NINA KIRIKI HOFFMAN
GONE TO HEAVEN SHOUTING
I'VE BEEN ON THIS QUEST for forty-seven years,
ever since my sixteenth birthday.
Every once in a while I find what I'm looking for, and
the restless urge to
search settles for a little while. It sleeps.
It never sleeps long.
I
haven't been home in thirty years, though I've directed others there.
There are music webs
in every community. Find a thread to follow and it will
lead you to little knots of
musicians who will give you other threads, if you
treat them right. There's the church
choir circuit, and the community choir
circuit, and the big performing arts centers that
play host to all kinds of
different musicians, big names in classical, rock, folk,
alternative; and then
there are the contra dance groups, and the old time fiddlers, and the
rock bands
and the jazz bands and the other people who play in little night clubs and
taverns
and small concert halls. There are high school garage bands who know
about each other.
Then
there are the people who practice alone at home when no one else is around
to hear, and
those I can almost never track down, their threads are so short.
Mostly they aren't the
ones I want, but it hurts me to know that perhaps
sometimes they are.
Some threads lead to
more than one sort of musician, and some never cross into
alien territory at all.
I never
know where I'll find my people. I used to search for them in a more
diffuse way, move into
a town and walk its streets up and down and wait for the
tug of recognition, watch for a
gesture or a flash of light or a certain look
around the eyes. These last few years I've
gone to the music webs, tweaked
threads, listened for rumors. I'm probably missing a lot of
my people. Not all
of them have found their way to music.
Not all of them wish to be found.
I've caught more family fish with music as a net than I did just strolling and
trolling
with no bait at all.
My name is Cyrus Locke. I carry a fiddle.
Also nice bamboo spoons for
rhythm, and a pennywhistle and some harmonicas, but
those are easier to hide.
IT WAS A
DECEMBER Saturday night like many they get in the Pacific Northwest,
stars scattered across
the dark sky, fog lying like pooled milk in roadside a
ditches and in low spots in the
pastures. The air smelled of cold and woodsmoke.
I was traveling by air, the way I do at
night when people are less likely to
notice. I don't go directly over the roads, where
headlights might catch me, but
I keep close enough not to miss the sort of buildings I want
to investigate.
I had watched a Christmas parade that morning in town, paying particular
attention to the various marching hands, but I hadn't seen any trace of my
people, though
I'd enjoyed the spectacle. Now I was just covering territory and
listening. On a cold night
you don't often hear music. People have got their
weatherproofing up and keep their tunes
inside. I would rather search than hole
up, though, especially since I had just finished
three cups of coffee at a diner
and was wide awake.
I drifted over a small country school,
slowing to look at it properly. Sometimes
there are community events in a school of a
Saturday night, and I specialize in
community events. If someone is going to shine, that's
a good place to find
them.
No sign of life there, but on the air a thread of music.
South of
the school was a big old oak tree, and huddled near and beneath some of
its limbs, a grange
building. Light, music, parked cars. Just the sort of place
I liked. I chose a shadow in
the grove of oaks behind the building and slipped
down into it, checking the back porch for
people smoking or children playing. I
used to get caught once in a while in the early days,
when I hadn't learned
caution. Once getting caught led to one of my better discoveries. All
in all,
though, I'd rather pick my moments.
I stood for a while listening to the music.
Country western, swing, old tunes
that I remembered hearing on radios in backwoods in the
fifties, early in my
questing years. I took my spoons and a D-pitch harmonica out of my
knapsack and
stuck them in my pants pockets, then lifted and lodged the knapsack in high
branches of one of the oak trees.
On the ground again, I opened my fiddle case and took out
Lucia. She's been with
me twenty-two years, ever since I rescued her from a pawn shop. If I
had some of
the gifts of other people in my family I might be able to get her to talk, tell
me her past history. What I know of her is that the label inside says she's a
copy of a
Stradivarius, like most fiddles you find, and it has the name of a
German city and a date,
1897. I got out the bow and tightened the hairs, then
tuned the fiddle, listening to the
music leaking out of the building, an old
tune Hank Williams had covered in the early
fifties, "Take These Chains from My
Heart."
I put the fiddle and bow away, straightened,
took a deep breath, then wandered
around toward the front of the grange, wondering how
these people took to
strangers. The windows were curtained with what looked like
yellow-orange
sheets, so I couldn't see in. One window, the one nearest the stage, was open
to
the frosty night. I caught a whiff of people: cologne, perfume, and sweat. I
heard the
shuffling sound of dancers on a wooden floor.
There is a dream that comes to me sometimes,
more often lately than I like, of
all the world poisoned and empty and dead. The only
colors are gray, black,
brown, and ice-white. In this dream I am alive.
In life I have
survived many things and anticipate surviving many more.
In the dream, I am alive, but
alone.
I opened the double door into the grange hall and saw people dancing and people
playing
music and I smiled the way I do every time I know my dream has not come
true yet. I am so
glad to see people alive, whether they are family members or
not. My heart lightened. I
edged to the left, where older folks were sitting on
a padded bench, and murmured to a
white-haired woman in a pale blue dress, "This
a private party, or can anybody join?"
"Welcome,
stranger," she said. "Go right on up and make yourself at home." Such
a nice smile she had.
They were playing "If Teardrops Were Pennies" as I edged past couples dancing.
