Book Read Free

The Year's Best Dark Fantasy and Horror, 2010

Page 82

by Elizabeth Bear


  Out the door. On the very threshold she looked out and saw what she had not thought to look for from the window of Sele’s room. Inside, the masquerade party was in full swing, hot and bright and loud with voices and music and smashing glass. Outside . . .

  Outside the ice had come.

  It was as clear as it can be only at the bottom of a glacier, where the weight of a mile of ice has pressed out all the impurities of water and air. It was as clear as glass, as clear as the sky, so that the stars shone through hardly dimmed, though their glittering was stilled. Berd could see everything, the carnival town frozen with every detail preserved: the tents still upright, though their canvas sagged; the shanties with the soot still crusted around their makeshift chimneys. Even the bonfires, with their half-burnt logs intact, their charcoal facsimiles of chairs and books and mannequins burned almost to the bone. In the glassy starlight Berd could even see all the little things strewn across the ground, all the ugly detritus of the end of the world, the bottles and discarded shoes, the dead cats and dead dogs and turds. And she could see the people, all the people abandoned at the last, caught in their celebratory despair. The whole crowd of them, men and women and children, young and old and ugly and fair, frozen as they danced, stumbled, fucked, puked, and died. And, yes, there were her own three, her own dears, the brothers and sister of her heart, standing at the foot of the steps as if they had been caught, too, captured by the ice just as they began to climb. Isse, and Wael, and Baer.

  The warmth of the house behind Berd could not combat the dreadful cold of the ice. The music faltered as the cold bit the musicians’ hands. Laughter died. And yet, and yet, and yet in the distance, beyond the frozen tents and the frozen people, a light still bloomed. Cold electricity, as cold as the unrisen moon and as bright, so that it cast the shadows of Baer and Wael and Isse before them up the stairs. The aerodrome, yes, the aerodrome, where the silver airships still hung from their tethers like great whales hanging in the depths of the clear ocean blue. Yes, and there was room at the right-hand edge of the stairs where Berd could slip between the balustrade and the still summer statue of Wael, her cousin Wael, with his hair shaken back and his dark eyes raised to where Berd still stood with her hand in her pocket, her ticket and travel pass and letters clutched in her cold but not yet frozen fist. The party was dying. There was a quiet weeping. The lights were growing dim. Now or never, Berd thought, and she took all her courage in her hands and stepped through the door.

  My darling, my beloved Berd,

  I wish I had the words to tell you how much I love you. It’s no good to say “like a sister” or “like a lover” or “like myself.” It’s closer to say like the sun that warms me, like the earth that supports me, like the air I breathe. And I have been suffering these past few days with the regret (I know I swore long ago to regret nothing, even to remember nothing I might regret, but it finds me all the same) that I have never come to be with you, your lover or your husband, in your beloved north. It’s as though I have consigned myself to some sunless, airless world. How have I let all this time pass without ever coming to you? And now it is too late, far too late for me. But I am paid with this interminable waiting. Come to me soon, I beg you. Save me from my folly. Forgive me. Tell me you love me as much as I love you . . .

  About the Author

  Holly Phillips lives in a small city on a large island off the west coast of Canada. She is the author of the award-winning collection In the Palace of Repose and the dark fantasy novel The Engine’s Child. You can visit her Web site at www.hollyphillips.com.

  Story Notes

  Phillips has a knack for showing the reader both the beautiful and the ugly in her elegant, lyrical prose. Here she writes of a decision that must be made, a “door” that once Berd steps through it will close forever. There will be a new life beyond it, but there will also always be a great deal left behind.

