hey Butthouse! Heads
up!"
A firework came whizzing through
the air, hit the ground between them, and spun in a mad whirl of green fire in
front of their back-scrabbling feet. A Black Cat cracker followed immediately,
exploding with a sharp bang in the air above them.
"Donny Schmidt!"
Bazzell shouted. "Schmidt-head! Pile of Schmidt!" He jumped to his
feet, snatched up a clod of dirt, and hurled it over the fence at the
straw-headed face guffawing through the weeds. The boy easily dodged it.
"Hey, Jones! Hanging out at
the Booger-house, huh? Seen any spooks? Ate any babies? Sacrificed any
dogs?"
"Shut up!" Bazzell
screamed. His face was beet red. "Shut your lying mouth or I'll..."
"Your Granmaw'll put a spell
on me?" Donny taunted gleefully. "That old witch can't hurt me. I'll
spit in her eye. I'll..."
At that moment Bazzell's father
came out of the backyard shed, carrying an old hoe. Donny went pale, turned,
and disappeared running into his own house, door slamming behind him.
"Come on," said
Bazzell. He snatched the books up off the ground. "Let's get out of
here."
The boys went back in, not saying
a word. Behind them, Mr. Butzehauser began chopping down stray Johnson grass
and throwing it on the burn pile.
Inside, Kevin had become ensnared
in an afternoon movie, so they could sit down and work at the dining room table
in peace. Bazzell grunted and growled, angry and obviously embarrassed. Steve
broke the silence.
"What an asshole."
"They say all kinds of crud.
The Schmidts are in and out of jail all the time, and in and out of jobs. They
say anything to break other folks down, so they can build themselves up.
They're trash."
"Obviously." Steve
opened his spiral History notebook to a clean page. "Forget him. Let's
work on this paper."
By the end of the afternoon, they
managed to produce an essay sufficiently unlike Mina's, with only about
two-thirds of her footnotes, done up in long hand form and in its own blue
binder. Mina had refused to let them use her typewriter or type it herself. As
they were putting their work away, Bazzell's mom was just finishing getting
supper on the kitchen table.
"Would you like to stay and
eat with us, Steve?" she asked.
Despite himself, Steve thought
fleetingly of babies and dogs.
"Thanks Mrs. Butzehauser,
but Mom and Dad said we're going to Pizza Joe's this evening. I got to get
home."
She smiled. "Well, maybe
next time."
They went out the back door,
Steve with books in hand, including a new House of Mystery comic Bazzell
had loaned him. They walked out towards the street in the darkening gloom.
"I hope you don't
think..." started Bazzell.
"Idiots," said Steve
firmly. "Assholes."
He turned his head as they came
around the house, glancing at the front porch. "Aww, jeez, now what? It
glows, too?"
Brother Silas's pale
phosphorescent mask hung there in the gloom, a smudge in the shadows, his black
hole eyes and gleaming white fangs accenting his glowing green face. Steve
turned angrily to Bazzell.
"All the same, it wouldn't
hurt your reputation if you torched that damn thing."
"After Halloween, it's
gone," Bazzell assured him. "We take out the stuffing and throw it on
the burn pile, and put away the clothes and mask till next year."
"Burn them, too. Burn it up,
and be finished with it."
Bazzell stopped at the end of the
driveway.
"Well, bye," he said
lamely.
Steve said nothing, but stumped
on down the road. As he went, the ghastly illumination of the street lights
clicked on, and began to draw late summer moths into their last, dying dance.
He opened the apartment door to
the waft of industrial cleaner and rayon carpeting. His parents were just
getting out their coats.
"Ah, Steve-o, right on time.
Wash up quick, and get your jacket." His dad grinned. "Pizza
night!"
They ate surrounded by red velvet
wallpaper and an endless loop of gentle pop music, piped over the speaker
system. The restaurant was full of
cigarette smoke and the clinking of beer mugs, and Mr. Jones loudly greeted
members of his new bowling team as they turned up. Among them Steve noticed
Donny, weaving around the tables, visiting his friends. Every now and then he
cast an insinuating look in Steve's direction, pointing him out. They would
stare at him, then go on talking.
