Dan Simmons - A Winter Haunting

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2024-12-23
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DAN SIMMONS
A WINTER HAUNTING
This is for Karen
For he was speechless, ghastly, wan,
Like him of whom the story ran,
Who spoke the spectre hound in man.
—Sir Walter Scott,The Lay of the Last Minstrel , Canto VI, v. 26
The hounds of winter, they harry me down.
—Sting, “The Hounds of Winter”
Contents
Epigraph
One
Forty-one years after I died, my friend Dale. . .
Two
I never left Illinois during my eleven years of life, but. . .
Three
It was snowing when Dale awoke to dull morning. . .
Four
There was more than a shower in. . .
Five
The last time Dale had seen his young lover. . .
Six
I said that I did not know the details of my own death. . .
Seven
Dale had driven only a few miles south out of. . .
Eight
Dale sat in the reeking Buick. . .
Nine
Driving to pick up his truck that afternoon. . .
Ten
During the next few weeks at the farm. . .
Eleven
Two weeks after Clare Hart joined. . .
Twelve
>Welcome back, Dale.
Thirteen
Boy, I hate movies like that.”
Fourteen
I couldn’t have told Dale what was waiting for him. . .
Fifteen
Driving into the Blackfeet Reservation that lovely autumn day. . .
Sixteen
It was almost dark by the time Clare and Dale. . .
Seventeen
At this point I begin to worry about Dale.
Eighteen
About three months after Dale began his affair. . .
Nineteen
I knew what Dale had been thinking the instant he. . .
Twenty
During the last months that Clare Hart was. . .
Twenty-One
And then what happened?”
Twenty-Two
During their last months together, before and after. . .
Twenty-Three
It snowed all the rest of Christmas Day.
Twenty-Four
For two weeks after Clare had left him. . .
Twenty-Five
The five black dogs returned shortly after midnight.
Twenty-Six
The sunrise of the last day of the old year. . .
Twenty-Seven
Dale coughed, blinked, and tried to breathe.
Twenty-Eight
C.J. Congden was sitting against the back wall. . .
Twenty-Nine
On the third day, I rise again and leave this place. . .
About the Author
By Dan Simmons
Praise for
Copyright
About the Publisher
ONE
FORTY-ONEyears after I died, my friend Dale returned to the farm where I was murdered. It was a
very bad winter.
I know what you’re thinking. There’s the old journalism anecdote of William Randolph Hearst needing
someone to cover the Johnstown flood and sending a young cub reporter. It was the kid’s big break. The
next day the novice cabled back this lead to Hearst’s paper: “GOD SAT ON A LONELY HILL
ABOVE JOHNSTOWN TODAY, LOOKING DOWN IN SORROW AT NATURE’S FIERCE
DESTRUCTION.” Old-timers swear that Hearst did not hesitate ten seconds before cabling back this
response: “FORGET FLOOD STORY. INTERVIEW GOD.”
I say I died forty-one years ago and your response is,Forget the story about Dale. Who cares? Tell us
what it’s like to be dead—what is the afterlife like? What is it like to be a ghost? Is there a God?
At least, these would be my questions. Unfortunately, I am not a ghost. Nor do I know anything about
any afterlife. When I was alive, I did not believe in ghosts or heaven or God or spirits surviving the body
or resurrection or reincarnation, and I still do not. If I had to describe my current state of existence, I
would say that I am a cyst of memory. Dale’ssense of me is so strong, so cut off and cauterized from the
rest of his consciousness by trauma, that I seem to exist as something more than memory, something less
than life, almost literally a black hole of holistic recollection formed by the collapsing gravity of grief.
I know this does not explain it, but then I do not really understand it myself. I know only that Iam and
that there was a—“quickening” might be the best word—when Dale decided to return and spend the
winter at the farm where I once lived and where I died.
And, no, I have no memory of my death. I know no more of that event than does Dale. Evidently one’s
death, like one’s birth, is so important as to be beyond recall.
When I was alive I was only a boy, but I was fairly smart and totally dedicated to becoming a writer
someday. I spent years preparing for that—apprenticing myself to the word—knowing that it would be
many more years before I could write a real short story, much less a novel, but practicing with opening
paragraphs for stories and novels nonetheless.
