-1-
I know what you’ve heard, but Pat O’Leary’s cow didn’t have nothing to do with it. Not like they said in the papers. The way them reporters put it, you’d have thought the damn cow was playing with matches. I mean, sure, it started in the cowshed, but that cow was long dead by that point, and really it was Pat himself who lit it. I helped him do it. And that meteor shower some folks talked about—you see, that happened beforehand. It didn’t start the fire, either, but it sure as hell caused it.
You have to understand what the West Side of Chicago was like back then. Pat had a nice little place on DeKoven Street—just enough land to grow some spuds and raise a few chickens. The cow was a skinny old milker, and she was of that age where her milk was too sour and her beef would probably be too tough. Pat O’Leary wanted to sell her to some drovers who were looking to lay down some jerky for a drive down to Abilene, but the missus would have none of it.
“Elsie’s like one of the family!” Catherine protested. “Aunt Sophie gave her to me when she was just a heifer.”
I knew Pat had to bite his tongue not to ask if Catherine meant when the cow was a heifer or when Sophie was. By that point in their marriage Pat’s tongue was crisscrossed with healed-overbite marks.
Catherine finished up by saying, “Selling that cow’d be like selling Aunt Sophie herself off by the pound.”
Over whiskey that night, Pat confided in me that if he could find a buyer for Sophie, he’d love to sell the old bitch. “She eats twice as much as the damn cow and don’t smell half as good.”
I agreed and we drank on it.
Shame the way she went. The cow, I mean. I wouldn’t wish that on a three-legged dog. As for Sophie … well, I guess in a way I feel sorry for her, too. And for the rest of them that went to meet their maker that night, the ones who perished in the fire … and the ones who died before.
The fire started Sunday night, but the problem started way sooner, just past midnight on a hot Tuesday morning. That was a strange autumn. Dryer than it should have been, and with a steady wind that you’d have thought blew straight in off a desert. I never saw anything like it except the Santa Anas, but this was Illinois, not California. Father Callahan had a grand ol’ time with it, saying that it was the hot breath of Hell blowing hard on all us sinners. Yeah, yeah, whatever, but we wasn’t sinning any worse that year than we had the year before and the year before that. Conner O’Malley was still sneaking into the Daley’s back door every Saturday night, the Kennedy twins were still stealing hogs, and Pat and I were still making cheap whiskey and selling it in premium bottles to the pubs who sold it to travelers heading west. No reason Hell should have breathed any harder that year than any other.
What was different that year was not what we sinners were doing but what those saints were up to, ’cause we had shooting stars every night for a week. The good father had something to say about that, too. It was the flaming sword of St. Michael and his lot, reminding us of why we were tossed out of Eden. That man could make a hellfire and brimstone sermon out of a field full of fuzzy bunnies, I swear to God.
On the first night there was just a handful of little ones, like Chinese fireworks, way out over Lake Michigan. But the second night there was a big ball of light—Biela’s Comet, the reporter from the Tribune called it—and it just burst apart up there, and balls of fire came a’raining down everywhere.
Paddy and I were up at the still, and we were trying to sort out how to make Mean-Dog Mulligan pay the six months’ worth of whiskey fees he owed us. Mean-Dog was a man who earned his nickname, and he was bigger than both of us put together, so when we came asking for our cash and he told us to piss off, we did. We only said anything out loud about it when we were a good six blocks from his place.
“We’ve got to sort him out,” I told Paddy, “or everyone’ll take a cue from him and then where will we be?”
Pat was feeling low. Mean-Dog had smacked him around a bit, just for show, and my poor lad was in the doldrums. His wife was pretty, but she was a nag; her aunt Sophie was more terrifying than the red Indians who still haunted some of these woods, and Mean-Dog Mulligan was turning us into laughingstocks. Pat wanted to brood, and brooding over a still of fresh whiskey at least took some of the sting out. It was after our fourth cup that we saw the comet.
Now, I’ve seen comets before. I seen them out at sea before I lost my leg, and I seen ’em out over the plains when I was running with the Scobie gang. I know what they look like, but this one was just a bit different. It was green, for one thing. Comets don’t burn green, not any I’ve seen or heard about. This one was a sickly green, too, the color of bad liver, and it scorched a path through the air. Most of it burned up in the sky, and that’s a good thing, but one piece of it came down hard by the edge of the lake, right smack down next to Aunt Sophie’s cottage.
