Eighteen
And so I told them everything I’d figured
out—to this point.
“Dr. Eastbrook,” I said, “was doing experiments
on cloning human beings—grown human beings. He was,” I continued, “both
a success and a horrible failure.”
“What do you mean?” asked Harriet.
“I mean that he was able to clone
humans—but that something in his experiments had gone horribly wrong.”
The others were just staring at me. “Take
Blue Boyle,” for example.
“You take him,” joked Harriet.
I smiled—and went on. “The doctor took
that poor kid, offered his family some money, and proceeded with experiments.”
“This is horrible,” said my new mother.
“He wanted a son,” I said as softly and
kindly as I could.
“Oh,” replied Mother.
I went on: “And you could see the
failures, couldn’t you? The increasing size—the increasing cruelty—the
vanishing humanity?”
I continued. “The only thing I can figure
is that the real Blue died in his first experiment—and with the tissue the
doctor had saved, he created ‘new’ ones, each one even less human than the previous
one.
“We saw the doctor looking for new bodies
down on Middle Island. And later, too, in other places. Everyone was told that
Gil’s body was never found at Niagara Falls—but the doctor had found
him—and created a new Gil, who seemed to retain few of the traits of the old
one. Except the way he looked.”
I noticed I was making everyone very uncomfortable.
“Should I go on?”
“How much more is there?” asked Father.
“Not much. In that lighthouse up on the
Lake Erie island I found a key device that he created and used. Recognizing what it probably
was, I destroyed it.”
“So that’s why he was after us,” sighed
Father.
“Yes.”
“And probably still is,” he said.
“Oh, most definitely is,” I said.
But here’s what I wondered then—and still
wonder. Several times that oddest collection of people—actual and fictional—had
rescued me. How was that possible? And if they had rescued me, why did Dr.
Eastbrook and the Boyles keep coming back?
***
In Oklahoma we lived fairly close to a
horse ranch, open to the public, a place we often went that summer after all
the craziness had happened—at first, we just wanted to look at all the horses
they had. Then, gaining courage, we began to go on horseback rides there. It
wasn’t too long before most of us (not all: I won’t name names) became pretty
good at it.
The trails on the ranch led through some
stands of woods, and it was fun pretending we had returned to those old
horseback days. We made up silly games, chasing one another as if we were
pursing enemies—or fleeing from them.
Till one day—we didn’t have to pretend.
***
That day, all four of us were riding
together through a remote part of the ranch that we had never really explored
before. And then I heard a voice cry out—a voice I recognized: “There they
are!”
And thundering toward us were Dr.
Eastbrook and a number of others, all mounted on huge black horses that looked as
if they’d once belonged to the Headless Horseman.
No one had to tell us to ride away—as
fast as we could. But those black horses were far too fast for us. They seemed
… supernatural.
Our pursuers were now riding on both
sides of us, and I could see several versions of Blue Boyle, looking even more
huge than before, and, in a sad surprise, Gil.
All of them except Gil had swords.
But just as they were getting ready to
swing them at us, the sky opened, and down some kind of ramp raced more horses.
“Look!” I yelled.
And everyone did—including our pursuers.
Each horse bore a ghostly character I
knew: William Godwin, Mary Shelley, Herman Melville, James Fenimore Cooper. And
a new one—Washington Irving—who carried a huge sword. Irving rode swiftly alongside
Dr. Eastbrook—and it seemed as if all these ghostly horses ran without touching
the ground. At all.
Irving swung his sword, and Dr.
Eastbrook’s head flew from his shoulders and began bouncing along behind
him—yelling in pain, cursing—as if it were still alive. Right in front of us,
the earth opened up and all the black horses and all of their riders were
sucked down into it, Aunt Claire holding the door open, then slamming it after
them. Only Gil and Blue Boyle—the oldest one—remained.
As Gil stopped by me, he looked at me,
and I saw on his face an enormous expression of relief. He spoke in a sad
voice, “Thank you, thank you, thank you”—over and over again.
And after he had ridden/floated off, Mary
said to me, “We are related, you know?”
“I feel it,” I said. “But can you answer
a question for me?”
“Surely.”
“Who were/are Aunt Claire and Mr. Leon?”
“That’s two questions,” she
smiled. “But I’ll answer them. They are both the spirits of your stories—all
stories have them. You are just very fortunate that yours are very powerful.”
She smiled again and rode over to join
the others. Blue followed, a very puzzled look on his face.
Then those ghostly friends, waving their
swords in triumph, flowed back upwards, Gil and Blue Boyle among them, and as
they disappeared into the clouds and haze, I could have sworn I heard voices
singing “Ghost Riders in the Sky.”
We looked around: No sign that anything
had just happened. Our horses, panicky only moments ago, were again calm and
moved along as they usually did. We all looked at one another.
“I think it’s finally all over,” I said.
***
Later, I asked Father: “Why did Blue
Boyle join them?
“I’ve thought about that,
too,” he said, “and I think it’s because he did nothing wrong. He was a victim,
not a perp.”
***
Not long after, I was online with John,
back in Ohio.
“So,” he wrote, “anything special go on recently?”
I sent him a picture of the Headless
Horseman.
His reply: “LOL.”
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