"We got something like that," he said. "You want to meet her?"
I hesitated. It was hard with Brother Jobe to tell where metaphor left off and something uncomfortably like hyperreality began.
"She won't sting you to death," he said. "Don't worry."
"This is an actual person you're talking about?"
"Hell yes. Mary Beth Ivanhoe of Lynchburg, Virginia. That actual enough for you?"
"I guess."
"Anyways, I was kind of hoping you'd help us out with this here room. It's a very special room. Mary Beth will be spending most of her time here, and she is not always feeling tip-top. She ain't sick, but she gets ... indisposed. It has to be a very beautiful room, like a jewel box. I got in mind wood paneling, inlay and such. Nice woods, finished finely. It requires first-class workmanship, and I know you can do it. Course, I was thinking you could educate some of our brothers in the process. You'd have to work up a ventilation scheme because she generates a lot of heat. What do you say?"
"I may have to work it in around other commitments."
"Then you'll do it?"
"I can probably do it."
"That's good. Very good," he said fervidly. "However you can make it happen, you won't be sorry. I promise. Now let's go drop in on the old girl."
The original school building had been U-shaped, with a grassy courtyard inside the U that had never been actually used for much more than a place for a few redwood picnic tables under some scraggly trees, such was the thoughtlessness of the folks who commissioned these buildings. When we left the gymnasium, Brother Jobe took me back down the hall and through a new doorway that had been cut into a corridor that led into the courtyard. Unseen from the road these many weeks, the New Faith building crew had filled in the courtyard with another labyrinth of rooms, chambers, and corridors in wood construction. They'd used clerestory windows to get light inside, but these were as yet unglazed. It all had a raw finish, like a frontier outpost. The cell-like rooms within were unpainted, and there was no finished flooring besides the recycled planking. Each room contained a bed, so I figured that the whole thing was a kind of dormitory.
"Our women sleep here," Brother Jobe said. I didn't know whether he meant all the women, or just the unmarried ones, or what. I didn't really want to know. Maybe, I thought, they had some kind of thing going on like the Shakers of the nineteenth century, with men and women assigned to separate quarters. As we penetrated the complex I became aware of an odd sweet-sickly smell. It increased when we reached a doorway near what I sensed to be about the center of the filled-in courtyard.
Brother Jobe rapped carefully on the door. One of the sisters answered. The two of them exchanged whispers. A gust of warm air washed over us. It carried that same sweet funky odor, but more intensely, as if someone had baked fresh corn bread in an unwashed sock. I followed Brother Jobe inside. The room was round, or rather seemed so, because carpets had been hung over the walls in a way that rounded out the corners, as though we were in a yurt. Up above there was a cupola, but they had hung drapes from the openings so the light entering was reduced, and it was actually very dim in the room, which needed ventilation badly. The floor was covered with layers of carpets. At the center of the room stood a large, heavy canopied bed with gauzy mosquito netting hung off it, and on it an extremely fat woman reclined in a posture of oriental luxury, propped up by many pillows. Curiously, her head seemed tiny in relation to the rest of her body. Perhaps it was because she was wearing a tight black headdress or turban. Her skin was extremely pale, almost pearllike. She wore a shiny yellow satin tunic embroidered with glittery things, rhinestones or sequins, I couldn't tell. It seemed to barely contain her waxy flesh, in particular her heaving, lumpy bosom. Her arms extruded from their short sleeves like a couple of country hams. Everything below her hips was concealed in a sacklike robe of yellow satin. Altogether she gave the impression of something not exactly human. The odors in the room seemed to emanate from her.
She was methodically eating little cakes off a silver tray, one after another, with machinelike regularity. Five sisters sat in a semicircle on the far side of her bed, softly singing, or rather chanting, a harmonic Appalachian-style round that repeated over and over hypnotically, like a kind of meditative prayer. Something about a long time traveling. Another sister prepared a fresh tray of cakes from a rolling cart that seemed well provisioned with many types of food, like in the dim sum restaurants of yesteryear. Yet another sister sat in a chair at the near side of the bed, waving a woven reed fan at the figure reclining there.
