Read World Made by Hand Online
Authors: James Howard Kunstler
People seemed to be running in all directions outside. More gunshots rang out. But at the center of the human maelstrom, near the foot of the exterior grand stairway, Elam waited mounted on his horse, calm as a drover, holding the reins of three other horses as well as a rifle hitched up under his arm. Several bodies lay strewn in the weedy grass. Then Seth emerged from the mob with a smoking pistol, leading Mr. Bullock's boatmen out into daylight for the first time in weeks. Tom and Skip struggled to assist Aaron Moyer, who was unsteady on his feet from sickness. A path cleared for them as Seth brandished his pistol and men scattered. Joseph launched himself onto his big gray, Temperance, while Tom and Skip helped get the weakened Aaron up behind him. Seth helped Tom aboard behind him. Skip mounted behind Elam. I followed on my bay gelding, Cadmus, giving Jake the stirrup to climb up behind me. Finally, all of us were double mounted.
More cracks of gunfire sounded. Gray puffs of smoke appeared up on the portico where they were shooting at us from behind the balustrade. Elam and Joseph answered these shots with several of their own. We wheeled our horses back around toward the elevated freeway. Seth raised his sword to hack at a man who attempted to grab his mount's bridle, and I thought I saw the man's hand separate from his sleeve in a gout of blood. I heard another shot much closer by and felt a bullet pass so near to my head it made a ripping noise in the air. Just ahead of me, perhaps twenty feet, a white cloud of gun smoke hung over a fat man with a red beard wearing dirty cream-colored pants held up with suspenders. I registered these details as I watched him level a pistol at me again and squeeze off another round. It was as if I was watching myself watching him, my amazement at being fired on was so great, and it all seemed to happen in slow motion. He was a poor shot and he missed the second time too. My wondrous detachment persisted as I reached behind, drew the big .41 out from my belt there, leveled it at the fat white target below the red smudge of beard and pulled the trigger. The report nearly knocked the gun out of my hand. My bullet took the red-bearded man off his feet and drove him backward like a rag doll against the dusty ground. His shirt and pants quickly turned red. I could hear him groan like a steer. Joseph yelled to follow him up the riverbank. We rounded the corner at Slavin's Hotel under the freeway and galloped up Commercial Row where the traders gaped at us silently from their doorways while the last shots, cries, and screams from Curry's headquarters faded into the distance.
We rode at a gallop for at least a mile, and then trotted for a long way until we crossed the Waterford bridge, where we had encountered the man beating his donkey on the way down. We dismounted there to rest the animals, which were foaming from exertion. Bullock's men fell into swoons of gratitude, saying that Adcock the jailer had promised that morning it would be their last day on earth. Tom Soukey, the captain of the Elizabeth, made noises about going back to Albany under cover of darkness to get the boat, but Joseph quashed that idea. In a little while we resumed riding north, to meet up with Brother Minor, who was waiting for us at the Raynor farm in Stillwater.
Except for Aaron Moyer, who was very ill, the other boatmen were happy to walk freely along the pleasant country roads north of Waterford. I walked for much of the way too, giving them turns on Cadmus. They didn't talk much, but they seemed keenly attuned to the sights and sounds along the way, as men would who had been locked up for weeks. We covered roughly fifteen miles, with ample rest stops, in five hours, making it over the last hill to the Raynor farm with the sun half lapped over the western horizon. Minor's horse and the donkey stood hobbled peacefully in the shrubby field where we had passed such a strange night recently. Smoke from a campfire ribboned straight up in the soft breezeless air.
Minor was extremely glad to see us when we rode up. He could barely contain his high spirits.
"Listen up," he said. "A momma n_ole, a daddy mole, and a baby mole lived in a hole in the ground up by yonder house. One day, the daddy mole poked his head out of the hole and said, `Mmmmmm, I smell bacon a'frying!' The momma mole stuck her head outside and said, `Mmmmm, I smell pancakes!' The baby mole tried to poke its head out of the hole but couldn't get past the momma and the daddy. `Dang,' he said, `all I can smell is mole-asses."'
Minor appreciated the joke more than anyone, of course.
