That House on Foster
Street
A late
fall day, 1692. The leaves have finished their fall show, and the pumpkins are
ready to harvest. A mere 48 miles southwest of Salem, Massachusetts, another
unnamed woman is tried by the Puritan code of behavior, and found guilty of
witchcraft. Before the hooded henchman pulls the lever, the woman, jet-black
hair and raven eyes caresses her pregnant belly. Standing on a levered trap
door on an outdoor stage, she smells the tinder dry piles of branches and cut
logs, all soaked in oil below her. The burly hangman pulls the noose snugly
around the woman’s neck, then grabs her arms roughly, and even more forcefully,
binds her hands behind her. Squirming at first, the woman looks down upon the
gathered crowd in front of her. The
hateful scowls on every face, from an elder’s dark, ruddy look to a
young woman with flushed cheeks, left no doubt about the verdict: the woman is undisputedly Satan’s progeny. These good folks, then,
have the sacred obligation, yea, a divine charge, to collect vengeance and
retribution for the Lord.
Spitting three times to the south, east and west, nodding her head up
and down, the shabbily dressed woman with the dirty face is still bursting with
evil enchantment. Snorting like a pig she quickly stops and again looks over
the country folk gathered. Silence, long and still, begins to unnerve the awkwardly
squirming crowd. The throng gathered in front of the gallows moves
uneasily, waiting for the next menacing
sound. Those who wanted a good look at Death up close
began to inch back. The henchman, still with his hand on the lever, stands
ready. From her delicate perch above the trap door, in a raw, raspy voice, the
woman speaks:
“I do curse
this ground this day that sent me away
Lo, I promise yee this before I burn,
This woman before yee, oh yea! Me and the wee child in me,
I promise someday, curse to yee who see me burn—I shall return!”
The
thick leather gloves that hold the henchman’s hands move the leaver forward,
the floor box falls. The woman’s dirty feet dance and dance, then become still.
With a flame, the henchman ignites the readied timber below. In the time it
takes a shoe to drop, the entire structure is so instantly consumed by flames
and smoke that the witch’s body has all but disappeared from sight.
** *******************************************
About 50 miles Southwest of Salem sits a house
at the very end of Foster Street in the town of Pepperell, Massachusetts. Now,
Pepperell isn’t a perfect place, but then God never intended perfection to be a
part of this life. But like many of the other houses in the neighborhood, the
majority built after WWII for returning soldiers, the area has seen several
cycles of better days. Gone is the era of cracked paint and caved-in roofs,
dusty dirt lawns and pot holes large enough to nearly consume a small car. A
sign of the times perhaps, Pepperell draws its largest crowds for the Veterans
Day and Fourth of July parades. Everyone, it seemed, had their special spot to
watch the parade on the fourth. Sometimes, days before the event, folding
chairs would mysteriously appear, a sure indication someone had already staked
their claim. And woe be to the person, or policeman, who would dare move
someone’s folding marker.
Susan
McCarthy and her friends from the Senior Center of Pepperell always staked out
their favorite spots by the police station. Paul Palmer, over from the next town,
always stood in front of the old bank to see what surprises the parade might
produce for his hometown, Groton, next year. John and Cathy McNabb, standing
stoically, out front of John’s old pharmacy, breathed in each whiff of cotton
candy and caramelized apples, as if it were their last parade together.
Now Pepperell, with its modernized ranch
houses, a gazebo in the town recreation field for summer concerts, without a
single traffic light, is as close to perfection as any town today. On a
summer’s eve a visitor quickly takes in the sweet smell of freshly cut grass
from the town field, wafting its memorable aroma everywhere; or hears the
jingle of an ice cream truck somewhere in the distance, alerting young boys and
girls of the delicacy about to arrive. Cub scouts, uniforms starched and
pressed, pledge their allegiance to the giant American flag hanging in front of
the town hall; the young Dressel doctors, Jennifer and Brian, stroll hand in hand
down Main Street. Amid all this is one particular house, a two-bedroom,
single-story house with ugly, weathered vinyl siding, missing strips here and
there, that is simply impossible to rent. No matter what the price, even free
for a caretaker, no one wants any part it. The reasons for not wanting the
house vary. But what a young woman told a realtor says it best:
“There is just something creepy about being in
there. Even in the middle of the day!”
“Tell me about it,” replied the realtor. “I
always wait outside now and just let people see for themselves. I can say it
now, but you’re right. It is creepy.
I thought at the very least some folks from the circus would use it for the
week. But that little manager—I can never tell the difference between a midget
and a dwarf—can you? Well, I was sure he’d use it for something. He was with
this very strange woman, kinda weird if you ask me. She was standing in front
of the house and, like, spaced out. Almost looked like she was praying, or
somethin’. Weird name, too. Miss Suboleo. Sounds hoity-toity you know,
European, or like one of those Harvard family names.”
Now,
Pepperell, Massachusetts is pastoral, rural and slow. Sheep are a more common sight than buses in this sleepy hollow. It is
not the sort of town anyone would ever associate with expressions such as “odd
events,” or “really strange,” and certainly never the use of “evil happenings.”
But like a plague with its ability to morph and change, and for reasons
understood only to those in the netherworld, the town is already alive with
Evil, merciless and immortal. In “The
Aeneid” Virgil himself said, “Facilis
decensus averni.” “The descent into Hell is easy.” The good people of
Pepperell, Massachusetts, never conceived that it is already too late to stop
their downward spiral.
The
first sign of anything out of the ordinary, Evil’s foot in the front door of
Pepperell, begins with Brian Dressel, M.D. Brian, handsome with scruffy hair
always a fashion disaster, is a primary care doctor trained in public health.
Noticing a pattern with his own patients, then, by means of anecdotal asides
with other physicians practicing in town, Brian finds his suspicions ultimately
confirmed. There had been no viable pregnancy within the town limits of
Pepperell for the last fourteen months.
Brittany Testa, one of the four Testa girls and the overnight person at
Cumberland Farms, was the first; she lost her baby in the back room during her
break. Then, sitting in her car in the parking lot at Donalyn’s supermarket, Theresa
Sole, already a mother of five, lost hers at six-plus months. No woman made it
past that seven-month period and few women saw their pregnancy go beyond three
months. Sheila Harrington, a local attorney and State Representative for the
area, did her best to see that these “…unusual but unsubstantiated” events
remained within the town limits of Pepperell until officials could learn more.
Small towns in upper Massachusetts are thick skinned, but the last thing anyone
wanted to see was the area being turned into a circus filled with camera-toting
tourists.
In turn, news
of this “statistical irregularity” never saw the light of day in either the Globe or especially the Examiner newspapers. The old folks down
at the drugstore could regularly be heard whispering their distrust of
foreigners. An invisible, impenetrable
wall was in place and, as long as is necessary, the strong-willed residents of Pepperell
would see it remained impenetrable. One afternoon, the belief that smarter city
folk could put one over on the blue-collar residents was put to the test.
A
reporter from the Washington Post made
the mistake of calling on residents to confirm a rumor regarding Pepperell. A
nice young man, a cub reporter from the Post, and no older than his late 20s,
rang the bell at the McNabb residence. Cathy McNabb, short grey hair and still
very fashionable well into her 70s, answered the door that day. Cathy surveyed
the young man on her porch and placed the golden rosary she was praying back in
its container.
“Yes, may I help you?” asked Cathy in a weak, muted
voice.
“Yes, my name is Gerald Egan. I am a reporter
for the Washington Post.”
“Yes, answered Cathy, “I am very familiar with
it. We do read around here.”
“May I ask your name?”
“Yes” was all Cathy stated.
“Your name, if I could have it, please?” came
back the reporter. “I am just trying to get to the bottom of a rumor about
Pepperell. Do you think you could help me?”
“I can sure try,” replied Cathy.
“There are reports that something “odd” is
going on here with respect to pregnancies. Or I suppose the rumor is that women
can’t deliver a baby full term. No pregnancies seem to survive past the sixth
month. You know anything about that rumor?”
Cathy McNabb, seemingly in the middle of a
petit mal seizure, looked out in the direction of the trees across the street.
Huge oaks were displaying their fall colors, bright oranges and muted reds. But
Cathy said nothing.
“You OK, lady?”
inquired the young reporter.
As quickly as she drifted away from the
reporter’s questions, Cathy McNabb settled down and looked directly into the
eyes of the reporter.
“Where did you attend college, Gerald?” The
reporter was put off by the question but decided to play along with the elderly
woman.
“York College, in...” and before Gerald could
answer Cathy continued.
“Graduate school is to what I was referring to,
Gerald.” Gerald’s shoulders slumped
forward tilting his head downward. Deflated by Cathy’s statement, the reporter
wanted to go and hide.
“I started for a while. No degree though.”