"Dad," Steve finally
said. "Why don't people like the Butzehausers?"
Mr. Jones looked surprised.
"Well, I hear they are
kind of stand-offish, with their religion and all. And their name is against
them."
"What's wrong with it?"
"Ah, right, you wouldn't
know. It was when I was stationed in Germany. Remember, Patsy? We rented from
that couple with all the kids."
"Before you were born,
Steve."
"Yeah. They were always
threatening the kiddos with the Butzeman. That's Boogeyman, in English. So
Butzehauser means something like the Boogeyman's House, or folks who live with
the Boogeyman, or something."
"Booger House,"
whispered Steve.
"But they're not like
that," he said louder. "They're good people."
"I know. But you can't help
small town prejudices, sometimes. You stick to your pal. Make up your own
mind."
"Do we have a religion,
Dad?"
Mr. Jones looked at his son. Steve
seemed engaged with the world for the first time since they found his Memaw
dead in her recliner, still watching soap operas.
"If I've got a religion,
it's the Air Force." He laughed. "Want some pudding for dessert?"
Their essay netted them a
B-Minus, in the end. Bohemian Days came and went, with its carnival and stock
show. Steve went with the Butzehausers, and ate sausages and potato dumplings
on a cardboard plate with a plastic fork. The boys rode with Kevin through the
Devil's Den, an embarrassingly mild haunted fun house. Kevin kept his arms over
his head the whole time. They passed teen-aged Schmidts and Vogelbaums giving a
midget carnie a hard time. At the end of the day, they agreed that this would
be the last year they trick-or-treated.
Windy, rainy days made them
anxious for the weather on Halloween. Brother Silas got wet, and his coat grew
splotchier and his earthy smell stronger as he dried out. Bazzell watched It's
the Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown for the first time in color on the TV at
the Jones's apartment. Then out of the blue he heard that the family was
summoned to church by his grandparents, on the very Sunday that Halloween fell.
"Don't worry," Mom
assured him. "We'll go to church, have lunch with Oma and Opa, and be home
in plenty of time for tricks and treats."
Despite that, Bazzell squirmed on
the long drive into the country. He squirmed on the hard pews as the bony
pastor preached. The man never actually mentioned the holiday, but it seemed
obvious to the boy that he was talking against it.
"Whoever hates, disguises
himself and harbors deceit in his heart," he droned. "When he speaks
graciously, believe him not, for there are seven abominations in his heart;
though his hatred be covered with a mask, his wickedness will be exposed among
men. Whoever digs a pit will fall into it, and a stone will come back on him
who starts it rolling. A lying tongue hates its victims, and a flattering mouth
works ruin."
The old man paused, coughing
drily.
"See to it that no one takes
you captive by vain philosophy and empty deceit, according to human tradition,
according to the elemental spirits of the world, and not according to
Christ," he concluded.
Bazzell looked around at the
plain walls, the clear glass windows, the scanty congregation of thirty or so
ancient farmers and their wives. There were no other children in the pews. It
really is dying out, he thought.
The pastor swallowed, adam's
apple bobbing in his ropy neck.
"Let us pray," he said.
Outside, after the service, Oma
kissed them all, and Opa shook the boys' hands.
"We haven't seen you since
Tchune," he said. Mina hugged him and kissed his scratchy cheek. "You
want to ride on de truck?"
They did, and relished each bump
of the country road on the way to the farm, waving at the family car behind
them, counting the cows they passed in the fields. At the house they greeted
Oma's little chihuahua and Opa's big watchdog, then ran out back to see the
sheep.
Bazzell grew tired of them long
before Mina and Kevin did. He went to explore the tilting gray barn where the
horses used to live, that now only sheltered some musty hay and an asthmatic
elderly tractor. He was trying to twirl the wheel of an antique hand plow when
he heard the steady clump-clomp of Pop and Opa, walking in step, getting
closer. He went still, hoping he wouldn't get swatted for messing around in the
old building, or worse, lectured. The men stopped in the doorway.
"Haf you had de talk with
Batzell?" asked Opa. His accent seemed thicker than usual.
"He's not even thirteen,
Poppa!"
"Years don't tell de man, de
body tells de man. Younger than him had got de trouble."
