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By Bizarre Hands For Scott Cupp When the traveling preacher heard about the
Widow Case and her retarded girl, he set out in his black Dodge to get over
there before Halloween night. Preacher Judd, as he called himself—though
his name was really Billy Fred Williams—had this thing for retarded
girls, due to the fact that his sister had been simple-headed, and his mama
always said it was a shame she was probably going to burn in hell like a pan of
biscuits forgot in the oven, just on account of not having a fun set of brains. This was a thing he had thought on
considerable, and this considerable thinking made it so he couldn’t pass up the
idea of baptizing and giving some God-training to female retards. It was
something he wanted to do in the worst way, though he had to admit there wasn’t
any burning desire in him to do the same for boys or men or women that were
half-wits, but due to his sister having been one, he certainly had this thing
for girl simples. And he had this thing for Halloween, because
that was the night the Lord took his sister to hell, and he might have taken
her to glory had she had any Bible-learning or God-sense. But she didn’t have a
drop, and it was partly his own fault, because he knew about God and could sing
some hymns pretty good. But he’d never turned a word of benediction or gospel
music in her direction. Not one word. Nor had his mama, and his papa wasn’t
around to do squat. The old man ran off with a buck-toothed
laundry woman that used to go house to house taking in wash and bringing it
back the next day, but when she took in their wash, she took in Papa too, and
she never brought either of them back. And if that wasn’t bad enough, the
laundry contained everything they had in the way of decent clothes, including a
couple of pairs of nice dress pants and some pin-striped shirts like niggers
wear to funerals. This left him with one old pair of faded overalls that he
used to wear to slop the hogs before the critters killed and ate Granny and
they had to get rid of them because they didn’t want to eat nothing that had
eaten somebody they knew. So, it wasn’t bad enough Papa ran off with a
beaver-toothed wash woman and his sister was a drooling retard, he now had only
the one pair of ugly, old overalls to wear to school, and this gave the other
kids three things to tease him about, and they never missed a chance to do it.
Well, four things. He was kind of ugly too. It got tiresome. Preacher Judd could remember nights waking up
with his sister crawled up in the bed alongside him, lying on her back, eyes
wide open, her face bathed in cool moonlight, picking her nose and eating what
she found, while he rested on one elbow and tried to figure why she was that
way. He finally gave up figuring, decided that she
ought to have some fun, and he could have some fun too. Come Halloween, he got
him a bar of soap for marking up windows and a few rocks for knocking out some,
and he made his sister and himself ghost-suits out of old sheets in which he
cut mouth and eye holes. This was her fifteenth year and she had never
been trick-or-treating. He had designs that she should go this time, and they
did, and later after they’d done it, he walked her back home, and later yet,
they found her out back of the house in her ghost suit, only the sheet had
turned red because her head was bashed in with something and she had bled out
like an ankle-hung hog. And someone had turned her trick-or-treat sack —
the handle of which was still clutched in her fat grip — inside out and
taken every bit of candy she’d gotten from the neighbors. The sheriff came out, pulled up the sheet and
saw that she was naked under it, and he looked her over and said that she
looked raped to him, and that she had been killed by bizarre hands. Bizarre hands never did make sense to
Preacher Judd, but he loved the sound of it, and never did let it slip away,
and when he would tell about his poor sister, naked under the sheet, her brains
smashed out and her trick-or-treat bag turned inside out, he’d never miss ending
the story with the sheriff’s line about her having died by bizarre hands. It had a kind of ring to it. He parked his Dodge by the roadside, got out
and walked up to the Widow Case’s, sipping on a FROSTY ROOT BEER. But even
though it was late October, the Southern sun was as hot as Satan’s ass and the
root beer was anything but frosty. Preacher Judd was decked out in his black
suit, white shirt and black loafers with black and white checked socks, and he
had on his black hat, which was short-brimmed and made him look, he thought,
exactly like a traveling preacher ought to look. Widow Case was out at the well, cranking a
bucket of water, and nearby, running hell out of a hill of ants with a stick
she was waggling, was the retarded girl, and Preacher Judd thought she looked
remarkably like his sister. He came up, took off his hat and held it over
his chest as though he were pressing his heart into proper place, and smiled at
the widow with all his gold-backed teeth. Widow Case put one hand on a bony hip, used the
other to prop the bucket of water on the well-curbing. She looked like a shaved
weasel, Preacher Judd thought, though her ankles weren’t shaved a bit and were
perfectly weasel-like. The hair there was thick and black enough to be mistaken
for thin socks at a distance. "Reckon you’ve come far enough,"
she said. "You look like one of them Jehova Witnesses or such. Or one of
them kind that run around with snakes in their teeth and hop to nigger
music." "No ma’m, I don’t hop to nothing, and last
snake I seen I run over with my car." "You here to take up money for
missionaries to give to them starving African niggers? If you are, forget it. I
don’t give to the niggers around here, sure ain’t giving to no hungry foreign
niggers that can’t even speak English." "Ain’t collecting money for nobody. Not
even myself." "Well, I ain’t seen you around here
before, and I don’t know you from white rice. You might be one of them mash
murderers for all I know." "No ma’m, I ain’t a mash murderer, and I
ain’t from around here. I’m from East Texas." She gave him a hard look. "Lots of
niggers there." "Place is rotten with them. Can’t throw
a dog tick without you’ve hit a burr-head in the noggin’. That’s one of the
reasons I’m traveling through here, so I can talk to white folks about God.
