Chapter 5 – Punishment for Peeking...
“Careful!” Mark shouted at his brothers in the dark just before dawn. “Careful! You might break father if you pull the chain too hard!”
The oldest Pence brothers removed their father’s stone corpse from their home via the attic’s small window. Chains threaded through pulleys nailed to the walls nudged Russell Pence’s body out of the attic window with the same methodology that might be used to remove a grand piano. The process moved slowly. There was much anxiety that a twist might break a chain with too much pressure, that a knock might crack away an arm or leg.
“Just a little more and his head will be clear of the window,” Travis shouted to one of his brothers grasping and tugging at the chain.
“Keep taking your time!” Mark shouted, his heart skipping a beat at each breeze.
“It won’t be easy to bury him,” a brother spoke to Mark as the chains lightly settled Russell Pence’s remains onto the front lawn. “The stone makes the body so heavy that the funeral services are expensive. Lots of families are standing the corpses up above the ground as monuments.”
Mark shook his head. “We’ll not deny father a decent burial. We’ll find some way to cover the cost.”
Mark failed to feel confident that means would be found for an honorable burial no matter how many times he promised his siblings a decent ceremony throughout the day’s remainder. Living mouths would still gather at the Pence table. Bills would continue to arrive through the mail. Respect for fathers and ancestors felt very ephemeral when the living’s needs continued to pound at the door.
Mark left the home late in the afternoon hoping to find a little assurance that he had chosen well in following his father’s wishes and faith. Outside his door, Mark saw no indication that the fool lingered at the end of the street. The crowd had apparently left his neighborhood to knock on other, waiting doors. His home felt fragile. The world seemed new in a terrifying way. A change gathered in the air.
He needed to hear Mr. Hussey bolster his faith; for his father was now stone, deceased and silent, unable to lift Mark’s confidence when the eldest of the Pence sons stumbled. So Marked knocked upon Mr. Hussey’s door and hoped his neighbor did not think him a fool.
When no one answered his pounding, his need for assurance overcame his better judgment, and Mark peeked through exterior windows. He hoped to see for the first time the lush furnishings to Mr. Hussey’s estate he had imagined so many times when his father’s wisdom proved a bitter medicine. Yet he saw only an empty room behind the first curtained window. Mark turned a corner and saw the room behind another window as empty as the first, devoid of any carpets to soften the hardwood floor, absent of framed photos or prints to splash color upon the wide, white walls. Peering through the blinds of the backyard’s double doors presented a long room as empty as the rest on the first floor. There was no television on the wall, no stereo in the corner, no couch against the wall, no recliners or loveseats for comfortable naps or warm books.
Mark’s mind clouded. The stoning affliction had just taken his father. Responsibilities stacked upon his table. A panic blended with his sorrow, and the mixture quickened his heart so that Mark shook. He scaled the garage to reach a second story window, and yet another empty room hid behind the curtains – a bedroom without dresser or bed, without a mirror before which to comb one’s hair, with a closet open to expose the lack of hanging clothes. He went to his knees to better navigate the steep tiles of Mr. Hussey’s roof. There remained a high gabled window through which he had not looked, and Mark refused to accept that the home across the street could be empty until he stared through the curtains behind every glass pane.
Mark wished the final window had remained empty.
Mark swept his gaze through the room, still praying to see something to dispell his anxiety and doubt. Instead, his eyes better focused to the room’s shadows. His sight moved beyond Mr. Hussey’s pale body sprawled upon the pullout sofa. There, against the far wall, stood the shapes of three figures. They were propped upward in that last room of Mr. Hussey’s home, pushed back into the shadow against that wall furthest from the window’s light. Mark wept to recognize the monument that remained of Mrs. Hussey, who would no longer tend to the walkway's flowers. He sobbed to recognize the grown sons, once so full of promise and exuberance, leaning rigidly against the wall. Mr. Hussey had concealed them behind that last window to his empty home.
Mark cried as he returned home. His soul pined for a glimmer of gold, but all he found was gray stone.