Dear
Reader, It has
been ten years since I launched Naomi, the internet's first
publisher-sponsored serial novel, and it's been 20 years this summer since
my first novel, Goat Dance, hit the bookstores and launched my
career.
So now, on the 20th anniversary of my first book, and the
10th anniversary of the first sponsored eserial, here's the new one.
I will send out episodes as I write them, not to a
schedule. I hope you enjoy this. If you'd prefer to only get my Updates
Newsletter three to four times per year, just hit reply with "Updates
Only."
Enjoy, and please suggest your friends subscribe at
http://www.DouglasClegg.com --
Thank you, and forgive the typos. It's part of the first draft process.
Best,
Douglas Clegg
www.DouglasClegg.com
All written material in this newsletter is copyright 2009
Douglas Clegg, all rights reserved.
THE LOCUST
By
Douglas Clegg
PART ONE
The Strange
Event at Wickedy River
ONE
1
One hot as hell summer evening in 1934, a black truck came barreling down
Old Mahican Road where it ran alongside Wickedy River-- a blur of
machinery and darkness.
Later that night, the truck, the river, Old Mahican Road -- and even the
ruins and the memories folks had of Ruth Merrill and her parties out at
Beacon Point -- became a dreaded whisper of things to come in the town of
Harwich and among those touched by what happened.
But the terrible event down by the bridge might not have happened if,
earlier in the day, just after two, when the heat was at its worst, Lloyd
Thurlow -- seventeen -- hadn't turned to a friend and said…
2
"Jesus H., I feel like a fish in a skillet out here. I bet you could fry
an egg on the sidewalk. I bet up on Bean Hill, see? Right up there, where
it crests. See? No trees. No shade. Nothing but brick. Hot molten brick. I
bet you could make a nice fried egg in less than thirty seconds," and then
Skipp said, "I don't like to bet."
"Everybody likes to bet."
"It's dumb to bet unless you know the outcome. That's what my old man
says."
"But if you bet, it means you think you know the outcome. You'll never
absolutely know if you know it until after you find out
whether you were right or wrong." Lloyd spoke slowly and carefully,
sounding as if he genuinely knew what he was talking about. But he didn't.
He had just heard his father's buddies talking when they played cards.
Lloyd's father had always told him that life was a game and you always
were at the table when you interacted with others. "In life, in business.
It's all poker. It's all craps. Everything I have, I gambled for. All
these other men," his father told him when he was younger and the Crash of
'29 hit, "you see? They lost their shirts. But not me. I know where to bet
on things. Know the odds. Sometimes you lose. But when you win, you win
big."
His father had begun betting with his two boys since as far back as Lloyd
could remember. Lloyd had lost his first toy car to his father in a bet;
he won a hundred dollars from his father at the age of nine; he lost a
pair of ice skates to his brother Winston over a bet, and then his father
won them and lost them back to Lloyd in another bet. Lloyd Thurlow had won
and lost bets with his father for years. It was a way of life for him,
nearly. So, when he spoke to Paul Skipp about the egg and the brick
sidewalk, it was like talking about the weather or girls or what Lloyd
thought everyone was thinking even if they weren't saying it out loud.
"But what do you think, Skipp? Is it hot enough to fry an egg?"
"It's hot, that's for sure. Look I don't want to bet."
"Come on. Two bits. I mean, what's it going to hurt?"
"It'll hurt enough if I have to pay it."
The conversation continued as Lloyd bought a single egg as Grosberg's, and
then they caught the trolley up the hill because it was too hot to walk
it.
Staring down at the brick sidewalk, Lloyd nodded to Skipp.
"You're already sure of the outcome, buddy. You'll win. If that happens,
I'll pay up. No, you know what? I'll give you double your money."
"I
don't want to bet."
"Okay, forget the two bits. How about this: that." Lloyd reached over and
tapped the ring on the third finger of Paul's right hand. "I know you like
my lighter."
