From
where Imogen sat, she had a clear view through the glassless window
out over the darkening plains. When she left for school the sun had
been in the middle of a cloudless sky, simmering the drying plains
with a vindictive eye. As she neared the schoolhouse a cold wind
began to blow. Harvest season inched near. She could smell the wheat,
the bean fields, the stink of cow pastures, and the stalks that
bounded on for miles and rolled like waves. Out the window she could
see the hamlet of Mortonbrooke. The stores, the silos, the church,
the gated cemetery and the administration building. Along the road to
the west, she see could see the Kreifel family property. Thier barn
higher than any building she had seen, a white castle, belonging to
the wealthiest family in the county. 1,500 acres of land. A pasture
for their cattle, a stable for their horses, a pen for their pigs,
and a coope for their chickens . Not to mention Mr. Kriefel had
recently bought a tractor and an automobile. To the east lived a
family of German immigrants. Strange folk. They had a farm of 300
acres. They didn’t go to school as often as Imogen.. She saw them
work in the fields when she walked to town with her father. She
believed they must be catholic, because there would be dozens from
too young to walk to full grown, each working in the field.
Cold
wind distracted her as it blew the papers from the desk of Father
O’Llyle. a curtain of gray cast across the sky, and in the distance
beyond the village and farmlands, black and purple clouds gathered.
She could hear the rust of the weathervane on top of the building
twist as the wind whined like a constable's whistle. The entire
northern horizon bruised and herded towards them. The few kids that
went to school noticed the sudden transition in climate too. Thier
faces grew white when bolts of lightning whipped around the clouds.
Moments later, muffled thunder rumbled. The wind shook the crops.
They flowed like a river of green and brown. The sunlight that had
beamed through the window faded away. Birds lifted from trees and
from tall grass, abandoning their search for bugs to eat to escape
for shelter.
O’Llyle,
an old man, limped whenever a storm approached. He set the chalk down
on the board, and took hold of his knee and rubbed it. His white hair
blew over the top of his balding head, and taking one look at the
storm bolstering its force, dismissed the class. Imogen couldn’t
see her farm, but her muscles tensed when she thought of it. She had
broad shoulders from working in the field with her father, and the
labor had sunburned her skin until it freckled up her arms,
shoulders, neck, and down her face. Her home, the Altgarten farm, was
two miles to the south.
Of
the 300 hundred acres her family farmed, only half produced any crop.
Holland Altgarten worked hard with his daughter to get the crops to
grow. Year after year, there had been droughts, locusts, pests,
floods. They had no barn, and lived in a house of sod. Holland
persisted. He had no sons. Each boy born died of fever before a year.
The
first born child they named Hubbard. He lived to be eight months
before he caught the flu. They sent for the doctor east in Omaha, but
the disease claimed the baby before the doctor could make his way
down.
Second
born they named Willis. He had bright eyes, and his mother's red
hair. He cried day and night without pause. Disease stuffed his nose
with mucus, and his hindered his limbs with aches. He died in two
months.
Imogen
came third. As a baby, she caught the same disease. Holland and
Cassidy feared that their newborn daughter would join her brothers,
but she recovered. A year went by. Then two. Imogen had her father's
build, and his resilience. Three years went on. She would get sick,
then recover the next day.
They
had a third boy when Imogen turned eight. The boy got caught in
Cassidy’s birth canal and suffocated. He joined the others in the
backyard. Imogen turned ten. By then, she had taken responsibilities
that had been reserved for her brothers. The plow along side her
father, as well as laundry and cooking with her mother. She developed
the habit of taking things, and losing them. She would leave tools
out in the field and come back for them to discover they had vanished
from the dirt. Money blew from her hands. Trinkets fell from her
pockets. She began to place valued things with objects she couldn’t
lose.