"Morning, precious mother," Brother Jobe called, rather musically, as one might address a longtime invalid on a routine visit. The figure ignored him, concentrating intensely on the food before her. The sister who let us in brought up a couple of chairs for us and set them beside the bed. Then she drew open one panel of the mosquito netting and tied it to the bedpost at the foot of the bed. "I brung a visitor, mother," Brother Jobe said.
She finally broke her concentration on the food and lifted her head in our direction. She seemed to have trouble focusing her vision. Some kind of mucousy goop had collected around her heavily lidded eyes, and one eyeball kept wandering off to the side, on its own, as though the owner could not control it, or perhaps she was undergoing some kind of neurological spasm.
"What you got to say for yourself, Robert?" she said in a voice that was strikingly harsh and nasal, as though she were speaking through a long brass tube from the next room. I was so transfixed by a kind of reflex disgust that it was another moment before I realized that nobody had introduced me to her by name.
"I don't know, ma'am," I said.
"You be nice to BJ here when you put him in the hoosegow."
"He won't be there long," I said, wondering how she knew about that too.
"That's for damn sure," she said, and gave out a harsh throaty laugh which seemed to pain her.
"You don't know the Lord, do you, Robert?" she said.
"Maybe not in the way you mean."
"But you walk with an upright spirit, don't you?"
"I don't know. I'm not the best judge. I get along okay."
"For an Israelite. Oh my. . ."
She seemed to undergo a minor paroxysm. Her wandering eye rolled up under the lid, which quivered, and a bit of masticated cake leaked out of her mouth. The others did not react, or at least not with alarm.
"Is she all right?" I said.
Brother Jobe just nodded and patted my arm. Then she came out of it. One of the sisters wiped the food off her chin, while another replaced the now empty tray of cakes with a freshly refilled one.
"Pardon me," she said, apparently coming back to herself. "I'm subject to fits. Did you know this old boy was a Jew, BJ?"
"He's a member in good standing at the Congregational, far as I know, mother," Brother Jobe said.
"Ain't it so, Robert?" she said. "Born Ear-lick or something like that."
"Ehrlich," I said.
"That a fact?" Brother Jobe said.
"What of it?"
"You're chosen," the fat woman said.
"I never felt special," I said.
"I'm anointing you, son, on behalf of you know who. Don't be thick. Take the responsibility, or be goddamned."
"May I ask what you're choosing me for?"
"To be a father," she said. "No, to be more than a father."
"I've already been one."
"Then you'll know what to do."
"I don't understand."
"You will. In all your trials. Oh ..."
The fat lady appeared to hyperventilate. Her left eye rolled up again, and she fell into another spasm, more profound this time, like an epileptic seizure. In the process, she knocked the little tray of sweets off the bed. Her body went rigid and tremored. She spit up more food. If it had been up to me, I would have rushed to make sure her airway was clear, or to put something in between her teeth to keep her from biting her tongue, but the others went about their business as if they'd s
een it happen a thousand times, and perhaps they had. The sister with the fan just fanned. The singers kept chanting. The fit lasted less than a minute. Then the fat woman subsided in place and seemed to fall instantly into a deep fathomless slumber, her aspirations noisy and full.
"You sleep now, precious mother," Brother Jobe said, while sort of lifting me by the elbow out of my seat, saying, "Let's go, old son.
I couldn't wait to get out of there. He took me back through the labyrinth of new construction to the lobby in the old part of the school. It was developing into yet another hot day, but nothing like the heat in that room. The sheer memory of that funky odor was still nauseating.
"How'd she know my name and all that," I said.
"Ain't it obvious?"
"Not to me."
"Mary Beth ain't like other people."
"What's her deal?"
"Look, old son. There's real strangeness in this world of ours. Back in the machine times, there was so much noise front and back, so to speak, it kept us from knowing what lies behind the surface of things. Now it stands out more."
"Am I ever going to understand what I just saw?"
