Copyright Ó # Txu1-009-024, Merlin
William Lessler
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be
used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without the written permission of
the author. Printed in the United States of America. For information address:
Front Street Press, 351 Front St., Owego, New York 13827. Library of Congress
Cataloging-In-Publication DataMystery on South MountainLessler, Merlin William FIRST EDITIONNovember, 2005
Edited by Lauren Massey
Published by Front Street Press351 Front Street
Owego, New York 13827
mlessler@stny.rr.com
Printed
by Carr Printing
Foreword – Sunday, June 20, 1954
She
stepped off the curb onto the path. It connected her street to Sally’s. She
hated this section of the neighborhood. Hated that it was not developed yet.
The mass of trees and undergrowth lining the trail scared her. Low branches and
blackberry shoots reached into the passageway, as though to grab her. She
thought of them as the elongated fingers of a witch. Her doll was cradled under
one arm. She dragged an overnight bag stuffed with miniature dresses in her
other. She was in a hurry to get home. Then she was struck! It was like a bolt
of lightning. One minute she was walking along, the next she was lying on her
back looking up at a clear blue, June sky. Tree branches swayed gently above,
but the hands that held her were rough. A stench of garlic and body odor washed
over her. She struggled to get up, but his grasp brought her down with a thud.
He mumbled behind a soiled kerchief that hid his face, “Shut up and you won’t
get hurt.” She squirmed free in a fit of panic when he shifted his hold to
unfurl a burlap sack. She took two steps and then felt her head explode. The
woods turned bright yellow, and then flashed to white. Her knees buckled; she
went down. She saw him above her just before the blackness took her away. He
was holding the sack with a gloved hand. How odd, she thought, to be wearing a
glove in summer. Then she was gone.
Chapter One - A Schoolyard Wake
Friday, June 18, 1954
Nick
Carns was twelve years old in the summer of 1954 when the mystery of South
Mountain swept through his hometown in upstate New York. It began during the
waning days of the school year, though its origin stretched back two decades.
Diane Palmer and Nick were alone in an isolated section of the school
playground, hidden behind a giant maple tree. He thrust a small silver box at
her in an attempt to startle and intimidate. She was a notorious tattletale,
constantly ratting out her classmates, no matter how slight their misdemeanor.
An “alphabet” belch, a tongue stuck out at the teacher behind her back, or a
concealed squirt gun were typical of the infractions “reported” by Diane. The
all-female academic staff at Longfellow Elementary had nearly had it with her
proclivity to tattle, though not one of them ever considered making her stop.
The information was too useful to their purpose - order and control. Nick was
eager to even the score; to make her pay for the hours he’d spent standing in
the cloakroom or staying after school because of her betrayal. Diane stared at
the tinfoil-covered box, her eyes as big as saucers. A nervous twitch pulsed
across her forehead. She knew the "Dead Finger" was inside the box.
She dreaded to see him open the coffin but her curiosity was too strong for her
to stop him or look away. It was her moment of glory. She’d be the first one to
see it from the girl’s side of the classroom. Nick slowly lifted the cover and
watched her rosy cheeks turn ashen. It lay silent, a pale twisted finger on a
fluffy bed of cotton.
"Blow
on it," he dared. Diane was stunned by the starkness of the
"corpse". She couldn’t catch her breath, let alone blow on the
finger. She began to squirm, crossing and uncrossing her legs like she did in
class when she got excited. Her squirm dance was often a prelude to a bladder
accident, an event Nick and the rest of the sixth grade class witnessed many
times over the years. She wanted to flee but orders from her brain weren’t
getting through to her legs. With nowhere to turn she gave in, leaned over and
gently blew on the necrotic finger. As her breath glided across the cotton bed
and engulfed the nestled body part, the dead finger rose from the white
batting, seeming to float above the tinfoil box that served as its final
resting place. The hovering finger did the trick; it ended her curiosity. Her
legs came back to life and she ran shrieking from the schoolyard to the
footbridge across Ross Creek, where her pig-tailed classmates were skipping
rope.
In
her haste to get away she crashed head-on into a small, wiry woman, who was
struggling with two heavy bags of groceries. The woman caught Diane, preventing
a disastrous collision, but spilled the contents of her sacks in the process.
"What's the matter with you? You act like you've seen a ghost,"
scolded the woman as she helped Diane to her feet and started refilling her
bags with the scattered cans of soup, vegetables and dry goods. "I did! It
was the ghost of a dead finger," sobbed Diane as she made her escape on
wobbly legs, too embarrassed to glance back. Had she, she would have been
shocked at the look of horror that swept across the woman's face - a look that
seemed to come directly from hell.
"Did
you see it? Did you see it?" the
girls excitedly asked when Diane finally made it to the safety of her clique.
"Yes! It was horrible, just horrible! So is that Nick Carns!" It was
all an act. She wasn't the least bit frightened, not now. She was filled with
pride and feelings of superiority. After all, she was the first girl in class
to view the monstrosity he'd brought to school that June day. One by one her
fellow rope jumpers took a turn in the makeshift funeral parlor behind the
maple tree. Not a single one noticed a small kerchiefed woman watching from the
other side of the schoolyard.
Chapter Two - Origins
Nick
walked home from school with his head in the clouds. The half-mile trek passed
in a flash. He was delighted with the reaction his corpse evoked at school. Up
until a week ago, he was the one who was scared to death of the dead finger, so
named the first time he saw it when his mother revealed it to him five years
earlier. Since that initial introduction he'd spent many nights in terror,
unable to fall asleep without pulling the covers over his head, a protective
shield from the dead finger his mother said was stored in the attic above his
bedroom. He could picture it in its little coffin, rising and falling, as his
breath ascended through the trap door above his dresser into attic space,
giving it life. He was thrilled with the power the finger gave him at school.
He now understood and could almost forgive his mother for the cruel prank she
played on him. She claimed she had no idea it affected him so severely, until
his sister Kathy complained that Nick snuck into her bedroom in the middle of
the night and slept on the floor at the foot of her bed, "YET AGAIN!"
That was a week ago. Nick was forced to admit he was terrified of the dead
finger, that he went to bed in fear. If he woke up in the middle of the night
it scared him so badly he fled from his room - either to the hall or Kathy’s
room. His confession brought tears to his mother’s eyes as she learned of the
terror she'd unknowingly unleashed on him. It had all been a joke. But she now
knew, it had gone too far.
She
loved practical jokes, and even more, she loved scaring kids. She almost always
went over the line, unable to end a prank until her victim was at least teary
eyed, if not downright sobbing. She'd always had a problem knowing when to
stop. She blamed it on a nervous temperament caused by the public school
system, an unenlightened system that forced her to write with her right hand,
ignoring that she was left-handed. She claimed the stress made her high strung
and nervous and impaired her ability to realize when she’d gone too far. The
story of the dead finger, which she revealed to Nick when he was seven, was an
extreme example of her impaired judgment. The corpse in the box that she used
as a climax to her narration was a boldfaced lie. It wasn’t that of an injured
railroad worker as claimed. It was her index finger, pushed up through a hole
in the bottom of a small box surrounded by a wad of cotton taken from a bottle
of Bayer Aspirin tablets.
As
the story went, she came into possession of a severed finger when she was
fourteen. It happened in a rail yard near her home where she and her six
siblings often played. A rail worker's hand was crushed under the wheel of a
freight car. She stood in the shadows of an abandoned work shed as the
ambulance took the injured man away. A freight car wheel had slipped off a jack
and crushed his hand. Four fingers were severed and fell to the stony ground in
the process. With the ambulance siren wailing in the background, she watched in
amazement as a young girl picked up the discarded digits and put them into a
small black purse. When the girl left, Nick's mother went to the spot where the
accident took place and kicked at the stones, trying to cover up the blood
already clotting and changing from crimson red to brownish copper. Suddenly an
index finger popped up as she kicked at the gravel. She jumped back in shock,
then was immediately drawn to the body part, as though by a magnet. She had to
have it! She fumbled around in her shirtsleeve and came out with an embroidered
cotton handkerchief. Using a twig as a pry bar, she maneuvered the finger onto
the handkerchief, folded it and quickly shoved it into her pocket. She backed
away slowly, then turned and ran full speed across the yard, crashing into the
girl with the black purse who’d been watching her. The girl was crying;
tearstains lined her face. She asked the future Mrs. Carns if she found
anything in the gravel. "No, nothing," Nick's Mom replied. "Are
you sure?" the girl questioned, "I thought I saw you pick something
out of the stones." "No," she lied in reply. "I just
dropped my handkerchief and then picked it up again. I didn't see anything
else." She wasn't going to give up her trophy. She knew she would be the
most famous kid on her block when everyone heard she had a man’s cut-off
finger. The girl challenged her again, "Are you sure?" "Yes I'm
sure," Nick's Mom shot back, then turned and ran, stopping once to shout
to the girl, "I've got to get home. I'm late."
Nick
remembered every word of the story and every gruesome detail of the finger he’d
gawked at that fateful day. He was absolutely positive she never bothered to
tell him it was a joke. Just the opposite; she’d reinforced the credibility of
her tale by telling him she kept the finger in the attic, the trapdoor to which
was in his bedroom. From that day, until last week when he was forced to
confess, he’d crawled into bed every night, scared to death.
Chapter Three - Woody is the first to know
June
11
After
Nick confessed his fear of the dead finger and then found out it was his
mother’s finger that he was afraid of, he couldn't wait to play the same trick
on his best friend, Woody. Woody Stiles lived in the next block. They’d been
soul mates since before they were born, at least according to neighborhood
legend. Their mothers were pregnant together and claimed the two boys
communicated inutero. When Nick was two weeks old his mother had a shower for
an “overdue” Marge Stiles. She held Nick on her lap as delivery stories filled
the room. Nick squirmed and Woody kicked all through the affair, evidence that
they were having a conversation as well. Marge suddenly felt a sharp pain. It
was strong. It was followed by a second jolt a few minutes later. She quietly
handed Nick back to his mother, politely excused herself and rushed home.
Before the back door slammed shut she had grabbed her already packed suitcase
and ordered a startled Marshall Stiles to take her to the hospital,
IMMEDIATELY! She barely made it. Woody was born in the hallway as his mother’s
gurney was being pushed to the delivery room. From their initial meeting that
fateful night, Nick and Woody were inseparable. They played together every day,
progressing from animated baby talk conversations as they sat on their mothers’
laps, to crawling together in each other’s playpens, or exchanging splashes in
a tin washtub on a hot summer afternoon. As they grew older their adventures
progressed to such things as tricycle races down Nick's cement driveway, with
half-dollar sized scabs on their knees to prove it, and climbing contests in
every tree in the neighborhood.
They
started kindergarten and moved to first grade as a duo. They both skipped ahead
from an overcrowded second grade; Woody because of straight "A"
grades and Nick because of "potential". They became the "Reptile
Duo," terrorizing neighborhood girls with an assorted collection of frogs,
turtles and snakes from a pond in a field behind Nick's house. Woody and Nick
were Siamese twins, except without a physical connection. Nick was blond, tall,
slim and athletic looking. Woody was short, slightly pudgy, and sported dark
hair and eyes, the latter enshrouded by thick glass lenses that hovered above a
mouth that constantly formed a grin. That grin exposed an overabundance of
teeth, destined to enrich a lucky member of the local orthodontist community.
It was only natural that when Nick found out that the dead finger was a joke,
he wanted to - no, HAD TO - play the same trick on his best friend, Woody. Over
the years he'd often repeated his mother’s tale to Woody. Woody knew first-hand
how scared of the dark it had made him. Even when they camped out together, a
mile from Nick's house, he still pulled the covers over his head to protect
himself from the “thing” in the attic. It was a Friday when Nick learned the
truth about the dead finger. Perfect, Woody and I are camping out
tonight. I'll bring the dead finger and scare the pants off him.
Nick
and Woody planned to climb to the top of South Mountain to search for dinosaur
bones. It was a quest they'd undertaken many times, although they had never
uncovered even a tyrannosaurs rex toenail. Even though it was only a half-hour
climb to the top of this large steep hill, which was a mountain in name only,
they planned to camp out en-route as part of the adventure. They loved to sleep
in the woods. Woody slept in his father’s sleeping bag, part of the Navy equipment
he brought home after his stint at the Panama Canal during WWII. Nick’s bag was
brought back by his uncle, who returned from his stay in France with a steel
plate in his head, a proclivity to grand mall seizures, and a drinking problem.
Woody carried a knapsack bursting at the seams with peanut butter & jelly
sandwiches, apples, bananas and chocolate chip cookies. Nick shouldered a pack
containing a tent pilfered from Woody’s older brother, camp supplies and two
Army canteens filled with milk. Homemade bedrolls were carried under their
arms. Laden to the gills, they headed for the mountain with Nick's dog Topper
following along. The black mongrel went everywhere with them. He even went
downtown when they rode their two wheelers to the movie theatre. They'd park
their 3-speed English bikes outside the building and Topper would plop down
next to the bike rack, a capable guard. Hours later when they came out of the
dark movie house rubbing their eyes, Topper would still be there, wagging his
tail excitedly and lobbying for a pat on the head. It was the fifties, a time
when dogs were well mannered and the leash laws were not yet in effect.
The
threesome reached the top of Denton Road, the steeper of the two streets that
made up their neighborhood, crossed an unpaved farm road and made their way
into the woods. The first leg of the ascent entailed a climb up a steep cleared
slope that served as a neighborhood sled and toboggan run in winter. It got a
lot of use because the city work crews were quick to ruin the kids’ preferred
sledding place, the hilly street that Nick lived on. The minute it started to
snow the public works trucks, laden with coal ash, were dispatched to the hilly
sections of town. A laborer stood in the truck bed shoveling the gray crap in herringbone
swaths across the snow-covered roads, making it passable for cars, but ruining
it for sleds. Sometimes the shoveler left them a path at the edge of the road,
but usually the kids on Nick’s block were forced to trek to the clearing in the
woods to ride their sleds. Climbing it now, with a full pack, was tough going.
They were forced to move to the side of the clearing and pull themselves up the
grade using small trees as a railing. After ten minutes of hard climbing they
were forced to stop. A cantilevered outcrop of ledge blocked their route. The
only way they could get over the lip was to shed their packs, toss the gear to
a flat area above the ledge and climb over the outcrop. They pulled themselves
an inch at a time using tree roots that protruded from cracks in the rock. They were exhausted by the time they made it
over the cliff. All they could manage was to roll on their backs and gasp for
air. A bored Topper took a longer but saner route. He explored the narrow mesa
for chipmunks and squirrels while they recovered. The flat spot was not a true
mesa, but rather an abandoned road that wound up the mountain to a rundown
estate at the top. A second road that traversed the slope five hundred feet
above was the primary route to the O'Neil estate. Cyrus O'Neil, an
Industrialist from England, purchased the pristine hilltop farm in the late
1800s. Its remote location on the mountain offered privacy and spectacular
views of the prosperous and bustling city below. It was excellent farmland,
sustaining a dairy herd for seventy-five years. O'Neil left the country in 1923
after a disastrous fire at his clothing factory. Twenty-one employees perished
in the blaze. All were women; most were Irish immigrants. They’d been trapped
on the third floor as an inferno raged through the sweatshop. A horrified crowd
of onlookers watched in helpless horror as the fire raged and the trapped
women’s screams filled the night air. It was the worst single disaster that
ever took place in Binghamton. The city fathers were so deeply moved by the
tragedy that they voted to allocate municipal funds to pay for a monument
honoring the victims. O'Neil was overwrought and ashamed. He never gained back
his old entrepreneurial drive. He let the business dissolve in the ashes. He
retreated to England and hired a series of caretakers to manage the farm on the
mountain. Unfortunately, he didn’t provide enough attention or funds and the
estate steadily deteriorated. Nick and his sister, Kathy, were told the story
of the fire by their grandmother, who not only witnessed the tragedy, but also
was friends with several of the women who perished. They gawked at the monolith
marking the mass gravesite in Spring Forrest Cemetery many times. It was just
down the block from their grandmother’s house and they often played among the
tombstones in the enormous burial ground when they visited her.
It
was an imposing monument, a thirty-foot tall monolith carved from solid
granite. Circling it were twenty-one unmarked gravestones. Looking at it from
the hill above, it appeared to be a giant clock, except with twenty-one hours
marked out, rather than twelve. Inscribed on the lower third of the stone was a
dedication text:
SACRED
TO THE MEMORY
OF
THOSE WHO LOST THEIR LIVES
IN
THE BINGHAMTON CLOTHING CO'S
FIRE,
JULY 22, 1922
ERECTED
BY THE CITY OF BINGHAMTON
TWENTY
ONE UNIDENTIFIED BURIED HERE
MISS
NELLIE THERESA CONNOR
MRS. NELLIE F. GLEASON
MRS
SARAH DORAN
MISS
MARY T. SMITH
MRS.
LIZZIE RISLEY
MISS
LENA MARIE KENNEDY
MRS.
MARY BIANCA
MRS.
LOU G. SHOVE
MRS.
NELLIE KISON
MRS.
ELLA M. WHITE
MRS.
IDA C. GOLDEN
MISS
CATHERINE CROWE
MRS.
EDITH M. CHERNOFF
MISS
MARY JOSEPHINE GREEGAN
MISS
EMMA D. HOUGHTALING
MRS.
EMMA REID
MRS.
STELLA M. CLARK
MISS
RUTH A. BUTTON
MISS
MARGARET DIMON
MISS
MARTHA D. BURDICK
The
deserted lane where Nick and Woody waited for their respiratory rate to return
to normal was on O’Neil property. The road hadn’t been used in fifty years,
having been returned to nature when a new shorter and wider lane was carved out
of the mountainside. The abandoned lane made a great camping spot. The grassy flat surface was a comfortable
place to sit and gaze down at the hustle and bustle of the civilized world
below. Nick and Woody could see a lot of the city from this vantage point. The
junction of the Chenango and Susquehanna rivers aesthetically framed the
several dozen multi-story brick buildings that made up the downtown section of
the city. Even twelve-year odds could appreciate the beauty of this panoramic scene.
After catching their breath they made their way along the trail looking for a
good spot to camp for the night. It didn't take long. They soon were relaxing
on a soft bed of pine needles and roasting marshmallows in a fire. The tent was
up, providing a snug and secure backdrop. Their wool bedrolls were lying inside
on a cushion of dry leaves. Topper snuggled at the foot of Nick's bed, a safe
distance from the fire. He was the only one smart enough to avoid the plumes of
white smoke that brought tears to the marshmallow roasters' eyes.
