Speaking to Skull Kings

Home > Other > Speaking to Skull Kings > Page 1
Speaking to Skull Kings Page 1

by Emily B. Cataneo




  EMILY B. CATANEO

  Copyright © 2017 Emily B. Cataneo

  “Speaking to Skull Kings” © 2014, first published in Betwixt

  “A Guide to Etiquette and Comportment for the Sisters of Henley House” © 2013, first published in Chiral Mad 2

  “The Rondelium Girl of Rue Marseilles” © 2014, first published in Qualia Nous

  “Not the Grand Duke’s Dancer” © 2014, first published in The Dark

  “The Ghosts of Blackwell, Maine” © 2015, first published in Urban Fantasy Magazine

  “The Heart Machine” © 2017, original to this collection

  “Purple Lemons” © 2017, original to this collection

  “The Firebird” © 2014, first published in Steampunk World

  “The Emerald Coat and Other Wishes ” © 2015, first published in Interfictions: A Journal of Interstitial Arts

  “The City Dreams of Bird-Men” © 2015, first published in Fantasy Scroll Magazine

  “Hungry Ghosts” © 2015, first published in Black Static

  “Victoria's One-Way Ticket” © 2014, first published in Kaleidotrope

  All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced by any means, graphic, electronic, or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, taping or by any information storage retrieval system without the written permission of the publisher except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews.

  This is a work of fiction. All of the characters, names, incidents, organizations, and dialogue in this novel are either the products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously.

  Trepidatio books may be ordered through booksellers or by contacting: Trepidatio Publishing, an imprint of JournalStone

  www.trepidatio.com

  The views expressed in this work are solely those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the publisher, and the publisher hereby disclaims any responsibility for them.

  ISBN: 978-1-945373-61-9 (sc)

  ISBN: 978-1-945373-62-6 (ebook)

  Trepidatio rev. date: May 19, 2017

  Library of Congress Control Number: 2017937091

  Printed in the United States of America

  Cover Design: Miai313—99designs

  Images: Jean 52—jean52.deviantart.com/art/Dead-Branch-PNG-492918445

  GothLyllyOn-Sotck—gothlyllyon-sotck.deviantart.com/art/Crows-Stock-by-GothLyllyOn-Stock-555695643

  FrankAndCarySTOCK—frankandcarystock.deviantart.com

  iStock photo ID: 649549662—young female ballet dancer dancing underwater: Robert Roka

  Edited by: Jess Landry

  To Mom and Dad, and my grandmother Hortense

  ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

  I’d like to thank the members of the 2013 Odyssey Writing Workshop who read and provided invaluable feedback on these stories in the years following our summer together in Manchester: Jeremy Sim, Kate Hall, Kathrin Köhler, Brad Hafford, Sofie Bird, Susan Hicks Wong, Bill Powell, Wendy Lambert, Dannie DeLisle, J.W. Alden, Chris Kelworth, and Emily Smith. Thanks also to our fearless workshop leader, Jeanne Cavelos, who showed me that when it came to writing, there could be a method to my madness, and to Dallas Mayr, who set the wheels in motion for my first professional sale.

  I’d also like to thank the Clarion Writers Workshop class of 2016 for their invaluable support, cheerleading, and friendship: Kendra Fortmeyer, Marykate Jasper, Mackenzie Smith, Jenn Grunigen, Jen Julian, Maggie Cooper, Alan Lin, Jordy Rosenberg, Ben Sloan, Grant Shepert, Sunil Patel, Giovanni De Feo, Derek So, Jack Sullivan, Kathleen Kayembe, Jaymee Goh, and Ryan Pennington, as well as our team of instructors.

  Thank you to the members of the Post-Armageddon Writing Group, especially Julie C. Day, C.S.A. Liddle, and Kat Köhler, for all the critique exchanges and Google Hang-out chats.

  Thank you to the editors who brought these stories into the light of day for the first time, especially Michael Bailey. Thanks to Theodora Goss, who told me about the world of speculative fiction writing and publishing in the first place. And thanks to JournalStone editor Jess Landry.

