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Visions of Fear - Foundations of Fear III (1992)

Page 30

by David G. Hartwell (Ed. )


  “I don’t know what to think.”

  “Led’, I thought, if I imitate that noise for him— ”

  “No!” She had brought some mending and was about

  to sit down with it, but froze as if threatened by attack. “ I

  couldn’t stand it, Harp. And— it might bring them.”

  “Them?” Harp chuckled uneasily. “I don’t guess I

  could do it that good he’d come for it.”

  “Don’t do it, Harp!”

  “All right, hon.” Her eyes were closed, her head

  drooping back. “Don’t git nerved up so.”

  I started wondering whether a man still seeming sane

  could dream up such a horror for the unconscious

  purpose of tormenting a woman too young for him, a

  woman he could never imagine he owned. If he told her a

  fox bark wasn’t right for a fox, she’d believe him. I said,

  “We shouldn’t talk about it if it upsets her.”

  He glanced at me like a man floating up from underwater. Leda said in a small, aching voice: “I wish to God we could move to Boston.”

  The granite face closed in defensiveness. “Led’, we

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  been over all that. Nothing is going to drive me off of my

  land. I got no time for the city at my age. What the Jesus

  would I do? Night watchman? Sweep out somebody’s

  back room, b’Jesus Christ? Savings’d be gone in no time.

  We been all over it. We ain’t moving nowhere.”

  “I could find work.” For Harp, of course, that was the

  worst thing she could have said. She probably knew it

  from his stricken silence. She said clumsily, “I forgot

  something upstairs.” She snatched up her mending and

  she was gone.

  We talked no more of it the rest of the day. I followed

  through the milking and other chores, lending a hand

  where I could, and we made everything as secure as we

  could against storm and other enemies. The longtoothed furry thing was the spectral guest at diriner, but

  .we cut him, on Leda’s account, or so we pretended.

  Supper would have been awkward anyway. They weren’t

  in the habit of putting up guests, and Leda was a rather

  deadly cook because she cared nothing about it. A

  Darkfield girl, I suppose she had the usual twentieth-

  century mishmash of television dreams until some impulse or maybe false signs of pregnancy tricked her into marrying a man out of the nineteenth. We had venison

  treated like beef and overdone vegetables. I don’t like

  venison even when it’s treated right.

  At six Harp turned on his battery radio and sat

  stone-faced through the day’s bad news and the weather

  forecast— “a blizzard which may prove the worst in

  forty-two years. Since three pm , eighteen inches have

  fallen at Bangor, twenty-one at Boston. Precipitation is

  not expected to end until tomorrow. Winds will increase

  during the night with gusts up to seventy miles per

  hour.” Harp shut it off, with finality. On other evenings I

  had spent there he let Leda play it after supper only kind

  of soft, so there had been a continuous muted bleat and

  blatter all evening. Tonight Harp meant to listen for

  other sounds. Leda washed the dishes, said an early good

  night, and fled upstairs.

  Longtooth

  241

  Harp didn’t talk, except as politeness obliged him to

  answer some blah of mine. We sat and listened to the

  snow and the lunatic wind. An hour of it was enough for

  me; I said I was beat and wanted to turn in early. Harp

  saw me to my bed in the parlor and placed a new chunk

  of rock maple in the pot-bellied stove. He produced a

  difficult granite smile, maybe using up his allowance for

  the week, and pulled out a bottle from a cabinet that had

  stood for many years below a parlor print— George

  Washington, I think, concluding a treaty with some

  offbeat sufferer from hepatitis who may have been General Cornwallis if the latter had two left feet. The bottle contained a brand of rye that Harp sincerely believed to

  be drinkable, having charred his gullet forty-odd years

  trying to prove it. While my throat healed, Harp said,

  “ Shouldn’t’ve bothered you with all this crap, Ben. Hope

  it ain’t going to spoil your sleep.” He got me his spare

  flashlight, then let me be, and closed the door.

  I heard him drop back into his kitchen armchair.

  Under too many covers, lamp out, I heard the cruel

  whisper of the snow. The stove muttered, a friend,

  making me a cocoon of living heat in a waste of outer

  cold. Later I heard Leda at the head of the stairs, her

  voice timid, tired, and sweet with invitation: “You

  cornin’ up to bed, Harp?” The stairs creaked under him.

  Their door closed; presently she cried out in that desired

  pain that is brief release from trouble.

  I remembered something Adelaide Simmons had told

  me about this house, where 1 had not gone upstairs since

  Harp and I were boys. Adelaide, one of the very few

  women in Darkfield who never spoke unkindly of Leda,

  said that the tiny west room across from Harp and

  Leda’s bedroom was fixed up for a nursery, and Harp

  wouldn’t allow anything in there but baby furniture. Had

  been so since they were married seven years before.

  Another hour dragged on, in my exasperations of

  sleeplessness.

  Then I heard Longtooth.

