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    Posted at 4:09 pm by writergherlone, on August 15, 2024

    The Carnival

    Story and photo by Kristy Gherlone

    Adeline searched for her mother’s face among the crowds as her tiny frame dangled sideways under the fortune teller’s arm. If she found it, she wondered if her expression would say, ‘I told you so.’  

    ***

         The carnival had rolled into town on Thursday night, just as it did every year at the end of April, when it was still early springtime in Maine. Missionville was always first on the carnival circuit and for most people it was an exciting event. It marked the end of the long, desolate winter, and was a delightful teaser to the summer ahead; the first in a long string of thrills, but not everyone felt that way. Adeline’s mother hated the carnival. To her, it was so akin to hell that the fire and brimstone it carried with it melted what was left of the snow. It was a haven for prostitutes and drug dealers and tempted those already on the edge of sin. It was a place rife with danger; where gypsies stole away children, and limbs and severed heads littered the ground around the rides that had claimed them. Adeline was never allowed to go, but that didn’t stop her from asking. She’d started begging as soon as the posters began to pop-up all-over town. 

         “But everyone else is going. Everyone is talking about it in school,” she whined. “There’s going to be a Tilt-O-Whirl and everything! Janine won a huge stuffed turtle last year, and Sophie said they had the best Dough Boys she’s ever eaten.”

         “I don’t want to hear about it,” Adeline’s mother said.

         “But everyone will think I’m a freak if I don’t go.”

         “I don’t care what everyone thinks,” Adeline’s mother said. “And I don’t care what everyone else does. Gambling is just fine for the likes of Janine,” she sniffed, “but not for my child.”

         “She wasn’t gambling,” Adeline sighed. “She was playing a game. You know, like the games we play at the church picnics.”

         “Don’t you sit there and compare our blessed church to that rat-infested cesspool,” her mother snapped. “I won’t have this kind of talk in my house. You’re not going and that is that.”

         Adeline pouted. She swore her mother hated everything fun. They never went anywhere in the summer except church. While her friends prattled on about camping trips and parades, barbecues and boat rides, Adeline stayed quiet and churned with envy. “But it’s not fair,” Adeline said. 

         “Fair? You want to talk about fair? How fair is it that I’m the one stuck raising you while your father is off committing I-don’t-know how many sins? How fair is it that I’m working two jobs just so I can put food on the table? Don’t you talk to me about fair! Even if I wanted to let you go, which I most certainly do not, I wouldn’t have the money. I can barely pay the rent, so you can just spend the rest of the afternoon cleaning that pit you call a bedroom and think about that!”

         Adeline stormed into her room and slammed the door. Her insides ached with injustice.  She jumped onto her bed, snatched her diary out from underneath her mattress, and tore it open. She flipped to a blank page, and wrote, ‘mom is a big, fat jerk.’ The satisfaction she felt was momentary. “I’m sorry, God. I didn’t mean it,” she said, scribbling over what she had written. She yanked out the page, ripped it to shreds, and tossed the pieces into the trash can. She turned her gaze towards the ceiling and folded her hands, “If you’d just please let me go to the carnival, I’ll never say anything bad about my mother again,” she vowed, though she knew it was a lie. It was supposed to be a sin to hate your mother, but sometimes Adeline did. She didn’t understand why her mom was so mean, because the truth was, she didn’t know much about her mother at all. There weren’t any pictures of her from before Adeline was born, and her mother never shared any of the details about her childhood. Whenever Adeline asked, her mother would say, ‘Mind your business.”  If Adeline persisted, she’d get mad. “Leave it alone. My past is mine to forget,” she’d say. If she had ever done anything that brought a smile or provoked a laugh; if she had ever done anything silly or even remotely adventurous, there was no sign. Adeline had never even seen her laugh, and the only smile she ever gave was the fake one she wore at church.

         “I don’t hear any cleaning going on in there,” her mother hollered.

         Adeline jumped off the bed. She stuck her tongue out at the door and kicked a pile of dirty clothes underneath her dresser.  She’d never met her father, but sometimes she wished he’d taken her with him when he left. She thought about that while she cleaned her room.  

