The Penance of Leather (Book 1): Ain't No Grave

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The Penance of Leather (Book 1): Ain't No Grave Page 1

by S. A. Softley




  All rights reserved; no part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopied or otherwise, without the prior permission of the author.

  First published in Canada 2015 by BookBaby

  Copyright © S. A. Softley 2015

  This is a work of fiction. All characters appearing in this work are fictitious. Any resemblance to real persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.

  For my wife Aleksandra.

  My best friend, inspiration and support.

  Table of Contents

  Table of Contents

  Introduction

  One

  Two

  Three

  Four

  Five

  Six

  Seven

  Eight

  Nine

  Ten

  Eleven

  Twelve

  Thirteen

  Fourteen

  Fifteen

  Sixteen

  Seventeen

  Eighteen

  Nineteen

  Twenty

  Twenty-One

  Twenty-Two

  Twenty-Three

  Twenty-Four

  Twenty-Five

  Twenty-Six

  Twenty-Seven

  Twenty-Eight

  Twenty-Nine

  Thirty

  Epilogue

  Acknowledgments

  Wayfaring Stranger

  There ain’t no grave

  Can hold my body down

  There ain’t no grave

  Can hold my body down

  When I hear that trumpet sound

  I’m gonna rise right out of the ground

  There ain’t no grave

  Can hold my body down

  Look way over yonder

  What do you think I see

  I see a band of angels

  And they’re coming after me

  Ain’t no grave

  Can hold my body down

  There ain’t no grave

  Can hold my body down

  Hymn.

  Claude Ely.

  Introduction

  It never occurred to me at the time. It always seemed somehow natural. It may have been because I was young then. We were all overwhelmed by everything that was happening. It struck me much later that we never knew his name. Maybe he did not want a name. Perhaps he did not feel he deserved one. A sacrifice; a part of his penance.

  I often find myself wondering what he was called before all this; what name his mother whispered to him at night as a child. I suppose I will never know. I have tried to discover what happened to him after he left us. Facts prove elusive. I know that he was purposefully so.

  As a child I used to imagine him as a silent, leather-skinned paladin, wandering among the survivors saving the good and casting down the evil. A child’s fantasy. I will never know what became of him. Not really.

  Every so often a traveller will come and will entertain us with some story out of their childhood about a strange wanderer who came among them and accomplished some act of heroism or bravery before fading away into the night, but the travellers are never sure if they remember the story correctly or if the whole thing had instead emerged from youthful dreams or imagination. Few enough are left that remember The Great Plague first hand and those who remember were so young and times were so dark. Even in the old times; the safe times; the times of plenty, darkness bred nightmare and fantasy.

  I have learned that those who swear up and down about the truth of their tales are often the least reliable, although a few… a small few have been very convincing. There were so many wanderers in those days. The tales spread between them, the details altered with each telling as in that children’s game of whispers.

  Some travellers recall only a terrifying apparition who swept through them swift and silent without stopping, bringing dread and terror. They dismiss it, perhaps, as a parent’s tale told only to instil fear in misbehaving children. No one is ever certain. After the telling, they often laugh and shake their heads dismissively. So few of them know, as I do, the truth of it. None, I suspect, know the truth as completely or as directly as I.

  On his story, I have some claim. I may not have known his name, but I knew him. He was with us for a time; came to know us and we to know him after a fashion. When he left us, he left his heart. He left his legacy, or at least those parts of it he wished to share; and he shared what he felt to be important with unflinching accuracy.

  What follows are the words he left us; the story he left me, in all its raw honesty. I have edited none of his words and have only arranged them, as near as I could, to tell a chronological history. This is his story and as near to the truth as any can claim.

  -A.

  One

  I don’t know when it started or why. Maybe something happened to me as a kid. I’d need psychotherapy to get to the root of it, or at least one of those self-help books that were a dime a dozen; the height of fashion back in the old days. Well psychotherapists, though some might say they’re much needed these days, are in short supply and self-help books are better used for kindling than for anything else.

  But that’s neither here nor there. The long and the short of it is that for as long as I can remember I’ve been afraid of small spaces. Claustrophobic, they called it. As a boy I’d wake up in fits if the blankets got wrapped ‘round me too tight. Used to piss the old man right off. He couldn’t understand it. Far as I can tell, he never felt fear a day in his life.

  I was born in the South. My father fought in Iraq. The second time, not the first. My dad’s dad worked in the coal mines; a career I couldn’t begin to contemplate. He went to Vietnam briefly, but was sent home with a bullet wound almost immediately.

  “He still earned his medal with blood,” my father would say.

  My great-granddad fought “the damn japs” as I recall him proclaiming loudly to those who cared and many who didn’t, long after such comments had gone out of fashion in favour of political sensitivity.

  It’s enough to say I came from a proud southern family with a history of military service, populated with strong men. My fears were not well received by those men.

  I remember one night, after waking up screaming from another dream in which I’d been buried alive, hearing my father argue with Ma after she’d checked in on me.

  “Ain’t no cause for it,” he’d say, “you think any one of us cried like that in the war? That was real fear. Not this ‘maginary shit.”

