From the Dust Returned (17 page)

Read From the Dust Returned Online

Authors: Ray Bradbury

"More than that,
listen
to her."

"She talks, does she?"

"A lot, sir."

"Is she talking, now?"

"Yes, but you have to bend close. I'm used to it, now. After a while, you will be, too."

The curator shut his eyes and listened. There was a rustle of ancient paper, somewhere, which wrinkled his face, listening. "What?" he asked. "What is it she, mainly, says?"

"Everything there is to say about death, sir."

"Everything?"

"Four thousand four hundred years, like I said, sir. And nine hundred million people who had to die so we can live."

"That's a lot of dying."

"Yes, sir. But I'm glad."

"What a terrible thing to say!"

"No, sir. Because if
they
were alive, we wouldn't be able to move. Or breathe."

"I see what you mean. She knows all
that,
does she?"

"Yes, sir. Her daughter was the Beautiful One Who Was There. So
she
is the One Who Remembers."

"The ghost that tells a flesh and soul complete history of the Book of the Dead?"

"I think so, sir. And one other thing," added Timothy.

"And?"

"If you don't mind, anytime I want, a visitor's card."

"So you can come visit anytime?"

"After hours, even."

"I think that can be arranged, son. There will be papers to be signed, of course, and authentication carried out."

The boy nodded.

The man rose.

"Silly of me to ask. Is she still talking?"

"Yes, sir. Come close. No,
closer."

The boy nudged the man's elbow, gently.

Far off, near the temple of Karnak, the desert winds sighed. Far off, between the paws of a great lion, the dust settled.

"Listen," said Timothy.

Afterword
How The Family Gathered

Where do I get my ideas and how long does it take to write an idea once I get it? Fifty-five years or nine days.

In the case of
From the Dust Returned,
the material started in 1945 and was only finished after a period stretching until 2000.

With
Fahrenheit 451,
I got the idea on a Monday and finished writing the first short version nine days later.

So you see, it all depends on the immediate passion.
Fahrenheit 451
was unusual and written during unusual times: that period of witch-hunting that ended with Joseph McCarthy in the fifties.

The Elliott family in
From the Dust Returned
began living in my childhood when I was seven years old. When Halloween came each year my Aunt Neva piled me and my brother into her old tin lizzie to motor out into October Country to gather cornstalks and field pumpkins. We brought them to my grandparents' home and stocked pumpkins in every corner, put cornstalks on the porch, and placed the leaves from the dining room table on the staircases so that you had to slide instead of stepping down.

She stashed me in the attic clad as a witch with a wax nose, hid my brother at the bottom of a ladder leading up to the attic, and invited her Halloween celebrants to climb up through the night to enter our house. The atmosphere was rampant and hilarious. Some of my finest memories are of this magical aunt, only ten years older than myself.

Out of this background of uncles and aunts and my grandmother, I began to see that some of it should be caught on paper to be kept forever. So in my early twenties I began to jigger the idea of this Family who were most strange, outré, rococo—who could be, but maybe were not, vampires.

At the time I finished the first story about this remarkable household, in my early twenties, I was writing for
Weird Tales
magazine for the magnificent sum of a half-cent a word. I published many of my early stories there, not realizing that I was turning out tales that would outlast the magazine, far into today.

When I got a raise to a penny a word I thought I was rich. So my stories appeared, one by one, and I sold them for fifteen dollars, twenty dollars, sometimes twenty-five dollars apiece.

When I finished "Homecoming," the first story about my Family,
Weird Tales
promptly rejected it. I had been having trouble with them all along because they complained that my stories were not about traditional ghosts. They wanted graveyards, late nights, strange walkers, and amazing murders.

I could not raise Marley's ghost again and again, as much as I loved him and all the ghosts that haunted Scrooge.
Weird Tales
desired first cousins to Edgar Allan Poe's Amontillado or Washington Irving's thrown pumpkin head.