It
was getting dark fast and Nick was anxious. He couldn't wait to scare the
daylights out of Woody. When their bellies were full and the fire died to a
soft glow he suggested they swap ghost stories, a camp-out tradition. Woody
went first with a truncated version of "Bluebeard," a serial
wife-killer from the last century. Finally it was Nick's turn. He spun his
oft-told yarn of the Dead Finger. Woody rolled his eyes and leaned back on his
elbows in bored disgust. No matter, Nick went on, covering every detail of the
story he'd heard for the first time when he was seven. Woody came back to life
and sat bolt upright when he heard Nick brag that he had the finger with him.
"Are you serious? Your Mom let you take it?" he croaked.
"No
she didn’t. I snuck it out of the house. She has no idea it's gone,"
crowed Nick, as he slipped a two by three inch tinfoil covered box out of his
knapsack.
Woody's
eyes bugged out of his head. He'd heard about the finger for years, but never expected
to actually see it. "Open it! Open it!" he exclaimed, his voice
breaking in the excitement of it all. Nick slowly lifted the cover from the
coffin, exposing the finger to Woody's shocked stare. "Oh my God!" he
exclaimed, backing away from the corpse.
"Blow
on it," challenged Nick. "Watch what it does."
Woody
was hysterical. All of a sudden the woods seemed darker, scarier. There was no
escape. He had to face it. Gathering all the courage he could muster in his
86-pound frame he leaned in and gently blew on the grotesque looking severed
finger. It slowly lifted, rising above the bed of cotton. Woody shrieked and
ran from his perch by the fire, into the tent. Nick rolled back on the ground
from his “Indian-style” sitting position in a laughing fit; Topper jumped in
alarm and started barking.
"Why
are you laughing?” Woody demanded.
"Because
it's a big joke," Nick replied. "Look, the Dead Finger is my finger,”
wiggling it while it still was sticking up through the hole in the bottom of
the box. Woody grabbed it and bent it back, bringing a yelp from Nick that
started Topper on another barking jag.
"Don't
ever scare me like that again!” he ordered.
Nick
couldn't help but notice a grin beginning to take control of Woody's face. When
it succeeded in breaking through, they both fell back on the bedrolls and
laughed till tears came to their eyes. Topper couldn't figure out what was
going on. He became nervous and began growling, first at Nick, then at Woody.
Finally they regained their composure. Nick hugged Topper to assure him they
hadn't gone totally mad. Woody sat on his bedroll and examined the now empty
jewelry box, poking his index finger through the hole onto the bed of cotton.
"This is so cool!" he bellowed.
"I
know," said Nick. "I can't wait to take it to school."
"You
can't do that. We've got exams. You'll get kicked out of class and end up
failing sixth grade," gasped Woody.
"I
know. I’ve got that figured out. I'm going to wait until Friday, after we're
through with them."
It
was over an hour before they settled down enough to crawl into bed. The fire
dimmed to a warm red flicker. Topper rested in protective posture between their
bedrolls. They both drifted into an uneasy sleep, dreaming that an enraged
faceless man was chasing them through the woods with his left hand raised above
his head, dripping blood from five stumps, cursing at them, “I’m going to get
you!”
Chapter Four - A Discovery on the mountaintop
Saturday,
June 12
The
next morning they rose early, the sun barely above the horizon. They were
starved as a result of running from the faceless man in their dreams. Peanut
butter & jelly sandwiches, fruit and cookies washed down with metallic
tasting tepid milk straightened them out. After a series of belches, a few
natural, and the rest forced, they packed up their camping gear and hid it on
the side of the roadway. They’d retrieve it on their way home. With lightened
packs, they carefully made their way up the mountain. They could have traveled
on an abandoned roadbed that wound up the hill to the summit. Instead, they
struck out on a deer path that went directly up the face. It crossed the main
road five hundred feet above, then a utility right-of-way a few hundred feet
after that, and lastly an overgrown branch road just short of the summit. The
latter provided access to a summer pasture that was no longer used. At each
road crossing they were forced to maneuver around an outcropping of ledge, a
strenuous chore that caused their shirts to be soaked with sweat by the time
they reached the summer pasture above. They didn’t care. In their heads they
were duplicating the climb that Edmund Hillary made to the top of Everest the
previous year. “A little sweat was a small price to pay to be the first one to
the top of the tallest mountain in the world.”
Woody
and Nick stepped over a fallen fence rail into the ancient cow field. It hadn't
provided nourishment to a single farm animal in over fifty years. They plopped
down and pulled out the canteen, taking turns sipping the brackish milk in a
futile attempt to slake their thirst. As they lay back and rested, they watched
large puffy clouds float by.
Woody
mused, "I wonder if we'll find any bones today," more to himself than
to Nick.
"I
think so,” Nick responded. “The mounds near the barn must be where they're
buried."
Woody
swallowed hard at Nick's prediction. He was afraid to get that close to the
barn. All the kids in the neighborhood steered clear of the place because of
stories about the crazy caretaker who lived there. His brother, Stew, told them
the caretaker was weird and carried a shotgun. Last winter he fired it at Stew
and his friend Vincent as they crossed the pasture near the barn. Fortunately,
they were far enough to away to escape injury. They just turned their backs
when they heard the gun. The spent pellets sprinkled harmlessly on their thick
winter jackets. The mounds to which Nick and Woody were headed were close to
where the incident took place. It was an active grazing area adjacent to the
barn. The field was cordoned off by an electric fence. Woody was scared. He bet
Nick was too. He didn't dare bring it up for discussion. He was afraid if he
said it out loud it would make it worse.
After
catching their breath and mustering their courage, Nick and Woody picked
themselves up and started across the summer pasture toward the house and barn.
Topper walked obediently at Nick's side, as though aware of the seriousness of
the mission. They skirted several large anthills, but then succumbed to
curiosity. They raced to the woods at the edge of the field to find something
to dig with. They broke two dead limbs off a towering pine tree, quickly
removed the stubble of small twigs that projected from the surface and raced
back to the anthills. Nick attacked one, Woody another. Soon the area was
swarming with thousands of angry black critters that crawled up their sticks,
covered their shoes and were making good headway up their pant legs. Woody and
Nick freaked and then ran for their lives, brushing off the tenacious attackers
in transit. When they reached a small grassy rise on the other side of the
field they dropped to the ground in a laughing fit. It was several minutes
before they stopped. Woody felt a lot better now. He forgot he was scared.
They
got to their feet and walked to the edge of the pasture where a thin wood lot
shielded it from a dirt road. This road was the main route to the farm. They
had to be careful if they wanted to avoid running into the caretaker chugging
along in his rusted pick-up. They crossed the road, after first listening for a
truck, and then slipped under the electric fence into an active pasture.
Skirting cows as they ran, they headed toward a thickly wooded area in the
middle of the meadow. It was a two- acre plot, too steep and densely wooded for
cows to traverse. The strange mounds were located there. It was dangerously
close to the barn, but they felt safe because of the cover provided by the
thick growth of trees. They also felt safe because Topper was with them, a
competent bodyguard.
They
dropped their packs near a large stump at the crest of the knoll. From here
they had a good view of the barn, allowing them to keep an eye out for trouble
while they worked. Nick pulled a lightweight ax from his pack. He was proud of
this new possession that his mother let him buy with S&H Green Stamps. She
saved the trading stamps she got for buying groceries at Loblaw’s Market for a
year. Nick and his sister each were given a full book the day they rode along
with her to the redemption center, their reward for licking the stamps every
week and putting them into the redemption booklets. A book was enough for Nick
to get a camping axe. Woody took out his father's fold-up shovel, compliments
of the U.S. Navy.
They
first cleared leaves from a large mound using their feet to kick them aside. It
took a lot longer than they expected. The covering was almost a foot thick.
Once the bare dirt was exposed, they switched from foot power to hand tools.
Woody dug with the shovel until hitting a snarl of tree roots. Then Nick took
over and cut through the mess with his ax. Topper came in for a sniff every few
minutes and had to be shooed away. The rhythm of their labor fell into a
pattern and before long they hit pay dirt, a dinosaur bone. It was a foot long and
as big around as Nick's arm. Now they dug with fervor, expecting to uncover the
jawbone of T-Rex any second. Instead, all they found after an hour of searching
was a twin of the first bone. They were beat, physically and mentally. They
ended the dig when they came across an odd shaped bone fragment resembling the
face of a cat. The eyeholes in the bone were oddly triangular. Happy with their
find, they packed up their tools and the bones and headed home. It was only ten
in the morning but they were hungry and tired. It had been a long four hours
since their breakfast at daybreak.
While
Woody watched, Nick quietly crept to the edge of the wood nearest the barn to
see if the caretaker was around. They didn't want to get caught crossing the
pasture with an armload of bones. Nick watched for several minutes. All he saw
was a small woman wearing a kerchief walking from the barn to the back door of
the house. The cows were still in the pasture, so he surmised the caretaker
must be in the barn cleaning out the stalls. He waved an all clear to Woody and
with false bravado they made their way out of the woods and into the open
field. Woody tripped as they fled across the rutted terrain, falling face down
on a ripe cow plop.
"Shit!"
he exclaimed, as Nick stood by laughing.
"It
sure is," Nick countered.
"I'll
get you for that!" screeched Woody as he lunged for and then chased him
across the field. Nick rolled under the electric fence and scampered across the
road into the woods but Woody couldn't stop in time and crashed right into the
energized wires.
"Yeoow!!!" he screamed as the
electricity traveled through his arm and down his body into the earth. He
released his grip and crashed to the ground. He laid in silence for a minute
and then erupted into a roaring fit of laughter. Nick stood open mouthed in the
woods and then he too fell to the ground and rolled around laughing.
"That
was the funniest thing I ever saw," Nick managed to squeak out between
waves of laughter, "A shit covered Electric Man." Then their laughing
fit started all over again. It was several minutes before they regained their
composure. When his side stopped hurting from the prolonged laugh fest, Woody
crawled under the fence and over to Nick.
"Let's
get going before the going gets gone," quipped Woody, misstating his
favorite and extremely over used “hip” saying. Had they not been so engrossed
they might have heard the idling pick-up truck parked nearby, but they didn’t
hear the knock of its well-worn engine. They didn’t smell the oil tinged smoke
pouring from the rusted tail pipe either.
Suddenly
Nick was dangling in mid-air, his feet six inches above the ground. The
caretaker had jerked him up by the back of his jacket in one quick motion.
Holding Nick and glaring down at Woody he spate, "What are you two
trespassers doing here?”
Neither
of them said anything. The beer and garlic stench from the filthy, unshaven and
unkempt attacker almost gagged them. Nick's voice box was choked off by his
collar and Woody was too scared to talk. It took him a full thirty seconds
before he gained control and muttered, "We were just digging for dinosaur
bones mister. We didn't hurt anything."
His
reply was met with an eruption of rage clearly displayed on the caretaker’s
pockmarked face. It was an image so profound that it caused Woody to wet his
pants on the spot.
"Nobody
digs up bones up on my farm and takes them away," shot back the mountain
man.
"They’re
dinosaur bones, not human bones," replied Woody, wondering why he'd been
so stupid to say anything. That did it. The caretaker began to shake he was so
mad.
"You
jag-offs are going to pay for this. You are going to pay dearly," he
promised.
While
still dragging Nick, he lunged for Woody but Topper jumped at him when his
gloved hand was about to make contact with the top of Woody's head. It gave
Woody just enough time to scamper out of range. The caretaker lunged again,
dragging a gagging Nick further into the woods. Topper went for the caretaker’s
legs, distracting him long enough for Woody to break into full stride and
giving Nick the opportunity to wiggle out of his jacket. Then Nick crashed
through the woods at full speed. When he took off, so did Topper. He was
quickly out in front leading the boys down the mountain to safety. The caretaker
stood holding the empty jacket, and screamed at them as they made their escape,
"I'll get you little creeps if it's the last thing I do!"
They
were so scared they literally fell down the steep hill. Branches lashed their
faces and arms as they cascaded down the trail, tumbling over roots and stones
protruding from the path. They didn't stop until they reached the farm road at
the bottom. They plopped down at the edge and panted for what seemed an
eternity. "He was going to kill us," Woody finally got enough breath
to say. "I know,” Nick responded. “He was drinking. He reeked of beer. I
know what I'm talking about. He smelled just like my grandfather." Nick's
grandfather drank three quarts of ale a day. This created a bonanza when Nick
and his sister hauled the empty deposit bottles to the Baby Bear Market to cash
them in for a nickel apiece. Their grandfather’s empty bottles netted them more
than their allowance. Nick didn't know what worried him more - the drunken mad
man on the mountain who had vowed to “get him” or his mother when she
discovered he’d lost his leather jacket.
“Maybe
she won't mind at all,” he thought, in the optimistic rationalism of a
twelve-year-old. “Maybe she'll be grateful that I lost the jacket. It won't
annoy her in church anymore when it squeaks and creaks every time I move.”
Every Sunday at Mass she whacked him while angrily whispering out of the side
of her mouth through clenched teeth, "Be quiet! Stop making that jacket
squeak!" Yea, maybe she won't be mad at all.
Chapter Five – The Skull
Saturday,
June 12
When Nick and
Woody recovered from their run/tumble down the mountain they stood up, shook
out the cobwebs and gazed down Denton Road. They pulled on their knapsacks and
headed down the last of the hill. The bones survived the trip intact and they
had successfully escaped the clutches of an angry maniac. All in all, their
adventure turned out pretty well! They decided to get home to the Saturday
chores that awaited them and meet after lunch. Woody took the bones, promising
to keep them secret until they could unveil their discovery together. When Nick
walked in the kitchen door, his mother didn’t say anything about his jacket.
She probably didn’t even give it a thought since it was June and far too warm
for a leather jacket. No, he was safe until she noticed it missing from the
front closet. He and Topper split a baloney sandwich and then went back
outside. Topper took a nap. Nick mowed the lawn, his favorite chore. It was one
he performed proudly, the only kid on the block permitted to operate a power
mower. Most families in the neighborhood still used push mowers. Those few
fathers who had purchased a power mower hogged all the fun and mowed the lawn
themselves. Nick's dad had a bad leg, so he eagerly taught his boy the ins and
outs of the labor saving machine. Nick finished mowing and snuck off to Woody's
house. He didn't want to be home when his father noticed he hadn't trimmed
along the sidewalk and stonewall. He hated trimming. He hated using the hand
clippers and most Saturdays he skipped out on the chore, unless his father was
around to see the omission. If Nick got caught, his father not only made him do
the trimming, but also made him rake the lawn, as punishment for trying to get
away with a “half-ass” job.
Woody and Nick
spent the afternoon working the neighborhood, showing off the bones. Most kids
on the block rejected the claim that the small bones were from dinosaurs. Only
a few little kids were impressed. Their last stop was at the Almy’s house, a
family who lived directly across the street from Woody. John Almy was their
age; his brother Mike two years younger. They went to Catholic school at Saint
John’s, not Longfellow, the public school that Nick and Woody attended. Nick
couldn't imagine spending all day in school with nuns. He could barely handle
it once a week when he and the other Catholic kids were “released” from school
to attend religion classes. He often left the hour-long session with knuckles
reddened from whacks administered by the presiding nun, the consequence of
failing to memorize a catechism passage. Students were also whacked with the
dreaded “yard-stick” for minor infractions of the rules. He watched in shock
one day, as a nun unloaded on a boy’s rear end for sticking his tongue out at the
girl behind him. It was a tough environment for antsy active rebels like Nick
and his cronies. The girls were rarely hit. The nuns just shamed them into
submission. John and Mike Almy eyed the bones with polite curiosity. Mr. Almy
studied them with a powerful magnifying glass. He was the only adult in the
neighborhood who spent any time with, or who showed any interest in kid stuff.
He also was an accomplished amateur scientist, having a subscription to both,
"Popular Science" and "National Geographic."
"Hmm,"
he remarked as he examined the find. “These could be dinosaur bones but more
likely they're from a wooly mammoth or maybe a cow. It's hard to tell."
He explained that
the foot long bones were probably from the forefoot of a forager, like a
mammoth or a cow. The "cat-face" bones with triangular eye sockets
were in actuality two sections of vertebrae. He said he was impressed with
their find and even though he never actually said it, it was clear to both of
them that they’d discovered a cow carcass. It was less than front-page news.
Oh well, they simultaneously rationalized in
their heads. At least he didn't accuse us of being idiots like everyone
else. John asked them if he could go on their next hunt.
"Sure,"
replied Nick knowing it was going to be a long time before they’d go back to
the top of South Mountain.
"How about
tomorrow?” piped up Woody. "We've got to get our camping gear."
"Jeeze, I
forgot we left it there. Why don't we get it and then look on Hazard Hill for
bones," Nick replied, hoping to avoid a second encounter with the
caretaker. He knew he eventually had to go back and retrieve his leather jacket
but didn’t want to face the ordeal anytime soon.
Sunday, June 13
On Sunday
afternoon, Woody, John, Nick and Topper struggled up Denton Road en-route to
the mountain. Woody agreed to hunt for bones on Hazard Hill, a smaller mountain
to the west. He was more afraid than Nick to go back to South Mountain. They
made it to their campsite without incident, gathered the camping gear and quickly
made their way west, intersecting the same farm road they crossed at the top of
Denton to get into the woods. This dirt road went all the way to the Conlon
farm at the foot of Hazard Hill. Mr. Conlon was a friendly farmer, not at all
like the caretaker on the mountain. He didn't mind kids hanging around. Hell,
he had four of his own. He once let Nick and Woody milk a cow, though the
experience left them less than enthused. They had both slipped down in the ripe
cow plop that littered the barn. Not wanting to waste time in conversation,
they skirted the farm by going through the woods to a hidden creek. It drained
rainwater from both South Mountain and Hazard Hill. They stashed the camping
gear near a pond formed by a crude dam and started out toward the summit.
Hazard Hill wasn't as steep as South Mountain, so it didn’t take long to make
it to a mid-level plateau where there were mounds similar to those on South
Mountain.
"Let's split
up," suggested Woody. "We can dig into three mounds at once."
Nick and John
agreed. Soon all three were digging with gusto, each hoping to be the first to
find something. After a few minutes of frenzied digging, Almy screamed,
"Come-ere, Come-ere, I found a skull." Sure enough, he’d uncovered a
small skull. It had a pointed snout.
"It's a baby
Tyrannosaurus Rex," Nick announced.
