Shady Acres and Darker Places
By Doug Lane
()
About this ebook
The premiere collection of fantasy, horror, and macabre short fiction by writer Doug Lane, this book gathers 21 tales from appearances in magazines, online publications, and anthologies between covers for the first time. (Trade paperback edition.)
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Shady Acres and Darker Places - Doug Lane
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Shady Acres
and darker places
stories by
Doug Lane
.Midnight-to-Three Publishing
Houston, TX
2018
Copyright © 2018 by Douglas J Lane
All rights reserved
Published by Midnight-To-Three Publishing
Houston, TX
978-0-9895417-5-6 (limited edition hardcover)
978-0-9895417-3-2 (trade paperback)
978-0-9895417-4-9 (ebook)
The Golem-Maker of Buchenwald
appeared online at Abyss & Apex Magazine, July 2016 • Good Bait
, Erin Beiber’s Wild Ride
and To The Devil, A Goat
appeared in Seasons In The Abyss, ed. by Jack Burton, Blood Bound Books, February 2011 • The Sinking Tomb
appeared online at Fiction365.com, March 2013 • The Last Ride of the Hole In The Well Gang
appeared in Sugar & Rice #3, October 2014 • Dial ‘C’ For Consultant
appeared in We Were Heroes, ed. by Martin T. Ingram, Martinus Publishing, February 2016 • The Jail In Shinjuku Ward
appeared online at Pure Francis, February 2009 • Lorem Ipsum Donald
appeared in Tales of the Unanticipated #31, March 2014 • Ark Of The Revenant
appeared in The Midnight Diner 5.1, January 2014 • Fear #7
appeared online at Stupefying Stories Showcase, October 2016 • Every Hero An Hombre, Every Wolf A Clown
appeared online at The Saturday Evening Post, February 2016 • One Man’s Famine
appeared in Bards and Sages Quarterly, October 2011 • The Shaman In Relief
appeared in Two In Left Field, Midnight-to-Three Publishing, July 2013 • Shady Acres
appeared online at Pure Francis, March 2009 • The Trapdoor
appeared in Blood Rites, ed. by Marc Ciccarone, Blood Bound Books, January 2013 • Tacklesmooches
appeared in Tales of the Unanticipated #30, Spring 2010 • Physicians’ Ball
appeared online at Pure Francis, January 2011 • In Days Of Auld Cheil’s Crime
appeared online at douglasjlane.com, December 2016 • Bobby Boxster In Eight Measures
appeared in Washington City Paper, January 2015 • Withering
appeared in Beyond Imagination, September 2015. All stories have been revised from their original publications.
Originally published as a limited edition hardcover.
First trade paperback publication November, 2018
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Contents
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Glimpsed In Shadow (An Introduction)
The Golem-Maker of Buchenwald
Good Bait
The Sinking Tomb
The Last Ride of the Hole In The Well Gang
Dial ‘C’ For Consultant
The Jail in Shinjuku Ward
Lorem Ipsum Donald
Ark of the Revenant
Fear #7
Every Hero An Hombre, Every Wolf A Clown
To The Devil, A Goat
One Man’s Famine
The Shaman In Relief
Shady Acres
Erin Beiber’s Wild Ride
The Trapdoor
Tacklesmooches
Physicians’ Ball
In Days of Auld Cheil’s Crime
Bobby Boxster in Eight Measures
Withering
How The Sausage Was Made (A Postscript)
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.DEDICATION
She supplied me with books,
encouraged my interest in writing,
was one of my first constant readers.
I know, I know. It’s what moms do.
But there wouldn’t be a book
for you–or for me–without her.
For my mom,
Patricia Lane
(1946 - 2017)
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Glimpsed In Shadow (An Introduction)
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What’s in the dark?
You’ve caught glimpses of things from the corner of your eye, had that shiver in the shade that can’t be explained as a simple absence of light. There are shadows, and then there’s darkness within them–places of curiosity and fear, of wonder and melancholy.
We’re compelled to check them out, even when the flesh prickles and the urge is to back away. We can’t help it.
We’re only human. Most of the time.
This collection flies in the face of convention. They (the mystical, all-seeing They) say a collection should be one thing–all SF, all fantasy, all horror, all whatever flavor. They say it needs to be this way if you’re going to find the intended audience. There’s probably some truth to that. The marketing of the film BUCKAROO BANZAI was all blind men and elephants: was it an adventure? A comedy? Satire? Pulp homage? It didn’t fit in the box, and so it couldn’t be sold like things in a box.
