Heidegger’s blown it (since Sparky was over there in the cage, Heidegger didn’t know what he was waiting for). After Heidegger sent the dog back, the soldier shows up to play with Sparky. Sparky’s gone. Where’s my dog? he asks. The vet doesn’t know. They go to Spaulding. Spaulding goes to Heidegger.
‘Lost, I guess,’ says Heidegger. ‘I’m sorry I lost your animal. I thought it was for the experiments. And I’m sorry I hurt it.’
‘Hurt him? Just what the hell did you do?’ asked the soldier, crying.
‘While he was trying to bite me, he hung his dewclaw on the machine and tore it. There was some blood. I’m sorry.’
‘Thanks a whole fucking lot,’ said the soldier. ‘I’m going to kill you someday.’
The vet jumped in and calmed the soldier down. When he left, the vet turned to Heidegger.
‘Wherever Sparky is,’ said the vet, ‘he won’t have any more dewclaws to hang things up on.’
‘What do you mean?’ asked Heidegger.
‘Well, I took one of his dewclaws off, myself when the soldier brought him in the first time. It was barely attached and infected.’
Heidegger looked him squarely in the eyes.
‘Which dewclaw was that?’ he asked.
‘The left one. He only had the right one when you handled him.’
Heidegger took off his glasses and rubbed his eyes. ‘The dog had two dewclaws when I put him in the machine. And,’ he said, turning back to the machine and looking at it with a new respect, ‘it was the left dewclaw which hung up on the wall and tore before I sent the dog back.’
Spaulding said that’s when Heidegger knew it would all work, and that’s when we should have been worried.
It takes all kinds.
Leake IV
‘Gravestones tell truth scarcely fourty years. Generations pass while some trees stand, and old Families last not three Oaks.’
Sunflower was in labor and there was a hell of a storm coming.
We just don’t have weather like that in the time I come from. The sky had clouded up late in the afternoon. A huge black thunderhead covered the whole southern sky by dusk. The top of it flashed silver and purple with lightning even before the sunlight faded. It must have been forty kilometers away when it formed. It was moving slowly and majestically toward us.
We were hearing the thunder by the time the midwife came and shooed us out. A flash of lightning made the sky white. Torches were lit down at the plaza.
‘What’s up?’ I asked Took-His-Time.
‘People are going to pray to the Woodpecker God,’ said Took. ‘Lightning tends to hit the village.’
‘Oh? Should we go down there?’
‘I can pray just as good here. Sun Man’s in fine form without me.’
There was a high moan from Sunflower in the hut.
‘Let’s get a little farther away,’ said Took.
‘Are you worried? I am,’ I said.
‘It’s in the beak of the God,’ said Took. ‘Tradition says I shouldn’t be in earshot, though, or he may be born deaf.’
We walked farther toward the plaza. Some of the Buzzard Cult people were standing in the doorway of a hut, looking toward the storm, not moving, not saying anything.
The thunder came in a continuous rumble, the cloud a constant pulse of lightnings. I saw bolts dancing beneath the cloud over the notches in the palisades. The smell of ozone came to us wetly.
‘Soon the Buzzard Cult people will start dancing to call down the thunder,’ Took said.
‘Why would they do that?’
‘They revel in death even more than we do,’ he said. ‘They invite it. It’s their way.’
‘I don’t think this storm will need any help,’ I said. The sound of the thunder was like a kettledrum being beaten just in front of us.
I looked out past the wall and the burial mounds, the dried fields. The woods, lit by the coming storm, began to rock and bend. Wind and water smacked me in the face.
Lightning bolts sizzled beneath the cloud, walked across the sky, boiled inside the thunderhead. Thunder smashed at us.
There were torches in front of the temple mound, and chanting I couldn’t quite catch through the wind and the noise.
‘Let’s go to the big mound,’ said Took.
People ran by, heading for the plaza. We ambled down that way, going instead to the big mound that had once been used for burials on the east side of the courtyard. We sat down.
The wind was whipping the straining woods. The thunder was as loud as a 155 going off next to your ears. The cloud leaned over us. A ragged wall cloud spun around, its top nearly touching the trees. The undersides of the clouds were green and purple.
‘We’re going to get hail,’ I observed, needlessly.
Took had one of his unfinished pipes out. He could have worked on it by the continuous lightning. I couldn’t keep my eyes off the storm.
Over on the plaza Sun Man was atop the temple steps. Thatch from hut roofs blew across like long snow. Torches went out.
The cold wet air hit us like fists. The hail hitting the River and the trees beyond sounded like an animal gnawing on them.
Lightning struck the palisade to the east. Thunder sounded like hot grease thrown on ice. Fist-sized hail started bouncing around like batting practice at the Astrodome. We got off the mound just as rain crashed into the village.
We made it to a hut belonging to Took’s cousin, along with a few other relatives. The wind shrieked, rocking the mud-wattled walls. We stood in the doorway, looking out. The plaza was a deserted blur. There were a few torches under the eaves of the temple showing where everyone ran.
Lightning hit a hut across the village, setting the roof on fire in a screaming explosion. Hailstones strobed in the flashing light, like a sky filled with Christmas tree ornaments. The white sky went away and fires sprang up. People pulled others from the burning hut. One of them was hit with a hailstone, then the hail quit and the rain came in flat level sheets.
Thunder crashed. I thought my sphincter would open. Part of the hut we were in blew away. Rain came in lumps. We ran around inside bumping into each other and getting things up off the wet mud floor.
Then two things happened at once:
I saw the midwife and Sunflower coming between the huts, towards the plaza, carrying something.
And lightning hit the temple, exploding it.
People screamed and ran toward the temple mound, Took with them. I ran toward Sunflower.
The lightning was horrible. We could all be hit anytime. The wind and rain mauled us. I was soaked in a few steps. If the hail hadn’t already stopped, I would be dead.
Flames lit up the night between the lightning bolts. The whole top of the mound was afire. Men were climbing up the temple walls, across the roof, cutting lashings, throwing handfuls of mud and dirt.
I reached Sunflower and the midwife. Sunflower looked up at me, the rain washing her face in streams. She and the midwife held a covered bundle between them. They said nothing. They didn’t have to.
Between thunderclaps I could hear Sunflower crying softly.
More lightning hit the village, a real explosion of flying sticks scattering in the air toward the north wall.
Now the Buzzard Cult people were dancing in the middle of the plaza, standing in one place, rocking back and forth on their feet, chanting some tune to themselves, not helping with fighting the fire or pulling people out of their huts.