| bitterfic ( @ 2008-03-07 18:51:00 |
|
|
|||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Seeking Who He May Devour
In a
“Satan is a roaring lion, seeking who he may devour,” the preacher intoned. “A roaring lion. Seeking who he may devour.”
Paul Sunday, Eli’s older brother, lay on the hotel room’s narrow bed. He was naked, his body battered and streaked with blood. Much of the blood was Paul’s, but a good deal of it belong to another man, who had stomped out of the room a few minutes before scattering a handful of banknotes as he went.
“Satan is like a roaring lion,” Eli Sunday cried. “Seeking who he may devour. Will he find you my sisters and brother? Will the devil, Satan, this roaring, devouring lion find you?”
Though it pained him to move, Paul Sunday began to laugh.
And laugh.
And laugh.
***********
Paul Sunday was a modest success, owner of a few wells, certainly not among the elite. And yet he found himself in
There were men with more wells and larger fortunes who were too moral or too prideful to treat a politician to dinner in a good restaurant or even a night in a brothel for the chance to plead their own case. And so they bankrolled Paul Sunday who had no objection to scrapping and bowing in his best interest and theirs.
Of course it didn't hurt that Paul was a dead ringer for one of the most trusted and beloved men in the country, his long estranged brother Eli.
Paul Sunday had the face of an angel without the bothersome scruples.
Early on a Sunday evening Paul was in a
Paul laughed.
“Who the devil indeed.”
Daniel Plainview’s eyes were burning holes in him from across the room.
It had been seventeen years since Paul and
Paul held no grudge. The pittance had been enough for him to make his start as an oil man and betraying his family had brought him the deepest satisfaction he had ever known.
Seeing Paul had finally noticed him, Daniel Plainview started over. The lawyer excused himself, doubtless a wise move. His suit was expensive, his watch made of gold, but Daniel Plainview bore an undeniable air of wildness and of menace.
“Paul Sunday, as I live and breathe.”
It caught Paul’s interest that
Though he offered her no encouragement and never replied, Paul’s sister Mary still wrote him now and then. Perhaps because her letters seemed to be delivered into the void, she disclosed the details of her life with an intimate frankness. Paul knew of her marriage to H.W. Plainview and he knew of the divesting break between father and son.
At the mention of his boy,
“You put me in mind of your brother just then,”
It had been seventeen years since he’d left the Sunday’s house. Seventeen years since he’d betrayed them and sold them and done his best to be rid of them. Why did they still exist? His fool of a father he could care less about but Eli…
“Seems like we have a great deal to catch up on,”
“Yes, not far at all.”
“Perhaps we could adjourn to your room, catch up on old times.”
His eyes were like black diamonds, coals burned beyond white hot. Mentioning Eli seemed to have stirred up the anger and hatred in him even more than it had stirred Paul’s.
It would be a mistake to take
Paul’s hotel room was modest, a plain bedstead, a varnished wood floor, wallpaper striped blue with a narrower stripe of white, a small round table, an upholstered chair, a lamp, a radio. When
“What are you doing?” Paul asked with a sideways smile.
“Don’t you know your brother’s preaching tonight?”
“No, I had no idea. Eli and I parted ways long ago.”
“Did you, did you now.”
“I told them he was a hypocrite and a fraud but they wouldn’t believe me.” Paul opened his hands, beseechingly. “Why would God choose Eli? Eli was always the stupid one.”
Their father had always said Eli never had a lick of sense. Paul had always been the clever one, always a step ahead.
Daniel Plainview locked the door.
“Tell me about Eli,” he said.
“I was always the clever one,” Paul said. “Eli never had a lick of sense.”
“You don’t say.”
“When he was fourteen, he had a fever. For three days he talked gibberish. When the fever broke he said the angels spoke to him. Ma thought he’d gone simple. They would have sent him away but I told him to keep his mouth shut and he knew enough to listen to me then.”
“When did he stop? When did he stop listening to you, Paul?”
“Libby Hascup had an orange striped kitten. Prettiest thing you’d ever seen. It got stepped on by a horse. I heard its spine crack, snap in two. It was lying on the ground, twitching and crying. Libby was screaming but Eli just smiled. He picked up the pussycat, started talking gibberish like when he had the fever. Then he said some words from the bible, from the place where Jesus heals a blind man with his spit and he gave the cat back to Libby good as new. That night Eli told our father what had happened. Pa asked me if it was true and I said it wasn’t. Eli got whipped that night but before long they were calling him a prophet. They built him a church. They believed him.”
“But you know better.”
“Yes, Mr.
“You’re a clear headed young man, Paul,”
He sunk his fist into Paul’s stomach. Paul fell to his knees, doubled over. He couldn’t even catch his breath enough to cry out.
Finally, breathing heavily
“That’s for my boy,”
The attack was no less than Paul had expected. He had resigned himself to accept a certain amount of mistreatment for the sake of gauging just how far gone
“Your boy?” Paul spat out when he was able to speak again. “It had been my understanding that you no longer had a son, only a competitor by the name of H. W. Plainview. It had been my understanding that you were in this town tonight in hopes of influencing legislation that would sabotage this H. W. Plainview’s interests.”
“You son of a whore,”
“You seem to think you can play them with me.”
