Buckethead
By:
Nathan Izzo
I
see your eye is drawn to this larger than normal plot of dirt. While
the marker that had born his name was a simple wooden cross, paid for
by the township that sentenced him to death, the sizable mound that
remains tells you that this person was larger than normal. He was a
giant of young man, he harnessed all the power and potential of
youth. He was a smart young man who excelled at anything and easily
grasped everything he was shown. He was dutiful and devout and held
as an example at his local church. He was near the top of his class
and stayed competitive with his grades. He was a quick learner and
was handy around the farm. He could work for 12 hours in the fields,
hauling brush or lugging bushels, and still be a font of energy and
joy to his parents. Listen to how such a beacon of youth and
potential for the future in a small farming town, ultimately finds
ruin. The town eventually abandoning him and then killing him,
telling themselves it was the right thing to do.
The lad worked on a
neighbor's farm after school, on weekends, and on vacations. It was
a lazy sunny Sunday when he was leading the plow-horses in to eat
their dinner, when a belligerent alpha male pulled the lead rope from
his hand and spun on him. The boy was still getting over his shock,
when the big horse reared up and planted an iron horseshoe squarely
on the side of his head. The old farmer found him hours later, half
dead in a pool of blood. The doctor stabilized him and sent him to
the hospital in the city. Many months and many surgeries later, the
doctors agreed they had done all they could. The distraught parents,
though grateful, were left in charge of a broken shell of a person.
The horse kick had left the youth with a misshapen skull that
flattened on the top, resembling a bucket. The smart, quick
personality was gone, leaving behind a slow, confused husk that one
had to take on faith that what was said to him was eventually
understood. That somewhere in that gaping maw and behind the big
uncomprehending eyes still remained the boy they knew. From that day
forward the town knew him as Buckethead, a giant, strong body with a
fragile, diminished intellect. His parents made sure he ate and got
to work in the fields, but mostly moved their hopes and dreams to his
younger siblings. They thought themselves kind by sweeping his
previous life quietly under a rug, and tried to make the best of
having a son who was only a little smarter than the plow he operated.
Buckethead went to work and helped around the house, resolved to live
out his life with nothing more than the joys he can draw from the
fleeting moments of clarity that passed him by like a summer breeze.
After a few years, he was able to be trusted with some slightly more
important tasks, like taking a wagon to town to pick up feed or
lumber. As long as he had a list pinned to his jeans and he didn't
have to exchange money. It was on those trips that he would
unknowingly come into contact with his one-time schoolmates, who had
grown up normally and have taken up important positions in the town.
The few good ones never forgot the potential that was lost when
Buckethead suffered his accident, but the majority treated Buckethead
as a plaything that could be toyed with without consequences, because
the town elders have a plan for everyone, and Buckethead must have
done something wrong to have suffered such a cruel fate. Therefore,
tormenting him was aligned to a greater plan, where everything will
work out fine. Those former classmates would play tricks on him and
con him out his possessions. They would pretend to talk to him about
politics or women or crop expectations, things that Buckethead wasn't
able to understand, so he would politely nod and pretend to
understand, much to the bullies' enjoyment. Buckethead reached
adulthood and was able to work manual labor, enough to bring money
into his family. He was diminished and stuck living under limited
means, but he was functioning. Buckethead was unable to maintain that
small plateau of achievement, because his former classmates and
one-time friends pushed Buckethead too far one day. During the Fall
Harvest Festival a woman who had once dated Buckethead before the
accident was encouraged to flirt with Buckethead now. The friends
laughed at Buckethead as he tried to make sense of the social
situation, while trying to understand the feelings the woman was
conjuring in him. Buckethead was left feeling confused and adrift as
the girl dismissed him and returned to her group of friends. He may
have been able to come to terms with the highs and lows that result
from interactions with the opposite sex. He may have been able to
take away the specialness she made him feel and forget the rejection
of his eventual dismissal. But the one-time friends weren't done
with him. As Buckethead left to return home, as he was instructed to
do, three of the men followed him as he walked out of town.
