Monday, August 29, 2005
The Von Bormann's Children By Anita Moscoso
I would love to have you come visit me and see for yourself where I spent my childhood.
I mean, for a writer like yourself…well, it would be time well spent, as you’ll see:
I grew up outside of a town where there's this small private Cemetery owned by the Von Bormann Family. The Von Bormann Family's Home is still up there overlooking the Cemetery and there's some talk about making it into a Historical Landmark.
The Local Smart Alecs started that movement. They are the types that like to go to The Clover Patch Bar and wear t-shirts with sports team logos on them and drink alcohol until they pass out.
The Blue Bloods, who do the exact same thing as the Smart Alecs only they do it in more expensive clothes would like to see the entire 100 acres shoved off the bluffs into the Straights, but you can't always get what you want...no matter what Mick Jagger says.
The Von Bormann’ s were this odd family where everyone looked alike, even the husband and wife...who in all probability were actually brother and sister and they had ' about a million kids' and it was said the kids wore really ratty, gray, ugly clothes even though the Von Bormann’ s were suppose to be Mega-Rich.
So the Von Bormann’ s kept having kids and the cemetery kept filling up until there was about 30 graves and the house fell apart little by little and the people in town saw less and less of the Von Bormann’ s until the sightings stopped all together.
The Von Bormann’ s were probably all dead the people in Town thought…though hoped was more likely what they were feeling.
Had the Von Bormann’ s been alive they’d have been way over a hundred when the stories started
It was the stories about the children that came first.
People saw these little kids wandering up and down the road leading to the Von Bormann’ s house in the middle of the night in all sorts of weather. Though, mostly they seemed to be seen more when the weather was bad.
So these people would pull over in their cars and ask the kids if they needed help and these kids would say yes and hop into the car. Then as soon as the car door slammed shut and the driver turned around to ask what on earth are you wondering around at this hour of the night they'd be gone.
Just like that.
Mrs. Woods said that once she stopped to help what she thought were two little girls walking hand in hand up that long dark road and when they got close to the car Mrs. Woods could see that the two little figures only looked liked children from a distance.
But they weren't...they were twisted and small and as Mrs. Woods would try to explain " they only looked like children, but they weren't they were just dried little husks. "
" Husks of what? "
Mrs. Woods would be asked and she would shake her head and say, " Husks, that's all. Husks."
Then the story about the Singing Lady in the cemetery started.
She was suppose to be dressed in old fashioned clothes and would wander from grave to grave singing lullabies. Once someone new to town actually talked to the Singing Lady and asked what she was she doing out there in the dark and she said, " why, I'm singing to my babies of course " and then she wandered off into the darkness.
Then a few years ago the Blue Bloods got their wish...sort of.
We had this massive rainstorm hit our town, which had started off as a massive blizzard, and we were nearly buried alive in all the snow and ice. Then something called the Pineapple Express tore in off the Pacific and the entire mess turned to water and instead of snow it rained.
And it rained and rained and rained.
Sometime during the storm part of the cliff that the Von Bormann’ s House stood on slid straight into the Straights and took part of the cemetery up there with it.
Coffins and body parts in all sorts of stages of decay started to wash up alone the shoreline.
My Dad was one of the half dozen that went up there to check and see what the state of the rest of the cemetery and the house was in.
The Von Bormann’ s House only looked abandoned. My Dad was convinced someone was watching them from that house ' lots of someones ' he told me ' that house was full of eyes.
Then they made their way carefully to the place where the cemetery was and they saw row after row of sleeping lambs and baby angels and little marble bibles with that prayer little kids say ' now I lay me down to sleep' carved into them.
I'm not sure who noticed the names first, but they started to go from stone to stone and familiar names started to come up...one after the other.
All had once been residents of the Town and later of the Town's Cemetery.
Now they were up here buried under children's tombstones.
" Oh God, " someone said, " it's them, it's Mrs. Von Bormann’ s Babies. "
They were you see...they had become Mrs. Von Bormann’ s babies.
This was Mrs. Von Bormann’ s nursery.
The Cemetery.
It probably always had been where her ‘babies’ came from.
Later these people from the Health Department found more of Von Bormann’ s Babies up at the Von Bormann’ s house. They were in the sitting rooms reading books and comics in front of cold dusty fireplaces and in a spider-webbed schoolroom with a blackboard and the ABC's printed on it in colored chalk.
They held stuffed toys and had ribbons in their hair and some were even sitting on a swinging bench in the backyard.
Corpses.
Mrs. Von Bormann’ s babies.
And to this day no one knows how they got up there.
So if you come to visit me soon (and I hope you do) all I can say is watch out for those kids on the road and if you hear singing coming from the cemetery I suggest you run, not walk away as fast as you can.
© anita marie moscoso 2005-text
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