Salvation Lies in Baraboo
Chester Chuckles’ size 37 shoes, once shiny and red, were covered in fallout dust as he waddled across the post-apocalyptic wasteland. He finally emerged from his car weeks ago and had been walking ever since. A clown car is a pleasant place to pass an apocalypse if you are well-provisioned. Also, if your car seats 21 clowns, as Chester’s did, it offers ample room to stretch out if you are alone, as Chester was. When finally, he emerged from the lowest depths of the car’s labyrinthine interior to the outside world, all had changed. He found himself alone in a post-apocalyptic hellscape that had once been the beautiful palm tree-lined campus of Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Clown College in Sarasota, Florida.
Also, the paint on his car was scratched.
At first Chester did not know what to do or where to go, but after he sat and thought for a moment, he knew that if there was hope anywhere for a lone clown like him, it lay in Wisconsin. For, tucked away in the quartzite hills of the ancient Baraboo Range from which the great Ringling Brothers sprung to spread the gospel of Circus to the all people, were the Circus World Museum and International Clown Hall of Fame. Surely salvation lay in Baraboo!
Now hundreds of miles into his journey, Chester shuffled through the red-gray dirt and thought about how it had all come to this. In the years before the end (though at the time no one anticipated a real end) there was a something in the air that could not be measured by any barometer or Sunday morning news shows. It was not something simple and nameable like political unrest or climate change, nor anything in the usual catalog of historical forebodings long compiled by historians reviled by those making the history. It was something subtler: a pervasive trembling beneath the irritated skin of ordinary life. Shelves were stocked, the airplanes arrived on time, screens glowed with appetite-inducing advertisements. And the good people of earth moved through their routines as if performing them for an audience they could not see. But though they could not see it for themselves, humanity at large was seized by a quiet dread: they required some proclamation of worth, some signal that their lives were anchored in something sturdier than awards shows and bull markets. Being no longer felt self-evident. It felt provisional, contingent, as though the veneer of the inevitability of experience was peeled back and, to everyone’s horror, there was nothing underneath. The horizon seemed suddenly closer, far too close. A few people gradually sensed that history had begun to slope, that time was leaning forward, that everything was about to tip under its own terrible inertia. But most people simply turned the other way, or at least looked down at their phones.
The world had become a dark and impenetrable obstacle to the transparent and ephemeral souls that inhabited it. Those afflicted with ontological clarity suffered most acutely. They were not superior in intellect, nor purer in motive, but they were constitutionally unable to perform in the play in which everyone else had memorized their lines. To pause, to ask foundational questions, was to risk exile. They were accused, subtly or overtly, of ingratitude. Depth was recast as morbidity, introspection as self-indulgence. The ultimate accusation was wickedness: that by declining to participate in the communal theater, they endangered the fragile coherence of the whole wide world.
The machinery of distraction hummed with increasing efficiency, insulating the populace from silence, but the signs of an approaching threshold intensified. The markets fluctuated, the climate destabilized, alliances shifted, but these were symptoms, not causes. Beneath them lay a metaphysical unease: a suspicion that the current being was unsustainable. Still, children were born, couples married, people commuted to work. Continuity was the order of the day. Yet in private journals and late-night conversations, people confessed to a peculiar anticipation. It was not despair, it was the intuition that the present form of things could not endure indefinitely. Toward what end were they marching, moving, slouching, creeping? No one could say what would come. But many felt deep in their marrow, that something fundamental was drawing near—not a spectacle, but a revelation. But it was not revelation. It was rupture more than anything.
Chester was suddenly torn from his philosophizing by a chortle that ran down his funny bone like ice water. He had been so absorbed in his own thoughts and narrative exposition that he didn’t realize he had nearly run right into another clown. Ordinarily Chester would have been overjoyed to have stumbled upon a fellow clown, but at the appearance of this strange clown he could offer only a hesitant ‘how-do-you-do’ wave.
The new clown’s greasepaint smile was carved too wide—much too wide—splitting his face into a permanent rictus that showed far too many small, needle-like teeth. His white makeup was cracked over sallow skin, and his eyes, ringed in smeared black, glinted with predatory amusement. A faded patchwork suit, once obviously bright but now stained and frayed, the ruffles stiff with grime, hung from his large but emaciated frame. Blood dripped from his red nose and lips.