Pat and I were sitting out in our lean-to in a stand of pines, drinking toasts in honor of Mean-Dog developing a wasting sickness when the green thing came burning down out of the sky and smacked into the ground not fifty feet from Sophie’s place. There was a sound like fifty cannons firing all at once, and the shock rolled up the hill to where we sat. Knocked both of us off our stools and tipped over the still.
“Pegleg!” Pat Paddy yelled as he landed on his ass. “The brew!”
I lunged for the barrel and caught it before it tilted too far, but a gallon of it splashed me in the face and half-drowned me. That’s just a comment, not a complaint. I steadied the pot as I stood up. My clothes were soaked with whiskey, but I was too shocked to even suck my shirttails. I stood staring down the slope. Sophie’s cottage still stood, but it was surrounded by towering flames. Green flames—and that wasn’t the whiskey talking. There were real green flames licking at the night, catching the grass, burning the trees that edged her property line.
“That’s Sophie’s place,” I said.
He wiped his face and squinted through the smoke. “Yeah, sure is.”
“She’s about to catch fire.”
He belched. “If I’m lucky.”
I grinned at him. It was easy to see his point. Except for Catherine there was nobody alive who could stand Aunt Sophie. She was fat and foul, and you couldn’t please her if you handed her a deed to a gold mine. Not even Father Callahan liked her, and he was sort of required to by license.
We stood there and watched as the green fire crept along the garden path toward her door. “Suppose we should go down there and kind of rescue her, like,” I suggested.
He bent and picked up a tin cup, dipped it in the barrel, drank a slug, and handed it to me. “I suppose.”
“Catherine will be mighty upset if we let her burn.”
“I expect.”
We could hear her screaming then as she finally realized that Father Callahan’s hellfire had come a’knocking. Considering her evil ways, she probably thought that’s just what it was, and had it been, not even she could have found fault with the reasoning.
“Come on,” Pat finally said, tugging on my sleeve, “I guess we’d better haul her fat ass outta there or I’ll never hear the end of it from the wife.”
“Be the Christian thing to do,” I agreed; though, truth to tell, we didn’t so much as hustle down the slope to her place as sort of saunter.
That’s what saved our lives in the end, ’cause we were still only halfway down when the second piece of the comet hit. This time it hit her cottage fair and square.
It was like the fist of God—if His fist was ever green, mind—punching down from Heaven and smashing right through her roof. The whole house just flew apart, the roof blew off, the windows turned to glittery dust, and the log walls splintered into matchwood. The force of it was so strong that it just plain sucked the air out of the fire, like blowing out a candle.
Patrick started running about then, and since he has two legs and I got this peg, I followed along as best I could. Took us maybe ten minutes to get all the way down there.
By that time, Sophie Kilpatrick was deader’n a doornail.
We stopped outside the jagged edge of what had been her north wall and stared at her just lying there amid the wreckage. Her bed was smashed flat, the legs broken; the dresser and rocker were in pieces, all the crockery in fragments. In the midst of it, still wearing her white nightgown and bonnet, was Sophie, her arms and legs spread like a starfish, her mouth open like a bass, her goggling eyes staring straight up at Heaven in the most accusing sort of way.
We exchanged a look and crept inside.
“She looks dead,” he said.
“Of course, she’s dead, Pat; a comet done just fell on her.”
The fire was out but there was still a bit of green glow coming off her and we crept closer still.
“What in tarnation is that?”
“Dunno,” I said. There were bits and pieces of green rock scattered around her, and they glowed like they had a light inside. Kind of pulsed in a way, like a slow heartbeat. Sophie was dusted with glowing green powder. It was on her gown and her hands and her face. A little piece of the rock pulsed inside her mouth, like she’d gasped it in as it all happened.
“What’s that green stuff?”
“Must be that comet they been talking about in the papers. Biela’s Comet, they been calling it.”
“Why’d it fall on Sophie?”
“Well, Paddy, I don’t think it meant to.”
He grunted as he stared down at her. The green pulsing of the rock made it seem like she was breathing, and a couple of times he bent close to make sure.
“Damn,” he said after he checked the third time, “I didn’t think she’d ever die. Didn’t think she could!”
“God kills everything,” I said, quoting one of Father Callahan’s cheerier observations. “Shame it didn’t fall on Mean-Dog Mulligan.”
