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Authors: Mary Willis Walker

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BOOK: Under the Beetle's Cellar
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Finally Mrs. Huff returned carrying a flat white cardboard box about the size you’d get if you bought a sweater at Foley’s. Molly wanted to grab it and run, but she stood patiently as the woman carried it across the room. She set it down on the table gingerly, as if it contained live rattlesnakes. She put her hands on the box, then paused. “Mrs. Cates, are you a saved woman?”

Molly didn’t hesitate. “No, Mrs. Huff. I imagine it’s a great comfort to those who are, but I seem unable to believe in anything I can’t see.”

Mrs. Huff nodded as if that was exactly what she’d expected to hear and raised the lid of the box. She stood aside to let Molly look inside. It was a garment made of a shiny red fabric, neatly folded. “See,” she said in a hushed voice, “that’s it.”

“Would you take it out for me?” Molly asked.

Mrs. Huff sighed. She reached in and lifted it out. Holding it with her fingertips, she gave it a shake to open the folds. It was a kimono, clearly old, but still a vivid red. Slowly Mrs. Huff turned it to show Molly the back. Embroidered there was a huge multicolored dragon, coiled in a circle. It had lots of heads and tongues. Molly was amazed: Thirty-three years it had sat in the box and the colors were still vivid, gaudy even.

“The mark of the Beast,” Dorothy Huff intoned.

A dampish, musty smell emanated from the garment. It took several seconds for Molly to make the connection. Beasts—Samuel Mordecai talked a lot about beasts. What was it he’d said? Something about being helpless and wrapped in the mantle of the Beast. My God. Was he referring to this, to being a baby wrapped in this gaudy garment and put out to die? She had assumed it was metaphorical talk, images from Revelation, but it was literal. She thought about a little boy whose only connection with the mother who gave him birth was this. Her heart was thudding.

“When did Donnie Ray first see this, Mrs. Huff?” And then she asked a question she should have asked the first time she was here. “And when did he learn about the details of his abandonment and adoption?”

“Well, let me see.” Dorothy Huff stuck her bottom lip out, an affectation
Molly now recognized as a pose of trying to remember. “Everybody says you should tell children they been adopted early on. So I told Donnie Ray, oh, maybe when he was two or three. You know, when he could understand.”

“Two or three?” Molly repeated.

“Yes, ma’am. And I showed him this. Had to warn him. You know, while there was still time.”

“Warn him?”

“Yes.” She shook the kimono in front of Molly’s face. “About the Beast and how careful he had to be to overcome this evil sign, this early influence.”

“Early influence?”

She looked at Molly with exasperation, as if she were a very slow child. “Well, you can see what with starting out life like this, marked in this terrible way, it was important for him to be careful. So when he was bad, I’d have to show him this to remind him of his inheritance. I had to warn him. Children are forgetful, so I had to do it often.”

Molly didn’t know if she could bear to hear more, but she said, “You’d warn him about this robe?”

“The image of the Beast, Mrs. Cates. That great dragon who waits to devour children at the moment of birth, the ancient serpent who leads the whole world astray. The Book of Revelation. You not being a Christian woman, I suppose you don’t know much about them things, but the boy was born under the image of the Beast, and he needed special handling.”

Molly knew she should follow up, ask about the special handling, but she didn’t think she could take it right now. “Mrs. Huff, if I’m very careful, could I take this with me? I’ll get it back to you with the file in a few days.”

“Well …”

“It could be important for helping the children at Jezreel.”

“Take it, then.” She flapped a hand. “This has just wore me out. I was just fixing to lay down for a nap.”

“Of course. I won’t keep you. Thanks for your help, Mrs. Huff.”

Molly left the house with the box under her arm.

Out on the highway, she checked to be sure her Fuzzbuster was working. Then she rolled down the windows and pushed the speedometer up to seventy. She turned on her new Rolling Stones tape with the volume at full blast—ungodly, satanic music to drive out the smell of Dorothy Huff’s house, she thought, as the hot wind blew through the cab and whipped her hair wildly around her head.

