"What are you afraid of?" she asks on the other side of the door.
"You," I tell her.
2
The rules for the Dark Game are simple:
First, you need to close your eyes. Do not open them. If necessary, you can
use a blindfold. In fact, because kids usually can't keep their eyes closed,
blindfolds are recommended.
Second, you need to stay very still for a long time and block out all noise
(except for the voice of the chosen master of the Dark Game). You must also
block out all smell and all touch, except for the others whose hands you're
holding. You have to join hands, and form a circle. But block out everything
you can.
Except the voice of the master of the Dark Game.
Third, someone has to be in control of where the Dark Game goes. To recite the
litany that begins it. To direct your mind into the game.
And lastly, you must never play the Dark Game once it's dark outside.
At night, it becomes too real. You lose control of it. You can't stop it after
dark.
You must start the game in the hour before dark, sometimes called the Magic
Hour.
You must stop playing when night falls. Because that's when it changes.
Sometimes, you can't get out of the Dark Game once the dark comes.
The stakes heighten after dark.
It becomes real, then.
It takes you over.
3
A nightmare:
On the other side of the door, her voice again, "Don't be afraid," she says.
"Don't be afraid."
The door swings wide, and from outside, in what seems an eternal twilight, she
enters with arms outstretched, wanting me.
Wanting me.
"I am here," she says.
"I won't play the Dark Game," I tell her.
"Too late," she says. "You can't stop playing it."
4
I've come to believe that absolute evil has a human face.
And absolute innocence is the brother of evil.
I was once innocent, but then I had begun playing that game.
5
When I was nine, I went wandering on a chilly early evening.
My father owned a vast property called Hawthorn, which included a house, some
woods, and a smokehouse, as well as a stream and duck pond. It seemed like an
endless world to me then.
A man found me in the woods -- a man whose face I have somehow erased from my
memory as part of a feverish week that vanished for me as a child.
He told me that I had blood on my face. He washed it off in an ice-cold
stream, splashing it all over my forehead and hands. I had no cuts on me at
all. but I felt as if I'd been bitten up by mosquitoes even in the middle of
winter.
He walked me through the night-smitten woods until we approached the back of
my home.
It was a moment out of time that I could not place within my other memories --
why I had wandered, or why I had what might've been blood on my face, or even
the face of the man who had washed blood from me.
That was childhood; it ended; I closed its door; I grew up, and moved away.
Many years later, when he was in his fifties and I was in my late 20s, my
father wandered at twilight, and opened the door to a mystery.
PART ONE
CHAPTER ONE
1
It attacked with the ferocity of a wild animal.
2
At the point my father, Gordie Raglan, entered the smokehouse, his life was
nearly over.
Even if you'd told him that, it probably wouldn't have stopped him.
Knowing my father, he probably had been thinking about the Boston Celtics and
if they were going to kick any ass that winter. Or whether or not he was going
to have shepherd's pie-without-peas for supper when he got back. Or how he was
going to repair the half-rotted roof of the cabin down by the duck pond when
he knew he should just let the cabin fall apart.
He was a guy who was fairly transparent in his thinking and, though smart, was
a simple man. He liked his world to be orderly.
He always looked to me -- in photographs and my childhood memories -- like a
solid structure. A man created for purpose, duty, and care. Even at his worst
(he had his terrible days, as all men who are fathers will have them), he
seemed a moral compass within a world spun out of control.
He liked the people around him to be somewhat predictable, which is no doubt
why he stayed on Burnley Island most of his life. His main loves were, in
fact, the Boston Celtics, what was for supper, home repairs, and his
daughter's two dogs, which, by right of whose house they lived in, were his as
well.
They were rescued greyhounds named for Welsh
legend (Mab and Madoc) that might've met terrible fates if he and Brooke
hadn't gone over to the racetrack in Rhode Island a few years previous to grab
two pups who weren't quite right for racing. Perhaps all he thought about was
what was bringing him out in the storm in the first place.
There were, at the time, a thousand guesses
for this, but none of them got near the mark.
He hadn't called the dogs. This was unusual for him. He might go out to see
who was in the driveway, or what a certain noise had been, but he nearly
always called the greyhounds out when he did that.
Not that he went out often at twilight or
most evenings. Not that Mab and Madoc would've gone with him -- those dogs
dreaded foul weather as much as they did the local veterinarian's office.
But still, he would've called them. If he had, my sister, Brooke, would've
known he was leaving. She was at the other end of the house -- down the boxcar
hallways that led like a puzzle from one room to another without end, built
that way by some ancient Raglan with a bizarre sense that every room should
open on another room.
Brooke was down in what was called the second
great room, with the dogs at her feet. Reading a mystery novel, halfway
falling asleep, having been up most of the previous night.
That afternoon, Gordie Raglan had drunk half a mug of hot cocoa before he left
the house. He had a fondness, in November, for comfort foods -- chicken soup,
warm cocoa, and shepherd's pie. Cocoa was his favorite. He loved it more laced
with a bit of bourbon, but this particular night, there was nary a drop in the
house.
He no doubt had chewed gum as he headed for the front door -- Wrigley's
Spearmint or Big Red, either one could be his favorite of the day. He wore his
funny red cap -- a red wool scully hat that belonged once to one of his sons,
but to which he had become attached over the past several years. He drew on a
red parka that he'd received as a present the previous Christmas. There were
boots by the door, but he chose to wear his scuffed, ten year worn Oxfords. It
was his storm outfit. No umbrella. Dad didn't believe in umbrellas.