Chester held out his hanky. “You seem to have a nosebleed.”
“What’s your name, pal?” asked the stranger.
“Chester. Chester Chuckles. And to whom do I have the pleasure of addressing?”
“They call me Gristle Splitgrin.”
“I see. What kind of clown are you?”
“The evil kind.”
Chester Chuckles’ face took on a dour look. “I thought that kind of clown only existed in the movies.”
Gristle shrugged and held out his hands as if to say, ‘And yet here I am.’ “And yet here I am,” he said. “What kind of clown are you?”
“Mostly a happy clown. A grotesque whiteface carpet clown, I suppose, if you were to be being taxonomical about it. What’s your bit?”
“Destruction,” growled Gristle most malevolently.
“You wanna see one of my gags?” asked Chester Chuckles. “It’s a pretty good one.” Gristle didn’t say no, so Chester stretched his arms as high as they would go, then plunged them deep into his suspendered wide hoop pants. There was a loud clanging noise as if a whole workbench of tools came crashing down. Then, his eyes lighting up, Chester exclaimed “I got it!” Gristle leaned in closer and Chester triumphantly yanked a machete from his hoop pants and thrust it into the air where the sunlight glinted on the razor-sharp edge. “Snicker-snack!” he halooed as he swung it wildly before him, slicing one of Gristle’s suspenders on a forehand and the other on the accompanying backhand. Gristle’s pants fell to his ankles. “Shall I tickle your entrails with Johnny Corkscrew?” Chester turned the blade in a deadly imitation of twisting it in a wound that he had planned for the middle of Gristle’s belly. Gristle pulled up his pants and ran for the hills.
“See ya, friend!” shouted Chester after him. Chuckling merrily, he continued down the path.
***
On a forest path, Chester stumbled upon a mime.
“Hello, there,” Chester chuckled.
“Hi!” the mime mimed.
“What’s your name?” asked Chester.
The mime mimed a look of barely hidden judgement of Chester’s powers of intellect.
“How silly of me,” replied Chester, barely registering the insult. “Let me guess.”
The mime mimed a greatly exaggerated rolling of the eyes.
“Let’s see… Is your name Arlec?”
The mime mimed shaking his head, meaning that his name was not Arlec.
“Is it Aurelio?”
It was not.
“Bellrose? Corvin? Lucern? Lune? Malvo? Marceau? Orrick? Pierre? Theophile? Valentin? Vespertine? Virelai?”
In addition to not being Arlec or Aurelio, the mime’s name was not Bellrose, Corvin, Lucern, Lune, Malvo, Marceau, Orrick, Pierre, Theophile, Valentin, Vespertine, nor was it Virelai.
Chester lifted his cap, then another smaller cap underneath the first cap, and scratched his head. “Hmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm…” he pondered. “I supposed I will just have to call you ‘Mr. Quiet’.”
Mr. Quiet mimed sticking his tongue out with disgust.
“Tell me, Mr. Quiet, how did you get here?”
Mr. Quiet mimed a thermonuclear explosion, hiding in a basement for three weeks, digging himself out from the rubble, being set upon by a pair of radiation-mutated looters, killing one with his bare hands and ripping out the throat of another with his own teeth, then stumbling, terrified, cold, and hungry through the woods in which they now stood.
“I see,” said Chester Chuckes, nodding, smiling, laughing, and crying all at the same time. “Will you come with me Mr. Quiet?”
Mr. Quiet mimed shaking his head again. He mimed the glorious Land of the Mimes, where it was always sunny and everymime had their own invisible box to lie down in.
“That sounds nice,” said Chester Chuckles. “Well, it was nice meeting you.” He put out his hand.
Mr. Quiet clasped Chester’s hand to shake it and jumped as the hand buzzer Chester had concealed in his palm buzzed him.
“Hyuck! Hyuck!” chuckled Chester Chuckles.
Mr. Quiet mimed giving Chester the finger and stomped away toward the Land of Mimes.
***
Chester Chuckles stood on the bank of a great river, wondering how to get across. With great joy, he spotted a rowboat with two oars tied to a tree and made his way down to untie it.