Bullock's men obviously didn't know what to make of Minor. But he had caught several large pike and had roasted them up and fixed a pot of buckwheat groats, onions and fresh nettles to go with them, and boiled two dozen eggs that he'd traded for along the way, and that was all Bullock's men concerned themselves with. They ate like wild animals, and when the fish and eggs and groats were gone they asked for more, so Minor turned out pan after pan of corn cakes, which they ate with butter and honey. Aaron was able to choke down a few of them too, and the others said it was the first they had seen him eat in days. By then, the sun had set, while the air remained mild. Joseph brought out the whiskey bottle and passed it among us. Elam sang a song about East Virginia in a reedy, mournful voice, and Joseph sang a brighter one about fair and tender maidens, with Minor playing harmonica softly behind him. I wished I'd had my fiddle there. Shortly, Bullock's boatmen were snoring in the fragrant grass.
Joseph and the brothers discussed the attributes and shortcomings of various New Faith women, and which ones would be nice to "get with," and I didn't know whether this was their argot for getting married, or whether more casual arrangements prevailed among them. They teased Minor remorselessly about his interest in a girl named Zilpah, and Minor retreated into playing his har monica. They said that anyone who had been in the vicinity of Washington, D.C., as they had, seemed to have trouble bearing children. It concerned them that their community had so few. I told them that the same was true apparently of people who had recovered from the flu or one of the other illnesses that had visited us. They said a good deal of their prayer every day was devoted to asking God for children. I asked if it bothered them that their prayers weren't answered, and they said it must be God's will. Seth said God had decided the earth was overpopulated, and I asked how come he let it get that way in the first place. Seth said that God loved his children so much that he couldn't bring himself to cut back until all this climate wickedness started and then he had to do something to save the planet from overheating and killing every last living thing on it. I argued that the human race should have known it was in for trouble, at least we in the United States should have, given how insane our way of life had become. Minor quit blowing into his harmonica long enough to say that John D. Rockefeller and the Bush family had made a deal with the Devil going back all the way to the 1900s.
By this time, my head was swimming with whiskey and the others sounded like they were far gone themselves. We let the fire run down. It was a warm night. Smoke from the smoldering embers helped keep the mosquitoes away. I lay back against my saddle to gaze at the stars twinkling against the incomprehensible depth of space and eternity, reflecting that I had shot a man, probably to death, that afternoon and had been an accessory in the killing of Dan Curry and his secretary, Birkenhaus. And the others had killed at least several more. Could we even pretend the law still existed? Or was it something you made up now, as the occasion required?
The rest of our journey home would have been unremarkable, even pleasant except for a disturbing encounter on Route 4, the River Road, some five miles south of Starkville in midafternoon the next day when we came upon an old man driving an automobile. Yes, an automobile.
I had not seen a car in motion for years. This one was a Ford, the big Explorer model, the color of dull brass, with daisies of rust around the wheel wells and a broken rear window. It was creeping down the road slower than our horses might go at a moderate walk. The pavement on Route 4 was badly broken with potholes, and the driver was obviously steering around them with the utmost care. He came to a stop as we approached. His engine knocked, sputtered, and backfired.
"What you running that thing on, old-timer?" Minor said.
"Who wants to know?" the old man said. He might have been eighty years old given the wizened face beneath a stained and tattered baseball cap. "You pickers or regulators?"
"Naw, just regular folks," Minor said and flashed a big grin around at all of us. He'd been walking, leading Jenny and the cart. Aaron Moyer was up on Minor's horse, sitting straight in the saddle on his own now, feeling better after a day in the fresh air and sunshine. The rest of us soon formed a circle around the car. "Where you going in that thing, anyway?" Minor said.
"None of your damn business."
"Excuse me for breathing," Minor said.
"I got a firearm," the old man said.
"Well you should," Skip Tarbay said. "But keep the safety on. We're men of Union Grove."
"Far afield, ain't you?"
"Far enough, and coming home from Albany now, thank God."
"Is the mall still there?"
"I wouldn't know, sir. That wasn't the part we were at. Hope you're not aiming to go down there in your car."
"Nope. I just like to keep her running," the old man said. "You know, use it or lose it."
"Sounds like she's losing it," Minor said. "What's she running on?"
"Grain spirits."
"A waste of the taste, if you ask me," Minor said.
"I can't taste nothing anyway," the old man said. "And who asked you?"
"Must be uncomfortable driving that thing on this busted up road," Skip said.
"It's a damn sorry excuse for a state highway. The state won't fix it. How do you like that? The taxes we paid all those years and look what we got to show for it."
"Don't hold your breath waiting for improvements, old-timer," Minor said.