“Yeah, but I thought Sophie was too damn ornery to die. Besides, I always figured the Devil’d do anything he could to keep her alive.”
I looked at him. “Why’s that?”
“He wouldn’t want the competition. You know she ain’t going to Heaven, and down in Hell … well, she’ll be bossing around old Scratch and his demons before her body is even cold in the grave. Ain’t nobody could be as persistently disagreeable as Aunt Sophie.”
“Amen to that,” I said, and sucked some whiskey out of my sleeve. Paddy noticed what I was doing and asked for a taste. I held my arm out to him. “So … what do you think we should do?”
Pat looked around. The fire was out, but the house was a ruin. “We can’t leave her out here.”
“We can call the constable,” I suggested. “Except that we both smell like whiskey.”
“I think we should take her up to the house, Peg.”
I stared at him. “To the house? She weighs nigh on half a ton.”
“She can’t be more than three hundred-weight. Catherine will kill me if I leave her out here to get gnawed on by every creature in the woods. She always says I was too hard on Sophie, too mean to her. She sees me bringing Sophie’s body home, sees how I cared enough to do that for her only living aunt, then she’ll think better of me.”
“Oh, man …” I complained, but Pat was adamant. Besides, when he was in his cups, Paddy complained that Catherine was not being very “wifely” lately. I think he was hoping that this would somehow charm him back onto Catherine’s side of the bed. Mind you, Paddy was as drunk as a lord, so this made sense to him, and I was damn near pickled, so it more or less made sense to me, too. Father Callahan could have gotten a month’s worth of hellfire sermons on the dangers of hard liquor out of the way Pat and I handled this affair. Of course, Father Callahan’s dead now, so there’s that.
Anyway, we wound up doing as Pat said and we near busted our guts picking up Sophie and slumping her onto a wheelbarrow. We dusted off the green stuff as best we could, but we forgot about the piece in her mouth and the action of dumping her on the ’barrow must have made that glowing green chunk slide right down her gullet. If we’d been a lot less drunk, we’d have wondered about that, because on some level I was pretty sure I heard her swallow that chunk, but since she was dead and we were grunting and cursing trying to lift her, and it couldn’t be real anyway, I didn’t comment on it. All I did once she was loaded was peer at her for a second to see if that great big bosom of hers was rising and falling—which it wasn’t—and then I took another suck on my sleeve.
It took nearly two hours to haul her fat ass up the hill and through the streets and down to Paddy’s little place on DeKoven Street. All the time I found myself looking queer at Sophie. I hadn’t liked that sound, that gulping sound, even if I wasn’t sober or ballsy enough to say anything to Pat. It made me wonder, though, about that glowing green piece of comet. What the hell was that stuff, and where’d it come from? It weren’t nothing normal, that’s for sure.
We stood out in the street for a bit with Paddy just staring at his own front door, mopping sweat from his face, careful of the bruises from Mean-Dog. “I can’t bring her in like this,” he said, “it wouldn’t be right.”
“Let’s put her in the cowshed,” I suggested. “Lay her out on the straw and then we can fetch the doctor. Let him pronounce her dead all legal-like.”
For some reason that sounded sensible to both of us, so that’s what we did. Neither of us could bear to try and lift her again, so we tipped over the ’barrow and let her tumble out.
“Ooof!” she said.
“Excuse me,” Pat said, and then we both froze.
He looked at me, and I looked at him, and we both looked at Aunt Sophie. My throat was suddenly as dry as an empty shot glass.
Paddy’s face looked like he’d seen a ghost, and we were both wondering if that’s what we’d just seen, in fact. We crouched over her, me still holding the arms of the ’barrow, him holding one of Sophie’s wrists.
“Tell me if you feel a pulse, Paddy my lad,” I whispered.
“Not a single thump,” he said.
“Then did you hear her say ‘ooof’ or some suchlike?”
“I’d be lying if I said I didn’t.”
“Lying’s not always a sin,” I observed.
He dropped her wrist, then looked at the pale green dust on his hands—the glow had faded—and wiped his palms on his coveralls.
“Is she dead, or isn’t she?” I asked.
He bent, and with great reluctance pressed his ear to her chest. He listened for a long time. “There’s no ghost of a heartbeat,” he said.
“Be using a different word now, will ya?”
Pat nodded. “There’s no heartbeat. No breath, nothing.”
“Then she’s dead?”
“Aye.”