  “He’s just a boy” she’d reply quietly.

  “He ain’t,” I heard him say once; “he’s sixteen. Shit, I enlisted at seventeen.” Ma had no reply to that. There was never any reply to father’s life in the army. As a child, embarrassing unmanly fears could be dismissed; I’d grow out of them, but the older I got the harder it was on everyone and the less Ma could think of in the way of excuses. She told me I’d get past it someday. I never did.

  Maybe it was out of some macho-masculine need to prove myself, to have myself thought of as a tough guy. Fearless. I had no other fears. You could say I was reckless. I would engage in all sorts of risky behaviour. Heights, dark places, dangerous animals, speed, isolation; hell even public speaking… These were no problem for me. I’d look for a new hit of adrenaline daily. I’d find new and increasingly more dangerous activities and none of it bothered me, but no matter what I did, no matter how I tried to face it, I couldn’t stand tight spaces.

  Elevators were a challenge and whenever possible, I’d wait for a crowd to go and catch the next one, if I ended up being able to get in at all. It kept me fit at least, taking all those stairs. I
never took a subway a day in my life; the aisle seat on planes required a couple pills and two fingers of bourbon, no ice. I couldn’t even think about boarding a plane if I’d been issued a window seat or, God forbid, the middle seat.

  And that’s how it happened. Or, at least, that’s where it happened; no one quite knows how and I’m not one to theorize. I don’t know if we were the first; we sure as hell weren’t the last…

  We were high over Northern Canada, but it wasn’t the height that bothered me. I’d been working up in the oil sands and was heading back south for my month off. I liked the north. It was wide open and empty. No crowds, no noise, just space.

  I spent most of my time trekking through nothing but wilderness, keeping an eye on pipelines and equipment, making short runs to nearby towns for supplies and doing survey work. I didn’t actually work on the oilrigs themselves; I was sort of the on-call jack-of-all-trades. I’d do some maintenance work on the buildings, clear brush for pathways and airfields and drive trucks, quads and snowmobiles around, taking survey teams of engineers and scientists to various sites. Often, I’d live in little trapper’s cabins, managing the local wildlife. I always liked that the best.

  I’d generally spend two months on the job and one month off. Normally I wouldn’t go far on my month off, maybe to the nearest city, Fort McMurray. Usually no further than Edmonton, about six hours away if the roads were good. Occasionally I’d just sort of travel and wander, taking an aimless road trip, finding a quiet bar, a cheap motel and some amiable company. This time I was headed back to The States. I had promised my mother I would visit, though I dreaded just about everything about the trip.

  I was on one of those short-haul flights; the kind I usually flat-out refuse to take. We were en route from a tiny regional airport up north, basically a rough field that had been packed down and smoothed out, to Springbank airport just outside of Calgary. I’d take a quick cab-ride through the unpleasantly crowded streets of Calgary to the international airport, where I could catch a flight back home.

  I hated those regional flights. The struggling airlines usually tried to cram as many people as they could into the oldest and smallest plane still running. This particular flying death trap was an aged prop plane with a wheezing ventilation system that trickled stale air through the overhead nozzles and every square inch of cabin was filled with people or luggage.

  Each of the fifteen rows had two seats on either side of a narrow aisle with a low ceiling. The flickering and yellowed fluorescent lights that ran above the aisle threatened to plunge the aircraft into darkness with each temperamental blink. I was lucky to have received the aisle seat; otherwise I’m sure I would have demanded hysterically to be released from the aluminum tube soon after sitting down.

  The seats themselves were crammed together so that it was barely possible to squeeze into them and contort into something that resembled a seated posture. Though it was uncomfortable and the arm rest pressed into my thigh, giving me a mean Charlie horse, I felt a little better having my knee and leg sticking out slightly into the aisle on my right, feeling that any space I could gain would help to calm me. I was protective almost to the point of aggression of that sliver of space and became irrationally angry when the flight attendants pushed past forcing me to squeeze my leg back in between the seats. It took a great deal of manoeuvring just to get my tray table down so I’d have a place to put my empty once I’d thrown back my third Jack Daniels - I’d had two at the tiny dive bar near the airport before the flight. Forty minutes in, I was sweating, shaky and red-faced, my breathing fast and shallow. The middle-aged flight attendant asked me if I was feeling all right.

  “I’m fine,” I replied in little more than a grunt, “space is a little tight.”

  “You’re telling me.” I could see his point, as he pushed his tin cart through an aisle two inches smaller than what the cart was designed for.

  “I couldn’t do it,” I replied, “don’t know how you manage.” I tried to smile, but it came out as a grimace.

  “Pays the bills.” He pushed a little further down the aisle. I nodded. Jobs were still scarce these days; at least compared to the boom years. A guy could do worse… at least he could do worse. I couldn’t manage.

  The guy in the window seat beside me was a big guy. And I mean big. Big voice, big gut, big legs. Big. I suppose he was fat, but fat in a more proportionate way than many. He looked like the type of guy who used to play linebacker before he let himself go, but could still handle himself in a pinch.

