At Fear's Altar (13 page)

Read At Fear's Altar Online

Authors: Richard Gavin

Tags: #Fiction, #Horror, #Short Stories (Single Author)

BOOK: At Fear's Altar
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Everything these strange and sibilant winds brushed past seemed to awaken, as though some fell intelligence, a contagion of awareness was being bestowed.
A realm of idealization; complexities draped in blunt images so crude and yet so apt.
Dobbs, a man who’d never thought much of anything beyond his own bodily survival, understood it all.
And what this vast realm told him was that its pure form needed to hunt, to rend all and everything that would encumber its flow of awareness, of becoming, of consciousness-in-flux .   .   .
Dobbs opened his eyes and saw the stars so far above him. He knew that he was back on the Earth, so frigid and familiar, but part of him must have been lagging behind in the dream-world, for he could still hear the hiss-howls all around him.
And there were shapes visible, but only fleetingly. The instant their presence registered with Dobbs these hazy forms swiftly melted down and down. Night’s silence was restored.
The first morning rays warmed Dobbs’s face with enough strength to wake him but, mercifully, not enough to pain him. It was actually a pleasant way to be woken. The pain in his skull had waned slightly, but now his belly hurt.
He rolled onto his side and carefully removed the lid that pinioned his handkerchief. He was scared to look at the tin, afraid that his makeshift condensation trap might have failed. Dobbs tilted the can and saw water. Not much, scarcely more than a swallow, but to his grateful eyes it was a veritable cold spring. Dobbs felt very grateful.
The collected moisture was warm, but Dobbs could feel it trickling down the inside of his parched throat like precious rain slaking a long-dead river bed.
His relief was fleeting, for he knew that this meagre libation would not sustain him, not for another full day in the Plain. With no barrel cactus from which he might draw water, no animals he might slay, no shade whatsoever, Dobbs knew he would be cooked by dusk. He heard his stomach growl and counted that a full four days had lapsed since he’d tasted food. Continuing to move was his prime concern, he had to make his way out. But Dobbs was also aware of the fact that he needed some form of sustenance if he was to survive the next forty-eight hours.
He reached blindly for his boots and felt something else resting above his head.
Aft first Dobbs didn’t believe that the bag was really there. He pulled it near and tried to keep his mounting joy in check. His brain was reeling with possibilities of the bag’s contents. It was not his saddlebag, but Jack’s. And inside it Dobbs found a wedge and a half of salt pork wrapped in cloth, a biscuit, and a canteen still half-full with water.
Weighting the bottom of the pack was an even dozen gold nuggets, big glittering chunky ones.
For the first time in his life Dobbs thanked his Maker. The how and why of this miracle mattered little to him. He was tempted to gobble everything but wisely rationed his provisions. Flavour burst in his mouth. The food was so succulent he whimpered and moaned as he chewed. He then lay back and examined the gold nugget. With this chunk alone he would never again be wanting. It was only a question of getting back to town, holing up for a while until the coast was clear, and then heading back east to Pearl River. If Emmett and Jack did survive, the plan was to head there. Assuming that hadn’t been a lie to lure him in, Dobbs would find them there and exact his particular brand of justice.
It was almost amusing, the way in which his situation had reversed in no time at all. Less than an hour ago Dobbs was convinced there was only a woefully small chance he would survive the hike back to Pearl River; now he was relatively well fed and slaked, and had riches in his fist.
He’d grown so content that he began to harbour an anorexic hope that the Plain might be blessed with a flash-flood today. He tried not to let the sight of the cloudless blue sky crush him.
Dobbs was not so grateful for the pack once he realized just how ill he felt. It was still early morning, yet he was exhausted. He felt even more feverish than the previous day and, compounding this, waves of dizziness were passing through him. The ground beneath him was spinning too rapidly, wrenching him further and further off course. Eventually this sensation became too much and Dobbs hunched over and vomited.
In the back of his mind Dobbs felt a queer shame for losing his precious food, but as he glanced what he’d brought up, he was horrified to discover that the puddle was predominantly blood. That and several small heaps of wet black sand.
The lining of his throat began to burn. Trickles of blood began to seep from his nostrils.
“Aw .   .   .” Dobbs whimpered, “aw, Christ.”