“How dare you toy with me you soft, weak, mealy mouthed little bastard,”
When he heard the clink of a belt being undone and the thwack of the leather strap against
Paul stumbled to his feet, backing away.
“No,” he said, hands gesturing meaninglessly in hopes of keeping the man at bay. “You’re not going to do that to me.”
“I am.” He promised. “I’m going to whoop you, boy. Whoop your ass.”
“No one’s done that to me since I left Little Boston. Came a time when I wouldn’t take it from my father any more and I won’t take it from you.”
“Came a time I wouldn’t take it from my father any more and I won’t take it from you,”
“Stop.”
The strap bit into the tender flesh of his bottom and thighs. Paul writhed and thrashed not just from the pain but in a desperate attempt to escape this, the most humiliating punishment of childhood. His throat was raw but he kept screaming not even hoping for help but just to drown out
Only when
“Sunday, what the devil is going on in there? Open the door this minute or I’m bringing back a policeman.” It was his landlord.
Cursing to himself Daniel Plainview yanked out his wallet. When he threw open the door he had a wad of bills in one hand and the leather belt in the other.
“I think you’d best make yourself scarce, friend, and leave me and Mr. Sunday to our business.”
“What?” The landlord stammered, baffled by the strange man and his stranger offer.
“You take this money and pretend you didn’t hear a thing or I take my strap to you. Is that simple enough for you to understand?”
The landlord’s eyes frantically scanned the room and filled with undisguised horror when they settled on Paul who was sprawled on the floor, his face streaked with snot and tears and blood, and his pants around his ankles.
“Take the cash,” Paul said firmly. It couldn’t end now. If it ended now it would be nothing but humiliation. Oil drilling metaphor – he was deep into this, but not deep enough for it to pay.
Paul’s landlord grabbed the money
“You’ve surprised me, Paul.”
“If that meddling ass had chosen helping me over cash in hand it would have shaken my faith in human nature.” Paul answered.
“You’re a hard-hearted, opportunistic bastard, Paul Sunday.”
“Do you know what I’m going to do to you now?”
He wasn’t supposed to know. It was supposed to be something he could never imagine but Paul knew.
He’d always been one step ahead.
Flat on his back in a
He grabbed the front of
“I know,” Paul said. “I was always a step ahead.” He ran his tongue along
On the radio the woman was crying.
Someone said “halleluiah”.
Someone said “amen”.
Daniel Plainview spit on his hand.
“Before God claimed him Eli belonged to me,” Paul said. “Our father always beat us, ruled us by brutality. I never hurt my brother like that but I ruled over him just the same.”
“Sexually?”
“I did what I pleased with him. It was easy. He had no control, no will. I could make him whimper like a puppy dog.”
“Yes.”
Paul shrieked when
“Tell me more about your little brother,”
Paul couldn’t speak, it hurt too much. He threw back his head, gritting his teeth and with all his strength dug his ten fingernails into
“After God claimed him Eli wouldn’t let me touch him.” Paul gasped. As
“The oil changed it all. When I was seventeen, Eli and I started to notice the oil oozing up from the ground. We realized soon enough its value we just didn’t know how to get at it. Eli was all excited, he said it was another sign that God had chosen him. Said that God was giving him the means to built a mighty church and spread the word. I looked at him, eyes all shining and I knew then it wasn’t God at all, it was just greed and ambition and a hunger for power. The same things I felt when I saw that muck coming out of the ground. God had nothing to do with it because there was no God.
“That night I went to my brother’s bed. There was no God anymore, so I wasn’t afraid. I thought I could use him however I wanted, just like before. Only it was different. He lay under me like a corpse, unyielding. I did everything I knew how to do but I couldn’t get him to bend to me the way he once had. He said God was protecting him but it wasn’t God. It was hatred and anger toward me and it was pride. He called it God and he believed in it, so I couldn’t reach him no matter what I did to his body.
“I left Little Boston the next day knowing the power of malice, Eli’s and my own. I found you and sold you his hopes for glory for $600. It was worth more but I wanted to sell cheap, for pure spite.”
“All have sinned,” Eli’s voice came over the radio. It tore through him worse than all of
“Shut your mouth, boy,”
He sunk his teeth into the slope where Paul’s neck and shoulder met, shuddering to a rough climax as he did.
Then it was over.
“Here, drink this. Go on.” He ordered. Spluttering and coughing, Paul managed to swallow a mouthful of the liquor, another and another. “Damned milquetoast. Better?”
Paul nodded, sunk back onto the bed, let the alcohol ease the clenched knots of his nerves. Eli’s voice on the radio was distant, almost soothing.
“I trust that your discretion, like your landlord’s, can be bought and paid for?”
“Yes,” Paul said shakily. For all the drunken, bestial rage he contained there was still something hard and cold and coherent in
Eli was a dead man.
“Name your price then.”
“I paid three days deposit on this room that I won’t be getting back,” Paul said. “And you’ve ruined a new shirt.”
“To say nothing of your virtue.”
“Two hundred dollars should cover everything. Including my virtue.”
“As always, Mr. Sunday, it’s been a pleasure doing business with you.”
The door slammed.
Eli’s voice came from the radio. “Satan is like a roaring lion,” he intoned. “Seeking who he may devour.”
Somewhere within his bruised and aching body, Paul found the malice to laugh.
And laugh.
And laugh.