Woody picked it up
and then quickly threw it back to the ground.
"It's full of
bugs," he exclaimed.
It also stunk to
high heaven. Nick stuck a branch into one of the eye sockets and lifted the
dinosaur skull in the air.
"Let’s take
it to the stream and wash it out," he suggested.
They were careful
to walk downwind from the reeking fossil. When they came to the creek, Nick
pushed the skull under the surface and held it there, letting water run
through, flushing it out. A horde of maggots were expelled and quickly floated
downstream. They took turns holding it in the water for the next half-hour.
When they fished it out for a final inspection it didn't seem to smell quite as
bad and the maggots were gone, as was the gooey gray matter they had been
feeding on. They carried it home suspended from the middle of a long stick,
African safari style. By the time they
reached Almy’s backyard, all three felt peakish. John ran in the house and got
his father. He took a quick look at the relic held by Woody and then at the
three green faces of the archaeologists.
"Put that
thing down boys, and come with me," he ordered, trying hard to cover his
nervousness.
He led them to a
hose at the side of the house and ordered them out of their pants and shirts.
Stripped down to their underwear, he hosed them off with cold water and
instructed them to wash themselves with a bar of yellow laundry soap, which he
tossed first to Nick, since his coloring was the greenest.
"That’s not a
dinosaur fossil. It’s a deer skull, probably from an animal that’s only been
dead a month or two. The brain is still rotting inside and you'll get deathly
ill unless we clean you up fast."
He
was fast but not fast enough. After the scrub down they got dressed. They were
even greener in the gills than when they came in from their excursion. Woody
threw up first, right on Mr. Almy’s shoes; Nick made it home before he
succumbed to the bile substance that screamed to be released from his stomach.
John deposited his load on the back porch in a vain attempt to get inside to
the bathroom. They were sick like never before in their lives, throwing up like
clockwork every half-hour. Nick’s dad went to the drug store to get a small
vial of coke syrup from the soda fountain after listening to his son retch for
several hours. The thick sweet concentrate did the trick, settling his stomach
so he could finally get to sleep. It was an early bedtime, only six o’clock,
but he never stirred until his alarm went off thirteen hours later.
Chapter Six - Exam Week
The
alarm clanged loudly, completely unwinding before it roused Nick from slumber.
He turned over and sat up in bed and moaned. His stomach was still sore from
yesterday’s “up-chuck” marathon. He wasn’t ready for a day of final exams. He
lay back down, gazing at a sea of tinfoil stars glued to his ceiling. It was
his Dad’s attempt to create a night sky in his bedroom. It didn't soothe him as
it usually did. He rubbed his eyes and stretched, setting off a new round of
growling in his belly. He knew he had to get a move on. He couldn't take the
day off. He’d never missed a single day of school in his life. He expected to
be presented a special perfect attendance award on the last day of school, ten
days from today. He'd received one every year but this year his string of
attendance would set a record. He wasn't sure how it started but it had become
almost a religious tenet for him. He had to get up and get moving and was
confident he could handle a day in the classroom in pain. He’d done it many
times in his school career. He crawled to the bathroom, brushed his teeth and
splashed cold water on his face to snap himself out of his stupor. He took a
quick swipe at his highly prized flattop with a stiff brush to finish off his
preschool ritual. Heck, he thought to himself, most boys in class
don't bother with their hair. They just brush it out of their eyes. Nick
slipped on a pair of corduroys that were too hot for June but they were the
only clean pants he had. He slipped into a short-sleeved sear sucker shirt and
his prized PF Flyer sneakers. Then he went downstairs for breakfast. His mother
was fixing egg toast (Woody called it French toast). The table was set for two,
him and his sister. His father left for work an hour earlier and his mother
didn’t sit down until they left for school.
He couldn’t stand the thought of egg toast, lying heavy with syrup in
his belly but he didn’t protest. It would only set his mother off on one of her
early morning jags. She hated the morning and was always irritable at
breakfast, standing at the stove banging pans and listing his shortcomings of
the previous day. (If he said anything about the egg toast it would get her
going and he’d get another tongue lashing for the filthy clothes he came home
in yesterday or, even worse, she might stumble onto the fact that his leather
jacket wasn't hanging in the front closet.) Better keep my big mouth shut,
he cautioned himself. He gulped down the unwelcome breakfast and then wisely
headed for the door, covering his retreat with the statement that he and Woody
wanted to get to school early so they could go brush up on spelling for today's
test. His mother bought it and Nick slipped away. He cut through several
backyards to get to Woody’s. The neighborhood dogs took notice but stayed
quiet. They were accustomed to him and Woody trespassing on their turf. He
arrived at Woody's kitchen door and peeked through the window at his
ashen-faced friend sitting at the table pecking away at a bowl of cereal. It
was probably his favorite, Wheaties. They both believed if you ate enough of
the tasteless mush you’d become as great an athlete as the sports hero featured
on the front of the box. He knocked on the door and Mrs. Stiles let him in. He
was forced to endure five minutes of conversational questioning from Woody's
parents, "How is your mother? How is your grandfather? Blah Blah
Blah." Finally he and Woody escaped and started the half-mile walk to school.
It was more than that if they took the sidewalk, but they traveled via the
field behind Nick's house, passing a small pond where they sometimes snagged a
frog to terrorize the girls on the playground. They skipped the pond today,
happy to get to school without throwing up their breakfast.
They
were early. Even Mr. Terry, the policeman who stopped cars so they could safely
cross Pennsylvania Ave, wasn't there yet. They crossed the busy street by
themselves and headed for the playground, a scooped out paved area ten feet
lower than street level. As usual, Denzel Kelly was there waiting.
"What'll it be boys, ten cents or a slug in the arm?" They put down
their books and rolled up their right sleeves, resigned to the painful ritual.
Whack! Whack! It was over in a second. Their arms hurt like hell, but they were
paid up for the day. For years they’d followed this ritual, which Denzel
initiated in the second grade. You either paid him a dime or took a shot in the
arm. Either choice ensured protection for the day, protection from him for the
most part. Some kids paid the dime. Woody and Nick didn’t have money to waste
on such a frivolous thing as avoiding a sock in the arm. But they fully
understood they had to pay one way or the other. They learned a long time ago
from watching what happened to kids who refused to go along with Denzel’s deal.
Usually the kid would tell Denzel to get lost, incorrectly sizing him up. That
was a big mistake. In less than ten seconds they'd find themselves lying on the
ground with a bloody nose and Denzel sitting on their chest demanding a dime.
He was fast, tough and enterprising.
After
submitting to Denzel's ritual, Woody and Nick made their way across the
playground to hang out in a remote section behind an old maple tree, the very
same spot where four days hence, Diane Palmer would meet her fate, would meet
the dead finger. They didn't bother going over the spelling words. Instead,
they made plans for introducing the dead finger to the school. They agreed that
the first day would belong to Nick, since it was his trick and he'd been the
one to suffer from it for so many years. Woody would reveal his version on the
second day. They didn't want to miss final exams because of the prank and be
forced to spend the day in the principal’s office, so they decided to launch
their wave of terror on Thursday, when exams ended. With that settled, they
made their way back to the playground, stopping to watch the bat ball game in
process. It was their favorite schoolyard activity. Today they passed it up,
since their stomachs were still queasy from the deer skull. Instead, they
messed around with their Duncan yo-yos by the school door. Woody tried in vain
to master "rock the baby" and Nick worked on refining his mastery of
"thread the needle." The bell rang and everyone lined up, girls to
the left, boys to the right. The janitor opened the door. They walked in and
immediately went to their classroom. Loitering wasn’t allowed.
Woody
and Nick took their assigned seats on the boy’s side of the classroom. Seating
was alphabetical so a dozen classmates separated them. Miss Nevel turned from
the board where she had written the day’s test instructions, just as the class
finished settling into their desks. She asked them to stand, nodding to Delbert
Gergocian to lead in the Pledge of Allegiance. Then it was Donald Pearl's turn
to lead the prayer, "Our Father, Who art in.” It was always interesting
for Nick to listen to the non-Catholics continue with the prayer following
"deliver us from evil, amen." He was instructed by his mother, and
more importantly by the nuns at Saint Johns, that it was forbidden by the
church to join in on the addendum, "For thine is the kingdom, the power
and the glory, forever and ever, Amen." He was amazed at the strictness of
his religion, especially during Lent when he was forced to “volunteer” to give
up candy for forty days, and to attend church services several times a week in
addition to the mandatory Sunday service. The class sat down after completing
the morning ritual. The only diversion they could hope for in the next four
hours was a fire or an air raid drill. Otherwise they were prisoners not just
to the classroom but to their desks as well. They’d had a lot of air raid
drills lately, ever since the “dirty Russians” set off their first hydrogen
bomb last summer.
Miss
Nevel instructed her charges to prepare for the first exam by getting their
writing paraphernalia ready. Nick had a special responsibility today. It was
his turn to fill the inkwells. He went to the supply cabinet and removed the
quart bottle of black ink and uncorked the filling snorkel. One by one he went
to each desk in the room and topped off the inkwell recessed in the upper right
hand corner. That done, he took his seat and like the rest of the class placed
his penholder, spare points, blotter and ink rag on his desk. He was now ready
for the first test, although his mind was on the dead finger and the terror it
would unleash at school in three days.
Nick
and Woody endured the grueling sixth grade test ordeal for three straight days.
The finals were the most important thus far in their academic lives. The
results determined if they graduated from Longfellow or not. If they did,
they’d leave behind the “little kid” school and be bussed to West Junior High
on the other side of town starting in September. They'd catch the bus at the
Longfellow playground, so their days of walking to the old brick school on
Pennsylvania Ave. would continue. They were terrified. They knew all about the
initiation ritual that greenhorns were forced to endure on the fifteen-minute
ride. Woody's older brother, Stew and his friend, Vinnie had been filling their
heads with the gory details for the last several months. They wouldn’t be
allowed to sit but rather, would be forced to stand in the aisle and be shoved
back and forth by “upper classmen”. A kangaroo court was conducted in the back
of the bus. One by one they’d be called back and forced to do gross things,
like licking the floor or eating a bug. They could also expect to be pounded by
the thugs running things in the back, out of sight of the disinterested bus
driver. Most definitely, a “wedgie” or the dreaded “atomic wedgie” would come
their way on the bus ride to West Junior. Stew and Vinnie promised protection
from the ordeal, but to get it Nick and Woody had to be their slaves until
school started in the fall. So far it had only involved running errands, but
Nick was sure the pace would pick up. Before long, he and Woody would probably
be doing all of their chores - mowing the grass, washing windows, cleaning up
dog crap in the yard, and on and on. It was going to be one lousy summer.
Chapter Seven - The skeleton is out of the closet.
Final
exams were over. Nick was free to unleash his reign of terror in the prison
where he served his sentence for six and a half years. He woke up bright and
chipper Thursday morning and, after getting dressed, made sure his index finger
fit through the hole in the bottom of the crude display case he’d concocted - a
tinfoil covered box that once held his sister’s prized ID bracelet. He lined
the interior with a puffy blanket of cotton so that it covered the hole and
made a snug bed for his finger. It checked out great! The finger looked real,
and dead. He stained his nail with blue ink and then rushed through a breakfast
of lumpy oatmeal and toast, a weekly ritual. It was tolerable on cold winter
mornings, but hard to swallow on a muggy June day with the temperature in the
seventies. Woody waited at the back door while Nick gagged down the gruel. Then
they left for school on a path that started in Nick’s back yard and went across
an open field for a quarter of a mile or so. Nick's mother watched them jump
and whoop from the kitchen window where she stood most mornings, gazing at her
son and his sidekick start off for school while she did the breakfast
dishes.
“I
wonder what those boys are up to?” she asked aloud though no one was there to
hear.
Woody
was more excited than Nick, even though he was sticking to their agreement and
wouldn’t showcase his dead finger until tomorrow.
"Don't
let Denzel see it," he cautioned. "I know,” said Nick. “Do you think
I'm stupid? He'd take it and that would end it for us."
The
coffin was well hidden in the pocket of Nick's dungarees when he and Woody
rolled up their sleeves to get their daily whack from Denzel. Rubbing the
soreness out of their arms, they walked over and joined in a bat ball game
already in progress. Nick kept an eye on Denzel, hoping for an opportunity to
bring out the finger without his seeing it. He got his wish. Denzel and his new
protégée, Richard Mosement, climbed the chain link fence separating the
playground from Ross Creek, and descended into the recessed aqueduct that
carried run-off from the surrounding hills. The creek went downstream to the
Susquehanna River passing by the school. Denzel and Richard headed toward the
river.
"They're
probably going to the tunnel," opined Woody. It was a popular but
forbidden hang out, a cavern that he and Nick went into for the first time last
year.
The
tunnel was as long as five football fields connected end-to-end. It was black
as night, even on the brightest summer day. According to schoolyard legend it
was inhabited by strange life forms. Woody and Nick made it through to the
river when they were eleven, thanks to Denzel, who chased them into the dark
abyss. They never mentioned or even discussed the thing, whatever it was, that
appeared in the dark just as they climbed out at the river end of the cavern.
Neither wanted to admit that anything so strange looking existed, or that it
might have, had their timing been different, attacked them in the isolated
darkness of the tunnel. If they didn’t speak of it out loud, the danger
couldn’t be real, and that’s the way they wanted to keep it.
With
Denzel gone, Nick and Woody quickly gathered the bat-ball players into a
circle. Nick told the story of the dead finger and then showed it to the “boys
of summer.” A pall fell over the group when the sickening sight was revealed.
The bell rang and Nick promised a second look at recess. All day long,
one-on-one, and in small groups, Nick related the tale to the boys in his
class. He let the story build to a climatic "viewing" of the corpse.
Every boy was shocked when the box was opened. By the end of the day he was the
talk of the school. Nick was famous, so was the floating dead finger.
The girls got wind
of the gruesome tale. It’s why Diane Palmer was so excited and secretly honored
that Nick picked her to be the very first from her side of the room to see it.
She agreed to meet him after school behind the maple tree. The woman who Diane
bumped into as she fled from the finger was waiting across the street from the
school when the three o'clock dismissal bell rang. Nearby, a rusted pick-up idled
noisily. The woman clutched a small bag of groceries, though it looked more
like a prop than a genuine parcel. One by one, the students of Longefellow
Elementary (PS-13) filed out the side door onto the playground. Some walked
toward the creek, crossing a narrow foot bridge that took them to Park Avenue
and the residential section of town know as Park Terrace. Most, though, went
toward the woman, climbed thirteen steps from the playground to street level,
and crossed the busy street as Officer Terry blocked traffic with his
outstretched arms. She scrutinized each student’s face from behind her bag of
groceries, paying particular attention to the girls with long dark hair.
Nothing registered on the woman's face until a school bus passed in front of
her. She saw Diane Palmer excitedly waving to her friends through a window on
the driver's side of the bus. Her wave was frantic and her face aglow. She was
still high from the encounter with Nick and the "Dead Finger." Diane
was one of a handful of kids who were bussed to Longfellow from their new
neighborhood near the western boundary of the school district. The woman cursed
under her breath as she pushed her way through clumps of kids ambling home from
school though none took offense. She turned the corner on Aldrich Ave, stepped
onto the running board and slid into the passenger seat of the rusting pick-up.
It sped from the curb, narrowly missing a group of boys pushing and shoving as
they crossed the street in a combination race and wrestling match. The truck hurled
around the corner at Brookfield Road heading toward Vestal Avenue in a reckless
attempt to catch the bus. It was slow going for the pick up. First, it was held
up trying to get onto Vestal Avenue, the main road west out of town. Then it
got stuck behind a farm tractor crossing from a stretch of cornrows along the
river to the Conlon farm at the base of Hazard Hill. By the time the pick-up
reached Diane's neighborhood, the students had exited the bus at the single
stop and were in their kitchens reporting events of the day to an interested
mother, snacking on the homemade cookies and milk before them at the table.
Diane's mother was appalled at her daughter’s recapitulation of the day’s
events. She had half-a-mind to call the school and report it. Had she even an
inkling of the events that would unfold in the next few days, she never would
have allowed her husband to talk her out of it. "Boys will be boys,"
he'd concluded as the clincher to his argument to let things be, this, the last
week of the school year.
Chapter Eight - Back to the Mountain
Woody
and Nick didn't race home from school, as was their usual Friday routine. They
lingered on the playground, using the draw of an after school bat-ball game to
attract new victims. Nick lured the kids waiting their turn at bat and then
Woody spun the tale, concluding with a viewing of his version of the dead
finger. They had earlier agreed since Nick had first crack at the kids in their
class, Woody would have first shot at the rest of the kids at Longfellow. As
Woody revealed the corpse to a small group of third grade boys, he felt a
presence behind him. The hairs on the back of his neck stood up. He turned to
find himself face to face with his worst nightmare, Denzel Kelly.
"What
the hell are you doing?" Denzel demanded.
"Na,
na, nothing," Woody stuttered while shoving the jewelry box into his pants
pocket, desperately trying to extract his finger from the hole in the bottom.
"This
is me you're talking to, punk," Denzel reminded him. He then grabbed his
arm and twisted it up behind his back in a half Nelson. "I want to know
EXACTLY what you told those kids. Are you cutting in on my territory?"
"Ok,
OK," Woody gasped. “I'll tell you what I was doing."
Denzel
listened intently as Woody related a condensed version of the dead finger
story. His arms were crossed when Woody opened the box holding the corpse.
Denzel gasped and then grabbed the finger as it rose from its cotton bed.
"That's
your finger!" he shouted and then fell back to the ground in a laughing
fit. "That's pretty good, kid," he managed to say, between waves of
laughter. "I'll take the box now. You're all done with this deal.”
"It's
not my deal!” Woody protested as he handed the box over to the bully.
"It's Nick’s deal and his mother really did find a finger in the rail yard
when she was a girl."
"Go
on, get out of here," Denzel countered. He then turned and sped across the
schoolyard to the West Junior bus pulling up to drop off the seventh, eighth
and ninth grade kids from the area. Nick and Woody knew it was all over now.
Denzel had hijacked their fifteen minutes of fame.
The
second Nick walked in his back door he knew he was in trouble. His mother was
waiting for him with an irritated look on her face.
"Where
is your leather jacket young man?” she demanded. He couldn't tell her the
truth. That would only get him in deeper. She had forbidden him to go to the
top of the mountain two years ago.
"I
left it at Woody's," he lied.
"Then
get right over there and get it," she ordered.
