ancy
Mercatelli was what Clayton Loso and the older men down at the
Barre Legion called a good old-fashioned slut. "Don't be
fooled, boys," Clayton told us. "She may be a flatlander
but she fits the bill, alright."
Then when she was found behind the Central Vermont tracks, naked, with
a black stocking twisted around her neck, Clayton said he wasn't surprised
at all. The way he put it was that Mercatelli was one of those girls who
come along who you want to screw so bad, and when she don't, why, you'd
just as soon kill her for it.
The cops made a big deal out of those words and said it proved his guilt
but all it proved was that one of the Chucks sitting around Clayton's
store that day ratted him out. That was just Clayton being Clayton. He
had a way with words that made us laugh but none of us took him serious.
We figured they picked on Clayton on account of him being a Woodchuck
and for telling the truth on the daughter of a rich New York bitch. Clayton
always said that flatlanders were taking over the state, one by one.
Mercatelli first showed up at our school in the middle of the seventh
grade. She brought something with her from New York, a walk and a look
like she was too good for us Chucks, like she was better than all the
town girls put together. She had long blonde hair and big tits and skinny
legs and her eyelids were always smeared with purple. She wore tight jeans
ripped in the knees and the back of the thighs and she walked down the
hall in that slow, pigeon-toed way with her ass raised up, like a doe
in heat. Then she'd stand in front of her locker and flick her long blonde
hair back over her shoulder and roll her purple eyelids up at the ceiling
and sigh like she was just too bored by the sight of us Chucks looking
her over. But she always had a big smile for the jocks and the rich kids.
All the town girls hated her, except the ones who sucked up to her and
tried to be like her.
After Mercatelli was killed, Clayton and the other Legion men hoped
that Mercatelli's mother would leave town and that would put an end to
her political ambition. "She's got all kinds of good reasons not
to have a dead daughter on her hands," was how Clayton put it. He
said that Mercatelli's mother was the only one in Barre who didn't know
the score about her daughter. "She's too busy running around herself,
trying to be one of them liberal big shots," he said. Her husband
had died a few years before in New York and left her a pile, enough to
move to Barre and open a store and play at being a politician, Clayton
said. She was on the school board and ran for town council and as far
as he knew, maybe even wanted to be mayor someday, as crazy as that idea
was. "Keeping up appearances is pretty damn high up on that bitch's
list," Clayton said. "But all that's gonna change now, ain't
it?" After Mercatelli was found like she was, stories her mother
couldn't ignore began to circulate. And just as Clayton hoped, she dropped
out of politics and even sold the snooty second-hand clothing store she'd
bought with her husband's money.
She called her shop the Once Removed, a name Clayton had lots of fun
with, of course. It was down on North Main Street, near a health food
store, the Granite Savings Bank, a fancy Chinese restaurant, the end of
Main none of us Chucks ever hang out on. A few times we went inside the
Once Removed to see what we could remove. There wasn't much. She had it
decked out like one of those city boutiques you hear about in Boston or
Montreal, with dummies dressed like magazine models and the walls decorated
with Chinese fans and antique bridal crap. There was a little tinkling
bell on the door and the store smelled of perfume, strong enough to choke
on. Mrs. Mercatelli was tall and thin, with a beehive hairdo and cold
beady blue eyes. Clayton said she only ever had a smile for you if she
thought you were a paying customer or a registered voter.
arre
is Main Street and Main Street, as far as we Chucks were concerned, is
South Main Street, where they put the bars, the Roman Gardens pool hall
and the discount stores. Behind the stores and bars are the streets where
we all grew up, the brown and gray and green tin-roofed houses, each not
much different from the next, and the Parish Halls of different Orders,
named for one saint after another: Saint Jean, Saint Monica, Saint Joseph,
Saint Patrick, Saint What-the-Fuck. Barre is full of Catholics, on account
of all the Poles and Italians who moved here a hundred years ago to work
the quarries. A few years ago, a priest named Father Maleski at St. Augustine's
Church on Washington Street got caught molesting boys and it was on page
one of the paper for weeks. That's why the Montpelier boys down the road
call us fags and chant at football games: "Barre rhymes with fairy,
Barre rhymes with fairy" over and over, and we brawl with them underneath
the stands. Those rich fucks from Montpelier figure priests wearing dresses
banging altar boys is the way it is in Barre so we must all be faggots.
