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Strange Children

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by Sadie Hoagland




  STRANGE CHILDREN

  STRANGE CHILDREN

  a novel

  Sadie Hoagland

  Red Hen Press | Pasadena, CA

  Strange Children

  Copyright © 2021 by Sadie Hoagland

  All Rights Reserved

  No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without the prior written permission of both the publisher and the copyright owner.

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, businesses, places, events, and incidents are either the products of the author’s imagination or used in a fictitious manner. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or actual events is purely coincidental.

  Book design by Mark E. Cull

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

  Names: Hoagland, Sadie, author.

  Title: Strange children : a novel / Sadie Hoagland.

  Description: First edition. | Pasadena, CA : Red Hen Press, [2021]

  Identifiers: LCCN 2020043143 (print) | LCCN 2020043144 (ebook) | ISBN 9781597091169 (trade paperback) | ISBN 9781597098731 (epub)

  Classification: LCC PS3608.O157 S77 2021 (print) | LCC PS3608.O157 (ebook) | DDC 813/.6—dc23

  LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2020043143

  LC ebook record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2020043144

  Publication of this book has been made possible in part through the financial support of Ann Beman.

  The National Endowment for the Arts, the Los Angeles County Arts Commission, the Ahmanson Foundation, the Dwight Stuart Youth Fund, the Max Factor Family Foundation, the Pasadena Tournament of Roses Foundation, the Pasadena Arts & Culture Commission and the City of Pasadena Cultural Affairs Division, the City of Los Angeles Department of Cultural Affairs, the Audrey & Sydney Irmas Charitable Foundation, the Kinder Morgan Foundation, the Meta & George Rosenberg Foundation, the Albert and Elaine Borchard Foundation, the Adams Family Foundation, the Riordan Foundation, Amazon Literary Partnership, the Sam Francis Foundation, and the Mara W. Breech Foundation partially support Red Hen Press.

  First Edition

  Published by Red Hen Press

  www.redhen.org

  for marc

  STRANGE CHILDREN

  The flames sawed in the wind and the embers paled and deepened and paled and deepened like the bloodbeat of some living thing eviscerate upon the ground before them and they watched the fire which does contain within it something of men themselves inasmuch as they are less without and divided from their origins and their exiles. For each fire is all fire, the first fire and the last ever to be.

  —Cormac McCarthy, Blood Meridian

  Send thine hand from above; rid me, and deliver me out of great waters, from the hand of strange children.

  —Psalm 144. The Holy Bible

  Redfield Family Trees

  Prologue

  Listen. Out of the desert silence the sound of dogs. Panting. Yelping. A distant barking in tempo. They came here that very week, after the fire burned the Prophet’s house. Smoke curled up then bloomed above the pink mesas. Ashes fell like snow on the red earth and the temple and the houses of the faithful. Air burned to breathe. For days after, even, the smoke seemed to sink, to hang about and brown the quiet air and out of this fog the dogs came.

  They came with tongues hanging out and dust frosting their fur; they came wagging their tails and strutting through the remains like victors.

  The children took to them right away, sneaking them bits of pigfat and whispering them names like Chickpea and Bone.

  Listen. Sometimes things are over before they begin. So remember this moment. Picture it: A burned town. A missing Prophet. A people wandering in the desert.

  And when it is over, I’ll be right back here, to the end, listening to the dogs freckling the pale hush that lay over Redfield.

  But first, the children.

  Listen. These strange children spoke the beginning and the after and they burned the ends together deep in the marrow of our hearts.

  They cleared a place for us.

  A place to feel for in the dark.

  I

  Emma

  My Mama always said that death has a sweet tooth. That’s how come he took my baby brother and also how come he took aunt Emma and so for a long time I figured it must be why he took Jeremiah, who was my soul’s eternal love, from me, though Mama never said this. And even though I know better now as to his fate and mine, and our story has been full up with things even so sinful as murder and arson, it’s best to start at the beginning because given what God had planned for me and my destiny, people will be wanting to know the whole account.