"I don't know as I understand it all myself. She has powers. It's a dadblamed miracle. Probably a sort of curse too, for her."
"What am I supposed to do?"
"I don't know," Brother Jobe said. "Ride with it. The truth will be revealed by and by. Like the old song goes: farther along, we'll understand why."
"Are you going to cooperate and come in with Loren and me this evening?"
"Sure I am. Didn't I already say so? You just come by. I'll be ready. Now about this Karp fella. He won't let you search his premises for stolen goods. I ain't even met the sumbitch, and I can tell you that. When you decide you want to bring him in, you come here and apply to Brother Joseph for assistance. You hear? He'll know what to do."
"We have to give Karp a chance to come in peacefully with us, first."
"You ever study where God's law diverges from man's law?"
'Well, oddly enough, man's law ain't always grounded in human nature. Ain't that a funny paradox?"
"I'm just trying to avoid a war."
"If I didn't know better, I'd say you got too much Jesus in you."
I struggled with whether to tell Loren about my audience with Mary Beth Ivanhoe, the "precious mother" of the New Faithers, and decided against it. I felt it would only make him turn more hostile toward them. Anyway, I had not digested the experience myself. He asked if Brother Jobe had showed me around the place, and I told him they were building a warren of rooms in the old gymnasium.
"Sounds like they're turning the place into a fucking termite mound," was all he said.
With the help of Brother Judah, we got the two jail cells cleaned up on the second floor of the old town hall. They were across a center aisle from each other in the rear behind the old police offices, which had been closed down when the town moved operations to the building out on Highway 29 in 1983. The old police offices had most recently served as the dressing rooms for our community theater productions. Props and scenery flats from Guys and Dolls were still scattered about in there. Then it dawned on us that we had to furnish the cells with at least a bed and a slop bucket each. Judah said they had extra beds at New Faith and he'd fetch some over in a wagon. Meanwhile, Loren and I went to scare up some padlocks, which was not such an easy task, since a lock without a key was useless. Loren found an old combination lock in a kitchen drawer in the rectory. He remembered the combination because it had been on his locker at the health club he belonged to in Glens Falls for fifteen years. The other padlock wasn't so easy. It took us a couple of hours. Finally we found one with a key in it in Claude Wormsley's desk at the old water treatment plant. Once we had the locks, we scrounged a couple of lengths of chain from Tom Allison's livery. By this time, Judah had gotten two beds delivered and our jail was open for business.
At quarter to seven, when we were confident that most everyone in town had come home from their places of work, we returned to the school where Brother Jobe "surrendered" to Loren in the lobby. He was lovingly surrounded by a couple dozen of his followers, who seemed more entertained than worried. One of the sisters handed him a big picnic basket, but as Loren prepared to bind Brother Jobe's hands behind him with rope-we didn't have any handcuffs-he gave me the picnic basket to carry for him.
"You don't mind, do you?" Brother Jobe said, with a wink, as if this was all a show, which to some extent it was.
"Well it is supper time," I said. "And, frankly, with all the scrounging and cleaning, we hadn't made provision for meals yet."
"That's a heck of a way to run a penitentiary," Brother Jobe said.
Another sister handed me a leather briefcase.
"His books and papers and like that," she said.
"Might's well turn out a sermon or two in stir," Brother Jobe said.
He made his farewells and we paraded him all the way down Salem Street to the corner of Main Street and Academy, where the old town hall stood. Along the way, plenty of people sitting out on their porches or inside at their dining room tables saw us pass by with our "prisoner." A few children playing out in the streets followed behind us for a while, until they began taunting Brother Jobe and Loren barked at them to "get lost" or he'd "lock them up too." Robbie Furnival, one of the shaving victims, passed us by on his way home and volunteered to testify in any court proceedings. By the time we got Brother Jobe to the jail, we figured we'd made our point and word would get out around town that this dangerous character was in our custody, and there would be no more involuntary beard shaving or other affronts to civil liberties in Union Grove from the New Faith bunch.