"I
can't. Woody isn't home and he hid it someplace at his house as a joke."
It was the best he could come up with on short notice. At that moment his
sister Kathy walked in with two of her friends, saving the day for Nick. He
took full advantage and fled to his bedroom. He changed into his prized Levis
and a white T-shirt. Getting the Levis took a lot of campaigning on his part.
His mother usually bought him cheap imitations, two- dollar dungarees. It took
three months of pleading to get her to spring for the real thing, reducing the
family’s net worth by six bucks. Kathy and her friends were working on their
cookies and milk when he returned to the kitchen. He casually told his mother
he'd be back by suppertime. She'd been distracted by the girl’s report of their
day at West Junior and forgot all about the jacket.
Nick
cut through the Bowen’s' back yard, over Daley’s' fence and carefully tiptoed
through Mrs. Viking’s garden to Woody's house. Mrs. Stiles let him in and he
shot up the stairs to Woody's room before she could engage him in one of her
extended and boring interviews. Didn't she get it? Kids hated to be peppered
with adult interrogations. Woody was tying his shoes as Nick rushed in.
"Hurry
up! We've got to go up the mountain and look for my jacket!" he extorted.
"What
are you talking about? I thought we were never going up there again,"
Woody countered.
Nick
explained that his mother figured out his jacket was missing and was furious.
He had to get it back even if it meant risking an encounter with the caretaker.
Woody wasn't keen on going. In fact he was scared to death, but he and Nick
were blood brothers so he had no choice.
He
said, "OK, let's get it over with." And then examined the small scar
on his wrist where he'd cut it with a Cub Scout knife the day they became blood
brothers. They’d copied the ritual from a Cowboy movie.
Woody
delayed their departure long enough to fill a canteen with water and snatch two
apples from the kitchen counter on their way out of the house. We’ll work up
an awful thirst getting to the top, and who knows, maybe the apples will be our
last meal, he thought.
It
didn't take long to get to the abandoned road bordering the unused pasture near
the top of the mountain. Time goes fast when you don't want it to,
thought Woody, as he climbed over the broken fence that poorly guarded the
overgrown field. Nick led the way, skirting the cluster of anthills still
misshapen from last week’s massacre. They stopped just outside the thin woodlot
that bordered the primary road to the O'Neil estate, and looked for signs of
the caretaker. They listened for sounds of his truck too. They weren’t going to
be ambushed again! The coast was clear. Giving Woody a hand signal to stay
back, Nick quickly made his way to the edge of the dirt lane. It was the same
spot where he had escaped from the caretaker the previous week, by wiggling out
of his leather jacket. He wished and prayed all the way up the mountain that it
would simply be right where he dropped it. He’d just pick it up and go home. It
wasn't. He waved to Woody to come over, afraid to attract attention by
shouting. This was exactly like one of the hundreds of cowboy and Indian
adventures they’d seen in the movies. In this one, they were the Indians so
they’d have to use clever tactics to win; they would sneak around the farm and
size things up before taking action. Woody was scared but Nick was terrified.
He'd felt the caretaker's strength when he was suspended above the ground by
the collar of his jacket. The guy didn’t even grunt and he held me there for
several minutes using only one arm, Nick mused to himself.
Nick
looked long and hard into Woody's eyes and asked, "Are you ready for
this?" Woody nodded with a sick
smile pasted on his face.
"OK,
follow me," Nick ordered. He got down on his belly and crawled under the
electric fence that guarded the cow pasture. They stayed on their bellies all
the way across the field, standing only when they reached the wooded mound in
the middle where they dug up the dinosaur (cow) bones last week.
"My
mother's going to kill me," Woody predicted, as he looked down at the
grass and dirt stains on his pants and shirt.
"I
hope that's mud and not cow shit," Nick chuckled, thinking back to last
week when Woody fell face down in the cow plop.
"Cut
it out!” Woody demanded. “This is no time to screw around."
Nick
agreed but he always used humor when he was scared or upset. He couldn't help
it, a genetic inheritance from his mother. They crept up the mound to a good
vantage point. They were well hidden by a thick clump of trees, yet had a clear
view of the house and the barn. They decided to sit and watch for a while,
hoping to see the caretaker leave in his truck. Just the opposite happened. His
smoking green pick-up rattled up the road into view and pulled into the yard. A
woman bolted out of the passenger door, struggling to keep her balance while
juggling a heavy bag of groceries. It looked as though she'd been shoved out of
the truck. Her head was shrouded in a kerchief. Had it not been, Nick and Woody
might have spotted the angry red welt that crossed her right cheek. She slammed
the door and walked toward the house, almost losing her balance as she climbed
the three steps to the back porch. The pick-up sputtered, blew a puff of black
smoke and rumbled through the open barn door. A few minutes later the caretaker
emerged, closed the door and went into the house as well.
"At
least we know where he is," gulped Woody. "He won't be able to sneak
up on us."
They
watched the house for fifteen minutes, though it seemed a lot longer. Nick
noticed something flapping in the wind behind the barn. It looked like a
scarecrow the way it stood erect in the middle of an open area. The sleeve that
waved looked like his leather jacket, calling for help. He pointed it out to
Woody, and then suggested they go around to the woods behind the barn and try
to get a closer look. Woody, scared but bored with the present situation,
readily agreed. Their clothes got even more stained when they repeated the
crawl back across the pasture and under the electric fence. They went downhill
through the woods for five hundred yards or so, then to the east to get behind
the barn. A twenty-foot cliff blocked their route from the back so they
retraced their steps to a huge pile of dead and downed trees that Nick’s
grandfather called “deadfall.” It extended from the cliff area to a thicket of
brambles near the back of the house. The place was virtually cut off from the
world. The deadfall was massive, a disorderly twisted pile of tree trunks and
limbs that had been pushed aside to clear the pasture many years ago. It lay in
a helter-skelter mess, large enough to easily bury a high school football field
under twenty feet of scrap logs and limbs. Anyone crossing it could easily slip
into the bowels of the pick-up-stick-like configuration and become trapped
twenty feet from sight, doomed to a slow death of starvation. No one would even
hear a cry for help, so thick was the tangle. Nick and Woody spent years
climbing trees and crossing piles of deadfall, though they’d never encountered
one this big. They didn't give the possibility of danger a thought. With Nick
still in the lead, as he should be since it's his jacket, thought Woody,
they climbed the twenty foot face of the wood pile and started across the
uneven surface on top. It was like a giant monkey bar set and under different
circumstances would have been a “blast” to play on, to use Woody's latest buzz
word. When they reached the half way point Nick shimmied up a small tree trunk
that jutted above the pile.
"Oh
my God! Look at this," he whispered excitedly to Woody. "There’s my
jacket. It's mounted on a cross."
Woody
gulped as he also shimmied up to look. It was so weird. It meant they would
have to climb down from the safety of the deadfall and go into the yard near
the house. Now he really was scared. He knew Nick wouldn’t leave without going
after it. I've got to get a new friend, he promised himself.
They
climbed back down and resumed their trek across the pile of logs. The closer
they got, the more they could see of the yard behind the house. Nick noticed a
cluster of small crosses lined up in rows behind the larger cross where his
jacket was flapping in the breeze. He slowed his pace and waited for Woody to
catch up.
"This
is starting to get weird," he observed.
"What
do you mean, ‘starting’?” countered Woody. "Is that a cemetery?" he
asked, pointing to the series of crosses that had stopped Nick in his tracks.
"I
don't know," Nick replied. "If it is, we're in big trouble."
Nick snapped himself out of the grip of fear that was starting to paralyze him.
He had to get the jacket, no matter what the cost. He moved across the final
dozen yards to the edge of the twisted pile of dead trees. Woody followed but
was so shaky he slipped twice before getting his unsteady legs back under
control. By the time they made it to the end of the maze it had become crystal
clear. There definitely was a crude cemetery behind the house. Nick counted
twenty-four small weathered crosses. Like everything else on the estate, only a
few specks of paint remained. Even the house, once a white Victorian gem, was
now a weathered gray color with large green patches where moss had taken root.
The whole place was slowly rotting away.
"You
wait here and be the lookout while I climb down and get my jacket," Nick
ordered. He then began to descend from the pile before he lost his courage.
Woody
stared intently at the house, a loyal watchdog on the job. Nick worked his way
down to the cemetery. What is going on here? Nick asked himself. He
didn’t really want an answer, just his jacket. It took several minutes to climb
free of the deadfall. He hid behind stumps that jutted out from the pile when
he could, a feeble attempt to prevent being spotted if someone was looking out
a window. He jumped the final five feet, twisting an ankle when he landed.
"Damn!" he cursed. He took a few steps to test it. It was sore but
seemed to carry his weight OK. The cross where his jacket flapped in the breeze
was forty feet from the dead fall, clearly visible from the house and barn.
He'd be a sitting duck the second he stepped away from the log pile. He decided
speed would serve him better than cunning. Instead of crawling on his belly, he
ran as fast as he could - sore ankle be dammed. He made it to the cross. Then
he crouched down to see if he'd been spotted. No sign of movement came from the
house. He got to his feet and tried to slip his jacket off the crude wooden
structure. It wouldn't budge. It was nailed to the cross. He tried to push the
cross to see if it would come out of the ground, but no deal. The post was
firmly imbedded. It didn't budge an inch. He needed something to pull out the
nails with; a hammer would do fine. He and Woody were experts at this. It was
how they got their supply of nails for building hot rods and tree forts. They
"inspected" new houses under construction in the neighborhood and
removed select pieces of discarded lumber, and salvaged bent nails that the
carpenters left behind. There must be a hammer in the barn, he thought.
He then regretted it, since going after it might put him right into the hands
of the creep who had sworn to get him. He ran back toward the pile and waved
for Woody to come down.
Down
he came, muttering all the way, "Oh man, I really really do have to get a
new friend." Nick told him the jacket was spiked firmly to the cross and
the only way to get it was to find a hammer and pull the nails out.
"I'm going
into the barn. There must be some tools there," he prophesied to Woody.
"You wait here. If the caretaker comes out of the house, yell and then
climb the pile and go for help as fast as you can. I'm sure you can get away;
he's probably drunk and won't be able to climb this mess. I'll hear you yell,
and hide out till the coast is clear."
Woody
didn't like it, didn't like it one bit, but couldn't come up with a better
idea. Nick left for the barn and Woody started up the pile, so he'd be a few
feet above the ground, in case the caretaker tried to sneak up on him. I
have a better view of the house from here, he mused as he settled down on a
log ten feet out of reach.
Getting
into the barn was easy, too easy - like walking into a spider’s web,
thought Nick as he went through the main door, past the pick-up truck that
rested heavy on a sagging wooden floor. The place reeked, a mixture of motor
oil and stale beer, the latter emanating from dozens of empty beer bottles
littering the floor. A quick look showed him there were no tools in this area.
He pushed open a massive interior door in front of the truck exposing livestock
stalls where a few cows quietly munched hay in their manure littered pens. Two
other doors led from the garage area. One was secured with three padlocks; the
other was slightly ajar. Nick pushed it open and peered in. He found what he
was looking for, a workshop. The large bench that extended along the entire
length of the outside wall was littered with tools. Hammers, pliers, screwdrivers
and saws were strewn in a long sweep of disarray across the worktable. Nick
turned and quietly closed the door, noticing that it was peppered with expired
car registrations held in place by thumbtacks. Corresponding metal license
plates were nailed to the adjacent wall. The registrations were for a 1938
Dodge pick-up truck. Francis Gleason was listed as the owner with an address of
#1 South Mountain Drive, Binghamton New York. Gleason must be the caretaker,
thought Nick somehow less afraid now that he knew the creep’s name. It was a
short-lived revere. He closed the door by leaning into it with his back and an
enormous mason jar on the workbench caught his eye. Something flesh colored
floated in a clear liquid. From his vantage point it looked just like the jars
that littered the bar in his grandfather’s favorite watering hole. Every once
in a while Nick was allowed to tag along, to the chagrin of both his mother and
grandmother. His grandfather would order a boilermaker and a pig knuckle
for himself and a coke for “the kid”. Nick couldn’t figure out how he could eat
the disgusting thing, especially after seeing the bartender fish it out of the
jar with a bare hand. The caretaker must have a private supply of pig
knuckles, mused Nick as he crossed the room for a closer look.
"Oh
my God!!" he gasped. It wasn't pig knuckles floating in the jar. It was
fingers, small and delicate like those of women or kids. Nick was stunned. He
almost fainted. His legs wobbled so much he was forced to sit. He knew he had
to get out but for the moment was too scared to move.
He heard Woody
yell: not a warning signal but a screech. He was reacting to a huge black snake
that crawled through the deadfall. It
brushed past his leg and over his foot, oblivious to the difference in texture
between the limb of a tree and that of a twelve-year old boy. Woody’s scream
brought Nick out of his stupor. He tore out of the barn and raced toward the
deadfall. He climbed right over the top of Woody in his rush to scale the log
barrier. The caretaker came charging around the side of the house just as they
scrambled out of sight. They were well on their way to the safety of the woods
by the time he reached the deadfall, a shotgun clutched in his right hand.
“Damn,” he cursed.
If he had know it was the same kids he caught trespassing the previous week, he
would have circled around and ambushed them. As it was he shrugged and walked
back to the house. He had enough to deal with. He had to find the girl who was
blabbing about a dead finger in the schoolyard. His sister would help, even if
he had to smack her senseless again.
Chapter Nine – The Calm
Before the Storm
Nick
and Woody crossed the top of the log pile in record time, slid and scampered
down the side and then made their way to the bottom of South Mountain. When
they broke out of the woods and stepped onto the pavement of Denton Road, they
were panting, sweating and covered with burdocks. They plopped down on an old
log by the side of the road to catch their breath and sat staring into space,
numb. Finally, Nick broke the ice, “You won’t believe what I saw in the barn,”
knowing full well that Woody could never guess what he saw.
“I
don’t think I want to,” Woody replied, looking over at Nick, hoping the answer
would be something silly or funny. He could tell by Nick’s ashen complexion it
wasn’t going to be either.
“A
jar of fingers,” Nick blurted, “a huge jar, with dead fingers floating around
like pig knuckles.” Woody desperately wanted
to see Nick grin and tell him he was joking, but he saw that Nick wasn’t
kidding. Maybe he just thought they were fingers. After all, they’d been
messing around with that stupid amputated finger trick all week. He’d even had
weird dreams himself the last few nights. Nick couldn’t be right; he must have
imagined it.
“I
know what you’re thinking, that I’ve gone nuts but I haven’t. I really did see
fingers floating in a jar!” Nick exclaimed. He hoped his best friend could see
he was telling the truth. “That caretaker is weirder than we thought.”
“No
shit, Sherlock,” Woody responded, still not sure what to believe but starting
to accept that Nick’s bizarre claim was real.
“His
name is Francis Gleason,” Nick continued after a long silent moment.
“How
do you know that?” Woody replied.
“His
expired truck registrations were plastered all over the door in the workshop,
Nick explained and then switched back to the topic Woody wanted to leave
behind. “I think the fingers might have something to do with that odd graveyard
behind the barn.”
“What
are we going to do?” Woody asked, “Go to the police?”
“What
good would that do?” Nick responded. “Remember what happens every time we do
that?” Woody remembered all right, like the time they escaped from the “Thing”
in Ross Creek tunnel. Something weird in the pitch-black cavern came after
them. The cop they reported it to booted Woody in the seat of his pants and
told them to stay the hell away from the creek. “Go play at the park like
you’re supposed to.”
Another
encounter they had with the “authorities” wasn’t any better. It happened six months ago. Tom Conlon’s dog,
Tippy, was attacked by a ferocious English bull dog on Vestal Ave. Nick, Woody,
and Tom were walking along the sidewalk on their way to MacArthur Park when
they passed by the McNierny house, the home of Butch. Butch was a menace to the
neighborhood. Mailmen and paperboys were his favorite targets. Nick knew this
all too well. Butch attacked him several times when he substituted for the regular
paper carrier. Butch was short legged, stocky and slow but made up for physical
limitations with meanness and cunning. His favorite trick was to hide in the
shrubs by the front door and attack strangers as they strolled up the walkway
to the house. He also prowled the neighborhood, unleashing his wrath on
unsuspecting kids and dogs. Tippy never knew what hit him. One minute he was
chugging along with the gang. The next, he was on his back, Butch chewing and
tearing at his throat. It was over in a flash. He lay on the walk bleeding and
in shock while Butch swaggered back to his roost under the shrubs. Tom scooped
up his dog and with Nick and Woody in tow, ran to get help. Sixty-three
stitches later, it looked like he’d survive. At least that’s what old Doc Vink
told them as they left Tippy behind to recuperate in the animal hospital.
The day after the
dog attack, Tom, Nick and Woody went to see McNierny, Butch’s owner, to discuss
the crime. Mr. “M” impatiently listened for less than a minute, then yelled at
them, “Get the hell off my property. If I catch you on my land again, I’ll sic
Butch on YOU.” Their next stop was the Dog Catcher’s office in downtown
Binghamton but their complaint was quickly dismissed by an impatient civil
servant, “ Are you kidding me? I don’t get paid to referee dogfights. Go home
and play with your dolls, girls.” They didn’t fare any better at police
headquarters, getting another brush off.
“The
hell with all of them,” Nick proclaimed. “Let’s just get even.”
“How?”
asked Tommy?
“I
don’t know,” mused Nick. “Maybe by shooting out the street light by McNierny’s
house?”
“Great
idea,” yelped Woody. “We can use my bb-gun.”
It took three nights of sniping before they
finally hit the target. They hid in a clump of wild bushes on the overgrown lot
next to McNierny’s, taking turns running from cover to take a quick shot. Woody
finally made a score and was rewarded with a shower of glass. It felt good. So
good that they repeated the feat every time the power company replaced the bulb,
chalking up six retaliatory strikes in total. They learned two valuable lessons
in the process: authorities don’t care about kids and getting even feels as
good as getting justice.
They
knew what would happen if they reported the jar of dead fingers to the cops -
disbelief and irritation. They might even end up in trouble themselves, cited
for trespassing. They also knew they couldn’t tell their parents. They’d been
forbidden to go within a mile of the O’Neil estate where Gleason was the
caretaker. They knew they couldn’t report it to anybody. The smart thing to do
was to keep their mouths shut. This strategy decided on, they parted company.
Woody went down Denton Road to his house for dinner while Nick cut through
Lowery and Colavito’s back yards to his on Chadwick. Topper, his tail wagging
in double time, welcomed him. Nick rewarded his loyalty with a pat on the head
and a big hug. “At least I have one friend in this house,” Nick whispered, as
he made his way through the back door to face the music.