If I were borrowing an opening for this tale, I would steal it from Thackeray’s boring 1861 novelLovel
the Widower:
Who shall be the hero of this tale? Not I who write it. I am but the Chorus of the Play. I make remarks
on the conduct of the characters: I narrate their simple story.
Thackeray’s ominiscient “I” was lying, of course. Any Creator stating that he is a simple Chorus and
impassive observer of his creatures’ actions is a hypocrite and a liar. Of course, I believed that to be true
of God, on the few occasions when I considered that He might exist at all. Once, when Dale and Mike
and I were having a chickenhouse discussion of God, my only contribution was a paraphrased quote
from Mark Twain: “When we look around at the pain and injustice of the world, we must come to the
ineluctable conclusion that God is a thug.” I’m not sure if I believed that then or now, but it certainly
shocked Mike and Dale into silence. Especially Mike. He was an altar boy then and most devout.
But I’m digressing even before I begin the story. I always hated writers who did that. I still have no
powerful opening line. I’ll just begin again.
Forty-one years after I died, my friend Dale returned to the farm where I was murdered. It was a very
bad winter.
Dale Stewart drove from western Montana to central Illinois, more than 1,700 miles in 29 hours, the
mountains dwindling and then disappearing in his rearview mirror, endless stretches of autumn prairie
blending into a tan and russet blur, following I-90 east to I-29 southeast to I-80 east to I-74 south and
then east again, traveling through the better part of two time zones, returning to the checkerboard
geometries of the Midwest, and forcing himself down through more than forty years of memories like a
diver going deep, fighting the pain and pressure that such depths bring. Dale stopped only for food, fuel,
and a few catnaps at interstate rest areas. He had not slept well for months, even before his suicide
attempt. Now he carried drugs for sleeping, but he did not choose to stop and use them on this trip. He
wanted to get there as soon as possible. He did not really understand why he was going there.
Dale had planned to arrive at Elm Haven in midmorning, tour his old hometown, and then drive on to
Duane’s farmhouse in the daylight, but it was after eleven o’clock at night when he saw theELM
HAVEN exit sign on I-74.
He had planned to move into Duane’s old house in early or mid-September, allowing plenty of time to
enjoy the fall colors and the crisp, sunny autumn days. He arrived on the last day of October, at night, in
the last hours of the first Halloween of the new century, hard on the cold cusp of winter.
I screwed up,thought Dale as he took the overpass above I-74 and followed the night-empty road the
two miles north toward Elm Haven.Screwed up again. Everything I haven’t lost, I’ve screwed up.
And everything I lost, I lost because I screwed it up .
He shook his head at this, angry at the bumper-sticker-stupid self-pity of the sentiment, feeling the fog of
too many nights with too little sleep, and punched a button to lower the driver’s-side window. The air
was cold, the wind blowing hard from the northwest, and the chill helped to wake Dale a bit as he came
out onto the Hard Road just a mile southeast of Elm Haven.
The Hard Road. Dale smiled despite himself. He had not thought of the phrase for decades, but it
immediately came to mind as he turned back northwest onto State Highway 150A and drove slowly into
the sleeping town.
He passed an asphalt road to his right and realized that they had paved County Road 6 between Jubilee
College Road and the Hard Road sometime in the last few decades—it had been muddy ruts between
walls of corn when he had lived here—so now he could drive straight north to Duane’s farmhouse if he
wished. He continued on into Elm Haven out of curiosity.
Morbid curiosity, it turned out. The town itself seemed sad and shrunken in the dark. Wrong. Smaller.
Dead. Desiccated. A corpse.
