Friday, October 12, 2012

Barn Burnin'

Johnny J. Potter is another of my recurring characters. He’s a whiskey-making, skirt-chasing storyteller who lives somewhere in the Appalachians. This is one of his first stories.

By Bettyann Moore

You ever been to a good ol-fashioned barn raisin? Don’t see much o that no more. I recollect one barn raisinin particular … no, now, that ain’t quite right. It weren’t the raisin of that barn I recall so much as the burninof that barn the day after we done raised it that I recollect.

It were Clarence Peterson’s barn andit burnt down all on account of Lester Garth didn’t want to take no bath that night.

It were Halloween night and Judd Olson were right peeved at his woman, ʼLizbeth. She done took off and olJudd were certain she were takina roll in the hay with Clarence Peterson, though I can’t see how he figgered it were Peterson, a regular bag obones he was and had a nose like a carrot. Anyhow, Judd were fit to be tied and he grabbed his shotgun and lantern andset off into the night to catch his missus andClarence. He weren’t gonna shoot ʼem, mind you, he jes wanted to scare the hide offa ʼem.

Fact othe matter is, Judd weren’t about to be out on Witches Night without no light and no shotgun. I ain’t one to talk ill ofolks, but in these parts they is right superstitious. Oh, sure, they’s superstitious in the usual way – weren’t no one what would walk under a ladder, andfolks kept clear ograveyards in a full moon – but there was ones like Judd what took stock in all sorts of ghostly doins and the like. If he weren’t so all-fired peeved at ʼLizbeth, he sure as heck wouldnta been out on All Hallow’s Eve … and ʼLizbeth – truth be told – sorta counted on that.

Now, Cotton Cooper were cut outta the same cloth as ol Judd, only on this Halloween, Cotton set out to do battle with Satan hisself. Seems Cotton done heared folks talkinʼbout a sure-fire way to keep evil away and it could only be done on Halloween. What Cotton dint know was folks was just joshinhim, knowin that Cotton were none too bright. That’s how he got the name Cotton – short fer Cotton Head – all fluff andno seed.

Anyhow, folks tolhim that to get rid of the devil, ya gotta go out on Halloween night and find yerself 13 black cats and put ʼem in a gunnysack, carry ʼem down to the river, say the Lord’s Prayer three times, then throw the whole thing into the water.

So that’s what he were doinjes afore Peterson’s barned burned down. How he ever found 13 black cats, we never knowed, and the truth be told, olCotton had a few in there what weren’t pure black. That could be why he were so nervous, knowinhe were cheatin the devil and all. What a sight he musta been, a-stuffinthem cats, one by one, into that sack! But he done it and flung it over his shoulder and took off down the path to the river, them cats kickinup a terrible ruckus.

Things sure woulda been simpler if Cotton weren’t so dang dumb – he coulda knocked them cats on the head or sumpthin, maybe even wrung their necks. And maybe Clarence Peterson’s barn would still be standin.

Now, Preacher Jeremiah Upworthy were new to this neck o the woods and he were mighty dismayed ʼbout the size o his congregation. Fact was, folks was jes plain bored durinhis services. He dint have the fire in him like Rev. Turner before him. Now there were a preacher! Full ohellfire and damnation, he were. His sermons set the chapel to rockin let me tell you. He got folks so worked up, they come outta there wringinwith sweat, a-feared the Lord would strike ʼem down if they dint come back the next Sunday. Rev. Turner kept the house packed. Preacher Upworthy were lucky if two pews was full.

I figger Upworthy were sick andtired hearin ʼbout how Rev. Turner kept folks all worked up from Sunday to Sunday, andon Halloween night he reckoned he’d do sumpthinabout it. He set out to go door-to-door – dressed in a mighty unusual way – to scares people into goinback to church. It were a shame he picked Lester Garth’s house to stop at first.

If there ever be a soul needinsavin, it’d be Lester Garth – a gamblin, whorin polecat what liked to shoot dogs fer sport. AndLordy, how he looked the part! He done lost an eye wrastlinwith one o his brothers and never did bother to have Doc take a look at it. He never wore no patch over it neither. Right ugly cuss.

And, man oh man, how he did smell! Lester Garth weren’t one fer takina bath. Fact were, there weren’t too many folks what took baths ʼcept maybe once a month or once a week if they was gointo church. And you know how many of ʼem was doing that. But olGarth, he dint see fit to take no bath but maybe two time a year, andeven then he’d be kickinand cursinall the way to the tub. And with Garth, what with the boils he had oozinpus, the stench were right powerful.

Now Garth’s wife – yep, he were married, and there weren’t no one more surprised ʼbout that fact than Garth hisself – she were fixinto get him into a tub that Halloween night, come hell or high water. She were a right toleratinwoman and a godsend to Garth on accounta she were born without the use of her nose – she couldn’t smell a skunk at two paces. But she did have eyes and them eyes could see how bad her man was lookin. When he walked in from the barn, she had the tub a-waitinfer him and that’s when all hell broke loose.

Garth come dragginin in a poor temper – one ohis heifers up and died givinbirth to a still-born calf. When he come in, the last thing he were wantin to see were a tub full o steaminwater and to hear his woman nagginat him to get into it.

Garth, a powerful big man, jes glared at his wife and walked over to that tub, picked it up and carried it over to the open door.

Preacher Upworthy were cominalongside the Garth house dressed up like Satan, fixinto scare folks into cominback to church. He done hisself proud with that get-up – it were complete with horns and tail and flames painted up and down his body. He was just about to step inside the door when olGarth let go and sent that scaldin’ water a-flyin– and Preacher Upworthy too.

That preacher took off like a shot, hot water drippin down his devil duds, shreikinlike a banshee.

Cotton Cooper was strugglin′ down the path with that sack o′ cats when outta the woods comes a devil, cursinand yellin at him. Cotton let go that bag and high-tailed it outta there with the devil at his heels. And since he were too stupid to have tied that sack, them cats come outta there spittin, yowlin and screechinand headed down the road right into Clarence Peterson’s barn.

Judd were jes climbindown outta the hay loft after checkinthe barn fer the third time, still lookinfor ʼLizbeth, when he says a hunnert or more black cats – the devil’s own – come in after him. The ladder rocked and swayed whilst he were tryinto climb back up, and down he come, sendinbuckshot into the air and his lantern to the floor.

Only took but a minute or two for that fire to catch hold, time enough fer Judd to get out, but I reckon some o them cats was fried right well. Only took a few more minutes fer the whole darn barn to blaze up – spankinnew barn, gone in an hour.

Clarence Peterson, asleep in his house the whole time, come runninout jes in time to see the walls cavinin. Ol Judd were right surprised to see him – Lizbeth weren’t with him after all.

Heck, I coulda tolhim that. She were with me all along.


1 comment:

  1. Good one, Betty! Loved reading about our old friend, Potter, again. Thanks

    ReplyDelete