I don’t understand what is ahead of us, either. It’s the noise that draws my eyes to the direction. It’s a soft sound, a constant motion of a sound. Like a child on a swing, it ebbs and flows with the pattern of the breeze. The sound sets the hair on my neck ridged like I should be shivering from the cold. It’s one of those sounds that sets your whole body on edge before your mind can catch up to the warning.
When we turn the corner, the large oak has more than just the black crows in its branches. The tree was once used as a park centerpiece, but now it’s cloaked with something sinister. The sight steals the air from our lungs and stalls our brains, slowing the pieces from being put together over the confusion of what we are seeing.
Hanging from the many thick branches are small children. Their eyes are wide and bulging from the pressure of the rope. Those who still have eyes. Those who don’t are left with black cavities that somehow stare at us deeper than those who do. The birds have been relentless in their scavenging. Grooves of flesh are missing, exposing bones or darker spots along the bodies. The cold winds of winter stir them, swaying them with the creaking ropes and ruffling their clothing. They sway like broken piñatas among the branches that someone sick has taken their stick to.
All around the base of the thick trunk lay the burnt remains of people. Their skin is blackened and contorted from the flames of the fires that once burned them. The fingers of their hands are twisted, locked in an outstretched cry, begging for help. Their faces tell the horrible tale of being burned alive. Around the many circular piles is the word “IXOYE” in something dark enough to be blood.
There is no snow here to cover this. Mother Nature wants this to be seen and there, sitting in one of the many piles, is April. Her blonde head is bowed as she sits by the remains. Her clothes are now stained from the ashes she must have disturbed and the soiled snow she has ran through. If she knows we are here, she makes no move to signal it.
“April,” Rhett whispers the little girl’s name. He whispers it softly as if talking loudly around such a massacre would be sacrilegious. He might be right. “April,” he whispers it again, stressing the short name into something longer. She still doesn’t move.
My feet have a life of their own. They always seem to move without my consent, landing me in situations I would have rather avoided. They are doing it now. I step past Rhett whispering her name and gingerly make my way to the child. My eyes land on the bodies around me and bounce to the bodies above me with small jerks. I’m too nervous to not keep either set in my vision for too long. If either set were to move right now, April would be back to being Rhett’s problem and dry pants would be my problem.
“April?” I call to her, carefully placing my feet around the burnt bodies to reach her circle. “April, it’s not safe here. We have to go, now.” She still doesn’t acknowledge me. There is not even a twitch of her body to show me she is listening. The way she sits limply by a body speaks to me. I take a different approach. “Did you know them?” I ask her kneeling down beside her and watch silently for her to speak.
Her voice is cotton soft. It is weary and worn in a way no one of her age should possess. “My mommy,” April tells me and I watch as her fingers flex with the need to touch the ruin of a woman.
I’m scared to ask the next question with so many piles around us, but I do. “Where is your dad?”
I watch as she finally lifts her head and points to a pile beside this one. There is something different about his pile but I don’t stare long enough to make any connection. “He couldn’t do it,” she says.
“Do what?”
“Be saved,” she says this as if I should understand. She tells me something that to her is a simple fact, but to me it is more of a question.
“Saved from what?” I ask her, trying to grasp some understanding of what is around me.
April looks at me, cocking her head, trying to gauge how serious I am in my misunderstanding of her answer. Before she can answer me, Rhett is here scooping her up like a doll. Her eyes never leave me though as she still tries to answer her question in her mind. She doesn’t flinch in Rhett’s arms or try to escape from him. She is a child who is used to being carried by many arms. The way her brown eyes stare at me, she is use to keeping many secrets, too. Brown eyes, not blue, and my soul aches in a different way.
I watch Rhett walk away with April’s eyes studying the remains of the swaying children. She looks to each pair of dangling feet as Ashley looked to the fallen in the gym. In her mind she is placing a name to each of her former friends. Names that have already been forgotten by the ones who did this, whereas for April they will remain with her forever, like stains on what was once a perfect childhood; like the red stains on once-perfect white clothes.
CHAPTER 19
“Where the hell have you three been?” Dolph’s accent is heavy with his anger. Marxx is obviously not the only tracker in our happy little homestead. Dolph was waiting for us in the woods we once thought of as thick and encompassing. It was just another illusion we allowed ourselves to be lured into.
“Happy to see you, too,” Rhett tells the man as he passes Dolph. The sight of Rhett holding April must be as unnerving as I imagined with how Dolph watches the pair. “Guess the math skills weren’t important growing up?” Rhett asks as they pass him.
Dolph smirks at the attempt of an insult. He says to Rhett, “Sorry, man. I was just counting the ones that matter.” Dolph waits half-tensed for the inevitable return from Rhett for his insult. All he receives is a smile.
“What was all that about?” I ask, being the only one confused by the exchange. Dolph has never been a fan of the men of the MC, but he has never so bluntly dared one without provocation.
“You’ve missed a lot,” Marxx mutters. He seems to be unsure of which side of the little tit-for-tat he should stand.
