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"ALL THE HELLS"

horror
by
Neal Romanek

www.nealromanek.com


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True Murders #1 – Christopher Marmalate

From Michael Galindo’s “True Murders: A Book of Murders & Murderers”:


foot

CHRISTOPHER MARMALATE

“The Foot Farmer”


Christopher Marmalate, aka “The Foot Farmer” (b. 1916 – d. 1951) murdered fifteen young men between the ages of 16 and 25 over a single summer in 1951. Marmalate lived in a small two-room house with no plumbing or electricity at the edge of a piece of public wasteground outside Spirit Lake, Iowa, USA.

Christopher Marmalate served in WWII in the Pacific and was several times disciplined for assault and drunkenness. He was discharged four months before the end of the war after his parents, along with two younger sisters, died when a tornado struck their Iowa home, leaving as the only survivor Christopher’s young brother, Paul Marmalate. In April 1949, Paul Marmalate was killed by a train. The wheels of the train parsed Paul’s body into 7 separate pieces. Christopher identified Paul’s body after it had been discovered by a group of teenagers. The remains were cremated.

In mid-May 1951, 20 year old bachelor Sam Knauss was reported missing, after he failed to report to his job as a delivery truck driver for five days in a row and family members found his house abandoned. Sam Knauss had been last seen at an after-hours bar on the outskirts of Sioux City by bookstore owner Morgan Krieger, a bar Christopher Marmalate was known to have occasionally visited.

Marmalate dispatched his victims by gunshot, usually with a single shot to the head. Although in at least three of the victims, multiple gunshot wounds to the back and torso indicate the victim attempted to flee or evade dying.

Spirit Lake, Iowa aerial survey

Spirit Lake, Iowa aerial survey

After shooting the victims, he severed their feet at the ankle joints. Initially he used a newly purchased hacksaw, but by the end of the summer a heavy axe was employed. Marmalate then buried the severed feet in holes carefully plotted in a circle around his house.

Though there was no way to absolutely match up every severed foot with its owner, it is believed that Sam Knauss’s feet were the first to be buried, in a line 24 feet away from Christopher Marmalate’s front door.

All Christopher Marmalate’s victims were from the Sioux City, Iowa area. The feet of each man were buried, within hours of their owner’s murder, exactly 24 feet away from the killer’s front door. The number 24 was somehow significant to Marmalate, as revealed by the many diagrams and maps of the area he drew and which were found strewn around his dwelling – marked with the number 24, or multiples of it, accompanied by arrows and cryptic symbols.

Marmalate died of a self administered gunshot wound – fired from the same WWI issue Colt revolver he had used to kill his victims. Police arrived to find the body lying in a shallow, hastily dug trench after receiving an anonymous tip about the murders. It’s almost certain the tip was a call from Marmalate himself.

Over 100 maps and diagrams, drawn in pencil on cardboard and scrap paper, were retrieved from the Marmalate House. These are currently held by the State Historical Society Of Iowa. The Society’s museum has an extensive collection of material about the “Foot Farmer” killings.

Note Found On A Malformed Man

(text of a pencil-written note found on the disfigured body of a
male of indeterminate age, preserved in Arctic ice for almost 200 years)

He told me I came to life on the night of the second of April, 17– .

But I contest this – yes, contest it! I remember events previous to that wild night. And some of those memories of a distant past are more lucid, vivid, to me than these delirious days since. Sometimes I’m convinced that I am walking through a dream, almost certain that momentarily I shall wake up in the early dawn, with The Girl next to me.

And then I remember, lucidly, vividly, that I murdered The Girl, remember I closed my hand over her mouth to stop her foul imprecations, remember I closed my hands around her throat after she snapped her teeth deep into my hand and drew warm wet blood.

I still have the scar. There. Still preternaturally fresh – a memory of her frowning mouth.

My poor misbegotten rose – that she should be damned to find me. Out of all the many men who went in and out of her doors, the one she fancied best was by far the worst. Born bad. Born to be bad.

I went to the gallows with a smug satisfaction. I had maneuvered her murderer into giving himself up, for the most part genuinely unaware it was I my own self – my own own self, my own dark self – that I had betrayed. I had lured the murderer into confessing the entire crime, had made him hold his hand aloft in the courtroom, the hand which bore my gold haired Magdalene’s bite.