Lloyd brought out the fancy silver lighter he'd won from his father in a
recent bet over the series of thunderstorms that had come through a few
weeks earlier. "It's nice, isn't it? It's worth a lot. My old man bought
it in New York for a lot of money. You can't find these at Grosberg's, can
you? And First National doesn't carry them. It's a Ronson. 1928. Watch."
Skipp looked at the lighter as Lloyd flicked the flame up and down, up and
down, clicking, flicking, clicking.
Skipp glanced down at the ring on his hand. "My dad brought it back from
the war, the year after I was born. Look, it's from Austria."
"It's a beaut," Lloyd said.
Truth was, Lloyd Thurlow didn't want the
ring; he just wanted the bet. Skipp didn't know it, but Lloyd would've
agreed to betting over shoelaces if it came down to it. In fact, Lloyd
already figured that if he won, he'd keep the ring for a few hours and
then give it back to Skipp -- or Skippy as he was sometimes called --
before they both took off to their homes for supper.
"But, this egg. Come on, Skippy. If I crack this egg on those bricks. Will
it fry?"
Skipp looked first at the small white egg in Lloyd's open palm, and then
at the sidewalk. "I don't want to bet."
"But is it hot enough? Is it frying pan hot?"
"Probably not."
"Is that your bet?"
"I
don't bet. I told you."
"No, you said that you don't want to bet. Nobody believes they
want to bet. That's not the same as not betting. Skipp, every time we
step out of the house, we make a bet that we'll get through the day
without getting hit by some madwoman behind the wheel of a car. Or that
we won't drown in the bathtub at night. And a thousand small and large
bets that go on in our heads constantly. In fact, I'd guess you already
made a bet in your mind but you don't want to risk saying it out loud."
"All right, if I make a bet on this, will you quit jabbering?"
"So, what's your bet? I mean, think: what are the chances?"
"That even though it's hot as hell, I still say you can't fry an egg on
those bricks."
"But are you sure?" Lloyd said, almost seriously, before getting down on
his hands and knees with the egg. "Sure enough to risk that ring?"
Skipp nodded.
"You're probably right. You probably just won the lighter."
Lloyd cracked the shell on the brick edge by the road, and poured the egg
out.
The egg sizzled and whitened slightly within several seconds of hitting
the bricks.
"Wouldja look at that?" Lloyd said.
"There's your evidence. Jesus H., we got to do something to avoid frying
like that damn egg."
Skipp stared at the egg and the brick sidewalk as if there were a trick to
it.
Lloyd winked at him. "It's the bricks. They get like an oven. Everybody up
here complains about it."
Lloyd accepted the ring graciously, told Skipp not to worry and that he'd
treat him to some ice cream. They hopped on the trolley and went down to
the First National store, where the ice truck parked out front and kids
came by to get shaved ice out of the back of it. Lloyd and Skipp ran into
little Joe, who was getting as many ice shavings as he could hold. Joe
wiped the bits of ice along his face and the back of his neck.
At
Guppy's barbershop right across the street, Lloyd's younger brother
Winston -- who had been flipping through magazines -- told Jack McAllister
that the river must be ice-cold right about then, while they stood there
like dopes with sweat pouring off their scalps. They caught up with Lloyd
and the others -- including the Vieira boy who was little for his age and
didn't even look fifteen, but told the best jokes, so he was always
welcome.
Lloyd showed off the ring, but when he saw
the a look of barely-concealed hurt on Skipp's face coupled with bristling
anger, he passed it back to him. They tussled, with Skipp telling him,
"Fair's fair," and Lloyd insisting his friend take his ring back.
Winston was the first to say, "It's too hot to argue. Let's get out to the
quarry."
This
evolved into whispers of "skinny dipping," outside the smoke shop and a
conversation between Lloyd and Danny Mulcahy. Then, the Giuliano Ianni saw
them crossing the street and took off the apron from his dad's pizza joint
and ran over to join them. In Union Square, a shirt came off and so began
the rat-tailing, the dares, the oppressive smell of sweat and disgust --
all of it had begun somewhere in town, somewhere by the trolley stand,
somewhere boys congregated on hot afternoons when they got away from work
and home and authority.
