Treat Us Like Dogs and We Will Become Wolves
Treat Us
Like Dogs
and
We Will Become
Wolves
Also by Carolyn Chute
The Beans of Egypt, Maine
Letourneau’s Used Auto Parts
Merry Men
Snow Man
The School on Heart’s Content Road
Treat Us
Like Dogs
and
We Will Become
Wolves
a novel
by
Carolyn Chute
Grove Press
New York
Copyright © 2014 by Carolyn Chute
Jacket design by Charles Rue Woods
Jacket artwork by Michael Tedesco
Author photograph by Joanna Eldredge Morrissey
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without permission in writing from the publisher, except by a reviewer, who may quote brief passages in a review. Scanning, uploading, and electronic distribution of this book or the facilitation of such without the permission of the publisher is prohibited. Please purchase only authorized electronic editions, and do not participate in or encourage electronic piracy of copyrighted materials. Your support of the author’s rights is appreciated. Any member of educational institutions wishing to photocopy part or all of the work for classroom use, or anthology, should send inquiries to Grove/Atlantic, Inc., 154 West 14th Street, New York, NY 10011 or permissions@groveatlantic.com.
Published simultaneously in Canada
Printed in the United States of America
ISBN 978-0-8021-1945-2
eISBN 978-0-8021-9193-9
Grove Press
an imprint of Grove/Atlantic, Inc.
154 West 14th Street
New York, NY 10011
Distributed by Publishers Group West
www.groveatlantic.com
Greetings to all Leo’s station alumni in Little Falls.
This mere book is dedicated to our hero and friend,
Leo Kimball
(in Heaven).
And also in Heaven,
Marian MacDowell of the MacDowell Colony, to her,
and to all her descendant rescuers in the wings.
And, as ever, everything is because of Beek of Beektown. ♥
Author’s note:
Treat Us Like Dogs and We Will Become Wolves is one of several novels that make up the School on Heart’s Content Road “four-ojilly,” a series of overlapping or parallel books that focus on different characters and their place in the story’s key events. Characters who play major roles in one or more of the books may be only walk-ons in others. Each book stands alone. No need to read them in a certain order.
Welcome
to
Treat Us Like Dogs and We Will Become Wolves
. . . as told by reporter Ivy Morelli and many other witnesses, spies, agents, friends, and foes, testimonies verifying and conflicting, some very large, others somewhat tiny.
Author’s Note #2
There is a character list at the very back of this book for helping with identifying important and semi-important characters. Don’t twist your head trying to keep every character straight. Continually referring to the list is not necessary. As you read along, characters who are meant to matter a lot will become obvious. On the other hand, I, myself, love character lists because I like to refresh myself on what characters look like and their connection to others. Maybe you do, too.
List of Icons
Home (the St. Onge Settlement)
The grays
Neighbors
The voice of Mammon
Out in the world
The screen insists, grins, cajoles
Claire and Bonnie Loo and other women who run things at the Settlement, usually speaking to us from the future
The Bureau
Others speaking from the future
Progress
Ivy Morelli (reporter for the Record Sun)
The forests of planet earth
Brianna Vandermast (Bree) and Catherine Court Downey
The FCC
Jane Meserve speaks
History as it happens.
History (the past)
Waste management
History
(The old, old, old past)
An old, old, old Chinese curse: “May you live in interesting times.”
BOOK ONE:
HIS SUN
BOOK TWO:
WOLVES
BOOK THREE:
BLOOD BROTHERS
(From a future time.) An excerpt from one of the hundreds of letters written by Gordon St. Onge, which remain in the custody of federal authorities (this one having been stuffed up an agent’s sleeve during a Settlement public event and snuck out):
“I would smile if I heard that someone, perhaps a madman, perhaps a sane man, burned every single school building in this world to the ground.”
YEAR 2000
Or was it 1999?
Well, thereabouts, one or the other.
The years do blur.
In those years,
big things
happened in America.
But you never
heard about some of
them. They were erased.
Here’s
the
story.
BOOK ONE:
His Sun
JUNE
From a future time, Claire St. Onge remembers the way it all went. She speaks.
So you’ve heard about us before, doubtlessly, how this tiny world, our home, our “chez nous,” cradled in the lap between two mountains, got blasted straight out into the eye of America. Yes, America, what one of our adopted teenagers here calls “The Land of Panicked Mice.” But really it was us, the family of the Settlement, who were the mice, the outside world a hale and majestic foot, the triumph of that foot set in motion by one small hand.
At 7:33 p.m., a message left on the answering machine of the Record Sun columnist and feature writer, Ivy Morelli.*
* Remember, there is a character list at the end of this book.
“Hello. I’m not going to tell you my name. I’m sure there’s the possibility of retribution by the individuals involved if you choose to proceed with this. There are several of us who are worried about what we see as very serious abuses to children at the so-called school located on Heart’s Content Road near Promise Lake in this town . . . Egypt. We’re aware of others who have voiced concern to authorities and to one or two other newspapers. We are furious about the lack of even an eye blink of interest shown! Unreturned phone calls. Passing the buck. Rudeness. Treating us like we are crazy. Like we are crazy . . .