"I'm keeping my eyes open.
I'm being careful."
"Church helps. It make you
mindful. Lord Tchohn, he always helps, if you call on him."
He paused.
"Me and Mutti, we ain't so
young no more."
"Whatever happens, Doris and
I will take care of it."
"Oh, so you de expert
now?" Opa was amused.
Pop wasn't.
"I got some personal
experience in the area," he said stiffly. Opa sobered up.
"Ja. I guess you haf."
He scuffed a milkweed down with his bootheel. "Let's see if de women is
done." They turned away from the barn. Bazzell breathed again.
"Haf de talk with your
son," said Opa.
For lunch, they had the best
fried chicken in the county, with home-grown string beans and mashed potatoes.
Oma said Mom was getting better at frying; Mom said no-one could ever match
Oma's cooking. Bazzell saw the old couple looking at him sidelong now and then,
and glancing away when he noticed. There was peach cobbler for dessert.
About two in the afternoon they
bundled in the car and headed home. Mina and Kevin fell asleep in the first ten
minutes. Mom looked drowsy, a square Tupperware container of still-warm cobbler
on her knees. Only Bazzell and Pop were fully awake, Pop because he was
concentrated on driving and Bazzell because he was thinking about the talk. He
was pretty sure what that meant; he had seen plenty of shows where a father had
to give his son THE TALK.
They were pulling into the
neighborhood before Bazzell said anything.
"So, why did Opa and Oma
want us to come over all of a sudden?"
"Just wanted to see how we
were doing, I guess," said Pop, eyes fixed on the road. "Get us all
in church once in a while. They like to see us."
"Are...they okay and
everything?"
"What? Oh, sure." He
looked back at Bazzell for a split second, then back to the road. "Of
course, nobody lasts forever. You should enjoy them while you can."
"Opa seemed kind of
worried."
"Oh? I didn't notice
it." He turned the car into the Loop. "But you always have worries,
on a farm."
They pulled up into the driveway.
"All right, folks, wake up.
We're home."
Bazzell felt something was wrong
before he got out of the car. There was a peculiar bitter smell in the
air. He stood a moment looking around
the yard, puzzling about it, while everyone else got out. He looked up at the
porch.
"Oh, man," he breathed,
then raced up the sidewalk ahead of the others.
Brother Silas sat, blackened and
almost faceless, half-gutted by fire, but still held upright by twine in his
chair. Bazzell looked at it in horror as the other family members came up
behind him, memories of Steve's words unreeling like looping tape through his
brain.
"Now what happened
here?" said Pop.
Mom paled. "Oh my God, the
whole house could have burned down!"
"Is Brother Silas
dead?" Kevin was round-eyed, Mina furious.
"Who the hell did this? What
kind of creep would do this?" She shook with rage.
Pop was calm.
"Now, we don't know that
anybody did this on purpose." He looked around. "Plenty of people are
burning stuff today. It could've been a stray spark on the wind. Or the sun
shining the wrong way through the windows."
He probed the figure's belly with
a forefinger. "After all, he's made of burning stuff. We were lucky his
leaves weren't completely dried out after the last rain."
"You think so, Pop?"
Bazzell said quietly. "Is it an accident?"
Mr. Butzehauser shrugged.
"Who knows? Nothing to do about it now, unless we find out something
different. Maybe we have a gang of very incompetent arsonists running around
the neighborhood, yes?"
He smiled, then sighed.
"In the meantime, I'm afraid
this is Brother Silas's last round-up. Come on, Bazz, help me take him to the
burn-pile. We'll finish the job tonight when we have the bonfire. Honey, go in
and just check around on things right quick?"
They put his charred boots in the
dummy's lap, then waddle-walked him, chair and all, to the back. They left
Brother Silas enthroned on the pile of dead leaves and cardboard boxes that had
been growing all month, sitting like the slain monarch of the year's decay.
As they waited for the evening
and trick-or-treating, Bazzell watched his mother fretting around, worried,
with nothing solid to concentrate it on. Mina was just angry. Pop looked on the
constant verge of saying something, then stopping, as if for normalcy's sake.
