The Story Until Now: A Great Big Book of Stories (44 page)

BOOK: The Story Until Now: A Great Big Book of Stories
12.86Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

In the next moment, they attacked. Uttering cries of hatred and revulsion, taking advantage of me in my weakened state, they marched on to me, crawling along my foreleg, heading toward my vulnerable face. They may even have thought to feed upon my eyes.

I cannot explain what happened next. Perhaps it was my pain and resentment toward these, my former brethren, perhaps it was only a sign of my metamorphosis; I only know that my pale flesh began to crawl and I rose, cracking my skull on the washbasin, nevertheless striking out, flailing, trying to scrape them off.

Landing in a cluster about my knees, they regrouped, and in the pause I tried to explain, to apologize, to beg them to recognize and accept me, but in the next second they attacked again. And so, goaded, I did what one cockroach has never done to another; I lashed out, first at Gloria, sending her flying against the baseboard; I could tell she was injured, but I was too angry to care. Then I squashed Sarah with my fist.

The others fled then, leaving me alone next to the basin, and as they left, a strange new feeling overtook me. I had for the first time power, and as I thought on the injuries the others had done me, this new power tasted sweet. Almost without effort I rose once more, coming quite naturally to my feet. Then, because it seemed the reasonable thing to do, I struck the faucet until water came and washed what was left of Sarah off what I now know to be my hands.

In the next few hours I discovered my kingdom anew. The room which I had always assumed to be the world was rather small, bounded on four sides by walls and filled with appurtenances which I gradually identified according to their functions. Experimenting with my joints, I applied part of myself to a chair. In time, remembering what I knew of humans, I took up some of the rags laid over the back of the chair and put them on my person, working my head and arms into a large, stretchy garment designed for that purpose, and grandly tying another garment around my waist.

Troubled, I went about the room again and again and again, finding at last an object with pictures on bits of paper bound together, understanding from the pictures that I had done something wrong and then re-garbing myself according to what I saw.

From time to time I would go back to the basics and if I saw so much as a sign of one of my fellows, I would poke at the crevices with my shoe.

I was occupied thus when there was a sound on the other side of the door and before I could gather myself to hide, the door opened and another human—a female—let herself into the room.

She spoke, and so complete was my transformation that I understood her. “Where’s Richard?”

Because I was afraid to try my voice, I answered her with a shrug.

“You must be one of his thousand cousins.”

I nodded. I was somehow comforted by her phrase; I had always taken humans to be isolated, and it made me feel somehow secure to know that their families were as big as ours.

“Well, when is he coming back?”

I shrugged again, but this time it did not satisfy her. She came closer, apparently studying me, and she said, finally, “What’s your name?”

“J-Joseph.” Even I was pleased with the way it came out.

“Well, Joseph, perhaps we can go out for a bite and when we get back maybe Richard will be here.”

I didn’t know why, but I knew I wasn’t ready. “I—I can’t do that.”

“Oh, you want to wait for him. Well, that’s your business.” She looked at me through a fall of red hair and for the first time I found hair attractive. She was soft all over and, inexplicably, that was attractive too.

“But I am—hungry.” I had not had anything since morning, when I found something behind the toilet bowl.

“I’ll bring you a hamburger,” she said. “If Richard comes while I’m gone, bring him down to Hatton’s.” She studied me for a moment. “You know, you’re not bad looking. But why on earth do you have your shirt buttoned that way?”

I will never forget what happened next. She stepped forward and fumbled with my upper garment, yanking it this way and that, patting it into place, and when she was satisfied she stepped back and said, “Not bad. Not bad at all.” In the next second, too fast for me but not for my heart, which followed her, she was gone.

How I exulted then! I whirled around the room like a spider, rejoicing in my many joints, knowing for the first time a certain pride in all my agile parts and the soft flesh that covered them, thinking that I would have the best of both worlds. I had been the largest and finest in the insect kingdom; now I would be the handsomest in the human world: a prince among cockroaches, a king among men. I spun and danced and celebrated my new body and then, in an orgy of release, I went back to the corner by the washbasin and with one of Richard’s shoes I battered all the antennae which came at me from that miserable little crack.

“You, Ralph. Hugo. Now I understand. The lesser will always hate the great.”

I was talking thus when a strange weakness overcame me, so that I had to stand suddenly because my beautiful joints had betrayed me and would not bend. Instead I stayed on my feet next to the room’s one window, looking out on the world below and thinking that once I had eaten, my strength would return and I would go out into it, a man among men.

And I would take the female with me. Now that she had seen me she would have no more use for this shabby Richard, who lived in this tiny, wretched room. She and I would find a nest of our own, and then … The thought dizzied me and I backed into a soft place set on four legs and because I could no longer remain upright without a tremendous effort I settled back in the softness, lying with a certain degree of discomfort on my back.

I was lying, so, noticing a certain strangeness about my mandibles, when a male, probably Richard, opened the door and came into the room.

In the next second he saw me lying in what I assume is his bed and some new transformation must have overtaken me for the face of which I was so proud did not please him at all, nor did my shape, lying among his bedcovers, nor did the limbs which I waved, calling out for him to stop screaming and wait …

I can hear his voice downstairs now, screaming and screaming, and I hear a female bellowing the alarm and I hear the voices of many men and know that they are armed. They are on the stairs now with chains and clubs and to my fear I find that large as I am I can move again, half this, half that, and I make my way to the basin and try to fit beneath it, and I cry out, pleading with my brethren to let me join them.

