The Whipping Boy (35 page)

Read The Whipping Boy Online

Authors: Speer Morgan

The only sounds were from the wind. He heard nothing at all coming from the boys' rooms, no bad-dream crying. There was a dim light in the Reverend's room, which seemed slightly odd. Tom stepped onto the porch and looked through the shutter of one of the large, low windows into the sitting room. Beyond the cracked door of the Reverend's bedroom a lantern was lit. Why the light at this hour, past midnight? It was difficult to see through the shutter, but it looked as if there was a rocking chair lying on its side, dumped over in the sitting room. Tom very carefully tried the front door and found it locked. None of the windows appeared to be disturbed or open.

He went around to the dilapidated back porch, where the door was standing partly open. By the porch steps, he glanced around but wasn't quite prepared for what he found. At the edge of a patch of moonlit weeds beside the building, he saw—and slowly went up and touched with his bare foot—Hack's satchel. It didn't even cross his mind to wonder why Hack had brought it with him instead of making the delivery and then catching a later train, because there was no question now that he had to go inside. He took the dangling shoes off his belt loop and laid them beside the satchel.

In the complete darkness of the back hallway, the building's smells provoked in him an instant melancholy. He stood still for a moment trying to collect himself. Then he walked on through the hall to the door leading to the Reverend's library, where the musty smell of the books was agonizingly familiar. He reached out and felt across their dry spines, as if to confirm that he really was in this place. Still he'd heard nothing except a creaking here and there in the house—no doors opening, no one walking down the stairs. The Reverend's office door was half shut, and he opened it gently, the room dimly lit by the lantern behind it in the adjacent bedroom. He walked quietly to the open bedroom door, seeing the lantern on the dresser and the capsized chair. The Reverend's bed was messed up but unoccupied. Had Hack come and taken him outside at gunpoint? Was Hack lurking on the grounds and the Reverend gone patrolling? He'd seen no lights anywhere else in the building.

Back in the office, he glanced around. The heavy kneeling block sat before the Reverend's desk. How many Fridays he had walked into this room and heard his defects read to him, the Reverend always sitting while he read, using his most monotonous, clerkly voice, implying that this was the standard and unavoidable inventory of living—poor attentiveness in school, failing to sit up straight and eat in silence, bad washing after fieldwork, improper care of uniform for marching practice, improper language, and so on and so on—he could hear the droning voice coming out of the square block of a man, but always with a hidden edge of anticipation beneath. Then he would ask Tom to remove his shirt, to kneel here.

Everything was the same in this room. The Reverend's own books, all lined up in the same order,
Institutes of the Christian Religion
prominent among them. Various books on education and the training of boys.
Antichrist on the American Continent
—Tom had always looked at that title and wondered about it. He took it down and flipped through the pages. It was a big, illuminated book with color plates and drawings throughout—mostly of Indians, with various tribal names beneath the plates, all grotesque, exaggerated renderings, naked devils and monsters dancing around fires with blood-dripping spears.

A terrible, bitter grief welled up in him, and he wanted to tear the book to pieces. He must not even throw it down, he realized. He set it down quietly and started to go back into the hallway when he had the feeling that someone was standing nearby watching him. He looked around the room until his eye lighted on the filing cabinet. “The annals of shame,” he'd once heard the Reverend call it. He walked around the desk and found several keys on a ring in the top drawer. As he picked it up he heard something, a voice somewhere in the timbers of the building. Hurriedly, he tried keys until one of them opened the cabinet drawer. Folders in it were put away in three carefully demarcated groups, and he found his own name in the back section. In his file were several pages with the single word
RECORDS
printed on the top. Each of these pages was a listing of transgressions, pages and pages of them going back for years, each with the appropriate “judgment” listed. The Reverend apparently spent a great deal of time copying the pages of his “book of sins” in his fastidiously plain script. Tom's life appeared to consist entirely of transgressions, until he found at the back of the file a single yellowed piece of paper, dated
14 July 1880
, with a tilting spider's scrawl written across it: “
To Whom it May Concern the Enfant in Question was received as a Foundling at Osi Tamaha Where he was Left near the Big Tree by Party or Partys
. . .” Tom deciphered as much as he could of the rest—“
possibly Apache . . . delivered to the Skullyville Agency . . . Captain Sam Sixkiller High Sheriff & Warden
”—but he had to do it quickly, because he unquestionably heard a muffled yell somewhere in the building. He dropped the paper back into the file, shut the cabinet, and retreated back down the hall.