Kevin freaked out at first, but
as trick-or-treating got closer and closer, he got distracted and more excited
about his costume. He was a black cat that year. He got into his mask about an
hour early, and went around saying, "I'm Dodger! I'm Dodger! Fsss!"
They calmed him down enough to draw a picture of a cat on a grocery bag to
collect his candy in.
Bazzell sat next to him, drawing
his own bag. He was going as a pirate, and he drew the face of his mask, with
an eyepatch, and a bloody dagger clenched in its teeth. He felt like he could
bite a knife in two himself. He couldn't tell Pop what he thought, but the more
he thought about it the madder he got. For good measure he drew blood and fire
like a halo around the pirate face.
He burned him, he thought.
He said he was going to burn Brother Silas, and he did. Now Mom's scared and
Mina's mad and Kevin's Halloween is poisoned, and our whole house could have
burned down! Some friend. He's probably got a record, that's why they keep
moving around. I'd like to burn him! He
colored in extra blood, dripping, from the pirate's head.
He picked the bag up and opened
it, looking at the picture. He had drawn it upside down. Snarling, he ripped it
in two, got another bag, and started over. Kevin looked up at him and laughed.
Evening started to gather in, and
Mrs. Butzehauser drove them around the neighborhood, sitting in the car with
Mina (who was way too superior to trick or treat), while the boys knocked on
doors and gathered their loot. She slowed down by the apartments.
"Do you want to try at the
Jones's?" she asked.
"No. Steve said they'd be
out," Bazzell lied.
"Oh. Are they going to the
school costume party? Maybe we'll see them there."
"I don't know. I'm not
going."
"Why not? Even Mina's going.
There's games and candy. You can see your old teachers."
"No thanks." He looked
out the car window. "This is the last year I trick-or-treat."
"Aw." She started the
car trundling forward again. "Well, let's make it a good one."
By the time they'd made the
rounds and come back, true evening had fallen. It was decided that Pop would
drop off the partygoers, and then they would be brought back home by Kevin's
friend's mother when the party was over. Mom seemed much better when she knew
that someone would be at home, watching.
The grade school looked weird and
alien, lit up and inhabited after dark. Bazzell was briefly envious as the
others disappeared into its decorated halls, into a burst of noise and laughter
that rang out and then was shut away as the doors pneumatically closed behind
them. Bazzell and his father drove off in silence.
At the first red light Pop
finally spoke.
"I'm kind of glad you
decided to stay home tonight. I've been meaning to have a talk with you. Man to
man."
"Is this about the birds and
bees? 'Cause if it is, I've had the rough details explained to me at school by
one of my little classmates."
"What? No!" The light
changed, bathing them in green. He drove forward. "Actually, this is much
harder to talk about. Harder to explain. It's about our family." He
paused. "About you."
Bazzell said nothing, could think
of nothing to say.
Pop started again.
"It's about the
Butzehausers. Let me tell you about Oma. When she was a girl. Beautiful girl.
Opa was in love with her. And when anybody tried to get close to her--or was
mean to her--or insulted her--they had accidents. Some pretty bad accidents.
Broken arms. Little fires breaking out, no reason. She would be miles away. But
people started noticing. Cross Clara Bresslau, and you got trouble. Clara Bresslau
was an ill-wisher. But it wasn't her. No. It was your Opa."
He swallowed.
"The Butzehausers have
always had these powers, even back in the old country." He picked his
words carefully, as if he were trying to understand it himself, having never
put it in words out loud. "They were trying to escape it. It's sort of a
curse. Because you can't always control it. It's like the pastor said today.
The heart is deceitful. You don't always know what you're doing."
"Monsters from the id,"
Bazzell whispered.
"What's that?"
"It's sounds like that
movie, Forbidden Planet. The scientist is destroyed by monsters from his
own mind."
"Yeah, okay." Pop
seemed doubtful. "Anyway Opa told Oma when they got married. She was mad
at first, but then she decided to help him. They had been Old Rite before, but
now they got really involved. And Opa got it under control. He watched himself.
He was careful. And I was born, and I grew up and married your mom.
"Your sister, thank God,
inherited your mother's nature. We hoped--Opa and I--that the power had bred
itself out. But. When you were a baby, your toys danced in your crib."
