Ray Bradbury Stories Volume 2
Page 27
Roger Bentley glanced at Rodney, who was checking his wristwatch.
‘Someday we must die, also.’ Roger Bentley hurried on. ‘Hard to believe. We’re spoiled. But Susan was right. Dog died to tell us this, gently, and we must believe. And at the same time celebrate. What? The fact that we’re the start of an amazing, dumbfounding history of survival that will only get better as the centuries pass. You may argue that the next war will take us all. Maybe.
‘I can only say I think you will grow to be old, very old people. Ninety years from now, most people will have cured hearts, stopped cancers, and jumped life cycles. A lot of sadness will have gone out of the world, thank God. Will this be easy to do? No. Will we do it? Yes. Not in all countries, right off. But, finally, in most.
‘As I said yesterday, fifty years ago, if you wanted to visit your aunts, uncles, grandparents, brothers, sisters, the graveyard was it. Death was all the talk. You had to talk it. Time’s up, Rodney?’
Rodney signaled his father he had one last minute.
Roger Bentley wound it down:
‘Sure, kids still die. But not millions. Old folks? Wind up in Sun City instead of Marble Orchard.’
The father surveyed his family, bright-eyed, in the pews.
‘God, look at you! Then look back. A thousand centuries of absolute terror, absolute grief. How parents stayed sane to raise their kids when half of them died, damned if I know. Yet with broken hearts, they did. While millions died of flu or the Plague.
‘So here we are in a new time that we can’t see because we stand in the eye of the hurricane, where everything’s calm.
‘I’ll shut up now, with a last word for Dog. Because we loved him, we’ve done this almost silly thing, this service, but now suddenly we’re not ashamed or sorry we bought him a plot or had me speak. We may never come visit him, who can say? But he has a place. Dog, old boy, bless you. Now, everyone, blow your nose.’
Everyone blew his nose.
‘Dad,’ said Rodney suddenly, ‘could – we hear the record again?’
Everyone looked at Rodney, surprised.
‘Just,’ said Roger Bentley, ‘what I was going to suggest.’
He put the needle on the record. It hissed.
About a minute in, when the sparks from the house flew over to burn the barn and torch the horseflesh and kill the dog, there was a sound at the back doorway to the small parlor.
Everyone turned.
A strange man stood in the door holding a small wicker basket from which came familiar, small yapping sounds.
And even as the flames from the candles around the coffin caught the curtains and the last sparks blew on the wind …
The whole family, drawn out into the sunlight, gathered around the stranger with the wicker basket, waiting for Father to arrive to throw back the coverlet on the small carrier so they could all dip their hands in.
That moment, as Susan said later, was like reading the telephone book one more time.
A Little Journey
There were two important things – one, that she was very old; two, that Mr Thirkell was taking her to God. For hadn’t he patted her hand and said: ‘Mrs Bellowes, we’ll take off into space in my rocket, and go to find Him together’?
And that was how it was going to be. Oh, this wasn’t like any other group Mrs Bellowes had ever joined. In her fervor to light a path for her delicate, tottering feet, she had struck matches down dark alleys, and found her way to Hindu mystics who floated their flickering, starry eyelashes over crystal balls. She had walked on the meadow paths with ascetic Indian philosophers imported by daughters-in-spirit of Madame Blavatsky. She had made pilgrimages to California’s stucco jungles to hunt the astrological seer in his natural habitat. She had even consented to signing away the rights to one of her homes in order to be taken into the shouting order of a temple of amazing evangelists who had promised her golden smoke, crystal fire, and the great soft hand of God coming to bear her home.
None of these people had ever shaken Mrs Bellowes’ faith, even when she saw them sirened away in a black wagon in the night, or discovered their pictures, bleak and unromantic, in the morning tabloids. The world had roughed them up and locked them away because they knew too much, that was all.
And then, two weeks ago, she had seen Mr Thirkell’s advertisement in New York City:
COME TO MARS!
Stay at the Thirkell Restorium for one week. And then, on into space on the greatest adventure life can offer! Send for Free Pamphlet: ‘Nearer My God To Thee.’ Excursion rates. Round trip slightly lower.