His
mother was mad but not the Irish Temper mad that Nick expected.
Thankfully, she didn’t use the cord from their electric coffee pot to make her
point this time. When she did it raised welts on the back of his leg. Maybe she
felt some guilt from the nights of terror she’d caused him with the dead
finger. She did give him a whack on the side of the head and made it crystal
clear he’d have to pay for the jacket. His sister was thrilled because Nick
would have to do dishes as part of his punishment. He’d get paid twenty-five
cents a day for taking over her chore, but every cent would go toward his debt.
The stash he’d put aside to buy a generator light for his bike and the money he
made from mowing lawns in the neighborhood would also be earmarked for the jacket
fund.
It
was a glum Nick who distractedly nibbled away his usual Friday night dinner
fare - macaroni topped with Hunt’s tomato sauce, tuna fish, bread, butter and
milk. His mother made sure they followed the Catholic Church rules; in this
case they abstained from meat on Friday. As he ate, he puzzled over the jar of
fingers in the barn, wondering whose fingers they were. When he asked to go to
Woody’s after finishing the dishes he learned he wouldn’t be going anyplace
after dinner until the jacket was paid for. This was a crushing blow. School
was going to end for the year in three days. He’d better get cracking if he
wanted to avoid being a prisoner for the summer. Twenty-five cents a day for
doing the dishes, and three dollars a week for mowing lawns in the neighborhood
would take half the summer to add up to the fifteen dollar price of a new
jacket. He guessed he’d better break into his so-called tamper proof bank,
which was official property of the Binghamton Savings Bank. His parents forced
him to use this metal vault, cleverly constructed to look like an ordinary
book, to save money for college. Heck, he didn’t even want to go to college,
especially if he had to put half his earnings away. He kept the bank on his
bookshelf between his favorite book, The Wild Dogs of Drowning Creek, by
Manly Wade Wellman and a collection of Cub Scout and Boy Scout Manuals. The
bank was so well made that most kids couldn’t get money out like they often did
from a piggy bank. Nick though, had become an expert at getting into it. It
took a lot of work and several years of practice, but he’d learned to pry open
the cover with a screwdriver. If he went at it very slowly he could avoid
damaging the series of metal tabs that held the two sides together. He’d opened
it and put it back together a dozen or more times. When he took it to the bank
to make a deposit, the bank teller never noticed that it’d been tampered with.
She’d simply opened it with her master key and took out the money. “It’ll be
the first thing I do tomorrow,” he thought to himself as he drifted into a
troubled sleep. Troubled because it was interrupted by dreams of dead fingers
chasing him through the woods.
Saturday
came and went, a blurred memory of grass clippings spraying over his sneakers.
His hands were tingling, as though asleep, from the constant vibration of the
power mower. He mowed his three regulars, and then took on two new customers
and one freeloader, Vinny DiStaphano. Vinny forced Woody and him to do the
DiStaphano lawn, an installment payment for the protection services he soon
would be providing on their bus ride to junior high. Nick was beat by the time
he sat down to the Saturday night hamburger ritual. He loved it but wished his
mother would spring for hamburger rolls once in a while. He hated the way plain
white bread fell apart under the stress of hot meat smeared with ketchup. After
dinner he did the dishes, chalking up another quarter for the jacket fund. He
was a third of the way toward getting the fifteen dollars he needed. He figured
he’d be done, or close to it, when he broke into his bank later that night. He
hung out in the back yard with Topper after the dishes were finished, working
on his knife throwing skills, using a screwdriver (the very same tool that
would break the bank in an hour or so) instead of a hunting knife. It was a
rare toss when the screwdriver actually stuck in the target, a bull’s eye
painted on an old tree stump. “I’ll never be able to defend myself in a
real life or death situation,” he mused, and then dejectedly went in at
dusk to listen to the radio and read comic books. He couldn’t get the jar of
fingers out of his head. “Where did they come from?” He had to find out. He had
to go back up the mountain.
Nick
was up by seven Sunday morning, hoping his mother would follow his lead so they
could go to eight o’clock mass (and get it over with, as she often described
their fulfillment of the Sunday obligation). She did. He and Kathy rode with
her to Saint John’s. He took his missal; she brought her rosary beads. His
father had dropped out of the church routine years before Nick was born. Today
he stayed home and worked on his latest construction project, a do-it-yourself
camping trailer. The plans came from Popular Mechanics. It was nearly
finished after six months of weekend construction, highly laced with bursts of
cursing at a hammer that routinely strayed from course. A two-week stay at
Chenango Valley State Park was the promised maiden voyage. Nick couldn’t wait.
He loved State Park. The swimming was great, with diving boards and floats.
There were boats and canoes for rent, which kids were allowed to use, provided
they’d passed a Junior Life Saving course. Nick took and passed it at the
Binghamton YMCA when he was ten. The park had miles of forest trails, acres of
swamps and plenty of streams to explore and play in. It even had a nine-hole
golf course where an ambitious twelve-year-old could earn a few bucks caddying.
The archery range next to the golf course was hardly used. It was a great place
for Nick and Woody to test their homemade bow & arrows. State Park was
heaven for a twelve-year-old boy, especially one allowed to bring his best
friend on a two-week camping trip.
After
mass he escaped to Woody’s house. Topper followed along as usual. He knew Woody
wasn’t allowed to play until noon on Sunday but he didn’t care. He just wanted
to get away from his mother so she wouldn’t trick him into admitting how he’d
lost his jacket. She was pretty good at sensing when something was wrong,
especially when that something had to do with him. He slipped into the Stiles’
garage, snagged a basketball and went to their side yard to the hoop for a
solitary game of Horse. It was a good way to kill time while he waited for
Woody.
At
the exact same moment his first shot was swishing through the net, a rusted
pick-up truck was six blocks away making a left turn off Vestal Ave. onto
Jutland Road. Smoke puffed angrily from the tail pipe as it entered the newest
subdivision in the city. It was as out of place as a vagrant at a fancy
wedding. The kids who lived here were bussed to Longfellow. It was where the
girl who spoke of a “Dead Finger” lived. At least that’s what Bessie Gleason
told her brother Francis after he’d viscously slapped her face to get the
information. Francis was obsessed. He had to get his hands on the girl.
Chapter
Ten – The Storm
Sunday,
June 20
Foreword
Repeated: She stepped off the curb onto the path. It connected her street to
Sally’s. She hated this section of the neighborhood. Hated that it was not
developed yet. The mass of trees and undergrowth lining the trail scared her.
Low branches and blackberry shoots reached into the passageway, as though to
grab her. She thought of them as the elongated fingers of a witch. Her doll was
cradled under one arm. She dragged an overnight bag stuffed with miniature
dresses in her other. She was in a hurry to get home. Then she was struck! It
was like a bolt of lightning. One minute she was walking along, the next she
was lying on her back looking up at a clear blue, June sky. Tree branches
swayed gently above but the hands that held her were rough. A stench of garlic
and body odor washed over her. She struggled to get up but his grasp brought
her down with a thud. He mumbled behind a soiled kerchief that hid his face,
“Shut up and you won’t get hurt.” She squirmed free in a fit of panic when he
shifted his hold to unfurl a burlap sack. She took two steps and then felt her
head explode. The woods turned bright yellow, and then flashed to white. Her
knees buckled; she went down. She saw him above her just before the blackness
took her away. He was holding the sack with a gloved hand. How odd, she
thought, to be wearing a glove in summer. Then she was gone.
Mrs.
Palmer started to prickle when Diane hadn’t come home from Sally’s for lunch by
twelve-fifteen. It was so unlike her to be late. By twelve-twenty she was
boiling. “How long does she expect me to stand here and keep the soup from
boiling away?” she complained to her husband. He could not hear her from his
location in the living room, reclined and in a snooze with the Sunday paper
lying across his chest. The phone rang, breaking the escalation of her anger.
It was Sally, asking if Diane was through with lunch.
“What
do you mean through with lunch? I thought she was still at your house,” Mrs.
Palmer responded, her mood now transformed from irritation to full blown rage.
“No,
Mrs. Palmer. Diane left over half an hour ago,” Sally replied.
“Well
she isn’t here. Are you sure she was headed straight home?”
“Yes,”
Sally answered, “Would you please have her call me when she gets home?” and
then quickly hung up. She knew how mean Mrs. Palmer could get when she was mad.
She wasn’t going to stay on the phone and take the brunt of it. “I wonder
where Diane is? It’s only a three-minute walk from my house to hers,” she
puzzled and then quickly made her way to her bedroom to escape the phone,
in case Mrs. Palmer called back. As Diane’s mother hung up the phone her knees
buckled. It was her body’s reaction to the rush of adrenalin that washed away
her anger and replaced it with a sinking feeling of dread. Her worst nightmare
was happening. Her daughter was missing.
Mr.
Palmer practically catapulted into the air from his leather recliner. His wife’s
scream jerked him out of a pleasant Sunday doze. He ran to the kitchen to find
her sitting on the linoleum in the middle of the floor, shrieking and sobbing,
“Our daughter is gone! She got lost in
the woods or someone has kidnapped her!”
“Now,
now,” he responded, helping her up and asking what was going on. He was
concerned himself when he learned that Diane was not home yet, having left
Sally’s a half hour earlier. She wasn’t one to dawdle or get sidetracked.
“I’ll
go look for her. I’m sure there’s a good explanation,” he said to his wife as
he walked toward the back door.
“I’m
going with you,” she shot back and together they began to scour the small
neighborhood. When they came to Sally’s, they knocked on the door and went in
to discuss Diane’s whereabouts with Sally and her parents. All they learned was
that Diane left before noon and headed straight home.
“I
know she wasn’t planning on stopping along the way,” Sally opined. “She was
carrying her doll and a suitcase full of doll clothes that we just traded. She
wanted to get home as quick as possible to arrange them in her doll closet
before lunch. That’s why she took the shortcut through the woods.”
Mr.
and Mrs. Palmer looked at each in surprise. They knew how much Diane hated the
woods. She always complained to them how scary the path was. They thanked the
Nights and quickly left, in a frenzy to get to the shortcut. The trail scared
Mrs. Palmer even more than it did Diane. She was a city girl who hated
woods and all the creepy things that lived there. When they got half way
down the path, where the wood was at its thickest, they spotted a doll lying
face down at the edge of the trail, nearly hidden under a thicket of briar. It
was Diane’s. Mrs. Palmer clutched it to her chest, too scared now to even cry.
A sickening feeling overcame them. They knew something bad had happened to
their only child, their princess. She never would have left her doll behind.
The
police responded immediately. Not to say they weren’t responsive to all
emergencies but this was the most exclusive neighborhood in town. The small
town political infrastructure reacted in a little faster when called on by the
highbrow residents. Every kid in the isolated neighborhood was questioned but
the only clue to surface was that an old beat-up pick-up truck was seen in the
neighborhood several times that morning.
The police made a second visit to each house, imploring everyone to keep
the situation confidential. It looked like a kidnapping and if the story went
public it might mess up their chances to get Diane back safely.
Chapter Eleven – The
Aftermath
Monday,
June 21
8:15
am – When Nick and Woody took their seats in response to the “third bell”
they noticed that Diane Palmer was absent but didn’t think anything of it. She
missed a lot of school. She was lucky; she had one of those rare over-indulgent
mothers who let their kids stay home with the slightest ailment, even a little
cold. But this was the last week of school. There were no tests and no new
subjects to conquer. They had three days of fun ahead, then a short graduation
ceremony where Miss Lennox would hand out the sixth grade diplomas. It would be
their “best ever” days in Longfellow. Why would anyone miss it? When they stood
to pledge to the flag, Woody tossed a spitball at Nick to get his attention. He
pointed to Diane’s empty seat and mouthed, “You must have scared her so bad
with the dead finger that she couldn’t come to school.”
“No
way! She came to school Friday after she saw it on Thursday and besides, she
loved it. You should have seen the way she ran screaming to her friends to
gloat,” Nick whispered, his hand covering his mouth so Mrs. Nevel couldn’t tell
where the chatter was coming from.
“Maybe
she thought we were going to get another polio shot,” Woody chuckled.
Nick
remembered back to April when every kid in school got polio shots, one of the
first schools in the country to use the new vaccine. They were forced to line
up in the auditorium and file past a nursing station set up on the stage. The
first nurse took their name and temperature; the second asked them to roll up
their sleeve and then swabbed their arm with alcohol. A doctor stood at the end
of the row, jabbing kids’ arms with a hypo as they tensed and closed their
eyes. Man it stung! But you didn’t dare wince in front of your
classmates - if you were a boy, that is. The girls shrieked and sobbed, belying
the courage they would demonstrate years later in the delivery room. Diane
refused to get in line. She ran sobbing back to class. Shortly thereafter, her
overindulgent mother came to school and took her home. She missed class for the
rest of the week and then came back with a big bandage on her arm and a tale of
woe. She claimed to be allergic to the polio serum, which had been administered
by her family doctor. She just barely survived. Nobody bought her story. Even
her best friend Sally rolled her eyes when Diane told some new kid about her
ordeal. Nick was sure Woody was kidding about Diane being absent because of a
new round of polio shots, but he might be right about the dead finger. Maybe
it had scared her more than he thought. After all, it kept him in a state of
fright for six long years.
The
rest of the morning session was spent going over the exams they took the
previous week. Woody hit “A’s” on all of them. Nick escaped with an A, two B’s
and two C+’s. His mother was going to be mad. The “C+’s” were in his best
subjects: Arithmetic and English. At eleven fifteen they went out to the playground
for a “bonus” recess, a reward for the fact that everyone passed. They all
would graduate on Wednesday.
11:20
am - At the exact moment Woody and Nick were choosing up sides for a bat
ball game, Mr. Finch, the head linotype operator at the Binghamton Evening
Press was checking the front-page story he’d just typed from the scribbled
notes of the city editor. He hated these last minute changes. As he read the
words that he’d unconsciously typed a minute earlier on the huge linotype
machine, he gasped. Charlie Palmer’s daughter was missing, maybe kidnapped.
He’d gone to high school with Charlie and, like a lot of people in town, was
envious of the success he’d achieved. Still, he liked and respected him a lot.
Palmer owned one of the biggest electronic supply houses in the region, drove a
fancy sports car and lived in the best and newest neighborhood. I bet she
was kidnapped, he thought. You couldn’t pick a better target. He
read on, in spite of the lump in his throat. The paper had to be printed and then
delivered to forty-six drop off points by 3:30. He had less than twelve minutes
to finish proofreading and get the front-page ready for the final run.
Back
in time to 8:15 am - As Nick and Woody were exchanging wise cracks about
Diane Palmer’s absence and the rest of the class was reciting the Pledge of
Allegiance, Bessie Gleason stumbled across the dirt driveway behind her house,
propelled by a powerful shove from her brother Francis. He was in a panic. The
girl he’d abducted yesterday was still unconscious.
“Get
in there and take care of her. I didn’t work my fingers to the bone to pay your
tuition to nursing school for nothing,” he shouted, while unlocking the door to
the small room next to his workshop.
He
gave a final shove that carried her across the small room into the rough boards
of the outside wall. Bessie was scared. She’d never seen him this much out of
control. He’d practically knocked her senseless yesterday with a flurry of
smashes to the face to make her to point out the girl who babbled about the
dead finger. She was sorry now she told him about her encounter on the
playground last Friday. Francis was sixteen when their mother died in the fire
and she was only two. He scraped out a living for the two of them delivering
papers and doing odd jobs. Jobs so awful that no one else would do them. It was
a remarkable testament to his tenacity. It was inconceivable in Nick’s era that
a sixteen-year-old boy could take care of himself, not to mention a two year
old sister. In 1922 it was more than possible. Saint Mary’s Orphans Home was
overflowing and the few Broome County social workers were spread too thin to
investigate reports of young kids living on their own. He was her only family,
so Bessie put up with his hermit-like approach to life. Now she was worried,
worried to death. He seemed to have gone mad with his long held obsession. She
didn’t have time to dwell on it. The girl was lying on the floor covered by a
ragged old horse blanket, her eyes closed, her breathing faint and shallow. She
knew a coma when she saw it and this kid was in one. The lump on the side of
her head was the size of an orange. “It’ll be a miracle if she doesn’t have
a fractured skull,” she thought, as she checked Diane’s pupils for
dilation. They checked OK. The girl groaned and shifted her position, another
good sign. The coma didn’t appear too deep but she knew from her days at
Binghamton General Hospital that a condition like this could last for weeks,
even months. She turned to Francis and told him the girl would most likely
recover but it might take several days for her to wake up. She hoped this news
would calm him down.
“Just
fix her and let me know when she wakes up,” he hissed as he huffed out of the
room. “And be sure to lock the door. If anything happens to her, you are going
to pay for it!”
Bessie
did what she could to make Diane comfortable and then locked the door and
returned to the house. She sat in the parlor reading and must have dozed off.
She woke with a start as the mantle clock struck ten; she raced out to the barn
to check on the Palmer girl. She noticed that her brother’s pick up truck
wasn’t in the yard or the barn and the cows were lined up at the pasture gate
for a milking that should have been finished an hour ago. Some of the cows were
already showing signs of discomfort. I wonder where Francis is off to. He
never neglects the herd.
But
he was neglecting the herd. Francis was across town in Spring Forrest Cemetery,
on his knees praying and crying.
“I’m
sorry mom, I messed up this week. Ever since I started coughing up blood I’ve
been crazy to find it. Now I’ve done something bad and I don’t know if I can
fix it. Please help me find it before it’s my turn to go.” Francis got to his
feet after kneeling at his mother’s grave for more than an hour. He felt a
little better. His graveside conversations with a long dead mother always
helped him work through a bad period, though lately he needed the one-sided
talks a lot more often than in the past. He used to come once a year. Now it was
every few days. It irritated him that he didn’t know for sure in which of the
twenty-one unmarked graves his mother was buried. As a result, he’d taken to
praying at the monument that honored all the women killed in the fire. It also
irked him that his drunken Irish father deserted them when his mother told him
she was pregnant with Bessie. It transformed his devotion to his mother into an
obsession.