I simply couldn't do that; I tried again and again but along the way my stories turned into tales of men who discovered the skeleton inside themselves and were terrified of that skeleton. Or stories about jars full of strange unguessed creatures.
Weird Tales
accepted some of these stories, reluctantly, with complaints. So when "Homecoming" arrived at their offices they cried "Enough!" and the story came back. I didn't know what to do with it at that time because there were very few markets in the United States for such tale telling. On a hunch I sent it to
Mademoiselle
magazine, where I'd had luck the year before selling a short story that I had submitted on impulse. Many months passed. I thought, well, perhaps the story had got lost. Finally I received a telegram from the editors, who said they had debated changing the story to fit the magazine, but instead they were going to change the magazine to fit the story!

They put together an entire October issue built around my "Homecoming" and got Kay Boyle and others to write October essays to round out the magazine. They hired the talents of Charles Addams, who was then an offbeat cartoonist for
The New Yorker,
and beginning to draw his own strange and wonderful "Addams Family." He created a remarkable two-page spread of my October House and my Family streaming through the autumn air and loping along the ground.

When the story finally appeared, I had grand meetings with Charles Addams in New York. We planned a collaboration: Over a period of years I would write more stories and Addams would illustrate them. Ultimately, we would gather them all, stories and drawings, into a book. The years passed, some stories were written, we stayed in touch but went our separate ways. My plans for a possible book were delayed by my good fortune in landing the job of writing the screenplay for John Huston's
Moby Dick.
But over the years, I kept revisiting my beloved Elliotts. That once-discrete tale, "Homecoming," became the cornerstone, a building block for the Life Story of the Elliott Family: their genesis and demise, their adventures and mishaps, their loves and their sorrows. By the time the last of these stories was written, dear Charles Addams had passed into that Eternity inhabited by the creatures of his and my world.

That, briefly, is the history of
From the Dust Returned.
Beyond this I might add that all my characters are based on the relatives who wandered through my grandmother's house on those October evenings when I was a child. My Uncle Einar was real, and the names of all the others in the book were once similarly attached to cousins or uncles or aunts. Though long dead, they live again and waft in the chimney flues, stairwells, and attics of my imagination, kept there with great love by this chap who was once fantastically young and incredibly impressed with the wonder of Halloween.

Recently, the nice folks at the Tee and Charles Addams Foundation sent me a copy of a letter I wrote to Charlie Addams in 1948—all about his wonderful painting of the "Homecoming" house, and the nascent plans we had to collaborate on an illustrated book. Dated February 11, 1948, the letter (written on my long-gone manual typewriter) reads, in part: " … let me say that I can't imagine putting out the book without you … It will become a sort of Christmas Carol idea, Halloween after Halloween people will buy the book, just as they buy the Carol, to read at the fireplace, with lights low. Halloween is the time of year for story-telling … I believe in this more than I have believed in anything in my writing career. I want you to be in it with me." Interestingly, my agent had been talking to William Morrow about the possibility of doing such a book, and so it is rather poetic, I think, that Morrow is publishing this book today, with Charlie's superb illustration on the cover. How I wish he were here to see this project come to fruition!

—Ray Bradbury

Summer 2000

 

Portions of this book have previously appeared as follows:

"The Traveler," first published in
Weird Tales,
December 1945; © 1945 by
Weird Tales,
renewed in 1972 by Ray Bradbury.

"Homecoming," first published in
Mademoiselle,
October 1946; ® 1946 by
Mademoiselle,
renewed in 1974 by Ray Bradbury.

"Uncle Einar," first published in
Dark Carnival
(Arkham House, 1947); © 1947, renewed 1975 by Ray Bradbury.

"The April Witch" (appearing here as "The Wandering Witch"), first pub-lished in
The Saturday Evening Post,
April 4, 1952, in a slightly different form; © 1952 by the Curtis Publishing Co., renewed 1980 by Ray Bradbury.

"On the Orient North," first published in
The Toynbee Convector
(Knopf, 1988); © 1988 by Ray Bradbury.

"West of October," first published in
The Toynbee Convector
(Knopf, 1988) in a slightly different form; ® 1988 by Ray Bradbury.

Other books

The Trial of Dr. Kate by Michael E. Glasscock III
Requiem for Blood by Hope, Alexandra
Antigua Kiss by Anne Weale
The All-Star Joker by David A. Kelly
Lorraine Heath by Parting Gifts
Perfect Couple by Jennifer Echols
Riding Raw by Stephanie Ganon
Big Strong Bear by Terry Bolryder
Rotter World by Scott R. Baker