“Hold it clown,” said a familiar voice. “That’s our boat.”
Chester looked up toward the source of the voice and was unsurprised to see Gristle Splitgrin emerging from behind a tree. “Oh – hi, Gristle,” said Chester.
Standing at Gristle’s shoulder was the most physically ravishing female clown Chester Chuckles had ever seen. Her hair was cardinal red, at least three feet across, and bouncy—nearly as bouncy as her breasts, which were stuffed quite precariously into a harlequin-patterned latex bralette. She wore a multicolored rainbow tutu, thigh-high black-and-white striped socks, and ruby stilettos. A very beautiful Gerber Daisy was pinned to her top. Chester leaned in close for a sniff and a surreptitious peek at the soft flesh upon which it was perched it when it squirted right in his eye.
“BWAH-HA-HA-HA!” laughed Gristle.
“Who’s the girl?” asked Chester, wiping his face.
“This is my gun moll, Slaughterbell.”
“What kind of clown is she?”
“The sexy kind.”
“I can see that,” said Chester. He reached into his pants and rummaged around for some time (actually, quite some time—perhaps too long—and even Slaughterbell’s confidently sexy, smug, heavily-painted face began to waiver at how deep and actively Chester’s two clown hands were working inside his oversized pants; she felt suddenly cheapened by the vigorous, drawn out motions of his hands in his pants) and finally pulled out an old-fashioned klaxon horn. “Hold on a second,” he mumble-chuckled as he shook the bouncy balls out of it. “There,” he said, satisfied, and began cranking the klaxon as fast as he could.
“Aaaaahhhooooooooooooooooogggaaaaaaaahhh!” said the horn.
“Enough!” shouted Gristle
Chester sadly let the klaxon wind down. “…oooooogaaaaaaaaaaahhhhhhh…” it moaned.
“What should I do to him, sweetie?” purred Slaughterbell.
“Kill him,” growled Gristle. “But in a fun way,” he added.
Slaughterbell slipped two fingers exquisitely manicured in a domino pattern into her cleavage and pulled out an unreasonably large and (presumably) heavy 69-cc chainsaw. With one practiced pull, it roared to life.
“I wonder where she found the gas for that,” wondered Chester to himself. “It’s probably a two-stroke,” he reasoned, “and can run on degraded gas.” Then, aloud: “Wait!”
Slaughterbell paused just long enough for Chester to dive back into his pants and bring out a sawed-off shotgun. “Boom!” he shouted each time he pulled the trigger and sprayed buckshot everywhere. “Boom! Boom! Boom!”
Gristle and Slaughterbell ran screaming along the riverbank while Chester stepped lightly into the rowboat and began pulling swiftly for the opposite shore.
***
Deep in a wood, Chester Chuckles heard a beautiful sound, like angels singing. He stopped to listen, then followed the sound. It grew louder. He was getting closer, and he ran faster. Turning a corner around a large boulder, he came to a natural amphitheater worn by mother nature into a rock hillside and, arranged within, a boys’ choir.
“Beat it, clown,” sang the boys.
“I’m just trying to get to get to Circus World,” explained Chester.
“Sing, damn it!” sang the boys beautifully. “Or this will be your end.” They started into the “Kyrie” from Hayden’s St. Cecilia Mass and drew switchblades from under their brilliant white choir robes.
Chester chuckled nervously and loosened his collar. He pulled a white hanky from his sleeve, then another hanky (red), and another (blue) and another (yellow) and another (green) until he finally wiped his brow with the last one, which was purple. The castratos’ angelic voices soared as they sang a terrifyingly gorgeous descant over the melody and fitted brass knuckles to their small, white, feminine hands.
Chester mumbled “Barnum and Bailey’s Favorite,” but the boys hit back hard with “Carol of the Birds.” Chester tried “Entry of the Gladiators” and the choir countered, seemingly without effort, with “A Birch Tree in the Field Did Stand.” Chester changed tactics and hit them with “Baby Elephant Walk,” but the choir boys were too quick. They executed an adroit key change to G major and launched into the “Benedictus” from Mozart’s Pastoral Mass. Chester could feel the press of their beautiful harmony and sought through his own admittedly small musical catalogue for his big guns. He landed on “Merry Go Round Broken Down” and quickly launched into a rollicking rendition, but the clever boys brought him down with “The Prayer of Francois Villon.” Desperate, Chester tied “Hungarian Rhapsody,” his last best hope, but the boys were ready and the choir struck out at him viciously with Monteverdi’s “Tancredi and Clorinda” madrigal.