At 7:59 p.m., on the same evening, on the same answering machine of the same Ivy Morelli.
As before, the caller doesn’t introduce himself, though it is clearly a different voice. Voice tells of the “school” in Egypt. Voice is dull, weighted by a sort of weary grief. “. . . and we’re talking here, ma’am, about children who are beaten, worked like animals, who have easy access to drugs, who are probably sexually abused, live in improper sanitation . . . and the parents . . . whenever anyone has seen them, seem like they are in some kind of trance, probably high . . . or, you know, could be victims of fanatical religious brainwashing. We all know these things happen. Waco, for instance. We’re all grown up, aren’t we? Of course, none of us would dream we’d get it right here in Maine. But here you have it . . .”
Next day, a different voice. A woman, a firm-sounding woman, not one to let t
hings slide.
“. . . and we know of a woman who has a grandson in this so-called school. A thirteen-year-old who hasn’t even learned to read yet! And she says that he hasn’t even been pushed to do so. She doesn’t want to reveal her name, either, but I’m sure there are plenty of others who will talk if you were to investigate. The place is a work camp, a prison for children. And there are guns. So you see what kind of people we are talking about here. We know about other calls you have received concerning this situation so we know you know there’s something going on at that place. If you could state in writing that you would not reveal our names, we’d be more than happy to meet with you in person. One of us will call again. Thank you very much . . . CLICK.”
Ivy Morelli listens to the snippet of dial tone before the next recorded message. She is picking at the rough weave of her skirt, frowning.
Claire St. Onge in recollection of that summer.
Always there were crows. Came for the cracked corn I spread on the broad sill of the big windows to my tiny sunroom, my morning room. Two chairs, some baskets, and a toadstool-shaped table, which is only big enough to hold a cup of coffee and a book. It is carved and streaky with grain and time. Looks like a relic.
One of the crows must have been a lost pet. Very chummy. And had had his tongue split or whatever cruel thing it is that is done. The first time I heard him, I thought it was the tinny voice of a small radio. I found he’d gotten in through the kitchenette door, and claimed a bedpost. The crow’s voice was urgent, “Church at ten!” He cocked his head. “Church at ten!”
Another message on Ivy Morelli’s machine.
“Hello. I am calling in reference to the Home School, a sort of military compound situation on Heart’s Content Road in North Egypt, on land owned and lorded over by a fellow named Gordon St. Onge. It is an urgent matter and I hope that one of us is able to connect with you soon.
I am unable to reveal my name, phone, fax, or e-mail for the reason that there are probably enough firearms in that St. Onge place . . . and explosives to eliminate fifty government buildings . . . so taking care of a few concerned citizens like us would be nothing to them . . .”
Ivy jots down a few words and slashes across the soft pink lines of her reporter pad.
This man’s voice is a different voice from those who have called over the last few days. And yet equally indignant. And she knows that those who have called her editor, Brian Fitch, or reporters in other departments here, have all been indignant, even a little discomposed.
Brian tells her, “Just keep on trying to nab somebody at DHS and the supe of the SAD, which Egypt is in. You know, Ivy, nothing goes into print without the official lowdown first . . . ’less you can charmingly get inside that compound and tape the grunts of laboring children and the crackings of the whips.” Brian flutters his eyes. “Meanwhile, good luck reaching some living breathing officials who know anything or want to spill it. There’s something here. But. We servants of the news shan’t be allowed the crumbs until we grovel a bit first.” He turns away, then back. “Jesus, this whole country gets fruitier by the minute. This might be real.”
Claire St. Onge† speaks.
† Remember the character list at back of this book.
When the call came last night, a few of us were there in Gordon’s kitchen. As he took the phone, we could tell by the way he held his shoulders, and how his face iced over, that the person on the other end was danger. When he hung up and said it was a Record Sun reporter, I felt the blood stop in my arms and jaws. He had, yes, agreed to an interview! He had always warned us of the commercial mainstream press. Now he became all gooey and helpful as he said good-bye. One of Gordon’s many selves. A traitor, even to himself. And to us. He’d be taking us down with him, right?
Claire St. Onge again.
And then on another morning on my white-picket gate, hopping left, then right, the crow. “Oh nooo! My floors!” and “Oh nooo! My floors!” he ranted.
This morning with the iris beds in head-spinning sweetness, he swept down, his wingspan always a little jolt to me, making the sun blank out like a missed heartbeat, and there on the sill he admired the cracked corn feast. But he didn’t eat. Arranged his classy black suit of feathers, did one high-stepping turnabout, and said into my eyes, “The ending was lousy.”
When Ivy Morelli shows up at the St. Onge property to get her story.
Dark windshield, dark glasses, dark “modified bowl” haircut tinted with violet clipped to a hot edge at the nape of her neck. Thudding beat of the radio. Gas pedal to the floor, fixed there rather continuously by the flabby little plastic heel of her dress sandal. The all-American driver. The race! The win! Time ticking in the blood. The engine straining to please. And Ivy Morelli wears a little stripy dress, her mouth set hard, the hard young modern woman, expression hard as nails.