Talking to niggers is like," and he lifted a hand to point, "talking
to that well-curbing there, only that well-curbing is smarter and a lot less
likely to sass, since it ain’t expecting no civil rights or a chance to crowd
up with our young’ns in schools. It knows its place and it stays there, and
that’s something for that well-curbing, if it ain’t nothing for niggers." "Amen." Preacher Judd was feeling pretty good now. He
could see she was starting to eat out of his hand. He put on his hat and looked
at the girl. She was on her elbows now, her head down and her butt up. The
dress she was wearing was way too short and had broken open in back from her
having outgrown it. Her panties were dirt-stained and there was gravel, like little
b.b.s hanging off of them. He thought she had legs that looked strong enough to
wrap around an alligator’s neck and choke it to death. "Cindereller there," the widow
said, noticing he was watching, "ain’t gonna have to worry about going to
school with niggers. She ain’t got the sense of a nigger. She ain’t got no
sense at all. A dead rabbit knows more than she knows. All she does is play
around all day, eat bugs and such and drool. In case you haven’t noticed, she’s
simple." "Yes ma’m, I noticed. Had a sister the
same way. She got killed on a Halloween night, was raped and murdered and had
her trick-or-treat candy stolen, and it was done, the sheriff said, by bizarre
hands." "No kiddin’?" Preacher Judd held up a hand. "No
kiddin’. She went on to hell, I reckon, ‘cause she didn’t have any God talk in
her. And retard or not, she deserved some so she wouldn’t have to cook for
eternity. I mean, think on it. How hot it must be down there, her boiling in
her own sweat, and she didn’t do nothing, and it’s mostly my fault cause I
didn’t teach her a thing about The Lord Jesus and his daddy, God." Widow Case thought that over. "Took her
Halloween candy too, huh?" "Whole kit and kaboodle. Rape, murder
and candy theft, one fatal swoop. That’s why I hate to see a young n like yours
who might not have no Word of God in her ... Is she without training?" "She ain’t even toilet trained. You
couldn’t perch her on the outdoor convenience if she was sick and her manage to
hit the hole. She can’t do nothing that don’t make a mess. You can’t teach her
a thing. Half the time she don’t even know her name." As if to prove this,
Widow Case called, "Cindereller." Cinderella had one eye against the ant hill
now and was trying to look down the hole. Her butt was way up and she was
rocking forward on her knees. "See," said Widow Case, throwing up
her hands. "She’s worse than any little ole baby, and it ain’t no easy row
to hoe with her here and me not having a man around to do the heavy work." "I can see that... By the way, call me
Preacher Judd... And can I help you tote that bucket up to the house
there?" "Well now," said Widow Case,
looking all the more like a weasel, "I’d appreciate that kindly." He got the bucket and they walked up to the
house. Cinderella followed, and pretty soon she was circling around him like
she was a shark closing in for the kill, the circles each time getting a mite
smaller. She did this by running with her back bent and her knuckles almost
touching the ground. Ropes of saliva dripped out of her mouth. Watching her, Preacher Judd got a sort of
warm feeling all over. She certainly reminded him of his sister. Only she had
liked to scoop up dirt, dog mess and stuff as she ran, and toss it at him. It
wasn’t a thing he thought he’d missed until just that moment, but now the truth
was out and he felt a little teary eyed. He half-hoped Cinderella would pick up
something and throw it on him. The house was a big, drafty thing circled by
a wide flower bed that didn’t look to have been worked in years. A narrow porch
ran half-way around it, and the front porch had man-tall windows on either side
of the door. Inside, Preacher Judd hung his hat on one of
the foil wrapped rabbit ears perched on top of an old SYLVANIA tv set, and
followed the widow and her child into the kitchen. The kitchen had big iron frying pans hanging
on wall pegs, and there was a framed embroidery that read GODWATCHES OVER THIS
HOUSE. It had been faded by sunlight coming through the window over the sink. Preacher Judd sat the bucket on the ice