Cathy thought about pulling back on the reporter, but decided that protecting
Pepperell was more important than the ego of a city boy.
“So, on my doorstep stands a reporter from a much-respected
newspaper. This same person had slightly above average scores on the SAT as
well as the GRE, too. Stop me if I am wrong, Gerald. You’re not as young as
your boyish looks suggest. And you are still looking for that one big story
that will make your editors take notice of you. You’re hunting the Millennial
Watergate, aren’t you? But you have not learned the art of the graceful
retreat.”
“The what?”
“You realize you’re a potential ‘goat choker’ to
them. You’ve come to Pepperell and you have, perhaps, heard of the False Light
Law here in the Commonwealth. Let me clue you in, Gerald. The law states that
if you write something that is not technically false, but that’s misleading to
your readers—tort concerning privacy, Gerald. Have this conversation with your
editors Mr. Egan, or in a Massachusetts court room. Now, good day, Mr. Egan.”
Resident chitchat regarding the intricacies of
why or how was always whispered in soft, hushed tones. The War Room-like
discussions are convened only at Charlotte’s Diner, or in front of the Keno
screen at the 7-11, the in chairs at Exotic Nails, the mats at Zumba exercise,
the booths at Breens’ Diner, or over a glass of white wine at Mariano’s
restaurant.
Emotions
surrounding something as personal as a miscarriage left bottled up inside must
find expression somewhere. In Pepperell, that frustration transmutes into
resentment among the townspeople; it begins with couples who’ve never had
children beginning to whisper rumors about those who do. Nearly overnight, in almost every household,
an atmosphere of blame and shame develops around the topic of infertility.
Mothers-in-law look askance at daughters-in-laws, unwilling to believe their
sons are at fault somehow. Wives and partners begin to suspect some “outside
attraction” draining or contaminating their men. Despondent, many women began
cocooning inside their homes, buried three quilts deep on their beds with boxes
of tissues at the bedside. Still others spend hours at the cemetery, crying
well into the night over the graves for the unrealized dreams that died too
soon over those fourteen long months.
With
each passing day, houses where everyone had been welcome, friends and newcomers
alike, could be heard slamming shut their front doors. One by one, shut tightly,
the deadlocks bolted in place, defending those on the inside from the world
outside. Day by day, couples ceased even trying for a child. There was no need,
the fetus’s future already a fait accompli. Accordingly, an underlying stress on all of Pepperell, slowly but
surely, began to take its toll on faithful, intimate relations and long-lasting
friendships.
Not too many exciting things happen in Pepperell.
Local housewives time the harvesting of apples by the turning of the leaves,
rather than by the pages of their calendars. Disruptions
happen in other places, other towns, other countries. Late newspaper deliveries,
even ten minutes late, are considered to be a high-water mark for most discord
in town. Nonetheless, this perfect bucolic town was
about to undergo sudden transformation, from the impeccably manicured to deteriorating
overnight. Things began falling apart the evening of the 30th of
October.
At 2:00
PM sharp, the leaves on the trees, grass on lawns,
pastures not yet taken in—even indoor houseplants all over town—simultaneously wither,
shrivel and die. Immediately the Town Manager, Mark Andrews, is alerted by
scores of frightened residents lining up outside Town Hall. Within minutes Mark
jumped into his car and made the short drive to the town line. Getting out of
his car, Mark can only shake his head in total disbelief. As far as the eye can see, singed remnants of plant
life, flourishing moments before, were now blowing away. The landscape of
Pepperell is now bare earth, scorched earth, white.
Still,
in the final triptych of this
three-paneled tale of deterioration and ruin, fourteen hours after the vegetation
all blackens and dies, as the townspeople stand in groups, asking each other questions
that still have no answer. The first animal, a beautiful golden lab owned by a
young lawyer and selectman, Melissa Tzanoudakis, lies down, rolls over, and dies at Melissa’s feet. The Harvard
trained lawyer, with her son by her side, drops to one knee, blesses herself
and the two recite a Hail Mary.
Within
hours, every animal in the town, including all family pets underwent the same
fate. From the family chinchilla, the snake in its aquarium, to the cows on the
farm, all cease breathing and die with little suffering. The Williams’ golden
lab whimpered for a moment then gently curled up at the feet of the youngest
daughter, Rosie. The Aldrich’s family rabbit, Einstein, that sometimes had the
run of the first floor of their house, rolled onto its side, gave three quick
kicks and then went lifeless. That night in Pepperell the children howl, their
beloved pets suddenly lifeless. A farmer fallen to his knees, suddenly
penniless, sobs like a little boy over a lifeless bull. The howling and wailing
reverberates over and over and over through a cloudless sky. The air is filled
with the aching din of screams and shrieks. There is even talk of abandoning the
town, burning it to the ground and salting the Earth.
The traveling circus had long left Pepperell
for small towns and cities along the eastern seaboard. Gone were the eerily
painted little people of the clowns squeezing into miniature cars; the ten-foot
Uncle Sam on stilts, waving the American flag; and the circus Master, with his
black polished boots, red, half coat with tails, and top hat.
Nevertheless, one person failed to accompany
them: Miss Suboleo, a woman in her early thirties, a classical beauty with high
cheekbones who turned the heads of the town’s men and older boys. Short
jet-black hair, gelled, and combed straight back, sets Miss Suboleo apart from
all other women. The frequency of her visits increased as the days wore on, and
she became so familiar, townspeople assumed she lived in Ayer, or Shirley, or another
nearby town. Soon, because her beauty posed no real threat, even if men strained
their necks to look at her, Miss Suboleo became just that “odd” woman seen
around town from time to time. Hot gusts blew dry, rootless vestiges of dead
florae around Miss Suboleo’s feet as she walked determinedly to someplace she seemed
late to arrive at.
She stopped
in front of Our Lady of Grace Catholic Church, the only Catholic church for
miles. Because the flu had swept through the entire community the previous
year, a particular strain that was exceptionally merciless for anyone unlucky
enough to contract it, First Communion had to be delayed until October rather than
take place during its usual time during the Easter season. In Pepperell, the
youngsters prepared to receive the body and blood of Jesus Christ for the first
time with the obligatory, requisite seriousness that this glorious event requires.
First, however, the soul needs cleaning so the temple is ready for Our Lord’s
eventual arrival. This meant today, Saturday morning, was time for all would-be
communicants to make their First Confession. Students had prepared for months,
memorizing the formula recited at the beginning of each confession: “Bless me
Father for I have sinned. It has been ____Weeks/days/months since my last
confession:
“Proceed my child,” the priest then stated,
encouraging the sinner to make a full and honest confession.
“I lied three times. I skipped Mass last
Sunday. I stole $.83 from the pocket of my father’s pants,” the penitent revealed.
“How, my child, were you able to remove the
$.83 from your father’s pocket?”
After some thought the adolescent whispered, “He
was asleep.”
“How many times have you done this, my child?”
“Since the start of the school year, well,
maybe 15 or 20 times.”
When the
youngster making the confession had finished ticking off all transgressions,
the priest asked him to make an Act of Contrition. As the penitent recited the
Act, the priest said:
"God, the Father of mercies, through the
death and resurrection of his Son has reconciled the world to himself and sent
the Holy Spirit among us for the forgiveness of sins. Through the ministry of
the Church may God give you pardon and peace. And I absolve you from your sins in the name of the Father, and of the
Son, and of the Holy Spirit.”
Sins were
forgiven and the soul, the soon-to-be Temple of the Lord, was now ready. With
the final class conducted, Fist Confessions completed, all was set for First
Communion Sunday the following day, October 31st. Nonetheless, one
student in particular is fretting: Butterfly Jones, whose textured curly hair
is cut into a bob, her eyebrows knitted, she is noticeably worried that she’s not
ready to receive Our Lord the following day. Miss Elliot, Butterfly’s CCD
teacher, noticed that one of her students looked distressed, repeatedly sighing,
then tugging and twisting a couple of the unruly curls on her forehead.
The
parish was lucky to find someone with her credentials so late. The scheduled
teacher, Mrs. Sullivan, who’d been teaching at Our Lady of Grace for twenty-two
years, had been involved in a car terrible one-car accident. She was still day to
day at Nashoba Stewart Hospital. Taking Butterfly aside so as not to embarrass her,
Miss Elliot addressed her with words brimming with strength and confidence.
“You must allow the Holy Spirit to come into
you, Butterfly, because the Spirit never lies. And always remember, Butterfly:
The power of Good is mightier than the tricks of the Devil. It is because you
don’t feel worthy, Butterfly. We call that ‘humility. Trust me, Our Lord Jesus
Christ is counting the minutes until your First Communion.”