CHAPTER

SEVEN
“To do whatsoever is needed to help You shut down the world and this evil generation, even if it goes against all commonly held ideas of what is good and what is not good.”
S
AMUEL
M
ORDECAI
, P
ROPHET

S
P
LEDGE FROM
H
EAVEN IN
E
ARTH
V
ATIC
G
OSPEL OF THE
J
EZREELITE

Josh was wheezing, curled tight against Kim, who had her cheek pressed against his damp head. “Tell me if you want to be alone, Josh,” she was saying. “I know when it’s bad, you don’t like anyone to be too close.”

“It’s okay,” he gasped between wheezes. “It’s okay now.”

The wheezing had begun in earnest right after he’d eaten his cereal and milk. It wasn’t good for Josh to drink milk, but it was all they’d been getting, so there was no choice. Josh had explained to Walter early on that milk made more mucus and that at home he drank it only occasionally. Walter had explained this to Martin and begged him to bring Josh something different. But Martin ignored the request.

It was always Martin who brought their meals, never anyone else. Twice a day he’d drop down the hole, reach up, and lift a cardboard carton down. One meal, the first of the day, was invariably cereal and milk. Sometimes the second meal was cereal and milk, too. But every second or third day the carton held peanut butter and jelly sandwiches on white bread and milk. Once a week they got a banana or an apple. They always had a jug of water that sat on the driver’s seat and each of them had a plastic cup. And that was it for food and drink. For forty-seven days, it had sustained life, but they were all ready to scream from the boredom.

If you tried to design a worse situation for a kid like Josh, you couldn’t do it, Walter thought. It had all the ingredients to make him sick: stuffy, bad air, a closed-in space underground, milk and cereal every
day, constant stress—not just Samuel Mordecai preaching his blood statues and cataclysm all the time, not just being captives, but living in such close quarters, with all the squabbling and friction among the kids. And, of course, no medication—that was the worst thing. When Josh’s yellow plastic inhaler had run out after the first week, his attacks got more severe and more frequent. In desperation Walter had filled the empty inhaler with water and got Josh to mist that into his throat. At first, the inhaler was probably picking up some residue of the medication, but by now it was straight water. Still, it seemed to give him some relief.

Now Kim held up the inhaler, which Josh always kept on the seat next to him. “Do you want another puff, Joshy?”

The boy took the inhaler, held it to his mouth, and pressed. Then he let his head loll back against Kim. She hummed to him softly. She didn’t carry a tune well, but Walter thought the song was that old Cat Stevens song “Morning Has Broken.” The humming seemed to soothe him. By trial and error, Kim and Walter had developed a desperate repertoire of techniques to help Josh through his breathing difficulties. The problem was they had so little to work with.

In general, they had so little. The first day down here, Martin and another man had come through the bus taking their backpacks, purses, and anything they saw that looked like it might contain dangerous or ungodly items. The only things that got left behind were the few items that happened to be out of their packs and out of sight when the confiscation occurred. And these objects had become intensely precious over the weeks—Brandon’s math book; Sandra’s novel,
Stuart Little
; Bucky’s Mighty Morphin Power Ranger action figure; Sue Ellen’s string box; Walter’s towel and the pad of paper and pencil he kept under the driver’s seat; Conrad’s pog collection, something Walter had never seen before—little cardboard circles; Heather’s packet of scrunchies for securing hair. Kim’s pink comb with the little mirror on it.

The kids were amazingly inventive at figuring out ways to amuse themselves, using what they had. They were indeed the television generation; lots of their play revolved about TV shows, acting out Power Ranger scenarios and cartoon characters. One particularly therapeutic activity Walter enjoyed was watching them act out what the Power Rangers would do to the Hearth Jezreelites. Even though television shaped some of their fantasies, it seemed to Walter that when necessity arose, they had all the resourcefulness of frontier kids. They sang, invented games, squabbled, listened to his story, argued about it, and played cat’s cradle and rock, paper, scissors—games he remembered from his childhood. They breathed onto the windows to fog them and played ticktacktoe. They made paper airplanes and triangles and had contests with
them, keeping running scores on a sheet of paper that was now solid with numbers. Paper was at a premium. Because Walter was saving the ten sheets left on his pad for an emergency, they talked Brandon out of the index pages in the back of his math book. At first Brandon was scandalized by the suggestion that he tear a page out of a schoolbook, but the kids got Walter to support them in saying this was such a special situation that the school would be unlikely to punish him for defacing the book.

