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Authors: Robert Cormier

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DEATHS OF 22 CHILDREN
HAUNT AFTER 25 YEARS
;
BARSTOW MAN HARASSED

By Les Albert
Telegram
Staff

On a quiet street in Barstow, Mass.—25 miles north of Wickburg—a man lives whose days and evenings are shadowed by a tragedy that occurred 25 years ago.

The man’s name is John Paul Colbert.

The tragedy was the collapse of the balcony in the venerable Globe Theater in downtown Wickburg on Halloween afternoon, which took the lives of 22 children.

Cries of anguish still resound from that disaster, piercing the memory of countless people, including survivors and relatives of the victims.

Among those cries is a question that still echoes a generation later:

Does Colbert share the blame for that disaster?

Colbert, who was 16 years old and a part-time usher at the time, struck a match in the rubbish-strewn balcony, setting it afire moments before it crashed down as the innocent children below waited for a Halloween magic show to begin.

The official investigation cleared Colbert of any blame, citing the decaying condition of the
balcony, which had been unused and neglected for many years.

Although he was never charged, accusations continue to plague Colbert’s life. Through the years, he is reported to have received harassing telephone calls and hate mail, plus occasional death threats, including a bomb threat to his home.

Colbert has maintained a strict silence on the abuse. Whenever he is questioned, his exact words are: “No comment.”

His son, Dennis, now 16, the age of his father at the time of the tragedy, continues in that tradition. “No comment,” Dennis Colbert said this week when asked about his father’s dilemma.

Meanwhile, friends and relatives of survivors still …

“Thank you, Denny,” his father said, putting down the newspaper they had both been reading.

“For what?” Denny asked, his mind still dazzled by the parade of words on the printed page and his own name in black type.

“For ‘No comment,’ for respecting what I have been doing.”

“I wanted to show my respect, Dad.”
But I’m not you.
They looked at each other for a long moment. Then, Denny asked: “Will this story start everything all over again?”

His father shrugged. “Who knows?”

“The reporter didn’t use our street address. Only Barstow.
Barstow has a population of thirty thousand people. We had to do a paper on it at school.”

“They have a way of tracking us down,” his mother said. She had taken the
Telegram
from his father’s hands and quickly scanned the story, after having refused to read it when the newspaper first arrived. “A sin,” she had said, “bringing all this up again. Why can’t they just write about the poor children, make it a tribute to them?” Then, looking at her husband: “Maybe we should go away this weekend …”

The telephone rang.

“We stay,” he said.

Denny dared to do what he had never done before. He put his arm around his father’s shoulder, and felt his father lean against him.

The telephone continued to ring.

 

N
ow, this moment: what he had been waiting for, standing on the corner, a shadow among other shadows, watching the parade of kids trooping by in the guise of ghosts and pirates and figures from the movies and television, Barney and Aladdin and one small girl in a bulging golden dress over her coat to protect her from the chill of the evening.

He spotted no one who resembled the monsters from the bus stop, simply because the children passed by in orderly fashion, no pushing or shoving, shepherded by someone older. Barstow was strict about Halloween trick-or-treating. One hour, between 6:00 and 7:00
P.M.
, and then home to empty all those paper bags of candy.

Denny glanced at his watch. Almost seven. Breathless, expectant, he checked out cars as they passed, his head swiveling like someone watching a tennis match. The neon
lights of the 24-Hour Store down the street danced nervously in the air.

He had lied to his father about where he was going tonight. Told him that he wanted to take a bus to the library, where a Halloween program in the young adult room was being held. He saw his father wince, as always, at the mention of Halloween. Then, shrugging in resignation, he said: “Have a nice time.” But typically, could not resist adding: “Be careful.” Denny was both dismayed and elated to find out how easy it was to lie.

Without warning, from his blind side, a car pulled up, headlights sweeping the sidewalk, catching him in its glare. Blinking, he strained to see the driver, but saw only a dark shadow at the wheel. A dim hand beckoned, and he stepped toward the car, an old car, four doors, black, like a car in an old gangster movie. He pulled the door open.