He tried to run, unsure of where he could run to, or even fully grasping just what it was he was trying to flee from. He could hear the gold chinking in his pack but no longer had any regard for its value. He let it slip off his shoulders and come down.
Then Dobbs himself crashed down. He howled into the Plain, watching as the blood from his nose and the inside of his mouth made stippling patterns upon the canvas of midnight granules.
It took a good long while before Dobbs readied himself for his demise. He could already feel the world shrinking from him, slipping into pale and hazy simulacra of the nature he knew. The sky was a smear, the wind as distant as his ancestors.
His passage had begun, or so Dobbs believed. But then he heard it; a promising sound, a mere wisp, but it grew louder. Dobbs had been a farmhand since he was able to stand and could identify the sound of a running horse at a hundred yards.
Lifting his head was a monumental effort, but Dobbs endured it just to have the luxury of his final image being a noble one: a mare in a free run.
He heard the clatter of its hooves before he actually saw the animal. It was charging roughly in his direction. Dobbs couldn’t tell if it was his horse or not. It could have been Emmett’s, or Jack’s. It was without a rider and its tread was, to Dobbs’s eye, peculiar. It was lilting to one side. The creature was not quite maimed, but certainly injured.
The desperation in the animal’s whinnying and snorting made him heartsick. Dobbs pushed himself up, fell once, but tried again. He called to the horse with what was left of his voice, made clicking noises with his cheek.
It was a grey. Alabama. Emmett’s horse. Dobbs slapped his thigh, urged her to come to him.
Alabama hobbled, her head bucking up and down, then side to side as if she was trying to shoo flies. When he drew near enough to her, Dobbs froze.
The horse’s grey fur was mottled with black ants. They were pushing up the animal’s legs, coiling about her neck and head and eyes. Dobbs went to brush them off, then saw that they were not insects but thousands, perhaps millions, of grains of black sand. The granules crept up from the ground where they had been resting. As these waves of gritty shadow passed over the animal they left rawhead in their wake.
As if driven by some collective soul or insect-like hive-mind, the sulphurous earth of the Plain moved over the beast in ravenous cascades.
Alabama no longer whinnied, and in no time was nothing more than bones, and then the bones were buried and the Plain smoothed itself into placid and well-sated plateau. Dust to dust.
Dobbs screamed, tried to at least. His legs faltered as the ground beneath him pulled down with such force that he was actually shucked from his boots. He sloughed forward and did his best to stay balanced.
His ears were now filled with a soft hushing sound as the unnumbered grains pushed forward in an elegant, inexorable sweep. The dark wave drew closer, doubling in size, tripling, quickening its pace.
As the landscape just ahead stretched away, it revealed the ossuary it had created. The bones curled up from the dark sand; brilliantly white, picked clean of every scrap of tendon and flesh. Perhaps the Plain was boasting to Dobbs of its spoils, or simply toying with him.
The bones were of every size and description, the gothic architecture of every manner of bird, beast, and human being that had ever breached the Plain. Judging by the number of bird skeletons, Dobbs wondered if the Plain blasted itself up like an oil geyser to snatch vultures and crows from the heights they assumed were untouchable. He wondered where his companions were among all this morbid rubble.
Dobbs was sinking. The Plain had already set to work on the exposed delicacy of his feet.
The black sand swarmed over his calves; piercing the skin just enough so that it could absorb a mere pinhead droplet of blood. The grains that had been patiently entering Dobbs’s nostrils and his sleep-slackened mouth began to push their way out. By the time the hissing wave engulfed him, silting in his final shriek, Dobbs was almost grateful.
The sun glared emotionlessly as packs and bones were occulted beneath the surface.
After a time, a precious harvest began as the Plain pushed gold nuggets up above its surface where they rested like golden fruit of temptation.
The evening gloom was hoisted by the tinny peals of children giggling. The residents of Pearl River, every last one of them, had come out of their homes to bask as the first drizzle spilled out from the graven sky and was whisking across the village.
The McArthurs were bartering over a five-pound half-sack with Otis Till on the porch of his feed store. The group of them stopped when they felt the cool magnificent mist. And when the mist became a downpour Mrs. McArthur joined her daughters in the road as they danced and whooped. Their feet, stripped of their re-treaded boots, left impressions in the mud as if to mark this auspicious evening.