  We live in God’s red desert country and we are his children but not all the people that live here in the land of Zion are God’s children, some are his not-children and some are even the children of Satan. You know Satan’s children by the way they stare at you if you go to Pine Mesa, hating you for dressing like we do, in our long dresses and dusty boots and wanting to tug our neat long braids and saying things about how we don’t go to school. When I was still young and worked in the front pens with the other children, where my lips were always salty, the Devil children would come sometimes in a car and say these things over the fence and sometimes take pictures while we were trying hard to do God’s work and to hold dominion over the beasts and feed the pigs and chickens. We always ignored them, my siblings—in all I have nine, four of them by my same mother—and myself didn’t pay them no mind because they were just using the Devil’s tongue to try to get us to quit our being of God’s children. My older sister Annalue sometimes talked back to the Devil’s children, waving hello even and once when she was mad she even said to me that she might just run away and go to live with them and even ride in their cars with them and it turns out now that she was truthing. But back then I thought Annalue was just saying this because she had found out she was not like to be married, owing to the limp she had been born with, but still it was hard on me at this time as I did not think I would be like to stand it if Annalue, who is fifteen and three years older than me, fell to the Devil or worse yet got sent away or put out to battle the Devil herself, because once you leave you can’t come back. I was worried and even though I knew that Annalue was not all the time truthing sometimes I feared greatly that she really did mean what she said. “Devil ain’t got no children,” Annalue would even sometimes say, and our brother Levi would pinch her when she said this and tell her that in fact he did, and she was like to be one of them because of her limp and I would shake my head at how wrong she was, but that’s before I found the One I’m meant to share my eternity with in the Celestial Kingdom, and learned more about how life really is, and then learned what He really had in mind for me.

  I always thought Jeremiah was handsome but I never put much thought on him really because I was promised to his father, Josiah, ever since I was ten. They was supposed to wait until I was fourteen until the hitching happened, but on account of Jeremiah, it happened two some years early.

  It started when I got charged in the teaching of Jeremiah’s little sister Mary how to read better because even though she was nigh nine years old she still could not get through the scriptures without all her awful stuttering. So in the mornings I would go to get Mary at her family’s place down the road, and we would take the Book outside and sit under some tree and I would listen to her trip over all of God’s words meant to be said smooth and fine. It was hot in the morning, even in the tree shade, and bugs clicked their wings and it was hard to stay awake while I listened and corrected her and tried to make her repeat what I’d say, so it was a welcome thing when Jeremiah began to sneak away from his work on the new fence to come and visit us. Jeremiah and I always got on fine growin
g up and he used to tug on my braid and tease me but in a nice way, the way I liked, not like when Levi did it and really hurt me or like the other boys who would do something like let a sow out of a pen so I’d have to chase her down. But now we were working grown-up jobs, relieved of the holding of dominion and of the feedings, and I was working mainly in the house and he was off working with the men on whatever needed working and so I hadn’t seen him most all summer so it was like I hadn’t seen him since we’d quit our being of children.

  The first time he just came and stood and watched us for a minute, like he had something to say, and I looked up at him and Mary kept reading, only louder and then he went away and I watched him disappear into the dry grasses and I think that’s when I first felt I might be in trouble because it was the first time I noticed that Jeremiah had grown since he turned sixteen and his chest was wide and his hair, which was blond, was longer than God likes but still it looked good with his farm skin.

  I know I was only twelve at the time which meant by the Word of the Prophet that I had two more years before I was of an age to be feeling for a man, but when Jeremiah came to the tree the second time and sat with us, chewing on a piece of grass and slapping flies away from all of us I knew I had the feelings a woman would have and I knew that God was trying to tell me something by putting this light in me.

  So the next time we went to practice reading and every time after that Mary and I started going to the same tree, a big cottonwood farther from the house than the others, the one at the edge of the field, so to make it easy for Jeremiah to find us. Really this was my idea about it, and Mary never seemed to say anything if she noticed. From there we could see out from the shade and we could see the way the sun hit everything else all the same. The red rock bowl in which we lived was a ruddy brown in summer and a floating snake of dust showed where the road led from the white stone of the temple on one side of town and then right to the Prophet’s old house on the far end. The Prophet’s was an older home, with a porch and shutters and it was large, too, by far the biggest in town, but from where I sat under that tree I could squint and fit the house between my thumb and forefinger—no bigger than a cottonwood leaf from here. Our ranch was halfway between these two, and the second biggest after Josiah’s, Jeremiah’s father. The earth was dry, and besides a few cottonwoods to every house, only sage brush grew, and the small patches of growing green God somehow let us eke out of this desert valley. Under that tree, I could also imagine how small the ranch houses might look if one were even farther away and while I waited for Jeremiah I thought about how the wood ranches would look only like a flat log laid out against the red valley if you was much gone past that tree. And Jeremiah would find us there every day, and just come sit in the shade with us and he’d look at me as we sat in the afternoon heat listening to Mary’s fits and starts and watch the fluffy white tufts of cottonwood seeds floating down through the air. Though he never said much of anything, the longer he sat, the longer Mary and I would practice because I never wanted to quit being so near to him and Mary read better anyway when he was around.