box—the old sort that used real ice — then they all went back to
the living room. Widow Case told him to sit down and asked him if he’d like
some ice-tea. "Yes, this bottle of FROSTY ain’t so
good." He took the bottle out of his coat pocket and gave it to her. Widow Case held it up and squinted at the
little line of liquid in the bottom. "You gonna want this?" "No ma’am, just pour what’s left out and
you can have the deposit." He took his Bible from his other pocket and
opened it. "You don’t mind if I try and read a verse or two to your Cindy,
do you?" "You make an effort on that while I fix
us some tea. And I’ll bring some things for ham sandwiches, too." "That would be right nice. I could use a
bite." Widow Case went to the kitchen and Preacher
Judd smiled at Cinderella. "You know tonight’s Halloween, Cindy?" Cinderella pulled up her dress, picked astray
ant off her knee and ate it. "Halloween is my favorite time of the
year," he continued. "That may be strange for a preacher to say,
considering it’s a devil thing, but I’ve always loved it. It just does
something to my blood. It’s like a tonic for me, you know?" She didn’t know. Cinderella went over to the
tv and turned it on. Preacher Judd got up, turned it off.
"Let’s don’t run the SYLVANIA right now, baby child," he said.
"Let’s you and me talk about God." Cinderella squatted down in front of the set,
not seeming to notice it had been cut off. She watched the dark screen like the
White Rabbit considering a plunge down the rabbit hole. Glancing out the window, Preacher Judd saw
that the sun looked like a dropped cherry snow cone melting into the clay road
that led out to Highway 80, and already the tumble bug of night was rolling in
blue-black and heavy. A feeling of frustration went over him, because he knew
he was losing time and he knew what he had to do. Opening his Bible, he read a verse and
Cinderella didn’t so much as look up until he finished and said a praye rand
ended it with "Amen." "Uhman," she said suddenly. Preacher Judd jumped with surprise, slammed
the Bible shut and dunked it in his pocket. "Well, well now," he said
with delight, "that does it. She’s got some Bible training." Widow Case came in with the tray of fixings.
"What’s that?" "She said some of a prayer," Preacher
Judd said. "That cinches it. God don’t expect much from retards, and that
ought to do for keeping her from burning in hell." He practically skipped
over to the woman and her tray, stuck two fingers in a glass of tea, whirled
and sprinkled the drops on Cinderella’s head. Cinderella held out a hand as if
checking for rain. Preacher Judd bellowed out. "I pronounce
you baptized. In the name of God, The Son, and The Holy Ghost. Amen." "Well, I’ll swan," the widow said.
"That there tea works for baptizing?" She sat the tray on the coffee
table. "It ain’t the tea water, it’s what’s
said and who says it that makes it take...Consider that gal legal baptized...
Now, she ought to have some fun too, don’t you think? Not having a full head of
brains don’t mean she shouldn’t have some fun." "She likes what she does with them
ants," Widow Case said. "I know, but I’m talking about something
special. It’s Halloween. Time for young folks to have fun, even if they are
retards. In fact, retards like it better than anyone else. They love this
stuff... A thing my sister enjoyed was dressing up like a ghost." "Ghost?" Widow Case was seated on
the couch, making the sandwiches. She had a big butcher knife and she was using
it to spread mustard on bread and cut ham slices. "We took this old sheet, you see, cut
some mouth and eye holes in it, then we wore them and went
trick-or-treating." "I don’t know that I’ve got an old
sheet. And there ain’t a house close enough for trick-or-treatin’ at." "I could take her around in my car. That
would be fun, I think. I’d like to see her have fun, wouldn’t you? She’d be
real scary too under that sheet, big as she is and liking to run stooped down
with her knuckles dragging." To make his point, he bent forward, humped
his back, let his hands dangle and made a face he thought was in imitation of
Cinderella. "She would be scary, I admit that,"
Widow Case said. "Though that sheet over her head would take some away
from it. Sometimes she scares me when I don’t got my mind on her, you know?