"I--you're creeping me out,
Pop." Bazzell studied him closely. "Is this a Halloween story?"
His father looked over at him,
his eyes tight, his lips thin.
"No. It's not.
"For two weeks your Oma and
your mom watched over you, never sleeping. Whenever something started to
happen, your Oma pinched you. Pulled your hair. Slapped your bottom. Your
mother cried the whole time. But at the end, everything stopped. Your power was
under control. And I was glad. But Opa and me, we knew it couldn't last.
"Because there comes a time
when you're no longer a child, but not quite a man. A time when the power
surges up in you. I knew. Because when I was a boy, the Kinderschrecker walked
again. And Ingo Schmidt died."
"The Kinder--?"
"Kinderschrekcer. The
bogeyman that steals children, puts them in a sack, and roasts them alive. I
hated Ingo, and my hate took that tale and made it true.
"They found him down by the
railroad tracks. In a sack. Dead. They said a hobo had probably done it. Maybe
one had. Maybe my hate had possessed him to do it. But I knew that I had
caused his death, that I had put him in the sack, as sure as if these
two hands did it. And there were some others who thought so too.
"I told my Momma and Poppa.
I grew mindful. I grew careful. I try to be calm, never to hate. But even so,
the power leaks into things, things you use. Sheep are the dumbest beasts on
earth, but Opa's do what he tells them. My truck? I swear sometimes she stops
or swerves on her own, to avoid an accident. I don't do it."
"Aw, come on, Pop."
Bazzell looked out the window, then stared. They had pulled into the home
driveway and parked without him noticing.
"So listen. Yesterday your
Opa calls me. He's got a feeling. He wants to see us. Look you over. Tell me to
have the talk with you. We come home, and Brother Silas is burned. And I think
maybe, maybe. Mysterious fires from far away? So I decide to have the talk with
you, before somebody is really hurt."
"Look, Pop. I know you might
feel guilty about some coincidental death in your past, but I know who set fire
to Brother Silas, and it wasn't me. I don't want to be a rat. I don't even want
to believe it. But it was Steve. Steve hated Brother Silas. He always talked
about wanting to burn him. And I guess he finally did while we were out."
"What, your friend Steve?
No. Steve is a good boy. No, now I know who burned Silas, and it wasn't Steve
or you. But I had been afraid it was you, so I decided to have the
talk..."
"Well, who was it,
then?"
"It was Donny Schmidt and
his gang. Mrs. Kunkel called while you guys were out treating. She saw them
from across the street. He was flicking fireworks at Silas, and one sparked up.
They ran off, the fire died down, and the poor old lady fell asleep, thinking
the excitement was all over. She called to tell me not to give them any
candy."
"Shit." Bazzell sat
back.
"Don't say shit."
"All day. All day I've been..."
They jumped at a knock on the
driver side window.
"What is this shit
now?" said Pop, and rolled the window down.
It was Mr. Jones, his windbreaker
flapping in the wind, his buzzcut damp with sweat.
"Hi, hi. Butzehauser, right?
Hi. Jack Jones." They shook hands briefly. "Has my boy been with you?
Is he here?"
"No, we haven't seen him.
We've been out all evening. Has he gone AWOL?"
"We don't know what's going
on. He went trick-or-treating hours ago. This is such a nice neighborhood, and
he's always running around by himself. He's a big boy...I hoped...I thought he
might be here..."
Pop unhooked the house key from
his ring. He handed it to Bazzell.
"Here. You go in and turn on
the lights. He might come by. You." He turned to Mr. Jones. "Get in.
We'll look for him."
Bazzell scrambled out. Mr. Jones
scrambled in. Bazzell ran to the front door, and Pop waited until he was in and
the porch light on before he pulled out, highbeams on, lights raking the front
yard. Bazzell heard them drive off, and the fading voice of Mr. Jones, leaning
out the car window and calling plaintively "Ste-e-eve!" over and
over.
Inside, the house was dark and
empty. Bazzell clicked on a table lamp in the living room. It made more shadows
than light. He felt his way into the kitchen, and turned on the light there.