Gleason
hurried from the cemetery, guilt from neglecting the herd flooding his
conscience. If only his damn sister could do it. She’ll have to sell the
cows when I’m gone. He tried not to think about it but a coughing fit on
the ride home made it hard to ignore. He spit the wad of blood-laced phlegm out
the window and stepped on the gas, forcing the tired engine in his rusted
pick-up to strain as it climbed South Mountain. The cows were mooing in
desperation as he pulled into the barnyard. He wanted to check on the girl, but
one look at the cows ended that. It took almost an hour to finish the job. He
was beat. Then a round of coughing hit him as he exited the milk parlor. When
it subsided, he unlocked the door to the room where Diane was kept. His
coughing didn’t bother Diane a bit. She just lay on the floor and stared at the
ceiling. Her eyes didn’t twitch nor did she make a single movement in the five
minutes he watched her. “Damn,” Gleason mused aloud. “She’s my last chance to
find it.” Then he turned and left the room. It was almost lunchtime but he
wasn’t hungry. He decided to go downtown and hang out by the Press Building.
The early edition would be finished and when they stopped the press to feed in
a new roll of paper the news could be read through a huge window in front of
the pressroom. Locals loved to hang out on the sidewalk and watch the presses roll.
It was quite a show. The “regulars” got a peek at the headlines before anyone
else in town. The need to be first with local gossip was rampant, well
evidenced by the number of people who hung out on the sidewalk in front of the
Press Building every afternoon. Gleason blended in with the crowd as the press
rolled to a stop. A gasp went through the small crowd as they read of the
kidnapping. Gleason’s face turned bright red as he took in the headline. He
pulled his hat down and quickly slipped through the crowd, heading down the
street to his truck. He couldn’t believe the mess he’d gotten himself into. Now
he’d have to kill her.
3:00pm
- Nick left school in an upbeat mood. “Two days to go and we’re junior high
students,” he remarked to Woody.
“Yea,
but first, a whole summer of slavery for Stew and Vinnie,” Woody responded,
bringing the mood back to street level.
Nick
didn’t care. He figured they could avoid much of the ordeal. Vinnie and Stew
never stayed focused long and in the summer they usually hitchhiked to Quaker
Lake to spend the day ogling girls at Brady’s Beach. Naw, this wasn’t going
to be a bad summer at all. Nick was also excited because tonight he’d be
delivering papers. Ronnie Gordon promised to sell him his route at the end of
summer and was giving him a tryout. For the next two weeks he’d be handling the
delivery, collecting the forty-five cent weekly fee and turning in the paper
work and money to Ron. They’d split the profit, netting him about five dollars.
As soon as he got home Nick changed into a pair of faded dungarees, each knee
marked with a bright blue, iron-on patch, and topped it with white tee shirt.
He headed to the drop off point on Vestal Ave. The paper bundles for three
separate routes were dropped off at the corner of Brookfield and Vestal. He
wanted to be there when the bales were tossed out of the truck. If no one were
around, the delivery guy would throw the bundles anywhere his mood dictated,
often into the bushes at the edge of the sidewalk. He was a real schmuck who loved
to jerk the paperboys around. He always tried to cheat them out of money when
they settled up at the end of the week.
Nick
was there when the Binghamton Press van pulled to a stop at the corner. Topper
was with him, sitting in the grass wagging his tail. His ears perked up in
suspicion as Mr. Libus waddled out and opened the back door to get the three
bundles of papers for this drop.
“What
the hell are you doing here kid? You’re not a paperboy,” he growled, never
taking the unlit cigar out of his mouth.
“I’m
filling in for Ronnie Gordon,” Nick responded. “He’s going to sell me his route
at the end of summer.”
“He can’t sell the route.
I’m the one who sells - er - I mean assigns the route,” Libus shot back. Nick
knew he’d said too much and countered,
“I’m
just kidding Mister. Ronnie asked me to substitute for him for a few days while
he works on a project with his father.” He hoped his lie would shut up the fat
distribution supervisor.
“That’s
more like it,” Libus said. “If you want a route, you come to me first. No
little punk of a paperboy is going to cut me out of a sale – er - I mean
assignment.” Nick knew he’d eventually have to pay off the slime ball but so
what? The route netted over ten dollars a week. He’d be rich. All he had to do
was deliver sixty-three papers every day and collect the money once a week.
As
Libus left, Topper stood and barked at the truck. “Calm down boy,” Nick
ordered. “He’s not worth getting in a stew about.” Nick was cutting the wire
that held the bundle of papers together when Marshall Reutlinger and Rick
Ludwick, the other two paperboys who picked up their papers at this drop-off,
walked up.
“What’s
in the news?” Marshall asked? “I like to be the first to know.” Nick had no
idea. He never read anything in the paper except the funnies. He pulled out the
top paper and looked.
“Oh
my God! Diane Palmer has been kidnapped!” he exclaimed as he read the two-inch
headline.
“What
are you talking about?” Marshall challenged. “Give me that paper!” The front
page was totally taken up with the story about Diane’s disappearance. The
headline writer had gone for the most dramatic angle possible and blasted the
front page with Wealthy
industrialist’s daughter kidnapped. It wasn’t until the third
paragraph that the reader would learn that she was missing, not kidnapped.
“She
wasn’t in class today,” Nick explained to Marshall and Rick. “I wondered why
she was absent.”
“I
bet she just ran away and is hiding at a friend’s house,” Marshall countered.
“She’s always doing dumb stuff to get attention and to make her parents buy her
things.”
Nick
and Rick agreed. It was too hard to believe that anything bad had happened to
her. Nick loaded up his sixty-three papers and began the long climb up
Brookfield Road to the first house on the route. Topper ran ahead, scouting for
birds and squirrels. Nick reread the article about Diane as he walked. Maybe it
was true. Maybe she really had been kidnapped. Then he came to a police quote
that caught his attention. Apparently several kids in the neighborhood
mentioned seeing a beat-up green pick-up truck driving around that morning. The
police discounted it as a lead since there were scores of green trucks around
town.
“It’s
the number one color for a work truck and most are beat up old wrecks. The guys
who buy em keep em till they rust off their frames,” according to the police
officer quoted in the paper. This wasn’t promising lead for the police, but
Nick wondered. Could it be Gleason’s truck? My God! If he has a jar of fingers in his
barn, he’s capable of anything!
4:15
pm - Nick finished delivering papers in record time and immediately went to
Woody’s house. Woody wasn’t home. “Darn!” he cursed under his breath as he
turned from the house and walked away. He forgot this was the day Woody had his
clarinet lesson. He won’t be home till dinnertime. Tomorrow will be
too late. Nick decided to go up the mountain by himself. He had to find out
if Gleason had anything to do with Diane’s disappearance. He decided not to
take Topper. He wanted his company and protection, but couldn’t risk it. It
would be his luck to be hiding in the bushes with Gleason nearby when Topper
ran out to chase a squirrel. No, he had to do this alone. He ran home and
tossed the newspaper delivery sack on the back porch and then quietly locked
Topper in the garage. He didn’t want his mother to know he was there. She said
he couldn’t go out to play after dinner until he paid for the lost jacket. He
was pretty sure that she wouldn’t let him free to play before dinner either -
at least until Diane’s kidnapper was captured. That is, if she had been
kidnapped. He was pretty sure she wasn’t pulling a fast one on her parents like
Marshall Reutlinger thought. There is no way she would leave her “lap of
luxury” to blackmail her parents into buying her something she wanted.
Nick
climbed the steep first section of woods to the abandoned road; he then
followed it to the top. He felt safer on the road then in the woods. He was
sure he could outrun most anyone on an open roadway and had learned the hard
way that Gleason was more than capable of sneaking up on him in the cover of
the woods. His lost jacket was proof of
that. He didn’t see any sign of Gleason on his trek to the top. He became more
nervous and paranoid with every step. He jumped into the undergrowth at the
side of the road three times. In each case it was in response to a bird
rustling in dry leaves.
“The
damn things make more noise than squirrels,” he whispered. I must be nuts.
Now I’m talking to myself. Finally he made it to the last section of road
and within sight of the house. He decided to go around to the back by the same
route across the deadfall pile that he and Woody had taken last Friday. It was
the safest way. He’d be protected from gunshot by the tree stumps that jutted
above the pile in an irregular pattern, like white caps on an ocean, and he
knew he could outrun Gleason in a chase across the uneven surface. He
maneuvered his way up and across the pile; then descended to the yard area
behind the house. He had a clear view of the house and the barn so he stopped
to check out the “lay of the land”, to use the cowboy & Indian lingo he and
Woody picked up in the hundreds of Oaters they’d seen.
He
didn’t have to wait long. Gleason exited the barn and went into the house. Nick
decided to sit tight for a few more minutes before making his move. It was a
good thing he did. Just as he was about to leave the safety of the log pile a
woman came out of the barn carrying a small sack. She, too, crossed the small
dirt driveway and went into the house. Nick waited for his heart to settle
down. It was beating so fast he was dizzy. Finally he got his courage back and
started to crawl across the un-mown lawn to the barn. He wanted to keep the
lowest profile possible. When he reached the barn he stood and, with his back
to wall, waited to see if Gleason or the woman had seen him. It looked good, so
he quietly slipped through the open door into the garage area of the barn. Just
when he felt safe for the first time in many minutes he heard the back door
slam. A nervous glance in the direction of the sound brought into view his
worst nightmare. Gleason was headed toward the barn. Nick jumped into the back
of the open pick-up and burrowed under a pile of empty feed sacks. He lay there
quiet and motionless. He heard Gleason’s footsteps crossing the warped wood
floor of the barn but they kept going - past him and the truck. He heard a door
slam after the footsteps passed. It seemed to be from the direction of the
workshop. Nick peeked his head out so he could get a look. As he changed
position his knee rammed into something hard under the pile of sacks. He
reached down to see what it was and felt a handle. It was a small suitcase. He
didn’t get a chance to check it because the sound of footsteps filled the air.
A loud coughing fit joined in the chorus. It ended with Gleason yelling, “God
Damn it!” Nick thought he’d been spotted but apparently Gleason was swearing at
his coughing fit; he left the barn without stopping at the truck.
In
a few seconds Nick heard the back door of the house slam. He sat up to be sure
Gleason was gone and then pulled the suitcase to his chest. What was a nice
suitcase like this doing in the back of a crummy truck, he wondered? He
opened it and got his answer. It was full of doll clothes. He knew from the
story in the paper that Diane was carrying a suitcase and her favorite doll
when she headed home from Sally’s house yesterday. They found her doll but not
the suitcase. Nick had it now and knew Gleason had taken Diane. He had all the
evidence he needed. He slipped out of the truck and with the suitcase clutched
in his hand, made his escape across the yard and up the pile to the top of the
deadfall. He was eager to get home with his find - too eager. About half way
across the uneven sea of dead logs he tripped, falling flat on his face. The
suitcase slipped away as he grasped at the logs to stop from slipping into the
abyss below him. He saved himself but not the suitcase. It made it all the way
to the bottom of the twenty-foot pile. Nobody could get to it now. Nick, on his
belly, stared down at it. He knew the police would never believe him.
6:00
pm - The mood around the police chief’s conference table was somber.
Detective O’Brien presented his latest update. The news wasn’t good. They
hadn’t discovered a single clue since the Palmer kid was reported missing. The
woods nearby had been searched and then searched again. Every kid on the block
was interviewed and given a healthy dose of the fear of God to pry loose even
the weakest link to her disappearance. Palmer had used his clout to get the FBI
involved, even though the case had not been officially designated a kidnapping.
Crank calls were rampant. The only levity in the whole meeting came when
O’Brien reported the phone call from a kid claiming Diane was being held on
South Mountain at the old O’Neil Estate. He said he found her doll suitcase
there in a green pick-up truck but lost it in pile of deadfall. “He really had
me going until he started ranting about a jar of dead fingers in the barn,”
chuckled O’Brien. Chief Casey was still burning over the beat cop’s leak about
the missing suitcase. It was the only lead they had, and thanks to The
Evening Press, everyone in the state knew about it, including the abductor.
No,
the mood wasn’t good at the Binghamton Police Department! They knew all too
well that the lack of a ransom note within the first twenty-fours hours of a
disappearance loomed ominously for the poor kid. It meant that a sicko, not a
kidnapper had probably taken her. They’d never see her again. At least if it
were a kidnapping, they’d have had a chance. The mayor sat at the table more
depressed than any of them. It was his job that was on the line, not theirs. He
was hounded by reporters and didn’t have a single shred of new news to share
with them. He couldn’t get away much longer with his pat reply, “We have
several leads we’re running down that I can’t discuss, because it would
jeopardize our chances of getting Diane back.” He was careful to use her first
name. He felt it showed his human side and was a good contrast to the police
chief who referred to her as the “Palmer kid.” Either way, if she weren’t found
and brought home safely, he was finished, politically. Why did this have to
happen during an election year?
The
meeting was over in fifteen minutes. The mayor left to face the media at a
press conference while the chief sidled out to face the Palmers. Neither had
anything to report.
7:30
pm – Woody and Nick were in Woody’s living room; Sergeant Preston of the
Royal Canadian Mounted Police was fighting bad guys in the Yukon on the radio.
It was their favorite show but neither of them paid attention. Nick told Woody
about the suitcase he found in Gleason’s truck. The doll clothes proved he kidnapped
Diane. Mrs. Stiles was in the kitchen, busy with the pots, pans and dishes from
dinner, but she kept nervously peeking in on the boys to make sure they were
OK. She was a wreck, as was every other mother in town. Nick had to call home
the minute he got to Woody’s, to let his mother know he made it OK. She had
pardoned him from house arrest, probably out of the guilt brought on by Diane’s
kidnapping. He wasn’t allowed to leave for Woody’s until he’d promised to call
the second he got there, something hard to do with a four-party phone line. He
and his sister had campaigned for years for his father to spring for a private
phone line instead of sharing one with three other families. He had to admit,
though, it was fun to eavesdrop on their conversations, something he did quite
often when he tried to make a call and found the line in use. If she knew he’d
gone in the woods and to the top of the mountain she would have locked him in
his room -- for life! Woody didn’t know what to make of Nick’s claim. If they
weren’t best friends and blood brothers he would never have believe it.
“You’ve
got to go to the police,” he finally responded.
“I
did,” Nick replied. “The detective handling the case laughed at me. I have to
go back up there and get proof. You’ve got to go with me.”
Woody
knew he couldn’t deny Nick this demand, even though the thought of it made his
stomach do flip-flops. They made plans to skip lunch the next day and get the
proof they needed to save Diane. Woody would tell his mother he was eating at
Nick’s and Nick would say he was going to Woody’s. They ate lunch at each
other’s house quite often, so they doubted either mother would be suspicious.
They’d set up the lie tonight. All they needed was a good reason.
“I’ve
got it!” said Nick. “We’ll tell them it’s safer if we’re together at all times.
If anyone tries something funny, one of us can run for help. Besides, nobody
would try to nab two kids at the same time.”
“I
think it’ll work,” said Woody. “Call me later and let me know how you make
out.” Deep down inside he hoped one of their mothers would nix the plan but
neither did. In fact, they liked the idea. Mrs. Stiles even suggested that
Woody go along with Nick when he delivered papers after school. Woody felt doomed. He was petrified to go
anywhere near the old estate. Gleason must be a mad man. What if he had already killed Diane?
Chapter Twelve – Mission Impossible
Tuesday,
June 22
8:15
am – Nick and Woody walked the long way to school, making sure their
parents knew the route they were taking. They went down Chadwick to Vestal
Avenue after meeting at Nick’s house. They traveled the sidewalk along Vestal
to Pennsylvania Avenue. The street was busy with fathers going to work in
downtown Binghamton, the walkway clogged with kids headed to school. It was
part of their plot to get free at noon. Nick’s mom wouldn’t expect to see them
when they came home for lunch. She had a good view of their normal route from
her kitchen window but the “safe way” wasn’t visible to her. The boy’s double
lie had worked. Neither mother expected to see them until school let out at
three.
As
Woody and Nick made their way around the corner at Vestal and Pennsylvania,
Sergeant O’Brien passed them in an unmarked police car. On the seat was a
ransom note, the third he’d picked up that morning. All three were fakes. They
had to be. Not one offered proof. The real kidnapper would have sent something
with the ransom note: one of Diane’s shoes, maybe some of the doll clothes,
something. These notes contained nothing. They’d all been written using letters
cut from a magazine but, other than that, they weren’t the least bit clever.
Each promised to return Diane if a large sum of money was paid, details of the
drop-off to come later. This case was sure bringing the kooks out of the
woodwork.
O’Brien
was worried. He knew these notes were fakes, which meant she’d been gone almost
two days with no word from the real kidnapper. It didn’t look good.
It
looked even worse to Francis Gleason. The kid was still unconscious and his
sister just told him she could be that way for days, maybe even weeks. She’d
die if they didn’t get nourishment into her, which meant she’d need to be fed
intravenously. Gleason’s sister was more than capable of handling the
situation, being a registered nurse, but Francis had made her quit her job at
the hospital last fall in one of his paranoid rages. Now she didn’t have access
to the supplies they needed to take care of the kid. He’d have to steal them
himself or get Diane to the hospital. He wasn’t going to give up now. He’d gone
too far to quit. He’d get the medical supplies somehow.
Noon
– The dreaded moment arrived for Woody, signaled by the noon dismissal
bell. Nick rushed from the classroom, eager to get up the mountain. Woody
dragged his twelve-year-old weary frame from behind his desk and out of Miss
Nevel’s extremely safe sixth grade classroom. He moved like a prisoner headed
to the gallows.
“What
took you so long?” Nick asked Woody when he finally made it to the rendezvous
point at the playground.
“I
had to help Miss Nevel,” Woody lied. “What’s your hurry anyhow? Aren’t you
scared?”
“Not
with you with me,” Nick replied.
“Damn!”
Woody cursed under his breath. “I’m dead!”
They
headed up the street from school for five blocks, then turned right on
Hotchkiss, a steep residential street that ended at an iron gate. The gate
blocked the road to the O’Neil estate. Although locked, it only stopped cars
from venturing onto estate property. It wasn’t designed to block two
trespassing 12-year-olds from striking out on a heroic mission to save a
“damsel in distress.” The damsel, ironically, had caused each of them
considerable trouble with her tattling at Longfellow Elementary. No matter, she
was one of their own, and in trouble. Nick led and Woody followed as they
ducked through the untrimmed hedge abutting the iron gate. Woody cursed under
his breath again as they crossed the line. They now were trespassing on land
controlled by a monster, a monster who stole Nick’s jacket, kept a jar of
fingers in his workshop and kidnapped Diane Palmer. “Oh yes!” Woody mumbled,
“This is going to be a great day!”
