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when Arnold P. went to heaven

by "Jim" <jim@[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Dec 22, 2005 at 03:15 AM

Panteblonius Rising
a short story


It has often been said that people are about as wise as they truly wish to

be. I've thought a lot about that saying lately, and I'm beginning to 
suspect there may some truth in those words.

Not so long ago, a man lived just east of town here, some seven miles
beyond 
those grassy hills. If you drive that way, and look south from the road, 
just past the last big stand of tall pines, you can still see the old
house. 
I believe it remains empty to this day. The man's name was Panteblonius. 
Arnold Panteblonius. He lived alone in that house for another forty years 
after his wife died.

Now when I was a boy, none of us children could pronounce the old man's 
name. So we got as close as we could, calling him, "Mr. Patterbones." And
we 
told each other stories about how the old man would fly about in the night

sky. We had ourselves convinced that old Mr. Patterbones could fly high 
above the ground. Especially during the harvest moon, around Halloween, we

always expected to see the old man's shadow sailing across that great
yellow 
orb.

The fact is, no one in the county was ever kinder or more helpful to
friend 
and stranger alike than Arnold Panteblonius. He never charged anything
when 
he bought something. He always paid cash. But he kept an open account at
the 
supermarket, the gas station, and at the small grocery down by the
highway. 
Anyone passing through, in need of gas or food, was allowed to charge it
to 
Mr. Panteblonius' tab. He had set it up that way. And he always paid the
tab 
in full every month.

Sometimes one of the locals would also use the tab, if things got really
bad 
for them. Mr. Panteblonius said that was fine, too. He didn't want to see 
anyone go without. You've met Earl Henry. Well, he used the account a
couple 
of times, when he broke his leg at the mill, and couldn't work for a
while. 
After he got better, Earl went out to pay Mr. Panteblonius back, but the
old 
man refused to take any money. "You've been out of work, Earl," the old
man 
said, shaking his head. "You need your money to take care of that family
of 
yours." So Earl decided to do some work around the old place, patching a 
couple of holes in the roof and repairing the fence out back.

That's what happened with my dad, too. He had to use the account, he says,

when I was still in diapers. But Mr. Panteblonius wouldn't allow him to
pay 
back the money. So he hauled in some gravel to fill potholes in the old 
man's long driveway, and replaced some broken glass in an upstairs window.

As I grew up, I heard other stories. For example, lots of the local kids 
have been able to go off to college, or to get other special training,
with 
help from Mr. Panteblonius.

When he was younger and stronger, Arnold Panteblonius was always helping 
people to move, or to add on to their house, or to get the crops in, or to

do most any kind of big job that needed to be done. He was a help to just 
about everyone in this town. I doubt there's a family in the county that 
hasn't been helped out in some way by Mr. Panteblonius.

About twenty years ago, Arnold Panteblonius finally lay down on his bed to

die. I think he was nearly ninety. He called for his lawyer, for the
mayor, 
and for the town clerk. And before he passed away, Mr. Panteblonius set up
a 
community fund for the people of the town. It helps folks when they need
to 
build a house, when they have a baby, or when they're struggling with some

illness or injury. It does the same kinds of things that Mr. Panteblonius 
always did when he was alive.

And then he died. The town's people had a wake for him, right in the
living 
room of his old house. That was more common in those days, since we didn't

really have a funeral parlor or anything like that.

The ladies of the town fussed around the old house for two days, cleaning 
and poli****ng and sorting things out. That's when they came upon Mr. 
Panteblonius' journals. He had stacks of them. Seems he wrote a little in 
his journal every day. But he didn't write about any of the kind and 
generous things he did. No record could ever be found of those gifts and 
deeds. He always wrote about what he had read in the Bible that day, and 
about the things that God would "tell him", as he put it. He also wrote 
about the "wonderful heavenly walks" he would take, alone with the Lord in

the early mornings or late at night. He sometimes mentioned how hard it
was 
to end those walks and come back home.

Needless to say, people were talking about these journals and their 
mysterious contents all during the wake and at the gathering for dinner 
after the funeral. Everyone had known, of course, that Mr. Panteblonius
was 
a spiritual man. After all, he had been a member of the Valley River 
Methodist church all his life. But still, people were surprised to learn 
that the old man thought he was hearing from God.

Had Mr. Panteblonius not been such a good and helpful man all those years,

many of us would've said out loud what we were all wondering to ourselves:

had the poor old man been loony? But as it was, we carefully avoided
saying 
such things, even to our closest friends and family.

But that's not the strangest thing that happened when Mr. Panteblonius 
passed away.

I remember that he died sometime in the early days of October. It was a 
rainy Wednesday afternoon. Word spread swiftly around the whole county
when 
Doc Shaffer pronounced Arnold Panteblonius dead. Hearing of his death 
troubled us all. And almost everyone went to church services that night. 
Even the people who never paid any attention to religion went to church
that 
night. It just seemed like the natural thing to do. And so just about the 
whole town and half the county beyond spent a couple hours singing hymns
and 
sharing wonderful stories of all the good things Mr. Panteblonius had
done. 
All three churches in town were packed.

After the service, people still lingered outside the churches, talking.
The 
weather was mild, the rain had stopped, and a big harvest moon was hanging

in the autumn sky, huge and round and yellow. The talking was neighborly
and 
warm, tinged with sadness, but not overcome with grief. No one was eager
to 
go home.

It must have been nearly ten o'clock when Ben Henderson started yelling
for 
everyone to look up. We all looked up to see what Ben was pointing at. The

clearing night sky was bright with moonlight, the air still a little hazy 
from a day of steady rain. We could see bright stars ****ning through the 
twilight haze.