His abandoned costume lay across the table next to the treat bags, full now,
and wrinkled with use. He pulled a jawbreaker out, looked at it, and chucked it
back in. He sat down, and put his head on the table in his folded arms.
He had been mad at Steve for most
of the day, and now that he wanted to talk to him, he was missing. He wanted to
tell him about the old church, and his Opa, and his last Halloween, and the
Schmidts and Uncle Silas. Steve might kind of enjoy that. He even wanted to
tell him about Pop's crazy story, though he didn't believe it; maybe brag about
it and make his flesh crawl. It was like there might be some reason for the
Butzehauser reputation, even if it was a superstitious old gossipy reason. But
Steve was gone. He'd heard about kids that disappeared. His stomach sank as he thought he might be
gone forever.
Pop's old story. He lifted his
head.
It was crazy. It couldn't be.
Bazzell got up, ran over to the junk drawer, and rummaged around. He lifted the
emergency flashlight out. He ran to the back door and paused, heart pounding,
then forced himself to turn the lock and go outside.
The backyard was a shifting
pattern of darkness and distant light from neighbor houses and streetlamps,
filtered through sheltering trees, half-bare and waving furtively in the
stealthy night wind. The garden was mostly in shadow, but he could see, seated
on the mound in the middle, the silhouette of the figure in the chair.
He headed down the back steps,
clicking on the flashlight. It flared and went out. He banged it a few times to
try to get it started again. It refused to live. After a minute he decided that
his eyes were adjusted enough to the dark. Something was wrong with what he had
glimpsed. Had Brother Silas moved?
He's mine, he thought. I
made him. He wouldn't hurt me. I made him. I've got to check.
He moved slowly forward over the
withering grass to the dirt border of the garden. It was maddening. The house
lights were like distant stars, surrounding the field of shadow that engulfed
the burn-pile. The cornfield whispered and creaked next to him. He squinted
hard, trying to make out details, inching closer. He could see very little, but
something was definitely wrong.
From the far corner of the block,
he could hear a car turning into the Loop. For a second its headlights shot
through the trees, through the corn stalks, illuminating the world like a bolt
of lightning, then gone. But it had lit up the shape on the mound.
It was Steve.
He had on an aviator's helmet,
and a red scarf with the ends stuffed in his mouth like a gag. He was tied to
the chair with the same rough twine that had held the dummy bound. He was
struggling against the cords, but weakly. Sweat was pouring down his face, his
shirt soaked.
Bazzell stood blinded for a
second. "What the hell--" he started, and put his foot on the heap to
climb up. An arm snaked out from behind the pile and grabbed his ankle, a dark
body scuttled out and raised itself into a crouch. It was Brother Silas.
The blackened remains of his mask
were covered by the pale ghost of his garish paint, his face a green simulacrum.
In its decayed glimmer Bazzell saw the gaping hole in his gut, re-stuffed with
leaves and trailing weeds, his coat like black folded wings. The mouth moved,
and Bazzell heard the harsh rasping voice he had so often imagined in his head.
"Flesh...blood..."
Silas hissed. "Burn!"
"No!" said Bazzell.
"No, he didn't do it!"
He raised the flashlight to hit
him away. With a snarl the thing easily knocked him back. Bazzell felt the arms
strike him like a tree branch, not an old shirt stuffed with leaves. He landed
on his back in the dirt, the flashlight spinning away. When it hit the ground
it suddenly jolted on, incongruously lighting everything three inches off the
ground.
Bazzell wheezed for air, turned
over, tried to get up on his elbow. He saw Uncle Silas slowly raising his arm,
pointing his glove-hand at the struggling boy on the pyre.
"Burn," it snarled.
"Burn!"
Blue fire ignited the glove,
springing from nowhere at command. Deliberately, inexorably, the scarecrow
shape lowered its arm and thrust it into the base of the burn-pile. The leaves
began to smolder, little flames licking and yellow, starting to spread. Silas
fixed his hate up at the bound boy.
Bazzell lurched unsteadily to his
feet, stumbling forward, trying to reach Steve. He wondered what, if anything,
he could do if that startlingly strong thing tried to keep him from his friend.
He had to try.
