Sideshow

Home > Other > Sideshow > Page 4
Sideshow Page 4

by William Ollie


  “Told you,” Reardon said.

  “Told me what?”

  “You know, about the Ferris wheel.”

  “It’s there, all right.”

  “Just like I told you.”

  “Well,” Justin said. “Its not just like you told me.”

  “What’s that supposed to mean?”

  “You said it sprouted up out of the ground.”

  “It did!”

  “Sure it did.”

  The man, now facing Fred Hagen, seemed to dwarf him—not an easy task, as Fred Hagen was not a short man, nor was he a man small in stature. On the contrary. Fred, fairly tall, and powerfully built, looked up to very few men in this town. But he sure looked up to this man, who towered over him as if he were a child. They were facing each other now, having what seemed to Justin to be an animated conversation.

  “What do you think Freddy Hagen’s doing out here?” Mickey said.

  “Probably saw that Ferris wheel from the highway and wanted to know what’s going on. I mean, Mr. K didn’t know anything about a carnival being out here. Weren’t no signs posted around town. I didn’t know anything ‘til you showed up this morning. Probably nobody else knows about it either. Freddy probably wants to know what they’re doing way out here, and who the heck they are. I know I sure do.”

  “Why don’t we just walk on over there and find out for ourselves?”

  “Yeah,” Justin said. “Why don’t we?”

  But neither boy stepped forward. They stayed put, out of sight in the tree line as the tall man turned his back to Fred Hagen and cast those impossibly long arms of his high into the air. His fingers began to wiggle. Then his hands dropped down and so did the black tarp covering the flatbed truck he and Hagen stood before.

  “How’d he—”

  “Look at that!” Justin said, both boys staring in wide-eyed amazement at the cages lining the flatbed trailer. A woman in one cage, a young boy in another. The woman was gripping the bars; her face was pressed against them. There was sorrow on that face, extreme dismay in her eyes—even from his spot in the tree line, Justin could see that. The boy was on his knees, praying, Justin thought. And barely visible, in the corner of the cage at the rear of the trailer…

  “Jesus,” Reardon said. “Look at that guy; he ain’t got no arms… or legs!”

  “Wow,” said Justin.

  And now the conversation was quite animated. Angry, even. Fred Hagen sure looked angry. Probably because of what he’d seen housed in those cages. But the tall man just smiled down at him as if he were a complaining child. Then out came the corncob pipe, and Justin’s eyes grew even wider, but not so wide as his friend’s, maybe. Certainly not as wide as Freddy Hagen’s when fire sparked between the tall man’s thumb and forefinger, and he touched that blazing digit to the bowl of his pipe. Then came a sudden shift in temperature—the icy chill racing up Justin’s spine as an impossibly perfect, three-foot-round smoke ring hung frozen in front of Deputy Hagen’s face, the edges around it thin as a picture frame. And something was in that ring of smoke, too—what, Justin didn’t know; he couldn’t tell. But whatever it was sure put a look of fear on Fred Hagen’s face, which seemed to go suddenly gaunt, and then slack, as the tall man waved his hand and the smoke ring moved forward, across, almost through Hagen’s face, before lifting slowly away, rising higher and higher, changing as it rose, from a thin, wide circle to a mirror image of the stovepipe hat that rested upon the tall man’s head.

  Up, up, and up it went, rising into the clear blue sky, that white frame of a top hat perfectly visible no matter how high it rose.

  “Geez,” Justin said.

  “No shit,” said Mickey Reardon, as the image climbed higher and higher… higher still, until it disappeared into a cloud, and the cloud—one that a moment ago had looked to Justin like the caboose of a train—began to change. To mold and meld, to twist and turn until it too took on the shape of the thing that had entered it.

