The Burial
John Michael Hurt
It was a Saturday and I was sittin’ on the porch
with a glass of sweet tea with the sweat dryin’ on my chest. I’d been out on
that old Farmall Cub tractor mowing the side lot. I don’t know if the damn
thing is going to run from one year to the next, but somehow it keeps goin’. I guess
I’ll sell it for a bona fide antique one of these days. Bobby come across the
back lot and up through the yard about three in the afternoon. He’d asked me if
he could hunt on the back part of my property that morning and I told him it
was okay. Hell, I don’t ever get out there to hunt anymore anyway, so it don’t
really matter to me. There’s even some pheasant out there that come over from
where this rich guy tried to plant them on his property so he could hunt ‘em.
Of course, they come over to my place where there wasn’t anybody shootin’ at
‘em. He wanted to come over here to shoot, but I didn’t much like his attitude,
so I said no. I figured Bobby was just coming to check in and tell me he was
goin’ home. When he got close, I could see that somethin’ wasn’t right. He was
pale and his eyes were wide, and he was breathing hard. He come right up on the
porch and I said “Well hi, Bobby. Did you do any good?”
He looked around quick, like he was
looking to see if anybody else was there listenin’. I could see then he was
real scared.
I said, “What in the world’s wrong,
boy. You look like you seen a ghost.”
“Seth, you gotta come see
something. Come on. I need you to see this. I need your help,” he said looking
at me with one of the strangest looks I’ve ever seen on a man. My first thought
was that he’d accidentally shot somebody.
“Bobby, what’s happened? Did you
shoot somebody or something? Are you hurt?” I asked him straight up. I know
about how the law treats stuff like this. I could easily go from ‘helping
Bobby’ to ‘being an accomplice’ if he had done somethin’ wrong.
“No!” he kind of half-shouted,
half-whispered. “Well… no but I gotta show you. I need you to see.”
Now, right off, I could see he’d
been drinking a little bit, but that wasn’t any big deal to me. Lots of folks
carried a little somethin’ out with ’em when they were huntin’. And he didn’t
seem drunk, just agitated and upset. Bobby wasn’t any kind of a bad guy. I’d
known his family since I’d been a kid. He’d done some farmin’, and when he had
a hard time making ends meet, he started working over at the paper mill in
Winston. He got in a fight over at the Mountain View Lounge last year, but it
wasn’t nothin’ really. Just some argument over a pool game. -- So I just
thought there had been an accident or somethin’.
After I pulled my boots back on, he
started back over the field with his twelve-gauge shotgun still in his right
hand, like it had been ever since he come up to the house. He was walking fast,
and I had to tell him to slow down twice before we got to the back part of the
property. I was breathin’ hard by then. We come across that little crick that
kinda divides my property in half – it was so shallow we just walked on the
rocks – and went into the big twenty-acre field I keep cleared off back there.
I just mow it for hay sometimes, but this year I didn’t, and he took me out
into the middle of the field in the waist-high grass. This was late summer and
the broom sage was already yellow.
There on the ground was a person –
sort of. The face didn’t look like either a man or a woman. It was wearing
clothes that were kind of like Roman clothes, but also kind of space-age looking.
I know, that don’t make no sense, but there it is. I can’t say it any better,
and neither could you, even if you saw it yourself. What was crazy was that it
had wings. It had big wings like goose wings only a lot bigger coming out of
its shoulders in the back. I thought about those cloning experiments I read
about in the paper, and about how they mixed frog genes or something with
tomatoes to make them better. Anyhow, there it was. It had been shot twice.
There was two holes in its chest. There wasn’t any chance it could have
survived. It was laying sort of face up but the wings underneath caused it to
be pushed over at an angle like. There was a lot of blood soaking into the
ground. It just looked like any regular blood. I’ve sure seen enough of that to
know.
“Shit,” I said. I know my eyes must
have been bugging out. “Bobby, did you shoot him..uh, her, it?”
“Well it just popped up and took
off,” he yelled defensively. “I didn’t know what it was. It was just kinda
automatic. What is it, Seth? What is it?” He was looking at me like I was going
to tell him it was okay. Like this thing had been raiding my corn or somethin’,
and I appreciated him taking it down.
“Damn, Bobby,” I whistled through
my teeth, “It looks like a goddam angel to me. I don’t know what else in the
world it could be. I don’t think they can make people like that, at least not
yet.”
“Oh, shit,” Bobby said in a
whisper. “What am I gonna do Seth? I done killed an angel. Do you think God
knows I killed it?” He was really panicking.
“Well, God’s supposed to know
everything,” I said thinking hard, “But if he did know, and if he was mad about
it, I think you’d already know that by now.”
Bobby threw the shotgun down on the
ground. It was a pretty new Browning, so I knew he was really upset. It was an automatic. That’s how he was able
to get off two shots so quick. The angel laid there with its eyes open starin’
at the sky. It had a beautiful face and its eyes were dark brown. Its arms and
legs looked slim and strong, kind of like a marathon runner or something. I was
in Vietnam and I’ve seen people die, so…… that part didn’t affect me…. so much.
I felt like I ought to close its eyes, but….. I was really kind of afraid to
touch it, as though I would be acceptin’ part of the blame for killin’ it if I
did. When I saw that Bobby wasn’t going to do it, I finally reached down and
pulled its eyelids closed.
That was when I had a sort of like
a flashback. I was in a hamlet outside of Dong Ha and we come in there after
the Viet Cong had been in there the night before, and we hit it too, and a lot
of people got killed by both sides. There was a lot of what they used to call
‘collateral damage.’ That meant non-combatants…civilians….. had gotten killed.
There was this girl that was dead in front of this one hooch. It was like she
had just laid down there to rest, but when I come up, I saw she was dead, but I
couldn’t see a mark on her. She was so pretty and she had these dark eyes. I
reached down and closed her eyes, and the angel’s eyes were just like that, so
I guess that’s why I thought about it. I
hadn’t remembered it really for a long time.
“Damn, Seth.” Bobby said. He was
sort of fuming around. “What are we going to do with it?”
“We?” I said, but knowin’ that I’d
have to help. “You shot it!”
“You got to help me hide it,” he
said and he seemed as desperate as I ever saw anybody act before.
“Who are you hidin’ it from?” I
asked him. “God? The police? The police
ain’t gonna know about this, and God already knows!” I just threw my hands up.
Bobby was crying now. “Just help me
bury it or something. Just help me. Please help me Seth.” He was really scared
and panicked.
“Okay, okay,” I said, “Take it easy
now, Bobby.” Like I said, he wasn’t a bad fellow. No worse than anybody else. I
went back to the house and got a shovel and a grubbin’ hoe and some sack cloth.
When I come back, we dug a deep hole in the bank of the little crick there and
put the angel in and covered it with the bags. It was really light to carry,
like a kid…. I looked at its face one last time as we laid it in the ground. It
was still really beautiful, even in death. We had to fold the big wings behind
it to lay it down. They had feathers, but they was soft. Then we buried it, and
I said a few words over it. We did our best to cover the place up so’s you
couldn’t tell there had been anything there.
We walked back to the house without
talkin’, and Bobby went back to his truck and went home. I think he was still
shaking when he drove off.
Well, If you was to ask Bobby about
it now, I know he’d say he don’t know
what you’re talkin’ about. But that’s just because he’s afraid to remember. I
remember it very well and sometimes I see that angel’s face in my dreams……but I
have forgotten exactly where she is buried. Maybe that’s for the best.
Michael Cimino-Hurt / 2014