Newsgroups: talk.bizarre,alt.butt.harp,alt.prose,rec.arts.prose From: richh@netcom.com (richh) Subject: RICHH: THE SONG Organization: NETCOM On-line Communication Services (408 241-9760 guest) Date: Thu, 17 Mar 1994 03:59:26 GMT Let me tell you a story. It's scary. You've been warned. In fact, it's the only time in my life I can remember ever really *being* scared. So, naturally, I'd like to share. The story involves me and my friend James. I've talked about him before. He was my best friend through high school. A tall, too-handsome black kid who could make his tenor sax do backflips and who could talk us into and out of clubs when we were only sixteen. Now I think he's an ambassador's aide or something. We'd heard all through high school about this place in Central Bucks County. In a town called Buckingham. Something called 'Lower Mountain Road'. We'd heard that the road goes uphill but you can take your foot off the gas at the bottom and it'll drag you up the hill. We were skeptical, needless to say. Now Buckingham is a pretty weird place in its own right--bordering on Pennsylvania Dutch country, it's supposed to be the site for most of the Satan worship in that area. Animal sacrifices, blood rites, lots of weirdness. Pagan fertility menarche virgin dances. It also was a stone's throw from Quakertown, rumored to be the site of an Illuminati(I kid you not) arsenal. The whole area was featured on "Sixty Minutes" some time last March. But James and I, we didn't believe any of it. So we decided to check it out one day. I think we headed up there from school. At that time I would have been driving my dad's Plymouth Fury--a monstrous car that was great to party in. We picked up a sixpack somewhere and smoked a bowl or two. Of the kinda pot that really got you high. And we were good to go. Only we really have only the vaguest idea of where we're going. But we hit the road and headed north, up Swamp Road, past the Community College and towards Trexlertown, where they built a velodrome and I saw my first real bicycle race. After about an hour of driving, we're a good two hours from home. All the roads seem to run on forever. The trees all arch towards each other on both sides of Swamp Road, enclosing it, protecting, making it impossibly dark after sundown. And it's all farmland with nearly no landmarks. The roads all have dumb names that just make it worse: Upper Creamery Road, Lower Dolington, Midhile Mountainview Lane I said , "What the hell is that? Midhile?!" "Isn't that what the Nazis would say...?" I laughed. "No no no--you're thinking of the guy with those 'follies'" "No--you're wrong--you're thinking of that faggy magician guy who works with the tigers in Vegas." "Roy?" Now it's starting to get dark, dusky...I didn't like it, and I had no idea where we were. James looks around and says, "Rich, check out the horse and buggy behind us.' I look into the rear view. Nothing. "Huh?" He turned around and looked out the back. "The fuck. I just saw--" "Oh, there it is. I see em now. Must've turned off. A guy and his daughter. Check out the footwear on the girl." I looked. The guy had one of those C. Everett Coop things going on with his face and the girl was wearing one black boot on her right foot and one odd-shaped brown one on her left. We drove around for another twenty minutes or so. "Look, I said. A bar. Let's stop. Get directions. Something to drink, ok? "Cool." We each took another hit off the bowl and James pulled on this jacket he had. James was tall, strong-looking and we were in a notoriously-prejudiced area. And he was wearing a Malcolm X jacket way before Spike Lee even learned how to spell it. The bar was called the 'Double Eagle Inn', I think. "Nice ambience," said James. "Early Poe, don't you think?" "What do we want?" "Amontillado!" "When do we want it?" "Now!" We were so stoned. James said, "I swear to God man. I just saw a sign. No shoes, no shirt, no niggers." We stumbled in laughing way too loud. The inn was a big, brick monstrosity. There were a couple pool tables and a bar at the other end. There were only a few people at the bar, but they just couldn't get over the likes of us, especially the two at the end who looked like those women look in Shakespeare's Sister, only they were blonde and really ugly. James was quite a sight in there. Across the bar, this guy with one of those faces that looked like a claymore mine exploded in front of it is giving James looks. We ordered and were brought a couple mugs of something nasty and James asked the Wilhem Defoe guy if he'd ever heard of 'Lower Mountain Road.' "Oh yeah, says the guy. You wanna go up Jericho Mountain. I look at James and James says, "Of course. Jericho Mountain." Guy went on. "There's a song on the mountain tonight." The Shakespeare Sisters women were whispering to each other and the one had her hand on the other's shoulder, giving it a real friendly squeeze. The James Woods guy saw that our attention had shifted and said, "Oh, don't mind them. They've been like that since they were seven. No one can make heads or what of them." James took out a coin and flipped it. "Heads or what," he said, "Call it in the air." "What?" "'Damn!" and he handed me the quarter. Defoe guy said, 'I can tell you how to get to Jericho Mountain. But you boys don't wanna be there past oh, too late or so, and it's getting on about reckonin' to soon now, so why don't I just show you myself?' We looked at each other, dumbfounded, tried in vain to parse what he'd said, paid for our beers, and walked out with the guy. "Hi. I'm Rich." "James." " "Deac." Back in the car, we finally get a good look at Deac. He's not real big at all, but he's wiry and his neck and forearms were really well-muscled, as if his job were wringing things out until they were bone dry. And he was evil, no other way about it. He smelled evil, his eyes were dark and narrow and his jeans fit really well. I guess he was somewhere around late twenties or early fifties and probably had a daughter. He got in the back and we closed up and I said, 'Where to?' "'Left up here. Then just go." We pulled on to another one of those roads where like the trees all seem to grow inward and make the road into a kind of tunnel shroudy thing. Well, it wasn't completely dark out yet but because of these trees it was pitch