Here it is up ahead. The St. Onge residence, as it has been described to her. A plain typical old farm place, gray with white trim. Cape and ell. Long screened-in piazza that was once open. There are the old lathed columns behind the haze of screening. And the dooryard, sandy with scattered plantain leaf. A nice big old tree. Everything tidy and well-kept. Seems there’s even fresh paint riding on the air.
Ivy Morelli’s sports car skids to a stop. Car door swings open. Nearly as fast as the speed of light she gathers her bag and camera from the passenger seat and steps out into the settling dust. She studies the bank of solar collectors across the roof of the ell. These collectors are strange. Big and boxy. She pushes her dark glasses to the top of her head, scratches a few notes on her slim reporter pad. She casts a cold eye over everything. Her eyes are, yes, a frigid blue in dark lashes. She is not tall. Her hand with pen, small.
“Hmmmm,” she says to herself, gazing dreamily up into the rivuleted limbs of the old ash. Big, dumb, old, dutiful beast. Not really much for shade. Just a ghostly gray pale shadow spread on the sand and out across the tiny front lawn of halfheartedly mowed grass, down into a ditch, then out onto the warm tar road.
Her eyes widen. “Look, Ivy!” she tells herself. She wiggles her pen. There on the great girth of the ash, a wooden sign, hand painted with letters that dribble like blood. OFICE.
Ivy Morelli snorts, then says to herself, “A school, yessir, with a misspelled sign.”
There are so many doors, especially along the ell and shedways. “Where’s the wacky sign that reads: ‘PARKENG’?” she asks herself with narrowed eyes.
She decides on a door with a single window covered with a pink curtain. She gives it a couple of sharp raps. No cool shade here, just the ugly bare truth of sun. And silence. She knocks again. Waits. Nothing.
She knocks again. Two real THWACKS. She squares her shoulders. Small person, small, yes, but.
She speaks indignantly. “Okey-dokey, pard’ners. So what’s up?” Anyone looking out at her from inside this house, seeing her here in her short striped dress and sandals, would certainly surmise she’s the reporter who called last night and arranged this appointed time. The camera, for heaven’s sake! The narrow lined pad and pen. She is clearly not a vacuum cleaner salesman!
She glances around the yard again and counsels herself, “No kiddie jungle gyms. No toys. No catcher’s mitts or basketball hoops. Take note of this.”
She looks at the dormer windows above, a silvery fog of brand-new screen and homey ruffled curtain. Cups her hands around her mouth. “HELLO!!!!!”
No answer.
Ivy Morelli drops her sunglasses back down onto her face and turns toward the little sandy rutted parking lot. She is so very young. On fire with the present. Her dark glasses reflect two sharp hot little suns. Her wristwatch flashes. Her small blue and pink tropical fish tattoos swim around her slim bicep. Her seven bracelets are both bright and noisy. Her earrings shriek light, spinning into lighter light. Her violet tinted inverted bowl of hair has an actual metal sheen. Her stride across the lot is filled with purpose. All that clinking-clatter. She is almost an after-image of a well-arm
ored knight. Will she be triumphant? Will the crowds cheer: such intrepitude!
The field rises up. Hazy. Red clouds of devil’s paintbrushes and the washed-out purples of vetch. Daisies, like a cheery galaxy of reachable stars! And all the greens, witchgrass, clovers, nettle, all on their toes celebrating heat, hell, being their heaven. And then the mountain, hot and close. And the other mountains humped politely behind and beside the bigger guy. Blue, spiked with hot black spruce and paler pine. Maple and beech and other leafy vegetable greens . . . trillions of individual leaves. Holy cow! And leaping lizards! It boggles the mind.
So this is the St. Onge property. Nine hundred acres in the boonies of Egypt. And how many ghosts of babies corralled within? How many Bibles? How many guns?
“What do you suppose that is?” Ivy Morelli asks herself. A peculiar thing up there along the tree line. Looks like the rusty steel roof of a pig shed, only perfectly round.
A prickly coolness (a warning?), moves up the back of Ivy’s damp neck. Fear. Just a few seconds of ugly, unfettered terror.
She looks back at the house. Over at her car. Down at her sandals, her feet spread apart in the sand. She tosses her shimmering bowl of hair. “Okay, Ivy. It’s okay. Easy girl. Holy horse whinnies!”
She heads for the field. The vetch and daisies grab and break at her shins. Heat shimmers in a yellowy way over the rusted roof of the faraway construction. She remembers a movie about prisoners of war in Korea kept in small corrugated steel sheds in unbearable heat. All the torture and grimness of that movie! And she was only a child. Why was she at that movie? Yeah, a goin’ out movie. Popcorn? Soda in a cup? Who took her to see it? She can’t remember. Because all that was gentle and loving in the real world of Ivy Morelli no longer existed as the keepers of the POW camp peeled away the steel doors to find another succumbed man or to drag a live one out to be “interviewed” once again.