  I didn’t know him; he looked like a roughneck, but not on any site I’d worked. I didn’t know anybody that well anyway. There were a few guys I worked with; they were like me: lonely wanderers who liked it that way. The scientists and engineers I met came for a week or two and left. If I saw them again it was usually months or a year later. I didn’t see much of the grunt workers, the multitudes of welders and electricians, drivers and crane operators, drillers and excavators.

  The big man spilled over the armrest into my seat. I couldn’t imagine being him. The seat belt had barely adjusted to his girth; his head just avoided being struck against the overhead compartments as he sat, his legs uncomfortably folded. I sympathized with how uncomfortable he must be, but at that moment, I was incapable of much compassion. He was leaking into my already restricted space, and that was something, which, under the circumstances and given what you already know about me, was intolerable. I closed my eyes; tried to take ten deep breaths.

  The panic subsided. I’d been doing that for years. Forcing air into my lungs until my body realized that I was not drowning, was not suffocating despite what my brain might believe.

  I pulled a newspaper out of the seat pocket in front of me and began to flip idly through it looking for something to distract me. I flipped past headline after headline about impending doom. It was all the usual media scare-fare. There was about to be a new super-flu outbreak, the Earth teetered on the edge of complete ecological meltdown, social unrest was gripping Egypt. A clan conflict in Africa was about to become the next Rwanda or Darfur, and ‘is your food really as safe as you think?’ It was all too overwhelming. It was why I strove to avoid civilization for as much of the year as possible.

  One headline caught my eye at last: Our Universe A Hologram? I flipped to the article picking out words and sentences here and there. A philosopher, physicist or mathematician had postulated that the laws of the universe could be explained if our universe was, in fact, a holographic projection. I skimmed on, amused and distracted at last, but disbelieving. Some asshole got paid an awful lot of money… probably had received research grants and tenure for the rest of his life just for coming up with a steaming load of horseshit. The article carried on to describe other similar thought experiments.

  Earlier this year it was shown that there is a mathematical probability that our universe is a computer simulation… Some genius had manipulated numbers so that the odds showed that humanity was unlikely to have developed on our own outside some kind of ancient alien computer game.

  Is it possible that the universe only exists because we perceive it? It asked. If a tree falls in the forest… The fabled ‘Schrodinger’s Cat’ analogy. The cat in the box is both alive and dead until a person sees it. As if we’re the only creatures capable of perceiving life and death. As if everything didn’t just tick right along without us.

  I chuckled to myself. Those trees go on falling across pipelines and trails whether I hear them or not. I knew that it was just a metaphor, meant to explain some strange quantum test results that showed particles being in two places at once until they were observed at which point they’d have to choose a place and stick to it… or something like that… I’d heard it somewhere, I thought.

  I chuckled again, glancing over the part about ‘anthropic theory’, the idea that nothing much mattered until we lofty humans saw it. The idea that the only reason the universe existed was because we gave it meaning, because we were here to perceive it. The self-centered i
diot who’d thought that one up had obviously not gone out of the office much to see that the world didn’t much care whether we were here or not. In fact, in those days, if the Earth had had a preference, I’d guess it’d rather we weren’t.

  The man beside me shifted, breaking my concentration. Up and down the aisle, flight attendants had blocked the way with their beverage carts. The plane shook. Just turbulence, I told myself. The plane rattled again and the lights flickered. The air nozzle above me, my only source of fresh oxygen, was producing barely a trickle. I felt my throat thicken and swell.

  I began to panic. I could feel my breath becoming increasingly strained and shallow. I looked over at the man beside me, a bead of sweat trickled down my forehead, a vein in my neck pumped, pumped, pumped…

  The big man looked as bad as I felt. His face was red and flushed. His eyes were bloodshot and clouded. Some sickly darkness shone from him, lighting the edges around his presence like the thin glow of a black light that shines brightly but seems to illuminate nothing. He was feverish; he seemed to shimmer with unhealthy heat; his breathing ragged. He glared flame into the back of the seat in front of him as we rode out a bout of turbulence.

  “You got it worse than me,” I said, mainly to myself, trying to distract myself from my increasing sense of dread.

  “Huh?” he replied hoarsely.

  “I get freaked out in tight spaces.” I replied, taking a few deep breaths before mustering the strength to speak again. “Looks like you ain’t doing too well yourself.” The big man grunted at me. A hiss escaped his tightly sealed mouth that sounded something like m’ssssick…

  Great, I thought, I’m crammed next to the guy with the biggest gut on the plane and he’s gonna be sick. I imagined how much that great belly could hold. I glanced worriedly at the little paper bag peeking out of the seat pocket and looked back at the man’s gut, grimacing as I considered the difference in volume. The man began to shudder.

  “Hey… you, uh… gonna be alright?” I asked, trying to force a little of the tight apprehension out of my voice. The big man groaned a wordless reply. I spent a moment wondering what I should do, uncertain. The big man grasped his head between his thick hands, looking as though he was using all his trembling strength to hold his own fragmenting skull together.

 

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