To me, stories are stories. The great Ray Bradbury had no qualms about putting a journey to Mars alongside the examination of a murder alongside a celebration of summer running, all within the same covers. He simply told stories. Genre is as much a tool as tense, person, grammar. It lets you frame an argument. The trail rider trying to round up stray cattle and the starship captain trying to account for all the life-pods are basically in the same pickle; the ‘who-what-where’ comes down to how best to probe the main character’s conflicts.
This book contains tales that range from fantasy to horror, with excursions in the supernatural, light science fiction, and straight-up literature. Their lengths vary widely, as do their moods. This is simply the way I tell stories. As this may be our first date, I didn’t want to give you the wrong impression.
But they do have a common thread: all of them wind a path through darker places, whether those trips are fantastical (raising a golem), horrific (literally falling apart), whimsical (breaking a curse), or grounded in the real-world (finding yourself after addiction). Darkness is merely gradients, the dance between the angle and amount of light and the size of the obstacle. Some shadows, you can leap.
Others, you’re bound to fall into.
I wonder what you’ll glimpse if you do.
Doug Lane
October, 2018
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The Golem-Maker of Buchenwald
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WE WERE TOLD YOU can create a golem.
The man in the suit flicks ash from a thin black cigarette into the ash tray.
Gerstmann turns from the TV behind the bar–Mayor Koch making proclamations about the ongoing city newspaper strike–and studies the man. Sheffer’s card says he’s a director of cultural affairs for the Israeli Minister of the Interior. His suit makes the bar look cheap.
Gerstmann sips his gimlet. Frowns. Too much lime juice. I don’t do that anymore.
"But you are Ira Gerstmann?"
One of them.
Born in 1930 in Erfurt, Germany to Bernard and Ruth Gerstmann.
Friends called him Bernie.
Your father died in the camps, but your mother was liberated and emigrated to the United States with you.
And her sister Miriam. There was also a schnauzer. A most unpleasant dog.
"Then you are the golem-maker of Buchenwald."
Gerstmann dismisses the notion with a wave. There was no golem at Buchenwald. Camp resistance had no need of one. They had guns and patience and a short-wave radio. All the magic they needed.
Men who were there say they saw it rise.
I’m a man who was there. The only thing that rose in Buchenwald was a cheer, when the Americans came through the gate. You know how legends build. They begin as pebbles at the summit. Those fall. More join them, and more, until they beget an avalanche that buries the foot of the mountain. Try finding the original pebbles in the rubble.
Sheffer’s lips hint at a smile. Then tell me the truth behind the legend.
The truth? They gave a hyperactive ten-year-old something on which to focus his energy, so the guards didn’t stave in his head.
Gerstmann has already said more about Buchenwald in a half-hour than he has in the decade preceding. Much later, I successfully raised a golem. Once or twice. Assistance to old women or rabbis with pest problems. But as I said, I don’t do that anymore.
Sheffer takes a drag. Smoke drifts from his scowl. The story has fallen short of his expectation. Gerstmann hears Bubbe Nussbaum in his head. Expectations are like eyelids, Ira. Everyone has a couple, and they can’t see past them. The woman was a Polish iron-work made flesh. She was sent to Ravensbrück early in the war, reduced to ghosts and memory. Gerstmann cannot recall her face now without a photographic prompt, of which there remain only two. Two more than many.
Why not?
Sheffer asks.
Gerstmann thinks of five reasons, broken-necked and splashed across the front page of the Post. His stomach churns anew. How did you find me?
"Ben Kastner works with my office. He told me you come here. He says you attended mesivta together."
True enough.
Gerstmann makes a silent vow to rap Ben Kastner in the mouth the next time he sees him, for talking out of school.
Plus I’ve seen pictures at the Ministry of the golem you raised for Irene Rosen.
Pictures?
Her rabbi found it in her basement after she died. It was there with an envelope containing your correspondence on the matter.
Gerstmann wonders if the woman simply died before she could destroy it, or kept it as some kind of memento. He feels naked. What became of it?
It was inert. After he photographed it, the rabbi destroyed the form. Dust to dust.
Gerstmann takes another sip and pushes the glass away, the drink devolving as quickly as his control of the conversation. What need does the Minister of the Interior of the State of Israel have for a golem?