  “Look at that!” Reardon said, as the cloud, which had been drifting slowly across the horizon, suddenly stood frozen in place. Slowly, a blemish began to form at its base, a small black dot that began to branch out in either direction, until a thin line was racing off, out and around, around and up, and the narrow black line, having traced a perfect outline of that stovepipe hat, finally came together at its peak. This event, this coming together of lines, seemed to fire off a chain reaction that set the wispy white, gossamer-like body of the cloud to churning. Roiling and boiling, the black edge of it began seeping like an oil spill, creeping ever inward from all sides until it came together in a dark ululating mass, a swirling sea of ebon waves. A gigantic black cloud in the shape of the tall man’s stovepipe hat, framed by the clear blue sky surrounding it. Frozen in place for all to see.

  “Look at that,” Reardon said.

  “I know,” said Justin, his wide eyes still turned toward the sky.

  “No, man,” Reardon said. “That!”

  Justin turned. His eyes, still wide, now seemed as if they might pop right out of his skull. The tall man, in his top hat and tails, stood in the middle of the clearing, those long arms stretched out at his sides, palms up, fingers fully extended. Slowly, ever so slowly, his hands began to rise, and as they rose, so rose the tent the workers had stretched across the ground. Like the circle of smoke: up, up, and up it went, until before them stood a fully erect carnival tent. And out of that tent, which moments ago had been an empty sheet of weather-beaten canvas lying flat on the ground, people began to emerge: a fat woman with curly black hair, a short man, who wore a straw hat and a red and white striped sports jacket. Out came a young girl in a skin-tight halter top, with blonde hair and gigantic breasts—“Look at ‘em!” Reardon said. “Look at her tits!”

  Behind her came a midget dressed in a multicolored jester’s costume. The pointed shoes he wore looked like they’d stepped straight out of One Thousand And One Arabian Nights. He walked hand-in-hand with a peg-legged woman; she was thin, not much taller than he was. Dark red hair spilled over her shoulders in ringlets and curls. She was smiling, moving quite gracefully on her wooden leg. Two more men followed—one, short and fat, bald on top with a black goatee on his chin. The other man, tall and thin with curly brown hair, wore a white t-shirt striped with horizontal blue lines. He had a ring in his ear and one in his nose. Out they came, all of them, into the clearing, smiling and laughing and nodding to the tall man, who now had an arm around Fred Hagen’s shoulder.

  Justin looked up at the sky, at the black cloud frozen in its middle, and knew that something had changed—like a change in the weather, he could feel it.

  Something dark and dangerous had come to Pottsboro, South Carolina.

  Darker even than the motionless cloud that looked down upon them all.

  Chapter Five

  Ritchie Scovul was in the den when it happened. Leaning back in his La-Z-Boy chair, feet in the air, his fat ass sunk into the plush leather cushions. It had been a long, hard week at the plant. There was a bug going around the place; some kind of stomach virus had chased half his shift away from the assembly line, leaving Ritchie stuck in his very own private hell, one that had stretched his normal ten hour workday to sixteen. Ten hours a day four days a week sounded pretty darn good back when the plant changed its scheduling format. Friday’s off, even better. And it was great. Of course, back in the beginning, those two extra hours had taken a little getting used to. After ten years of seven-to-four, it had felt a bit weird walking out of the place at six o’clock in the evening, especially in the winter time, when it was dark when he left his house and dark when he finally returned. Yep, all that took a little getting used to. But in the long run, it had been well worth the adjustment. Sleeping late on Friday, he would have pretty much the entire day to go fishing, to grab his shotgun and traipse off to the woods. Or kick around town, maybe. Hang out at the Wagon Wheel, or even haul ass over to Columbia if he felt like it.

  Friday, his very own personal play-day.r />
  But not this Friday. Not yesterday, when he trudged off to work feeling like a downtrodden slave. Sure, the overtime was nice—great, actually. But enough was enough, and this morning, Ritchie Scovul had finally had enough. So when the alarm clock shattered his sleep, he rolled over and shut it off, picked up the telephone and relayed a little message to Bob Roberts, the asininely-named shop foreman who never seemed to leave the place—seriously, what was his name, Robert Roberts?