Miss
Elliot’s message made Butterfly shiver and break out in goose pimples. Always
dressed in brilliant white cotton outfits buttoned up all the way to the neck,
and constantly peering over the top of her wire-rimmed glasses, there was a
true purity, a glow of virtuousness, about this CCD teacher. Next, reaching
into a large drawer, Miss Elliot removed a FedEx package and placed it on her
desk.
“What
is inside this package is my gift to you, class. I am so very proud of every
one of you,” she told the class. “Now, this FedEx box contains the 14 smaller
boxes,” Miss Elliot explained to her excited students. Her straight dark brown
hair was short with rounded edges, a sort of a neo classic style that made the
demure religion teacher appear beatific, almost saintly. Butterfly Jones could almost picture a halo
around her teacher’s head, like the painting of Saint Theresa that hung in the
parish hall.
“One
by one, starting with you Ignatius, you will come up, remove a box, and quietly
return to your seat. Once you all have a box, we will open them together.
Clear? OK, Ignatius you may proceed.”
The class could hardly contain themselves as they began to ask and
answer questions about the content of each box. Miss Elliot counted down,
“…5-4-3-2-1 open!”
Everyone opened their boxes. A moment later,
every face wore a puzzled, stupefied look. The silence was deafening as if a
single atom could be heard falling to the floor.
“Well
now, I did not anticipate this response, I have to admit,” said Miss Elliot, feigning
shock. “Nonetheless, what you have before you is a scapula. In Latin, it means, literally, shoulder blade. Yours is a special type called a Devotional
Scapula. It is meant to remind you, the wearer, of your commitment to live a
Christian life. More important, some say that wearing a scapula protects you
from the Devil himself. You and only you should touch your scapula, as it is
your private and personal link to God.”
For
the second time, it was this last little bit regarding protection from Satan
that caught everyone’s attention, especially Butterfly’s. With both First Communion and Halloween the
following day, the students were naturally puzzled about how two unique events,
one holy and one not, could possibly fall on the same day. Miss Elliot demonstrated how the two matchbox-size
pieces of cloth, held by two strings over the right and left shoulders, allowed
the wearer to have part in front and part in the back.
“Each one is different, so don’t compare yours
with your neighbor’s. Identify with your neighborhood’s holiness,” she related to
her class.
Butterfly was delighted to discover a picture
of Our Blessed Mother, her favorite image besides the image of Jesus, of
course, on her Scapula.
“Oh
thank you, Miss Elliot!” she shouted. “It’s the most beautiful thing I’ve ever
seen! I’ll never take it off. Ever. Thank you again, Miss Elliot.”
“You
are very welcome, Butterfly. Now, class, you will notice that they all arrived
in this FedEx package and, I know you can’t see the postmark, but it was sent
from Rome, the Vatican, in fact, where the Pope lives. It was sent two days ago,
Just in time for your big day tomorrow.”
The
curious children rushed to get closer but Miss Elliot was clear in her message.
“You will sit and sit now!” Just as quickly they all scampered back to their
chairs. “I’d better not see these sorts of goings on tomorrow! I can tell you
that!” Frozen in place, the students barely breathed.
“Now, I
certainly hope you know how much I have enjoyed teaching this particular class,”
she said, pausing to smile at each child. “So, before I dismiss you, I have one
more surprise. One of the Cardinals in the Vatican has blessed each scapular
you hold and now wear. Blessed, one by one for you. And the most important part—are
you ready? One of you, someone very lucky and special, has a scapular blessed,
specially, by Pope Francis himself! Not
even I know which one. The only way you will know, or any of us will, for that
matter, is when Pope Francis sends a brief note to the lucky person. The
Vatican has each of your addresses and, please God, one of you will have a
special letter on Monday.”
Out the
window Miss Elliot noticed the silhouette of a person looking attentively at
the entrance to Our Lady of Grace Catholic Church. For a briefest moment, she believed
the shadowy figure looked oddly familiar. Lowering
the shades, she looked out one more time, but the person had moved on, and Mill
Elliot turned her attention back to the class. She clapped her hands to focus
the children’s’ attention, and heads swiveled to the front.
“Pay attention now and all eyes to the front. We meet at exactly 8:30 on the side of the
church. Get a good night’s sleep and, 5-4-3-2-1 dismissed!”
Beginning with the first student nearest the door, they filed slowly out
of the classroom walking calmly, as they’d been trained to do. One arm’s length
apart, always beginning with the right foot first, the students resembled toy
soldiers as they paraded out. On the
horizon, dark clouds were churning, building higher and higher with flashes of
lightening, and the smell of rain was thick in the air.
Their footsteps following a daily route so ingrained in them that it seems worn
into the street itself Butterfly and Tommy Ellison walked
home together. Standing outside the school, Tommy looked up at the approaching
storm.
“Geez, Butterfly. Maybe we should call to be
picked up. Look at those clouds. I’ve never seen something as wild looking at
what’s coming.”
“Oh nonsense Tommy, don’t be silly. We’ll
probably be home by the time the first drop falls. Besides, this way we can
talk about making our First Communion. I’m not really sure I’m ready, Tommy.
Then again, I don’t really know what ready feels like. How about you?”
As
always, they passed the red house on Foster Street. Butterfly and Tommy didn’t
know it, but the neighbors had reported hearing the sounds of talking and laughter
coming from inside that vacant house, always beginning at midnight. The events
were becoming more regular, and this truly began to unnerve the citizens. The
Evensens’, mister and misses, both newly retired cooks in the prison system,
were so distressed by the sounds emanating from that house that they took turns
being on watch in front of their plate glass window that faced that house.
Using binoculars, they kept a journal of what they thought they heard and the
time they heard it. Employing a mini-weather station in their back yard, they
included everything from wind speed to amount of rainfall on any given night,
as well. The couple left nothing to chance, in the event the prankster should
be found out, arrested and tried. Experience told them that it didn’t matter
what a person knew, it mattered only what they could prove.
Other
neighbors began calling the police instead. But none of the visits of patrol
officers, sergeants, a lieutenant, or even the Chief, whether day or night, made
any difference. The outcome was always the same: their presence on site caused
whatever noises others heard to stop. They
checked the doors and windows and, between weathered and bowed pieces of thick
plywood covering the windows, saw the same broken pieces of wooden furniture
sitting exactly where they’d been the day before. Even
so, the neighbors persisted in their belief that someone, or something, was in the
house and what was happening was not good. In turn, volunteers began to spell
mister and misses Evenson at their lookout, convinced that vigilance was the
only solution to catch the culprits. In addition, other townspeople reported
hearing screeches, whether a man’s or woman’s, they weren’t sure. But they
heard one voice, definitely a male voice, speaking a in some foreign language.
Old
soldiers swore they could hear the high-pitched voices of young children,
spewing obscenities they hadn’t heard since their days in the army.
Now,
in a small town like Pepperell it isn’t unusual for children to walk home in
pairs after nearby events. However, on this night, both sets of parents were
alert to the quickly changing weather, and the rising winds growing in
strength, shaking and rattling street signs, and nearly blinding those
unfortunate enough to be caught in the gusts. Butterfly held tightly to Tommy
Ellison’s hand as the two, heading into the wind, bent low and began walking. As they passed the red house, Butterfly stopped
abruptly.
“Gee Butterfly, I think I’m ready. But after
talking to you I’m not so sure,” Tommy reported.
“You see that Tommy?” yelled Butterfly, shouting
over the whirl of the wind gusts.
“See what, Butterfly?” asked her companion,
holding his papers close to his chest for safety.
“I thought I saw light coming from inside that
house. There it is again. Did you see it this time, Tommy?” screamed Butterfly
inches from Tommy’s ear.
Poor
Tommy, head and eyes down, was trying hard to keep the center line in the
concrete path below in focus, and could barely make out Butterfly’s words.
“A light? From the creepy house? I think you’re
seeing things. Butterfly, I’m starting to get scared.”
Tommy truly did not see any flashing lights
because he was working so hard to keep from blowing away. His knitted cap had
blown off the block before, and he was afraid of some projectile, part of a
tree or a sign, hitting him. Going low with his body so as to be closer to the
ground, Tommy Elliot stomped one foot and then the other. After he missed the
flashing light a second time, Butterfly looked over and saw just how much
distress Tommy was in; she locked arms with her friend as the two trudged home.
To Butterfly it just didn’t make sense that, after all this time, someone was
actually inside that vacant house.
Peals
of lightening flashed, producing an ear-splitting boom. Huge drops of rain began
to fall, pelting the skin driven by frighteningly fast winds. There was no
escape from this sudden squall. Another flash and, not more than 50 feet in
front of the two, a bolt struck an old oak tree. The tree was split in two,
with the heavier part of the trunk falling directly toward Tommy and Butterfly.