“But she made a sound.”
Pat straightened, then snapped his fingers. “It’s the death rattle,” he said. “Sure and that’s it. The dead exhaling a last breath.”
“She’s been dead these two hours and more. What’s she been waiting for?”
He thought about that. “It was the stone. The green stone—it lodged in her throat and blocked the air. We must have dislodged it when we dumped her out, and that last breath came out. Just late, is all.”
I was beginning to sober up and that didn’t have the ring of logic it would have had an hour ago.
We stood over her for another five minutes, but Aunt Sophie just lay there, dead as can be.
“I got to go tell Catherine,” Pat said eventually. “She’s going to be in a state. You’d better scram. She’ll know what we’ve been about.”
“She’ll know anyway. You smell as bad as I do.”
“But Sophie smells worse,” he said, and that was the truth of it.
So I scampered and he went in to break his wife’s heart. I wasn’t halfway down the street before I heard her scream.
-2-
I didn’t come back until Thursday, and as I came up the street smoking my pipe, Paddy came rushing around the side of the house. I swear he was wearing the same overalls and looked like he hadn’t washed or anything. The bruises had faded to the color of a rotten eggplant, but his lip was less swollen. He grabbed me by the wrist and fair wrenched my arm out dragging me back to the shed, but before he opened the door, he stopped and looked me square in the eye.
“You got to promise me to keep a secret, Pegleg.”
“I always keep your secrets,” I lied, and he knew I was lying.
“No, you have to really keep this one. Swear by the baby Jesus.”
Paddy was borderline religious, so asking me to swear by anything holy was a big thing for him. The only other time he’d done it was right before he showed me the whiskey still.
“Okay, Paddy, I swear by the baby Jesus and His Holy Mother, too.”
He stared at me for a moment before nodding; then he turned and looked up and down the alley as if all the world was leaning out to hear whatever Patrick O’Leary had to say. All I saw was a cat sitting on a stack of building bricks, distractedly licking his bollocks. In a big whisper, Paddy said, “Something’s happened to Sophie.”
I blinked at him a few times. “Of course, something’s happened to her, you daft bugger; a comet fell on her head and killed her.”
He was shaking his head before I was even finished. “No … since then.”
That’s not a great way to ease into a conversation about the dead. “What?”
He fished a key out of his pocket, which is when I noticed the shiny new chain and padlock on the cowshed door. It must have cost Pat a week’s worth of whiskey sales to buy that thing.
“Did Mean-Dog pay us now?”
Pat snorted. “He’d as soon kick me as pay us a penny of what he owes.”
I nodded at the chain. “You afraid someone’s going to steal her body?”
He gave me the funniest look. “I’m not afraid of anybody breaking in.”
Which is another of those things that don’t sound good when someone says it before entering a room with a dead body in it.
He unlocked the lock; then he reached down to where his shillelagh leaned against the frame. It was made from a whopping great piece of oak root, all twisted and polished, the handle wrapped with leather.
“What’s going on now, Paddy?” I asked, starting to back away, and remembering a dozen other things that needed doing. Like running and hiding and getting drunk.
“I think it was that green stuff from the comet,” Paddy whispered as he slowly pushed open the door. “It did something to her. Something unnatural.”
“Everything about Sophie was unnatural,” I reminded him.
The door swung inward with a creak and the light of day shone into the cowshed. It was ten feet wide by twenty feet deep, with a wooden rail, a manger, stalls for two cows—though Paddy only owned just the one. The scrawny milk cow Catherine doted on was lying on her side in the middle of the floor.
I mean to say what was left of her was lying on the floor. I tried to scream, but all that came out of my whiskey-raw throat was a crooked little screech.
The cow had been torn to pieces. Blood and gobs of meat littered the floor, and there were more splashes of blood on the wall. And right there in the middle of all that muck, sitting like the queen of all damnation, was Aunt Sophie. Her fat face and throat were covered with blood. Her cotton gown was torn and streaked with cow shit and gore. Flies buzzed around her and crawled on her face.
Aunt Sophie was gnawing on what looked like half a cow liver, and when the sunlight fell across her from the open door, she raised her head and looked right at us. Her skin was as gray-pale as the maggots that wriggled through little rips in her skin, but it was her eyes that took all the starch out of my knees. They were dry and milky, but the pupils glowed an unnatural green, just like the piece of comet that had slid down her gullet.