The small bulb in the ceiling cast a feeble light as Denny slipped inside. Hand trembling with excitement—and nervousness—he closed the door, turned toward the driver and, astonished, saw Dave at the wheel. Without his roof, his skull inflamed, crazy tufts of hair sticking up all over, eyes deep with sadness, tight lips hiding the false teeth.

“I’m sorry,” Dave said. “I didn’t want this to happen. Lulu’s my sister …” As if he had rehearsed saying these words.

A scent of perfume came from the backseat, as if someone had opened a fancy magazine. Hands slipped around his eyes, blinding him, soft flesh against his cheek, then that sultry telephone voice in his ear:

“Hello, Denny. I’m so glad we’re finally getting together.”
Then, urgent and commanding: “Drive, Baby, drive.”

The apartment they entered was cluttered, a confusion of cardboard boxes, clothing piled everywhere, bare walls pockmarked with ugly holes where pictures once hung. A transient look to the place, as if nobody had ever lived there or it was about to be abandoned.

Denny sensed that Lulu had not accompanied them into the house but he was reluctant to look behind him. She had remained in the backseat during the short drive to the apartment. Her hands had slipped from his eyes to the back of his neck then to his shoulders, touching him lightly.

Denny had managed to stay calm during the drive, simply because he trusted Dave. He was puzzled, yes, and nervous. Very nervous. His palms were moist, his thoughts in a whirl with a lot of questions—hell, a million questions—but he told himself to take it easy. Dave said nothing, concentrating on driving, his knuckles pale on the steering wheel. Lulu hummed a tune Denny did not recognize.

Dave now led him through a dark hallway to a closed door. Opening the door, he motioned Denny to step in, not looking at him, eyes downcast.

The first fingers of apprehension plucked at Denny. He had read somewhere that members of a jury never looked at a defendant when they were bringing in a guilty verdict, and Dave avoided Denny’s eyes as he directed him
to sit down in a straight-back kitchen chair. Except for two other identical chairs, the room was unfurnished, an unshaded bulb in the ceiling filling the place with naked light. Denny sat down tentatively on the edge of the seat, and turned, looking for Lulu, who was not to be seen. Finally turning to Dave, he was shocked. In the harsh, merciless light, Dave’s face was red and splotchy, an ugly sore near his mouth, his eyes fevered and bloodshot.

“The Big One is back, Denny,” he said. “Recess is over and the bell is ringing.”

A clumping noise caused Denny to turn, and he saw a woman entering the room, leaning on an aluminum walker as she made her way painfully toward him, one deliberate step at a time.

“Hello again, Denny.”

That voice. Lulu’s voice. But this could not be Lulu, this woman with legs in steel braces, old, not old like a grandmother, but not young, skin tight on her cheeks, gaunt, disheveled black hair tumbling over her forehead in untidy bangs.

“Sorry to disappoint you, Denny,” she said, the voice still husky but tinged with sarcasm now.

Denny’s chest tightened; his throat constricted. He knew he had been fooling himself about Lulu, had known that she could not be the girl he had envisioned during those afternoon calls, but he did not expect someone like this—old and disabled, with bitterness pulling at the edges of her lips and a cold glitter in her eyes.

He looked toward Dave, not so much to see him but to take his eyes away from this woman who was Lulu.

“What’s this all about?” he asked Dave. “Why am I here?”

But Dave didn’t answer him, looked at Lulu instead.

“Let’s not play any games, Lulu. If you have to go through with this, then do it right away.”

Do what
? Denny didn’t really want to know the answer to that question. He just wanted to get out of there. He wasn’t tied down, figured he could get up and leave at any moment. But some instinct told him it would not be as simple as that.

“Your father,” Lulu said. “
That’s
why you’re here, Denny.”

“What about my father?”

“Your father killed me. When that balcony crashed down. I died at the Globe Theater twenty-five years ago because of him.” Did she say
died
? “He started that fire and the balcony fell and we died, me and all the others.”

“My father wasn’t guilty of anything,” Denny said. “He was never arrested. There was no evidence against him.”

“Cover-up,” she said. “You weren’t there. You didn’t hear the screams. You didn’t feel the pain. You didn’t die the way I did.”

A madwoman, Denny thought.
I’m getting out of this place.

He made as if to rise from the chair but had no will to do it, his body not responding to his urgency.