Everyone had
smiles for me. I smiled back. Sun has beaten my skin brown and
folded, and age has bleached
my hair oyster-shell white. I am a fraction taller
than most but can still fit into clothes
I find on the medium rack in thrift
stores, like the scuffed loafers, faded dungarees,
gray-and-white striped shirt,
black leather vest, and beat-up bomber jacket I was wearing.
All around the cavernous room were people who looked vaguely like me in size and
age, some
sitting on benches that lined the walls, some out on the dance floor,
coupled and whirling.
A few of them were a little more dressed up than I was.
There were a few kids too, and some
younger couples. My dream of destruction
retreated as I looked around and felt that for
this moment I had found a home
and a family.
I get this family feeling at the best of times.
Sometimes it's deceptive. Often
it's not, though. There are other places and people,
foreign to where I stood
that Saturday night, that feel even closer to home to me.
Sometimes I walk into
alien worlds when I open a door. Sometimes after I've spent a little
time in an
alien world it embraces me too. Not many cast me out completely.
There were three
people with guitars toward the front of the room, and a woman
with a string bass, two
fiddlers, one white-haired fellow with a bandolier of
harmonicas, a young woman with a
banjo, and an older woman sitting and strumming
a mandolin. Three microphones on stands
amplified voice, fiddle, harmonica,
cords were hidden under little throw rugs. Black
instrument cases littered the
stage behind the musicians, and the desks and floor near
where they were
playing. Some cases had instruments still in them; a rotating cast of
musicians,
apparently.
Not quite sure of the particular protocol of this place, I took a
seat near the
woman with the mandolin and held my fiddle case on my lap. She was wearing a
turquoise sweatshirt with big furry white cats painted on it in glitter. She had
red-framed
glasses and a big grin, and curly dark hair shot with silver. Her
earrings were silver
snowflakes.
The tune ended and she smiled and nodded at me. "You new in town?"
"Yep."
"Welcome
to Spruce Grange." She held out a hand and I shook it. "I/m Alma."
"Cyrus," I said.
"Care to
join us?"
"Love to."
"You want to sign up for a couple tunes?" She nodded toward a yellow
shopping
pad sitting behind the musicians on a podium that had been shoved up against the
stage. "You can just play backup if you want."
"I'll sign," I said. One of the fiddlers
stepped up to the central microphone
and began "Black Velvet," an old waltz. I hadn't heard
it in a long time. It was
surely pretty.
I edged behind the other musicians, who made room,
and picked up a chewed
pencil. The sign-up sheet had twenty numbers with names listed
beside them: Joe
W., John I., John P., Grace, Calvin, Annie, Jim, Sharon, Lilian, Harry,
Dale,
Earl, Everett, fine old names with nothing strange about them. None of them
sounded
like names my family would use; we generally venture farther away from
common when naming
our babies. I wrote "21" and "Cyrus," wondering where on the
list they had reached, how
soon they would expect me to play.
Someone would tell me.
I set my case on the edge of the
stage, opened it, and got out Lucia and the
bow. Tightened bow hairs, ran some rosin across
them, checked my tuning, glanced
at the other musicians near me, got a nod and a smile from
the bass player, and
edged into the tune, playing melody very softly to get it back in my
fingers and
my head, then venturing into harmony, observing the rules of being a backup
player:
Listen to the leader. Never play louder than whoever is leading, and
never play fancier.
Follow the leader's tempo by watching his or her foot
tapping even if other people are
lagging behind or getting ahead. Smile.
It wasn't great music, but it was
good-enough-to-dance-to music, and that was
swell. People were moving to it and smiling.
Near the door at the other end of
the hall, three people were even boot-scooting while
nearer couples held each
other and waltzed. New ways coming in, I thought, then wondered
how I knew they
were new. I was melding just a little. Thoughts can travel by air, and air
is my
sign. Join a tune, mix with it, slide under the surface, add your mite while
others
are adding theirs, and you can get a little tangled with the
thought-stream.
Here it was
friendly for the most part. The first fiddler focused on fingering,
hoping the tune would
stick with her until she got through her fourth repeat of
it. The second fiddler hated the
sound of the banjo, but didn't hate the banjo
player. One of the guitar players was annoyed
at the second fiddler, thinking
that the second fiddler was misbehaving by playing fancier
than the first
fiddler grandstanding. Bad manners. The mandolin player was interested in
me.
She did think I was a good-enough musician, and so far not too musically pushy,
and that
was warming.
I let the thoughts go and sank into the music, which had a life of its own.
The
tune had its shadowy ancestry, passed from person to person, and its brief life,
born at
the first bowstroke, dying with the final flourish, in the middle it
reached out into
people's heads and planted its seeds there. With luck it would
be reborn many ways -- a
hum, a whistle, or maybe a kid hearing it and wanting
to figure out how to play it. Tunes
were like benign viruses. They could sure as
shooting mutate from one life to the next,
too.
The first fiddler kicked up her foot to signal that she was approaching the end
of the
tune. She closed it down after that, nodded to the few people who
applauded, turned and
told us, "Chinese Breakdown," and started on her second
tune.
I played twiddles that
supported her tune and watched people two-step lively
around the floor. It was so fine to
see people enjoying themselves in the midst
of music and dance. I basked in it, part of the
music tapestry myself.
