The Necromancer's House
Page 29
A pickup truck pulls over.
• • •
Sarah lives another year and a day.
The length of a handfasting.
She has her aneurysm at Darien Lake.
After the roller coaster.
Sits down.
Falls over.
And that’s all.
• • •
The following year, Salvador chases a doe into the road.
The big Swede in the pickup truck misses the doe.
Not the dog.
Andrew drinks for two more years.
Thinks that’s when he calls Ichabod.
Thinks that’s when he botches the spell to send him back.
Thinks it’s time to stop drinking.
When really it’s long past time.
86
The cave near the railroad tracks.
Now.
“Will you destroy her?”
“No.”
“Why not?”
Silence.
“Why not, Ichabod?”
The sound of water dripping.
“I can’t.”
87
A moment later.
Andrew has just left the cave.
The sun is going down.
He was in there for six hours somehow.
He turns back and looks at the mouth of the cave.
All the bats fly out around him into the new night.
Hunting.
PART FOUR
88
Home.
Andrew calls Haint for the first time since New Orleans.
He wants to arrange a drop-off of the Hand of Glory, the one that kills. That hand might serve him well against her, but then it might not, and he had promised it in payment to the scarred little man—the last thing he needs atop his other woes is to piss off a dangerous citizen like Haint.
Four rings.
Five.
He knows the message will play at six, anticipates this, but, to Andrew’s mild surprise, Haint picks up.
Goes to Facetime.
Andrew braces himself for a comment about how old he looks now.
Haint comes in, his face filling the screen.
“Salutations,” Andrew says.
Haint works his lips like he wants to speak, or perhaps to spit out some unpleasant thing from under his tongue, but then he just shakes his head.
“You all right?” Andrew says. “I owe you this,” he says, holding up the withered little hand, as light as a dried chili pepper.
The hoodoo man doesn’t even seem to see it.
He shakes his head harder, his eyes a little wide.
Bricks behind him—he’s in his mobile apartment.
“Haint, do you need help?”
Haint closes his eyes, keeps shaking his head, like a stubborn toddler shaking off a parental command.
Now he seems to be thinking very hard.
Gags.
Opens his mouth.
A snake pokes its head out of Haint’s mouth, not a large one, perhaps a garter snake, its tongue a-flick. Its head probes the air, turns to look at Haint’s eye. Haint squints. He snatches the snake’s head, winds it around his hand twice, pulling it entirely out. He wrings its neck, throws it.
Looks angrily at the screen.
Points.
The camera follows his finger.
In the corner of the apartment, behind a knocked-over chair, stands a knee-high heap of dead snakes, mostly small, a few less so.
Many of them bloody.
A knife stuck in the table nearby.
Vomit on the floor.
Why this is hell, nor am I out of it.
Now Haint sets the camera down, returns with a piece of paper and a pen.
Writes, pressing hard with the pen.
4 DAYS OF THIS
BUST LARYNX
CAN’T TALK
TELL ME HOW TO STOP THIS
“I don’t know,” Andrew says.
Several expressions pass across Haint’s face; anger, fear, and, finally, something like resignation.
He nods.
The nod says, I knew I was playing with fire.
Now I pay.
Writes.
DON’T COME HERE
KEEP THE HAND
USE IT NOW
He points at his chest.
Andrew shakes his head.
Haint looks incredulous, then angry.
Bares his chest, jabs violently at it with his thumb, points at the screen.
Fills the screen with his enraged eyes.
Writes.
DO IT
DO IT
DO IT
“I can’t,” Andrew says.
He only just notices Haint is wearing a wool coat, doesn’t yet process this.
Radha might help me find a counterspell, but I think she got Radha.
Could go to New Orleans, but what would I do for him?
Miss Mathilda knows hoodoo and voodoo people, but none as strong as Haint.
He’s dead.
And maybe me next.
Haint’s eyes squint, fill with fresh water.
He retches awfully.
Pants like a dog.
Oh Christ I can see his breath it’s cold in there.
He claws at his throat, retches up another snake.
Colorful, like a small king snake.
Not a coral snake, that would be lethal.
He’s supposed to suffer.
Haint stamps on the snake.
Kicks it to the corner.
Andrew has just decided to use the hand to stop Haint’s heart when Haint spits on the camera.
• • •
A flash of pixilated nonsense as Haint throws the phone against his bricks.
Smashes it.
Call ended.
89
She’s getting to all of them.
She’s killing them like mice.
Anneke.
Should have told Michael to keep her there; she’s probably on her way home.
No sooner has Andrew thought this than his phone rings.