    ***

         “And the Lord said, “Go into all the world and proclaim the gospel!”  Pastor Cranmore boomed during Wednesday evening service. 

          Adeline, who’d fallen asleep, jumped to her feet.  “Pepperoni pizza!” she cried out, still in the throes of a dream. Everyone turned to stare. Adeline’s mother grabbed the back of her pants, hauled her back down into the pew, and gave her a scathing look. Adeline shrugged.

         “Let us pray,” Pastor Cranmore said. Everyone bowed their heads. “Lord, please look over my flock as they venture forth to do your work. Protect my children as they descend upon that heathen carnival to deliver your words and let them be heard, in Christ’s name, Amen.”

         Adeline’s heart skipped. Carnival? She sat up straight and stole a sideways glance at her mother. She was frowning. 

          Adeline smiled and clasped her hands. “Thank you, God,” she whispered.

         Her mother elbowed her in the rib. “Don’t get too excited, young lady. I have no intention of going.”

         “But…” Adeline started.

         “We’ll discuss this later,” her mother hissed. “Now pay attention.”

         Adeline scowled.

         “Now, I’m going to need some volunteers,” Pastor Cranmore said. He scanned the congregation. His eyes fell on Adeline’s mother.  She stiffened. “Charity Loveridge, I’d like you to take the lead on this. We’re going to need some brochures and…,” he continued, talking on and on, but Adeline didn’t hear the rest. She was going to the carnival! 

    ***

             “Remember, we are here to do the Lord’s work, young lady, and nothing more,” Adeline’s mother said the next evening when the church van rolled into a parking space on the edge of the fairgrounds.

         Adeline’s face was pressed up against the window in the back seat. “I see Janine! And there’s Ramona!” she exclaimed.

         “Did you hear me?”

         “A Ferris Wheel! There’s a Ferris Wheel! Oh! Can I go on it just once? Please, please, pretty please?” Adeline begged.

         “Adeline Louise,” Adeline’s mother snapped, “I already told you ‘No.’ We’re going to hand out church fliers and that’s all.”

         “But that’s not fair!”

         “Don’t start with that again. You knew how it was going to be. Now come on. The sooner we hand these out, the sooner we can leave,” she said, slapping a stack of papers into Adeline’s hand.

         Adeline pouted. She took the brochures, hopped out of the van, and joined the others who had gathered.

         “Okay, everyone,” Pastor Cranmore said as he got out of the van as well. “Let’s break up into our groups. We’ll meet back here in an hour.”

         “Come on, Adeline,” her mother said, casting a wary glance toward the entrance. “Let’s get this over with.” 

         Adeline couldn’t contain her excitement. The music! The people! She’d never seen anything like it! It was all so thrilling! She skipped on ahead.

         “Get back here this minute,” Adeline’s mother barked, running to capture her. Her hand shook as it closed around Adeline’s. “This place is so full of sin, I can feel it from here.”

         Adeline didn’t know how something so wonderful could be such a sin.

         “Tickets!” The man hollered at the gate. “Get your tickets! Ride all night, only twenty bucks!”  he said, waving a string of colorful stubs. He gave Adeline and her mother a lop-sided grin, revealing a mouth full of blackened teeth. “How about it, pretty little ladies? Tickets?” he winked.

         Adeline reached out to take one, but her mother slapped her hand away. “No thank you,” she said to the man, her fingers tightening around Adeline’s hand, “but if you care to spare a minute, I’d like to talk to you about Jesus,” she said, pulling out a brochure.

         The man’s smile turned into a scowl. “Lady, do I look like I want to talk about Jesus? Cripes,” he growled, “move it along before you scare off my customers!” he said.

          Adeline’s mother sighed. “Well, I didn’t say it was going to be easy. Let’s start in the back and work our way through,” she said.

         Adeline trailed behind, taking in the sights and smells.

         “Everyone’s a winner, folks!” A man shouted as they entered the game section. “A dollar a try!”