  WHAT HAPPENS WHEN YOU WAKE UP IN THE NIGHT

  MICHAEL MARSHALL SMITH

  The first thing I was unhappy about was the dark. I do not like the dark very much. It is not the worst thing in the world but it is also not the best thing in the world, either. When I was smaller I used to wake up sometimes in the middle of the night and be scared when I woke up, because it was so dark. I went to bed with my light on, the light that turns round and round, on the drawers by the side of my bed. It has animals on it and it turns around and it makes shapes and patterns on the ceiling and it is pretty and Mummy’s friend Jeanette gave it to me. It is not too bright but it is bright enough and you can see what is what. But then it started that when I woke up in the middle of the night, the light would not be on any more and it would be completely dark instead and it would make me sad. I didn’t understand this but one night when I’d woken up and cried a lot Mummy told me that she came in every night and turned off the light after I was asleep, so it didn’t wake me up. But I said that wasn’t any good, because if I did wake up in the night and the light wasn’t on, then I might be scared, and cry. She said it seemed that I was waking every night, and she and Daddy had worked out that it might be the light that woke me, and after I was awake I’d get up and go into their room and see what was up with them, which meant she got no sleep any night ever and it was driving her completely nuts.

  So we made a deal, and the deal said I could have the light on all night but I promised that I would not go into their room in the night unless it was really important, and it is a good deal and so I’m allowed to have my light on again now, which is why the first thing I noticed when I woke up was that it was dark.

  Mummy had broken the deal.

  I was cross about this but I was also very sleepy and so wasn’t sure if I was going to shout about it or not.

  Then I noticed it was cold.

  Before I go to bed, Mummy puts a heater on while I am having my bath, and also I have two blankets on top of my duvet, and so I am a warm little bunny and it is fine. Sometimes if I wake in the middle of the night it feels a bit cold but if I snuggle down again it’s okay.

  But this felt really cold.

  My light was not on and I was cold.

  I put my hand out to put my light on, which was the first thing to do. There is a switch on a white wire that comes from the light and I can turn it on myself—I can even find it in the dark when there is no light.

  I tried to do that but I could not find the wire with my hand.

  So I sat up and tried again, but still I could not find it, and I wondered if Mummy had moved it, and I thought I might go and ask her. But I could not see the door. It had been so long since I had been in my room in the night without my light being on that I had forgotten how dark it gets. It’s really dark. I knew it would be hard to find the door if I could not see it, so I did it a clever way.

  I used my imagination.

  I sat still for a moment and remembered what my bedroom is like. It is like a rectangle and has some drawers by the top of my bed where my head goes. My light is on the drawers, usually. My room also has a table where my coloring books go and some small toys, and two more sets of drawers, and windows down the other end. They have curtains so the street lights do not keep me awake, and because in summer it gets bright too early in the morning and so I wake everybody up when they should still be asleep because they have work to do and they need some sleep. And there is a big chair but it is always covered in toys and it is not important.

  I turned to the side so my legs hung off the bed and down onto the floor. In my imagination I could see that if I stood up and walked straight in front of me, I would nearly be at my door, but that I would have to go a little way . . . left, too.

  So I stood up and did this walking.

  It was funny doing it in the dark. I stepped on something soft with one of my feet, I think it was a toy that had fallen off the chair. Then I touched one of the other drawers with my hand and I knew I was close to the door, so I turned left and walked that way a bit.

  I reached out with my hands then and trie
d to find my dressing gown. I was trying to find it because I was cold, but also because it hangs off the back of my bedroom door on a little hook and so when I found the dressing gown I would know I had got to the right place to open the door.

  But I could not find the dressing gown.

  Sometimes my Mummy takes things downstairs and washes them in the washing machine in the kitchen and then dries them in another machine that makes them hot, so maybe that was where it was. I was quite awake now and very cold so I decided not to keep trying to find the gown and just go wake Mummy and Daddy and say to them that I was awake.