The two business blocks of Main Street along the Hard Road had lost several buildings, disorienting Dale
the way a familiar smile with missing teeth would. He remembered the tall facade of Jensen’s Hardware;
it was now an empty lot. The A & P, where Mike’s mother had worked, was gone. He remembered the
glowing windows of the Parkside Cafe: it was now a private residence. Lucky’s Grill on the other side of
the street appeared to be some kind of flea market with stuffed animals staring out at the Hard Road
through dusty black eyes. The Corner Pantry market was boarded up. The barbershop next door was
gone. Bandstand Park was worse than gone—the tiny yard-sized space was now cluttered with a tiny
VFW hall and various tin sheds, the bandstand torn down, the trees uprooted and their stumps cut out,
and the war memorial hidden by weeds.
Dale made a U-turn and drove back east, turning north onto Broad Avenue. The clouds were low and
the wind was cold. Leaves blew across the wide street ahead of his Toyota Land Cruiser, their dry
scraping sounding like the scuttle of rats. For an instant, fatigue convinced Dale that thesewere rats,
hundreds of them, rushing through the cones of his headlights.
There were no streetlights on Broad Avenue. The great elms that used to arch over the wide street had
fallen victim to Dutch elm disease decades ago, and the trees planted since seemed smaller, stunted,
irregular, and ignoble in comparison. Some of the fine old homes along Broad still stood back behind
their wide lawns, the houses dark and silent against the night wind, but like an old war veteran at a
reunion, Dale was more aware of the missing houses than of the few survivors.
He turned right onto Depot Street and drove the few blocks to his childhood home across the street from
where Old Central School had stood.
His home of seven years was recognizable, but just barely. The huge old elm that had stood outside his
and Lawrence’s bedroom was gone, of course, and the new owners had long ago paved the short
driveway and added a modern garage that did not go well with the American-square design of the house.
The front porch was missing its railings and swing. The old white clapboard had been replaced with vinyl
siding. Jack-o’-lanterns and a bulging straw man in bib overalls had been set out on the porch in
celebration of the holiday, but the candles had burned out hours earlier, leaving the jack-o’-lanterns’
triangular eyes as black and empty as skull sockets; the rising breeze had scattered the straw man’s guts
to the wind.
Old Central, of course, was gone. Dale had few clear memories of the summer of 1960, but he vividly
remembered the building burning, embers flying orange against a stormy sky. Now the once-grand
square city block was filled with a few ratty-looking ranch houses—dark and incongruous amidst the
older, taller homes on each side of the square—and all signs of the former school building and its huge
playground had long since been eradicated.
The tall sentinel elms around the school block were gone, of course, and no trees had been planted in
their place. The tiny houses on the square—all built after 1960—looked exposed and vulnerable under
the black sky.
There were more gaps in the rows of homes facing the former schoolyard. The Somerset place next to
Dale’s old home was just gone, not even its foundation remaining. Across the street from the Somersets’,
Mrs. Moon’s tidy white home had been bulldozed into a gravel lot. His friend Kevin’s family home—a
ranch house that had seemed modern and out of place in 1960—was still there on its slight rise of
ground, but even in the dark Dale could see that it was unpainted and in need of repair. Both of the grand
Victorian homes north of Kevin’s house were gone, replaced by a short dead-end street with a few new
homes—very cheap—crowded where the woods had once started.
Dale continued slowly east past Second Avenue, stopping where Depot Street ended at First. Mike
O’Rourke’s home still stood. The tiny gray-shingled house looked just as it had in 1960, except for the
rear addition that obviously had taken the place of the outhouse. The old chickenhouse where the Bike
Patrol had met was gone, but the large vegetable garden remained. Out front, staring sadly across First
Avenue at the harvested fields, the Virgin Mary still held out her hands, palms outward, watching from
the half-buried bathtub shrine in the front yard.
Dale had seen no trick-or-treaters. All of the homes he had passed had been dark except for the
occasional porch light. Elm Haven had few streetlights in 1960 and now seemed to have none at all. He
had noticed two small bonfires burning in yards along Broad, and now he saw the remains of another
fire—untended, burned down to orange embers, sparks flying in the strong wind—in the O’Rourke side
yard. He did not recall bonfires being lighted for Halloween when he was a boy here.
Dale turned left past the small high school and left Elm Haven behind, turning west on Jubilee College
Road at the water tower and accelerating north on County 6, hurrying the last three miles separating him
from Duane McBride’s farmhouse.