As
Woody and Nick slyly made their way along the mountain road, Gleason was boldly
making his way down the corridor on the surgery floor at General Hospital, his
sister by his side. He wore stolen, loose fitting surgical greens and she, wore
her old nurses uniform. She hoped they could get the supplies and leave before
anyone recognized her. Everyone on this floor knew her when she quit last year,
so her presence would bring a flurry of questions. “When did you come back?
What shift have you been assigned to? Are you a floater?”
“Oh
God, let us make it to the supply room unnoticed,” she prayed, shielding her
face with a clipboard held in an unnaturally high manner.
“I
wonder if that kid was telling the truth about the Palmer kid’s suitcase?”
Detective O’Brien asked the wilting fern in his office. “How could he be?”
answering his own question. “A jar of dead fingers! My God! Am I that desperate
to get a lead on this case?”
“What’s
that?” Chief Casey asked as he opened the oak door to O’Brien’s office.
“Nothing,”
just thinking out loud. “It helps sometimes,” replied O’Brien.
“Then
you have nothing new to go on?” asked the Chief.
“No!
I’m grasping at straws. I don’t have anything”.
“I
thought you said some kid found a suitcase,” countered Chief Casey, to keep the
conversation moving in a positive direction.
“It
was a crank call. The kid said he found a suitcase full of doll clothes, but
lost it running from a guy with a jar of dead fingers. Can you believe it?
Where do they come up with that stuff?”
“Sometimes
the unbelievable is a path to the truth in detective work,” offered Casey. “Where
did he say he found it?”
“At
the O’Neil estate on South Mountain. It’s a run-down place that kids in the
area claim is haunted. I had to go up there a few years ago to look into a
complaint. A hysterical mother from the Southside claimed the caretaker shot at
her son. It turned out to be nothing; just a couple of kids trespassing who
probably made up the story to get out of trouble with their parents for messing
up their good clothes in the woods.”
“Well,
if you don’t have anything else you might want to check it out,” Casey urged.
“Oh
I plan to,” O’Brien lied, “later in the day. It’s just not a priority.”
“Well,
hang in there,” Casey advised as he left O’Brien’s office.
“God
damn it,” cursed O’Brien. “Now I’ve got to go up to that weird place and talk
to the creep who takes care of it.” The fern was unmoved by his plight.
It
was a nervous walk for Woody and Nick as they worked their way up South
Mountain on the main road. They stopped every few yards to listen for Gleason’s
truck. Twice they were startled by birds darting through dry leaves near the
edge of the road. Woody claimed to be
having a heart attack the second time it happened. They finally completed the
climb, arriving at a flat section of road within sight of the house.
"Let’s
turn here and go the rest of the way on the pile of dead-fall,” suggested
Woody, as he pointed to the route that took them out of range of the house.
“No!”
Nick replied. “I don’t think anyone’s around. Anyhow we can use the bushes at
the edge of the pasture to give us a little cover.”
Woody
gave in. He just wanted to get it over with. They picked up scores of scratches
on their arms in the process, but soon were past the house and at a spot that
gave them a good view of the barn. They could see that the truck wasn’t in the
driveway or the barn. The door was wide open.
“He
must be in town!” Nick offered.
“What
about the woman?” Woody asked.
“Are
you afraid of a woman?” Nick chided.
“No!”
Woody shot back. “But I am afraid of someone with a gun. Maybe she’s the one
who shot at Vinny and my brother!”
Nick
hadn’t thought of that, but he doubted it. He never heard of a woman shooting a
gun, except Annie Oakley. Women cooked and men hunted, period. “Let’s just keep
going,” he finally answered. “The sooner we get over there and get it done, the
sooner we can get out of here.”
Woody
caved, as usual. He knew that when Nick made up his mind there was no talking
him out of it. With about the same enthusiasm he exhibited the day they got
their first polio shot at school, he dragged behind Nick from the cover of the
brambles on a direct route to the barnyard. They walked through the open door
to where Gleason’s truck had leaked oil all over the wooden floor. Nick crossed
it, making tracks to the workshop. He wanted Woody to see the jar of pickled
fingers, but now the door was padlocked. So was the one next to it. “That’s
funny. This wasn’t locked last week.”
“Yea,
but that was before he chased us out of here. He must have locked it after
that,” Woody concluded, making Nick wonder why he’d been so stupid that he
hadn’t figured that out himself. It was so obvious now that Woody said it.
“Let’s
find something to pry open the lock with,” suggested Nick.
They
started rummaging around the barn just as Francis and Bessie pulled to a stop
at the entrance gate on Hotchkiss Street. Bessie was trembling. It had been one
thing to steal a collection of amputated fingers about to be discarded when she
was a student in nursing school. That was more like a prank, not outright stealing.
Besides, it was the only time she ever remembered her brother being genuinely
happy. He beamed for days when she gave him the jar of fingers. She hoped it
would convince him that a lot of people get buried without all their body
parts, that it’s no big deal! But it hadn’t worked. He went into a rage when
she tried to make her point. He’d slapped her and stomped out of the house,
yelling back over his shoulder, “You shut your mouth – I’m going to get my
finger back before I die, and I’ll kill whoever stands in my way!” That was
sixteen years ago, the year she received her nursing degree. Nothing had
changed in the intervening years. Now that she had gone back to the place she
loved, it wasn’t as a caring nurse but as a common thief. If she were caught she’d
be disgraced and then sent to jail.
Francis
unlocked the gate, pulled the truck forward, got out and relocked it behind
him. “Nobody is going to drive in here,” he assured himself, not even the
police. The truck was gasping for breath by the time it pulled into the
barnyard.
“What’s
that door doing shut? I left it open when we left!” he shouted to Bessie, as
though it was her fault.
She
shrugged and looked blank. “God, please don’t let him go off again.” But he all ready was off – He flew out of the
truck and tore into the barn and then was stopped in his tracks by a coughing
fit, beads of perspiration amassed across his brow. It was so intense it
brought him to his knees before releasing him from its grasp. He staggered to
his feet, hot and dizzy – his rage even greater now. Had he spotted Woody or
Nick at that moment he would have beaten them senseless. Fortunately they were
out of sight but not out of danger.
Woody
glanced at Nick, a look of horror crossing his face. “He’s here! What are we
going to do?”
“I
don’t know,” Nick replied. Then he turned from the workbench, still holding the
jar of fingers he’d been showing Woody. They didn’t have to worry about it for
long; Gleason, recovering from his coughing fit, stepped into the workshop door
and growled,
“You’re
the same two I caught snooping around in the woods! You aren’t getting away
this time!”
“You
can’t hurt us,” Nick defiantly announced. “We know you kidnapped Diane Palmer
and so do the police. They’ll be here any second.” Woody couldn’t believe what
he was hearing. How does Nick come up with crap like that? He’s the best
liar I ever met.
“Nice
try kid. If the cops knew about the Palmer kid they’d be here themselves, not
two asshole kids. Well, you are going to get your wish. You’re going to see
Diane.”
He
grabbed Woody by the hair with his right hand and put a headlock on Nick with
his left. The only thought that went through Woody's head was, “Shit! I wish I
had a flat-top haircut like Nick.” Nick held tight to the jar as Gleason
dragged them out of the workshop and to the door of the room next to it. He
threw Woody to the ground; his head hit hard on the wooden floor, knocking him
unconscious. Nick wondered if he’d killed him. Gleason took the key to the
padlock from the chain around his neck and while still holding Nick, unlocked
it, then swung open the door. Nick could see Diane lying on the floor. Her back
was to him but there was no mistaking who it was. He’d glared at the back of
her head for from the rear of the classroom many, many times. It was where he
was forced to stand at attention as a punishment for some infraction that Diane
had reported to the teacher. Yes, he knew the back of her head better than her
own mother did. As Gleason turned to shove Woody into the room with his foot,
Nick squirmed and broke free, the jar of fingers fell to the floor and smashed.
The gloved hand that held him became disconnected from Gleason’s arm in the
process, explaining why Nick was able to break free of his hold. Gleason’s left
hand was a fake, a prosthesis carved of wood.
Nick
didn’t wait for an explanation. He made a lunge toward the door but Gleason
clubbed him with his stump before he made it, sending him spinning down, coming
to rest in a puddle of formaldehyde, amputated fingers scattered every which
way. He grabbed two handfuls and got to his feet. Gleason came at him. Nick
threw a handful of fingers, hitting the surprised caretaker in the face, the
formaldehyde splashed into his eyes. It stung, momentarily blinding him. It was
all Nick needed. He ran out of the room knocking Bessie over as he fled. He
made for the deadfall, knowing Gleason would never catch him on the log pile.
Gleason stumbled to his feet, cleared his eyes with his lone hand and headed
after Nick.
Bessie
grabbed her brother’s leg and held on tight. “Francis stop! You’ve got to end
this madness.”
He
turned and glared down at her but said nothing; he just pushed her away. He
exited the barn and tore across the yard after Nick. Nick watched him attack
the pile and close the gap between them.
“Oh
my God!” he thought. “He’s going to catch me!”
A
coughing fit brought Gleason to a dead stop and gave Nick the break he needed.
Nick was out of sight when the coughing attack subsided, leaving Gleason weak,
dizzy and hostile. He walked back to the barn and locked everybody in, even his
sister.
Nick
made it most of the way across the pile of deadfall, a precarious
one-eighth-mile journey, before realizing he still held two amputated fingers
in his left hand. “Just what I need to prove my story,” he thought. He climbed
down the pile and, figuring Gleason would be coming after him in the truck,
entered the thick woods to the east rather than the familiar route to the west.
It passed too close to the road Gleason would be driving on. He’d been this way
years ago, when he hiked with Wally Zagorsky, a classmate who lived on the
other side of the mountain. It would take him a lot longer but he was sure it
was safer. He couldn’t take a chance of getting caught by Gleason. Even when he
made it out of the woods he would have to be careful, to sneak through back
yards, not go on the sidewalk. He stuffed the fingers in his pocket and
left.
2:30pm
– Gleason was roaring when he pulled into the barnyard. He slammed the door of
his pick-up and angrily stomped into the barn. He’d searched for over an hour
in his truck and on foot, but didn’t see a trace of the kid. “The little
bastard!” His head was awhirl. He was
hot, dizzy and couldn’t go ten minutes without a coughing fit. He didn’t know
what to do. He even had trouble finding the key, though it was on a chain
around his neck, swaying back and forth. He finally spotted it and walked over
to the locked room where Woody and Diane were confined. His sister Bessie was
there as well. He unfastened the padlock and swung the door open, holding on to
it as a coughing spasm overtook him. Woody and Bessie stared from their perch
on a wooden platform. Diane lay in a heap, her shallow breathing hardly
detectable.
3:00pm
– Nick made it to the schoolyard just as the West Junior busses pulled to the
curb. Denzel Kelly and his aide-de-camp, Richard Mosement were standing near
the bus stop. They were undoubtedly there to collect a daily protection fee
from the smaller kids who went to West, or at least the ones they could still
bully. .
For
the first time in his life, Nick was happy to see Denzel’s ugly mug. He waved
and shouted as he ran over to them. “Denzel! Denzel! I need your help.”
“What’s
with you?” Denzel replied. “Is some third grade girl after you?” He looked over
at Mosement and winked. Then they both split a gut laughing.
“No!
No! A guy with a jar of dead fingers kidnapped Diane Palmer and is after me. He
has Woody too. I escaped. You’ve got to help me save them!”
“You
are some piece of work Carns. What kind of deal are you trying to pull here?
Don’t you know who you’re messing with?”
“No
look! Here’s the proof,” Nick explained, and pulled two amputated fingers out
of his pocket. They had dried out on the journey down the mountain and looked
even more ghastly than when they were swimming in the jar of formaldehyde.
“Here!”
he shouted. He shoved the fingers toward Denzel, who jumped back in alarm
knocking them to the sidewalk.
“Holy
shit! They really are somebody’s fingers. Where’d you get them?”
“I
told you. From the guy who kidnapped Diane - the caretaker on South Mountain.
You’ve got to help me save her! Now he has Woody too!”
Denzel
waved and yelled to his older brother Chuck, who was getting off the bus. He
was an even bigger bully than Denzel. (In fact, he was the one who taught
Denzel the ropes of his protection game and then turned over his clients when
he graduated from Longfellow, two years behind the class he started with.) Two
of his customers at West Junior, Woody’s brother Stew and his friend Vinny,
were right behind him getting off the bus. He ordered them to come with him as
he sauntered over to Denzel and Nick.
“What’s
up bro?”
At
the very same moment that Denzel began to explain Nick’s crazy tale to his
brother, detective O’Brien was trying to figure out how he was going to explain
his predicament to the chief. He was stumbling from his car toward Gleason’s
barn door, a shotgun poking him as he went. “I can’t believe it! I’m so
stupid,” he chided himself - “to get captured by a farmer.”
It
all started at the gatehouse. He pulled up to the iron fence that blocked the
road, thinking all he had to do was get out and open it. Not so. It was locked!
The old guy who lived in what was once a pristine gatehouse chalet, a welcoming
entrance to the estate on the mountain, didn’t have a key. He claimed Gleason
took it away from him years ago. O’Brien had to smash the lock with a lug
wrench from his trunk. The wrench cost him a fingernail when it refused to
budge from its rust-encrusted nest beneath the spare tire. He was in a snit as
he drove up the mountain, certain he was wasting his time. But he was afraid to
face the Chief and tell him he hadn’t followed up on the only lead they had.
“Shit! Shit! Shit!” he yelled out the window to the silent trees as his old
Ford police sedan rumbled up the hill. He pulled right into the barnyard and
got out. Had his mood been brighter, he might have been a little more cautious.
He hopped out of the car, anxious to get the useless follow-up over with, not
noticing the green pick-up truck in the barn. Gleason was waiting. He knew the
unmarked vehicle was a police car the minute it rounded the bend five hundred
yards down the road. He’d been watching its progress up the mountain, a plume
of road dust rising above the trees, announcing the arrival of an unwelcome
intruder.
He
thought, “Who else but the police would buy a car so plain?” It didn’t have a
single piece of chrome and sported four ridiculous looking hubcaps, barley
large enough to cover the lug nuts. The car screamed, “POLICE.” Gleason chucked
to himself as he stepped from his hiding spot by the back door, a cocked
shotgun lying across his left wrist. He swiftly ordered O’Brien to put up his
hands. O’Brien’s ears were bright red by
the time he ambled through the door into the barn; he never was more
embarrassed in his life. The gun barrel prodded into his back every step of the
way, so he knew exactly where to go.
“Stand
there with your hands high on the wall,” Gleason ordered. “And don’t turn
around.” If he had turned, or even taken a quick peek, he could have redeemed
himself. Gleason leaned the gun against the door while he fumbled with the key,
finally getting the stubborn padlock to open.
“That
was stupid,” he cursed under his breath. “I should have made the cop unlock the
door.” He gave O’Brien a vicious whack
in the kidneys with the butt of the gun. It helped vent the anger that was
going to consume him. O’Brien went down in a heap. Gleason kicked him to finish
off the rage induced by his own stupidity.
“Get
up and get into the room,” he ordered.
O’Brien
couldn’t make it to his feet. He crawled on all fours into the make shift POW
camp. Woody and Bessie were sitting back-to-back, their hands tied in a single
lump behind them. Diane was on her knees trying to undo the knots. O’Brien
perked up for the first time in days.
“The
kid’s alive!”
His
high was short lived. He was hit yet again with the butt of Gleason’s gun, this
time across the back of his head. He felt nothing, just saw a bright yellow
light and was gone. Diane shrieked and Woody cowered. “Oh God, we’re next,”
he thought, but he was wrong. Gleason shoved the gun down his pants and walked
over and grabbed Diane by the hair.
“You
tricked me you little bitch.”
“No
she didn’t!” countered his sister, a brave attempt to protect the girl. “She
just came to a few minutes ago!”
“Shut-up!
Don’t you stick up for her,” he yelled, dragging the screaming Diane from the
room. He locked the door, holding her immobile in a scissor lock between his
knees. He repeated the maneuver when he unlocked the door in the next room. It
swung open and he pulled her inside and over to the workbench. He let go of her
hair and switched to a headlock. With his right hand now free, he opened the
jaws of a massive vice that was bolted to the workbench.
“Put
your finger in there!” he ordered a sobbing Diane, still shaky from her long
bout with unconsciousness.
“No!”
she replied and then felt her hair being pulled from her head. It hurt so bad
she thought she was going to black out.
“Stick
your finger in there or I’ll tear every hair out of your head!” he yelled.
She
obliged, not knowing what else to do. He spun the handle on the vise until her
index finger was held tight, too tight. It turned purple and immediately began
to throb. She cried out and was rewarded with a slap across the face.
“Now
you’re going to tell me!”
“Tell
you what?” she answered. “I don’t know anything!”
“My
sister overheard you yelling about a dead finger when you bumped into her last
week. I want to know about the finger,” Gleason responded and then began
coughing again. His head was killing him and he was sweating like a pig. He
thought he was going to pass out. He got so shaky he dropped to the floor and
sat. Diane was puzzled.
“Is
he dying?” she hoped. She didn’t have long to dwell on it. He shifted to all
fours then slowly got to his feet. He reached over and gave the vice handle a
whack, causing the jaws to clamp tighter on Diane’s finger.
She
screamed. “I’ll tell you! Please don’t hurt me!”
It
only took a minute to explain about the dead finger that Nick Carns brought to
school and the story he told of his mother finding it at the rail yard when she
was a girl. “But it’s not true,” she concluded. “He tricked us. It was just his
finger sticking up through a hole in the box.”
Maybe
not, Gleason thought, maybe the kid’s mother really did find a finger
near the railroad tracks when she was a girl. My finger!
“Who
is this Nick Carns? Where does he live?” Gleason yelled, standing over Diane as
though to hit her again.
“He’s
a boy in my class. That’s his best friend Woody that you have tied up in the
other room. They both live in same neighborhood at the bottom of the mountain!”
she responded and then began sobbing again.
Gleason
smiled. Nick Carns must be kid that got away. His twenty-two years of
prayers had finally been answered. This Carns kid’s mother must be the one.
He walked out of the workshop in a trance. I’ve got to get something for
this headache and a drink. I’m so thirsty. He left the barn, leaving the
door to the workshop open. Diane slumped to the floor and passed out, her
finger still held fast in the vise. He staggered through the backdoor of the
house and went to the kitchen cabinet where he kept his medicine. “I need a
whole bottle of aspirin to knock out this one,” he thought, reaching for the
pills.