“Oh … lordy-lordy-save a sinner!” I heard someone say in an old woman’s voice, and then realized that it was I speaking.
Aunt Sophie lunged at us. All of sudden she went from sitting there like a fat dead slob eating Paddy’s cow to coming at us like a charging bull. I shrieked. I’m not proud; I’ll admit it.
If it hadn’t been for the length of chain Paddy had wound around her waist, she’d have had me, too, ’cause I could no more move from where I was frozen than I could make leprechauns fly out of my bottom. Sophie’s lunge was jerked to a stop with her yellow teeth not a foot from my throat.
Paddy stepped past me and raised the club. If Sophie saw it, or cared, she didn’t show it.
“Get back, you fat sow!” he yelled, and took to thumping her about the face and shoulders, which did no noticeable good.
“Paddy, my dear,” I croaked, “I think I’ve soiled myself.”
Paddy stepped back, his face running sweat. “No, that’s her you smell. It’s too hot in this shed. She’s coming up ripe.” He pulled me farther back and we watched as Sophie snapped the air in our direction for a whole minute, then she lost interest and went back to gnawing on the cow.
“What’s happened to her?”
“She’s dead,” he said.
“She can’t be. I’ve seen dead folks before, lad, and she’s a bit too spry.”
He shook his head. “I checked and I checked. I even stuck her with the pitchfork. Just experimental-like, and I got them tines all the way in, but she didn’t bleed.”
“But … but …”
“Catherine came out here, too. Before Sophie woke back up, I mean. She took it hard and didn’t want to hear about comets or nothing like that. She thinks we poisoned her with our whiskey.”
“It’s strong, I’ll admit, but it’s more likely to kill a person than make the dead wake back up again.”
“I told her that and she commenced to hit me, and she hits as hard as Mean-Dog. She had a good handful of my hair and was swatting me a goodun’ when Sophie just woke up.”
“How’d Catherine take that?”
“Well, she took it poorly, the lass. At first, she tried to comfort Sophie, but when the old bitch tried to bite her Catherine seemed to cool a bit toward her aunt. It wasn’t until after Sophie tore the throat out of the cow that Catherine seemed to question whether Sophie was really her aunt or more of an old acquaintance of the family.”
“What’d she say?”
“It’s not what she said so much as it was her hitting Sophie in the back of the head with a shovel.”
“That’ll do ’er.”
“It dropped Sophie for a while, and I hustled out and bought some chain and locks. By the time I came back, Catherine was in a complete state. Sophie kept waking up, you see, and she had to clout her a fair few times to keep her tractable.”
“So, where’s the missus now?”
“Abed. Seems she’s discovered the medicinal qualities of our whiskey.”
“I’ve been saying it for years.”
He nodded and we stood there, watching Sophie eat the cow.
“So, Paddy me old mate,” I said softly, “what do you think we should do?”
“With Sophie?”
“Aye.”
Paddy’s bruised faced took on the one expression I would have thought impossible under the circumstances. He smiled. A great big smile that was every bit as hungry and nasty as Aunt Sophie.
-3-
It took three days of sweet-talk and charm, of sweat-soaked promises and cajoling, but we finally got him to come to Paddy’s cowshed. And then there he was, the Mean-Dog himself, all six-and-a-half feet of him, flanked by Killer Muldoon and Razor Riley, the three of them standing in Paddy’s yard late on Sunday afternoon.
My head was ringing from a courtesy smacking Mean-Dog had given me when I’d come to his office, and Pat’s lips were puffed out again, but Paddy was still smiling.
“So, lads,” Mean-Dog said quietly, “tell me again why I’m here in a yard that smells of pigshit instead of at home drinking a beer.”
“Cow shit,” Paddy corrected him, and got a clout for it.
“We have a new business partner, Mr. Mulligan,” I said. “And she told us that we can’t provide no more whiskey until you and she settle accounts.”
“She? You’re working with a woman?” His voice was filled with contempt. “Who’s this woman, then? Sounds like she has more mouth than she can use.”
“You might be saying that,” Pat agreed softly. “It’s my Aunt Sophie.”
I have to admit, that did give even Mean-Dog a moment’s pause. There are Cherokee war parties that would go twenty miles out of their way not to cross Sophie. And that was before the comet.
“Sophie Kilpatrick, eh?” He looked at his two bruisers. Neither of them knew her and they weren’t impressed. “Where is she?”