He did take a flashlight with him.
The cap made him look youthful or silly, depending upon who was asked about
it. His peppered gray hair no doubt stuck out of the skully hat. My father was
generally late with haircuts once November had begun, unless his daughter had
been after him about it.
He rarely left the house after three or four p.m. anymore, unless something
needed immediate attention around the grounds of his home.
But something got him outside, during the storm.
3
Barely light out anymore, the fury of the storm brought an early veil of
darkness with it.
Something made him put down the mug, slip his shoes on, leaving them untied as
he went out the front door of his home. He had a flashlight with him. Around
the house, he always kept a flashlight by his side, as much as he kept his
spot heater in whichever room he chose to occupy.
Only a man as stubborn as my Gordie Raglan would've traipsed out in the worst
storm of November, to do some mysterious errand in what amounted to a rundown
stone shelter that had been locked up for years.
It had been a tempest out at sea, but on the island, it was a rough kind of
magic -- a Nor'easter blowing down across the bogs and ponds and the slips and
beaches, through the woods with their sheltering pines, with all the beauty
that a terrific storm brings with it -- the overly dramatic light of creation
itself swirling through that island.
(I had loved the winter storms when I was a boy. I had gone out into them
sometimes and held my arms out -- imagine a boy of ten doing that -- as if it
were my own power that brought the wind and rain.)
But this particular night: the rain was incessant. Maddening.
The lightning, a constant flashbulb in the eyes. Thunderheads roared overhead
like drunken nordic gods.
He must've been swearing under his breath. Given his limp and what he had
always called the "old pain," doubly frustrated, for at one point his left
shoe went into the mud, deep.
He left it there, a few feet from the entrance to the smokehouse.
The smokehouse itself was hardly much of a shelter. It was a small one room
stone house that had at one time been the place where meat was hung to smoke
and dry. It had been kept locked for as long as anyone could remember.
He had the key with him.
4
He would not have been considered tall by any stretch of the imagination, but
there was something in his broad shoulders and barrel chest that indicated a
large, imposing figure. Upon entering the small room, he smelled old smoky
odor and the pungent stink of earth in the air. Behind him, the door slid shut
-- creaking with the wind that howled outside.
He spun around, annoyed.
The rain had been coming down in sheets for nearly an hour. He directed the
flashlight's beam to the small, thick square of glass that was the only
window. The sky darkened with clouds and a somber grayness. The door banged
back and forth briefly, then shut again. Branches scraped the low rooftop.
He glanced back into the darkness, perhaps.
Then up -- the ceiling, highest at about six feet, was arched. He looked back
at the door and its window.
The square of light through its glass.
Twilight outside. Rain began hitting the window.
He shot the flashlight beam around the ceiling. He glanced down along the
rough stone walls.
He might have heard what would be a clash of metal, like a knife being
sharpened on stone.
He heard sound -- perhaps someone behind him?
The first slice came down on his shoulder.
He dropped the flashlight.
The next slice caught him on the back of the leg. Something stung the place
between his shoulder blades. A cold blade thrust into his back.
After an hour, the flashlight's beam grew feeble.
He was not yet dead.
The door to the small stone structure swung back and forth, and then closed
again.
It grew dark outside, from descending night and the storm.
Branches of the old hawthorn tree
scraped the roof as the rain battered down. Lightning flashed across the
gently sloping hills and rocky pastures, followed by a rolling boom of
thunder.
The storm, the end of a powerful Nor'easter that had begun off the coast
further south and had ridden up into New England on the Jet Stream, howled and
screamed and groaned through the night.
The lights went out at the farmhouse that stood less than a mile away as the
rain turned gradually to sleet and then snow with the falling temperature.
The first snow of the year swept through on the heels of the storm.
It frosted the fields and woods.
There was something about the New England woods, and in particular, this
island off the Atlantic coast, off Massachusetts, that created a very real
isolation within the beauty of a winter storm. The first snow, a dusting
across the pines and oaks, with the last stalks of the balding pasture thrust
up through the glittering whiteness.
A pastoral moment: the farmhouse in the distance, the stone smokehouse, the
swirls of fine snow, the smell of woodfire in the air from chimneys near and
far, and the night, as it descended.
5
This is the story of my family.
Call me Nemo, for that was the name my sister saddled me with when I was a
kid. It stuck. Other things stuck from childhood, as well -- including the
Brain Fart.
The Brain Fart was a week in the memories of my brother, sister, and I that
had just disappeared without warning. We imagined it, after awhile, as an
enormous gassy cloud that had shot out of our ears and floated like mist
somewhere above the island before drifting off to sea. By the time I'd turned
28, that Brain Fart seemed to hover in the air again. None of us knew what had
caused the Brain Fart. It had seemed spontaneous, although a certain amount of
fever had accompanied it. We had lost a week, which, for children like us,
seemed like an entire season.
I suspected even then that the week of the Brain Fart was important, and in
the end, I guess it was.
But the beginning was my father, and how he had walked into the smokehouse and
set in motion a mystery that drew me back to the island in the first place.
And how my sister, Brooke, had found him.
________________________________________
Copyright 2002 Douglas Clegg. All rights reserved. Used here with permission.