  “Sorry, Bob,” he’d told him. “But that goddamn flu bug’s done gone and latched itself right onto my ass. And I ain’t coming in to work today.”

  Then he hung up the phone and rolled his two-hundred and sixty pound frame up in his sheets, and went right on back to sleep. By the time he climbed out of bed it was one o’clock in the afternoon. He showered and shaved, brushed his teeth and threw on some underwear. Grabbed a beer from the fridge and went down the hallway to the living room, where he snapped on the TV and plopped down in his easy chair. It wasn’t Friday, but it damn sure felt good to be away from the hell hole that plant had become, felt great knowing he could do whatever he wanted with his day.

  He was stretched out in his La-Z-Boy chair when it happened, watching ‘the old ball coach’ on television. The Gators were over in Columbia today, and though the wily old coach wouldn’t come right out and say it, Ritchie could read between the lines. This was the year they’d finally send those pricks back to Florida with their tails dragging between their legs, tears in their eyes and sorrow in their hearts. Coach sure thought so; Ritchie could see it written all over that smug little face of his.

  He was tipping back his beer when he felt it. A stirring deep within, a tingling of the spine, and, yes, gooseflesh, scurrying across his flesh like an army of cockroaches. He’d felt this way plenty of times in his life. It had been a while, but he’d felt it, all right. Down in the principal’s office, lo those many years ago. The time the old man caught him and his brother with a six pack and told Ritchie to go cut a goddamn switch. Sitting in the cell after that first DWI, wondering if they’d find the bag of pot he’d stashed between the seats when the siren went off and those blue lights went to strobing, how many years he’d be gone if they did find it.

  And now here it was again.

  And something else. The temperature in the house had changed, grown suddenly cool, cold on his bare skin as he sat in his La-Z-Boy in nothing but his underwear. He couldn’t hear the television anymore, either, could not register what the old ball coach was saying. Didn’t care if he ever heard the silly prick speak ever again, for that matter.

  Something was happening here. What, he didn’t know, and wasn’t sure he wanted to find out.

  Ritchie didn’t want to get up and go outside, did not want to leave his chair. Something was waiting for him out there, something he didn’t want to see. He didn’t want to get up, but he did, and before he knew it he was padding barefoot across the hardwood floor… through the front door and out onto the porch, down the stairs and into the yard.

  He didn’t feel the twigs digging into his feet as he crossed the lawn, the rocks or the pebbles either, nor the cool breeze blowing across his bare skin. Just a slow sinking feeling when he suddenly stopped, tilted back his head and looked up at the sky, a feeling of utter dread that started in the pit of his stomach and spread quickly throughout him.

  Chapter Six

  Tricia Reardon was worried about her son, worried he might find out why his father had left them, where he’d gone and why. It wasn’t her fault Rick Reardon had been a lying, cheating dirt-bag, a piece of shit who couldn’t keep his pants up or his zipper fastened. Wasn’t her fault whoring around town with his worthless friends meant more to him than his own family. But Mickey wouldn’t see it that way. Hell, Tricia’s mother didn’t see it that way. Her own mother, who one fine Sunday morning looked her daughter dead in the eye, and told her, ‘Maybe if you wore a little more makeup, honey. Give him what he wants—you know—whatever he needs, in bed’.

  Yeah, right. Whatever that perverted son of a bitch wanted was far more than Tricia was willing to give him, much more than she would ever be willing to put up with. So off he went to the drunkards and derelicts, the dopers and the whores. Off he went, and good fucking riddance, as far as Tricia was concerned. Only she couldn’t tell Mickey—she didn’t dare. He wouldn’t understand. Never in a million years would he understand. He was just too young. Hell, she wasn’t sure she understood it herself.