Chester knew he was beaten, but there was one hope. He began humming “The Major General’s Song” as he danced a little two-step and tossed two Mk 2 pineapple grenades into the choir, one for the trebles and one for the altos. Before they could react, he opened his umbrella and huddled under it as the blood and gore rained down upon him. When the bloody shower stopped, Chester peaked out from under the umbrella at the 24 left feet and 24 right feet standing alone where the choir had once threatened him. He chuckled and shook his umbrella and went on his way.
***
About seven miles south of Baraboo, Chester Chuckles picked his way carefully through the Badger Army Ammunition Plant. “How ironic that the last stretch of my journey through this post-apocalyptic world is through an ordinance works where the instruments of our own destruction were created by our own hands,” he said to himself. “I wonder if there’s a thematic reason for that?”
“There isn’t,” sneered a voice with a sneer.
Chester stopped and rolled his eyes. He knew already to whom that sneer belonged.
“Happy to see me?” asked Gristle Splitgrin.
“No,” said Chester, who was always honest, sometimes to a fault. “Not particularly.”
“Well then why are you smiling?”
“I’m always smiling, you assclown. It’s painted on. I’m a happy clown!”
“I don’t particularly care for your tone,” said Gristle. “Boys!” he called. “Let’s teach Chester Chuckles some manners.”
From behind Gristle’s tall but not particularly wide frame fanned a half dozen clown lackeys: two whitefaces, two Augustes, a rodeo clown, and a Pierrot.
“You there,” said Chester, pointing at the Pierrot. “What are you doing here? You’re better than this.”
The Pierrot just shrugged his shoulders. “Le travail est difficile à trouver.”
“Hmm,” replied Chester. “I don’t know what you just said.”
“Lucky for you, you won’t need to speak French in Hell,” laughed Gristle.
“Wouldn’t it be more fitting if they only spoke French in Hell?”
“Shut up!” roared Gristle. “Get him, boys!”
Once again, the clown hands at the end of Chester’s clown arms plunged deeply into Chester’s oversized clown pants. He grunted as he bent down to get a better grip, reaching so deeply that he disappeared into the wide waist of his pants and it appeared now to the savage clownish horde that there was but the lower half of clown left standing before them.
“Hey!” shouted Gristle. “Come back up here! Stop clowning around down there!”
Chester’s head popped up above his waistband and he smiled. “Just one second, buddy.” He looked at the advancing sextet of murderous clown lackeys: “Can you all hold on for just one more second?”
Chester dove down again, completely disappearing once more into his pants. Then, with triumphant music swelling in the background, a high-explosive anti-tank rocket emerged, followed by the muzzle of an M20 Super Bazooka, then the rest of the bazooka, then Chester’s huge, ecstatic smile, and finally, the rest of Chester.
“Sorry, boys,” said Chester, taking aim. “At first I thought we clowns were an endangered species—you know, with the apocalypse and everything—but now I see there are just too many bad clowns. Well, goodbye!”
Gristle Splitgrin and his six accomplices blew up in a spectacular display of high-explosive anti-tank technology. Chester Chuckles tossed the bazooka on a pile of unexploded ordinance and walked off to the north on the homestretch.
***
Huffing and puffing, Chester Chuckles pulled himself to the summit of the Devil’s Lake West Bluff and stood, letting his vision sweep the Baraboo Valley that stretched out before him.
“Shit,” he said.
Directly north, right where Baraboo should have been, right where it had been the last two hundred years, was a huge Baraboo-sized crater. Around its edge, a few buildings and trees that survived the initial blast smoldered. Nowhere to be seen was even the slightest hint of a circus: not a single big-top tent, no circus trains, no elephants, and certainly no clowns.
“Shit,” he said again. Chester sat down to think. “Maybe I could try miming.” That sounded nice.