“In the cowshed,” Pat said. “She said she wanted to meet somewhere quiet.”
“Shrewd,” Mean-Dog agreed, but he was still uncertain. “Lads, go in and ask Miss Sophie to come out.”
The two goons shrugged and went into the shed as I inched my way toward the side alley. Pat held his ground, and I don’t know whether it was all the clouting ’round the head he’d been getting, or the latest batch of whiskey, or maybe he’d just reached the bottom of his own cup and couldn’t take no more from anyone, but Paddy O’Leary stood there grinning at Mean-Dog as the two big men opened the shed door and went in.
Pat hadn’t left a light on in there and it was a cloudy day. The goons had to feel their way in the dark. When they commenced screaming, I figured they’d found their way to Sophie. This was Sunday by now, and the cow was long gone. Sophie was feeling a might peckish.
Mean-Dog jumped back from the doorway and dragged out his pistol with one hand and took a handful of Pat’s shirt with the other. “What the hell’s happening? Who’s in there?”
“Just Aunt Sophie,” Paddy said, and actually held his hand to God as he said it.
Mean-Dog shoved him aside and kicked open the door. That was his first mistake, because Razor Riley’s head smacked him right in the face. Mean-Dog staggered back and then stood there in dumb shock as his leg-breaker’s head bounced to the ground right at his feet. Riley’s face wore an expression of profound shock.
“What?” Mean-Dog asked, as if anything Pat or I could say would be an adequate answer to that.
The second mistake Mean-Dog made was to get mad and go charging into the shed. We watched him enter and we both jumped as he fired two quick shots, then another, and another.
I don’t know, even to this day, whether one of those shots clipped her chain or whether Sophie was even stronger than we thought she was, but a second later Mean-Dog came barreling out of the cowshed, running at full tilt, with Sophie Kilpatrick howling after him, trailing six feet of chain. She was covered in blood and the sound she made would have made a banshee take a vow of silence. They were gone down the alley in a heartbeat, and Pat and I stood there in shock for a moment, then we peered around the edge of the door into the shed.
The lower half of Razor Riley lay just about where the cow had been. Killer Muldoon was all in one piece, but there were pieces missing from him, if you follow. Sophie had her way with him, and he lay dead as a mullet, his throat torn out and his blood pooled around him.
“Oh, lordy,” I said. “This is bad for us, Paddy. This is jail, and skinny fellows like you and me have to wear petticoats in prison.”
But there was a strange light in his eyes. Not a glowing green light—which was a comfort—but not a nice light, either. He looked down at the bodies and then over his shoulder in the direction where Sophie and Mean-Dog had vanished. He licked his bruised lips and said, “You know, Pegleg … there are other sonsabitches who owe us money.”
“Those are bad thoughts you’re having, Paddy my dear.”
“I’m not saying we feed them to Sophie. But if we let it get known, so to speak. Maybe show them what’s left of these lads …”
“Patrick O’Leary, you listen to me—we are not about being criminal masterminds here. I’m not half as smart as a fencepost and you’re not half as smart as me, so let’s not be planning anything extravagant.”
Which is when Mean-Dog Mulligan came screaming back into Paddy’s yard. God only knows what twisted puzzle-path he took through the neighborhood, but there he was, running back toward us, his arms bleeding from a couple of bites and his big legs pumping to keep him just ahead of Sophie.
“Oh dear,” Pat said in a voice that made it clear that his plan still had a few bugs to be sorted out.
“Shovel!” I said and lunged for the one Catherine had used on her aunt. Paddy grabbed a pickaxe and we swung at the same time.
I hit Sophie fair and square in the face and the shock of it rang all the way up my arms and shivered the tool right out of my hands, but the force of the blow had its way with her, and her green eyes were instantly blank. She stopped dead in her tracks and then pitched backward to measure her length on the ground.
Paddy’s swing had a different effect. The big spike of the pickaxe caught Mean-Dog square in the center of the chest and, though everyone said the man had no heart, Pat and his pickaxe begged to differ. The gangster’s last word was “Urk!” and he fell backward, as dead as Riley and Muldoon.
“Quick!” I said, and we fetched the broken length of chain from the shed and wound it about Sophie, pinning her arms to her body and then snugging it all with the padlock. While Pat was checking the lock, I fetched the wheelbarrow and we grunted and cursed some more as we got her onto it.