  Growing up, Tricia had been a fairly bright girl. Not college material, maybe, but clever enough to steer free of trouble. She’d been a cheerleader, a straight-laced student with higher marks than most. A good girl, with the right kind of friends, a girl who, in one wild and bizarre night, had taken up with the rebel from the wrong side of the tracks. He was different from the boys she’d dated, from the boys she’d been used to. Long brown hair and muscles, tattoos on his arms and one on his neck—a Chinese symbol of lines and dashes that, translated, meant: Rule The Day. A cool dude who smoked and drank, and played his guitar in a rock and roll band, he was the exact opposite of every boy she’d ever known.

  She was a little tipsy the night they met. It had been an exciting game of lead changes and swings of momentum, one that finally saw her team ram the pigskin across the goal line for that last-second victory, leaving Tricia and her fellow cheerleaders in the parking lot hoisting a couple of celebratory beers. She didn’t think a few hits off the joint Rick showed her was such a big deal. After all, it wasn’t the first time she’d smoked the stuff—many a time she and her friends had partied. She was a good girl, but she wasn’t a nun, for chrissakes. But she sure wasn’t prepared for whatever Rick Reardon showed up with that night, wasn’t prepared for the chemical aftertaste, or the way her body began shutting down. First came the slurring of her speech. Then came the lightheadedness, the rubbery legs that refused to allow her to walk away. It was hot, and it was sweaty, and before she knew it he was all over her, pressing against her. On her, in her.

  And then it was over.

  Something she’d hung onto for seventeen years, gone in one frenzied moment of sweltering madness. A one night stand with a boy who, although he was cool, she could never have been serious about, and most definitely would never have wanted to see again. But she had to see him again. Not because he’d rung her bell—she didn’t even know she’d had a bell to ring. Hell, she didn’t even know how he’d felt inside her, couldn’t remember much past raising that thinly-rolled joint to her lips. Her first sexual encounter, that special event she had planned on pressing between her life’s pages, forever remembering giving herself over on her wedding night to her once in a lifetime soul mate, had become a vague memory seen only through the drug-induced haze that had spawned it. And now she could hardly remember it at all. Her first sexual encounter, and she barely even knew it had happened.

  If not for the life growing within her, she would have put it out of her thoughts entirely. And it didn’t take long to figure that life was rising deep within her. A few weeks went by. Time passed and, much to her horror, nothing happened. Late for what she now realized was the most important event of her young life, a terrifying realization began to settle over her. She didn’t know what to do, where to go or who to turn to, and pretty soon it was too late to do anything at all. Except tell the truth when her condition could no longer be kept secret. Gone were her hopes and dreams, along with whatever plans she had been formulating these last few years: meet a wonderful young man who would wine her and dine her, and sweep her off her feet. He’d have a good job, one to be proud of. They’d marry and have children. A house would soon follow, a happy home to shelter them from the world outside. A nice car, clothes, good friends who would come over during the day while their husbands were hard at work.

  But it would never happen, because it was over. Gone were her friends, who were no longer allowed to associate with her. Her reputation, which up to that point had been damned near unassailable—that was go
ne too, along with the trust her parents had always afforded her. Gone, like everything else, replaced by Rick Reardon, a drunken lout, who in their first three years of marriage had as many jobs as he’d had haircuts. And, Tricia would eventually come to find out, twice as many affairs and one night stands.

  The years dragged on, leaving Tricia to deal with one unhappy event after another. Sleepless nights, waiting for Rick to come home. Voices in the night from anonymous callers, whispered taunts from soft-spoken, sultry voices, who laughed and giggled, and asked Tricia if she knew where her husband was. The years dragged on, and so did the heartache, those brief flashes of normal every day life he would allow her to experience giving way to one gut wrenching episode after another, a horrendous string of humiliations that threatened to tear her apart, until she finally began to wonder if she had much of a heart left at all. Or much of a life that was worth living.

  The only constant in this sad and depressing existence was her loving son, this innocent being, who wanted only that his mother and father get along, and love each other as much as he loved the two of them. The only constant was her beautiful boy, and the whores her faithless husband couldn’t seem to stay away from. Well, they could have his sorry ass now. If they could find it.

 

‹ Prev