As the sentence was passed, as the judge donned his black cap, I suddenly, absurdly, recalled a romantic fancy she had – that we would go to the Americas together and start a new life, now that the war with England had been resolved and…

They hanged me -

A sudden rush downwards – almost exhilarating – I might have almost squealed like a child on a swing – until the sudden nonsensical snap to a stop and a notion that something dreadful had happened and then the gray cloud pouring into my eyes, nose, brain …

…and then being aware of sleeping – or not sleeping – being aware simply of being aware. An I that knew it was an I – but ignorant of its origins, its circumstance. An Adam on his first day in the world.

And God said:

“It’s alive!”

The voice shocked me into sentience. My eyes had been open – but now they saw. And the first thing they saw was a face. His face.

My ears had been open – but now they heard. And the first thing they heard was his voice. His voice.

“It’s alive!”

Those sounds – I could not grasp their meaning yet – imbedded themselves in my reconstituted head. I rolled the sounds around and around, repeating, refraining. Backward, forward. For days, for weeks, for months after – those sounds. From his mouth. To my ears.

It was a hot Bavarian June day which threatens a hot mosquito-rich August. I sat at the South Garden table of the grounds – sipping a sweet wine, hearing the bees, itching at the new exquisite suit of clothes, reading Milton’s Book – savouring the matter in its original language, savouring the mere ability to read and apprehend, again.

And those sounds came thundering into my mind – it’s alive. It’s alive!

He had meant me!

I did not know until that moment – that moment – as Satan looked round with baleful eyes – that he had meant me. I was it, it that was alive.

Oh, he had called me his child many times, explained his work, even explained how I fit into his scheme of things, but I hadn’t until that moment…

Cold sweat poured from my hairless torso and I tried to swallow and I could feel the weigh of my great cold tongue like piece of bland fruit in my mouth and I knocked the wine glass over and I jumped up letting Milton go and I had to tear off that fine new coat, the cloth on my skin smothering. Smothering.

I strode into the Baron’s woods. An observer would have though I was set with a firm purpose, maybe struck by a sudden memory of a vital, neglected duty. But I knew nothing of where I was, what I was doing, why.

Only those words:

“It’s alive.”

We went into the woods together – those words and I. Chased each other deep into the woods. It would be a challenge for the philosophers to divine whether it was I who chased the words or the words that chased me. That would be a challenge for the philosophers.

But eventually we threw our lot in together, the words and I, and we holed up in the damp boulder caves near the stream. Crouching in the muck, watching the woods with dread, I listened to the words – as if spoken with my own cold mouth.

It is alive. It is alive. It is alive.

The rest of the story you may know. If not, it is no matter and you ought to count this letter as the last testament of a criminal and madman, another of God’s born sinners, as a last petition of grievance by one more justly punished rebel angel. As the shout before the condemned man is hauled to the gallows. The SHOUT! THE SHOUT!

I grow cold.

Yes, I – even I – grow cold.

And I who need never sleep grow tired.

And there is no time. I who have lived now two lifetimes tell you – there is no time! This low latitude sun creeps along the horizon, as if ashamed to meet me head on, and whether it is beginning or ending the day, I cannot tell.

I can hear the men from here. I hear the groaning of their ship strangled in the pack ice. They have heard me too, playing at being the Unearthly Thing. Calling to them. How they must have trembled in their chilly berths!

All but one of them.

I must be ready for him when he comes.

But now!

Ah, now! Now! Look I see Him! I see Him!

My Master comes across the ice. His face is wet with tears.

My hands need no warmth to do their work. No light, nor desire, nor mind. Let my hands do the work they were made to do. My Mster only need come to me, my hands shall do the rest. He is here. My master is here.

I free my hands

Now I free my hands to do the work for which God made them

Epiphany

In one of the Hells I saw a Star.

Travelling by gray-blue morning and purple twilight, a caravan made time through the desert – chasing the ghost of Alexander who 320 years earlier had staggered back along this route and died drunk and resentful, the world conquered but so what.

The Star eased westward and soft-lit the way for the long train of concubines and double-humped camels, retainers and men-at-arms. A Wise King of the East headed this host, a mighty one who had taken his crown from the severed head of his own father. This Wise King ruled ten million people in his country and another ten million in the neighboring country.

He travelled west, following this loosed Star, advised by his keenest seers. Again and again, in trances they had told him to chase the bright sign westward, where he would find One who would be King Of Kings and Lord Of Lords, who would one day rule a thousand nations, to whom every other king would kneel.