Otis felt himself, almost autonomously, turning to face the dying sun, which was gorgeously smothered by rainclouds.
Mr. McArthur stepped out from beneath the warped awning and removed his hat. He moved forward until he was sure Otis could see him. Mr. McArthur’s mouth hitched into a half-smile; an expression of bittersweet relief, of cautious optimism.
Otis nodded at him once then looked ahead.
Only Enuma Elish
I
’d never performed a single good deed in my life until I met Katrina Claxton. It’s not that I was a
bad
person, or even a selfish one really; it’s just that I’d always preferred to keep my fellow species at arm’s length. I certainly didn’t wish anyone harm, but I had no interest in helping them either. I lived alone and worked at a job that prevented all but the most essential conversation. Most of my relatives, including my parents, were deceased, so as I grew older I became increasingly reclusive. I wouldn’t say I was happy, but my insular lifestyle at least made me feel secure. (Some consider being even-keeled to be purgatorial, but I’ve always preferred a clockwork existence.)
Then, one random afternoon, on impulse, I extended a helping hand. And the fallout of this lone action flung this world into chaos.
At that time I was living next door to the aforementioned Katrina Claxton; an elderly woman who was almost as great a shut-in as I was. I was new to the neighbourhood, having just bought my house the previous winter. Prior to that I’d been dwelling in a one-bedroom apartment, but I found having neighbours pressed in on either side of me almost unbearable. I grew tired of forced chitchat in the elevator or the laundry room. I wanted my own space, and since a cabin in the sticks was out of the question until I could afford to retire, I settled for a little wartime cottage on a boring side street. I didn’t actually see the old woman who lived beside me until well after the April thaw, and when I did, it tore my heart out.
I was walking home from the supermarket when I spotted a frail figure with a shock of white hair. She was straining to push an ancient-looking manual mower across the weedy hell of her front lawn. The teenaged boy who lived on the opposite side of me was skateboarding up and down his driveway with two of his friends and, perhaps just to make the scene that much more awful, the boys were laughing at her.
As I said, I’ve never been an ambassador of goodwill, especially when I was their age, but I like to think that even in the F.T.W. phase of my youth, I would have had the decency to lend a hand in a situation like this.
I didn’t bother moving to the lighted crosswalk, but instead made a beeline for my front door. By then Katrina was leaning on the mower handle as though it were a crutch, wiping her brow with a waded tissue. She smiled when she noticed me.
“Warm,” she rasped. It really wasn’t; merely fifteen degrees or so.
“Hold on,” I called, stepping inside just long enough to kick off my leather loafers and replace them with a battered pair of runners. I plunked the groceries on the kitchen table on my way to the garage.
When Katrina saw me wheeling out my gas-powered mower, she nearly burst into tears.
“Oh, you don’t have to,” she said. “I’m sure I’ll manage. Chores take twice as long when you get to be my age.” She laughed and I smiled. My grandmother had died when I was only nine, and I’d never realized just how much I missed her until that very moment.
“It’s no trouble,” I replied. “It helps me relax,” which was true. At that time I was working in the invoicing department of a magazine distributor, so any hands-on labour was a remedy to number-crunching.
“I wouldn’t have bothered with it,” Mrs. Claxton explained, “but a man from the city came by today and said there’d been complaints. Did you know there’s a bylaw against letting your grass grow too long?”
I did but said I didn’t so the old woman wouldn’t feel foolish. She introduced herself and I did the same. Then she shuffled toward her backyard, dragging her squeaking mower behind her.
The lawn was a son of a bitch to mow down. Every time my mower stalled from being weed-choked, I would scowl at the giggling punks down the road as if they were somehow to blame. When I finally finished, I spotted Katrina peering at me over the warped planks of her gate. She insisted that I join her in back for some lemonade. She dragged back the misshapen gate and I followed her around the side of the house.
“Bylaw man can’t say anything about back here,” she boasted. “Nobody’s got to look at it but me.”
