No.
I had said that before but, naturally, Mr. Holmes
wanted to be sure.
No, I’ve never seen this person before. I realize it
is on our page in the newspaper, but it must have some significance for you,
not me. I can’t make out the person very well at all. Looks like a photo of a
drawing.
Very alert you are my dear boy. Clearcut photographs
of Houlihan are few. I can only relate her appearance on our page to the
reports of sightings of her in our area. She had been away quite some time. She
returns with a colleague, a Mr. Bielseley. She has a justifiable reputation of
being a firestarter. She rarely lends herself to an effort to put flames all
through a structure. Many times past she has only mentioned the possibility of
fire and, after a “contribution” to her general fund, shall we say, no fire
eventuated. Mr. Bielseley apparently is new to the game. He may act as the
go-between and negotiates deals on her behalf. She has never communicated
directly with any “customers.” He may initially pocket the “fee,” take a commission,
and Houlihan has the remainder.
I see beside her photo on our page is a shot of the
Four Houses.
Yes, apparently They have an interest in them. The
obvious indication is that Houlihan and the Four Houses and fire are as one
thought.
I have been by the Four Houses a few times. Not
distinguished in any way. But they look alike, except for trim and different
colors. Big, wide, actually squat, houses of two stories. Each has a full basement.
The North House, as it is called, faces North, and there is an alley on its
south side. Across the alley, further south, is a half-hearted courtyard. The
remaining three of the four houses share that courtyard. The West House faces
West into an adjacent lot containing a ranch style house. South House faces a
major diagonal of Cheyenne running from downtown and out past Pioneer School.
East House is on a major N-S street that ends at the Frontier Days venue. W and
E are for rent. N and S are for sale. None are occupied, no furnishings. At
least there is a reduced chance of injury should any or all come to a fiery
end. (In my imagination I find all ablaze simultaneously. Such big houses on
fire but with no wind, so straight up goes the flames and heat and castoff
debris.)
Mr. Holmes - Fire
may happen, though even that seems a smallish proposition for Them. Perhaps it
is a distraction, though Houlihan’s abilities could be put to broader use
through surrogates. Nevertheless, the actual doing of a fire has always been
hers alone and no one has ever been burnt.
Me – What a way to evaluate one of Their projects,
only is it likely to be favored by Them if people will be hurt.
Ah yes, true enough.
Naturally you are going to the area of the Four Houses
rather soon.
I shall repair soon enough.
(I, meanwhile, would be opening yet heavier, bigger,
more costly textbooks to acquire knowledge I need not have except for my being
here. I was then, before my return, a slightly above average student. I now
remain so.)
Mr. Holmes returned from
his foray to the Four Houses with nothing amiss to report. He was hailed more
than once by the people across the street. They called him “Sherlock.” Next
time, surely there will be a next time, he will be in disguise.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The next issue of the newspaper had a photo on our
page of a beheaded Mr. Holmes! He was lying in the street that South House
borders on. It was twilight. Rather a shock to be sitting in your armchair, by
yourself, as was Mr. Holmes, when you come across a photo of yourself,
headless. So someone took the trouble to clothe a dummy approximately as Mr.
Holmes and knock off the head. This being the era it is, the “body” was
photographed from the shoes looking along toward the head where there was an
indication of something missing beyond the neck. No gore, no blood. The caption
for the photo – Is this the end of Sherlock?
I made no comment on the photo, nor did Mr. Holmes.
Next issue, our page, had an account of Mr. Holmes seen in the area “lurking”
about the Four Houses. This was reported by “people across the street.” Nothing
more than that. No connection being made to how he recovered his head and has
soldiered on.
Our page was getting a workout in that every day
brought more “news.” Except, for it seemed at first glance, the next issue. But
Mr. Holmes was running his fingers along the outside edge of the page and then
its gutter. “Perforation.” He frowned. Then he brought out his magnifying glass
and carefully surveyed where his fingers had been.
Ah, my boy, we have a coverup here.
What?
He went over to the card table and placed the paper
flat on it and opened to our page.
Please hold this magnifier for my sight at the edges
as I move along with the knife and so saying he brought out from his coat a
very small jackknife. He then began to cut along the perforated line at the
outer edge of the paper. I moved the magnifier as he moved the knife. Then the
operation was repeated on the gutter. Underneath was a gigantic black headline:
THE ALIENS HAVE LANDED. So black was the ink that it smelled faintly. I was
cautious enough not to touch it for fear it would smear.
Mr. Holmes – What idiotic poppycock!
Me- I, I…
The “aliens” are occupying the Four Houses, said Mr.