At the basement entrance, a coolness leaked through the bottom of the door. He stood there thinking he'd readily go to hell before he would descend those stairs, but there was a light coming through the crack, and another, louder cry, and definitely it came from there.

He pushed open the thick door and went down. At the base of the half-rotted stairs, beyond the graveyard—mounds of both marked and unmarked burial places of orphans and Civil War soldiers—past huge barrels that at one time had been used for water storage, in a small pool of light coming from one lantern, Hack knelt in the dirt with his shirt off and his arms tied behind him. Standing by him, with his short braided horsewhip in one hand and a pistol in the other, was the Reverend James Schoot.

He saw Tom at the base of the stairs and said, “You're just in time for judgment, Mr. Freshour. Come and join us.”

***

“Your friend Mr. Deneuve came to do me harm,” the Reverend said, with the fixed blankness on his face that Tom had seen so many times. His arm fell hard, the whip snapped across Hack's back, causing him to topple into the dirt. “Get back on your knees.” Hack struggled up, with stripes of blood on his back visible from twenty feet away. The Reverend talked while he did it, as always, in a tone controlled but excited and only partly connected to the flailing arm. Tom had heard it so many times.
I am a stronger and more vital animal than you
, it seemed to say.

“You are a threat to God's work. You are pestilent in His eyes.”

The sight of the Reverend beating Hack, the terrible familiarity of this place, the dirt and rotten smell permeating the damp, grief-filled darkness made Tom weak in the knees, nauseated. He hid behind one of the huge containers, breathing, trying to gain control of himself.

“Come here, boy.”

With his back against the vat, Tom looked around it and was surprised to see the Reverend coming toward him, with the pistol held at the ready. Tom ran back into the darkness. The Reverend pulled off one ear-splitting blast, the bullet eating air close to his head. Tom went around a corner and stopped, waiting to see if he would follow, his pulse pounding. Tom had one advantage, thanks to the Reverend: he knew every nook and cranny of this stinking basement.

Hack had just stood up. Walking back to him, the Reverend said, louder, “Kneel down, boy. Now!” Tom found a rock and threw it into the darkness near them, hoping he would waste a shot on it. The Reverend shouted at Tom, “If you don't come here now, I will send this sinner to his final judgment. Do you hear me? I'll count to ten, and if you haven't come here into the light, slowly, with your hands in the air, his sickness will be over. It is in your hands. One, two . . .”

Tom came partway out so that he could see better. Hack was still standing, and the Reverend kicked him hard in the knee. There was a sickening crunch, Hack screamed in pain and fell to the ground, and the Reverend aimed the pistol toward his head. “. . . four, five, six—you don't think I mean it?”

“I'm coming,” Tom said.


No!
” Hack wailed. “Don't. He'll kill us both!”

Tom didn't know what to do. He didn't believe that the Reverend would execute Hack. Tom had no weapon, but during one of his exiles down here he had whittled on some old hoe handles, using a piece of metal he'd laboriously sharpened on the foundation rock. He'd made primitive candles out of tightly twisted paper, talked some matches out of the boy who brought him water, and practiced spear throwing. He had spent hours and hours doing this, until hunger and darkness prevented him. He and some of the other boys had hunted in the woods, too, with spears and bows, homemade from ash saplings, and he'd gotten good enough to kill an occasional rabbit with a spear. He ran to the corner where he remembered leaving the spear, and felt across the damp rough rock.

“Seven . . .”

Finally his hand found three of them. He grabbed one, swiveled around, and threw it toward the Reverend. He'd thrown without looking, and it missed, but the clattering caused the Reverend to crouch down. Tom knew that he would come after him now. He took the remaining two spears and moved back from the wall into the darkness so he wouldn't get cornered.

The Reverend leaned over and picked up the lantern. He took a step toward Tom, but then saw Hack trying to crawl away and changed his mind. He placed the lantern back on the ground and quickly counted, “Nine, ten! This is your last chance, Mr. Freshour. Do you want to kill your friend?”