Buckethead didn't notice. He was awash in sorting out his
experience with the woman. Plus he was feeling amazed at how
different the party made him feel, as compared with his normal night
of watching the fireplace burn down as he whittled wood until he
drifted off to sleep. Buckethead eventually stopped by the covered
bridge to relieve himself. He finished and turned back to the road
when the men from town caught up with him. They blocked his path home
and the way back to town. They accused him of embarrassing their
whole generation, of being the bad joke that will be remembered from
their age group. They wanted Buckethead to just "snap out of it"
and return to normal, as if it was a choice that he had been putting
off. Their attempt to heal Buckethead through negative reinforcement
failed. They pushed him and knocked him down. They kicked him and
spat on him and called him names he didn't understand. They fed off
one another's anger until they were beating Buckethead, as he
curled up to protect himself, wailing like an injured goat. Sometime
during that beating, Buckethead remembered or found his survival
instinct, and the simple, docile behemoth became an engine of
destruction. He caught a kick mid-swing and tripped one. He absorbed
a kick from a second to purchase his footing. He moved past a punch
to get face-to-face with the third. He grabbed the third by his
throat with his left hand and began punching with his right. It was a
level of violence the town boys didn't understand. He punched
slowly and calmly. Planting his fist in face and body with a fluid
evenness that came from tens of thousands of hours of field work. He
beat those men with the dull repetition of chopping wood. The men
soon realized that the tide had turned and what they thought was fun
had turned into a life-and -death situation. It was luck alone that
when they broke and ran, the closest one was caught and held by
Buckethead's stone fists. The other two ran off. The one who got
caught, met with a horrible end, being beat to death by a calm and
silent force of vengeance. Buckethead beat his already dead body well
past death, and when he tired, he simply dropped him and finished his
walk home. He had the sense to wash off the blood and gore before
retiring to bed, but he curled up under his blankets and slept the
sleep of the innocent. He gave not a second thought to the strange
and extreme night he had experienced, because he felt that way every
night. Everyday was just a series of strange and unexplainable wild
events that smashed together for no greater reason. The next day
brought commotion at the town. The authorities were greeted with two
bloody and panicked young men, claiming a third had never returned
from an altercation in the woods. They claimed that Buckethead had
attacked them as they wandered the south street outside of town. The
town was slow to react. Buckethead was considered a tragic piece of
town lore, but violence and the big man was never in the same
conversation. A search party was sent out to find the missing man,
with expectations being that they would find him asleep and hungover.
A second group went to talk to a woman Buckethead was seen talking
to. A third, accompanied by the sheriff himself, went to collect
Buckethead from his parents. The sheriff had a tough time convincing
the parents to turn Buckethead over to him, but a general confusion
from Buckethead made his presence necessary. By midday, the town had
found itself confused, as it had stories of a violent and angry
Buckethead that the town had never seen. The woman had insisted that
Buckethead had lecherously come onto her and tried forcing himself on
her. The two beaten men stuck to their story of Buckethead having
attacked them by the covered bridge. And the pulped body of the third
man was found by the bridge, mangled and left to rot, as if he were a
rat or crow that threatened the crops. By evening the town was left
with a story of a peaceful man turning violent and murderous for no
reason, versus three respectable, fully functional citizens claiming
one thing against a silent and unintelligible stone of man, who
couldn't speak for himself, let alone explain his side of a
complicated legal matter. The following days left the town with the
realization that they had a murder and a murderer, but justice eluded
them. Their hands were tied, legally on side, and socially on the
other. The trial was quick and certain. The sentencing became a
months long struggle to find justice, but after years of
psychological examinations and electro-shock, the need for a legal
resolution grew large. The death sentence passed and they strapped
Buckethead into the electric chair, knowing that the big lug had no
idea what was happening. The dull uncertainty stayed in his eyes
until the grip of the electricity took hold of his muscles and
nervous system. A flash of pain and fear and questioning shock
flashed across his visage just before the light behind his eyes went
out.
And
that was the end of the man known as Buckethead. The town's
greatest unspoken tragedy grew and became the county's greatest
unspoken tragedy. They brought his body out to the Pine Barrens and
laid him to rest in this graveyard. His spirit still resides here,
incapable of passing on while his soul is still unable to grasp the
how's and why's that led to his death. He doesn't understand
how this happened to him. He cannot comprehend why the smarter people
would do this to him. He can only reason that there is some tragic
wrong that he committed that he doesn't have the capacity to
recognize. Perhaps there is a functioning soul that is still trying
to resolve this poor wretch's lot in life. But until that day
arrives, he remains mine, here among the pine needles and sand.
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