  Nobody knew about this at least that we could tell and once Mary looked up from the passage she was reading about the Lamanites and asked Jeremiah why he come here all the time and shouldn’t he be doing something with those idle hands. Then Jeremiah told Mary to hush to him and hush to everyone about it because he’d kick her if she said a word. I was surprised to hear him say this, like it was this covenant, but I understood because even though we hadn’t ever done anything wrong yet, none of the fathers would have liked it because there are rules in God’s country and those rules, if you obey them, keep you from burning in the flames of hell.

  So as the crick narrowed with the summer drought and each day became more unbearable and Jeremiah still came to see me and I still liked it, I didn’t even tell Annalue. Though I wanted to. I did.

  And then one day it was hot, hot outside and Jeremiah came to where we sat under the cottonwood and right away sent Mary away. When he said for her to go she looked up from her scriptures and looked real hard at me to see if I wanted her to go away too, like she was trying to save me from myself and I thought to myself that while that child could barely read, she wasn’t blind to sin. But I told her to go off anyways, so happy was I to be alone with Jeremiah. She picked up her book and brushed off her dress and sighed and left off to go see about something else to do. And when she was gone it was quiet and I looked at Jeremiah. We sat there, and a raven landed in the tree and looked his black onyx eyes down at us and then screamed that way that those birds do. We both looked up and then down to each other and then he moved closer and reached into my lap and closed the old cover of the Book and I still remember the soft slap sound of the Book closing and I do not believe I’ll ever forget it. We sat there then and there were so many things I wanted to say to Jeremiah, things to ask him, private thoughts I had that I felt I could trust in him with, but it was hot, the kind of hot when it’s hard to find much in your head but the buzzing of the flies and the way that sage gets to smelling in the heat, that too gets into your head so before I could really think what I was wanting to say he was saying I was the prettiest of all the birds around and that he thought about me always even in his bed at night and I started to tell him that it was the same for me with him but then he reached his fingers which were thick from work and brushed them on the back of my neck, taking my dust-red braid in his hand and lifting it off my back so that I stopped talking. I watched him take my hair in his hands and lift it towards his face and then he stuck the end of the braid, the tail below the blue ribbon, into his mouth and he started sucking on it like it was rock candy. He watched me while he did it and his eyes which were blue seemed so new to me, even though most everyone around here has those same eyes, including Annalue whose might be bluest of all. But these ones had a new look in them and I knew right then since I was so good this couldn’t be bad so it must be that the light in me was God’s love, and I was supposed to share it with Jeremiah and I knew this meant that he was my soul’s husband and the one I should be wed to for eternity and that the Prophet thinking it was Josiah and not his son that was my eternal husband must have been a misreading of the signs of God because I knew both that it was Jeremiah and that I would let him do what he pleased with me and that I would not stop him. My certainty at the time was a testament to how strong the power of temptation can be, and how twisting of one’s youth-tainted mind.

  Which is not to say that things happened right away, no, it took all July for him to start reaching his hand up my dress and I never did kiss him until August.

  Annalue

  It’s hard to say when things started to go bad for the whole brethren. No plague came down like in the Book. There was no locusts, no blood on the doors. No, it just eventually became clear that things had gone all rotten and even as we thought it, the orchards all turned sour and the sick sweet smell of softening and bruising apples hung about everywhere. But even with this smell no one could name any one thing that was unholy and in a land of God’s people and with only His words no one knew how to say that things were going bad until they had already gone that way.

  But it’s not hard to say when things got bad for me. That’s easy to say. It was the day that someone came to tell me that the Prophet wanted to see me after all.

  I was born with a limp and this is an inconvenience in most ways. It was like my right leg had gone straight from the womb to the grave, so stiff and straight and dead is it. Even the skin is cold to touch. But I learned to walk just the same as any other child learns, only with a limp on account of having to use my leg like it was wood instead of flesh and so it’s not always been easy and it’s not always made me feel believing about the light of God and the general state of fairness in the world.