Like if I’m napping in there on the bed, and I sorta open my eyes, and there
she is, looking at me like she looks at them ants. I declare, she looks like
she’d like to take a stick and whirl it around on me." "You need a sheet, a white one, for a
ghost-suit." "Now maybe it would be nice for
Cindereller to go out and have some fun." She finished making the
sandwiches and stood up. "I’ll see what I can find." "Good, good," Preacher Judd said
rubbing his hands together. "You can let me make the outfit. I’m real good
at it." While Widow Case went to look for a sheet,
Preacher Judd cite one of the sandwiches, took one and handed it down to
Cinderella. Cinderella promptly took the bread off of it, ate the meat, and
laid the mustard sides down on her knees. When the meat was chewed, she took to the
mustard bread, cramming it into her mouth and smacking her lips loudly. "Is that good, sugar?" Preacher
Judd asked. Cinderella smiled some mustard bread at him
and he couldn’t help but think the mustard looked a lot like baby shit, and he
had to turn his head away. "This do?" Widow Case said, coming
into the room with a slightly yellowed sheet and a pair of scissors. "That’s the thing," Preacher Judd
said, taking a swig from his ice tea. He set the tea down and called to
Cinderella. "Come on, sugar, let’s you and me go in
the bedroom there and get you fixed up and surprise your mama." It took a bit of coaxing, but he finally got
her up and took her into the bedroom with the sheet and scissors. He
half-closed the bedroom door and called out to the widow. "You’re going to
like this." After a moment, Widow Case heard the scissors
snipping away and Cinderella grunting like a hog to trough. When the scissors
sound stopped, she heard Preacher Judd talking in a low voice, trying to coach
Cinderella on something, but as she wanted it to be a surprise, she quit trying
to hear. She went over to the couch and fiddled with a sandwich, but she didn’t
eat it, As soon as she’d gotten out of eyesight of Preacher Judd, she’d upended
the last of his root beer and it was as bad as he said. It sort of made her
stomach sick and didn’t encourage her to add any food to it. Suddenly the bedroom door was knocked back,
and Cinderella, having a big time of it, charged into the room with her arms held
out in front of her yelling, "Woooo, woooo, goats." Widow Case let out a laugh. Cinderella ran
around the room yelling, "Woooo, woooo, goats," until she tripped
over the coffee table and sent the sandwich makings and herself flying. Preacher Judd, who’d followed her in after a
second, went over and helped her up. The Widow Case, who had curled up on the
couch in natural defense against the flying food and retarded girl, now
uncurled when she saw something dangling on Preacher Judd’s arm. She knew what it
was, but she asked anyway. "What’s that?" "One of your piller cases. For a
trick-or-treat sack." "Oh," Widow Case said stiffly, and
she went to straightening up the coffee table and picking the ham and makings
off the floor. Preacher Judd saw that the sun was no longer
visible, He walked over to a window and looked out. The tumble bug of night was
even more blue-black now and the moon was out, big as a dinner plate, and
looking like it had gravy stains on it. "I think we’ve got to go now," he
said. "We’ll be back in a few hours, just long enough to run the houses
around here." "Whoa, whoa," Widow Case said.
"Trick-or-treatin’ I can go for, but I can’t let my daughter go off with
no strange man. "I ain’t strange. I’m a preacher." "You strike me as an all right fella
that wants to do things right, but I still can’t let you take my daughter off
without me going. People would talk." Preacher Judd started to sweat. "I’ll
pay you some money to let me take her on." Widow Case stared at him. She had moved up
close now and he could smell root beer on her breath. Right then he knew what
she’d done and he didn’t like it any. It wasn’t that he’d wanted it, but
somehow it seemed dishonest to him that she swigged it without asking him. He
thought she was going to pour it out. He started to say as much when she spoke
up. "I don’t like the sound of that none,
you offering me money. "I just want her for the night," he
said, pulling Cinderella close to him. "She’d have fun." "I don’t like the sound of that no
better. Maybe you ain’t as right thinking as I thought." Widow Case took a step back and reached the
butcher knife off the table and pushed it at him. "I reckon you better
just let go of her and run on out to that car of yours and take your ownself
trick-or-treatin’. And without my piller case." "No ma’m, can’t do that. I’ve come for
Cindy and that’s the thing God expects of me, and I’m going to do it. I got to
do it. I didn’t do my sister right and she’s burning in hell. I’m doing Cindy
right. She said some of a prayer and she’s baptized. Anything happened to her,
wouldn’t be on my conscience." Widow Case trembled a bit. Cinderella lifted
up her ghost-suit with her free hand to look at herself, and Widow Case saw
that she was naked as a jay-bird underneath. "You let go of her arm right now, you
pervert. And drop that piller case... Toss it on the couch would be better.