After a while I woke out of the moment and thought about my quest,
and opened up
my ears for that particular thread of sound that would tell me I had found a
family member. An overtone, a harmonic that nobody else could quite produce. It
was not a
sound that came out of an instrument, but I could hear my own melody
there in the overhead,
singing about who I was and what I was doing at that
moment, a tumbling tune of joy.
Faintly,
faintly, masked by other sounds, there was the thread I sought. Fainter
than I had ever
heard it before. I tuned my listening to this trace, kept my
mind on it while my hands
played music along with the first fiddler.
It was a strange little melody, plaintive and
constant. "Chinese Breakdown" came
to a rousing finish and the dancers and listeners
clapped, and still this tiny
tune played on, the same notes sounding, no shift in awareness
(my own tune had
spun to a waiting pedal note until the next overtune would rise and it
could
harmonize). In the brief break between one player and the next I listened to the
faint
tune and recognized it. "Bright Morning Stars Are Rising," an old
Christmas tune whose
origins I did not know.
One of the guitar players stepped up to the mike, then turned back
to face the
musicians. "Hey, Good-Looking,'" she said, "in G." She grinned at us. "Alma,
play me in, okay?"
The mandolin player nodded and grinned and struck up the tune and pretty
soon we
were all flowing along the notes together. The guitar player had a nice clear
voice
and the bass kept good rhythm and dancers flocked to the floor. In the
middle between
verses the guitar player surprised me by turning to me and
lifting her brows, then nodding
toward one of the mikes. I stepped up and played
a verse, wondering how this would all work
out in the hierarchy of musicians,
that she had asked a stranger for backup before she went
to the ones who were
already here. Such tiny shifts and swedes in the living dynamic,
everything
could change, or everything could absorb change and return to its flow
unimpeded.
I played well and strongly, decorated notes with flourishes, finished my verse
and nodded
back to her, smiling, then stepped away from the mike. "Thanks," she
said, and sang the
second verse. It was all right. The others still projected
contentment. Polite, friendly,
welcoming people.
The tiny thread of family still played, underneath it all, unchanging as
the
evening moved on. We played down through the list, with some people putting down
instruments
and going out to dance and others coming in off the floor to pick up
instruments. I played
two tunes, "Florida Blues" and "Kentucky Waltz."
Then the musicians took a break and most
people went to the dining room for
potluck desserts.
"Mighty fine, mighty fine, Cyrus," Alma
said as she put her mandolin back in its
hardshell case. "Hope you'll come next week. We're
playing out at Ethel Creek
Grange then."
"Thank you. I don't know if I'll still be in town,
but I appreciate the
invitation."
"Want some coffee?"
"In a couple minutes, thank you," I
said.
She smiled, picked up a cane that had been lying beside her chair, and moved off
after
most of the others toward the dining hall.
I put my fiddle away, set the case on the stage.
The mystery tune was still
playing, clearer now that other ambient noise had quieted. I
looked around the
nearly empty room.
I glanced through the door into the next-door room and
saw a combination
kitchen-dining room which ran the length of the dance hall but was
narrower
across: cream walls, lace curtains, two rows of end-to-end long narrow tables
draped
with paper tablecloths, folding metal chairs lined up on both sides of
them and people
sitting in the chairs, talking. At the far end of the dining
room was the kitchen area,
with a counter spread with snacks in dishes or
supermarket plastic containers. People lined
up, holding paper plates, to get
desserts. Some dropped a dollar into a donation coffee can
on the buffet.
A few people lingered on the benches in the dance hall, talking with each
other.
One of the guitar players, a tall old guy named Dale, was still sitting up front
and
noodling on his guitar. The banjo-playing woman came back from the kitchen
carrying two
Styrofoam cups of steaming coffee. She set them down carefully and
then sat next to Dale.
I wandered up the hall and down, pausing near the small clots of people and
listening for
the tune. Not there, not here, not there. I wandered toward Dale
and Rose, the
banjo-player. The tune was louder there, but it didn't seem to be
coming from either of
them.
I climbed up onto the stage.
Louder.
Was someone hiding up here? I was satisfied at
this point that the tune was
something other people didn't naturally hear, since no one
else had responded to
it. The music had that flavor of family, and it went on and on. It
was hard for
me to believe that some lost lonely person would hide out on the stage or in
the
wings making this music when there were so many friendly people out front.
Not everybody
in my family can adjust to regular people, though. Lots of them
hide out entirely and never
mix. There seems to be more and more of a trend
toward isolation with some of my people,
and I deplore it. Wonderful people are
everywhere. You miss a lot if you stop looking for
them.
Simple blank flats framed the stage, with a few pieces of rickety furniture
against
them. The back wall held a working door. I went through it, listening to
the air, tasting.
Bats, somewhere up above in the galleries. To the left, to the
right, slender dark
corridors leading to the wings. No complicated stagecraft
here. I had seen grange skits
before. Full of enthusiasm, nothing complicated.
Occasional raw talent. Occasional trained
talent.
On a table, a straw farmer's hat. A bouquet of silk flowers in rust and bronze
and
gold.
No sign of the tunemaker.
"What are you looking for?" asked a voice from behind me. I
turned and found
Alma leaning on her cane and peering at me along the backstage corridor.