When I saw the condition of the back yard, I wondered why the old woman seemed so proud. It was so unkempt that just being there made the skin on my arms creep. The grass had sprouted above my knees, and everywhere there grew strange freckly weeds. A rusted-out shed lilted against a drooping length of clothesline; the only barrier that distinguished the old woman’s property from the field it backed onto. The manual mower had been dropped in the middle of the lawn; the most recent castaway on this island of refuse that also included garden hoses, trashcan lids, broken mason jars half-filled with stagnant rain, a bicycle frame.
Katrina gestured toward a pattern of cement slabs; a patio in only the most rudimentary sense. The plastic chair I lowered myself onto felt gritty and its wobbly legs made me nervous, but the glass Katrina handed me looked clean, and the lemonade it contained was cold and tart.
She prattled on for several minutes about how cramped the suburbs were becoming, the current cost of gasoline, human interest stories from the news.
“Are you married, Mr. Jude?” she asked abruptly. When I didn’t answer right away, my hostesses put a hand to her mouth. “I’m prying, I’m sorry.”
“It’s okay, you’re not prying. No, I’ve never been married.”
“I only asked because, well, I know this sounds funny, but you seem like a very neat man. Most men only get that way through marriage.”
I chortled a little. “I inherited that from my mother, I suppose.”
“You keep a tidy house then?”
I nodded.
“Maybe you can give me some pointers.” Katrina exposed her ill-coloured teeth with a broad grin. “I was married once. But my husband passed away many years ago now.”
“I’m sorry to hear that.”
“We had twins,” she added proudly, “a boy and a girl. They’re all grown up.”
“Do you see them often?”
She shook her head. I could see the pride bleeding out of her. Sadness was its swift replacement.
“Now I’m the one who’s prying,” I said. This made her laugh. She helmed the conversation back to generalities until I finally rose and thanked her for the lemonade.
“Thank
you
for visiting,” she chirped. “Can’t remember the last time I had a guest.”
The next day I found myself wondering about the woman a great deal. When had her husband died? Had she raised her children singlehandedly? Where were her kids now? Wouldn’t she be better off in a smaller, more manageable abode? Because I knew none of the answers, I invented my own theories, all of which painted Katrina in a tragic light. I began to pity her, and pity is dangerous. Compassion, I suppose, is a good thing, because you empathise with another person and maybe want to help give them a leg up. But when you pity someone, you envision them as something less than human.
After work that day I wandered down the “the Dregs,” which was a massive iron bin holding hundreds of magazines that had been rejected from shipments for various reasons. Employees could take their pick for free. It was a company perk. Believe me, there weren’t many. I fished out some titles I thought a woman Katrina’s age might enjoy:
Time, Ellery Queen, Home & Hearth.
I toyed with giving her a copy of
Lawn & Garden Care
but feared she might not appreciate the joke.
After my bus ride, I made my way to her house.
I flicked up her mailbox lid, exposing several weeks’ accumulation of fliers and bills that was bulging up from the box.
“Well, hello!” called the familiar voice from beyond the screen door. “What a nice surprise! Come in, come in.”
She flung the screen door wide, her expression one of elation. I stepped into the old woman’s home. Mrs. Claxton shut the inner door, sealing out the fresh afternoon breeze from her must-choked house.
“I thought you might like these,” I said, holding up the fan of periodicals.
“Oh my!” She took them and tossed them atop of a cluttered boot rack without even glancing at the titles. “Let’s go into the living room.”
Excluding vermin, I failed to see how anything could actually live in the room my hostess led me into. Whatever furnishings the room did offer were interred beneath hills of dirty laundry, half-emptied drinking glasses now fuzzy with dust, broken and grimy-looking bric-a-brac. I glimpsed one of the skewed towers of newspapers that flanked the archway. The yellowed headline announced the passing of an actor who’d died several years before I was born.
“Looks like you already have a lot of reading material,” I said.
“You can never have too many things to read,” was her retort. “One day I’ll find the time to read them, but I always find myself drawn to the same books over and over again.” She gestured toward the fireplace mantle, the only portion of the living room that was not submerged in chaos. “These ones here are my favourites.”
Though I was too far away to read the spines, I could see a gold-leaf cross glinting on one of them. I swallowed hard.
