Mount Moriah
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The apartments above small old block of shops contains an odd assortment of characters, each with his or her own quixotic goals. In a week in March, their paths cross in unpredictable ways.
There’s the Anglican priest, for one. He moved out of his parish in confusion after being told by God, in no uncertain terms, that He (God) did not exist. Now the priest is trying to break all the commandments, then work on all the cardinal sins.
There’s the poet who has given up on high art and is simply, and unsuccessfully, trying to write a book of limericks about good places to buy cinnamon buns.
There are two students from the local university, trying to assemble a bomb to use on the subway, to make a political point or two.
Finally, there’s a pregnant woman in a ground-floor apartment convinced she’s carrying not only a baby, but a genuine alien who’s drawing up a report on Earthlings to decide whether or not Earth should have its humans removed.
To this assembly comes a CSIS agent, sent by his superiors to get him out of the way for a week or two. They really don’t expect him to find anything.
The one unused apartment? That’s the object of a foursome of teenagers who have targeted it for a romantic afternoon tryst, as soon as they can arrange it.
Pursued by his wife’s largish brothers, the priest skips town with the poet, intending to climb a hill called Mount Moriah to see if that nonexistent God has a supplementary message for him. This pair is followed by (among others) the CSIS agent who thinks the poet was the source of the bomb-making equipment he found. The agent is accompanied by the woman with the alien implant, since they’ve become lovers. The whole bunch is followed in turn by a Canadian special forces JTF2 agent.
While these people are climbing hills in search of enlightenment, a garbled version of events has got the American and Canadian governments convinced there’s a major terrorist threat at the apartment building.
Which there would be, if the two students weren’t already on their way to Toronto with their little device, pursued by a couple of US SEALs.
So there isn’t anyone doing anything wrong at the apartment (other than a couple of pairs of oversexed teens) when the army actually gets to the apartment.
In the end, the university students are prevented from setting off their device, the priest and his followers watch the alien depart by flying saucer, and people generally set through it all.
Lenny Everson
List of Completed Works by Lenny Everson (As of November, 2014, over 36,000 copies of Lenny's works have been downloaded.) Novels • Death On a Small, Dark Lake. 67,700 words. Our hero snags a body in a remote lake. • Death on a Rocky Little Island 71,500 words. Our hero convinces a friend to take a canoeing trip to the 30,000 islands. • Mount Moriah 50,000 words. A strange sequence events involves a priest, a poet, a CSIS agent, a space alien, four horny teens, among others. My most fun fiction. • Last Exit to Pine Lake. 45,000 words. A dying writer goes back into the bush to off himself. Grimly literary. My best fiction. • Ally Oop Through the Ulysses Trees. As much fun as Mount Moriah! • Marley Was Dead: A Christmas Carol Mystery Novelettes • Granite and Dry Blood. 9,700 words. Our hero wants to write a book on Massassauga Park. Various people would prefer that he didn't. • Death on a Foggy Spring Portage. 11,800 words. One member of a paddling group is found dead on a muddy portage. Screenplays • Murder on a Foggy Spring Portage. One member of a paddling group is found dead on a muddy portage. Plays • Louis Riel and Gabriel Dumont. Ghosts of the two Métis leaders meet in today's world to remember their lives. A short (20-minute) play for two actors. Full-Length Poetry Books • The Minor Odyssey of Lollie Heronfeathers Singer. A middle-aged woman tries to connect with her aboriginal ancestry. • In The Tavern of Lost Souls. Four poets meet at a grungy bar once a month to give their poetic answers to random questions. • Love in a Canoe. A set of five chapbooks and a songbook about the love of canoeing. With illustrations. • Louis Riel and Gabriel Dumont are Dead. Ghosts of the two Métis leaders meet in today's world to remember their lives. Includes the play. Poetry Chapbooks • Encounter in a Small, Old Cemetery. Autumn. Midnight. Poet visits a small, old private graveyard. Best poem I ever wrote. • Fire and Ashes. Poems about life's flames and regrets. • The Empty Tarmac of a Long-Abandoned Airport. Poems about having a midlife crisis. • Love Poems A compilation • Pray for Me: 22 Poems Probably Slandering God and Jesus • Ballads from an Unlucky Fisherman: Poems from a fisherman • Tweetable Limericks. 60 limericks small enough to be tweets • Hiking Poems. Co-Authored Poetry Chapbooks • Who Would Be a God? ...