Chapter Thirteen - Here come the Mounties
Nick
led the way as he and the Southside “bully boys” scrambled up the mountain via
the long route through the woods. He was on his turf now and they all knew it.
Denzel was out of breath and sweaty. His arms stung from scores of scratches,
painfully delivered by the blackberry bush he had pushed through along the way.
He wanted to quit. His pride wouldn’t let him. Chuck, Stew and Vinnie felt the
same but their macho image was on the line too, so they kept going. Finally,
they reached the abandoned pasture where they hoped the pile of deadfall would
shield them from Gleason. Nick was fit and ready to go but the foursome of
toughs had to sit down and catch their breath. They could fight but they
couldn’t run; Nick needed them for the fight. Ten minutes later they were on
their feet.
“OK,
kiddo, where’s the house?” asked Denzel.
“Follow
me, we have to cross the deadfall to get there,” Nick replied.
They
all stood like fools with their jaws agape as Nick scrambled up the twenty-foot
wall to the top of the pile.
“How
the hell did he do that?” Vinny asked in disbelief.
“I
don’t know but if he can do it, so can I!” Chuck countered and then started up
the ancient, twisted pile of logs. By the time they reached the top they
realized just how dangerous it was. They could see skeletons of dead animals
that had slipped through the maze to a dirt prison twenty feet below.
“This
is a giant set of Pick-up-Sticks,” observed Stu. It was a game he and
Vinny played for hours when they were younger.
“Yea,
it is,” responded Vinny. “Except this game can kill you.”
Nick
stayed in the lead, skillfully stepping over the trunks that jutted above the
surface, never slipping once in the process. His progress was dazzling compared
to the four land crabs following behind. The agility he picked up from years of
tree climbing and fighting pirate wars on tipsy log rafts in MacArthur swamp
was finally paying off. He was first to reach the end of the pile. He spotted
the plain green sedan that “could only be an unmarked police vehicle,”
parked in the yard. He let out a sigh of relief.
“Hurry
up! Hurry up!” he yelled back to the posse of four. “The cops are here. We
don’t have to save Diane and Woody after all!”
Then
he saw Gleason walk out of the barn, a shotgun resting on his shoulder. Nick
ducked down and sidled back a few yards, out of view from the barnyard. He put
his finger to his lips and shushed the walruses making their way on all fours;
sweat was dropping from their faces to the abyss below. Vinny, overweight by
twenty pounds, (the fat coming from doughnuts swiped from his father’s bakery)
had lost his footing twice, the first time almost sliding out of sight. If
Chuck hadn’t been there to catch him by the back of his shirt he would have
gone under. He was trembling as he came to a stop at Nick’s feet.
“Gleason
must have captured the cops, or killed them!” Nick whispered. “We can’t let him
know we’re here. I’m going ahead and see
what he’s doing. You guys wait here.” They loved his plan. It gave them a
chance to rest because they were too scared to go ahead themselves.
Nick
found a spot near the edge of the pile where he could see both the barn and the
house, yet was hidden behind a berm formed by three logs lying crosswise. He
watched in silence but didn’t see anything unusual. The green police car, its
driver-side door standing open was the only thing in the yard. There was no
sign of Gleason, the cops, Woody, Diane or the woman. Even the cows, usually
grazing in the pasture near the barn, were missing. Suddenly the back door to
the house swung open and Gleason came into view, the gun held at his side
pointing to the ground. He headed for the barn. Nick waited until Gleason made
it all the way to the barn and was swallowed by the darkness inside before he
waved to his “troops” to come forward. Denzel was first to reach him
“What’s
up?” he asked.
“Gleason
just went in the barn. I’m going down to see out what’s going on,” Nick
answered.
“I’m
going with you,” Denzel insisted.
Nick
didn’t argue. He welcomed the company. He was sure Denzel could take Gleason,
especially now that the caretaker was missing a hand. Vinny, Stew and Chuck
agreed to stay at the top of the pile and wait for a signal, hoping to hell it
would never come. They’d be in a safe position to go for help if Nick and Denzel
got captured. With that settled, the scouting party of two climbed down the
pile and crossed the yard where twenty-two weathered crosses stood guard.
Nick’s jacket still hung from the tallest but at the moment it was of no
interest to him. They pressed on to the relative safety of the barn wall. Nick
used sign language to ask Denzel for a boost, so he could peek through the
window above their heads. When he looked through the glass he couldn’t see a
thing. A thick layer of filth blocked his view. It was no use. They’d have to
go in blindly.
They
crept to the barn door and stopped. “I’ll go and you watch. If Gleason comes
for me, yell to your brother then come in,” Nick instructed in a hushed voice.
Denzel
gave him the OK sign, then swallowed hard. This was a little different than
pushing around some puke of a kid on the playground. Nick has more guts than
I thought. Nick didn’t hesitate. He
got down on his stomach and began crawling. His route took him under Gleason’s
pick-up. He figured it was the safest way to go. It was like crawling through a
grease pit, there was so much oil on the floor. The truck must leak like a
sieve, he thought. He craned his neck when he reached the front of the
truck. He could see into the workshop door, though he only had a partial view.
It looked like someone was sitting on the floor with his or her arm in the air.
He rubbed his eyes to help adjust his vision to the dim light and looked again.
It’s
Diane! Why is she sitting like that, her hand in the air, as though to get the
teacher’s attention? It’s like in class when she’s getting ready to tattle on
someone. What’s Gleason done to her? Nick was baffled, so much so, that he
acted without thinking and crawled out from under the pick-up. He got to his
feet and took a step toward the workroom.
Who
the hell is that? F. Gleason wondered, as he looked through the windshield
and saw a kid standing in front of the truck. I must have nodded off. All I
remember is being dizzy and climbing in. It’s a good thing I didn’t start the
motor. I’d be asphyxiated by now.
Nick
walked over to the workshop door and then stopped to look around. No sense
in letting Gleason trap me in there, he thought. I’m sure he won’t let
me get away from him again. (He didn’t think to look in the truck!)
Gleason
couldn’t believe his eyes. He didn’t have to go looking for the Carns kid. Yes,
he’s right here, like a fly in a spider web, my spider web. Francis slid
the gun from the passenger seat to his lap and got ready to open the door. I’ll
wait until he goes into the room before I get out, he decided. The kid’s
fast, but he’s not getting away from me again.
Nick
saw that Diane was out cold. Why does she have her arm up in the air like
that? He crossed the room and had his answer. Her finger was clamped securely
in a bench vise, purple and bloated. A chill ran through him causing the hairs
on the back of his neck to stand up. Before he could figure out why, he was
down on his knees, the recipient of a blow to his left kidney from Gleason’s
gun butt. “God that hurts,” he thought, fighting for all he was worth to stay
conscious. Instinct took over. He rolled and kicked at his attacker’s legs,
knocking a surprised Gleason on his ass. He didn’t wait to see if the caretaker
still had the gun. He just scrambled on his hands and knees as fast as he could
toward the door. He only made it to the opening when Gleason’s cow-plop caked
boot stomped him flat to the floor.
“Denzel!
Denzel!” He yelled. “Help me!”
It’s
just what Denzel was waiting for. Completely forgetting to signal to his
brother and the rest of the posse, he charged into the barn. He didn’t flinch
when he saw Gleason standing in the doorway with a gun, Nick at his feet. He
ran full speed, lowered his noggin and dove head first, knocking the caretaker
to the floor. The gun fell out of his hand, hit the floor hard and discharged.
All three sat tangled in a heap wondering where the bullet went and hoping it
didn’t go into them. They didn’t have to wonder long. Diane let out a scream
that could wake the dead. The bullet, a deer slug, accelerated across the room.
It smashed into the metal vice, and then ricocheted into her index finger.
One-third of her finger stayed in the vice; one-third vaporized and floated
toward the wall where the bullet lost its velocity and lodged in a wooden beam.
The remaining third was still attached to her hand, a bloody stump. Nick’s
prophetic reaction surprised even him, She’ll never point out our sins in
class again. The tattletale is out of business. It wasn’t funny, but he
couldn’t help smiling.
The
tangle of bodies Nick was trapped in began to move. Before he could figure out
why, he was lying on his back looking over at Denzel who’d done his patented
wrestling move and flipped the caretaker, grabbing the gun in the process. Denzel
was sitting on Gleason’s chest, pressing the rifle barrel, held crosswise, into
his throat. The creep was powerless beneath the adrenalin-charged teenager.
Chuck, Stew and Vinny stormed into the room.
“Go
help Diane!” Nick yelled as he got to his feet.
Vinny,
Stu and Chuck ran toward the workbench where Diane was sobbing face down on the
floor. Vinny and Stew took one look at the hunk of her finger still held
securely in the bench vice and threw up. Chuck didn’t flinch. He took out his
handkerchief, wrapped it around Diane’s stump and sat down on the floor next to
her, his arm around her shoulder. She was ashen and shaky, but her sobbing was
subsiding as shock began to take hold. Nick got to his feet and walked over to
Denzel and Gleason.
“Where’s
the key to the other room?” he demanded.
Gleason
didn’t say anything. Denzel pushed the shotgun barrel deeper into his neck and
shouted,
“When
the kid asks a question, you answer!”
Gleason
responded with a violent coughing fit. Denzel wasn’t fooled. He didn’t let up
on his hold one iota. He sat there and waited for an answer. The reply came in
the form of a gesture: Gleason pointed to the chain around his neck. Nick got
the message and started feeling for the clasp to undo it. Denzel didn’t have as
much patience. He reached down and yanked. It broke - he then handed the chain
and the clump of keys to Nick.
Woody’s
eyes bugged out when Nick walked into the make shift prison cell where he and
the rest of Gleason’s prisoners were secured with rope. Nick smiled and
announced, “The Mounties are here,” a reference he knew Woody would appreciate.
He was Sergeant Preston’s biggest fan and he never went anywhere without his Royal
Canadian Mounted Police honorary membership card. It was a membership he’d
earned by saving ten Wheaties box tops and mailing them to the General
Mills Company with twenty-five cents.
“Untie
me first!” ordered Detective O’Brien. “I’ll take over now!”
“Like
hell!” Nick replied. “You laughed in my face when I told you where to find
Diane. We solved the case, not you. You don’t get untied until everybody else
is free.”
O’Brien
shrugged. “You’re right, kid. I should have listened to you. I’m sorry.”
Nick
couldn’t believe his ears. An adult apologizing to him? And a cop, at that.
Wow, he finally got some respect. He quickly untied Woody, Bessie, and
finally, O’Brien, who to his credit didn’t try to take over. “What do you want
me to do?” he asked Nick.
“Put
the cuffs on Gleason; then call an ambulance for Diane on your police radio.
She just had her finger shot off!” Nick then turned to Bessie and asked. “What
the hell is this all about? Do you know?”
“I
know and I’ll tell the whole story as soon as we get the girl taken care of.
Let me help her. I’m a nurse.” She then passed by Nick and went into the
workshop to tend to her patient.
EPILOG
June
23, 1954, 7:45am
Nick
and Woody walked to school at Longfellow Elementary for the last time. They
took the route through the field behind Nick’s house. Their parents had restored
their freedom now that Diane was safe and the mystery of her disappearance
solved. Woody was excited; Nick was a little subdued.
“Tell
me what happened at the police station,” Woody asked, unable to wait for Nick
to volunteer the information. Nick and his mother had gone to the police
headquarters last night after Gleason was arrested.
“I
don’t think you’re going to believe it,” Nick replied after a long silence. “In
a way, the whole thing is my mother’s fault.”
“What
are you talking about?” Woody could hardly contain himself.
“You
have to promise to believe me,” Nick asserted. “We’re blood brothers, so when I
say trust me you have to do it.”
“OK!”
Woody quickly agreed. “Now tell me what happened?”
“We
all sat around a big conference table in the police chief’s office: me, mom,
Gleason’s sister Bessie and detective O’Brien. Chief Casey started it off by
saying that Diane was going to be okay, except for missing half her index
finger. Gleason was under arrest but in the hospital under police guard. When
he gets better he’s going straight to jail. He has a severe case of pneumonia,
bronchitis, an inflamed esophagus and a bleeding ulcer. As soon as Casey
finished telling us about Gleason, Bessie jumped up and screamed that he should
spend the rest of his life in jail. She was crying and looked pathetic. She
said he’s her brother and she loves him, but he doesn’t fit in and never has.
He raised her from when she was two years old, after their mother died. He was
only sixteen at the time. They had to move all the time so the authorities
wouldn’t put them in Saint Mary’s Orphanage. They lived like fugitives and it
messed him up. He doesn’t trust anybody, even her.”
“The
chief gave her a handkerchief and she sat down and sobbed. It was pathetic. He
changed back to the subject and told them that the cows had been trucked to the
County Work Farm where they could be properly taken care of now that he was
under arrest. That calmed her down a little. Then he said he wanted to get to
the bottom of this mess, to figure out what happened and why.
“The
Chief asked Bessie if she knew why her brother kidnapped Diane. It took a long
time for her get composed and to answer, but she finally stopped crying and
said that Francis didn’t mean to kidnap the girl. He just wanted to ask her
some questions, but got mad when Diane tried to get away. He hit her and it
knocked her out. He panicked and brought her home and locked her in the barn.
He claimed he was going to let her go as soon as she came to and answered his
questions, but she didn’t wake up. Bessie started crying again, and in the
middle of it she stood up and shouted that it was her fault.
“Her
fault? How could it be her fault?” Woody interrupted.
“This
is the part you are not going to believe,” Nick cautioned. “She finally got
herself under control again and began to explain. She said it started over
twenty years ago, when she was ten and her brother was twenty-five. He worked
part time for the Erie Railroad, greasing wheels, adjusting brakes and doing
routine maintenance on old freight cars, broken down wrecks that were only good
enough to use around the rail yard.
“Bessie
kept sobbing but went on with her story anyhow. She said a freight car slipped
off a jack and crushed his hand. She was to blame. He was working on it when
she came up behind him with his lunch. He left his lunch pail home that morning
so she brought it to him. She threw it over to where he was working to see if
she could scare him. They always scared each other. It was one of the few things
in life he enjoyed other than working with animals. The lunch pail startled
him. He jumped back and his foot kicked the jack and the wheel came down on his
hand. She said it was awful. He screamed and screamed. There was blood all
over. He yelled so loud the stationmaster and another railroad worker across
the yard heard him and came running. Once they saw what happened, the
stationmaster ran to call an ambulance and the other guy put a tourniquet on
Gleason’s arm. She said she felt so guilty she ran away and hid behind a
storage shed until the ambulance crew took him away.
“I
looked over at Mom. Her eyes were practically popping out of her head. Then she
interrupted Gleason’s sister. She stood up and said she knew exactly what
happened after they took Francis away in the ambulance.”
“Gleason’s
sister looked at her like she was nuts; so did Casey and O’Brien. Casey asked
her to explain what she was talking about.
“Mom
sat down and said she knew because she was there. Then she told them the same
story she told me about the dead finger.
“I
thought she told you it was a joke,” Woody complained.
“She
did, but that was because it had scared me so bad. She felt guilty and tried to
make it better for me so she lied about it. She really did find a finger when she
was a girl. And it was Francis Gleason’s finger.
“Wow!”
Woody could hardly believe his ears. “What happened when she told Gleason’s
sister?”
“That’s
the crazy part. After she told the whole story, Gleason’s sister stopped crying
and smiled. And she didn’t just smile, she beamed.”
“That
doesn’t make sense,” Woody concluded.
“It
does when you hear the rest of the story,” Nick countered.
“Lay
it on me,” Woody begged.
“Gleason’s
sister went back to scene of the accident after the ambulance left, just to
look around. Gleason’s fingers were lying on the ground next to the wheel.
Bessie picked them up and put them in her purse. She found a thumb and three
fingers, but she didn’t know if she had all of them, because she didn’t know
how many had been cut off. Apparently his index finger was hidden under the
gravel. It must have gotten covered up when the ambulance crew was loading him
on the stretcher. My mother spotted it after Bessie left and shoved it in her
pocket. Then Bessie came up to mom as she was leaving and asked if she found
anything. Mom lied and said she didn’t.
She wanted to show it off, to scare the kids in her neighborhood. But it
backfired on her. One of kids she scared told on her and when my grandfather
found out, he went ballistic. He yelled at her and told her to get rid of it,
said she had to bury it in “hallowed” ground. She lived real close to the
Spring Forrest Cemetery; it’s where she and her brothers played in the summer,
so she buried the finger there. Get this! She buried it by the big monument
that the City put up for the women who died in the Binghamton Clothing Company
fire. Francis and Bessie’s mother was one of the women who died in that fire.
“This
will blow your mind. Gleason buried his thumb and three fingers near the same
monument but he put them next to one of the twenty-one unmarked headstones that
go around the big monument in a circle. He believed it was the one where his
mother’s body was buried, though nobody knew for sure who was buried where.
Rumor has it that all the bodies were found huddled in a clump after the fire.
His sister said he spent his whole life worrying about the missing finger. He
wanted to find it so that when he died it could be buried with him and the
other fingers that were cut off in the train accident. He thought he wouldn’t
get into heaven unless his entire body was buried intact, awaiting
resurrection. He even went so far as to erect a small cross in their back yard
every year on the anniversary of his accident. That’s why we saw the twenty-four
crosses there, well, twenty-five if you count the one my jacket is hanging on.
Bessie said he became really obsessed about finding his finger in the last few
months; he thought he was dying. When she told him about crashing into a girl
near the schoolyard who was yelling about a dead finger, he went nuts. He made
her go to the school with him so she could point the girl out to him. She
didn’t want to, but he made her; he hit her.
“Diane
was the girl.” Nick concluded.
Woody
and Nick continued their walk to school in silence, both lost in thought. Nick
was certain that none of this would have happened if he hadn’t taken the dead
finger to school. Was it his fault? Was it his mother’s fault? He
couldn’t reason it out. Finally Woody cleared up the muddle for him.
“That
Gleason is a real creep isn’t he?” Woody asserted. “All he had to do was ask
Diane about the finger and go from there. Instead, he almost killed her. I hope
they lock him up for the rest of his life!”
As
they entered Longfellow Elementary s School Nick turned to Woody and asked,
“How about after class we go back up the mountain and get my leather jacket?”
“Sure,”
Woody answered, a big smile on his face. “It’ll be the first time I go there
without being scared to death.”
That’s what you think,” Nick whispered, too softly for
Woody to hear!