“Are you a religious man?” she asked. I set my teeth against the anxiety that her question stoked inside me. Considering that even hollow forms of chitchat make me uncomfortable, I would opt for thumbscrews or the rack over being asked the Big Important Questions about the Big Important Topics.
“Yes and no,” was my tepid reply. Mrs. Claxton nodded.
“Well, I was never much of a believer until I found this book in an old box upstairs. I guess whoever lived here before me must have left it for me to find.”
I was taken aback when Mrs. Claxton did not reach for the Bible. Instead she tugged a slender volume, no bigger than an address book, off the mantle.
“Have you ever read the
Enuma Elish
?”
I think I shook my head, though I might have just stood dumbly in the archway.
“It tells how the universe was created. It comes from ancient Babylon, but it’s about the here and now, too. I tried finding meaning in those other religious books, but only
Enuma Elish
gave me the answers I needed.”
“That’s .   .   . that’s good,” I mumbled before regressing a step or two into the foyer. “I’m running late, I’m afraid.”
“Take this with you!” She thrust the book toward me. “I have other versions stashed all over the house.”
I reluctantly accepted her offering of
Enuma Elish
, and even lied about how I would read it soon.
“Don’t be surprised if you see someone familiar when you do,” Mrs. Claxton chirped.
I was never so happy to be outside as I was that afternoon. I went home and drew the blinds in every room of my house, yet I imagined that the old lady’s eyes were studying me.
Going to and from work the next day was a covert operation. I peered out between the blinds before creeping out my front door. I took a different bus home and hopped my own back fence in order to slip into my side door. One never knew when the old loon would be puttering in her yard.
Later that week, Mrs. Claxton caught me on my stealth mission of taking the weekly trash to the curb.
“Well?” she cried. Her eyes were wide, sparkling with hope.
“I’m sorry?”
“The book, silly,” she said. Her expression dulled a little as she asked, “You did read it, didn’t you?”
“Oh, yes, of course.”
“And?”
Not knowing what else to do, I simply shrugged.
“The goddess of chaos .   .   . gave birth to twins? Sound like anyone you know?”
I stood stoic.
“Tiamat!” she blurted as she pointed at herself. “The goddess of chaos, the one who is torn in two by her son Marduk, the one who commands primordial water and winds .   .   . she’s me, silly, she’s me!”
“Okay.”
“You don’t believe me, do you?” There was rage bubbling beneath her voice. I took a step back. “But don’t you see?” she continued. “You’re the one who will piece me back together, who’ll bring me back. You’re the one who brings order after my chaos.”
I can’t even recall the response I sputtered out when Mrs. Claxton finished proving her insanity. Whatever words I’d come up with must have been appeasing enough, for I remember that the old woman and I parted on good terms.
After locking my front door and sliding the safety chain in place, I slumped against the wall, trying to centre myself. The encounter had managed to wrench me from the true. I needed to realign myself. Once the smog inside my skull had cleared, I vowed never to speak to my neighbour again. I even had the impulse to put my house up for sale.
Most of that night’s dinnertime consisted of me poking at my macaroni with a fork while I flicked through Mrs. Claxton’s copy of
Enuma Elish
. She wasn’t lying when she’d said that the goddess Tiamat bore twin children, though for all I knew Mrs. Claxton had no children at all and had simply fed me a lie that jelled with her cherished Babylonian myth. In
Enuma Elish
, Tiamat is a widow, just like Katrina, and she is indeed halved by her son, the god Marduk, who uses one portion of his mother’s cadaver to build the sky and the other to forge the earth.
I skipped to the end to see where I apparently came into the picture as Tiamat’s restorer, but I learned that the fifth and final tablet of
Enuma Elish
has long been lost to history. Whether Tiamat is ever rebuilt or avenges her murder will never be known. The fate of the world, it seemed, was a lacuna in a text, a gap, a black hole.
I set my alarm an hour early so that I could toss the
Enuma Elish
on Mrs. Claxton’s doorstep without running into her. Even crazy old ladies aren’t usually milling about at four A.M. As much as it pained me to shake up my life, I forced myself to stick to my remoulded routine in order to minimize my chances of seeing her.
It worked. The days tumbled past and into a summer so sweltering that, apart from work and errands, I never left the air conditioned sanctuary of my home.

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