“Hugo, Arnold, let me come back.”

I am trying desperately to make myself small against the baseboard but part of me still protrudes from underneath the basin—I can feel the air against my naked, hardening carapace. They have broken down the door now, they are upon us.

Hugo, Arnold. It’s me.


New Worlds
, 1966

On the Penal Colony
 

Notebook found in candy bin

General Store,

Old Arkham Village, Arkham, Mass.

Friend, if you are reading this, I am already dead. I, Arch Plummer, am giving this notebook to Hester Phyle with instructions to burn it as soon as she knows Gemma and I and our friend are safe. The truth must out. Unspeakable secrets fester here. Atrocities. If the three of us don’t make it, Hester knows what to do. The horror must be exposed!

If we make it, Gemma and Laramie and I will hold a press conference and blow the lid off this place. If we don’t, Hester has promised to leave this where you will find it. Whoever you are, the future depends on you.

If you pulled this out of the barrel in the General Store instead of Olde Arkham™ candy corn or packaged pemmican or arrowheads or that cornhusk doll your daughter wanted, then Gemma and Laramie and I are already dead. I beg you. Call
The Times
and
Hard Copy
now. Leave no stone unturned. Contact the network anchors whether or not they can pronounce the language. Bring
The National Enquirer.

*

 

“And on your right note the authentic eighteenth-century architecture. Every house in Old Arkham Village is more than two hundred years old! Now count the windowpanes. Every window is 12 over 12.”

“Mom, can we leave now?”

“Quit hitting your brother!”

“I want to watch
TV
.”

“ …
paints made from natural substances. Blueberries. Buttermilk. Now, the village tavern. Our colonists will be happy to answer any questions you have.”

“Harry, that one is smiling at me.”

“It’s his job. Don’t get too close.” Dad lights a match and winks. “Watch this
.”

The “colonist” rips off the flaming wig. “Eeeowwww!

*

 

You come for the day and you say “Ohhh, quaint.” You have no idea what’s really happening just below the surface in our idyllic colonial village, deep in the Massachusetts hills. Underneath the mobcaps. Underneath the earth. You’re all malled out so you bring the kids, drop your candy papers and Ziploc sandwich bags, deface the property, take your snapshots, and go. You cart in foreign guests to impress them with your nation’s heritage—eighteenth-century houses and shops; oh, wow, these things are
old!
Or you bring Gran because she is old.

Or something shakes loose inside you and starts rattling around. You get hungry for your past. Not necessarily your past. A past. Any past. Some commercial visionary resurrected all these old buildings and moved them here to supply an early American past for all of you late Americans to enjoy even though you never had one. At twenty bucks a pop, it’s your past too.

So you pack up the kids and throw grinders and a six-pack of brewskis into the cooler and come rolling our way as if this is some kind of Colonial Mecca, God’s own solution to two problems: crime and rootlessness. Well I can’t tell you about rootlessness—who cares whether your great-greats hit Plymouth Rock or Ellis Island or rolled in hanging from the axle of a truck? But I can tell you a thing or two about crime.

*

 

“ … scheme for a model prison.” Bullfinch Warden hocks; the sound is heard clear to the back of the tram. “As our country’s leading penologists you can see what we have accomplished here. Forget license plates. Forget telemarketing and Readers’ Clearing House as revenue producing activities for prisoners who turn back the proceeds to the state. We are at the apex here. The prison of the future. Convicts as capital
.”

*

 

Crime? You want to see crime? This place is a crime. Maggoty food and floggings in the picturesque village square, torture so deep that you never hear the screams. Murderous trusties, sadistic screws. But what do you know anyway, you stuff home made gingerbread into the kids and buy them the thirteen-star flag and you lead them onto the scaled-down replica of the
Bonhomme Richard
and you go, “Oh, wow, these are my people.”

You trudge through the landlocked whaler, humming to the canned gabble on the Auditron, and no matter where you came from, you’re all, like,
these are our forefathers
. You get to feeling all-American even if you just landed on a raft. Correction. Early American; you ride Paul Bunyan’s blue ox and you bong your knuckles on the genuine authentic half-sized Liberty Bell and if the screws aren’t looking maybe you try to scratch in your initials, but only a little bit, and you feel as American as hell.

And, wuoow, you think, what a cool solution to America’s problems. Punishment and restitution, all in one place! Symbiosis. Patriotism and profit. Plus rehabilitation, us hard-timers in tricorns or aprons and mobcaps answering your stupid questions about beef jerky and square-headed nails. And we are so fucking polite! You push a button and the National Anthem plays and the replicated flag goes up over the to-scale replica of Fort McHenry. Your heart swells up like the Barney balloon in the Macy’s Day parade and you’re like, America, wow!

*

 

“Note the presentation. It’s based on a revolutionary new concept. It’s not what you’re doing, it’s what it
looks
like you’re doing that shapes society. Hence the ideal village. Happy villagers.”

*

 

Happy! What do you care about us? What do you know?

You see us sweating in our period costumes and you think, fine. Hardened criminals working their way back into the fabric of American life. How heart-warming. When they get out they’ll be all-American, yes!

Other books

A Million Miles Away by Avery,Lara
Hotel Ruby by Suzanne Young
Passenger by Ronald Malfi
Ride Hard by Evelyn Glass
Channel Blue by Jay Martel
SEALs of Honor: Mason by Dale Mayer
The Lady Who Saw Too Much by Thomasine Rappold
Bet on Me by Mia Hoddell