  One thing about a limp in a congregation like ours is that it keeps you from being married off at fourteen, or even twelve after the Prophet went to loosing the standards of God, which now I suppose is a good th
ing. But when I was fourteen it just made me feel unwanted and unusable. Like I couldn’t ever get to helping in the numerating of God’s people. Though I always did like that it kept me round to keep after Emma and Mama, and I suppose it was true that it was good, though I used to dream of being somewhere else where work was not life but instead we had things like television, which I used to dream about in the dark. And I did think that if we had a box of light, like the ones I’d seen pulsing in the windows of town, and if we could see the whole world in it, things might be different. Maybe better. And even though my Pa said television wasn’t magic, I couldn’t see how a picture of people in one place going up into space and bouncing back down somewhere else at almost the same time, could be anything else, really, and I imagined if I had a television I could see in it a picture of a girl with a limp like mine, going about her day like me but somewhere else, and I could watch her and know I was not alone. And everyone else would know I was not alone, neither, in my gait.

  And even though now I know there is no such other girl, back then I thought she would have made my limp mean something better than it did in a place where there is a history of limps, and it is not a pretty thing to tell. Other children had been born with limps and in harder times they just died outright by some way or some hand owing to the logic that when a cow or horse is born with a limp, they are just slitted straight off, as soon as they take their first stupid steps and let it be known what they got. But now for want or gain of mercy, and I’ve never been quite sure which, children born in that state are left to live and limp their whole life through. This reprieve is partly owing to Alice Parley Smith who, like me, was also born with a limp, and who was convinced her leg was dead because the Devil himself lived in the flesh and at times, was able to take over the rest of her body and drive her to some terrible doings. People around Redfield became afraid of Alice Parley Smith and the Devil within her so I guess they never thought about holding another limping child’s head in the trough again which is what Levi told me they used to do. So I suppose I should thank Alice. But she managed to kill her own nephew and that child’s kitten all in one day just before she died and so I do not thank her because now people look at my leg, and the crooked tread I leave and I swear the hair of their own necks stands up for fear of the Devil they saw in Alice and the Devil they think they see in my own stone flesh. Because Alice did blame that leg for her taking her paring knife to the child’s throat when he was stupid enough to ask his aunt to please sew a button on his pants for him so his mother wouldn’t find out he’d lost it and whip him. They say the boy held the kitten as he asked, a calico barn thing with fleas and big eyes like they all have and Alice first looked up from her slicing of peaches for pie making and asked to see the kitten. They say it was quick, the way she moved, with the dead flesh of her leg and the Devil in it rising up to her face and even her eyes turned the cold gray of gone-life as she stabbed that kitten through its tiny ribs and into its walnut-sized heart and bits of peach still on the knife were then stuck to the kitten’s fur so that the fatal wound was so irresistible to lick by the other barn cats that the kitten’s body had to be burned right off before the boy—whose turn was next and equally as quick as he dropped the button and bent over the just cooling kitten bleeding onto the table covered in flour and fruit and things for pie—was even in the ground. And when he was in the grave and everyone looked at Alice, she just looked at her leg and smiled this sad little smile and so was deemed unfit to die atoned and so was left alone to be punished by God in His time, though children never did ask her for anything ever again. And while I am glad not to have been drowned at birth I do not thank her because the children never ask me for anything either, like I was her, and I wish they would. Also I do not thank her because not two months after Alice finally died, when I was only eleven, I was out working in the pen, feeding the pigs and the chickens and doing my work as I always did when Levi, my older brother by one year, pushed me down from behind so that I was on my stomach in mud and he put his foot on my back and I saw the shadows of some of the other boys who were getting big but who were not yet men and Levi pushed down on my back and another boy, Daniel, put his palm on my head and pressed until my face sank into the mud, and the mud began to cover my mouth and nose. I could not breathe almost at all. Levi pressed down harder and then I really couldn’t breathe with all his weight on me and my face in the mud and he said Don’t you ever, ever try anything like Alice Parley Smith, Annalue, because if you do, if you ever try to kill any of us like that we will burn you and the Devil that lives in your leg will go back to hell. And then just before I lost all breath and light, he let up and they walked away and left me. So I do not thank her.

 

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