At the last possible moment, the children found themselves being scooped up in
the delicate but strong arms of Miss Elliot. The tree crashed
with a deafening explosive bang onto two cars, crushing the roofs and shattering
their windshields.
“Come on,” yelled Miss Elliot. “We need to find
some shelter—and fast!”
Through the pelting rain Miss Elliot could see the open door of the red
house. The wind and rain lashed directly into the faces of Miss Elliot, Tommy,
and Butterfly, blinding them so they were unable to tell what direction they
were facing, or what progress they were making. For all intents and purposes, they
were this close to becoming part of
the storm itself. Locking arms, they gained some foothold against the near hurricane
gusts. Their faces wore welts, red, round, and swollen from the never-ending
watery assault that was growing in velocity with each step they took. Exhausted
and almost ready to quit, Miss Elliot was first through the door, pulling Tommy
in quickly behind her. Butterfly was just about to cross the threshold when a
burst, a gigantic blast of air blew the wee girl off her feet and away from the
doorway. Landing head over heels on what was left of the lawn, Butterfly heard the
storm, with all its intensity suddenly ceasing, stopping completely, nearly as
quickly as it had begun. Shaken, filthy and crying, she ran home with the speed
of an Olympic sprinter. The 31st
of October, Halloween, should be some kind of First Communion day.
**************************************************************************
It is
extremely unusual to see anyone, much less a woman, standing beneath an unnatural,
eerily diffused street light at 4:00 am in Pepperell. Miss Suboleo, retaining an
air of single-minded determination, her face taut like a seaman’s knot, stepped
out into the fullness of the light. The night air was still, with only the howl
of a lone coyote somewhere in the distance. Miss Suboleo, always in a black
Chanel business suit, eyes fixed three feet head and down, began to stroll down
Main St. Anyone would think she was mad, and definitely cross the street to
avoid her. Not coincidentally, Cathy McNabb herself reported that she had seen
this same woman peering from across the street at the boarded-up front door of
the house on Foster Street. The peculiar thing was, as far as anyone knew, the
house was still just as vacant and mysterious, with all its windows and doors
nailed and glued tight, as it had ever been.
Yet,
in an age when an I-Phone camera and audio abilities, so sophisticated and 21st
century, should be a tremendous help in documenting everything from apples to
algorithms, sometimes the archaic is best. While children replayed iPhone
recordings of the voices, and policemen scrutinized high-definition security
footage, searching in vain for proof of the apparitions, it was an
old-fashioned Dictaphone that captured the first piece of solid evidence. The Robinson twins, Richie and Reggie, produced the first tangible
piece of evidence that more than broken chairs and dishes existed inside the house
on Foster Street. The two identical idiots, one wearing a red toupee and the
other blonde, covered themselves in garlic, spread holy water on their faces
like cologne, and finally crammed their pockets with old holy cards, and scores
of sacred medallions encased in waterproof plastic.
The brothers
wore silver crucifixes around their necks, so heavy that Jesus Himself might
struggle moving it. One minute after midnight they securely tied off the
Dictaphone, checked to make sure the bubble wrap encasing the device was secure,
and Reggie (the redhead) reared back and cast the recorder within two feet of a
boarded-up window on the side of the house.
Whatever
was inside that house was finally exposed by the town’s laughingstock, the
bumbling twin brothers and their fishing gear. Waiting
a full ten minutes after the hour just to be safe, the brothers reeled in their
catch. Richie stored the gear, battered and scratched, as Reggie turned the
recorder on. The men looked at each
other and scratched their heads in disbelief.
“How come all we hear is
tires screeching from a high octane vehicle? You tell me that car and roars is
all we goanna get?” Shaking his empty head from side to side, Reggie continued,
“Well, that’s just not right. No sir, just not right.”
“I’ll bet you that old thing
was broken before we tied it off at the end. That was a fine bit of casting,
too, brother.”
“Thank you for the fine
compliment. I just thought, well, why wouldn’t it work? I still think we’ve
gotta take it to Fr. Bob.”
“Roger
that,” Reggie confirmed.
A few
minutes later the twins were pounding on the rectory door of Our Lady of Grace.
Early Sunday, the day of First Communion, the wind and rain, and the cries
coming from the house had all subsided; all of Pepperell, amid motionless
weathervanes and bare-armed trees as stiff as stone, only the whirling of a
distant flock of crows disturbed the stillness.
The twins woke Fr. Robert Portrais, Pastor
and Administrator of Our Lady of Grace church. Standing in the parish office
foyer, anyone would be impressed by the framed testimonies to the intelligence
and integrity of Fr. Bob, as he was known to all. Not only was Fr. Bob a member
of Mensa, but as the row of framed newspaper articles reported, a Chess Master,
too.
Fr. Bob not only spoke the language of his
Portuguese parents, but Spanish and Italian, too. For good measure, and a
necessity for anyone doing serious biblical scholarship, Fr. Bob was more than
proficient in biblical Greek and Latin, The twins sat with Fr. Bob and played the
recording they made that night. When the tape finally concluded, all the good
priest could do was grin and politely chuckle.
“Tell me again when you recorded this?” he
asked, now serious again.
“We
heard the laughing one night and decided we’d do what the rest of Pepperell
seems ascared to do. So, Richie gets hold of this good but old Dictaphone and I
grab my rod and reel. Quiet as anything, we were. We takes off our shoes so as
just to be sure, and then my brother Reggie lets off with the perfect
cast. The thing lands this far from the dang window, Father.”
“Well, I would have to listen to it again, but
I think someone has played a pretty good practical joke on you two,” replied the priest.
“Why you say that, Father?” Richie shot back.
“That’s impossible,” said Reggie, defending his
brother. “We know what we heard, where we were and what we did. T’aint no joke,
Father.”
“OK, like I say, I’d have to go back and listen
to it a few more times, but, what I heard was, ah, someone yelling insults at you in several languages.”
“Na, you heard it same as us, Father. Those
were tire screeches and maybe kids’ voices.”
“I‘d like to borrow it for a few days and play
it for the Cardinal. Would that be OK with the two of you?”
“Why heck yes. Cardinal Sean O’Malley gonna
listen to our tape, Father? Keep it as long as you ‘all need. Cardinal
O’Malley, no shit! Oh, sorry there Father.”
“I will call you if I learn anything new. But
for the moment let’s just keep this between ourselves boys, shall we? I wouldn’t
want to get people more riled up. Agreed?”
Father Bob swiveled his chair, stood and walked
the twins to the door. “Remember now, just between us. OK?”
Allowing
the heavy oak door to close lightly behind him, Father Bob sinks
wearily into his heavy leather desk chair, watching motes of dust swirl around
him in the morning sunlight as he as if he
were recreating the scene of an accident in his head. Pulling his I-phone from its cradle, he reminded
himself again that he was sure whose voice was on the tape. It was the “voice”
that was so problematic for Father Bob. For that voice, so
unmistakably gravelly shrill and deep. so,
distinctive as never to be mistaken—even when the owner of that voice was
alive. Yes, problematic.
Early October
31th, Sunday, continued to be unseasonably warm. Townsfolk stepped
into the warm morning air, then ducked back inside their houses wearing smiles
of pleasant surprise to leave their thick sweaters behind. Inside Cardinal O’Malley’s office, the
Cardinal and Father Bob leaned closely over the Dictaphone on Father Bob’s
desk, their fingers knotted and brows furrowed in concentration. Over and over,
then over again, through a battery change, they listened to the sounds on the
tape. Father Bob suddenly leaps up and hurls the Dictaphone across the room,
screaming, ‘I can’t take another second of this!’”
“Not, now Bob.
Settle down. Frankly, I find it difficult to believe. But I also heard what
sounds like his voice, what he’s saying, and it’s clear to whom he is directing
his tirade. Of course, I will report this to our Vatican liaison.”
The silence was deep and prolonged. The two men glared at each other across the
table, above mugs of coffee long gone cold. Father Bob cracked his knuckles
nervously, until at last he broke the silence.
“What would you have me do, your Eminence?” Father Bob
politely asked, still looking for the validation he so desperately sought.
“You reported him. I removed him. Rome defrocked him.
But the former Father Nicholas Herzberger did, by his choosing, hang himself.
What would I have you do? Something like this can be—no—it is quite upsetting. Pray for insight into where God is in all this,
Bob. We’ll speak again after your First Communion Mass. Now, do your best.
Everyone is relying on your A-Game from here on out.”
************************************************************************
When
Tommy Ellison never made it home, the good people of Pepperell, helped along by
the gossipy telephone network, began to panic. There were repeated calls to the
small room rented by Miss Elliot, and several burly men knocked, pounded, and
beat on her door, all to no avail. Like Tommy Ellison, Miss Elliot was also
assumed to be somewhere near where she’d been seen last, namely, the boarded-up
house on Foster Street. As the sky began growing light, ushering in October 31st,
Butterfly Jones was already up and dressed in her white faux-lace communion
attire, complete with crown and veil, a vision of holy innocence ready to
receive the body of Christ for the first time.