That was the question, wasn't it?
Without the aid of music as a carrier, I had no idea what
she was thinking.
"A tune," I said after a moment.
"You're looking for a tune behind the
scenes at Spruce Grange?"
"Do you know that old Christmas carol, 'Bright Morning Stars Are
Rising'?"
"Eh?" She cocked her head.
I listened to the trace of music. Here, close to its
source, I heard a child's
voice singing the words on top of thin fiddle notes. I lifted my
voice and
joined the song in mid-verse: "'Oh, where are our dear mothers? Oh, where are
our
dear mothers? Day is-a-breaking in my soul.'"
Alma took two steps back, her face clouding,
mouth drooping from its smile.
"What is it?" I asked. "I didn't mean to upset you."
"Why are
you looking for that song here?" she whispered.
I opened the door in the scene and stepped
out into the light on stage. She
entered from the wing. I sat on a metal chair among the
instrument cases, and
she sat on a chair next to me and laid her cane on the floor.
"Something
is singing that song," I said.
"What do you mean?" Her eyes were bleak behind her glasses.
"Do you believe in ghosts?" Some people do, I know. I believe, but then, I've
met a number
of them.
"No," she whispered. She looked right and left, then stared down at her feet.
"Never
mind, then," I said. I patted her hand.
A thread of family here, but not really in the
present time. I could come back
later and search, I was pretty sure, after everybody else
had left. Might as
well enjoy what was left of the evening.
"When I was a little girl," she
whispered, and looked up at me. I smiled and
waited.
"When I was a young girl, I was
searching in the woods for scrap metal to help
with the war effort. My daddy had gone off
to war and I was a wild girl, a
handful, roaming up and roaming down. Momma couldn't keep
me home at all. Any
excuse to get out would do. I was out picking blackberries before there
were any
ripe ones, or looking for filberts or pears or apples from trees gone wild from
pioneer orchards. Scrap metal was a good excuse to wander, those years.
"It was in these
woods, just back of the grange here-- that was before there
were all these people in the
valley; folks lived much further apart, and the
town was a lot smaller in those days- in
these woods I found them."
"Who?"
"That little family. They'd raised a house out of
up-and-down logs, not regular
crosswise. Squatters was what they was. This all used to be
part of Tim and
Adeline Venture's donation land claim, but they never did log it all off,
weren't enough kids in the family...well.
"So I was running through the woods keeping an
eye out for metal, only I was so
far in wasn't much chance anybody had left any metal thing
out there. I thought
I was walking where no man had walked before, and then I smelled smoke
and came
to a clearing."
She paused, her eyes staring unseeing across the hall. Below us,
out on the
dance floor near the microphones, Dale and Rose played a mournful old song about
departed lovers and lonesome train whistles. The banjo made everything sound
spunky.
"Morning
glories had twined right up over the house." Her voice had dropped to a
whisper. "I never
saw such a thing before or since. Up-and-down logs -- some
still part of growing trees,
Cyrus, with branches sprouting out the top. Did you
ever hear of such a thing?"
"Maybe," I
said quietly. If the family she talked about had any sign Earth
people in it, with their
gifts of growth and plant-talk, many things were
possible.
"And a little vegetable garden up
near the house," Alma murmured, looking into
the past. "Sassy green leaves on those squash
vines. Tall corn. Lacy carrot
tops. I tell you, I felt like I had walked into a fairy tale,
this snug little
house in the middle of nowhere with the flowers growing all over it."
She
fell silent again. I sat and listened to the child's thin voice. "Oh, where
are our dear
fathers? Oh, where are our dear fathers? Oh, where are our dear
fathers? Da-a-ay is
a-breakin' in my soul."
"I woulda run away again," said Alma presently. "Too many stories
my ma told
about tripping over a fairy mound and going into another land for a century or
two until you come out and everything's changed, everyone you know is dead. I
woulda run,
but the wind changed then, and I smelled that smell, and heard the
child's voice."
She was
quiet a long time then. I feared the other musicians would return from
the
coffee-and-dessert break and the music would start and Alma would fall out
of her memory
into the present. Once she left this confiding mood, I would not
know how to bring her back
to it, and she was getting to the meat of the story
now.
I touched her hand. A terrible
temptation came over me to use my powers of
persuasion and force the story out of her, but
I waited, and the impulse passed.
I could make people talk about anything, I could make
them forget afterward
everything they had said; but I could not make myself forget what I
had done,
and those memories were difficult to live with. I had enough of them already.
"The
child was singing that song," Alma said. "Her voice didn't have much voice
left in it, if
you know what I mean. And the smell was the smell of dead things
that have been lying a
while in the heat."
"What happened?" I whispered.
"She wandered around the side of the
house, a thin little girl in a dirty white
dress that was all tatters. She was sick. Her
cheeks were caved in, and her eyes
sunk down in her head. Come to find out later, after the
doctor saw her, she
probably hadn't eaten anything in days, and there were vegetables lying
on that
ground just as fine as anything you see in the market. She wandered and wavered
around,
singing. `Some have gone to heaven shouting.'"
I could hear her singing that verse even as
Alma spoke.
"I stepped out of the woods. `Little girl, little girl. Who are you?' I said.