They piled into the Thurlow car -- a gang of eight gangly boys, a mix of
Irish, Italian, Polish, Portuguese and well, Thurlow -- since nobody was
sure what a Thurlow was or where they'd even come from or why the rich
Thurlow boys never mingled with the other rich sons along Stoddard Row but
ran with a crowd that their neighbors considered hooligans and lowlifes.
3
The Thurlow boys were the sons of the Rich Old Man from town, a powerful
figure who was old enough to be their grandfather. The Rich Old Man was
known for striking stray dogs on the nose with his eagle-beaked silver
cane and for telling young ladies to button up and cover.
No
one had ever really seen Mrs. Thurlow more than once or twice, and even
then she kept to herself, beneath that big yellow hat with the brim pulled
down over her eyes. She was a subject of rumors and innuendo that included
gold-digging, bath-tub gin-drinking, John Dillinger, Clyde Barrow, dance
marathons and perhaps foreign intrigue. She was the Thurlow boys'
stepmother, and those who had briefly glimpsed her face beneath that hat
swore that she could not be more than four or five years older than Lloyd
Thurlow himself.
They were the wealthiest family in town -- "ungodly wealth," some said.
"Wealth born of great crime," others whispered. "The kind of wealth that
attracts the wrong element."
The local gossip was that the Rich Old Man made his money in bootlegging,
then in vaudeville theaters, and finally, he arrived in town the year
after the Crash to buy up the mill in Easterly and rename it the Thurlow
Woolen Mill.
Thurlow and his wife and sons were not Old New England or Old Money or
even members of one of the churches in Harwich or Easterly, so they had
never truly been accepted in their four brief years in town. Local parents
often warned their children to "keep a good country mile between you and
those Thurlow boys."
The Thurlow boys did not seem like sons of a Rich Old Man -- in fact, to
the handful of well-to-do families -- the lawyers, the doctors, the mill
owners -- Lloyd and Winston Thurlow seemed rather -- and distressingly --
ordinary. They dressed like the other boys, got most of their clothes on
sale at Hagood's, didn't shine their shoes as often as they should've,
sometimes their collars were ragged, their ties askew, and buttons were
frequently missing.
The only conspicuous sign of the boys' wealth was the automobile they
called "Fate."
Fate was a 1933 Packard Super Eight Sport Phaeton, black as
pitch but with a white roof, and it was the finest car that anyone in
Harwich or Easterly had ever seen. It was their mother's, but they
borrowed it often -- or took it at will.
The Thurlow boys drove that automobile like the devil. It was full of
dings and dent and rarely ever was seen by passersby without a tinge of
fear that it might leap up onto the sidewalk, given the boys' driving
records.
That miserable summer afternoon, all eight boys crammed into the Phaeton,
filling every inch. Jack McAllister stood on the runner and was nearly
thrown off the car when it went over the thousand bumps along the unpaved
stretch of road beyond town, out past the farms and out to the Mahican
Bridge.
The boys chose the most lonesome, shit-digger bug-infested,
decrepit-bridged end of the river, abandoning the car to the roadside,
leaving its doors open wide.
4
Cigarettes magically appeared from pockets before shirts came off. A
couple of bottles of warm beer were "discovered" as well, as if none of
them had any idea how they'd appeared. The older boys kept the younger
from the beer (all were underage, but who was there to catch them?) Nearly
all of them tried the Lucky Strikes, which the Mulcahy boy said was the
brand more doctors smoked and recommended.
The river stank of dead fish beneath the unending heat of the summer sun
as it began its steamy fade to dusk. Shit-digger bugs buzzed in the shade
of overhanging trees and on the surface of pools of gummy river muck caked
beneath the bridge.
Lloyd was the first to strip -- he nearly tore his shirt off, then his
undershirt, and the shoes dropped off as he ran, then socks, then the
trousers came down. He nearly tripped as he tried to move forward and pull
them off at the same time. The others followed, laughing, squawking like
geese as they headed for the river. By the time they got to the muddy
edge, swatting the shit-digger bugs and mosquitoes off, they were nearly
all naked as the day they were born, their clothes on the grass or fallen
logs or hanging from the near-dead sycamore tree that leaned its gnarled,
bark-stripped branches over the water.