Holmes, as he read the caption. “They wish us no harm and will be leaving
soon.”
Mr. Holmes – Whatever are They up to?
Me – I, I…
It seems They are focusing on the Four Houses as a
locus for something yet to come. I now must give more fodder for “the people
across the street” as I visit the area. Care to accompany me?
I, I…have parsing to do on some fifty sentences.
Ah well, the student’s life.
Yeah, well watch out for ray guns and worse-than-death
Empire games.
Certainly. I’m off, and as myself. My disguise kit is
getting vacant.
I did have sentence diagramming to get done. The darn
sentences were ones we would never read, much less write. If done at the
blackboard during class, I tried to position myself at the far right so the
spillover as I edged down and to the right ran up against the end of the board.
I couldn’t very well write on the wall, now could I? I gave generous space to
my left so that my pal there had to trail down to the right into the abyss as
modifiers modified modifiers unto almost infinity.
Mr. Holmes, on his return, said “the people across the
street” included Houlihan and Bielseley.
Houlihan?
Yes, she may be reconnoitering and about to issue a
threat for fire.
Aliens? Four Houses? Fire? I think They have gone
weird.
Certainly if there is rationality herein, it escapes
me.
Could it have been someone else? Not Houlihan?
She stood at the curb. She is under five feet and has
steel frames, small lenses. Her hair, going gray, is always in very tight
ringlets all about her head. Never a dress, always clad as if a workman. Called
jeans? Plaid shirt, long sleeves. Brown. The jeans or whatever are brown also.
Thin mouth. Never any animation of the face. Yellow bright eyes of a predator.
It was Houlihan.
Bielseley?
Average height and build. Also in brown. He wears a
soft hat, folded down in front to partially cover his face. Broad face, pallid.
Grey eyes. Gloves at all times which are leather and brown of course. Large
boots, as if he can never find the right size and fit. Oh yes, he and she were
there.
They saw you?
Of course.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
So came the next issue of the newspaper and on our
page was a photo of Mr. Holmes “lurking” in the Four Houses area. (Someone in
costume as Mr. Holmes. Though the real Holmes was there.) The “people across
the street” (pats) smelled something flammable in the air. (Mr. Holmes did
not.) Also mentioned was a dismissal of someone having floated the possibility
that aliens had come to occupy the Four Houses. Not being of the pats (so it
was implied) it was branded as what-will-they-think -of-next stupidity.
Next, in this cavalcade of Four Houses goings-on, Mr.
Holmes was seen to have emerged from the bushes on one side of South House’s
veranda and then charged across that very wide veranda and dove into the bushes
on the other side. Light of various colors were flashing upstairs in South
House. Also this “Mr. Holmes,” as seen by some of the pats, had a beard. A
Zeegler?
The “our page” output was at a constant flow of Four
Houses and Mr. Holmes locked in a common conception. If you had one, you had
the other. By then, all sightings of Mr. Holmes were of imposters. Although Mr.
Holmes was there, in disguise. He mingled freely with the pats. As the days
rolled on, he saw Houlihan, not Bielseley, only once more on the night a fire
began upstairs in the East House. Response was swift and only burn marks on the
wall and floor resulted. Mr. Holmes and the authorities knew of this
concentration on the Four Houses. So it was not if, but when. And what it all
could portend for Them vs us, we didn’t know. Nevertheless, fire was coming. It
got to the West House one night. The pats crowd saw “Sherlock” there before and
during the fire that was of more than a burn but less than structural damage.
Then the unexpected happened. They jailed Mr. Holmes!
For “observation” and his “protection.” Houlihan was also in jail. So they
could be trying to stop a burn-down but they couldn’t continue such indefinitely.
I visited Mr. Holmes in jail. He seemed OK. As probably was Houlihan. He
counseled patience. A few days went by. On another visit, Mr. Holmes said he
had secured an attorney for Houlihan and that the attorney, upon Houlihan’s
release, was to present her with enough money so she could retire to Mexico.
She was released.
One night later, the North House was on fire. No doubt
about it this time. A great ball of fire, like a smaller Sun, was in the house.
Something more than the house itself was burning. The heat was monumental for
blocks. Houlihan had disappeared. Of course. And then I met with Mr. Holmes a
third time.
Mr. Holmes – I have a revolver in the laboratory in
your basement.
OK.
Arm yourself and frequent Woolworths in the town
center.
To what purpose?
Bring in Bielseley.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
I went to Woolworths. It was a Thursday. I knew the
guy behind the counter was wondering what I was doing not in school. In those
days, it was school or a certain elsewhere. I much preferred school. My Mom, I
said, would be in shortly. I was to see a doc about a sore back. So I said. He
shrugged. I ordered a banana spilt which Bielseley was reputed to favor.