‘Round trip,’ Mrs Bellowes had thought. ‘But who would come back after seeing Him?’
And so she had bought a ticket and flown off to Mars and spent seven mild days at Mr Thirkell’s Restorium, the building with the sign on it which flashed: THIRKELL’S ROCKET TO HEAVEN! She had spent the week bathing in limpid waters and erasing the care from her tiny bones, and now she was fidgeting, ready to be loaded into Mr Thirkell’s own special private rocket, like a bullet, to be fired on out into space beyond Jupiter and Saturn and Pluto. And thus – who could deny it? – you would be getting nearer and nearer to the Lord. How wonderful! Couldn’t you just feel Him drawing near? Couldn’t you just sense His breath, His scrutiny, His Presence?
‘Here I am,’ said Mrs Bellowes, ‘an ancient rickety elevator, ready to go up the shaft. God need only press the button.’
Now, on the seventh day, as she minced up the steps of the Restorium, a number of small doubts assailed her.
‘For one thing,’ she said aloud to no one, ‘it isn’t quite the land of milk and honey here on Mars that they said it would be. My room is like a cell, the swimming pool is really quite inadequate, and, besides, how many widows who look like mushrooms or skeletons want to swim? And, finally, the whole Restorium smells of boiled cabbage and tennis shoes!’
She opened the front door and let it slam, somewhat irritably.
She was amazed at the other women in the auditorium. It was like wandering in a carnival mirror-maze, coming again and again upon yourself – the same floury face, the same chicken hands, and jingling bracelets. One after another of the images of herself floated before her. She put out her hand, but it wasn’t a mirror; it was another lady shaking her fingers and saying:
‘We’re waiting for Mr Thirkell. Sh!’
‘Ah,’ whispered everyone.
The velvet curtains parted.
Mr Thirkell appeared, fantastically serene, his Egyptian eyes upon everyone. But there was something, nevertheless, in his appearance which made one expect him to call ‘Hi!’ while fuzzy dogs jumped over his legs, through his hooped arms, and over his back. Then, dogs and all, he should dance with a dazzling piano-keyboard smile off into the wings.
Mrs Bellowes, with a secret part of her mind which she constantly had to grip tightly, expected to hear a cheap Chinese gong sound when Mr Thirkell entered. His large liquid dark eyes were so improbable that one of the old ladies had facetiously claimed she saw a mosquito cloud hovering over them as they did around summer rain barrels. And Mrs Bellowes sometimes caught the scent of the theatrical mothball and the smell of calliope steam on his sharply pressed suit.
But with the same savage rationalization that had greeted all other disappointments in her rickety life, she bit at the suspicion and whispered, ‘This time it’s real. This time it’ll work. Haven’t we got a rocket?’
Mr Thirkell bowed. He smiled a sudden Comedy Mask smile. The old ladies looked in at his epiglottis and sensed chaos there.
Before he even began to speak, Mrs Bellowes saw him picking up each of his words, oiling it, making sure it ran smooth on its rails. Her heart squeezed in like a tiny fist, and she gritted her porcelain teeth.
‘Friends,’ said Mr Thirkell, and you could hear the frost snap in the hearts of the entire assemblage.
‘No!’ said Mrs Bellowes ahead of time. She could hear the bad news rushing at her, and herself tied to the track while the immense black
wheels threatened and the whistle screamed, helpless.
‘There will be a slight delay,’ said Mr Thirkell.
In the next instant, Mr Thirkell might have cried, or been tempted to cry, ‘Ladies, be seated!’ in minstrel-fashion, for the ladies had come up at him from their chairs, protesting and trembling.
‘Not a very long delay.’ Mr Thirkell put up his hands to pat the air.
‘How long?’
‘Only a week.’
‘A week!’
‘Yes. You can stay here at the Restorium for seven more days, can’t you? A little delay won’t matter, will it, in the end? You’ve waited a lifetime. Only a few more days.’
At twenty dollars a day, thought Mrs Bellowes, coldly.
‘What’s the trouble?’ a woman cried.
‘A legal difficulty,’ said Mr Thirkell.
‘We’ve a rocket, haven’t we?’
‘Well, ye-ess.’