Once up in the cell, though, Brother Jobe became irascible, letting his underlying annoyance show, and demanded various extra furnishings that perhaps we should have thought of ourselves but didn't: a table and chair, which we got from the old police office, a jug of drinking water, a blanket, and a couple of candles. That took another hour of scrounging. Finally, we secured the door to his cell with a sturdy length of chain and ran the padlock through it. By that time, he had a napkin tucked into his collar and seemed pleasantly preoccupied with the fried chicken, corn bread, pickled okra, and other delicacies that the sisters had packed for his supper, not to mention a quart of cider, all laid out nicely on the table before him.
"We'll come back later and tuck you in," Loren said.
Brother Jobe just snorted and waved goodbye.
Jane Ann fixed us a quick supper of smoked trout with new potatoes and dill, and then we set off on foot for Karptown up the North Road, armed only with Bullock's writs. The sun still hung above Pumpkin Hill when we set out, and it was a warm evening. Deerflies hectored us along the way. It was the first appearance of the year for these hateful pests, who went into orbit around your head and nearly drove you crazy before they came in for the painful bite. Near the turnoff to the Schmidt farm, where I had met up with Shawn Watling on that fateful morning weeks ago, we watched a pack of coyotes skulk out of the woods and cross the road perhaps twenty yards ahead of us. Several of them stopped for a moment to regard us and bared their teeth, then continued on their way and vanished into the trees on the other side. They were impressive animals. Over the years, it was said, the coyotes had been mixing with the red wolves coming down from Canada to our part of the country, where there were fewer people than there used to be. Judging by their size, it seemed that they were becoming less coyote and more wolf now. After seeing them, Loren and I cut ourselves a couple of stout walking staffs before continuing on our way.
When we got there, Karptown seemed a festive place. Formerly the Hill n' Dale Mobile Home Park, it had taken on the flavor of something halfway between a frontier outpost and a medieval peasant village. For one thing, no cars or trucks were around. They'd all been sold for scrap during the Great Collection years ago. So the establishment was pleasantly inviting. The only motor vehicle on the premises was a Harley-Davidson motorc
ycle, a Sportster model, mounted totemically over the ceremonial entrance gate that they had constructed where the Hill n' Dale original driveway met the road. They had nailed up horizontal timbers between two oak trees on each side of the driveway about twenty feet above the ground. The Harley was up there in a wheelie pose. It was painted black, decorated all over with feathers, and had some small animal skulls dangling on rawhide strips from the ape-hanger handlebars.
Over the years, as the Hill n' Dale morphed into Karptown, it had expanded demographically in a way not unlike Bullock's plantation. Misfits, losers, and former motorheads from all around Washington County had drifted into Wayne's orbit and pledged their allegiance to him, the way that the failed dairymen, shopkeepers, and tradesmen with lost occupations had come under Bullock's wing. There may have been a hundred or so adults and children living in Karptown now. The original twenty trailers had been rearranged, added onto, and filled in considerably. Since Wayne ran the general supply and the old landfill along with it, and had his crews out in the county constantly disassembling vacant buildings for their materials, his people could pretty much put up what they wanted to, and Karptown had evolved into a ramshackle masterpiece of twenty-first-century folk art. Wayne's own domicile, befitting the chieftain of a large clan, was composed of three conjoined trailers around a kind of great hall built of logs, with a thick fieldstone chimney at its center. This was where their wintertime communions took place-and they were said to be a very communal bunch. In behavior, they were less like their own parents and forbears and more like the Iroquois who had inhabited the same area four hundred years earlier. Wayne's Place, as this tribal headquarters was called unpretentiously, was renowned for its wild levees and holiday bashes. But Union Grove townies generally did not consort with them, and Karp's followers were at this point, like Bullock's people, a social world unto themselves. I had never been inside Wayne's inner sanctum myself. However, the front gate to Karptown had no doors on it, and I had often glimpsed the scene inside when walking past it on my way to the general supply, or beyond to Cossayuna and Hebron.
World Made by Hand: A Novel Page 24