His heart goes chill, afraid it’s Haint again, never mind that Haint smashed his phone, just primally afraid of what he might see if it were Haint. Afraid Haint might decide to take Andrew with him.
God, I’m selfish.
It’s Anneke.
Drunk as hell.
“I did something.”
He’s still gathering himself from Haint.
She speaks again.
“Something bad.”
“What did you do, Anneke?”
Silence.
The unmistakable sound of swigging.
“Where are you?” he says.
“Home.”
Silence.
“I thought it would be like a leaf. The leaf, I mean. The tree-leaf. I told myself I would just turn it into wood, like a cool plant, and then back to stone later. But that’s not what I was thinking. Doing, I mean. Not what I was doing. I was remembering.”
“I don’t understand. Tell me what happened.”
Swig.
Cough.
A lighter lights, wet puffs.
“Don’t. Don’t tell Michael, right?”
“Just tell me. I can help.”
“Maybe only Michael can help but he won’t help, he’ll kill me and I don’t blame him.”
Andrew’s heart is beating fast.
“Anneke,” he says.
“Andrew.”
He hears a new sound.
Anneke crying.
She hangs up.
“Salvador! Lock the house down!”
<
br /> Andrew fires up the Mustang.
90
Anneke goes outside, just wants fresh air on her face.
The thing is on her bed, waiting for her.
She told it to wait and it did.
It’s quite obedient.
She closes the door behind her, stumbles, only just keeps from falling.
Outside, the night is brilliant with moonlight.
She looks up, sees the moon blurry through her tears, wipes her eyes with her sleeves.
The hairs on the backs of her arms stand up just a little.
Am I cold?
No.
That’s magic.
She looks down the path leading away from her cottage, sees a figure. Because of the magic feeling, she expects it to be Michael Rudnick, but that’s wrong. She just left him in Vermont.
It’s a woman in a black silk robe. A mourning veil of sorts covers her face, but she looks to be quite beautiful.
She seems far away, but before Anneke knows it, she’s standing near her, like someone sped up the film, but that could just be the whiskey.
The veil comes up.
This is a beautiful woman, all cheekbones and tilted eyes, quite blue. The cutest mole ever near the corner of her mouth.
She’s charming me.
Okay.
I don’t care.
The woman’s gaze is as pure as the blue heart of a glacier.
She remembers Hans Christian Andersen’s Snow Queen.
She wants to kiss me!
A lip brushes hers.
Warm, not cold.
She has breath like tea and mint and a hint of garlic.
Not unpleasant.
Far from it.
Anneke leans forward to kiss her again, but the woman pulls back.
Smiles.
“I want to give you something,” the woman says.
Russian accent.
“What?”
“A . . . what’s the word in English? . . . A torque.”
She produces
From where?
an iron circlet depicting a snake eating its tail. Like something from an archaeological dig. Something from a glass case in a museum.
“It’s beautiful.”
“It’s old. Would you like to wear it?”
This is wrong.
She hears herself say, “Yes.”
This is Baba Yaga’s daughter.
Andrew told me about the mole.
But she helped him!
Helped him escape!
“Bow your head.”
Anneke fights out of the charm just enough to say, “I don’t do that.”
The woman tilts her head, still smiling.
“A pity. Now I think it will hurt.”
The woman steps back, tosses the circlet at Anneke.
It whips around her neck.
Now it begins dragging her backward down the path away from her house; she digs her fingers under it to keep it from crushing her windpipe.
As the torque drags her, she sees the woman walking after her, casually, unconcerned.
Anneke sees a loose stone, a stone the size of a small egg, but something. She uses magic, flings it at the woman. It flies with great force, but inaccurately. She hears it crashing in the woods.
The woman purses her lips and raises an eyebrow, gently claps.
“You should teach me to do that,” she says. “Don’t you Americans do that? Promise to teach students? You should be my professor.”
Keeps walking.
Slippers on her feet, embroidered.
This is the most beautiful and dangerous person I’ll ever see.
They pass a house, her second-nearest neighbor.
An old woman she never properly met.
The woman is taking the trash to the curb wearing a flannel gown bowed neatly at the waist.
Looks right at them, nods, says, “Good evening.”
“Good evening,” the witch says back.
“That’s a pretty dog,” the neighbor says, indicating Anneke. “What kind is it?”
“A borzoi.”
“Do you live around here?”
The witch says, “Staying with neighbors,” in English, then says, “You bore me,” in Russian.
The woman falls asleep next to her trash can, standing up.
The torque keeps dragging Anneke.
The woman keeps walking.
A pocket has ripped off Anneke’s jeans.
Now the circlet yanks her to her feet.
In the moon-shadow of something quite large.
Not fucking possible.
A cabin.