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Mount Moriah - Lenny Everson
Mount Moriah
By Lenny Everson
rev 2
Copyright Lenny Everson 2011
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****
I could start this story by telling you about the woman who claimed to have and alien inside her. Or the CSIS agent, the two guys making bombs, or the teenagers with sex on their minds. It might even be logical to tell you first about the priest who had God speak to him down by the river.
But I won’t.
I’ll start with a smallish commercial building called the Dayton Block, because that was the centre of action (even more than Mount Moriah). Four stores, five apartments: several tales to tell.
****
There was nothing about the little block of stores to make it especially memorable to the passer-by or lost tourist. It did, in fact, take up about a third of the city block on Regina Street, no more.
Perhaps, had someone in apartment four made a mistake with a timer or a block of C4, the whole thing would have made the news as a pile of rubble. But the people making the bombs up there were, or had decided they were, fervent disciples of their own beliefs, and were careful. This had so far prevented an accident with their assemblies, although they sometimes got the shakes after an experiment or two.
And they had two weeks to ready the five bombs they planned to use.
There was, an architecture student might have noted, a definite air of the Art Deco about the building. That would not have been wrong; it had been put up in the early 1930s based on a plan and design from a Toronto company, and modeled on similar units in that city. The plan had been drawn up and the blueprints made during the late 1920s.
In those years of planning, there was still money, lots of money and credit, and plenty of optimism. By the time the last bricks were being set into mortar and the name Dayton Block
was set into concrete along the roofline, the money had disappeared along with the optimism, and it was only the skill of the masons that kept the building up, roofless, during the first years of the depression.
But the city’s post office was built across the street, and that saved the building. The government was still paying workers, and the architects and contractors needed a place to stay until the post office was finished.
Someone bought the brick building and finished it, then rented the upstairs rooms by the month to anybody who could afford them. Rent wasn’t much, but interest rates and wages were correspondingly low, so there was enough potential income to justify finishing the structure.
The ground floor was divided into storefronts, although the building was only a block away from downtown. But the architects of the post office moved in bringing a sandwich shop, and then a hand laundry. The building brought in, for a few years, enough money to keep going.
As the years passed, the post office – also an art deco design, by the way – continued to justify the Dayton Block’s existence. The sandwich and laundry shops merged under one owner and a tailor set up near one corner.
And the four upstairs apartments were divided into eight, to support transients during these hard times, and to house the owner of the sandwich an laundry business and his family. He was Chinese by heritage, although his wife was Malay. They and their five children kept themselves housed and fed until the war came.
There was money during the war, and women and older men in from villages like Baden and Jakobstettle went to working the local factories making, among other things, incendiary bombs to drop onto places in Germany with similar names and onto people in Germany with the same last names as the workers.
The workers ate in the sandwich shop after work and tried not to figure out whether some of their products, dropped from Stirling and Lancaster bombers, had cooked some of their old-country relatives into the schnitzels and sausages they’d grown up on.
After the war, the block declined a bit. The eaves weren’t replaced in time, and some water damage resulted. Cockroaches moved into the damp areas, and people who were dreaming of their own little homes going up in the black earth around Waterloo moved out to start families.