Honestly I had no problem with a revolver and encountering Bielseley. I wasn’t
certain I would see Bielseley. Mr. Holmes thought he would come in to contact
others, some of the pats could be about. With Mr. Holmes in jail, who was to
carry on? I was here for a purpose allied to what Mr. Holmes was doing here in
Cheyenne. I had shot lots of Zeeglers. So bring on Bielseley. But why should he
show? Besides, a banana spilt I hadn’t had in ages. Woolworths put it in a
glass schooner like for ocean going if it had not been glass and, anyway I
could never finish it. But there it sat, on the long counter that curved off to
the left far down the store. Mirrors on the wall lined the entire counter
opposite the seats. A lunch counter really but it was mid-afternoon. Just me
and the guy behind the counter who busied himself at the far end and a guy
sitting at a table to my right, reading the paper.
And Bielseley. He had come in the side door, as I had done
that puts you immediately at the lunch counter. The front door led to the
merchandise area where noise could be heard as women (all women by the way)
were perhaps appraising and ready to purchase goods. It was Woolworths – the
Five and Dime. Bielseley was beside me
on my right. Hi, kid, how’s Sherlock?
No need to express surprise. So he knew me. Don’t know
how. He sat down two chairs from me at the counter. Hey barkeep, he turned and
said to the counter guy. A spoon. I pulled the revolver from a jacket pocket as
he was turned. I held it under the counter pointing mostly at his kneecaps. Yes
sir, I could and would fire it. Bielseley got his spoon, the counter guy moved
back to where he had come from. Bielseley leaned in toward the spilt. He
noticed the revolver. He dug into the end of the spilt that was toward him. He
took a big portion. He downed it extravagantly, like a much appreciated luxury,
his mouth moving every which way. Then he slowly stood up. The guy at my right
reading the newspaper dropped it on the table. He had a gun leveled at Bielseley. A cop.
That had been easy. Bielseley in jail. And Mr. Holmes
had got out. Why I asked. Gratitude he said. From whom? Houlihan. North House.
We were home, in the basement. Mr. Holmes had delayed
his exit from jail, but I wanted home and school and Mom and siblings and
friends and books and TV and …. Not jail.
I do thank you for apprehending Bielseley.
Nothing to it.
Oh, by the way, Bielseley is out.
What? How?
A bribe. He bribed a guard.
And so what was all this about putting you in the
cooler?
Our opposition wanted to associate me with what was
occurring at the Four Houses.
Enough repetition and it would become fact – you as an
arsonist.
Correct.
Oh, wait a minute. This may have been the best plan
They have ever come up with. You out of circulation, and They could do whatever
they wanted.
Except for you, of course.
Yeah, right, I flunk out while opposing them at every
turn. Really, the setup was to establish the bizarre linked to you and then
move it down to more commonplace arson.
Yes, in some ways this was truly the better plan. A
guilt by association from false witnesses and my reputation used to put me
where They wanted me – at the scene They selected with Houlihan as a “smoke
screen.” How clever, me behind bars and They had far more freedom in which to
operate.
But it didn’t come off eventually as they had wanted.
They did not choose wisely. Houlihan had too much
gray.
How’s that?
Retirement, shall we say, loomed large for her. I soon
enough suspected as much, so she was offered freedom and funds and she honored
the implicit agreement.
The North House. But what of Bielseley?
As I said, I know he is gone.
But he had just got there! So he had money for a bribe
that he should have paid to Houlihan.
Why?
Well, wasn’t he the paymaster, the go-between for Them
and Houlihan?
Have we ever known Them to employ go-betweens? I could
never with certainty conclude he was such.
But, but who was Bielseley?
Mr. Holmes was watching me intently, hopefully, with a
now-drop-the-other-shoe expectation.
Indeed, said he. Must you guess? Recall that in
Woolworths he knew who you were and They have always been hands on for whatever
was going on except, of course, for the Zeeglers. Recall the grey eyes.
You mean he was not a substitute, a shave of the beard,
not a Zeegler? Not an arsonist and not truly in league with Houlihan? One who
hires and pays but he wasn’t.
Yes and no, then…
That means now I don’t know if I could have pulled the
trigger in Woolsworths.
Tut, tut, Wilson was there, but only to make it
official.
Yes, a backup or a takeover.
Never you mind, you are a crack shot.
So, so… and I
then said exasperatingly, finally, at long last – he was one of Them!
Yes.
The
end