Don't come
!” Hack bellowed.

Tom was just opening his mouth to say he would come when to his astonishment the Reverend aimed the gun at Hack's head and pulled the trigger. He shot him once, in the temple, and Hack thrashed in the dirt. The Reverend looked up, and the sight of his face in the shadowy yellow light, the inert black eyes—the awful, indifferent fixity looming above Hack's death tremor—changed something in Tom forever. By inborn fact of temperament, against all odds, Tom had stubbornly resisted what this man had tried to make him believe—that there was evil in thè world, that there were people who were in the grip of evil, in whom it eclipsed anything else. Partly because the Reverend so avidly believed it, Tom had resisted this knowledge, but now he knew that the Reverend had been right, because he was one of them. In his heart this man was an inflicter of pain, a killer, and whatever good he did was finally nothing beside it—null and void, zero, utterly meaningless.

Without thinking it in words, Tom at last became a believer.

Turning toward him, the Reverend raised the pistol and aimed it in his direction. Tom fell to the dirt and scrambled to the side. There was another blast and a thump near his hand. He had missed, but the flash had revealed the Reverend. Tom stood up. Using all of his body, he launched another of the sharpened handles. Just as the pistol went off again, the spear struck the Reverend in the shoulder and he grunted with surprise and pain. The gun fell from his hand, and slowly he leaned over to retrieve it.

Tom never hesitated. Giving the Cherokee death gobble that the boys used to make when they wrestled, he ran toward the Reverend. The noise made the Reverend hesitate just a second, causing a hitch to his movement as he brought the gun up, and when he straightened, Tom rammed him with the sharpened stick in his belly. His mouth hinged wide open in surprise, and he staggered backwards against a pillar and roared in pain as Tom pushed the spear home. The gun went off again, a wild shot, and Tom kicked it out of his hand. The Reverend tried to pull the spear from his gut, and he bellowed again as a red stain blossomed across his front. He pulled it out but was bleeding lavishly; he fell to his knees, crawled, then stood up and stumbled toward the stairs, crashing into something and falling again. Tom darted up the stairs ahead of him, slammed the door, and bolted it. He stood outside the door gulping air, and he heard the Reverend dragging himself to the top of the stairs.

“Let me out,” he said weakly.

Tom didn't reply.

“God will forgive you, sinner,” he groaned.

“No,” Tom said.

“Then you will go to hell,” the Reverend said feebly. “Please,” he panted through the door. “Let me out.”

Tom wondered why none of the boys from this side of the building had come at the sounds of gunshots in the basement, and guessed that they were afraid for their lives. He had a chance to get away without being seen, and he took it. He ran to the back door and fell headlong down the steps. He lay on the ground a moment, winded, stars bursting in his head. Lying there, he saw Hack's satchel, left on the ground. He crawled over, grabbed it and the shoes, and ran for the barn. With luck he could hold on to a horse long enough to get away from here.

 

 

 

 

PART THREE
23

T
OM HAD TAKEN
one of the Reverend's team horses and ridden through rapidly falling temperatures. The day came, and he was riding into the face of real winter weather coming down across the plains. He made the St. Louis and San Francisco tracks and followed the old, washed-out military road that went alongside it, north into the Winding Stair Mountains. He didn't know how hungry and tired he was until he fell off the horse from exhaustion. He led the horse down to a gully under a trestle, out of the biting wind, and went to sleep on the ground.

After a nap filled with wild visions, he woke up feeling stiff and strange. The sky was grey and closed in, with a curtain of greenish darkness approaching from the northwest.

What he'd done last night seemed like a dream. He felt unmoored, adrift, almost to the point of not being sure who he was anymore. The horse was standing nearby with his head down, and Tom noticed Hack's satchel on the back of it. When he'd saddled him, he'd tied it on and forgotten about it. He walked over and unbuckled it. At first he just looked inside without touching anything. Then he put the satchel down, took out five neat envelopes, and lined them up on the ground. Five bundles of twenty-dollar bills. He counted a bundle. There were twenty-five of them. Two thousand five hundred dollars in all.

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