  But I couldn’t find my doorknob. I knew I must be where the door is, because it is in the corner where the two walls of my room come together. I reached out with my hands and could feel the two sides of the corner, but I could not find the doorknob, even though I moved my hands all over where it should be. When I was smaller the doorknob came off once, and Mummy was very scared because she thought if it happened again I would be trapped in my bedroom and I wouldn’t be able to get out, so she shouted at Daddy until he fixed it with a different screw. But it had never come off again so I did not know where it could be now. I wondered if I had got off my bed in the wrong way because it was dark and I had got it mixed up in my imagination, and maybe I should go back to my bed and start again.

  Then a voice said:

  “Maddy, what are you doing?”

  I was so surprised I made a scared sound, and jumped. I trod on something, and the same voice said “Ow!”

  I heard someone moving and sitting up. Even though it was in the dark I knew it was my Mummy.

  “Mummy?” I said. “Where are you?’

  “Maddy, I’ve told you about coming into our room.”

  “I’m not.”

  “It’s just not fair. Mummy has to go to work and Daddy has to go to work and you have to go to school and we all need our sleep. We made a deal, remember?”

  “But you broke the deal. You took away my light.”

  “I haven’t touched your light.”

  “You did!”

  “Maddy, don’t lie. We’ve talked about lying.”

  “You took my light!”

  “I haven’t taken your light and I didn’t turn it off.”

  “But it’s not turned on.’

  She made a sighing sound. “Maybe the bulb went.”

  “Went to where?”

  “I mean, got broken.”

  “No, my whole light is not there.”

  “Maddy . . . ”

  “It’s not! I put my hand out and I couldn’t find it!”

  My Mummy made a sound like she was very cross or very tired, I don’t know which. Sometimes they sound the same. She didn’t say anything for a little minute.

  “Look,” she said then, and she did not sound very cross now, just sleepy and as if she loved me but wished I was still asleep. “It’s the middle of the night and everyone should be in bed. Their own bed.”

  “I’m sorry, Mummy.”

  “That’s okay.” I heard her standing up. “Come on. Let’s go back to your room.”

  “What do you mean?” I said.

  “Back to your room. Now. I’ll tuck you in, and then we can all go back to sleep.”

  “I am in my room.”

  “Maddy—don’t start.”

  “I am in my room!”

  “Maddy, this is just silly. Why would you . . . Why is it so dark in here?”

  “Because my light is off. I told you.”

  “Maddy, your light is in your room. Don’t—”

  She stopped talking suddenly. I heard her fingers moving against something, the wall, maybe. “What the hell?”

  Her voice sounded different.

  “ ‘Hell’ is a naughty word,” I told her.

  “Shush.”

  I heard her fingers swishing over the wall again. She had been asleep on the floor, right next to the wall. I heard her feet moving on the carpet and then there was a banging sound and she said a naughty word again, but she did not sound angry but like she did not understand something. It was like a question mark sound.

  “For the love of Christ.”

  This was not my Mummy talking.

  “Dan?”

  “Who the hell else? Any chance you’ll just take her back to bed? Or I can do it. I don’t mind. But let’s one of us do it. It’s the middle of the fucking night.”

  “Dan!”

  “ ‘Fucking’ is a very naughty—”

  “Yes, yes, I’m terribly sorry,” my Daddy said. He sounded as if he was only half not in a dream. “But we have talked about you coming into our room in the middle of the night, Maddy. Talked about it endlessly. And—”

  “Dan,” my Mummy said, starting to talk when he was still talking, which is not good and can be rude. “Where are you?’ ”

  “I’m right here,” he said. “For God’s sake. I’m . . . Did you put up new curtains or something?”

  “No,” Mummy said.

  “It’s not normally this dark in here, is it?”

  “My light has gone,” I said. “That’s why it is so dark.”

  “Your light is in your room,” Daddy said.

  I could hear him sitting up. I could hear his hands, too. They were not right next to Mummy, but at the other end of my room. I could hear them moving around on the carpet.

  “Am I on the floor?” he asked. “What the hell am I doing on the floor?”