Outside,
Tommy Ellison’s mom and dad were frantically calling out their son’s name, eventually
making their way to the red house. Several hundred of the townspeople had
gathered to join the search for Tommy and Miss Elliot. There was no need for
billboards: this AMBER ALERT moved quicker than liquid mercury down a polished
slide. News of a young boy missing and last seen in the company of his female
teacher does not take long to hit the AP wire service. Soon the set lights of
the commercial and cable television channels dotted Main Street. The squeal of
multiple sirens, all rushing to the scene simultaneously, created a nearly
unbearable cacophony of warnings. As reporters gave live updates, first
responders, fire department, state and local police got to work at gaining
entrance to the house.
“…and 5-4-3-2-1 you’re clear,” said a man, a television
producer, counting the moments down to a woman holding a microphone, the on-air
talent.
“That was terrific. But when we go live again,
see if you can include anything about a reward being offered” he said to the
woman. Then, looking around, the producer shouted, “Anyone know if there is a
reward for the kid?”
No reply.
Using
the Jaws of Life, along with axes and whatever other tools they could lay their
hands on, the rescuers tried to gain a toehold to the house. Skilled at every
type of rescue imaginable, these men and women were frustrated at their
inability to make even a small dent in the structure.
“Is this some sort of a joke?” yelled one
rescuer to a man using a chain saw. “What is this crap made of, titanium?”
Standing with her mother, Butterfly watched the action unfold in front
of her. Exasperated, the Fire Chief, Toby Tyler, a large man who carries a
distended gut from too much eating and too little exercise, located Butterfly
and knelt so he was the same size as the small girl.
“Butterfly,” began the Chief. “That’s a very
unusual name, now, isn’t it?”
“Yes, it is, thank God,” retorted a very
unimpressed Butterfly. “You are not a happy man, are you, Chief? Tyler.”
“No, I’m not, Butterfly. And would you like to
know why?”
“No thank you, Chief, because I already know.”
“You do? Can you tell me, then?”
“I believe you know why already, Chief Tyler,
but yes, I can tell you. Looks like I’m the only one who saw Tommy go into that
house with Miss Elliot.”
“Yes, you are, Butterfly.”
“And so far, no one has seen them come out
either, correct?”
“Correct again, Butterfly.”
“But you haven’t found Tommy yet, or seen a
strange woman, have you?”
Chief
Tyler was thrown off by his star witness’s answer. “No, Butterfly, no one has seen Tommy or any
woman,” he replied, slowly and deliberately.
Hearing Butterfly’s answer, the Chief of
Police, David Scott, pushed his way through the crowd. Chief Scott knelt by
Butterfly’s side as well and composed himself before speaking.
“Now, Butterfly, you said before that a Miss
Elliot took Tommy into the house, didn’t you?”
“Yes I did, Chief Scott.”
“Now, you have me thinking there are two
women,” Chief Scott answered, beginning to question what he’d just heard
Butterfly say. The Chief decided to ask his diminutive witness the question
again, but this time in a different way.
“Butterfly, are there two women or one woman?
You understand the difference?”
“’Yes Chief. I do, in fact,
know how to count, believe it or not. Now,
so you understand, Miss Elliot took Tommy and one woman spoke to me.”
“So there are two women?”
“’Yes, Chief Scott, that’s
what I said. You are listening to me, aren’t you? Two women. Miss Elliot is a woman too, I believe.”
“One woman is inside with Tommy, and where is
the other woman, Butterfly?” asked the Chief, his eyes widening with the
realization that he was finally onto something.
“She went back to Heaven, I suppose.”
Once again Butterfly answered in a way that had
the Chief frustrated. Slapping his forehead in desperation, the Chief stood and
looked around at all the effort and work being directed toward locating the
Elliot boy and his religion teacher. He looked down into the eyes of a very
unapologetic Butterfly.
“And you expect all these men and women, who
brought all these tools and all these trucks, to believe you, Butterfly? You
think you saw him enter the house with Miss Elliot and now some other strange
woman is also helping you?”
“Of course not, Chief. I don’t expect them all
to just believe just me. I expect them to believe because it’s true.”
And the moment Butterfly finished speaking to
the Chief she removed the front part of her scapular from under her shirt. She kissed
the image, placed it back under her shirt, and set back into the thick of the
crowd to look for her mother. Surrounded
by people much taller than she, Butterfly seemed to be completely swallowed up
by the multitude of limbs, feet, crutches, and legs all attached to the workers
and support people now occupying every square inch of Foster Street. Dodging in
and out of the way of the variety of appendages, Butterfly grabbed hold of a
pant leg here, a skirt there and, like a little hairless chimp swinging through
the vines, navigated through the throng of helpers. For a moment completely disoriented,
at long last, Butterfly spotted her mother’s yellow khakis.
Butterfly’s parents, standing back to back, shoulder to shoulder,
frantically search the horizons for her. Adults, some taller than others and
all looking exhausted, was all they could see. At seventy-six, Velma Klatca was
the Daylight Detective of Pepperell. Velma’s fluorescent pill hat was almost
impossible to miss. Lewis Lund, always in his construction clothes, would never
be mistaken for anything but a heavy equipment operator. Tracey Enzzio, town pharmacist,
practically slept in her white medical coat, some say. The broad shoulders of
John McNabb displayed the look of a man who had helped one too many people in
Pepperell. Feeling a pull on her pant leg, Butterfly’s mother looked down from
the horizon, somewhat annoyed by the interruption, only to find her daughter
looking up at her with a two-teeth missing smile.
“Please
Butterfly, promise me you will stay by my side! Your father and I have been
worried sick.”
“Did I do something wrong?” asked Butterfly, nervously
nibbling a fingernail.
“No, you didn’t,” her mother quickly replied,
hugging Butterfly tightly, with warm tears rising in her
eyes.
Arms crossed,
scowling, and stomping her foot, annoyed by her inability to see everyone
working on entering that house, Butterfly once again left the safety of her
mother’s arms and edged closer and closer to the front of the crowd. Drawn by
what she believed was simple curiosity, the pint-sized soon-to-be Communicant
moved closer to the front door that, mysteriously, seemed to shine with some
strange inner light. Pulling her way to the crowd’s innermost ring, Butterfly noticed
the slightest sliver of light around the door jam. Fixated on the light,
Butterfly Jones, in a daze, walked slowly past the rescue workers and onto the
front stoop.
“Oh,
dear God! Someone please stop her!” yelled Butterfly’s mother, in a voice so
powerful it muted all other sounds around her. Too far away to stop her
daughter, the mother’s panic was picked up by another woman, much closer to
Butterfly on the stoop directly in front of the door.
“Butterfly, if you walk into that house you
understand that it’ll break your mother’s heart, don’t you?” the woman began,
cautiously approaching the little girl.
“Besides that, now that you know walking into
that house will pain your mother and father greatly, that is something that you
will have to confess to Father Bob.
Think about it. You will not be honoring your mother, Butterfly. The fourth
commandment, remember?”
The woman certainly sounded sincere and
convincing. Nevertheless, Butterfly Jones was so determined that had Pope
Francis himself walked up to her and asked her to turn around to the safety of
her parents would have been unable to convince her to do anything but what was in
her heart.
Placing
her hand on the doorknob, Butterfly heard a uniform gasp from the onlookers, then
an ear-rending shriek that seemed to crack the sky, sending flocks of birds
fluttering from the rooftops in a panic. Shouts,
yells, screams, howls, cries, yatters and yaps all blended into a cacophony of
pleads, begs and supplication as Butterfly opened the door and took a step.
Police, agents, responders, and firefighters all rushed to the open door to
grab Butterfly. No sooner was she within the grasp of a responder than
suddenly, she was simply not there.
All anyone could report was that they saw the
last shred of Butterfly’s white dress disappear inside the house and the door slam
shut behind her.
Suddenly
surrounded by darkness everywhere, Butterfly strained her ears for
the slightest sound, but heard only the soft rushing of blood behind her ears.
She stretched out her hands in search of something solid, but felt only cool,
soft wind against her skin. Furthermore, she was surprised
at just how dark it was. She could’ve sworn, just moments before, from the
outside, that the house’s windows were missing too many slats for it to be dark
on the inside. Nonetheless, the dark was no ordinary darkness, but a blackness
dripping with gloom. She couldn’t say how she knew,
but she sensed a cold hatred, darker than the darkness itself, emanating from
just inches in front of her. The feeling was unsettling and, wrapping her
hands around her bare arms, Butterfly felt the flesh breaking out in goose bumps.