At first, I didn't see anything strange. That didn't surprise me because 
everyone knew that Ben Henderson loved nothing better than to tease and 
joke. He was a little slow in the head. He was every bit of thirty-five at

the time, but still had the mind of an adolescent. Don't misunderstand me,

Ben was a good man. If not always dependable, he was still a decent 
neighbor, a hard worker, and friends with everyone. But he was simple and 
childlike. He always loved to tell the silly jokes he had learned in 
childhood. And he would pull his little pranks on just about anyone,
always 
in good fun. He loved to hear people laugh, even when he knew they were 
laughing at him. I only saw him without a smile once in my whole life, and

that was when his old dog had died. On that day, Ben Henderson sobbed like
a 
baby. So we all went with him to help bury the dog. Then all of us guys 
pitched in and bought him a new puppy. Ben had a special place in
everyone's 
heart, I think.

So I was in the middle of groaning loudly and saying, "Ben! There ain't 
nothin' in the sky but the ol' yellow moon..." when I suddenly saw it. 
Rising slowly up in the sky, right over where old Mr. Panteblonius' house 
would be, was something small and white or gray in the moonlight, like the

figure of a man walking. Clouds were moving across the sky, and the 
moonlight made it hard to see clearly. But I saw it.

I was afraid to look away, sure that I'd never find it again. So I just
kept 
watching. The figure rose up higher and higher, like a man walking up
steps 
or going up a hill. And as I watched, sure enough, the figure went right 
across the face of that big yellow moon. Only as it passed in front of the

moon, I could see that it wasn't just one man, but two figures. One was 
smaller and could easily pass for Mr. Panteblonius. But the other was 
bigger, taller, walking side by side with the first figure.

I never blinked, I don't think, until they had finally passed up and out
of 
sight, too far away to see anymore in the twilight of the moonlit sky.
Then 
I looked down again. Just about everyone else still had their eyes fixed
on 
the sky. I knew they had seen it, too. But as we all started to bring our 
gazes and thoughts back to earth, no one said much about what they had
just 
seen. After all, what was there to say? The whole thing was impossible. 
Whatever we had really seen in the sky, it didn't fit in with anything
that 
we could explain or understand. It was one of those mysteries that you see

and remember for life, but almost never say much about.

I found out later that Arnold Panteblonius had never had much schooling.
He 
had grown up in the days before the big schools were built. His parent
were 
poor dirt farmers, and he had quit school in about the third or fourth
grade 
so he could help out with the work. His folks had continued to struggle 
along with the farm until they both died. Then Mr. Panteblonius had done
it 
all on his own for a few years.

But then things changed. He married a young lady who had come down to do 
some government research work for the farmers. Soon after that, he left
town 
for a few years, going off to the big city to work with his
father-in-law's 
factory in Chicago. While in Chicago, he invented several little parts for

automobile engines and things. Some of the inventions he gave to his 
father-in-law to use in his business. And some of them had made Arnold 
Panteblonius and his wife rich. At Least he had become very rich by our 
standards.

They could have lived out their years in the big city, partying and doing 
all that socializing stuff. But they decided to come back to live on the
old 
farm. Instead of building a big, fancy house to show off their money, or 
driving around in a limousine, Mr. and Mrs. Panteblonius did some
necessary 
repairs to the old place and settled into a simple lifestyle. They used 
their money to help others. They wanted everyone else to have the same 
op****tunity they had enjoyed. But they didn't build monuments to their own

names. Instead, they started quietly helping the local kids, assisting 
families whenever trouble came, and just trying to be good neighbors.

The kind of wisdom Mr. Panteblonius had was not the flashy kind that 
publishes lots of books on how to do this or that. He didn't take over the

local papers or run for any public office. He didn't buy off senators or
try 
to get on TV or radio. He just lived his life, doing whatever he could do
to 
help ease some of the pain others might feel, from time to time. He liked 
people. He believed in people just about as much as he believed in God.
His 
journals showed that he prayed for just about everyone he ever knew. And
he 
also prayed for strangers. But then he also did whatever he could do to
give 
hands and feet to those prayers.

I suppose some of us think we might've done something better with the
wealth 
Mr. Panteblonius had been given. But I've come to believe that he made the

very best investments. He invested in people's lives. Better yet, he 
invested in the lives of his own neighbors, and in the lives of others who

happened to wander through. He seemed to believe that his own life was
made 
rich by encouraging the dreams of others.

Lots of our local boys have gone on to get a good education. Many of them 
might not have been able to do that without a little help from Mr. 
Panteblonius. Some of them have now become leaders in their field of study

and work. Others came back home to help keep and build a strong and
growing 
community. Even Dr. Nestor, Doc Shaffer's younger partner at the clinic, 
went through medical school with help from Mr. Panteblonius.

These days, whenever I happen to see a full moon, I always think of Mr. 
Panteblonius. I think of the night everyone in town saw him going up the 
staircase of heaven, taking one of those long "heavenly walks" with the 
Lord. I try to imagine how he must have felt when he figured out that he 
didn't have to stop and go back home. And I think of how he lived his life

among us, as a good neighbor and friend. I think of all the good he did
and 
all the people he helped along the way.

And then I always decide all over again that I want to be that same kind
of 
good neighbor and friend. That's the kind of wisdom I want to have, the
kind 
of life I want to live.



Panteblonius Rising ©2005 Jim Sutton
all rights reserved

originally published at:
www.jimsdesk.com
 




 1 Posts in Topic:
when Arnold P. went to heaven
"Jim" <jim@[  2005-12-22 03:15:16 

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