It’s clean." He didn’t do either. Widow Case’s teeth went together like a bear
trap and made about as much noise, and she slashed at him with the knife. He stepped back out of the way and let goof
Cinderella, who suddenly let out a screech, broke and ran, started around the
room yelling, "Wooooo, wooooo, goats." Preacher Judd hadn’t moved quick enough, and
the knife had cut through the pillow case, his coat and shirt sleeve, but
hadn’t broke the skin. When Widow Case saw her slashed pillow case
fall to the floor, a fire went through her. The same fire that went through
Preacher Judd when he realized his J.C. Penney’s suit coat which had cost him,
with the pants, $39.95 on sale, was ruined. They started circling one another, arms
outstretched like wrestlers ready for the run together, and Widow Case had the
advantage on account of having the knife. But she fell for Preacher Judd holding up his
left hand and wiggling two fingers like mule ears, and while she was looking at
that, he hit her with a right cross and floored her. Her head hit the coffee
table and the ham and fixings flew up again. Preacher Judd jumped on top of her and held
her knife hand down with one of his, while he picked up the ham with the other
and hit her in the face with it, but the ham was so greasy it kept sliding off
and he couldn’t get a good blow in. Finally he tossed the ham down and started
wrestling the knife away from her with both hands while she chewed on one of
his forearms until he screamed. Cinderella was still running about, going,
"Wooooo, wooooo, goats," and when she ran by the SYLVANIA, her arm
hit the foil-wrapped rabbit ears and sent them flying. Preacher Judd finally got the knife away from
Widow Case, cutting his hand slightly in the process, and that made him mad. He
stabbed her in the back as she rolled out from under him and tried to run off
on all fours. He got on top of her again, knocking her flat, and he tried to pull
the knife out. He pulled and tugged, but it wouldn’t come free. She was as
strong as a cow and was crawling across the floor and pulling him along as he
hung tight to the thick, wooden butcher knife handle. Blood was boiling all
over the place. Out of the corner of his eye, Preacher Judd
saw that his retard was going wild, flapping around in her ghost-suit like a
fat dove, bouncing off walls and tumbling over furniture. She wasn’t making the
ghost sounds now. She knew something was up and she didn’t like it. "Now, now," he called to her as
Widow Case dragged him across the floor, yelling all the while, "Bloody
murder, I’m being kilt, bloody murder, bloody murder!" "Shut up, goddamnit!" he yelled.
Then, reflecting on his words, he turned his face heavenward. "Forgive me
my language, God." Then he said sweetly to Cinderella, who was incomplete
bouncing distress, "Take it easy, honey. Ain’t nothing wrong, not a
thing." "Oh Lordy mercy, I’m being kilt!"
Widow Case yelled. "Die, you stupid old cow." But she didn’t die. He couldn’t believe it,
but she was starting to stand. The knife he was clinging to pulled him to his
feet, and when she was up, she whipped an elbow around, whacked him in the ribs
and sent him flying. About that time, Cinderella broke through a
window, tumbled onto the porch, over the edge and into the empty flowerbed. Preacher Judd got up and ran at Widow Case,
hitting her just above the knees and knocking her down, cracking her head aloud
one on the SYLVANIA, but it still didn’t send her out. She was strong enough to
grab him by the throat with both hands and throttle him. As she did, he turned his head slightly away
from her digging fingers, and through the broken window he could see his
retarded ghost. She was doing a kind of two step, first to the left, then to
the right, going, "Unhhh, unhhhh," and it reminded Preacher Judd of
one of them dances sinners do in them places with lots of blinking lights and
girls up on pedestals doing lashes with their hips. He made a fist and hit the widow a couple of
times, and she let go of him and rolled away. She got up, staggered a second,
then started running toward the kitchen, the knife still in her back, only
deeper from having fallen on it. He ran after her and she staggered into the
wall, her hands hitting out and knocking one of the big iron frying pans off
its peg and down on her head. It made a loud BONG, and Widow Case went down. Preacher Judd let out a sigh. He was glad for
that. He was tired. He grabbed up the pan and whammed her a few times, then,
still carrying the pan, he found his hat in the living room and went out on the
porch to look for Cinderella. She wasn’t in sight. He ran out in the front yard calling her, and
saw her making the rear corner of the house, running wildly, hands close to the
ground, her butt flashing in the moonlight every time the sheet popped up. She
was heading for the woods out back. He ran after her, but she made the woods well
ahead of him. He followed in, but didn’t see her. "Cindy," he called.