A summer cabin.
On very large chicken’s feet.
It turns its windows down to look at her.
Two rectangular eyes.
Inside, the gentle glow of coal fire, as if from an open stove.
“Izba, Izba, eat this woman.”
The chicken’s foot picks Anneke up around the waist, its force irresistible, tucks her into its open door.
The door shuts hard.
Anneke is not alone.
91
The Mustang eats the road.
The night air hums and breathes with the current not of magic but like the tickle magic makes—this is the hum of big things on the move, audible as if in the inner ear, spurring Andrew’s foot to grow heavier on the pedal, goosing his turquoise, or biryuzoviy (the Russian occurs to him for no obvious reason), Mustang up to eighty on the straightaways, back down to forty or fifty on the turns, depending on the angle.
Anneke’s in trouble.
Andrew has never been in the military, but he imagines that one of the comforts the lifestyle affords, for some at least, is the certainty of following orders. When the command comes, you obey, end of story. Love speaks in imperatives, too.
The phone was still warm from his hand when he got into his big steel beast, and now he roars west, knowing he’ll find his apprentice drunk, hoping that’s all.
He knows it’s not all.
That’s when he nearly hits the SUV.
92
Anneke breathes hard, trying to calm herself. The hut is on the move, swaying and pitching, making her want to throw up the thin gruel of whiskey sloshing around in her belly.
The man with the beard sits across from her, the bastard with the bald head who handcuffed and blindfolded her. She can hear him grunt from time to time, swear occasionally, though she doesn’t know exactly why; but it’s his koanlike chanting that really bugs her out. He sounds insane. He sounds like a woman who’s been in labor for a while, just running air over his vocal cords because he hasn’t got anything left. Something between a kid’s impression of a ghost and some Indian chant on a shitty 1960s western.
Hee-ee-ee-ee-uh-ee-ee-ee-EE-uh-ee-ee-ee-oh fuck oh fuck oh fuuuuck-unh uh-uh-ee-ee-ee.
She imagines this is what a guy sounds like just before he bangs his head into the wall ten or fifteen times.
If not for the greasy towel around her eyes, she would know he was frantically trying to finish sewing up the last of nine burlap dolls. All stuffed with rags and hair and iron shavings, their feet shod in canvas cut from army surplus boots and stapled on, their eyes twin buttons, seams sewn with blood. His blood. He pokes a finger or an arm and sews. The swaying of the hut doesn’t help, but he knows better than to disappoint her.
Anneke remembers the glimpse she got inside the hut; it used to be a cabin, the kind they rent out on the lake, but it had compacted in on itself, the whole thing just the size of the kitchen now, the walls crumpled together but still intact somehow, these walls discolored where the modern appliances had been removed. She only saw one appliance, a sort of old-timey antique shop stove. Glowing red.
/> And then the bearded man cuffed her to an iron loop in the wall, blindfolded her. She failed to notice, during their brief and lopsided struggle, that he, too, is chained to the wall by one ankle.
She’s upset with herself she didn’t fight harder sooner. She might have been a match for him were she not bewildered, terrified, and dragged halfway across the state—her shirt is torn, her ass and back are on fire, and dirt falls from her pockets when she moves.
Then there’s the torque.
The thing throbs like it has a pulse.
And it’s heavy.
She notices she gets sleepy and heavy-limbed when the hut moves faster.
It’s draining me.
93
Andrew reflexively pounds the horn, but only for a split second; he needs both hands, now, quick, swerves hard, the driver of the SUV visible in a flash, her mouth a classic O of panic.
She swerves, too.
She wasn’t going all that fast, fishtails anyway.
Top heavy.
Rolls.
Lands right-side up in corn.
Her air bag goes off.
Andrew pulls a U-turn, meaning to help the SUV driver.
Then he sees the tractor she was trying to go around.
Only it’s not a tractor.
Magic makes it look like a tractor, strong enough magic to fool even him, until he really looks at it.
His heart skips a beat.
Two beats.
He’s still got clonazepam in his system, or else he would likely go into a full-blown panic.
A hut on chicken legs.
Loping down the road away from me.
It’s HER.
Not the hut she had in the woods, but its modern sister.
He thinks the hut will stop, turn around, come for him.
It keeps going.
Toward my house!!!!!
Now he sits, breathing hard, trying to process.
Anneke.
House.
Shit, the other driver!
He drives up and looks at her.
Fortyish lady in short hair.
One drop of blood on her forehead.
“You okay?” he shouts.
“I think so,” she says, unbuckling, stepping out into the flattened corn.
She’s got her cell phone out, motions to him to pull over and park, dials.
Nick on her forehead.