She didn't even look my way, just pranced away and back, singing. I went to her
and caught
her hands. She looked at me then, and her eyes were like a dead
person's. She hummed the
tune. Months afterward I couldn't get it out of my
head.
"The smell was stronger. I didn't
know what to do. I wasn't so old myself.
`What's the matter, little girl?' I said. She sang
at me and that was all. She
didn't try to pull away or anything. Just sang."
Alma's hand
slipped from under mine. She put her hands over her eyes. "You know,
I knew that everything
had gone wrong, and I didn't know what to do. I let go of
the girl. I opened the door of
the house. The door, it had a carving of a man's
face on it, a bearded face with leaves all
around it, and it scared me some --
too much like something from Ma's tales, a door that
could look at you.
"I opened that door, and that horrible smell came out, stronger than
before, and
the buzzing of flies. Only light in the room came from it might be a hole in
the
roof, I didn't look long enough to figure it out; but there was the two of them
in there
on a bed, lying under that hard light, dead, as far as I could tell,
for days maybe;
covered with flies."
She lowered her hands from her face, gripped mine in both of hers.
"She had to
be going in and out," she whispered. "The fire was still lit. That was hard for
me to know, that she would go inside with them in such a state." She shook her
head.
"I
didn't know what to do. I took the girl's hand and led her out of there. The
grange was the
closest building. I led her here. It was a Saturday, and women
were quilting. I brought the
girl here and they all started up like a flock of
birds. Someone got the doctor. They tried
to feed that child, tried to give her
water, tried to get her to name herself, but she
never did. Only thing she ever
did was sing. She died later that night. Doctor said it was
starving did it."
The hall filled with talk and commotion as people came back from their
conversations and coffee. Musicians gathered around the microphones. Alma
gripped my hands
and finally looked up at me. "We never even knew their names,"
she said. The anguish she
had felt more than fifty years earlier was still in
her face.
"It's all right," I said. I
held her hands tight, trying to give her
reassurance. "I'll take care of it."
She cocked her
head and stared hard at me, almost as hard as she had stared into
the past. "What do you
mean?" she asked.
I looked at her and wondered how much to tell her. "I believe in ghosts,"
I said
at last. "I'll talk to her."
"Talk to her." Her voice sounded flat.
"She's here. Still
singing. I'll talk to her."
"What good will that do?"
"I think she must have been a relative
of mine," I said, "and in my family, we
know how to care for our dead."
"Alma?" someone
called from below. "You back me up on `Your Cheatin' Heart'?"
"Sure, honey," she said in a
distracted voice. She grabbed her cane, left the
stage, and went to get her mandolin. We
both joined in the music again. Between
tunes, though, she was always looking at me.
THE
DANCE LASTED until eleven, the dregs of it anyway; people packed up and left
in trickles
earlier, until at last only Alma and Rose and a guitar player named
John and I were left,
and the couple who swept the dancing dust off the floor
and put away the folding metal
chairs.
"Time to go home," John said, "before they kick us out."
I wiped the rosin off
Lucia's strings with a bandana I keep in her case for that
purpose. I loosened the horse
hairs on my bow. John put away his guitar, Rose
packed up her banjo, and Alma locked her
mandolin in its case. We said good
night to the caretakers and left the building amid their
invitation to come back
next month.
Rose and John went to their cars. Alma stood beside me
in the chill night. The
motion-sensitive light above the door lit us from behind, but if we
stood still
long enough, it would switch off again. I waited.
"You got a car, Cyrus?"
"No."
"How'd you get here?"
"Hitched a ride." On a wind.
"You want a ride somewheres else?"
I
smiled at her. "I still have business here."
"You believe in ghosts," she said, and then
whispered, "I've been so afraid they
exist. None of those deaths was quiet, and I've never
been able to stop seeing
them. Poor little mite. Holding her hand was like holding twigs."
"What I need to do now is private, Alma."
"Don't tell me that," she said. "Don't you tell
me to go away with this darkness
still in my head. I've lived with it a long time, Cyrus. I
am more than ready to
let it go."
I sighed. I wondered. Even though she didn't want to go, I
could tell her to go,
and she would do it. But if the thought of these spirits was
troubling her so
much, how could I leave her with that darkness? "Wait here," I told Alma,
and I
went around back of the grange and lifted up into the tree where I had hidden my
things.
Mostly I make my own rules, but there are some very strong ones almost all of us
follow,
and one of them concerns outsiders. I'm not supposed to reveal family
secrets if I can help
it.
I took my snow crystal out of my knapsack and sat on a branch, holding the
crystal in
both hands. "Powers and Presences, lead me and guide me," I murmured.
"Help me to choose
what is right for each person."
"Which are your choices?" whispered a breeze past my ear.
"Here is a spirit that needs a path, and here is a person who has a troubled
mind. I would
like to help them both if I can."
"Why not?" whispered the wind.
"One is not of our family."
A moment of silence slipped by, and then the whisper came: "In your hands."
I kissed the
crystal, tucked it into my pocket, and shrugged into my knapsack. I
climbed down the tree,
and a good thing, too: Alma was on the ground below,
leaning on her cane and looking up.
"What were you doing up there?" she asked.
"Praying a little and getting my things," I
said, hanging by my arms from the
lowest limb, then dropping. I had not swung from a limb
in quite that way since
I was a boy, and I felt absurd.