         Adeline saw some kids from school playing a basketball toss. They looked like they were having a blast. She wished she could play too. “Can I go and say hello?” she asked, hopefully. 

        “No. You need to stay with me,” her mother said, stopping to give a brochure to a young couple with kids. When they started moving again, Adeline saw a tent with a sign on the outside. It said, ‘Fortunes Read. Five Dollars.’ As she contemplated what it might be like to know the future, an old woman emerged. She wore a funny hat and a long dress. When she saw Adeline, she waved.  Shyly, Adeline waved back.

         “Adeline!” someone screeched from somewhere behind. Startled, Adeline whipped around. It was Ramona. She was carrying a giant stuffed lion. 

         “Wow! Where’d you get that?” Adeline asked, reaching over to stroke it.

         “I won it,” Ramona said proudly. 

         “Lucky!” Adeline said enviously.

         “I’m glad you’re here,” Ramona said. “No one will go on the Zipper with me. Can you?”

         “What’s a Zipper?” Adeline asked.

         “Only the coolest, scariest ride ever,” Ramona said. “It’s this big cage thing that takes you up in the air and turns you upside down. Last year a kid threw up on it. It’s real neat.”

          It did sound scary, but it also sounded fun. Adeline looked at her mother with pleading eyes.

         “Absolutely not. It’s not safe,” she said.

         Just then, Pastor Cranmore and some of the other members of the group walked up and began talking to Adeline’s mother. 

         “Well, I better go,” Ramona said. “I’ll see you around.”

          “Okay, bye,” Adeline said, disappointedly. She glanced over at the tent again. The old woman was still there. The way she kept staring made Adeline nervous. When she motioned for Adeline to come over, Pastor Cranmore said, “Looks like that lady wants a brochure. “Go and give her one, Adeline.”

         Adeline didn’t want to. She hid behind her mother.

         Distracted, Adeline’s mother shooed her out, “Go on and do what you’re told,” she said.

         Reluctantly, Adeline walked over to the tent and held a brochure at arm’s length. “Here’s some stuff about Jesus and things,” she said.

          The fortune teller smiled, “Thank you,” she said, reaching out to accept it. “Come on inside. I can’t see a thing without my reading glasses.”

         Adeline looked back towards her mother. She was still talking. Adeline knew she shouldn’t, but she followed the fortune teller inside anyway.  Before she knew what was happening, the fortune teller snatched her up and carried her out the back!

         Adeline wiggled and thrashed, but the fortune teller tightened her grip and hurried toward the back field. Adeline tried to call out before she could be carried further out of sight, but the old woman clamped her free hand over Adeline’s mouth. “Shush,” she said. 

         The intoxicating aroma of grilled onions, fried sausages, and cotton candy dissipated as they moved further away from the fairgrounds, and it began to smell more like Porta Potties and grease. It was quieter back there, but Adeline could still hear the muted sounds of music and laughter. Every so often a shriek of terror or perhaps delight would pierce the air, as whoever it came from churned around inside of the Zipper. Adeline had wanted to go on the Zipper, but her mother had said no. “It isn’t safe,” she’d said. Adeline smirked, despite her dilemma. “Yeah. This was so much safer,” she mumbled, rolling her eyes. 

         “What’d ya say girl?” the fortune teller asked.

         “Nothing,” Adeline said.

         The old woman’s pace began to slow as they neared a row of campers. “Well, we’re here,” she said, coming to a full stop. “It ain’t much, but it’s home.”

         Adeline lifted her head. “Home” was a rusted, red trailer that looked so fragile, a stiff wind could probably blow it to pieces.

         “Dale!” the old woman screeched. “Where you at, boy? You come on out here and help me with this child,” she huffed, out of breath. She set Adeline down but kept a grip on her arm.

           Adeline cringed as a large boy wearing a grimy, white T-shirt shirt busted out through the door.

         “Who’s this?” the boy asked, giving Adeline a once over.

         “Don’t matter who. You just help me get her inside. And quick,” she said, stealing a wary glance around.

         The boy called Dale bolted down the steps and scooped Adeline up. She didn’t even try to fight or get away. She just let him carry her up the steps and inside.