TWO
INEVERleft Illinois during my eleven years of life, but from what I’ve seen of Montana through Dale’s
eyes, it is an incredible place. The mountains and rivers are unlike anything in the Midwest—my uncle Art
and I used to enjoy fishing in the Spoon River not far from Elm Haven, but it hardly qualifies as “river”
compared to the wide, fast, rippling rivers like the Bitterroot and the Flathead and the Missouri and the
Yellowstone. And our lazy sitting on a bank and watching bobbers while we chatted hardly qualifies as
“fishing” compared to the energetic fly-fishing mystique in Montana. I’ve never tried fly-fishing, of course,
but I suspect that I would prefer our quiet, sit-in-the-shade, conversational creekside approach to
catching fish. I’m always suspicious of sports or recreational activities that begin to sound like religion
when you hear their adherents preaching about them. Besides, I doubt if there are any catfish in those
Montana rivers.
Dale’s corner office on the campus of the University of Montana, his former family home in the old
section of Missoula, and his ranch near Flathead Lake are all alien to me but fascinating. Missoula—for a
city of only about 50,000 people—seems cordial to the things I probably would have loved had I lived to
be an adult: bookstores, bakeries, good restaurants, lots of live music, a very decent university, movie
and live drama theaters, a vibrant downtown section.
Dale’s psychiatrist, a man named Charles Hall, had his office over one of these older used bookstores.
Dale had been seeing Dr. Hall for the last ten months before his trip back here. Dale had first visited the
psychiatrist two days after he had set the muzzle of the loaded Savage over-and-under shotgun against
his temple and pulled the trigger.
Dr. Hall’s office was small but comfortable—books, artwork on the wall, a window looking out onto
leaves, a desk off to one side, and two worn leather chairs facing each other with a small glass table
between. The table held only a pitcher of ice water, two clean glasses, and a box of Kleenex. Dale had
needed the Kleenex only on his third visit, when he’d had a spring cold.
During their last session in mid-October, the leaves had been red outside the windows and Dr. Hall had
been concerned about Dale’s decision to spend the winter in Illinois. Eventually, however, the subject
changed from emergency phone numbers and the necessity of Dale’s getting in contact with another
doctor to provide the necessary antidepressants and sleeping pills.
“You understand that I strongly advise against your plan to spend the winter alone in Illinois,” said Dr.
Hall.
“Noted,” said Dale.
“Does my advice make any difference?”
“I’m spending a hundred and twenty-five dollars an hour for it,” said Dale.
“You’re spending a hundred and twenty-five dollars an hour for therapy,” said Hall. “To talk. Or in your
case, Dale, not so much to talk, but to get the prescriptions you need. But you’re still going to spend the
next ten months or so alone in Illinois.”
“Yes,” said Dale. “But only nine months. The usual gestation period.”
“You realize that this is a classic pattern.”
Dale waited and listened.
“A spouse dies and the survivor moves away—especially men, Dale—and tries to ‘start a new life,’ not
realizing that what’s needed at such a time is continuity, contact with friends, a support system . . .”
“My spouse didn’t die,” said Dale. “Anne is alive and well. I just betrayed her and lost her. Her and the
girls.”
“But the effect is the same . . .”
“Not really,” said Dale. “There’s no continuity here. My home here in Missoula is off-limits except for
supervised visits and divorced-daddy Sunday pickups. I hate that. And you agree that spending another
winter at the ranch is a bad idea . . .”
“Yes, of course,” said Dr. Hall.
“So I’m headed back to the Midwest to spend part of my sabbatical. Back to The Jolly Corner.”
“You never explained why your friend Duane called his home The Jolly Corner,” said Dr. Hall. “Did he
see it as a happy place? You said that the boy lived with just his father and that his father was an
alcoholic. Was he being ironic? Is it possible that an eleven-year-old would use such irony, or have you
supplied that irony in the decades since then?”