This Wise King Of The East, and his assembly, had already marched a year and still the Star showed no sign of stopping.

His men-at-arms rebelled and were executed and replaced. Concubines who began the journey virgins had given birth – and the sons anointed and the daughters put out for the sky to eat. Fever had culled the host once – and then again.

And still the Wise King Of The East, ever resolute, ever fixed in purposed – like the North Star, quiet and fixed at the center of the ever-changing cosmos – still he pressed on with such determination that it might be believed that he himself could drag behind him the entire mass of his caravan on his own lone strength and will.

He would follow the star to its destination, however afar. He would. He would be ushered into the presence of this One destined to rule all the earth.

Yes, and when he was announced, when he was brought before this One…then…on this, the oracles and seers always kept silent, none would answer. They swooned into the weeks-long coma which concluded their prophetic trances or they held together their lips so tight the mouth and jaw around went white and blue with the rageful effort of it, the eyes rolling back into the head.

The silence from the oracles was as clear an instruction as any openly spoken. What was to be done next was a matter for the King alone to decide – for the King and the Sky God at his right shoulder.

So the Wise King of the East would face the King of Kings and he would do as he had always done. He would speak and act as King, his voice would itself be the voice of all powers in the Sky and the Earth, and his action would be all the action of Water and Nature. His would be a decision without fault, perfect and true and unquestionable. Incontrovertible. Yes.

But as the King paced sleepless in his hot tent, peeking at the progress of the blazing afternoon, where the star, hanging in the hazy blue sky, still shone bright in the West like a signal mirror flashing from a distant ship, he was afraid.

Every day that passed, every week, his unease about this meeting with the King of Kings blossomed, taking on a hundred grotesque shapes, turning hopes to fears, plans to terrors, mighty pronouncements falling from his lips like lightning bolts turned to the spent heaving of a drunk.

“Alexander died in this waste. Alexander, who conquered my very own grandfathers, even he, he died on this road.”

The Wise King from the east drew the door, and turned to face the blackness in the tent and was blind for a minute.

He called his armorer and bid him again make ready his arms and armor, lest the day should come upon them unaware. He told his captain to drill the men, yes, even in this heat, to be prepared for an encounter with the King of Kings.

Then, one night, encamped outside Jerusalem Crossroads Of The West, at the edge of that vast kingdom ruled by Augustus, the Wise King of the East received his riders, who had at Damascus changed their camels for stallions.

The Star, the riders said, had settled over a town an hour hence.

Many had seen the Star. Many, curious, had come to make of it what they could or would. But in this town there was no sign of a host, there were no banners, no evidence of any Great King there at all, so the riders said.

Without the thousand hard miles behind them, the two riders might have been vexed, mutinous. But now all that was left in them was grief and despair.

There was no one of name in this town, which was called Bethlehem.

The occupying army of Augustus and local worshippers of Yahweh – a cousin of the Wise King’s own Sky God – and that mocking Star, yes, were there, but no King of Kings, no. No one of royal birth at all.

“Oh, your Mightiness has been deceived!” they lamented.

The Wise King of the east thanked them for their service and then had them beheaded there in his own tent and then he displayed the heads in a special pavilion with their four eyes in a porcelain bowl. He decreed that any man or woman or slave or beast in his caravan who should despair or lose hope would meet the same end and as immediately.

But in secret, the King’s own faith flickered. Until this day his concern – his fear, yes – had been how he might act upon meeting the future king of all kings, but his faith in the vision, in the guidance of his oracles, who had shown him the right way time and time again, was so strong as to be a thing out of mind. But now…

“Perhaps they have been lied to. The spirits, the demons and the dead, who run screaming in and out of the shadows of their prophetic vision, they have been playing games. Or worse. Has the Sky God brought me here as Olive-Eyed Athena lured cursed Alexander astray, to kill him in his bed? Has the Great Winged Benevolence lured me away from the green valleys and snow capped peaks of home to make me a fool and hand my kingdom to my enemies in my absence? Does my home palace burn even now? Oh, please let it not be so! Please let it not be so!?”

And he watched with a steely vulture’s stare his subjects pass before the severed heads and the porcelain bowl of eyes, watched as they bowed deeply and silently yes, silently – yes, even the relatives and friends of these two faithless riders, bowing deeply and silently.