Soon
after, they had another boy, who they didn’t bother naming, and
buried him behind the house with the others. Cassidy grew sick with
herself. Grief struck dark circles around her eyes. She quit
embroidering, quit singing, seldom said grace before eating. Only
when Holland asked them to do it, and even he gave it up after a long
winter. The crops stopped growing the following season. Sometimes
they would sprout healthy, but turn black and die. Other times
locusts or other pests would devour them. They didn’t have much to
eat, and for this, Holland blamed himself. Imogen never told a soul,
but some mornings she woke up before sunrise and heard her father
weep, damning himself over and over. His own melancholy after the
death of so many children, failure after failure, affected his
health. He began to smoke, and drink. Both parents however took pride
in their daughter. Imogen showed promise, and learned fast about how
jobs around their humble farm needed to be done.
When
she turned twelve, they had another boy. This one grew ill, and they
all wept for him. Holland dug a grave. Cassidy never let him leave
her embrace. Yet he beat the illness.He lived for one year. Than two.
Than three. Imogen turned fifteen, and the little boy had began to
walk, climb over everything, put everything into his mouth, turn over
every rock and shake it to see if it did anything, and try his
hardest to speak to them. He talked more than anyone Imogen had ever
met, even as a newborn. He had a name for everything. Imogen worked
with him with delight. She read to him from a book of medieval
legends. His face lit up at the stories of knights on horseback
fighting fierce dragons. She started to teach him his letters, and he
learned fast. By the planting season of that year, he knew his
colors, and could read simple words. Jack.
Dog. Horse.
Even
better, the rain came. For years it had been scarce. When it did
rain, it fell briefly. A few times, it stormed enough to drown their
crop.
This
year however turned out to be a good year. The rain nourished the
land, and their crops began to grow. The whole clan said their
prayers, and didn’t curse under their breath. When hard winds blew
they held their breaths. When the land frosted over, they only worked
harder. The crops still lived. In addition, Cassidy finally decided
on a name for their youngest boy. Thadeus, after her grandfather who
first left Ireland to come to a new country. Holland taught him the
names of plants and animals, and promised to get him a horse one day.
Not even owning a mule, Holland carved a horse from a log and gave it
to his son. That's what Imogen always thought of when she thought of
her baby brother.
As
Imogen left the school building, father O’Llyle took her by the
shoulder. Cold air blending with warm air cycloned around them both
blowing reeds and blades of grass into the air. The black clouds
swelled and forced forward like a siege tower.
“Walking
home, Imogen?”
“Yes,
father.”
“Do
you have the book I lent to you?”
“Sorry
father,
I lost it… I set it down before I went to bed, and when I woke up I
took it with me to read… and I must of left it outside. I’m
honest sorry.”
“I
understand, Imogen, but lets not worry about it. Be sure to find
cover. I hear your family doesn’t have a cellar.”
“We
will go to our neighbors house. They have a cellar we can use.”
“Good.
This storm…” He drifted over her, gazing towards the storm as if
it were fiery ash, his eyes rolling around his head as he
reconstructed his words. “A storm this late in the year is driven
by something supernatural. Even God’s protection has limits. How is
little Thadeus?”
“He’s
fine. Very alive, that boy.”
“Glad
to hear. How old is he?”
“He
turns four this January.”
“Good.
It’s strange having a storm like this so late in the year. My
father tried to farm. He wasn’t very good at it. I had a little
brother too, Patrick. He was about Thad’s age. One day I was
supposed to watch him, but I didn’t. He got away, crawled into the
corn field and we never found him. Got the whole community together
and searched, and searched. Nothing.”
“I’m…
sorry to hear that.’
“I’ve
leaving. For good. Listen to me. Be sure to get away from this storm…
It’s not natural.” He took both shoulders and squeezed, silently
standing above her with a stone white expression and trembling eyes.
Imogen
lifted his hands from her shoulders, and turned away to leave with no
words but a swelling disgust in her stomach. Down the path through
the grass she walked, wiping the white powder from the old man’s
hands from her shoulders, but finding that he had also stained her
dress with black oil in the shape of his hands. Turning back to where
the pastor stood she found only the vacant porch of the small prairie
school and a black coat blowing from the iron railing.