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  Edgar Pangbom

  The noise came from the west side, beyond the snow-

  hidden vegetable garden. When it snatched me from the

  edge of sleep, I tried to think it was a fox barking, the

  ringing, metallic shriek the little red beast can belch

  dragonlike from his throat. But wide awake, I knew it

  had been much deeper, chestier. Homed owl?— no. A

  sound that belonged to ancient times when men relied

  on chipped stone weapons and had full reason to fear the

  dark.

  The cracks in the stove gave me firelight for groping

  back into my clothes. The wind had not calmed at all. I

  stumbled to the west window, buttoning up, and found it

  a white blank. Snow had drifted above the lower sash.

  On tiptoe I could just see over it. A light appeared, dimly

  illuminating the snowfield beyond. That would be coming from a lamp in the Ryders’ bedroom, shining through the nursery room and so out, weak and diffused,

  into the blizzard chaos.

  Yaaarrhh!

  Now it had drawn horribly near. From the north

  windows of the parlor I saw black nothing. Harp

  squeaked down to my door.

  “ ’Wake, Ben?”

  “Yes. Come look at the west window.”

  He had left no night-light burning in the kitchen, and

  only a scant glow came down to the landing from the

  bedroom. He murmured behind me, “Ayah, snow’s up

  some. Must be over three foot on the level by now.”

  Yaaarrhh!

  The voice had shouted on the south side, the blinder

  side of the house, overlooked only by one kitchen

  window and a small one in the pantry where the hand

  pump stood. The view from the pantry window was
>
  mostly blocked by a great maple that overtopped the

  house. I heard the wind shrilling across the tree’s winter

  bones.

  “Ben, you want to git your boots on? Up to you— can’t

  ask it. I might have to go out.” Harp spoke in an under­

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  tone as if the beast might understand him through the

  tight walls.

  “Of course.” I got into my knee boots and caught

  up my parka as I followed him into the kitchen. A

  .30-caliber rifle and his heavy shotgun hung on deerhom

  over the door to the woodshed. He found them in the

  dark.

  What courage I possessed that night came from being

  shamed into action, from fearing to show a poor face to

  an old friend in trouble. I went through the Normandy

  invasion. I have camped out alone, when I was younger

  and healthier,' and slept nicely. But that noise of

  Longtooth stole courage. It ached along the channel of

  the spine.

  I had the spare flashlight, but knew Harp didn’t want

  me to use it here. I could make out the furniture, and

  Harp reaching for the gun rack. He already had on his

  boots, fur cap, and mackinaw. “You take this’n,” he said,

  and put the ten gauge in my hands. “Both barrels loaded.

  Ain’t my way to do that, ain’t right, but since this thing

  started— ”

  Yaaarrhh!

  “Where’s he got to now?” Harp was by the south

  window. “Round this side?”

  “I thought so. . . . Where’s Droopy?”

  Harp chuckled thinly. “Poor little shit! She come

  upstairs at the first sound of him and went under the bed.

  I told Led’ to stay upstairs. She’d want a light down here.

  Wouldn’t make sense.”

  Then, apparently from the east side of the hen loft and

  high, booming off some resonating surface: Yaaarrhh!

  “He can’t! Jesus, that’s twelve foot off the ground!”

  But Harp plunged out into the shed, and I followed.

  “Keep your light on the floor, Ben.” He ran up the

  narrow stairway. “Don’t shine it on the birds, they’ll act

  up.”

  So far the chickens, stupid and virtually blind in the

  dark, were making only a peevish tut-tutting of alarm.

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  Edgar Pangbom

  But something was clinging to the outside of the barricaded east window, snarling, chattering teeth, pounding on the two-by-fours. With a fist?— it sounded like nothing else. Harp snapped, “Get your light on the window!”

  And he fired through the glass.

  We heard no outcry. Any noise outside was covered by

  the storm and the squawks of the hens scandalized by the

  shot. The glass was dirty from their continual disturbance of the litter; I couldn’t see through it. The bullet had drilled the pane without shattering it, and passed

  between the two-by-fours, but the beast could have

  dropped before he fired. “I got to go out there. You stay,

  Ben.” Back in the kitchen he exchanged rifle for shotgun.

  “Might not have no chance to aim. You remember this

  piece, don’t y’?— eight in the clip.”

  “I remember it.”

  “Good. Keep your ears open.” Harp ran out through

  the door that gave on a small paved area by the woodshed. To get around under the east loft window he would have to push through the snow behind the bam, since he

  had blocked all the rear openings. He could have circled

  the house instead, but only by bucking the west wind and

  fighting deeper drifts. I saw his big shadow melt out of

  sight.

  Leda’s voice quavered down to me: “He—get it?”

  “Don’t know. He’s gone to see. Sit tight. . . .”

  I heard that infernal bark once again before Harp

  returned, and again it sounded high off the ground; it

  must have come from the big maple. And then moments

  later— I was still trying to pierce the dark, watching for

  Harp— a vast smash of broken glass and wood, and the

  violent bang of the door upstairs. One small wheezing

  shriek cut short, and one scream such as no human being

  should ever hear. I can still hear it.