‘But I’ve been here a whole month, waiting,’ said one old lady. ‘Delays, delays!’
‘That’s right,’ said everyone.
‘Ladies, ladies,’ murmured Mr Thirkell, smiling serenely.
‘We want to see the rocket!’ It was Mrs Bellowes forging ahead, alone, brandishing her fist like a toy hammer.
Mr Thirkell looked into the old ladies’ eyes, a missionary among albino cannibals.
‘Well, now,’ he said.
‘Yes, now!’ cried Mrs Bellowes.
‘I’m afraid—’ he began.
‘So am I!’ she said. ‘That’s why we want to see the ship!’
‘No, no, now, Mrs—’ He snapped his fingers for her name.
‘Bellowes!’ she cried. She was a small container, but now all the seething pressures that had been built up over long years came steaming through the delicate vents of her body. Her cheeks became incandescent. With a wail that was like a melancholy factory whistle, Mrs Bellowes ran forward and hung to him, almost by her teeth, like a summer-maddened Spitz. She would not and never could let go until he died, and the other women followed, jumping and yapping like a pound let loose on its trainer, the same one who had petted them and to whom they had squirmed and whined joyfully an hour before, now milling about him, creasing his sleeves and frightening the Egyptian serenity from his gaze.
‘This way!’ cried Mrs Bellowes, feeling like Madame Lafarge. ‘Through the back! We’ve waited long enough to see the ship. Every day he’s put us off, every day we’ve waited, now let’s see.’
‘No, no, ladies!’ cried Mr Thirkell, leaping about.
They burst through the back of the stage and out a door, like a flood, bearing the poor man with them into a shed, and then out, quite suddenly, into an abandoned gymnasium.
‘There it is!’ said someone. ‘The rocket.’
And then a silence fell that was terrible to entertain.
There was the rocket.
Mrs Bellowes looked at it and her hands sagged away from Mr Thirkell’s collar.
The rocket was something like a battered copper pot. There were a thousand bulges and rents and rusty pipes and dirty vents on and in it. The ports were clouded over with dust, resembling the eyes of a blind hog.
Everyone wailed a little sighing wail.
‘Is that the rocket ship Glory Be to the Highest?’ cried Mrs Bellowes, appalled.
Mr Thirkell nodded and looked at his feet.
‘For which we paid out our one thousand dollars apiece and came all the way to Mars to get on board with you and go off to find Him?’ asked Mrs Bellowes.
‘Why, that isn’t worth a sack of dried peas,’ said Mrs Bellowes.
‘It’s nothing but junk!’
Junk, whispered everyone, getting hysterical.
‘Don’t let him get away!’
Mr Thirkell tried to break and run, but a thousand possum traps closed on him from every side. He withered.
Everybody walked around in circles like blind mice. There was a confusion and a weeping that lasted for five minutes as they went over and touched the Rocket, the Dented Kettle, the Rusty Container for God’s Children.
‘Well,’ said Mrs Bellowes. She stepped up into the askew doorway of the rocket and faced everyone. ‘It looks as if a terrible thing has been done to us,’ she said. ‘I haven’t any money to go back home to Earth and I’ve too much pride to go to the Government and tell them a common man like this has fooled us out of our life’s savings. I don’t know how you feel about it, all of you, but the reason all of us came is because I’m eighty-five, and you’re eighty-nine, and you’re seventy-eight, and all of us are nudging on toward a hundred, and there’s nothing on Earth for us, and it doesn’t appear there’s anything on Mars either. We all expected not to breathe much more air or crochet many more doilies or we’d never have come here. So what I have to propose is a simple thing – to take a chance.’
She reached out and touched the rusted hulk of the rocket.
‘This is our rocket. We paid for our trip. And we’re going to take our trip!’
Everyone rustled and stood on tiptoes and opened an astonished mouth.
Mr Thirkell began to cry. He did it quite easily and very effectively.
‘We’re going to get in this ship,’ said Mrs Bellowes, ignoring him. ‘And we’re going to take off to where we were going.’