Even
the room itself now carried with it an alien silence, blackness
beyond blackness that blotted out even that pinwheel of colors that always
dance behind closed eyes. The room was absent of any
light at all. Yet, somehow, Butterfly Jones was absolutely certain that the
Evil, threatening energy had moved. To the slightly built girl, it felt as
though the ominous entity was directly to the right of the front door—the same
door she’d willingly entered moments before. Oddly, Butterfly believed she could
hear a serene melody played on a harp, and was enchanted, not afraid, but
suddenly charmed by the Darkness.
Something overwhelming stirred inside Butterfly, tempting her to get
closer to the Wickedness hiding in the corner.
She was
drawn to something sadistic and fierce that created a desire inside her to
taste, if even for a moment, the sweetness of some Dark, fiendish fruit. The
smell of ripe strawberries, so sweet she could taste it, filled the black air
everywhere. Then the rich, distinct taste of chocolate chip cookies suddenly awakened
her taste buds. Spellbound, she inched toward the Darkness in the corner.
“Please, don’t move from me whoever you are.
Stay there,” whispered Butterfly. “I am coming to you.”
Moving
closer and closer toward the Darkness Butterfly Jones abandoned her reason for
being in the room—to help Tommy Ellison. All she wanted was more of the
buttery-sweet taste. Small beads of
sweat begin to appear on her forehead. Quickly those beads become rivulets of
moisture running freely downward. Soaked up by the t-shirt she wore under her
lace dress, it was only when a drip landed in a place most unexpected that
coincidence became destiny.
Finding its way past a variety of clothing obstacles, Butterfly’s sweat trickled
down onto her scapular. Divine intervention played its part. Whatever the
reason, the now wet cloth produced a burning sensation so painful that
Butterfly was suddenly forced to reach for the red-hot scapular. Butterfly quickly
pulled it from under her dress, and as she did so, she felt the lure of the
Darkness by the door begin to subtly diminish. The smells, so
clear and enticing just moments before vanished without a trace.
Once
in her hand, the holy cloth that only moments before seared her skin was now
cool and soothing to the touch. Unable to see the sacred fabric, Butterfly
gently caressed the scapular, rolling it back and forth between her thumb and
index finger. As she does, the mint toothpaste she used hours before slowly
replaces the scrumptious chocolate chip cookie flavor she pursued. The odor of
rotting timbers and urine fills Butterfly’s nostrils, replacing the fragrance
of sweet strawberry preserves she’d drawn in with enthusiasm. As if awaking
from sleep, Butterfly, again sensing the Darkness, gently but deliberately moved
away until she could no longer feel its enticing pull. Energized by the thought
of finding Tommy, Butterfly turned her back on the darkness and called out to Tommy
with a clear voice.
“Tommy, are you in here? Please, answer me. Please. It’s me, Butterfly.
Are you OK? Can you hear me?”
Straining her ears for any sound besides the
thumping of her own heart, Butterfly can feel
Wickedness moving from its lair in the corner and headed where she knows not.
Nonetheless, by way of following the appalling odor she senses that whatever or
whoever it is has chosen to move. Exasperated at first then unexpectedly
infuriated, grunting in frustration, she felt her fists clench as
anger rose in her chest, Butterfly had had her fill
of all the moving, morphing, and theatrics of this lurking Darkness. Angry, she
acted before thinking, using language till now foreign to her.
“Now, at this instant, as part of the flow of
what God has set in motion, I call upon you, I challenge you, I command you
Darkness, in the name of God, His Son, Jesus the Christ, and the Spirit that
guides and lights the way for us, to show yourself in all your fullness now. Do
you hear me? —now!”
In reply, she heard only the pounding of her own heart.
Sensing something revolting no more than the thickness of a toothpick
away from her face, she felt its breath roll down her neck. The breath is warm—nearly
hot—and with a thick, sharp smell, like rotting fruit on a muggy
summer’s day; like the time her family’s septic tank burst and flooded the
backyard. For the second time, Butterfly doubted her
daring and boldness in coming into that house alone. Then
a second wave of stench washed over her, a putrid
amalgam of decaying flesh, vomit, and human excrement, growing stronger or weaker
depending where Miss Butterfly sensed the threat was in that moment.
“Tommy?” Butterfly called out tentatively in a
faint voice. “Please, answer me. Are you there?”
Stretching
her hands out in front of her, Butterfly began awkwardly groping her way
through the dark rooms. Hands flailing, she
felt her foot meet something solid, but what was it? She gasped, eyes widening
in fear. Forcing herself to kneel and reach out a hand, she grasped first a
tennis shoe, then a pant leg and, finally, felt a nose, hair, and ears. Butterfly
screamed at what she believed was Tommy Ellison
“Oh God! Tommy! What did they do to you?”
Resting on an old, iron-framed bed left over
from tenants long gone, on a paper-thin mattress supported by rusted coils,
Tommy peered out at Butterfly from beneath a well-worn blanket pulled up to his
nose. Chains, with several feet of slack, held Tommy’s ankles to the corners at
the foot of the bed. His reddened, startled eyes darted to the right. From that
corner by the door Miss Elliot, the butter-wouldn’t-melt-in-her-mouth First
Communion Teacher, walked out under a beam of light finally entering through
the ceiling.
“Surprise!” crowed Miss Elliot. “Butterfly, you
little piece of shit.”
“Miss Elliot?”
“I’ve waited quite a while for this moment,
Miss holier-than-thou. Forgive my bad manners. Let me introduce someone else to
you. He’s been taking care of Tommy while we waited for you. He’s dying to meet
you.”
Nicholas Herzberger, the former priest, the long dead pedophile priest, emerged
from the shadows wearing his formal clerical dress, complete with French cuffs.
Herzberger was well over six feet tall, razor thin, and his long, drawn face was
whitish, highlighting his pasty complexion. Lighting a filterless cigarette, he
looked to Tommy before dramatically blowing out the match. There was more light now, much of it coming
from the tireless efforts of the first responders to cut through the exterior
walls. Despite nearly a full company of responders using acid, hydraulic Jaws
of Life, and sharpened axes to break through the walls, they had little to show
for their effort. It was as if some
invisible, impenetrable dome formed around the house was protecting all its
inhabitants.
Nicholas Herzberger, flicks the cigarette onto Tommy’s bed; it smolders
as Tommy’s eyes dart between Miss Elliot and Herzberger. Then Herzberger nods
toward Tommy. Immediately, and still horizontal, Tommy begins to ascend, rising
from the bed, tethered to it only by the chains around his ankles. The young boy comes to a stop, hovering nearly
three feet above the now glowing blanket below.
“We’ve never met either little girl,”
Herzberger creeps slowly, catlike, across the half-rotten
floorboards toward Butterfly until his face hovers inches
from hers. His putrid breath makes Butterfly gag. She turns her head to the
side and takes in purer air.
“Now, I
suppose you’re wondering what this is all about, no? Well, let me break it down
so a simple little pig like you can understand. You have something that I very
much need. Something you’ll happily hand over to me in a moment, of your own
volition. That something is your scapular. But it is the why, the why—always
the why is what people demand to know.”
Butterfly stands firm and locks eyes with
Herzberger. A thumb’s length separates the two frozen expressions of Butterfly
and the ghostly Herzberger.
“Many, many years ago, on this very spot, you
little animal, a woman of great significance from where I originate, your Miss
Elliot, was identified as demonic, hung and burned. It was such an ugly scene
really, with the smell of burning flesh, a baby, not yet born, burning, the
smell wafting out to the onlookers and inhaled by your disgusting ancestors.
That’s the why!”
“I don’t understand why you have to hurt Tommy
though, if it’s just my scapular you want. Now, if you promise Tommy will be OK,
Miss Elliot can just have this stupid ole scapular. Deal?”
“"Puer Satanae amisso Deo denuo renatus
fuerit. Sed inter spiritus beatae arma Romani Pontificis.’ Do you know
what that means, piglet?’”
“No, I don’t.”
“‘A child of Satan, lost to God, will be reborn
again. But only between the breath of a Pope and Blessed Mother’s arms.’ You possess that key, in cloth, around your
neck. That child, spawned by me, will again find life, as it almost did all
those years ago. Now, do exactly what I say. Place the scapular around the neck
of my bride, Miss Elliot.”
“OK. But it won’t mean anything, because you
didn’t spit and swear on it.”
“What-did-you-say-to-me? ‘Spit and swear?’” demanded
Herzberger, now furious. “Now, the scapular and Miss Elliot! The longer you wait,
the more Thomas will suffer for your delay.”