"Your things," said Alma. She
glanced from my fiddle case, still at the base of
the tree, to the knapsack on my back.
"Those are all your things?"
I nodded. "Just passing through."
"On your way to where?"
"Everywhere."
"Nowhere," she said.
For a moment I felt a strange sense of vertigo. My dream of the death
of the
planet unfolded in my mind. Fields of barren ground, dark blasted hills, ice
along
the edges. How bleak it would be to have no one to look for, no one to
talk to, no one to
jam with. Why explore when every place was gray and dead?
But this was not my reality. I
blinked and looked at Alma. "Everywhere," I said
again. Everywhere there were musicians,
coffee shops, radio stations, roads;
crops in the field, people in cars, animals in
forests, crickets and frog
choruses and murmuring bees, and the slow rich sound of voices
talking on a
porch of a summer evening, voices murmuring in a firelit room of a winter's
night.
Usually my voice wasn't among them, though. I did a lot of listening and
appreciating,
but not much sharing.
"Have it your own way," Alma said. "Now what?"
"I'm going back inside
as soon as they close it up and leave."
"Just how do you imagine you'll get inside that
building? You some kind of
burglar?"
I smiled at her.
"I have a key," she said. "I'm on the
planning committee. I'll let you in."
"Alma? Alma!" Voices called from the front of the
building. They sounded
alarmed. "You out here? You all right? Alma!"
"Oh, my car's still
there," she muttered. She and her cane walked around to the
front of the building. "You go
on home, Charlie and Liz. I'll lock up. I've got
some thinking to do."
"All right," they
said, relief in their voices. Presently a car started and
drove off down the road.
"Come on,
Cyrus," said Alma and we went back inside Spruce Grange through the
front door.
The hall
looked unfamiliar and dark with nobody in it but us. Alma went into the
coat closet and
flipped on banks of lights.
"Can you light the stage?" I asked.
Lights went on above the
stage.
It was strange to see this empty place that minutes earlier had been alive with
people
and dance. My doom dream murmured in my mind.
"What next?" Alma said.
I climbed the stairs
to the stage. No clutter of instruments and coats; even the
metal chairs were folded and
stood against the backdrop.
I listened.
"Some are down in the valley singing..."
I knelt on
the bare wood stage. I took my snow crystal from my pocket and placed
it on the floor, then
slid out of my knapsack and sat back on my heels, looking
around.
"Some are down in the
valley singing..."
Alma leaned against the stage's edge and watched me.
"What I'm about to
do may seem strange to you," I said. "It will not hurt you,
but it may frighten you. Are
you sure you want to watch?"
"Some are down in the valley singing..."
"It concerns that
little girl?"
"I believe it does."
She gripped her cane, hunched her shoulders. "Go ahead."
"Da-a-a-ay is a-breakin' in my soul..."
I took a small, pale green glass plate from my
knapsack. I had made it as part
of my apprenticeship to the glassblower in Cielito, before
I understood the
limitations of my being Sign Air -- fire would heed me as much as it did
anybody
without fire persuasions; I had no skill with it, but still, the plate was a
gift of
earth and fire, lopsided and thick as it was, and I smiled at it as I
did every time I dug
it out of its protecting silk. I set it on the stage beside
my snow crystal and placed a
sprig of desert sage and some dried cedar twigs on
it.
I sat and gathered my mind, preparing
a version of the "Things Seen and Unseen"
chant that would let the invisible attain
visibility if it so desired. Usually
this chant revealed things whether they wanted to be
shown or not, and only for
a brief time. I wanted a version that would grant power to the
invisible to
choose the length of its interaction with light.
When I was satisfied that I
had shaped the tool I wanted, I touched fire to the
spices on the glass plate. They burned
quickly, leaving a smudge of smoke, a
signature in the air that smelled of desert starlight
and night forest. I
addressed Powers and Presences and spoke my chant.
The song stopped.
When
I looked up, a young girl stood across from me.
She was slender and hollow-eyed and wore a
white shift. She looked just like my
little sister Drusilla had at ten, long dark wavy hair
almost to her waist, a
pale fine-featured face with large gray eyes, slender hands. She was
not gaunt
the way Alma had described her.
"Presence," I murmured.
Her eyes widened. She
touched her chest.
I smiled at her. "Presence," I said again.
"Uncle?" she whispered.
"Cousin,"
I said. If she had died during World War II, at about ten--she looked
perhaps ten, perhaps
eleven w then she and I had been born at about the same
time.
"I don't understand,"
whispered the girl. She blinked. She glanced around, saw
Alma, who stood there staring at
her. Alma dropped her cane. Her right fist
pressed against her breastbone, and her left
hand gripped her right. Her eyes
were wide.
"Gift me a name? Mine is Cyrus Locke," I said.
"Helena Exile," said the girl, still staring at Alma.
Exile! A name taken by those who were
cast out from our family, the threads
binding them to us cut. She was too young to be
exiled; her parents must have
been the ones banished. I did not even know which clan place
they had come from;
it was all old news now, no doubt, though I would have to check with
the Powers
and other Presences about final disposition.
"Helena," I said. "This is Alma."
Alma stood unmoving, her mouth a little open.
"Alma, are you all right?"
Alma said, "How?
How can she be standing there more real than life? She looks
much stronger than when I saw
her."