black on that stupid road. James went to put in a tape. "No music," said Deac, and he actually reached over and pulled James' arm back. We just looked at each other but figured it was some kind of Amish thing. The trees ended but the road just went on and on. We'd see the horse and buggy types from time to time, but they always seemed far off, and were tough to get a good luck at. I saw a young boy with that strange brown boot on his left foot and a black one on his right. He was chasing some kind of squirrel, but he had an odd gait and the squirrel easily got away. It was starting to get chilly. I turned up the heat in the car. Deac cracked his window. "So how do we get back to 413 from here, Deac?" asked James, as we were instructed to make yet another turn, this time onto a road with no sign... "'Oh, I'll get you back, don't you worry." We looked at each other and we were pretty sure that the two of us could take him if we had to, but we weren't positive. We'd been driving for hours. It was well after eleven and we hadn't told anyone where we were and it was a school night so we figured we were in pretty deep shit anyhow so what the hey. All of a sudden, Deac sat up real straight and said, "Okay, you see that wagon wheel thing? You're gonna make a right, a left, then a right. Then we'll be on Lower Mountain Road. Then it will flyyyyyyyyyyyyyyy..." I pulled onto the road and we started moving. It was another of those tree-shrouded roads, dotted on each side by these mostly gutted-out farmhouses and barns. We were building up speed, doing about thirty on the narrow road, when I said, "Um, James, my foot's not on the accelerator.' "No way." I put the car in neutral and we kept picking up speed. I swear to God. It was the weirdest thing. And it scared me shitless. Deac's laughing didn't help. "Ain't that some wild shit? This road fucks people up. Haw haw." James looked at me and mouthed 'Haw haw'. Deac said, "At the crazy tree up ahead pull over." I did, and Deac said, "I'll be right back." He let himself out and walked with that same odd gait that the kid had, up towards a small red shack. I hadn't noticed his walk at the bar. James said, "We outta here?" "Yeah, I think so." I started to turn the car around, but somehow Deac was already back, dressed in a pair of bib overalls. He had two extra pairs with him. Perfectly folded. He said, "Change." We did. "You boys are in for a treat. There's gonna be a song tonight." James and I looked at each other and mouthed, 'A song?'. "Head on up," said Deac. I did. Time had stopped on that hill. The road went on forever. There were no landmarks, just a shack or tree or so every couple of miles. A piece of wood on a rope that was some child's swing. A charred book that could have been a diary or _Huck Finn_. There was no clock in the car and neither James nor I had a watch, but there was no way it should still have been dark out. After some time we saw an old red barn about a hundred yards off the road. There was a mailbox, but it was too dark to make out the name on it. I think one of the letters was an 'E'. Deac said, "Stop. We're here." I pulled the car over and shut it off. We followed Deac up a drive to the barn. James did an uncanny imitation of his odd gait, but would stop every time Deac did something unusual, like make a clicking sound with the nails of his thumb and forefinger. He stopped us outside the barn. "You boys know what a 'graven image' is?" "Sure. It's from the Bible." "It's an idol, isn't it?" Deac swung open the big red door and led us in. The barn seemed much bigger inside than from the outside, almost the size of a warehouse. Odd, no-longer-functional farm tools lined the walls and were strewn treacherously across the floor. There were no animals anywhere but the barn still smelled of fresh death. Deac had lit a candle and was leading us through the course of rusty saws and threshing equipment. "You boys ever play with dolls," said Deac. We could tell by the way he asked that our answer was important. "Uh, no. Not really." "You wanna see a good doll?" he asked. "Um, sure." He produced one. Now I remembered where I'd heard the 'graven images' bit before, and what it meant to the Amish. Because of the law in the Bible against making graven images, their dolls were featureless, just four limbs and a torso. No faces or identifying marks. They were all nearly identical. "You see this doll, boys?" We nodded. "You don't name this doll. You don't love this doll. You can play with it, sure, but you don't *love* this doll." Indeed. I remembered hearing that sometimes the naughtier children would draw faces on their dolls, much to their parents' dismay. Sometimes they would caricature town idiots, or represent Biblical characters. "A good doll don't cost ya nothing. A bad one, that can cost ya." "Huh?" "Lookee, in here." Deac opened a black door and we followed him in. Hanging from the ceilings were hundreds of little Amish dolls, each with a face drawn on it. They each had a name tag as well. "Go on," said Deac. "Take a look. The others are coming." We heard the sound of people entering the barn and going upstairs. "There'll be a song soon." James said, "Rich," and pointed out the name tag on a particularly-ugly doll. Someone had painted a huge penis on it and it was smoking a pipe. The name tag read, 'Deac'. "Yeah," Deac chuckled. "That was mine all right. I don't remember the song but I remember loving that doll. A-heh." "Come on, it's a girl." So it was. A tiny black-haired girl with haunted eyes was being led upstairs by the others. Except for her, they all had that same bouncy gait. James whispered, "What say we bolt." "When they're all upstairs." "It's dark. Watch the floor." "You can head on up, boys," said Deac. "They're gonna start the song soon." He was handed a doll. It looked like the little girl, only with big doe-eyes and fuller, red lips. It had a name tag that read 'Margaret'." "Okay, Maggie, up you go." The girl was lifted onto a large concrete slab. She lay back so that her left ankle extended just over the edge. When a woman slid a bucket along the floor into position under the girl's foot and a man raised a saw, we knew we'd seen enough. As we reached the car we heard the girl sing out in what must have surely been: a sweet and beautiful song. RICHH