5
Lloyd bet Skipp his ring back if he would go to the top of the bridge and
jump over the pylon into the river. Skipp gave him a dismissive wave. He
ran along the fallen pylon and dove off the end of it.
Ianni, in stripping down, made everybody laugh.
"What is it?" he asked.
He
stood there in the most ridiculous-looking pair of striped underwear
they'd ever seen. "Hey, my mother made these."
"His mama!" Jack shouted. "She made him some big bambino panties!"
Ianni ignored the jeers as he unbuttoned down the front and dropped his
underwear to the cord-grass.
They all dove off the edge of the pylon, splashed around, daring each
other to prove who was fastest or best or who could take the highest jump
off the old rope swing. Lloyd placed imaginary bets for races out to the
middle of the river and back, and then bets on who could stay underwater
the longest, and then more bets until finally, they piled on him in the
water to shut him up on all the betting and competitions.
They intoned -- like sacred hymns -- drinking songs they'd heard from
their dads. They flung off-color jokes around until all humor was washed
out of them. Uncouth behavior was the rule. Tales of thievery and lies
about sex and bad girls made the rounds. The cries of "Up yours!" and
"Geronimo!" could be heard as they launched -- one after another -- from
the rope swing or the pylon or the groaning sycamore branches into the
deep river.
On
the opposite shore, the spires and turrets of Havergate, the asylum and
poor house; the noise of some distant truck out on some faraway road; the
chattering of starlings and coos of doves; dusk slowly drew in.
Lloyd and his brother swam out to the rocks that jutted up just beyond the
middle of the river.
"This is the best day ever," Winston gasped as he reached for one of the
wide flat rocks that rose up from the heavy current. He hoisted himself
onto it and stood straight up in the dimming sunlight, spreading his arms
out like an Olympic athlete..
"You look like Buster Crabbe when he won the gold medal," Lloyd laughed.
"Only he wasn't buck nekkid."
"I
feel like that. I feel like it's all starting."
"What?"
"
We own the damn world, Lloyd. You, me, Ianni, Skipp, McAllister, Mulcahy,
all of us. This is the point. Dad said in two years I can go to college
out west. You'll go in a year -- what, to Chicago? New York? This is
probably one of our last summers here, together. We're on the edge of
life. It's about to begin."
Glancing at Havergate across the river. "Aren't you worried the crazies
are looking at you?"
"Let 'em look. We are blessed, Lloyd. So many people struggling. You've
seen the men coming through, sleeping in the park. You know those kids
over in Hadleyville and what they go through. We can do something with our
lives. I just feel it. We're going to change the world -- we can help turn
things around once we get out of here. Once we're away. We don't have to
be like dad. We can become something more."
Lloyd, who never thought enough about his younger brother or what went
through his head, felt a surge of happiness that they had each other.
Despite their father and his barrage of business and betting and stern
talks and combative daily routines with them, and their stepmother
and her vanity and isolation, the boys always had each other. After their
mother had died, Lloyd practically raised Winston, who was only a year
younger, but needed a lot of care. And when they moved to Harwich, it was
Lloyd who protected Winston from bullies and who got him involved in
sports and school activities and made him forget the sadness about their
mother.
There, in the water, clinging to the rocks, looking up at his little
brother, Lloyd was happy they had moments like this now and then -- a
golden twilight by a dark river, with nothing but the future ahead and the
sad days behind them.
It
was the best day, all the boys agreed when Lloyd and his brother swam back
and they all started roughhousing on the embankment and along the pylon's
edge.
The worst and the best day, the hottest and the coolest, the funniest and
the saddest in the way that the last days of summer seemed an end to
things when young.
Not one of the boys suspected that someone crouched low on the bridge
above, peering through the gaping cracks in the wall, spying.
6
The black truck raced past the ruins along the river road as if the driver wanted nothing more than to meet oblivion head-on.
In the distance, up around the
bend, the Old Mahican Bridge.
Stay tuned for Episode 2
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