The
sky south of the gathering storm gleamed with golden rays. The light
strangled from the sky dripped down like holy water onto a grave.
Warmth flushed between flashes of cold air. Imogen’s legs chilled.
The flaps of her gown blew in the wind. Dust from the road swallowed
her, getting into her hair and eyes. She rubbed the dust out and
looked back at the storm with a scowl. Lighting stabbed across the
sky like javelins and moments later quiet thunder growled. It felt
closer. She could feel the thunder shake the ground. Bits of moisture
fell from the sky and kissed her freckled face. The eclipsing skyline
flashed with a bolt striking a tree three miles down plain. Smoke
arose like a flock of crows. Imogen looked away and decided not to
follow the road, but to instead take a shortcut across the grassy
plain. The grass rose to her waist, but she wore thick shoes, and her
flesh had toughened. Muscles defined her short legs. She could push
her way through the fullest bush. She stepped over the fence and
crossed into the field. She kicked her way through tangles, and
leaped over dry ravines. She wondered why she had never taken this
way before. She estimated getting home in half the time. After all,
the shortest distance between two points is a straight line.
The
grass grew higher as she hiked. Thicker, and rougher. The long blades
wrapped around her ankles, bit into her stockings and tore them.
Beads of blood blossomed. She rubbed them away with the back of her
hand, and then stuck the flesh into her mouth and sucked the blood
from her skin. The grass rose to her waist. Grasshoppers danced on
the high weeds. One here and there, Imogen paid them no notice but
for their size. They flew from weed to weed, the length of her index
finger with throbbing eyes big enough for her to see the green film
over them twitch and fold. Thier teeth grinded and chewed away at
smaller grasshoppers. Winged locusts flew past her head like bullets.
On their back, three or four smaller grasshoppers. Imogen kept on her
way, looking back to see the road and the schoolhouse shrink away.
The storm clouds kept coming. More cold wind, then a break of warm
air that sank and chilled before another gust of wet air blew across
the plains. Her feet sank into what she hoped was mud. She had to
pull her leg from one puddle buried in the high grass. With one heavy
step her leg dipped in. Ice cold numbed her leg. She screamed, unable
to retract her foot. The cold substance had hold of her and began to
tighten like a vice. It swallowed her ankle. She reached into the
mud, took hold of her shoe, and pulled it out. It couldn’t be mud.
Yellow and red chunks of sediment coated her leg and arms. She felt
it pull her hairs, hardening into a shell.
She
tore grass from the dirt, using handfuls of it to wipe away the heavy
substance, but red and yellow stains marked her skin. Thunder rose in
the distance. The sky darkened. The eclipsing light from condensing
clouds dripped like evaporating water droplets. Her hair blew over
her face, so she rolled it back, and crudely tied it in a crude knot.
Sweat trickled down her hairline, down her neck, where it cooled
under her clothes. Her body began to shiver. She crossed her arms,
and caressed the pimpled flesh, but it did did little to provide her
with warmth. Her teeth began to chatter. Dust and pieces of grass
flew into her eyes. The wind whistled, and another clasp of thunder
caught her by surprise. She trotted like a horse. As far she she
could. As fast she she could. The land began to elevate. She felt
warmer tearing through the high weeds, but her lungs began to
constrict. Wheezing, she stopped at the peak of the hill, leaning on
her knees, her gown catching the wind. She looked behind her. The
road, the schoolhouse, Mortonbrooke all gone. Only an ocean of
flowing yellow and red grass under the collapsing daylight. She
looked in front of her. More weeds. Brown, and dry, yet interrupted
by one building erected on top of an adjacent hill. At first she
thought of horses and hay. Anything too far became blurry to her, so
she squinted and made her way towards it. The warm air sank beneath
the earth. Only cold air swirled around the plains. Cracks broke in
the sky, and lightning whipped from the opening across the west.
Imogen jumped, but still moved through the grass. Only as the wind
blew harder and harder, a path separated before her, creating a trail
to the structure that she could see was no barn. Instead, a small
concrete building in the middle of a nest of long weeds and
overgrowth.