Behind the stores on the other side of Main Street is a mess of railroad
tracks, the Central Vermont lines, which connect up one way or another,
with all the granite quarries. A train engine idles back there at every
time of day or night, like a panting dog, with flatbed cars behind it
carrying huge chunks of granite tied down by cables. The trains move slowly
through the center of town and as younger boys, we played chicken by jumping
on and off of them or sometimes even in front of them. A kid named Pete
D'Agostino was killed that way when he was eight. He tripped and fell
and his head was crushed beneath a wheel. You can still make out the bloodstains
on the tracks today. Or maybe it's his blood. Half a mile from that spot
is where they found Mercatelli.
Clayton owned Loso's Supermarket on a little side street off of Main
called Dell Lane. The store was no bigger than a fruit stand, really,
but was in the Loso family for years. Back when all the brochures and
restaurant placemats called Barre the Tombstone Capital of the World,
his store might have deserved a fancy name like thata Supermarket.
But by the time Mercatelli was killed, the granite business was bust and
nobody had jobs or money to spend and Clayton's place was a wreck. The
outside paint was chipped off and the glass doors in front didn't quite
come together on account of the concrete buckling. Inside, the fluorescent
bulbs flickered, and the shelves were filled with junk nobody bought:
canned soup, dish soap, Lysol, Rid-X. It all looked like it had been sitting
there for years, the same items, like they were just for show. Clayton
made ends meet selling newspapers and cigarettes, fishing and hunting
licenses, beer, ammo, lottery tickets and porno mags. He kept the porn
behind a black curtain in a storeroom in back, except for the latest copies
of Penthouse and Hustler and Gallery, which he put
in the newspaper and magazine rack for out-of-town salesman to pick up
and jerk off to back in their motel rooms out on the Barre-Montpelier
Road.
Clayton's back room was strictly for the locals, strictly for the Chucks.
It was where the meat butchering used to be done. Big hooks hung from
the ceiling above two long white metal tables and there was still the
smell of blood in the air and in the damp wooden walls and floor. Clayton
called the room his "Meat Rack." The hard core magazines hung
in plastic covers from the walls or were spread out over the tables. The
girls on the covers wore nothing but garter belts and black stockings,
their knees spread wide apart, leaning back on their hands, mouths open,
pink tongues lolling, most of them blondes. They looked like they'd just
gotten fucked or were about to be. Inside were grainy color pictures,
mostly of blonde women getting balled, doing three at a time, sometimes.
In one corner was a black metal cabinet, the size of a high school locker,
padlocked. Inside were magazines with plain black covers. Clayton kept
them sealed with a piece of strapping tape, which you could break only
if you bought them and took them out of the store. He kept a couple of
unsealed ones on a shelf under the cash register, next to his .38, and
gave us a peek once or twice. There were pictures inside of very young
girls, maybe eight or nine or even younger, being screwed by men with
hairy chests and big bellies whose faces you could never make out. These
girls looked bad, ugly. Their faces were twisted and hurting, even though
they tried to smile for the camera. They weren't so pretty to look at,
those pictures.
Clayton spent most of his days stalking back and forth behind the front
counter in his Army boots, and carried on about one thing or another.
He was short and had puffy cheeks that made him look like a toad, thick
glasses and greased back hair that was going gray. He was ugly as sin
and acted as if he was proud of it, the way he said he was proud to be
a Woodchuck. He divided the whole world into Chucks and Flatlanders. When
he was in the army, he said, he took endless shit for saying "fairm"
instead of "farm" and toim, instead of "time." For
four years the Flatlanders tried to beat the Woodchuck out of him, he
said, but they couldn't do it.