Wearing only his underwear, Tommy remained floating above the small
flames that had begun rising from the embers from Herzberger’s cigarette. At
Tommy’s ankles, just above where the chains are fixed, the skin began to roll
up, exposing bloody, raw tissue. Tommy screamed and cried in a high-pitched squeal,
turning and twisting in the air as the smoke from the flames scorched and
blackened the raw flesh. Her poor friend’s anguish was too much for Butterfly.
She tried to cover her ears but her arms were as stiff and unbending as
pencils.
Tommy gazed down at his failed helper, and, removing
her scapular, Butterfly cupped the holy cloth in the middle of her hands.
“Stop it please! Please stop hurting him!” she
screamed, tears pouring down her cheeks.
******************************************************************************
Outside,
hundreds and hundreds of curious Pepperell townspeople gathered, some to offer
help. Boys Tommy’s age carried cardboard boxes filled with freshly made
sandwiches, and distributed them to anyone hungry. Older girls carried freshly
iced bottled water for the workers, while others poured hearty mugs of newly
tapped apple cider. From the farthest ring of the crowd, the townspeople of
Pepperell, all the way to Pleasant Street two blocks away were responding to a disruption,
a commotion of some sort that moved with confidence through the multitude on
Main Street. Never stopping, the force formed an invisible “V,” pushing the
crowd aside as it navigated the corner, heading due south on Foster Street.
This powerful dynamism came to a sudden stop. Then, just as oddly as she once
appeared on the streets of Pepperell, Miss Suboleo stepped under the yellow
police tape. Locating the first important looking, uniformed person she could find,
Miss Suboleo walked directly up to a Massachusetts State trooper and read his
nametag. The trooper was talking on his cell phone, wearing a pained look of
concern.
“You,
Sergeant…Williams. Who’s in charge here?” she asked.
“I withdraw my question. So Sergeant, who
should I tell to stop all this nonsense so I can go inside?”
“Lady, look, ‘m not sure what cult you’re with
but, neither man, God, nor beast is getting inside that house. Guaranteed. Now,
other side of the yellow tape, please.”
Refusing to budge, Miss Suboleo stood firm as
if she hadn’t hear a word the big trooper had spoken. Sergeant Williams was clearly taken aback by her
presence. Looking down at her, Williams found himself mystified by this confrontational
woman dressed in blindingly white silk clothes: silk pants, white shoes, and a
blouse with a train like a wedding gown’s that flowed freely behind her without
ever getting soiled or dusty. Miss Suboleo placed one finger on the bridge of
her nose and considered her next sentence.
“Yes…I see….”
“You see what, lady? And I’m not going to ask
you again to move,” the big sergeant replied.
“It took me a moment but, Sergeant Williams—Gary—things
here are almost under control—or they will be soon. Completely. Now, you will
tell your captain over there that, clearly, you are not feeling well. You will
drive home and help Donna with your daughter. April is sick, very sick and she’ll
remain that way for three more days. After that, Gary, I believe she will be
fine. From Wednesday on, April will bring you and Donna years and years of
happiness. Do you understand what I just said?”
“Then
you tell me how could you could possibly know nothing three minutes ago and
now, now you seem to know everything about me and my family? How is that
possible, lady? You worry me. I want to see some ID, and keep your hands where
I can see them.”
“The ‘how’ is never really that mystifying,
Gary. It is always the ‘why’ that people want to know. O.K., we’ll do it your
way. In seven seconds you’ll begin to feel nauseous, sickly, and you’ll break
out in a sweat. Now, 4-3-2-1.
Gray’s knees begin to buckle. He caught himself
on a State cruiser at the last minute.
“Not feeling all that well, are you? There is
your Captain and now you know what to say. Get on with you and, oh yes, stop
and get some milk, too.”
Looking determined now the task was finally complete,
Miss Suboleo made her way to the front door unimpeded. She stopped and turned back
to issue one remaining order. “Gary, you’re buying milk, just milk. No need for
cigarettes since you just quit, Gary. And no cheating, you hear me?”
The big
Sargeant stood, eyes wide and mouth agape, as Miss Suboleo, her white robes
flowing but never touching the ground, glided past everyone and onto the three
steps leading to the front door.
This
ghostly, translucent apparition passed by the rescuers. Just as Butterfly had
done hours before, Miss Suboleo placed her hand on the rusted front door knob
and turned it. No one reacted as she entered the house. Sergeant Williams could
only shake his head in disbelief. . With ax in hand, a rescue worker, one of
the three working on the door, passed the massive Sergeant. Williams grabbed the
exhausted woman by the arm.
“Why didn’t you stop that woman before she went
into the house, huh?”
“No one went into the house. What woman are you
talking about?” asked the rescuer.
“The woman in the white gown. She passed right
by you on the porch. You didn’t see her?”
“How many hours have been on?” she asked
Williams. Williams’ eyes searched the crowd for the woman. The rescuer grabbed hold
of his face, pulling it low again to meet hers. “I’m talking to you. You done
more than sixteen straight?”
“No, you’re right,” said Williams. “I need to
go home. I can see the Captain from here. I…I do need to go home.”
Mary didn’t
have to wait long for her eyes to adjust to the sudden shift in light. Finding
herself on the other side of the door, she kept her gaze fixed on the drama
before her. Like a big cat ready to take down animals that sprint for survival,
Mary had her eyes on the weakest of the four, Tommy, floating above the others.
Mary, still with her brilliantly white train following closely behind, made a
beeline for Tommy. From young Butterfly’s perspective, the view was quite
different. One moment she saw four
people, and then, suddenly, there were five. This Mary, it seemed, could be
anywhere and nowhere at the exact same moment. Without warning Mary was standing
by Butterfly’s side.
“You
need to decide if you really want to give that to them or not, Butterfly,” Mary
asked a much-startled Butterfly.
Butterfly shrieked, seeing Mary suddenly appear. Hand
over her heart she calmed herself until she felt ready to resume. Then, her hand over her heart, she mimicked what she had seen older
people do when they were frightened. Calming herself, she felt ready to resume.
“You
really scared me, you know. Please don’t sneak up on me again. Who…who are you?
And how did you get in here?” Butterfly
asked with a wry half-smile. “Are you one of them?”
“No
sweetie. I’m here to take you home.”
“Like
Hell you are!” burst forth from the pasty white, defrocked priest.
Mary moved a few steps closer to Herzberger and
his bride. The corner of Herzberger’s lips rose into a sneer at the newest
arrival. He sized her up and down. “You couldn’t put me away before, you skank,
and now you think you’re God Himself and will finish a job you screwed up
before? You and this little blob of excrement, eh?”
Mary
carefully pondered what she was about to say to Herzberger. “No, no I don’t
think I’m God—but you certainly do. Yes, it did take me a while; I’ll grant you
that. But you knew I’d find you eventually. You can’t possibly conceal the
stomach-churning stench that comes from you. Now, I have my instructions.”
The woman in white turned her back on the Devil
and focused solely on Tommy. No one moved or uttered a word as the boy, still
suffering, floated back onto the bed. Looking askance, Mary twirled back to
Satan and his bride, Miss Elliot. She fixed her angry gaze on her nemesis and,
for the first time, Miss Elliot and Herzberger, the Satan were perceptibly
nervous, agitated in a way that seemed to grow more recognizable with each
passing moment,
“Now,
mark my words and listen carefully to every word. I will not repeat myself,”
Mary advised Herzberger and Miss Elliot.
“Am I supposed to somehow be afraid of you and
your shallow little periculum?” the Devil asked in a voice that rose as he spoke.
“No, I don’t expect you and your girlfriend to
be frightened. I do expect you two to be returned to Hell shortly though.
Listen to me: Both children are walking out of here fully restored. And you and
this poor excuse for a morph, well, as I said, I do know where you’ll be having
lunch in a short while.”
Mockingly,
the Devil slowly clapped his hands, applauding Mary. “Congratulations. You
found me. Wow, I can only imagine the great difficulty that entailed. Oh, I nearly
forgot. You lowered the little piece of dung back onto his soon-to-be deathbed.
But from where I stand and our history, such as it is, I’d say you’ve exhausted
your little bag of tricks.”
Herzberger turned, standing directly beside Butterfly, enraged by the
delay Mary’s presence had caused him. Mary stood at an equal distance to the
other side of Butterfly. After all the screaming and shouting, the silence now had
Butterfly nervously twirling the ends of her hair. Butterfly considered the room: the broken and
aged furniture, Tommy, eyes closed and breathing deeply, and Miss Elliot, eyes downcast, her face
relaxed and eerily serene. The quiet was suddenly interrupted when the Devil
himself, Nicholas Herzberger, turned his fury and rage on Butterfly.
“I ask
you, But-ter-ball,,.” Herzberger began in a long, slow drawl. “Would you like
me to resume where I left off on little Tommy? I am going to assume that you,
being such a good little girl, don’t want to see what I have in store. He still
has a great deal of life left in him. But I’ll tell you what. He’ll
experience pain like never before. It is completely up to you. His life is in
your hands.”