Dilapidating,
the shingles had blown from the roof. Only nails and jutting boards
sealed the top. Vines of ivy covered the walls, crumbling the layers
of concrete, revealing patches of brick beneath. She heard her name
in the wind growing louder as she came nearer. The door bent inwards,
and swung open and shut in the wind, prying from its hinges. The wind
came from all directions, but it forced at her back like a pair of
hands. She came closer, following the locusts, until she could see
through the darkened doorway. Cracks ran along the discolored patches
of the interior walls. Dust and concrete paved the floor. Broken
chunks of cement laying in mounds of white dust gathered around
rectangle slabs of various size on the floor. As she passed through
the doorway the wind pressed at her back. The cold air rode up her
gown and tingled her spine. Hollow moans escaped through the doorway.
Her shadow broke the beam of dim light. Shadows filled each corner.
Imogen crossed her arms. Her heart still raced from exertion. She
brushed a grasshopper from her hairy forearm. It didn’t fly but
instead landed on a slab of white cement. She bent down to inspect
the slab, seeing marking across in the middle. A name, and a date.
1830-1905. An inscription read: Beloved father, and husband.
Imogen
rose to her feet, the same disgust as when O’Llyle had his writhing
hands on her. She felt ashamed of that she hadn't recognized sooner,
but at the same time intrigue intinced her attention. She never knew
a crypt had been here. No one ever mentioned it. The family name,
Verxseric, was one she had never heard of. She counted the tombs. Six
adult sized ones, and four child sized ones. The last one caught her
attention. The grasshoppers crowded against each other around it.
Portions of the lid lay before an open tomb, and the insects crawled
over eacher to get inside. The wind called her name. It blew from the
open space. She could see nothing but darkness, so she reached in.
She felt cold, rough cement scrape against her palm. Then her fingers
found something wet, and thick. She reached in further until the
insects began to bite her hand. She pulled her arm out, and saw that
white powder cast over her palm, and black oil, still warm against
her cold flesh, tipped her fingers. The wind blew harder and
screeched through the chamber. She didn’t hear footsteps behind
her. She bent back over the tomb, curious to know how the lid had
broken open as two heavy, long fingered hands fell over her
shoulders, and no matter how hard she pushed back, the mouth of the
tomb opened wider. .
Back
home, Holland Altgarten waited for his daughter. He tugged on the
rope, propelling the bucket from the well, and taking it to Cassidy.
She sat with Thadeus on a stump watching him play with the small
horse carved by Holland. His broad and blue eyes had no interests in
the gathering clouds, only his toy which he stuck in his mouth.
Cassidy took it from his gums and but didn’t scold him. She
pretended with him until a strike of thunder crashed to remind them.
The flash of lightning lit up the day. Holland brought the bucket to
them, and with a ladle, offered Thadeus water, then Cassidy, then
drank some himself.
“There’s
a tornada on way. Where’s that girl?” He asked as if Cassidy
would know the answer. “We need to get to shelter now ways.”
“We’ve
never had a tornado, haven’t we little Thadeus?”
“At
least the drought’s at its end. God be praised.” Holland took
another drink of water.
Down
the road, a family lived. The Salomonsson clan had a house no bigger,
but it was made of wood. They had a barn, and most importantly a
cellar. “I’m loading our tools into the wagon.”
“Holland,
we can take no wagon. We must move as fast as we’re able.”
“Imogen’s
taken shelter at the school. We need these tools. If something
happens to the house, or to the crops, at least we’ll have them.”
He galloped to the wagon sitting behind their home. Stacks of
firewood wavered. Hay blew from the roof. The tree which headed their
garden of graves twisted and swayed. The leaves turned brown. Some
already dropped from the branches. The limbs bent and cracked.
Holland couldn’t hear anything over the racing wind. He saw the
tree, but took no notice of the branches swooping downward. A bolt of
lightning slashed through the sky. Blue fire lit up the world for a
moment, and in the next the tree broke and toppled. Holland had his
hands on the cart, and tried to jump backwards but his body failed
him. His feet caught the dirt, and he fell back. The tree came down
onto the house, smashing through the layers of sod and buttress,
smashing the wagon, and missing his body but pinning his legs into
the dirt.