Some afternoons, he'd give us a little speech, something like: "The
goddamn liberal flatlanders are ruining this state." Or: "Soon
them faggots and lesbos'll come up here in droves to get married."
Or: "I got the clap off a hippie girl once." This last was his
proudest memory, he said it so much, not that any of us believed him.
He was always joking about something dirty, like: "There's these
two rubbers walking down the street. They go by one of them queer bars
and one says t'other, 'Hey, let's go in there and get shit-faced.'"
Sometimes Mercatelli walked by the store on her way home from school
and as she passed, Clayton pumped his hand like he was jerking off and
said, "I'd like to get her back in the Meat Rack, wouldn't you?"
And we'd hoot along with him while she made her way past the front glass
doors with that slow walk of hers.
Clayton had a wife but we rarely saw her. She wasn't fun like he was
and she never smiled. She was small and had glasses and wore plain sleeveless
dresses and her hair was going gray and her arms were all doughy and blue.
She had a strange effect on Clayton, too. He clammed up around her and
quit his blustering. He called her Mrs. Loso, even when she wasn't around.
Once or twice he put his arm around her and her small mouse-face squinched
up in pain, like he was squeezing her to death although he was just being
tender from what we saw. She went to Mass a lot, every day just about.
She was a town girl and a real Chuck. She never had much to say about
anything.
e
were in Loso's Supermarket when one of the Legion men came in with the
news that the cops had a suspect, a Montpelier weenie named Tom Miller.
Miller was supposed to be Mercatelli's latest flame, the cops said. That's
another thing that used to make us laugh: whenever some Montpelier weenie
fell for Mercatelli, which they always did. They'd meet her in the Country
Cousin or the Dream Machine or the Zodiac in East Barre and she'd screw
them in their cars out in the parking lot, or, if her mother was at some
meeting, take them home and screw them there. Next thing was, the weenie
would think he was her man and wouldn't want her screwing around except
with him. Miller was the last of Mercatelli's Montpelier lover boys.
Clayton had a saying: Montpelier's got the money and Barre's got the
honey. Barre girls have the reputation for putting out faster and younger
than Montpelier girls. So every Friday and Saturday night, rich Montpelier
weenies come over by the carload, and hunt for easy pussy. The best we
can do is wait for them out in the parking lots, with pipes and baseball
bats, and beat the shit out of the stray ones we find. Quite a few Chucks
got their knocks in and then paid for it with a weekend up in the Saint
Johnsbury jail.
The cop who arrested Tom Miller was a local named Georgie Pitkin who
liked nothing better than busting Chucks, even though he was basically
a Chuck himself. He was a mean, cold-hearted son of a bitch, who arrested
his own brother for drug pushing and was responsible for sending him to
Saint Johnsbury for a long, long stretch. The story we heard was that
Georgie began his career by squealing on his brother to the vice-principal
when he saw him smoking in the boy's room. Maybe that's what got Georgie
through high school, that kind of thinking, whereas Chucks like his brother
were bound to drop out sooner or later and become fulltime criminals.
Georgie was a little guy who looked like a kid, even though he must
have been at least twenty-five. He had a small black mustache that looked
stuck on with glue, and he always wore a big chrome-handled six-shooter
that wobbled against his skinny hip. We used to yell at him that he should
get rid of that pistol before he hurt himself with it. Maybe that's one
reason he had it in for us.
One night a few days after the killing, a bunch of us were hanging around
on the Green, drinking Old Crow out of a sack, swatting fireflies, horsing
around. Georgie's blue and white cruiser came wailing around the corner,
followed by three or four green and yellow trooper cars. They stopped
in front of the cop station across the street from the Green. All the
car doors opened up at once and a few Staties with tall hats jumped out
toting shotguns. We thought we were about to get our heads busted and
it was too late to run or we might've got shot, so we froze where we were.
But then out of the back of Georgie's car comes this big, tall blonde
kid wearing jeans and a black turtleneck sweater. Georgie grabbed him
by the elbow and walked him inside. The kid had a jaunty walk and his
face was red; he looked more pissed than scared. He looked like he would
crush that puny Georgie Pitkin between his thumb and forefinger if it
wasn't for those handcuffs he was wearing.