"We got a right to decent roads. This ain't the American way."
"The American way has kind of lost its way," Minor said. "Maybe you should get a horse."
The old man snorted scornfully and spat out the window onto the fissured asphalt. "This is supposed to be the modern age."
"The modern age went to hell some time ago."
"Is that so? Well I don't like it."
"It's a fact we all got to live with."
"You should have been around in the 1960s, boy. Hooo-weee. Gas was twenty-five cents and the roads were smooth as a baby's behind. You could buy good bread and ground round anywhere, and the TV came on when you felt like it. Now nothing's on when you want it."
"It ain't even on when you don't want it," Minor said, to everyone's amusement. "Do the home folks know you're out and about?" "They don't give a damn whether I live or die."
"You must be lonesome, then, old man."
"It ain't none of your damn business what I am."
"Have you found the Lord?"
"No, I ain't."
"You could find some comfort there."
"I'll pass, thank you."
"Why don't you try letting him into your heart?"
"I don't care to. I got this far without it."
"This far ain't nothing," Minor said, raising his voice shrilly. "What about the trackless eternity you're going to spend down in hell, old man, where the modern age is still going strong, waiting patiently for you to show up and sign back on? And you'll get there pretty durn soon, I imagine, from the looks of you."
"Are you crazy or something?"
"Hell no."
"Well, you talk like a goddamn crazy man."
"And I ain't drunk, neither. But if I was, I'd be sober tomorrow. And you'd still be a godless old sumbitch."
"Sonny, I'd put a bullet in your ass if I wasn't saving it for something worthwhile."
"And what'd that be?"
"You got more goddamn questions-get out of my goddamn way.
The old man put the engine back in gear and continued on, hardly giving Seth a chance to step his mount aside. He wove the car around a stretch of divots, ruts, and potholes and we watched him go, the very sight of an automobile going down the road a marvel, like seeing history come back to life. He had gone perhaps a hundred yards when we heard a little pop. I thought, oh no, he's gone and blown a tire, given how old they must have been, and how rough the road, but the car did not stop. It veered to the side of the road and then clean off the shoulder and into a shrubby field where it plowed over a series of poplar saplings before coming to rest with a crunch against the trunk of a mature black ash tree. Even so, the engine kept running and the horn blared. We hurried down to it.
The old man lay slumped against the wheel. Tom and I helped get him out. He had a gash above an eyebrow. We laid him down in the weeds-black-eyed Susans and Queen Anne's lace-and realized he was no longer breathing. Then we discovered it wasn't the crash that had killed him. Rather, his tattered flannel shirt was dark and sopping with blood. We ripped it open. Underneath he had a clean purple hole in his chest with a slightly raised doughnut of blue flesh around it, just over his heart. Minor rooted around the interior of the car and emerged holding the pistol. He examined the cylinder and said, "One spent shell, all right. Sumbitch done himself in. How do you like that?"
Joseph slid down off his horse as though he was suddenly all in a hurry and stalked over to Minor.
"Give me that damn thing," he said and wrenched the gun out of Minor's hand, and proceeded to cuff him across the head, driving the smaller man to the ground. "You think death is just another of your jokes," Joseph said. "I'm sick of it."
"I didn't have nothing to do with this-"
"You got to talk trash with everybody that crosses your path?"
"You think he kilt himself'cause I made a little chitchat?"
"Calling him a godless sumbitch! I got half a mind to strop you skinless."
"Just you try it!" Minor reached for the dagger he called the last resort. Joseph kicked it out of his hand and, using a move that he might have learned in the military, had Minor flipped over with his face pinned in the weeds, a knee on his neck, and both of his arms nearly dislocated, held painfully behind him.
"Ow, ow! Damn you, you're hurtin' me!" Minor said.
"I aim to hurt you," Joseph said. "If you ever raise up a weapon against one of your brothers again, you'll get hurt so bad you'll never recover. Understand?"
"Yes."
"Say you're sorry."
"I can't breathe!"
"I don't care about your comfort just now."
"Okay, okay, I'm sorry."
"I can't hear you."
"I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry. . ." Minor said. Joseph released his arms and his boot from Minor's neck, but Minor remained facedown. His body shook and he seemed to be blubbering. The Union Grove men turned away, in embarrassment I suppose. Elam and Seth eventually helped Minor back up on his feet. Jenny stood at the edge of the road in front of her cart blinking at us.