That night in his prayer tent, as a priest chanted and incense sent up smoke, the Wise King prayed for guidance and courage, prayed and prayed, until he fell asleep.

Still unaccustomed to travelling by day, he was awake before dawn, covered by his servants, with his priest still chanting

He threw off the covers and called his grooms and had his best horse readied, and he called his body servants and they washed him and shaved him and rouged his lips and braided his beard and lined his eyes with kohl made from the rarest tree in his kingdom.

He put on silks of red and blue and gold from China and a superb sword from farther east still, and he brought for a gift a jar of myrrh – that precious ointment used most especially to anoint the dead.

He would stand before this King. And he would offer the gift of myrrh – used to anoint the dead. And he would let the Sky God inspire him how he would.

And if there was no King Of Kings at all, he would order his archers to shoot the star out of the sky. And would command his seers to eat each other alive.

The Wise King with four hand-picked fighting men and a valet and a fast rider entered the city of Bethlehem while it was still dark.

Bethlehem was spilling over in the middle of a season of census in which Augustus’s subjects were being summed by bureaucrats across his kingdom. The bureaucratic necessity was that each man must return, at his own expense, to his birthplace, to be properly counted.

It was a mad, jovial, rustic mix. Reunited friends who had not seen each other in a decade, traded stories and confessed old hurts. Marriage arrangements were made, murders committed, promising business ventures embarked upon.

The Star hung low over a hillside of sheds and huts at the edge of town.

The Wise King and his bodyguard wound past campfires and up alleys, navigating by the Star above, until finally they cast no shadow before them or behind them or to the left of or the right. And the light – seeming brighter than ever – fell straight down on their heads like a slight warm rain.

They stood there before the open door of a stable, lit inside by a few small lamps.

The Wise King positioned his bodyguards outside and went in.

The place stank of livestock and human excrement. And of blood too. A couple drunken thieves lounged in the straw at one end. In a stall, a man hurriedly copulated with a silent woman who held herself up with one hand, held aside her gown with the other.

In the lamplight sat an adolescent girl, pale and fragile. A man, a tradesman of some kind, crouched by her in the fluttering gloom. The girl held a tiny bundle. A swaddled newborn. An old prostitute sat with them, giving the girl a remedy mixed from vinegar and herbs.

A voice from the shadows, thickly accented by a language closer to his own that to that spoken in this country:

“You have come for an audience with the King of Kings.”

“I seek him,” he replied.

And it was then – called upon to act, called upon to be a king – that the Wise King from the east felt all the weight leave him and felt his shoulders grow strong and his spine gathering up the power of a mighty bow used by the heroes of old. Yes, just as he knew it would.

“There he is.”

In the shadows nearby, two brother Kings of distant lands knelt gleaming with wealth equal to the rest of Bethlehem combined,. One had come from the far west, a Black King from the land of gold and precious wood and ivory. The other, from a bleak land north of the Wise King’s own – a man who, with an army at his back, would have been the Wise King’s enemy. But the present circumstance brought all three to the same befuddled low.

The Wise King stood and approached the weary girl and the tradesman father. And he offered them the jar of myrrh, that ointment used to anoint the dead.

The father took it and bowed deeply and silently and gratefully.

The Wise King turned back to the door, back to wear the other two kings, the Black King and the King of the Bleak North, knelt still.

The Wise King made subtle and secret gestures to his bodyguard crouching outside.

They moved quickly, drawing silent oily swords.

The Black King’s neck was chopped through in one, the heavy blade mixing skin and ivory and flesh and gold into one mess.

The King of the Bleak North lost all sensation in his body as his spine was hacked through, lost all sense of mind when his skull was halved like a dense fruit.

The girl and her husband, before they too were cut down, blinded by the lamps, knew only that someone was again approaching them.

The thieves and anonymous lovers were killed too with equal speed and silence.

The corpses were thoroughly disposed of – every joint disconnected, all distinguishing features annihilated.

The swaddled child, King of Kings, dozing through it all, was hurried off.

The Wise King took the child home, back to his palace in the East.

The King’s own concubines nursed the boy.

And in time, the boy became a mighty king, became the mightiest of kings. His throne was made of ivory, gold and rubies, and all around it were displayed the shattered skulls of his enemies. He had many wives and many sons and he conquered all the nations and he was worshipped as a god.