Cassidy
rushed over, leaving Thadeus by himself on the stump. The wind
concealed his parent's angstful cries. He began to follow his mom,
but something shiny caught his attention. He turned his head to the
rows of corn. They swayed, and bent, flowing like tides, but in the
heart of one row he saw a glimmer. Something silver, like a suit of
armor. He waddled to it, the wooden horse in his hand. He smiled at
what he saw. A pony with silver eyes, sticking its head out from the
corn. Thadeus giggled, fell over trying to rush to it, but climbed up
and made his way towards the creature. The pony had a red and yellow
coat and a mane like a lion's. Thadeus felt its breath on his cheek.
He reached up and touched its nose, the moisture kissing his flesh.
It let out a snort. Mucus spittle the boy’s face. He wiped it off,
and looked to resume his interests, but the horse had turned its tail
and moved back into the rows. Taking the wooden horse with him,
Thadeus followed it into the corn.
Cassidy
couldn't see where Holland’s leg ended and where the pieces of
wagon began. Splinters, carnage, and soil foamed together into a mass
she couldn’t medicate. She took him by the shoulders and pulled. He
screamed like a cow so she dropped him. Running around into the
house, she found that the wall holding all the tools had collapsed
over them. She ran back out to comfort Holland, but noticed the
stump, the waving crops, and no Thadeus. Mortified, she froze,
looking every which way, finding no one. Thunder struck like an
anvil, and lightning sparked over head. The clouds seemed to boil,
dropping lower and lower. In between the flashes of lightning,
Cassidy thought she saw an army of furious faces forming in the
clouds. She began to weep, and shake. The small pieces of moisture
became fat droplets splashing against her, running down her face, and
streaming down the crumbling walls of their house. She rushed to
Holland, took him by head, and yelled over the wind into his ear as
the thunder roared through the concocting clouds.
“Thadeus
is gone. I must find him and I’ll come back.”
“No!
Please!” Holland didn’t understand. He shook his head begging
her, but Cassidy didn’t take time to explain. She had already made
off.
Cassidy
ran across the yard to the stump where she had last seen him. The
rain fell like iron rods. Water ran down her body as if she had just
pulled herself from a pool. Lightning flashed a hateful scorn down at
her. She wiped the streaming rainfall from his eyes as a glacial cold
encompassed her body. She didn’t bother calling. No one could hear
her over the wind. Cassidy made her way to the rows of crop. She
didn’t want it to be, but in horror she picked up one of his socks
from the mouth of the corn. She didn’t think, but rushed into the
rows, crying the boys name. She hoped Imogen had shelter, a safe
place. Her feet sank into mud. The crops blow over and smacked her in
the face. She could taste the blood dripping from her lips. One stalk
flew around and struck her in the back of the neck. The blow fell
like a club, and knocked her to her knees. Cassidy took handfuls of
mud and squeezed them, grinding her teeth, blood and tears mixing
together. She tough she saw figures beyond the row she knelt in. She
cried for their help, but they turned to mist and blew away. She
cursed, climbing back up and pushing her way onward, slower, covering
her face from flying stalks.
In
a puddle of darkness her foot sank and something bit her heel. She
kicked her foot away thinking she had stepped on an animal, but she
cried in delight. The wooden horse standing upright in the mud. She
took it, looked around, calling her son's name. Everything looked the
same. Every row a haze of green and brown chaos. Though something
stood in the corn. She stopped when she saw it. Her jaw dropped, but
she didn’t believe it. The leaves had cut her eyes. The rain had
blinded her. Anything. But the figure limped closer to her, it's
peeling flesh and broken bones contorting and bending, projecting it
through the corn towards her. Cassidy turned and fled in the opposite
direction. She cut through stalks of corn, disconcerning herself with
direction or personal safety. With no idea of which direction she
headed towards, she looked up to the sky to find a fury of hateful
clouds beating against one another, clashing and falling as lightning
and thunder tore them apart. Black horses galloped across the sky
impaling full plates of black armour with bolts of lightning. Thunder
hammered onto the plains, beating on them without hesitation, without
mercy, casting fist sized rocks of hale down at the world below. She
ran, covering her head, screaming in agony, blind to the flood ditch
she approached. Rushing water roared down it, and her foot slide
inside, and took her body down with it. She heard the crack of her
ankle, but the frosty rainwater numbed hr body.