This morning, Conrad and Brandon sat in the doorway moving buttons they had torn off their clothes around on a checkerboard Walter had drawn on the cardboard backing from his writing pad. Heather had been braiding Sue Ellen’s long black hair until they’d gotten into a fight over who had left the cup of water in the aisle to get knocked over. Hector and Lucy were playing with Conrad’s pogs. Sandra read her book. When Walter asked her how many times she’d read it, her answer was that it wasn’t the sort of thing you counted.

Bucky sat perched on the edge of Philip’s seat trying to interest him in talking to his Power Ranger doll. Philip showed no interest in Power Rangers or anything else. He was leaning against the window, his eyes closed. Walter didn’t know what to do about Philip. He hadn’t gotten up from his seat today and he hadn’t eaten his cereal. For at least a week, Walter hadn’t heard him utter a word. He was slipping away, getting dimmer and dimmer. If they were set free today, Walter wondered, would he ever recover? Would any of them?

When Josh’s wheezing finally eased, he said softly, “Hey, Mr. Demming, let’s hear about Jacksonville.”

“Good idea,” Kim said.

“Okay,” Walter said. “How about some story, kids?”

There was general agreement to have story time. Brandon stood, got some water from the thermos, and wandered to the back.

The hard-core eight gathered at the front and waited. Walter got a cup of water, too, and hunkered down in the aisle. He waited for the story to come and fill him up. The way he did it was to back up in his mind to the last installment and remember where he’d left Jacksonville. Then it felt like the story was just drawn out of him by the waiting kids. He smiled at them, sitting there waiting for him to start. It occurred to him that he enjoyed storytelling and that he’d never again have an audience as eager as this one.

“The rain,” he said. “The yellow rain that came so suddenly and then just stopped. As soon as the Tongs ran back to their hootches, it stopped. Just like that. Jacksonville had never seen a rain like that. And it had been such a funny yellowish color. But he was thankful for it. Dr. Mortimer was still alive.

“But then, sitting alone in the dark, he started feeling sad and hopeless again. Nothing had really changed. Tomorrow the Tongs would just build another fire and there’d be no sudden, miraculous rain to stop it. So what difference did it make? Tonight or tomorrow—it was all the same. He thought about the big Tong warrior laughing and drawing his finger across his throat. He gave up the idea of sleeping and just sat there in his cage, scared and miserable. Waiting to die. In a way that’s what life was, he thought—just waiting to die. Maybe it would be tomorrow when the sun came up, or maybe when the sun went down. But he
would
die. Jacksonville had never really felt that before: certain that he would die—sometime. It made him wonder what all the effort was for, all this searching, trying to find Dr. Mortimer. It all just ends in a cooking pot, like a carrot or a potato.”

Walter paused here, alarmed by the dark direction the story had taken. This had started as an action-adventure tale to pass the time. He hadn’t intended to get into all this stuff about death and dying; it had just sneaked in. Maybe it was too much for kids this young, especially kids in this situation. He walked up the aisle so he could look at them up close, see how they were taking it. He looked into the faces of the regulars: Bucky, thumb in mouth, looked in a trance. Kim sat with her legs hugged into her chest, her chin resting on her knees. Her eyes were bright with interest. Lucy was wrapping a curl around her index finger, impatient for him to go on. Josh, Hector, Heather, Conrad, and Sue Ellen all looked interested and not particularly upset. After all, these were kids who had grown up with
The Terminator
and
Nightmare on Elm Street.
These were children who had been held hostage in a buried school bus for weeks. A buzzard fretting about death was unlikely to traumatize them any more than they already were.

He went all the way to the back where Brandon Betts lay on the floor, glowering. Tears were running down Philip’s cheeks. Walter reached out and smoothed down his hair. He climbed up and sat on the back of Philip’s seat so the kids in the front could see him.

“Jacksonville felt more alone than he had ever felt in his life. He watched the moon rise. It was almost full, and he was glad to have some light for company because he sure hated sitting alone in the dark.

BOOK: Under the Beetle's Cellar
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