“Your two other boys are tearing the place apart looking for you.” Dolph ignores my real question and launches into a different explanation. “Law seems to think that since this one here was missing, along with the other guy, something went down and took you and Aimes with it. He’s even got that preacher guy worked up.”
“Chapel?” Aimes’ famous eyebrow is arched again as she helps Dolph out with names he is either omitting or forgetting.
Dolph shakes his head for a moment in a short, controlled act. “Nah. The other one.”
“Travis?” Aimes offers again.
“Yeah, that one.” Dolph swings the rifle he held close to his leg back onto his back. I hadn’t even noticed the gun, but Rhett had. He had purposely cut ahead of me so he could pass Dolph on the side of the gun. With the two being so close, Rhett would have had time to disarm the long barreled weapon if the need would arise. I don’t know if I am grateful or alarmed by Rhett’s ability to spot such things.
“Let’s get this over with.” Marxx begins to walk towards the high school. He is no longer huddling against the cold wind and floating ice crystals. He has pulled himself tall for the fight he knows awaits us.
His shoulders will bear most of the anger from Lawless who has begun to see everything as a personal insult. Even to offer the truth that it was my fault he found us outside the walls, that it was my fault we went after April, the blame would still be Marxx’ to hold. Chapel, I’m sure, has done his best to diffuse the mounting anger Law has used to cover his fears. There is only so much that can be done though when a man has become as consumed as Law has with his emotions.
“Let the good times roll!” Aimes mockingly replies as we begin to file in behind Marxx.
It always amuses me how the men will naturally pick one to take the lead while one will always volunteer to follow last. Like some sandwich of protection, Aimes and I often find ourselves in the middle of this pattern like we are now. It’s amusing because when trouble does arrive, I’m often one of the first to rush in. Only later do I find myself thinking just how once I’d lik
e to be on the sidelines.
It’s amazing how we only stop to think about how stupid our choices were when we are neck deep in them, or worse, as we sit and think about them. People wear rubber bands to snap themselves with to break bad habits. I wonder if there is a band big enough for all of my habits.
We hear Lawless before we enter the courtyard. His voice is raised and heated in conversation with someone. The high walls keep the words being exchanged private, but the volume is enough to give an idea of what is being exchanged. Especially since most of it seems to be one syllable at that and “you”s. I think I hear a lot of “you”s.
“Anyone else thinking that perhaps we should have beat Rhett back?” Aimes asks, catching on the stream of conversation faster than the rest of us.
“Shit,” Marxx swears under his breath with the thought of what must be happening. “I do, now.”
The four of us stand transfixed by the two voices rising over the grey, thick walls. The wooden doors of the entrance loom tall, being the final barrier between another battle of the civil war happening on the other side and us. Slavery isn’t the poster for this war, but freedom is still the undercurrent for the reason and a president has already been shot enflaming the battle further.
“Paper, rock, scissors?” I offer since no one has volunteered to be the first casualty.
Dolph leans against one of the walls, crossing his arms still listening to the exchange. “I say we let them have a little longer,” he says with complete seriousness.
“Yes, let’s just let Simon clean up the mess again while we all stand back. You and Richard seem to do that well.” My words pull him off the wall with a power I hadn’t meant for them to have. I wanted to sting, not bite him. Being the coward that I am when it comes to admitting I’m in the wrong, I walk into the courtyard to avoid his stare. Any wound Lawless and Rhett offer me is better than standing here and looking at the wound I have placed on Dolph.
Aimes is quick to follow me in and what she whispers reminds me of just how horrible of a person I am. “You do remember Richard is dead, right? When you were attacked in the shower, turns out that wasn’t the only loner left standing,” she tells me.
I can feel my stomach drop so fast I am afraid for a moment I may trip over it. No, I hadn’t remembered. I didn’t just bite. I may as well have amputated a limb with the misjudgment I have made. Let the good times roll, Aimes had said. No one throws a good time quite like I do.
The creaking of the wooden doors with their opening was like a signal for a play to start and we just walked onto the stage. The shouting and its muffled counterparts become a vacuum of silence. Lawless is standing across from Rhett with a semi-circle of the “town’s folk” surrounding them. The nervousness on their faces shows how ugly their fight was becoming. Now that we have entered, all of those faces are turned to us. If their stares had weight, I would lie broken under so many eyes.
Chapel and Paula stand across from one another with their own line drawn. Their line doesn’t cause them anger. Their sadness is plain to see with how lost they are in this war. Either would gladly step across the line if the other would ask them to. With so much outside willing to destroy us, here we stand inside doing it ourselves.
“Sup?” Aimes asks being the first one to break the tension.
“Sup?” Lawless asks her, mocking her very question. I’m starting to think she should have chosen a better entrance. “What’s up?” he asks again hovering between rage and disbelief. Now I know she should have picked a better one. “Why don’t you tell me, “what’s up”?” he asks her and I can hear her answers choking her as I look in his eyes.
“We went and had tea with J.D.,” I start with my plans fully aimed at being a bigger ass than Lawless is being. Aimes picks up the path of my plotting and eagerly joins in.
“…then we went through the woods to grandmom’s house.”