There was a thought, by one of the series of owners, of putting in wiring and plumbing to meet the new government standards, but a detailed assessment scotched that idea. Instead, that owner kept detailed figures on income from the building, and expenses. The figures looked good, since he hadn’t done much maintenance, and there were always optimists willing to rent out the stores that faced the sidewalk. The rooms upstairs were often empty, except as storage for the shops, and eventually accumulated a museum-like collection from previous entrepreneurs who’d gone bust, leaving a few boxes each behind them.
With the profit and loss figures looking good, the sale of the Dayton Block to another optimist was a foregone conclusion, since sooner or later there was one who knew nothing about the money that would be needed to get the apartments into habitable condition.
By the 1980s the Dayton Block was getting a bit shabby. The post office had moved to a new facility where sorting machines and snotty clerks could work more efficiently, and the art deco building was now used as offices for immigration and welfare and other services that didn’t require as much traffic.
As a building declined – and the Dayton Block was in definite decline – its value dropped and the rent on the stores dropped. Those stores, such as a leather-working hobby shop, whose customers came from a distance could survive, but those stores needing constant traffic, such as the convenience store on the corner, changed hands regularly. Most of the new owners were from countries where foot traffic predominated, and their minds somehow associated the constant stream of automobile traffic with customers. It never worked, not with the limited parking around.
The city, during those years, made things worse by making the street a one-way drive. This sped up traffic quite a bit, but old people didn’t like faster cars, since their reflexes were slowing, and women with kids didn’t like faster streets since kids tend to dart unpredictably in the wrong directions. Businesses all along such streets suffered, as one might expect.
By the late 80s the Dayton Block was being eyed for a parking lot, but not too seriously, since there wasn’t much need for one. But the owner, a Lebanese man, knew that a parking lot required no maintenance, and might someday be sold to some concern that didn’t want the hassle of tearing down an old building before putting up a concrete and glass monstrosity. He did loosen a few wires, but the building didn’t burn down as he’d hoped – the arcing just interfered with TV reception in the neighbourhood.
At its nadir, in 1986, the block was home to the leather shop, seventh in a succession of tiny convenience stores, a tailor’s shop, a dressmaker’s shop (owned by the mistress of the tailor who paid half the rent) and the headquarters of the Albanian Communist Party in Canada. Members of the Communist Party, both of them, lived frugally in the one upstairs room that was rented, and ran off newspapers and brochures on an old but well-maintained offset press on the ground floor. In their spare time (of which they had more than you might suppose) they smoked pot, grew herbs on the windowsill, and wrote poetry (in English, since they’d forgotten most of the Albanian their parents had taught them).
They got wonderful letters from the Party in Albania, but no money from that remote land, and endless rejection letters from literary journals to which they’d submitted their poems. Communist ideology, it seems, doesn’t make for good poetry. The man was employed by the post office to deliver mail to a few affluent neighbourhoods, and he’d sometimes slip a brochure or poem into the someone’s mailbox, but somehow the revolution never gelled in Waterloo.
The woman knitted sweaters, and carefully broke into the boxes in the other rooms, or at least the ones that looked like they’d not been touched for a generation. Aside from one mummified cat, they managed to get only a bit of money for the goods they looted. The cat went for two hundred dollars to an oriental herbalist.
The years passed, and a man with a few smarts, a bit of money, and an inside connection to local government (his wife worked for city planning) bought the Dayton Block. Which, you will remember, is only a third of a block long and sits on a one-way street across from a government building that used to be the post office.
The Lebanese man who’d owned the building had given up waiting for it to burn down, and the city was complaining about the wildlife in the building. And he was looking at some property north of Toronto, but needed just a bit more cash for it.
John M. Brubacher (the M
to distinguish him from a few other John Brubachers who lived on Mennonite farms outside town) was taking a calculated risk when he bought the building. But he had the odds with him. He got the price down by pointing out the mice, rats, cockroaches, and bats that were enjoying the building, the unsuitability of the upstairs rooms for human habitation, the urgent need for a new roof, foundation bracing, and new plumbing.