"It’s me. Ole Preacher Judd. I come to read you some Bible verses. You’d
like that wouldn’t you?" Then he commenced to coo like he was talking to a
baby, but still Cinderella did not appear. He trucked around through the woods with his
frying pan for half an hour, but didn’t see a sign of her. For a half-wit, she
was a good hider. Preacher Judd was covered in sweat and the
night was growing slightly cool and the old Halloween moon was climbing to the
stars. He felt like just giving up. He sat down on the ground and started to cry. Nothing ever seemed to work out right. That
night he’d taken his sister out hadn’t gone fully right. They’d gotten the
candy and he’d brought her home, but later, when he tried to get her in bed
with him for a little bit of the thing animals do without sin, she wouldn’t go
for it, and she always had before. Now she was uppity over having a ghost-suit
and going trick-or-treating. Worse yet, her wearing that sheet with nothing
under it did something for him. He didn’t know what it was, but the idea of it made
him kind of crazy. But he couldn’t talk or bribe her into a
thing. She ran out back and he ran after her and tackled her, and when he
started doing to her what he wanted to do, out beneath the Halloween moon,
underneath the apple tree, she started screaming. She could scream real loud,
and he’d had to choke her some and beat her in the head with a rock. After
that, he felt he should make like some kind of theft was at the bottom of it
all, so he took all her Halloween candy. He was sick thinking back on that night. Her
dying without no God-training made him feel lousy. And he couldn’t get those
TOOTSIE ROLLS out of his mind. There must have been three dozen of them. Later
he got so sick from eating them all in one sitting that to this day he couldn’t
stand the smell of chocolate. He was thinking on these misfortunes, when he
saw through the limbs and brush a white sheet go by. Preacher Judd poked his head up and saw
Cinderella running down a little path going, "Wooooo, wooooo,goats." She had already forgotten about him and had
the ghost thing on her mind. He got up and crept after her with his frying
pan. Pretty soon she disappeared over a dip in the trail and he followed her
down. She was sitting at the bottom of the trail
between two pines, and ahead of her was a clear lake with the moon shining its
face in the water. Across the water the trees thinned, and he could see the
glow of lights from a house. She was looking at those lights and the big moon
in the water and was saying over and over, "Oh, priddy, priddy." He walked up behind her and said, "It
sure is, sugar," and he hit her in the head with the pan. It gave a real
solid ring, kind of like the clap of a sweet church bell. He figured that one
shot to the bean was sufficient, since it was a good overhand lick, but she was
still sitting up and he didn’t want to be no slacker about things, so he hit
her a couple more times, and by the second time, her head didn’t give a ring,
just sort of a dull thump, like he was hitting a thick, rubber bag full of mud. She fell over on what was left of her head
and her butt cocked up in the air, exposed as the sheet fell down her back. He
took a long look at it, but found he wasn’t interested in doing what animals do
without sin anymore. All that hitting on the Widow Case and Cinderella had
tuckered him out. He pulled his arm way back, tossed the frying
pan with all his might toward the lake. It went in with a soft splash. He
turned back toward the house and his car, and when he got out to the road, he
cranked up the Dodge and drove away noticing that the Halloween sky was looking
blacker. It was because the moon had slipped behind some dark clouds. He
thought it looked like a suffering face behind a veil, and as he drove away
from the Case’s, he stuck his head out the window for a better look. By the
time he made the hill that dipped down toward Highway 80, the clouds had passed
along, and he’d come to see it more as a happy jack-o-lantern than a sad face,
and he took that as a sign that he had done well. "By Bizarre Hands" was originally
published in 1988 in Hardboiled #9.
It later appeared in By Bizarre Hands,
a collection of Lansdale’s short stories published by Avon Books, and in High
Cotton: Selected Short Stories of Joe R. Lansdale, published in 2000 by Golden Gryphon Press. "By
Bizarre Hands" © 1988 Joe R. Lansdale. All rights reserved. Come on back next week, kids, for more
non-stop hilarity from champion Mojo storyteller Joe R. Lansdale! A new story
will be posted on Thursday, September 4! |
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