  I think I lost some seconds in shock. Then 1 was

  groping up the narrow stairway, clumsy with the rifle and

  flashlight. Wind roared at the opening of the kitchen

  door, and Harp was crowding past me, thrusting me

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  aside. But I was close behind him when he flung the

  bedroom door open. The blast from the broken window

  that had slammed the door had also blown out the lamp.

  But our flashlights said at once that Leda was not there.

  Nothing was, nothing living.

  Droopy lay in a mess of glass splinters and broken

  window sash, dead from a crushed neck— something

  had stamped on her. The bedspread had been pulled

  almost to the window— maybe Leda’s hand had

  clenched on it. I saw blood on some of the glass fragments, and on the splintered sash, a patch of reddish fur.

  Harp ran back downstairs. I lingered a few seconds.

  The arrow of fear was deep in me, but at the moment it

  made me numb. My light touched up an ugly photograph

  on the wall, Harp’s mother at fifty or so, petrified and

  acid-faced before the camera, a puritan deity with shallow, haunted eyes. I remembered her.

  Harp had kicked over the traces when his father died,

  and quit going to church. Mrs. Ryder “disowned" him.

  The farm was his; she left him with it and went to live

  with a widowed sister in Lohman, and died soon,

  unreconciled. Harp lived on as a bachelor, crank, recluse, until his strange marriage in his fifties. Now here was Ma still watchful, pucker-faced, unforgiving. In my

  dullness of shock I thought: Oh, they probably always

  made love with the lights out.

  But now Leda wasn’t there.

  I hurried after Harp, who had left the kitchen door to

  bang in the wind. I got out there with rifle and flashlight,

  and over across the road I saw his torch. No other light,

  just his small gleam and mine.

  I knew as soon as I had forced myself beyond the

  comer of the house and into the fantastic embrace of the

  storm that I could never make it. The west wind ground

  needles into my face. The snow was up beyond the

  middle of my thighs. With weak lungs and maybe an

  imperfect heart I could do nothing out here except die

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  Edgar Pangbom

  quickly to no purpose. In a moment Harp would be

  starting down the slope of the woods. His trail was

  already disappearing under my beam. I drove myself a

  little farther, and an instant’s lull in the storm allowed

  me to shout: “Harp! I can’t follow!”

  He heard. He cupped his mouth and yelled back:

  “Don’t try! Git back to the house! Telephone!” I waved

  to acknowledge the message and struggled back.

  I only just made it. Inside the kitchen doorway I fell

  flat, gun and flashlight clattering off somewhere, and

  there I stayed until 1 won back enough breath to keep

  myself living. My face and hands were ice blocks, then

 
fires. While I worked at the task of getting air into my

  body, one thought continued, an inner necessity: There

  must be a rational cause. I do not abandon the rational

  cause. At length I hauled myself up and stumbled to the

  telephone. The line was dead.

  I found the flashlight and reeled upstairs with it. I

  stepped past poor Droopy’s body and over the broken

  glass to look through the window space. I could see that

  snow had been pushed off the shed roof near the bedroom window; the house sheltered that area from the full drive of the west wind, so some evidence remained. I

  guessed that whatever came must have jumped to the

  house roof from the maple, then down to the shed roof

  and then hurled itself through the closed window without regard for it as an obstacle. Losing a little blood and a little fur.

  I glanced around and could not find that fur now.

  Wind must have pushed it out of sight. I forced the door

  shut. Downstairs, I lit the table lamps in kitchen and

  parlor. Harp might need those beacons— if he came

  back. I refreshed the fires, and gave myself a dose of

  Harp’s horrible whiskey. It was nearly one in the morning. If he never came back?

  It might be days before they could plow out the road.

  When the storm let up I could use Harp’s snowshoes,

  maybe . . .

  Longtooth

  247

  Harp came back at 1:20, bent and staggering. He let

  me support him to the armchair. When he could speak

  he said, “No trail. No trail.” He took the bottle from my

  hands and pulled on it. “Christ Jesus! What can I do?

  Ben . . . ? I got to go to the village, get help. If they got

  any help to give.”

  “ Do you have an extra pair of snowshoes?”

  He stared toward me, battling confusion. “Hah? No, I

  ain’t. Better you stay anyhow. I’ll bring yours from your

  house if you want, if I can git there.” He drank again and

  slammed in the cork with the heel of his hand. “I’ll leave

  you the ten gauge.”

  He got his snowshoes from a closet. I persuaded him to

  wait for coffee. Haste could accomplish nothing now; we

  could not say to each other that we knew Leda was dead.

  When he was ready to go, I stepped outside with him

  into the mad wind. “Anything you want me to do before

  you get back?” He tried to think about it.

  “ I guess not, Ben . . . God, ain’t I lived right? No, that

 

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