And of course, the fact that the electricity was shorting out somewhere in the building.
Finally, he made the man from Lebanon aware that, as everyone knew, the fifty dollars worth of art deco work that had originally gone into the building now meant that the local architectural-heritage group wouldn’t let the building be torn town. He made the Dayton Block seem so sad that the price went down forty percent from the starting point.
The Lebanese owner wept real tears, mostly because he’d been willing to accept a fifty percent discount, and sold it to John M. Brubacher.
Things did happen, of course, and almost all of them in the way Mrs. Brubacher had predicted. The city, aware that one-way streets killed business (although they hadn’t a clue why) made the street two-way again. The provincial government, flush with money it pretended it had just before an election, started handing out bundles to people willing to maintain old buildings near the downtowns, to handle immigrants. Someone had been reading Jane Jacobs in detail, it seemed.
The city administration matched the handouts after being hounded by the architectural-heritage group’s main yeller at council meetings, so the fifty dollars worth of decoration resulted in many tens of thousands of dollars being put into John M. Brubacher’s account to pay for new plumbing and new wiring.
The day after that deal, the fire department put out an electrical fire in the building, much to Brubacher’s relief.
Brubacher got his money and his wife got a spiffy bimmer and a cottage on the shores of Lake Huron, in which she could paint pictures of the lake and, when John was busy in town, entertain a young man from Kincardine who would drop over to critique her techniques (painting among them) for hours at a time.
During the six months it took to upgrade the plumbing, replace the wiring, and repair a roof problem that John’s building inspector hadn’t noticed, the convenience store changed hands again, going to a Jamaican who made very good meat patties. The tailor hung in there, although he lost customers, who complained about dust on the clothing, but the dress shop skipped off to New Hamburg, where it abruptly changed into a garden-supply outlet for upscale tourists. The leathercraft shop stayed there, since its customers seldom noticed anything around them when they were tooling a fine belt. And a bakery took out an option on a store, contingent on the work being finished by the first of January. With a few inspired shortcuts the city might not have been informed about, the work was done by Christmas.
After the work was done there were four apartments above the store. You’re curious? Let me tell you about them.
The first of these apartments was taken by two young engineering brothers from the University of Waterloo. Middle-class students on a scholarship, they applied themselves to their courses, to picking up girlfriends, and to an interesting brand of right-wing politics. Mind you, they never brought their girlfriends back to the apartment, because they were also making bombs, which they planned to use in Toronto, on the subway, on April first.
The second apartment was taken by the tailor, who expected his former girlfriend to drive in from New Hamburg on Mondays, when the garden-supply store was closed, and entertain him. This plan went awry when the garden-supply business turned out quite well, and the girlfriend decided she didn’t want the tailor’s nimble fingers as much as she wanted a lifestyle that included airline travel and exploring a late-twentyish young woman who worked at the Pro Hardware store in town. You could find them many Mondays at the Waterlot, a fancy restaurant on the edge of the river, planning things best known only to themselves and to an adult-accessories store in Hamilton.
The apartment became available when the tailor, trying to fix a suit through his tears, stuck himself with an unclean needle, developed blood poisoning, and died three weeks later.
His wife attended the funeral, then left for her old family home in Montreal to be with her kids.
Another tailor, this one from Yemen, bought the business without the loss of a single customer. This guy wanted to move his family into apartment 2, the one the first tailor had rented through July, but the first tailor had paid up until then, and everybody thought it easier, from a legal point of view, to keep it empty until July.
Apartment 2 was empty until July. Note that.
Besides, the new tailor was having problems getting his family, one wife and two pre-teen children, into Canada. It seems an unmanned plane, flying over Yemen but directed by a nervous young man in Arkansas, had spotted a car belonging to a known al Qaeda terrorist cell and launched a Hellfire missile at it. Terrorists not being that stupid, the car had been lent to a fellow who just wanted to drive it to town to pick