Helena's face clouded. "Cousin Cyrus," she said. "Please."
"Cousin." I lifted my hands
to her even though I knew she could not touch them.
"You are only halfway here. You've been
halfway here a long time, fifty years or
more. I offer you a chance to choose. Do you wish
to go farther away? Do you
wish to return?"
"I -- I -- My mother! My father!" She stiffened,
her eyes glazing.
"They are gone too. They left before you did. They may be waiting on the
other
side of shadow, or they may be trapped without a proper unbinding. I will tend
to them
soon. Just now, let's think about you."
"I don't feel --" She reached across to me and
tried to grasp my hands. Hers
passed through mine. "Oh!"
Alma gasped as well. I looked at
her. She was paper pale. Her eyelids fluttered
and she began to sag. I bespoke the air
around her to hold her up, worried even
as I did so that I was going too far. Ghosts,
whether she believed in them or
not, were part of her everyday, a conversational coin
always being spent. Solid
air would be outside her experience. "Breathe deeply," I said to
her, and asked
air to strengthen and sustain her.
After a moment the color returned to her
face. She still looked terrified.
"Alma," I said.
"You -- you're one of those black magic
demon sorcerers, aren't you?"
"No." I glanced at Helena, who looked down at her hands, at
the glass plate and
snow crystal at her feet, at me, and then at Alma. Helena might be
confused, but
if her parents had raised her with any knowledge of her heritage, she would
be
able to understand what had happened to her, given time and explanation. Alma,
on the
other hand
"Demon has nothing to do with what I am," I said.
"Are you evil?"
Sometimes.
Regrets still pricked me. "No."
"Let me go."
"Are you all right? You looked like you were
going to fall."
"I'm fine," she said, her voice hollow as though she were trying to
convince
herself.
I bespoke air to be air-like again, and Alma shuddered, then bent to
retrieve
her cane. She limped to the double doors at the far end of the hall, never
looking
back. When she had closed the doors behind her, I turned to Helena.
"Little cousin," I
said. "Flesh has left you. Where do you wish to go next?"
She squatted across from me and
stared at me. "I have been so lost," she
whispered, "so alone in the darkness."
"Your spirit
tied itself to this place."
She looked around. "What is this place?"
"This is a grange hall.
A community place where people get together; not usually
members of our family, though.
There is music here sometimes. You were singing."
"Why am I here?"
"This is where you died,
Alma said."
"Alma..."
"Alma found you in the forest and brought you here. She was trying to
help you."
"I remember a girl." Her eyes looked inward. "A tall brown girl with twigs in
her hair. One of the first strangers I ever saw. I remember her and I don't
remember her."
She shook her head. "That was after...I -- "
She screamed.
It was a high, huge, sad,
chilling sound, a sound that might have echoed across
a cold landscape of white and gray,
the last sound of life on a dead world. It
lasted a good while. The hair on my head and the
back of my neck rose, and my
skin tingled with goosebumps.
Alma looked in through the doors.
Helena screamed, first with her eyes closed, then with her eyes opened. She
stared up at
the ceiling and screamed.
She stopped. The ensuing silence lay like a weight on me. She
stared at me.
"My parents died!" she yelled.
"Yes."
"They died and left me all alone!"
"Yes."
"I couldn't wake them! Mami! Papa! How could you leave me?"
"They couldn't help it," I said
when no other answer came.
"I couldn't let them go, but they weren't there anyway."
"Yes," I
said.
"They didn't come back."
"No." I held out my arms to her, wanting to hug her, but how?
Air whispered past my ears.
Air could be solid for me.
"Helena," I murmured, holding out my
arms, asking air to be solid where she was
in it.
She sobbed and came to me and crawled into
my lap, and I put my arms around her,
air and light and spirit unbreathed, unfinished. I
held her and she cried. Her
world had been as bleak as the dead land in my dreams, shorn as
it was of all
she knew of warmth.
"You don't have to be alone anymore," I told her when her
sobs slowed. "You can
stay with me, or you can go on and find your parents."
"How can I find
them now?" She stirred and pushed away from me. It was strange.
It did not feel like a
child I held; she was smooth and cool and had no breath
or heartbeat. I embraced a
weightless stone. She pushed at my arms, and I
released her.
She rose and looked at Alma,
who had come back and stood against the edge of the
stage again. "You were the girl who
came?" Helena said.
"Yes," said Alma.
"She was the girl who found me," Helena told me, "and
look at her now. She's an
old woman. I couldn't even find my parents when they first left
their bodies.
How can I possibly find them now?" "Where are they buried?" I asked Alma.
"At
the little cemetery up the hill behind Ravensville Church. All three
together we put them
in the ground, under a stone with no name on it. `Mother,
Father, Child' was all it said,
and the year of their death."
"May we go there now?"
"I can drive," she said.
"Would you?" I
spoke to her doubts and fears. Often enough I have spent time
with people who have no magic
in their lives, and I have done my best to
understand how that feels.
There are so many
things to be afraid of.
Yet Alma had returned in the middle of Helena's scream, for me the
most
frightening thing that had happened tonight. It was a sound of despair that came
from a
place so deep I had not known whether it had an end. I had been afraid I
might spend the
rest of my life listening to it.
"I will," said Alma.
"Thank you." I looked at Helena. "Are
you ready to leave this place? You have
been here a long time."