Something grazed his leg as he
took another shaky step. He looked down. It was the pitchfork, still jabbed in
the broken dirt. He grabbed its handle, leaned on it a second gathering
strength, then pulled it out. Determined, he staggered toward the back of the
hunched scarecrow. He was only two steps away when Silas whirled, growled,
pushed him away.
Bazzell was braced this time, but
he stumbled back a few steps. He steadied himself, and raised the pitchfork
like a bat. The fire caught a piece of cardboard, blazing up.
"Lord John help me," he
breathed.
Steve's eyes grew wide. Bazzell
brought the weapon around in a batter's swing. Brother Silas raised his arms,
but could not block the blow. It scattered the phosphorescent glow that had
animated his face in a splatter of dying sparks and sent the hollow head and
scorched mask sailing.
The body stood for a beat, then
collapsed writhing bonelessly. Bazzell raised the pitchfork again and brought
it down, hard, pinning the squirming remains to the earth, shoving the tines in
viciously with his foot.
The burn-pile was already ablaze
on one side. Steve had managed in his desperation to tip himself over away from
it, but not to roll off the pile altogether.
Bazzell got behind him, grabbed the back of the chair, and slithered him
down the leafy slope to a safe distance. He pulled the muffler out, and while
Steve gasped for air he cut the twine with his pocketknife then lifted him to
his feet.
"Are you okay? I'm damn
sorry. I.."
Steve held up his hand, still
gasping. He walked over to Silas's head. It was rolling back and forth feebly,
like a tortoise trying to right itself. Steve brought his foot down, crushing
it, the charred bits of mask shattering to black fragments.
"I told you," he
panted. "You should get rid of that thing."
Bazzell picked up the remains of
the head. They went over to the burnpile, and he threw them into the hottest
part of the flame.
"Well, you were right,"
he said. "I don't think we'll have another one next year."
"Please don't."
"How did he get you?"
"I came over to see you when
I was done, so we could compare our hauls and I could show you my
costume..."
"What are you supposed to
be, anyway?"
Steve snorted.
"Don't you know a World War
One flying ace when you see it? Well, it was dark and there wasn't any car, but
I went up and knocked on the front door. The next thing I know dear old Brother
Silas is jumping out of the bushes, and then the next thing I know he's tying
me up to his chair."
He shuddered.
"He was damn strong. I
thought we were goners before your big friend showed up. Where did he go,
anyway?"
"Big friend?"
"The big guy with the beard.
He was right behind you when you were swinging the pitchfork. He looked like he
was pushing your hand or something."
Bazzell looked blank.
"He showed up right when you
were saying something about help."
"Lord John?" Bazzell
whispered.
The corn leaves rustled in the
wind.
"Steve!"
Mr. Jones came rushing in from
the front yard, Mr. Butzehauser following somewhat slower. He caught up with
his boy, hugged him, then held him at arm's length.
"Where ya been,
Steve-o?"
"Trick or treating,
Dad."
"For two hours?"
"Well, I was doing so well,
I thought I'd try a few more houses. I kept getting further out, and then I
lost my way. By the time I found it again, it was pretty late, and I just
dropped by here on my way home. Sorry, Dad."
Bazzell looked at him in
admiration. He wished he could lie as quickly as that. Pop came up beside his
boy. He saw the headless dummy, pinned under the pitchfork, and raised his
eyes.
"Come on Steve, let's get
home. I'm sure your mom's worried. Thanks, Butzehauser, for helping me look.
Where's your candy, Steve?"
"Stashed it in the jasmine
bushes." He turned to Bazzell. "See you in school tomorrow?"
"Yeah. I think I owe you a
long story."
Pop watched as the pair walked
off, Mr. Jones's hand protectively grasping Steve's shoulder. He turned to his
own son.
"Sorry, Pop,” Bazzell said.
He pulled the pitchfork out, and thrust the clinging remnants of Uncle Silas
into the heart of the blaze. "I started the bonfire a little early."
"That's all right. Time that
old rubbish burned."
"Yeah." They watched
smoke and sparks disappearing up into the starry sky. Bazzel took the fork and
poked a stray black sleeve back into the flame.
"I'm learning to be
careful."
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