         “Have a seat,” the fortune teller said, and following them in. 

         Adeline hesitated, glancing toward the door. 

         “You can run if you want,” the fortune teller said following Adeline’s gaze. “but I wouldn’t advise it. The carnival can be a pretty dangerous place for a girl alone. Ain’t that right, Dale,” she said, shooting him a look.

         Dale pulled a small knife out of his pocket, held it up to the light, and ran his finger along the edge of the blade. Adeline’s heart skipped. This is it, she thought, I’m about to be killed!  She had to think fast. “Did you know that Jesus says it’s a sin to murder, especially children?” Adeline asked, “so, you should probably let me go. I wouldn’t want you to get into trouble.”

         “No one’s gonna hurt ya, honey,” the fortune teller said. “Dale can be a little rough, but don’t be scared. He’s harmless. He don’t know no better.”

         Adeline wanted to believe her. She eyed Dale suspiciously and was relieved when he plucked a chunk of wood from the table and began to whittle with the knife.

         “Dale, you go on outside now. I’ll call you if I need you,” the fortune teller said.

         Dale took the wood and knife and went back outside.

         The fortune teller turned her attention back to Adeline. “I just want to talk with you a while,” she said. “That’s all.”

         Adeline couldn’t imagine what they’d have to talk about or why.

         “What’s your name?” she asked.

         “Adeline.” Adeline said.

         The old woman smiled. “That’s a right fine and proper name. People call me Ro. How old are you, child?” she asked.

         “Eight,” Adeline said.

         Ro sucked in her breath and put her hand to her heart. “My goodness. Eight whole years,” she shook her head. “Time does fly. Doesn’t seem like so long ago that my little girl was eight.” 

         “You had a little girl?” Adeline asked, shocked by the notion.

         “Yep, I sure did and she was a beauty. Course not quite as pretty as you,” she winked, “but she was a looker, that one. And the talent! People came from all around just to see her perform.”

         Adeline’s interest was piqued. “What did she do?” she asked.

         “Do?” Ro cried. “Why, she was one of the biggest deals around, that one! She was a Trapeze artist!”

         “Wow! That’s neat!” Adeline cried.

         “Mmm hmm,” Ro nodded proudly. “Oh, that girl worked so hard. Up each morning at four; practicing until it was too dark to see. Couldn’t keep her away from it. She was addicted. She started young and made quite a name for herself here on the carnival circuit before she even turned ten.”

         “She lived at the carnival?” Adeline asked incredulously. 

         “Of course she did. I raised her right up in it. She loved it. Yep, she was a carny girl through and through,” Ro said.

         “I wish I lived at a carnival,” Adeline said. “I bet it’s fun. I bet you get to travel around and visit all kinds of places. I almost never get to do anything. Do you like living here?”

         “I do. Been with it a long time. I suppose it’s like everything else, there’s good points and bad ones. Sometimes it can get real lonely. I sure do miss my daughter,” she said. 

          “What happened to her?” Adeline asked. “Did the Gypsies steal her?’

         Ro laughed heartily. “’Course not. She grew up, like all kids do,” she said. “She fell in love and had her heart broken when her honey ran off with the snake charmer. She blamed it on the carnival life. She blamed me. When she found out she was gonna have a baby, and couldn’t perform anymore, she got terrible depressed. There was nothing anyone could do for her. When the Christians came, one of them told her that the carnival folk were all sinners. Said her misery was her own fault because she lived a life full of sin. He promised her a new life full of happiness if she left and joined their church. He told her that God could make her happy again.”

         Adeline thought about that. Her mother believed in God, but she wasn’t happy. “Did she go with them?” she asked. 

         Ro gave Adeline a sad smile. “She did.”

         Adeline felt bad for her. “The Christians aren’t bad,” she said, trying to lighten her mood. “They’re mostly nice, I guess. They wouldn’t hurt her or anything.”