  I heard him stand up. I did not tell him “hell” is a naughty word. I did not think that he would like it. I heard him move around a little more, his hands knocking into things.

  “Maddy,” Mummy said, “where do you think you are?”

  “I’m in my room,” I said.

  “Dan?” she said, to Daddy. My daddy’s other name is “Dan.” It is like “Dad” but has a nuh-sound at the end instead of a duh-sound. “Is this Maddy’s room?”

  I heard him moving around again, as if he was checking things with his hands.

  “What are we doing in here?” he said, sounding as if he was not certain. “Is this her room?”

  “Yes, it’s my room,” I said.

  I was beginning to think Daddy or Mummy could not hear properly, because I kept saying things over and over, but they did not listen. I told them again. “I woke up, and my light was off, and this is my room.”

  “Have you tried the switch by the door?” Daddy asked Mummy.

  I heard Mummy move to the door, and her fingers swishing on the wall, swishing and patting. “It’s not there.”

  “What do you mean it’s not there?”

  “What do you think I mean?”

  “For Christ’s sake.”

  I heard Daddy walking carefully across the room to where Mummy was.

  Mummy said: “Satisfied?”

  “How can it not be there? Maddy—can you turn the light by your bed on, please?” Daddy sounded cross now.

  “She says it isn’t there.”

  “What do you mean, not there?”

  “It’s not there,” I said. “I already told Mummy, fourteen times. I was coming into your room to tell you, and then Mummy woke up and she was on the floor.”

  “Are the street lamps out?”

  This was Mummy asking. I heard Daddy go away from the door and go back to the other end of the room, where he had woken up from. He knocked into the table as he was moving and made a cross sound but kept on moving again.

  “Dan? Is that why it’s so dark? Is it a power cut?”

  “I don’t know,’ he said. “I . . . can’t find the curtains.”

  “Can’t find the gap, you mean?”

  “No. Can’t find the curtains. They’re not here.”

  “You’re sure you’re in the right —”

  “Of course I’m in the right place. They’re not here. I can’t feel them. It’s just wall.”

  “It is just wall where my door is too,” I said. I was happy that Daddy had found the same thing as me, because if he ha
d found it too then it could not be wrong.

  I heard Mummy check the wall near us with her hands. She was breathing a little quickly.

  “She’s right. It’s just wall,” she said, so we all knew the same thing.

  But Mummy’s voice sounded quiet and a bit scared and so it did not make me so happy when she said it.

  “Okay, this is ridiculous,” Daddy said. “Stay where you are. Don’t move.”

  I could hear what he was doing. He was going along the sides of the room, with his fingers on the walls. He went around the drawers near the window, then past where my cloth calendar hangs, where I put what day it is in the mornings, then along my bed.

  “She’s right,” he said. “The lamp isn’t here.”

  “I’m really cold,” Mummy said.

  Daddy went past me and into the corner where Mummy had been sleeping, where I trod on her when I was trying to find the door. But he couldn’t find it either.

  He said the door had gone and the windows and all the walls felt like they were made of stone.

  Mummy tried to find the curtains then too, but she couldn’t. They tried to find the door and the window for a long time but they still couldn’t find them and then my Mummy started crying.

  Daddy said crying would not help, which he says to me sometimes, and he kept on looking in the dark for some more time.

  But in the end he stopped, and he came and sat down with us. I don’t now how long ago that was. It’s hard to remember in the dark.

  Sometimes we sleep but later we wake up and everything is the same. I do not get hungry but it is always dark and very cold. Mummy and Daddy had ideas and used their imaginations. Mummy thought there was a fire and it burned all our house down. Daddy says we think we are in my room because I woke up first, but really we are in a small place made of stone near a church. I don’t know but we have been here a very long time now and still it is not morning yet. It is quiet and I do not like it.

  Mummy and Daddy do not talk much any more, and this is why, if you wake up in the night, you should never ever get up out of bed.

  About the Author

 

‹ Prev