Mr Thirkell stopped crying long enough to say, ‘But it was all a fake. I don’t know anything about space. He’s not out there, anyway. I lied. I don’t know where He is, and I couldn’t find Him if I wanted to. And you were fools to ever take my word on it.’
‘Yes,’ said Mrs Bellowes, ‘we were fools. I’ll go along on that. But you can’t blame us, for we’re old, and it was a lovely, good and fine idea, one of the loveliest ideas in the world. Oh, we didn’t really fool ourselves that we could get nearer to Him physically. It was the gentle, mad dream of old people, the kind of thing you hold onto for a few minutes a day, even though you know it’s not true. So, all of you who want to go, you follow me in the ship.’
‘But you can’t go!’ said Mr Thirkell. ‘You haven’t got a navigator. And that ship’s a ruin!’
‘You,’ said Mrs Bellowes, ‘will be the navigator.’
She stepped into the ship, and after a moment, the other old ladies pressed forward. Mr Thirkell, windmilling his arms frantically, was nevertheless pressed through the port, and in a minute the door slammed shut. Mr Thirkell was strapped into the navigator’s seat, with everyone talking at once and holding him down. The special helmets were issued to be fitted over every gray or white head to supply extra oxygen in case of a leakage in the ship’s hull, and at long last the hour had come and Mrs Bellowes stood behind Mr Thirkell and said, ‘We’re ready, sir.’
He said nothing. He pleaded with them silently, using his great, dark, wet eyes, but Mrs Bellowes shook her head and pointed to the control.
‘Takeoff,’ agreed Mr Thirkell morosely, and pulled a switch.
Everybody fell. The rocket went up from the planet Mars in a great fiery glide, with the noise of an entire kitchen thrown down an elevator shaft, with a sound of pots and pans and kettles and fires boiling and stews bubbling, with a smell of burned incense and rubber and sulfur, with a color of yellow fire, and a ribbon of red stretching below them, and all the old women singing and holding to each other, and Mrs Bellowes crawling upright in the sighing, straining, trembling ship.
‘Head for space, Mr Thirkell.’
‘It can’t last,’ said Mr Thirkell, sadly. ‘This ship can’t last. It will—’
It did.
The rocket exploded.
Mrs Bellowes felt herself lifted and thrown about dizzily, like a doll. She heard the great screamings and saw the flashes of bodies sailing by her in fragments of metal and powdery light.
‘Help, help!’ cried Mr Thirkell, far away, on a small radio beam.
The ship disintegrated into a million parts, and the old ladies, all one hundred of them, were flung straight on ahead with the same velocity as the ship
.
As for Mr Thirkell, for some reason of trajectory, perhaps, he had been blown out the other side of the ship. Mrs Bellowes saw him falling separate and away from them, screaming, screaming.
There goes Mr Thirkell, thought Mrs Bellowes.
And she knew where he was going. He was going to be burned and roasted and broiled good, but very good.
Mr Thirkell was falling down, into the Sun.
And here we are, thought Mrs Bellowes. Here we are, going on out, and out, and out.
There was hardly a sense of motion at all, but she knew that she was traveling at fifty thousand miles an hour and would continue to travel at that speed for an eternity, until.…
She saw the other women swinging all about her in their own trajectories, a few minutes of oxygen left to each of them in their helmets, and each was looking up to where they were going.
Of course, thought Mrs Bellowes. Out into space. Out and out, and the darkness like a great church, and the stars like candles, and in spite of everything, Mr Thirkell, the rocket, and the dishonesty, we are going toward the Lord.
And there, yes, there, as she fell on and on, coming toward her, she could almost discern the outline now, coming toward her was His mighty golden hand, reaching down to hold her and comfort her like a frightened sparrow.
‘I’m Mrs Amelia Bellowes,’ she said quietly, in her best company voice. ‘I’m from the planet Earth.’
Any Friend of Nicholas Nickleby’s Is a Friend of Mine
Imagine a summer that would never end.
Nineteen twenty-nine.
Imagine a boy who would never grow up.
Me.
Imagine a barber who was never young.
Mr Wyneski.
Imagine a dog that would live forever.
Mine.
Imagine a small town, the kind that isn’t lived in anymore.
Ready? Begin …
Green Town, Illinois … Late June.