Cassidy
began to cry, sinking into the ravine. The mist reformed into white
figures before her. She struck at them, and they vanished for a time,
only to reappear a little farther away. She fell over the side of the
ditch. Frost form in her hair, and along the mud she crawled through.
The cold conquered her. She shivered, unable to feet her feet, hands,
eras, dropping face first into the mud, but pulling herself out and
pressing further. She thought she saw Thadeus just sitting and
waiting up a small mound. Closer she same, until at last she saw the
figure taking shape of her boy was only a skull rising from the mud.
She pressed it back in, cursing at it, until it went back under. A
nail fell from the sky and struck her in the forehead. Blood blinded
her, but she crawled on until at the top of the mound where she
finally gave up.
Laying
still, she watched as the blackest clouds funneled into an onyx tower
away from her, and steadily ate through the crops. At the mound, she
was at the highest peak of an otherwise flat land. She could see
everything. Her own farm, their neighbors, the Kreifels,
Mortonbrooke, the schoolhouse. The onyx tower could fit an entire
town inside. The horizon became a gold ring pressed by the black
clouds. A mist of debris floated over the world. Pieces of ice
striking her back, and her cranium. She covered her head, and watched
as the tornado devoured the crops field by field, then enveloped the
schoolhouse, waved around to the kreifel farm, devouring their barn
and house before turning back and enclosing Mortonbrooke. The last
thing she saw was Mr. Kriefel's car spinning through the air. First
the size of an insect, than it grew larger before her eyes. In the
final moments before it smashed her into the dirt, she apologized to
Holland for smothering the babies...
Imogen
woke up feeling refreshed. Water dripped from the rafters above her
head, light beamed through the holes in the ceiling, and a garden of
icy and dandelions grew along the floor and walls. She herself felt
warm, and dry. She rose from her bed and rubbed her eyes, unable to
remember where she had been. A purple blanket draped across her
shoulders comforted her like summer. Soft, and thick, She burried her
face into it, breathing in, and exhaling with satisfaction. Rising to
her feet, she walked to the door and leaned out. The afternoon sun
burned in the autumn sky, and the waning crescent moon shined along
with it. The smell of harvest and rain filled the air. Best yet, a
silence pressed onto the land like she had never experienced. She
walked out, and felt sincere enjoyment at the world she awoke to. All
the fields had been torn asunder. Nothing stood, only heaps of mulch.
She
came to the schoolhouse. Only one wall stood before the stone
foundation. She smiled, and giggled. Father O'Llyle, his clothing
torn to pieces and his white hair hanging loose, pinned to the wall
by an iron rod through the heart. His head slacked to the side, one
eye popped out and hung from a tendon. Down further she saw the
wreckage that once was Mortonbrooke, now just a road to nowhere and
piles of rubble. She looked over the plain. No tall stalks, no high
grass. She could see for miles. Than something broke the silence. A
muffled cry came from beneath a wreckage of iron and wood. Imogen
stood before it, listening to the insistant crying before acting,
pulling the large pieces of wood away. It sounded like a billy goat,
but the further she dug, the more voices joined in. One just one or
two, but three, four. She worked faster, her large muscular hands
lifting and heaving metal beams until the sound became clear. She
remember that she had a baby brother, and within a purple blanket,
there sat Thadeus, frightened, but unharmed. Something rustled in the
blanket. Imogen held her breath and pulled away the blanket,
revealing a steel cuirras around the chest of Thadeus, shared with
four babies huddled together crying for their mother.