Masi'shen Evolution
Copyright© 2013 by Graybyrd
Chapter 9: Hate Crimes
"Every home in America lies under the shadow of Godless alien subversion! Every family in America faces the menace of Godless alien infiltrators! Every parent in America knows the fear that their precious children will be caught in the snare of the Godless cult that invites and welcomes the alien subversion into our cities, our homes and our schools! This very same godless cult denies the true teachings of our Lord Jesus Christ and the holy message of God's Primal Revelation. Every brave father, knowing that the salvation of his family lies under the mantle of God's Primal Revelation, must arise... ARISE, I SAY! ... to defend his God-given family, his precious wife and children."
The crowd of thousands packed into the Spokane Coliseum roared its approbation as Rev. Chase Evans McClayne thundered his message into the unblinking eye of the television cameras. His face, contorted and twisted with the delivery of his sermon, glared from television screens into the faces of millions of viewers around the nation over a dozen religiously-affiliated cable channels.
Jared Armbruster couldn't attend the Spokane event, although he desperately wished that he had. His brother Josh sat beside him on a sagging couch in their single-wide trailer in Republic, Washington. The brothers inherited the trailer the previous year when their mother died of lung cancer, a victim of years' of chain smoking. Their step-father died three years previously in a logging accident. A tree split and fell on his crawler tractor while he skidded logs to a mountainside landing.
The Armbruster brothers were unemployed. They'd been out of work for two years since timber sales in their region were cut back by the U.S. Forest Service. Without large timber sales, the multi-national forest products corporation closed the local sawmill and fired the workers. The brothers and their disgruntled friends blamed the government, the environmentalists, and the local Indians for their lost jobs. They couldn't attack the government; the environmentalists were too scattered to reach; and until recently, they'd done little more than snarl racial slurs and insults at the Indians.
Now they had inspiration, justification, and a holy cause! Not only were the shiftless, drunken Indians to blame for hurting salmon fishing by claiming 100-year-old treaty rights; for using lawyers to close all the logging and forest roads to protect the salmon spawning beds; and for pushing electricity prices sky-high by forcing early releases of reservoir water to flush salmon smolt down the Columbia River! Hell, even the local politicians complained that the Indians were killing the economy!
No, that's not enough for them heathen Indian bastards, Jared realized. Now they're in cahoots with them goddamned Godless aliens!
Jared leaped up from the sagging sofa and hurled his nearly-empty beer can at the television.
"Did you hear that, Josh? Reverend Chase Evans McClayne said it, plain as could be! Them damned Indians over at the reservation are the ones! They're the very ones that hid them alien-lovin' bastards that let them alien sons-a-bitches get up in their space ship and attack our Air Force. And that's where that freak-woman, that Wapato witch and her brothers live! Them and their kind! They're gonna bring our churches down—and us—our families and our kids, Josh! Why, there's no tellin' what could happen! He's been sent from God to warn us, Josh! You hear that?"
Josh rose and turned off the television and scooped up the dribbling beer can laying in the kitchen where it had ricocheted off the TV. He lobbed the can at the trash bin. It rolled off the heap and fell in the corner.
"Want another beer, Jared? You kinda wasted the last of that one," he teased. Jared stood angrily by the sofa, his fists clenched and his eyes squeezed half shut, nurturing his rage for all the injustice that he and his white friends had suffered at the hands of forces outside their understanding. Now it seemed he had a target for his anger. He couldn't do anything about the government or the aliens or the loss of logging jobs or their unemployment or his miserable life, or the humiliation of begging for an extension of his unemployment benefit ... but a warm feeling of retribution began to rise up in him. It flooded his cheeks with a hot flush of purpose.
"Yeh, hell yeh, bro! Grab me another cold beer! That last one was gettin' warm. Bro, we got some thinkin' and plannin' to do. I think we been sittin' around on our asses too much, and we been lettin' this shit go on for too long! It's about time we did something to show them bastards that we ain't gonna sit around helpless and take all this shit! We can do somethin', Bro! We can go make us an example. Fuck with us, will they? They won't fuck with us so much after we get through puttin' up a warnin' of what's to come—what'll happen if things don't get set right—get put back where they needs to be!"
Two sheriff's department cruisers, their blue and red cannon lights strobing garish reflections off the steep embankment bordering the county road, flanked the white and orange ambulance parked on the shoulder. Two EMT attendants opened a folding gurney to receive a body.
"Jesus, Frank! You ever seen anything like that before?"
Deputy Sheriff Oswald "Ozzie" Buttars and his partner stared up at the massive trunk of a ponderosa pine on the high edge of the cut bank above the road.
"No, I never did, Ozzie, and you know damn well I didn't," Frank answered. "Closest thing to this I ever heard of was that gay kid that got tortured and hung up naked on that fence in Wyoming some years ago. As bad as that was, I don't think it was anything like this!"
"Oh, damn ... I better radio down to Fred. We don't need anybody comin' along gawkin' at this, and we sure as hell don't want any pictures comin' out in the papers!"
Frank jogged over to his cruiser and snatched up a microphone.
"Unit 307, Unit 302."
"Unit 307, go ahead, Frank."
"Fred, you better block the road down there at the fork. Don't let anybody up this way except the boss. This scene is pretty bad, and we don't need people up here lookin' or takin' pictures. Okay?"
"You got it, Frank. And the boss won't be coming. He told me to have you all come straight to the hospital. He and the coroner will meet you there. He said to have somebody stay back and guard the scene until the forensics guy comes at dawn. 10-4?"
"Yeh, I got it. I'll ask Ozzie to cover here; I reckon you can go back to town with us as soon as we got the ambulance loaded and there's nothing to take pictures of. See you in about 30, I think. 302 clear."
"Understood. 307 clear."
Frank turned back to Ozzie, who was standing where he heard both sides of the radio exchange.
"Yeh, I'll be glad to hang out here and wait for the forensics guy, Frank. Martha's got the night shift at the Jiffy Mart, so I'll probably get home in time to have breakfast with her. Not that I'm going to have much of an appetite after seein' all this!"
The "all this" that Ozzie referred to was the corpse nailed upside down to the trunk of the pine tree. He was stripped naked. His body, arms and legs were covered with welts and lacerations, some showing a distinctive link pattern. Someone had whipped him with a length of chain. The body hung facing out with a single spike through both feet. His hands were spiked at the ends of a cross-timber lashed to the base of the tree. It was an upside-down crucifixion.
The victim was alive when he was crucified. Dried streams of blood ran from his hands and feet. The body was mutilated so obscenely, so sadistically, that none of them could look at it with more than a glance before feeling uncontrollably nauseous.
Another reason for wanting the road blocked was the crude cardboard sign nailed to the tree above the victim's spiked feet:
Be Warnt! Injuns, Mormins, Aleins. Bewar God's Army!
Ozzie couldn't take it any more. He ran down the road and stopped behind a tall bush. He heaved up the sandwiches and coffee he'd eaten earlier.
Christ! he thought to himself as he wiped his mouth, the vicious ignorant bastards can't even spell!
Two days later in the early morning hours someone threw a gasoline bomb through the window of the reservation community center. It burned to the ground. Another attack damaged the tribal elementary daycare building. Blood and animal entrails were thrown against the door. Bags of offal and sewage were tossed through the windows to break open on the floor. A crude cardboard sign tacked to the door bore the message: "Be Warnt! Bewar God's Army!"
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