"There's nothing here for
me," she said.
I thought of the music and dance earlier that evening. When I died, I might
like
to haunt a place like this for such a taste of life, friendship, warmth once a
month.
But Helena had not been awake to any of it.
I looked at the glass plate on the stage, the
dusting of gray ash left behind by
cedar and sage. I thanked Powers and Presences for help,
asked for more, put
away my tools and climbed to my feet, picked up my knapsack and my
fiddle case.
Helena and I went down the stairs together to the floor below.
"I see it," Alma
said, staring at us.
I glanced at Helena, then at Alma.
"You are related. Your nose, hers.
Your eyes. How can that be? How could you
know?"
"Recognition," I said. "In the music."
She
frowned. Her eyebrows drew together. "Guess I don't have to understand it to
see that it
works," she said. "Let's go."
For a moment Helena and I hesitated in the grange's doorway.
I watched her, She
looked behind her at the stage, confused.
"You've woven yourself into
this place," I said.
"Unbind me."
I worked it out in my head, a thread-cutting chant for
ties of place. It had to
be specific. I don't like unbinding work; too risky, too counter
to my impulses
to connect. I said this chant for Helena Exile, though, and felt the brief
shock
of freedom shake her.
I remembered that shock. I had cut myself free of my home place
all those years
ago, though I didn't realize I was doing it at the time. It had hurt.
ALMA
DROVE a big maroon sedan with well-padded white seats. Helena and I got in
the back. Alma
glanced over her shoulder at us, shook her head, started the car,
and drove through the
cold December night along back roads that cut through
quiet fields, past houses where all
the lights were out. Every once in a while
Alma shook her head again.
We went through brief
patches of forest, then through a little sleeping town
that had a general store, a
garage/gas pump, and a feed store. Then we came to a
white church among trees, its spire
pointing to the stars.
Alma turned the car off on a dirt road past the church and we edged
up a small
forested hill to a graveyard. She stopped the car, turned off the engine and the
headlights. We sat there in silence for a little while.
I opened the door and climbed out,
my knapsack in my hand. Helena joined me.
The car engine ticked. Somewhere birds chirped
and silenced. Gravestones stood
in less-than-orderly rows, some new, some old, some ornate,
some plain, some
with fresh or plastic flowers at their foot, and some embraced by weeds.
Alma emerged. "Not really my favorite place to be at night," she said after a
moment.
"There's
nothing here will hurt you," I told her. Then I checked. Sometimes the
energies surrounding
death and the dead can get muddled and enhanced and
strange. Much depends on how people
relate to their dead, and what the dead plan
to do next.
There was no smell of danger in
this place.
Alma shuddered. She straightened her shoulders, gripped her cane in one hand
and
a flashlight in the other, and headed in among the stones. We followed her.
It was a
plain stone, not even granite or marble: a rounded rock you might find
in a river, and it
said just what Alma had told us: MOTHER, FATHER, CHILD 1943.
"Oh," said Helena, holding out
open hands, waving them above the ground. "I feel
so strange."
I took my snow crystal from
my pocket, held it in my right hand. Powers and
Presences, help us to find the right way to
proceed. May we awaken those who
sleep here?
They are here and they do not sleep.
I looked up
as Alma dropped her cane and gripped my arm. Two glowing shadows
stood beyond the
headstone, holding hands.
I said the chant I had said for Helena, "Things Seen and Unseen,"
modified so
that those unseen could become seen for as long as they wished.
The shining
shadows darkened, took on weight and hue. A broad man and a narrow
woman, he in overalls
and an undershirt, she in a calico dress. They had the
faces of my cousins.
"Helena! Bright
staff" the woman cried, reaching toward us.
"Where have you been?" cried the man, opening
his arms. "We've been waiting
ages!"
"Mami! Papa!" Helena gave a choked sob and ran to them,
was swallowed in their
embrace.
Exiles. In death, were they still separated from the rest of
us?
People make such separations, something whispered past my ear. Most of us do
not.
My
dream of a wasteland: a place I had sent myself?
Helena separated from her parents, came
back to me. "Cousin Cyrus," she said.
"Thank you. Thank you." She rose on tiptoe and kissed
my cheek, a cold hard spot
of pressure and then release. "Thank you for trying to help me,"
she whispered
to Alma, kissing her too. Alma's fingers dug even deeper into my upper arm.
Helena darted back to her parents. They smiled at us, melted into each other,
glowed
brighter and brighter, then vanished in a final flare.
"What...happened?" Alma said.
I was
not alone on a dead world now. Alma's grip convinced me I was alive and in
company. "I
guess they knew where they were going after all," I said, "once she
came back to them." I
felt a strange longing to go home myself, and see my
sister and my parents and my cousins
and aunts and uncles. Some of the people I
had known were no doubt dead now, and some new
ones had probably been born. I
wanted to make sure the family was still where I had left
it.
"I don't mean what happened to them, the--the ghosts--I mean what happened? What
happened
this whole night? Who the heck are you, anyway?" Alma said. "And what
were you talking
about when you were saying all those things in that other
language?"
People make such
separations. Most of us do not.
There was family, and then there was family--all over the
place. "I'll buy you
coffee at Shari's and we can talk about it," I said, stooping to pick
up her
cane.