         “Oh, sweet pea,” Ro said, reaching over to touch Adeline’s cheek. “No group of people is all bad or all good. It’s a dangerous thing to think that way. You have to take each person, individually. What that man said about carnival folk all being sinners was wrong. That did hurt her. He convinced her that she was a bad person just because of where she came from. It doesn’t matter where you come from, it matters what’s on the inside. The carnival does have some awful sinners, but you might be surprised to know we have some Christians here too.”

         “You do?” Adeline asked, surprised.

         “Sure we do. Religion can be a wonderful thing to have in your life, just so long as that’s not all you have. You have to make time for other things. One thing my girl should have known, being a trapeze artist and all, is that you gotta have balance. If you lean too far in one direction you’re bound to fall. It’s best to stay right in the middle. She forgot that she was always the happiest in the middle. ‘Course if you stay grounded,” she added, “you can’t fall at all, but some people are born with their head in the clouds and that’s a whole different story.”

          Adeline wanted to hear that story but didn’t dare ask. “Did she ever come back to visit?” 

         “I’m afraid not. She swore she’d never set foot in a carnival again. She said she wanted to forget about the past.”

         “That’s what my mom always says,” Adeline said.

         “Well, sorry to be the one to tell you, but that ain’t right. If you forget the past, you forget everything. The good and the bad. The happy and the sad. It’s all part of who you are. It’s all part of who you become.”

         Adeline vowed to tell her mother that. If she ever saw her again. 

         As if reading her mind, Ro said, “Well, I hate to, but I suppose I’d better take you back. I’m just so glad I got to meet you.”

         Adeline smiled. “I’m glad I got to meet you too.” She knew her mother must be worried, but part of her she wished she could stay a little longer. “I hope you get to see your daughter again,” she said.

         “I’m sure I will,” Ro said knowingly. “Sometimes folks just need a little reminding from time to time.”

         Adeline started for the door. “Can you really tell the future?” she asked, turning back around.

         Ro chuckled. “I get a glimpse every once in a while,” 

         “Can you tell me mine?” Adeline asked hopefully.

         “Let me see your hand,” the fortune teller said.

         Adeline held it out. The old woman captured it, turned it over, and traced her finger along the palm. “Looks like you’re going to have a busy summer. I see some adventures coming your way,” she said. 

         “Are you sure?” Adeline asked excitedly. 

         “The outlook is good,” Ro winked.

         Adeline prayed it was true.

         “Just remember, a person’s future is up to them,” the old woman said. “Keep an open mind and you’ll do alright.” She opened the door and together they started back towards the fairgrounds. 

         “How are we going to find my mother?” Adeline asked, looking around at all the people.

         “Don’t you worry. I think I know where she might be,” Ro said. “At least I hope so,” she added under her breath.

         They walked on and on until they came to a large, tented arena. Ro ushered Adeline inside. “There she is,” she said, pointing towards the ceiling. “I knew she’d come to her senses, eventually.”

         Adeline couldn’t believe her eyes. Her mother was on the high wire! She wore a smile so bright, Adeline almost didn’t recognize her.

         “Hi Adeline! Hi Mama!” Adeline’s mother hollered, waving enthusiastically when she spotted them. “I’d forgotten all about this! I’d forgotten how much fun it was!”

         Shocked, Adeline turned to Ro. 

         “People call me Ro, but I hope you’ll call me Grandma,” she said.

         Adeline laughed. “Really?”

         “Come on up here, Adeline,” Adeline’s mother called. “You’re going to love this!”

    End

    **No part of this story may be copied or reproduced without written consent from the author.

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    Author: writergherlone

    Kristy Gherlone is the New Hampshire author of novels, The History Lottery, Twelve Urns, and Innate Tendencies. You can also find some of her short stories in Squawk Back 167, Bedlam Magazine's Loud Zoo #9, Every Writers Resource, and in Wild Women's Medicine Circle Journal. Kristy grew up in northern Maine, attended the University of Maine in Orono, worked for Baxter State Park, and as an Early Interventionist for children with autism. Currently, she is a full-time writer, mother, grandmother, and duck mother of Miss Sassafras.
    Posted in Uncategorized | 0 Comments | Tagged carnival, childhood, familyfriendly, fiction, maine, summer |

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