Butterfly looked toward Tommy, sleeping so
peacefully. Still clutching the scapular,
Butterfly looked to Mary for reassurance or help, anything to tell her she was doing
the right thing. For her part, Mary said nothing, her face bearing an untroubled
look. She appeared detached from the conundrum before Butterfly.
“I never did like this old scapular anyway.
Always feels scratchy on my back. It’s silly for me to give it to Miss Elliot. Why
don’t you just take it and give it to her? She’s your girlfriend. Why must I do
it?”
Hours before, Butterfly Jones was up at first
light, ready and dressed for her important day. Now, this gifted girl, the top of
her class, appeared more than willing to sacrifice some old piece of cloth
blessed by Pope Francis in exchange for the life of her best friend. The
Devil-priest ordered Miss Elliot to move closer to Butterfly.
“I want you directly in front of this little dog,
so she can place the scapular directly over your head.” Miss Elliot, no longer resembling
the fresh-faced first communion teacher, moved as she was told.
“Now, I want you, Tommy’s little slutty friend,
to place the scapular over the shoulders of my mother-to-be and arrange the
front so it is directly above her heart. That should not be too difficult for a
perverted little primate like you. I am going to count to three, Butterfly, and
if you hear me say three, the next sound you’ll hear, one to linger forever in
your memory.
“Look, I told you I don’t even want it. But you
want it. So here, take it.” Butterfly shouted angrily, moving from between the
two women to place the cloth directly into his palm. Instantly, Butterfly heard
a sound like bacon sizzling in a heavy pan, and then breathed in a smell so
powerfully putrid that when the stink of hissing, blistering flesh reached her
nose, she immediately fainted.
Stunned,
Herzberger staggered toward Miss Elliot. “Get this thing off my hand! Now! Now,
do you hear me?” he screamed at her, but, still in a sort of trance, the woman walked
toward him at glacial speed. All the while the Satan-Herzberger, now writhing
in agony and uttering loud, anguished screams, struggled to pull the scapular
off with his teeth.
“Wake her up. Now! She can remove it. Wake
her!” he once again screamed to Miss Elliot. But there was no need to wake Butterfly,
who was opening her eyes on her own, placing her shirt over her nose to
block out the thick stench.
“You little lying bitch. You knew exactly what
you were doing all along, didn’t you?”
Butterfly, now wearing a smile for the first
time all day, moved toward the Devil-priest. “Here, I take it back.” Rather
than removing the blessed cloth from the scorching, searing palm of Evil’s
hand, she reached out and grasped his hand firmly, intent on holding it with a
white-knuckled death grip.
“What are you doing? Let go of my hand, you
little maggot.
Mary’s eyes, immediately attentive, grew as
wide as saucers. Still, she hesitated to help Butterfly. Like a rodeo cowgirl
caught on a bucking bull, Butterfly bucked and swung in circles around the Evil
One—but never let up her death grip. Finally, sensing the perfect moment had
arrived, Mary now crept closer to the bucking Butterfly. Firmly holding
Butterfly’s free arm, Mary stared directly into the eyes of Evil.
“I am sure you have heard the chapter and verse
from Matthew, 18:20: For where two or three have gathered together in My name, I am there
in their midst."
At that moment, Mary grabbed hold
of Butterfly’s arm. As she did, the clatters
and clangs coming from the Devil shook the walls,
thundering and screeching in Butterfly’s ears. This
time it was Mary’s turn. She removed her own scapular, placed it directly on the
forehead of the Evil One and declared: “For where two or three have gathered together in My name, I am there
in their midst. The Lord is now with us.”
As if shot from a cannon, the front door flew
open, allowing Father Portrais and Cardinal Sean to be the first ones through.
Outside, the rescuers ran to the door to see what caused it to suddenly open.
Townspeople stood in shock to see the Cardinal and Father move past everyone
and into the semi-darkened house,
“Here!” Mary yelled to make
herself heard above the turbulent gusts encircling everyone and everything in
the room. “Take hold of my arm and do not let go. Father, you grab onto the
Cardinal.”
Now with four believers and two scapulars
imprisoning him, Satan’s yelps grew even louder as he weakened. Awakening from
her dazed stupor, Miss Elliot took hold of her Master. Immediately, everyone in
the room experienced a warmish slime, the Evilness, the pure power in the Evil
One, increase a hundredfold. Susan McCarthy, Director of the Pepperell Senior
Center, entered the room, followed by an assembly of octogenarians ready to do
battle. Twelve in all, including three women carrying heavy black skillets. Without
being told what to do, Susan and her troops locked arms, forming a human chain that
stretched out the door. Next was Paul
Palmer, owner of the Groton Exchange and two-foot-long dreadlocks. Paul, always
the true gentleman, at first lightly took hold of one of the old men but was
instantaneously tossed away like a bag of chips against the wall. Determined
not to let it happen again, the Rastafarian, using both hands, grasped hold of
the man’s arm. Behind Paul, his son Ian was screaming at his father to free up
one arm so he might be a part of the chain, too. The sturdy John McNabb grabbed
Ian. John’s wife Cathy took hold of hands that had helped so many over the
years. Determined to make the chain as strong as possible, Deb Spratt, Head of
the Lawrence Library, locked arms with John McNabb.
Next came Al Somma, followed by the Dressel doctors, Brian and Jennifer, moving the human chain
around the corner of that house on Foster Street. Sprinting to be next were Joe
and his wife Ann. Mike Murphy, Slurpee in hand, set down his drink and joined
the chain. From outside the house everyone listened to the cacophony of demonic
cries the Devil-priest was emitting each time someone joined the chain.
As the moments ticked by, more and more of
the Pepperell townspeople volunteered their services and bodies to the human
chain. The Evil One and his bride grew weaker, dropping to their knees their,
shaking violently from side to side with each new addition to the corporal
chain. With Butterfly’s scapula still glued to Herzberger’s palm, and the holy
cloth belonging to Mary still embedded onto his forehead, the thrashing and
whirling of the two Seducers for Sin. Then, like a piece of movie film held too
close to heat, the Satan Nicholas Hershberger and Miss Elliot began to burn and
slowly dissolve from their hearts outwards until, poof, two shreds of sacred
cloth floated gently to the floor.
In the end, the human chain of concern and
compassion, formulated solely from townspeople of Pepperell, reached not just
out the door, but encircled the house completely. The line of love grew and
grew, snaking down Foster Street, onto Main Street and ending at Donalyn’s
supermarket. When the final tally was counted, 286 individuals had joined in to
form the chain, Inside that house on Foster Street, Miss Elliot and Nicholas
Hershberger ended their stay in Pepperell that October 31st and
dined elsewhere that day. Opening his eyes and wondering how he came to be
where he was, Tommy Elliot could only smile to the others in the room. Missing
from his view was Miss Suboleo.
******************************************************************************
Later that day, Sunday, October 31st,
Butterfly Jones, scrubbed clean and ready to receive the body of the Lord for
the first time, stood with her classmates outside Our Lady of Grace Catholic
Church. As the parish bell tolled, signaling the advent of the First Communion
Mass, Mary, also known as Miss Suboleo, tapped Butterfly on the shoulder.
“Here, I believe you left this behind,” she
said, handing Butterfly her scapular.
“Oh thank you. I never thought I’d see it
again.”
Miss Suboleo was now hardly
recognizable with her stylish red hair in ringlets, poking out from beneath a Sinamay hat with a point d’esprit veil. She was naturally
beautiful. Wearing a simple black silk dress subtly gleaming with silver blooms,
she appeared even more so. To Butterfly, she was almost angelic.
After a
moment, Miss Suboleo removed herself to the back of the
gathered crowd.
“Wait, please. I don’t even know your name.
What is it?”
“Why…it’s Mary, of course.”
The organist began playing. Two lines of
children, boys on one side and girls on the other, began marching into the
church to receive their first Holy Communion. Last in line and almost inside
Butterfly quickly pivoted and called out to Mary.
“Mary? Mary what? What’s your last name?”
“Magdalen. I’m Mary Magdalen, sweetie.”
Inside
Our Lady of Grace Catholic Church, Father Portrais stood before a packed
congregation, fully vested in his celebratory white vestments. Hands folded in
prayer, Butterfly Jones gazed up at the life-size corpus of Jesus Christ. Directly to her left, in an alcove, stood a
statue of the Virgin Mary. Nearby, another woman was kneeling at the foot of a
crucified Jesus.
“Let us begin in the name of the Father, Son
and Holy Spirit,” Father Portrais began.
Only Butterfly Jones knew the true identity of
the kneeling woman—whom everyone else called Miss Suboleo.
THE
END
No comments:
Post a Comment