“We have to hide the bodies,” I said, and Pat, too stunned to speak, just nodded. He grabbed Mean-Dog’s heels and dragged him into the shed while I played a quick game of football with Razor Riley’s head. Soon the three toughs were hidden in the shed. Pat closed it and we locked the door.
That left Sophie sprawled on the ’barrow, and she was already starting to show signs of waking up.
“Sweet suffering Jesus!” I yelled. “Let’s get her into the hills. We can chain her to a tree by the still until we figure out what to do.”
“What about them?” Pat said, jerking a thumb at the shed.
“They’re not going anywhere.”
We took the safest route that we could manage quickly, and if anyone did see us hauling a fat, blood-covered, struggling dead woman in chains out of town in a wheelbarrow, it never made it into an official report. We chained her to a stout oak and then hurried back. It was already dark, and we were scared and exhausted and I wanted a drink so badly I could cry.
“I had a jug in the shed,” Pat whispered as we crept back into his yard.
“Then consider me on the wagon, lad.”
“Don’t be daft. There’s nothing in there that can hurt us now. And we have to decide what to do with those lads.”
“God … this is the sort of thing that could make the mother of Jesus eat meat on Friday.”
He unlocked the door, and we went inside, careful not to step in blood, careful not to look at the bodies. I lit his small lantern, and we closed the door so we could drink for a bit and sort things out.
After we’d both had a few pulls on the bottle, I said, “Pat, now be honest, my lad … you didn’t think this through, now did you?”
“It worked out differently in my head.” He took a drink.
“How’s that?”
“Mean-Dog got scared of us and paid us, and then everyone else heard about Sophie and got scared of us, too.”
“Even though she was chained up in a cowshed?”
“Well, she got out, didn’t she?”
“Was that part of the plan?”
“Not as such.”
“So, in the plan we just scared people with a dead fat woman in a shed.”
“It sounds better when it’s only a thought.”
“Most things do.” We toasted on that.
Mean-Dog Mulligan said, “Ooof.”
“Oh dear,” I said, the jug halfway to my mouth.
We both turned and there he was, Mean-Dog himself with a pickaxe in his chest and no blood left in him, struggling to sit up. Next to him, Killer Muldoon was starting to twitch. Mean-Dog looked at us, and his eyes were already glowing green.
“Was this part of the plan, then?” I whispered.
Paddy said “Eeep!” which was all he could manage.
That’s how the whole lantern thing started, you see. It was never the cow, ’cause the cow was long dead by then. It was Patrick who grabbed the lantern and threw it, screaming all the while, right at Mean-Dog Mulligan.
I grabbed Pat by the shoulder and dragged him out of the shed and we slammed the door and leaned on it while Patrick fumbled the lock and chain into place.
It was another plan we hadn’t thought all the way through. The shed didn’t have a cow anymore, but it had plenty of straw. It fair burst into flame. We staggered back from it and then stood in his yard, feeling the hot wind blow past us, watching as the breeze blew the fire across the alley. Oddly, Paddy’s house never burned down, and Catherine slept through the whole thing.
It was about 9 pm when it started, and by midnight the fire had spread all the way across the south branch of the river. We watched the business district burn—and with it, all of the bars that bought our whiskey.
Maybe God was tired of our shenanigans, or maybe he had a little pity left for poor fools, but sometime after midnight it started to rain. They said later that if it hadn’t rained, then all of Chicago would have burned. As it was, it was only half the town. The church burned down, though, and Father Callahan was roasted like a Christmas goose. Sure, and the Lord had His mysterious ways.
Two other things burned up that night. Our still and Aunt Sophie. All we ever found was her skeleton and the chains wrapped around the burned stump of the oak. On the ground between her charred feet was a small lump of green rock. Neither one of us dared touch it. We just dug a hole and swatted it in with the shovel, covered it over and fled. As far as I know, it’s still up there to this day.
When I think of what would have happened if we’d followed through with Pat’s plan … or if Mean-Dog and Muldoon had gotten out and bitten someone else—who knows how fast it could have spread, or how far? It also tends to make my knees knock when I think of how many other pieces of that green comet must have fallen … and where those stones are. Just thinking about it’s enough to make a man want to take a drink.
I would like to say that Paddy and I changed our ways after that night, that we never rebuilt the still and never took nor sold another drop of whiskey. But that would be lying, and as we both know, I never like to tell a lie.