Dale hesitated, not sure how to respond. He was embarrassed that Hall did not recognize the allusion to
“The Jolly Corner.” If his psychiatrist didn’t know Henry James, how smart could he be? Should he tell
Hall that Duane hadn’t told him about “The Jolly Corner” when he was eleven—Duane had died at age
eleven—but had used that name for his farm when Dale had first moved to Elm Haven in 1956, when
both boys were eight? An eight-year-old hick farm kid had known the Henry James story, and now
Dale’s $125-an-hour shrink had never heard of it.
“I think Duane McBride is the only real genius I’ve ever met,” Dale said at last.
Dr. Hall sat back in his chair. Dale thought that for a psychiatrist, Hall did not have a very good poker
face. He could see the skepticism in the doctor’s slight rise of eyebrows and forced neutral expression.
“I know,” continued Dale, “genius is a powerful word. I don’t use it often . . . hell, Inever use it. And
I’ve met a lot of powerfully intelligent people in my lifetime—writers, academics, researchers. Duane is
the onlygenius I’ve known.”
Dr. Hall nodded. “But you knew him only as a child.”
“Duane didn’t live long enough to get out of childhood,” said Dale. “But he sure was a strange kid.”
“How so?” Dr. Hall put his yellow notepad on his lap and clicked his ballpoint pen open—a habit that
Dale found distracting and vaguely annoying.
Dale sighed. How could he explain? “You would had to have met Duane, I think, to understand. On the
outside, he was a big slob of a farm kid—fat, sloppy, lousy haircut. He wore the same flannel shirt and
corduroy pants all the time, summer and winter. And remember, this was back in 1960—kids actually
dressed up for school in those days, even in little hick towns like Elm Haven, Illinois. Nothing fancy, but
we had school clothes and play clothes and knew the difference, not like the slobs in school today . . .”
Dr. Hall’s supposedly neutral expression had shifted to the very slight frown that signaled that Dale had
wandered from the subject.
“Anyway,” said Dale, “I met Duane shortly after my family moved to Elm Haven when I was in fourth
grade, and right away I knew that Duane was different—almost scary, he was so smart.”
“Scary?” said Dr. Hall, making a note. “How so?”
“Not really scary,” said Dale, “but beyond our understanding.” He took a breath. “All right, summer after
fifth grade. The bunch of us boys used to hang around together in a sort of club we called the Bike
Patrol, like a junior Justice League of America . . .”
Dale could tell that Hall had no idea what he was talking about. Perhaps male psychiatrists had never
been boys. That would explain a lot.
“Anyway, our clubhouse was in Mike O’Rourke’s old chicken coop in town,” continued Dale. “We had
a sprung sofa in there, an old easy chair from the dump, the shell of a console radio . . . that kind of crap.
I remember one night in the summer after fifth grade when we were bored and Duane started telling us
the story of Beowulf . . . word for word. Night after night, reciting Beowulf from memory. Years later,
when I read the epic in college, I recognized it . . . word for word . . . from Duane’s storytelling on those
summer evenings.”
Hall nodded. “That’s unusual for someone that age, to even know of Beowulf.”
Dale had to smile. “The unusual part was that Duane told it to us in Old English.”
The psychiatrist blinked. “Then how did you understand . . .”
“He’d rattle on in Old English for a while and then translate,” said Dale. “That autumn, he gave us a
bunch of Chaucer. We thought Duane was weird, but we loved it.”
Dr. Hall made a note.
“Once we were hanging around and Duane was reading a new book . . . I think it was something by
Truman Capote, obviously a writer I’d never heard of at the time . . . and one of the guys, I think it was
Kevin, asked him how the book was, and Duane said that it was okay but that the author hadn’t gotten
his characters out of immigration yet.”
Dr. Hall hesitated and then made another note.Maybe you don’t understand that, thought Dale,but I’m
a writer—sometimes I’m a writer—and I’ve never had a goddamned editor make a remark that
insightful .
“Any other manifestations of this . . . genius?” asked the psychiatrist.
Dale rubbed his eyes. “That summer Duane died, 1960, a bunch of us were lying in a hammock out at
Uncle Henry and Aunt Lena’s farm, just down the road from The Jolly Corner, it was night, we were
looking at the stars, and Mike O’Rourke—he was an altar boy—said that he thought that the world all
existed in the mind of God and he wondered what it would be like to meet God, to shake hands with
Him. Without hesitating a second, Duane said that he’d worry about that because he suspected that God
spent too much time picking His mental nose with His mental fingers . . .”