The whole town of Barre went crazy. Mercatelli wasn't the first
girl killed in Barre that year. The previous winter, another high
school girl, Francey Wiggers, was found naked at the bottom of
a Rock of Ages quarry, strangled, and then there was the Dumbrowski
girl, who was only twelve, and disappeared right out of her backyard
up on Trow Hill. There was a manhunt after that one. Vigilante
groups formed up and Clayton and other Legion men provided the
manpower. A few of us Chucks volunteered to take some shifts but
Clayton said, "Forget it, boys. This is men's work."
They beat the bushes and searched the woods for days but nothing
came of it.
Then when they found Mercatelli, panic set in. Even though Mercatelli
was a whore, and the others maybe weren't so much, people figured there
had to be a connection. An FBI expert flew in from Washington and said
that the same type of stocking had been used in the two known killings,
that each killing had the same M.O. So they announced in the paper that
a serial killer was on the loose. After Miller was arrested, the cops
were quick to let on that he was their prime suspect not only for Mercatelli,
but for Wiggers and the Dumbrowski girl too.
Down at Loso's, Clayton acted ticked off that the FBI had been brought
into it in the first place. He called them Fucking Bastard Imbeciles.
"Them bureaucrats in Washington must think all we got is a bunch
of local yokels up here. The Barre cops got Miller six ways coming and
going. Down to the Legion, the boys said the cops were sure that the guilty
sonofabitch is about to confess. What the fuck they need them Fucking
Bastard Imbeciles here, anyways?"
It turned out Miller's father was a big shot at National Life Insurance
in Montpelier. He hired a lawyer, a former Attorney General for the state
of Vermont, who got Miller out on bail lickety-split. That dampened down
the excitement a little, too much for Clayton. "Ain't that just like
Montpe'er," he said. "They're all in bed with each other over
there. I betcha the DA's getting a handjob from Miller's lawyer right
now. Speaking of which, you boys heard the one about the Scotsman? He's
wearing a kilt and a young girl comes up to him and says, 'Whatcha got
underneath that skirt, Mister?' and he says, 'Why don't you reach under
there and see for yourself?' So she does and she says, 'Ooh, that's gruesome!'
And he says, 'Reach under there again.' So she does again and this time
he says, 'See? It just grue-some more.'"
A day later, Georgie Pitkin and two other cops raided Loso's Supermarket,
and dug up the lot behind the store with a backhoe. "You got the
wrong man, boys," Clayton said, as Georgie handcuffed him and led
him away. "Whyn't ya charging that Miller fella?" But you could
see he was scared, despite his swagger.
eorgie
questioned all of us about the whereabouts and the whenabouts and someone,
we never found out who told the cops what Clayton said the day she was
found. Down at the Roman Gardens we told each other over and over it couldn't
have been Clayton. Couldn't have been.
Then after a few months, Clayton cut a deal and said he was guilty after
all. He got 45 years to life in prison. Mrs. Mercatelli came back to town
for the sentencing and her picture was all over the paper. She looked
like she'd aged a thousand years. She told the paper: "He killed
my baby girl. She didn't deserve to die like that. No one deserves to
die like that." She said she'd only ever come back to Barre to put
flowers on her daughter's grave.
ost
of us who stayed behind got jobs and got married and started going to
Church again. As the years roll by, it gets easier to forget Clayton's
face. But he haunts us just the same, like he never really left. These
young Chucks now, most of them, don't have the slightest idea of the who
or the why. To them, he's not even a memory.
Sometimes you can see them downtown hanging around the liquor store
or on the Green or spilling out of the high school doors at the end of
the day laughing and carrying on, just like we did. They litter the steps
with cigarette butts and watch the pretty girls go by and sometimes they
shout and snicker and make crude animal noises, just like we did.
I can tell from their faces they feel no shame about it.
[END]
© 2003 Steve Young