A cold, crafty smile spread across Lulu’s face. Harsh light glinted on the walker as she shuffled toward him.

“I don’t think you noticed the tiny pinprick in the car, Denny. A small needle in your neck as we drove here.
Takes about twenty minutes to do its little job. I’m an expert with needles. You learn a lot spending time in hospitals, and I learned about needles. This was a special one. Keeps your mind alert but puts your body to sleep for a while.”

She was right. He could not move. Or, rather, had no capacity to move. Wanted to, tried to lift his hands, tried to raise his body from the chair, but none of it suddenly seemed worth the effort.

“But no pain, Denny. I don’t want you to feel pain. I want your father to feel the pain, the worst pain of all. The pain of losing his son and knowing he was to blame. That’s the worst thing of all, Denny. Outliving your child …”

He felt doom descending upon him as the meaning of her words became clear. He knew now why he was brought here. For revenge—Lulu’s revenge against his father. He looked at Dave, seeking help, but Dave’s eyes were riveted on his sister, his body fragile, his hands clinging to his own chair, as if he’d fall if he had no support.

“What are you going to do?” Denny asked, trying to keep his voice normal, trying to hide the panic that streaked through his body, accelerating his heart.

“I’m going to be kind, Denny. I promised you no pain at all and I’ll keep that promise. But I can’t guarantee what happens after that. That’s the sad part—what happens after you die …”

“What are you talking about?” Dave asked, speaking the exact words Denny wanted to utter.

“I’m talking about what you’ve always wanted to know, Baby,” she said. “What happened when I died.
Now I’ll tell you: My body was still as a stone. No heartbeat. No breath going in and out of my lungs. Dead! Want to hear the rest, Baby?”

“Yes,” Dave said, rigid against the chair, eyes leaping with fever.

“Nothing,” she said, voice flat. “Nothing, Baby. That’s the horror of what happened to me. Worse than nothing! Becoming a blank! A terrifying blank! Unable to think and yet aware, knowing that I was a cipher and a zero. And, worst of all, my brain not working, only my awareness alive. That was the horror—knowing that I would be like this forever, for an eternity. No light at the end of the tunnel, Baby. No heaven and no hell. Or maybe
that
was hell, being a cipher in all that terrible blankness.”

As she talked, her face became a blank, her eyes unfocused, as if she were not standing there in the room but had gone far away, someplace else. Then, back again: “Finally, it ended and I was trapped under the balcony. Alive again. Thinking. My bowels gave way and I lay there in my stench and my terror until they rescued me. But the terror was not from being trapped in the Globe but trapped in that eternity of nothing …”

Denny saw tears on Dave’s cheeks, his face a mask of agony, mouth agape, his false teeth like small white bones jutting from his gums.

She did not acknowledge Dave’s tears. Instead, she looked at Denny with those black eyes: “That’s what your father did to me. To an eleven-year-old girl. Gave me a glimpse of horror, the worst horror of my life, worse even than these useless, helpless legs of mine.”

A small twitching of his foot and a sudden tingling in his right hand gave Denny hope just when everything had seemed hopeless. His limbs were coming to life again. Maybe he had a chance of escaping this crazy woman, after all.

Dave reached out to embrace her, but Lulu shrank away from him.

“There’s nothing out there, Baby. Now you know why I never wanted to tell you what happened. No matter what the priests or the ministers say, or those people talking about near-death experiences …”

“Maybe it was only a nightmare, Lulu,” Dave said.

“Poor Baby, always trying to make things easy for me.”

Denny could wiggle his toes. A cramp in the arch of his left foot was beautiful in its pain, signifying life and energy. His right arm felt as if insects were stinging it.

“If you want to make things easy for me, Baby, help me do what I have to do,” Lulu was saying to Dave. Then, swiveling toward Denny once more: “Now it’s your turn, Denny. To experience that terrible nothingness. Just a small pinprick and the beginning of sleep. Then nothing. Remember your father did this to you.”

Denny didn’t know where it came from, but a hypodermic needle suddenly appeared in Dave’s hand. Lulu held out her hand but Dave withheld the needle. “It doesn’t have to be this way, Lulu.”

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