Dr. Hall made no note, but he did look at Dale almost reproachfully. “Your friend Duane was an atheist,
I take it?”
Dale shrugged. “More or less. No, wait . . . I remember Duane telling me one of the first times we hung
out together . . . we were building a three-stage rocket in fourth grade . . . he told me that he’d decided
that all the churches and temples to the currently fashionable gods . . . that’s what he called them, ‘the
currently fashionable gods’ . . . were too crowded, so he’d chosen some minor Egyptian deity as his god.
Learned the old prayers, studied the rituals, the whole nine yards. I remember him telling me that he’d
considered worshiping Terminus, the Roman god of lawn boundaries, but had decided on this Egyptian
god instead. He thought the Egyptian god had been ignored for many centuries and might be lonely.”
“That is unusual,” allowed Dr. Hall, making a final brief note.
Now Dale did have to grin. “If I remember correctly, Duane taught himself how to read Egyptian
hieroglyphics just for that purpose—to pray to his forgotten little god. Of course, Duane spoke eight or
nine languages by the time he died at age eleven and probably read a dozen more.”
Dr. Hall set aside his yellow legal pad, a sure sign that he was becoming bored with the topic being
discussed. “Have you had any more dreams?” he asked.
Dale agreed that it was time to change the subject. “I had that dream about the hands again last night.”
“Tell me about it.”
“It was no different than the previous ones.”
“Yes, Dale, that’s more or less the definition of ‘recurring dreams,’ but it’s interesting how one can find
slight but important differences when the dreams are actually discussed.”
“We haven’t discussed dreams much.”
“That’s true. I’m a psychiatrist but not—as you know—a psychoanalyst. But tell me about the hands
dream anyway.”
“It was the same as always. I’m a kid again—“
“How old?”
“Ten, eleven, I don’t know. But I’m in our old house in Elm Haven. Sleeping in the upstairs room with
my little brother, Lawrence . . .”
“Go on.”
“Well, Lawrence and I are talking, there’s a night light on, and Lawrence drops a comic book. He
reaches down and . . . well, this hand comes out from under the bed and grabs him by the wrist. Pulls him
down.”
“A pale hand, you said last time.”
“Yes. No. Not just pale, white . . . grub white . . . dead white.”
“What else about the hand . . . or is it hands, plural?”
“Just one hand at first. It grabs Lawrence by the wrist and pulls him off the bed before either one of us
can react. The hand—the white hand—is weird, long fingers . . . I mean,way too long . . . eight or nine
inches long. Spiderlike. Then I grab Lawrence by the legs . . .”
“He has already been pulled under the bed at this point?”
“Just his head and shoulders. He’s still screaming. That’s when I see both of the spidery white hands,
pulling and cramming him under the bed.”
“And sleeves? Cuffs? Bare arms?”
“No. Just the white hands and blackness, but blackness darker than the dark under Lawrence’s bed.
Like the sleeves of a black velvet robe, perhaps.”
“And you don’t succeed in saving your brother?”
“No, the hands pull him under and then he’s gone.”
“Gone?”
“Gone. As if a hole has opened up in the wooden floor and the hands had pulled him in.”
“But your brother—in real life—is still alive and well.”
“Yes. Sure. He runs an insurance investigation agency in California.”
“Have you discussed this dream with him?”
“No. We don’t see each other that much. We talk occasionally on the phone.”
“But you’ve never mentioned the dream?”
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DANSIMMONSAWINTERHAUNTINGThisisforKarenForhewasspeechless,ghastly,wan,Likehimofwhomthestoryran,Whospokethespectrehoundinman.—SirWalterScott,TheLayoftheLastMinstrel,CantoVI,v.26Thehoundsofwinter,theyharrymedown.—Sting,“TheHoundsofWinter”ContentsEpigraphOneForty-oneyearsafterIdied,myfriendDale. . .Two...
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时间:2024-12-23