Sheffer lifts a briefcase from beside his chair. He pops brass latches. I trust you will keep what I’m about to tell you a secret.
I’m 43, unmarried, and unemployed. Who would I tell?
Sheffer sets a folder on the table and pushes it across. We need someone to protect Avner Wollman.
Gerstmann opens the folder. He flips through a series of newspaper articles and fuzzy photocopies as Sheffer narrates. Wollman is a German Jew. An Auschwitz survivor. His testimony helped tie the noose around the neck of Franz Hössler at the Belsen Trial. Heard of him?
Gerstmann shakes his head. If he doesn’t recognize the name, the story is familiar. He’s incapable of remembering all the people who have testified at some time to something done in Germany or Poland or the dozen other countries that had camps, a fraternity chartered by history.
He’s a cultural treasure,
Sheffer continues. A writer, photographer and poet. He started by self-publishing his own experiences. He was also one of the first survivors to return to the camps after the war to document them. He recorded oral histories of their inmates, as well as people in the towns nearby. He’s highly regarded as an outspoken champion of human rights and an enemy of war criminals. He is thus very important to Israel.
Gerstmann skims pages. Samples of the man’s work. Interviews. Lecture transcripts. Photographs of places for which Gerstmann’s memory needs no prompt. Where is he now?
Rio de Janeiro. He went there in 1974 on vacation and decided to stay. Keeps to himself. I’d call it retirement, but he still publishes the occasional op-ed.
And from who or what does he need protection?
For four years, Wollman flew under the radar. But in the last few months, people have begun harassing him. There are individuals down there still sympathetic to the Nazis–expatriate German nationals, Holocaust deniers, that ilk. Wollman doesn’t want a thug with a gun. He thinks that invites trouble.
Sheffer flips to the back of the folder, to a color snapshot of Wollman sitting at a table outside a cafe. The man’s face is old, creased, hard. His gaze bores up from the image, annoyance at being photographed.
You think a golem is the answer?
Sheffer points at the photo. He does. The Minister thinks they’re a fairy tale.
And you?
Sheffer shrugs. I’m a little more open to the notion of such things.
Gerstmann sighs. "I don’t do this anymore."
I have three men on my list. The other two are both elderly rabbis, only rumored to have raised golems. You, I’ve seen proof. I’d prefer you.
He takes another drag, the tip of his cigarette rage red, then fading. You would be well-compensated for your work. Monetary payment for time and effort. A personal letter of thanks from the Minister of the Interior. I also understand you’ve been unemployed for six months.
Gerstmann’s tone cuts. Does the Ministry also know my brand of toothpaste and my shoe size?
We can also offer you a job. The Ministry maintains an office in lower Manhattan, if you don’t mind clerical work.
Gerstmann studies the man for some sign of mirth. All he sees through the haze of cigarette smoke is grim determination.
I need to think about it,
Gerstmann says, with no real intention to give it another thought.
~o~
Gerstmann takes the D train to Bay Parkway in south Brooklyn and walks home. The autumn night is crisp. Winter is going to sting. As he passes other homes in the row, he sees his house is dark. He always leaves the porch light and a living room lamp illuminated.
He steps onto the small porch and sees the notice on the door. The Con Ed logo is more festive than the words that leap out at him in the glow of the street light: service disconnected,
account past due,
other utility company hate-speak toward the unemployed. He stuffs the notice in his pocket and unlocks the door.
Yeah, the power jockeys were here,
a voice says behind Gerstmann. He turns to see Milkin, his neighbor for the last ten years, on the adjacent porch. Milkin’s a busybody, his eyes always watching, his lips crowded with probing questions. Money troubles?
No. Just a crossed payment. A miscommunication.
Oh.
Milkin pauses. Because it seems like you’ve been out of work for a while.
He stops again, as if the words need to queue in his mouth. You know, my younger son has a lot of pull at his firm. They respect his opinion. He worked on that Son of Sam thing. I can ask him to float your resume to their accounting department.
Thanks, Milkin. I’ll let you know.
I mean, it won’t be easy. You don’t find a lot of guys your age just starting at law firms. What are you, 50?
I’m 43, but thanks for the extra birthdays. Goodnight, Milkin.
Gerstmann enters the house and closes his door.
~o~
Gerstmann sits on the old wooden stool in his basement, candlelight flickering on the walls, the porcelain tub, his workbench. He sets aside his bowl of cereal. He uncorks a bottle of Kentucky bourbon and pours two