“…where we crashed a birthday party.”
“…killed a little girl for good measure to be sure we aren’t ever invited back.”
“…went and saw a tree decorating event.”
“…rescued a little girl to even out the karma for the dead one.”
“…and then followed the breadcrumbs back home.”
“I don’t know who keeps requesting there be more zombie action in our lives, but I could really use a nap.” Aimes finishes the volley with a head cock and a forced pout.
“Cute.” Marxx’ disapproval is not only with what we have said but also with how we are handling the bomb of a man by dancing on his tripwires. Well, I’m dancing. I think Aimes is just jumping in place on them.
Law’s eyes are bouncing from Marxx to Aimes and myself as he tries to pick the one to yell at first. With each person he sees, his hand clenches into fists before relaxing again to repeat the process. At least his anger is showing. If he was holding himself to the mask of disinterest, I might be more worried. This I can handle. I have become a pro at cleaning and handling the toxic mess from the explosions of their male egos and the way they leak all over everything they touch.
Rhett has not turned to completely face our little grand entrance. He keeps a side view of Law as he studies the man’s face. Whatever Rhett is seeing there softens the hard lines of his mouth and relaxes his posture. “Nothing was going to happen to them. We wouldn’t have let.” All the anger from whatever was said is gone from Rhett’s voice. He sounds tired, deflated and almost sympathetic. His tone brings down the wall of aggression between the two men, but for Selma, it does the opposite.
“How do you know?” Selma asks Rhett. She isn’t really concerned with Aimes and myself. She is more concerned with keeping the male animosity thriving. “You could have been injured, or worse, and no one would have known where to find you. The woods are a dark and evil place. We’ve talked about how they should be avoided at all costs. The risk is just too high.”
“Good thing we didn’t think so since you allowed April to go play in them,” I say to her and I can watch her response filter through the many levels of schemes she is building. What she really wants to say to me, she can’t. It would ruin her perfect, shinning example of holy righteousness. Not many people can pull off a “screw you” and a “praise the Lord” at the same time. I don’t think she is one of those few.
“Yes, a tragic mistake that will be taken into hand. It’s a good thing you and yours continue to be so reckless with our safety so she could be retuned home to us. Thank’s be to our Lord,” Travis says wearing his best smile. Now, he is one of the few.
“Can I be taken into hand, too?” Aimes asks with the excitement of a child on their birthday. “It’s been so long since I have been taken into hand. A good strong hand, or a soft, firm hand? How about a good tickling hand?” Aimes continues to rattle off the many types of “hands” she would prefer to be “taken” by as she makes her way through the courtyard with the same excited voice at every idea that comes to her.
Her patience has worn thinner than mine, but she is better at her word play. The audience smirks and tries to hide their laughter as she walks by them to the stairs. By the time I have followed her in, she has gone more than just the fifty shades with her thinking.
“Cute.” I mock Marxx, but Aimes’ strategy has worked. With the situation so destroyed to hold any anger now, the groups separate into their respected corners like the sea rolling back out; all but one, anyway.
Rhett stands alone in the spot Lawless left him, his head lowers until it is bowed with each step Law and Marxx take away from him. Chapel only lingers for a moment inbetween the space that has occurred. I’m not sure if he is waiting for Rhett or for Paula, but when neither turn to him, he follows our path inside. He follows us now for the same reason he followed us then. He doesn’t do it because he wants to, not really. He does it because this is “home”. As dysfunctional and mind battering as it is, this is “home”.
“We should go to him.” I’m watching the man who was once our enforcer, our nightmare, stand alone and fragile with so many staring at him. Selma stands a few feet from him with the same uncertainty that I am feeling.
“We should what?” Lawless asks but I know he heard me. He’s just daring me to say it again.
“We should go to him,” I say it again. I do so love to dance.
Aimes has never stopped walking in her rambling path to the stairs. She calls back without even looking at me, “He made his bed, Hells. If he wants to change the sheets, he has to do it himself.”
“Exactly.” Law agrees with her. He passes me so closely that he has to walk sideways. We exchange looks before he moves passed and I know that he is waiting for us to reach our little second floor loft before exploding again.
“Anything you do now, will just set it all backwards.” Marxx has wrapped his arms around me and is whispering in my ear as he pushes us forward with his body. “Those two have to work this out, themselves. You can’t fix this one.”
“But –” I start before he cuts my sentence short.
“Leave it alone.” He slides to the side of me so he can look into my eyes. His voice is so low the bass of it vibrates me. “Why not, just for once, try fixing your own messes. You might be surprised at how much will fall into place once you do.”
He leaves me with that gut-punch of a thought. My head still swivels to where Rhett is standing behind the safety-glassed windows on his own accord. I really do have a problem of standing up to my own mistakes. Muddling with others problems is so much easier than having to face your private demons. Especially when your demons don’t wear horns or sharp teeth, but the faces of the ones you have failed.
Aimes is waiting at the heavy, metal doors for us. Lawless enters the stairwell first and she follows him with me right behind her. The “sandwich of protection” forms again. Let the good times roll.
The Risen: Courage Page 16