  In many ways, my friends are my chosen family. Thank you to Liza Behrendt, Ayden LeRoux, Allison Krzanowski, Dana Moyer, Meghan Faulkner, Kate Giuggio, Nivi Poola, Lauren Moss-Racusin, Carolyn Maurer, Lilia Stantcheva, Sarah Segal, Vanessa Ruano, Chonel and Ken Petti, Laura Fischer, Lee Gaines, Beina Xu, Irina Baych, Lucie Stevens, Karthik Nagarajan and Sarmishta Pantham, Katharina Hampel, and Emily and Chrissie O’Neill, for hanging out with me on Gchat or in real life, for listening to my woes and celebrating my triumphs. Thanks to Hannah Reynolds and Monica Jimenez for the long nights and afternoons of writing together in Cambridge’s many cafes, and to my old colleagues at GateHouse Media, especially Dan Atkinson, for letting me use the printer.

  Of course, besides my chosen family, I also have my family family: my parents, Kathryn and David Cataneo, and our ever-inspirational dog, Ike; my aunts, uncles, and cousins, especially Debbie and Alan Carter, Skip and Jackie Petrizzo, and Lisa Perrault; and my in-laws, Connie and Rich Guerin and Missy and Matt Smith. Finally, thanks to my husband, Nate Guerin, for keeping me well-fed and exercised and optimistic, and thanks to Cassandra de Alba, my basically-sister and life-long partner in ferality.

  PRAISE FOR SPEAKING TO SKULL KINGS

  "Very rarely will you meet an imagination as potent and far-reaching as Emily Cataneo's. It startles and amazes. Yet every fine-cut gem of a story presented here is firmly grounded in the human experience, in tenderness and yearning, in humor and heartache. You'll want to stop and savor each and every one. This is unique fantasy—fresh, gripping and brilliantly realized."

  — Jack Ketchum, Bram Stoker Award winning author of The Box and The Girl Next Door

  "Elegantly composed, Speaking to Skull Kings and Other Stories is a literary dance. Cataneo pulls you in close, whispering song in your ear, twirling you round one story to the next in an embrace as tight as her prose. Not until you finish the final dance and she pulls away with her words do you realize you'd left the ground awhile, that she'd ripped the wings off your back in order to bring you back down, to let you go. This debut fiction collection is magical, enticing, and leaves you wanting those bloodied hands to lead just one more time."

  — Michael Bailey, Bram Stoker Award winning editor of The Library of the Dead

  "This fine collection fits into the weird places in my skull and the dark places in my heart. I adore it. Fans of modern dark fairy tales of the sort that Neil Gaiman and Kelly Link write will enjoy this, as will readers of classic weird fiction who prefer the work of Robert Chambers and Charlotte Perkins Gilman over that of Lovecraft. Cataneo has filtered the classics through her own sensibilities to create vivid stories of ghosts and other lost souls."

  — Lucy A. Snyder, Bram Stoker Award winning author of Soft Apocalypses

  SPEAKING TO SKULL KINGS

  When Bird with his crown of black roses disappears from the clearing, Genevieve knows she and Joseph won’t be safe anymore. At night, while Joseph sleeps, she sorts the walnuts and lingonberries that Bird gathered for them to eat, counting fewer each time. Her stomach aches and she flinches at the rustle of the skull kings in the ghost forest beyond the clearing.

  Sometimes, she clambers up trees, her boots slipping on bark, straining to hear the rustle of Bird’s wings, the growl of his caw.

  Night after night, Bird doesn’t return.

  Night after night, the skull kings crunch through the undergrowth, closer and closer.

  * * *

  Bird always protected them, as long as Genevieve can remember, since she and Joseph picked bittercress in the clearing as children. Then, Bird loomed taller than both of them. In summer, he plucked frui
ts and nuts from the trees’ highest branches, and in winter, he draped them in his glossy black feathers, sheltering them against whipping ice.

  He protected them the first time the skull kings attacked. Small skull kings, the skulls of mice and voles, had always chattered in the weeds that ringed the clearing, and once or twice larger skull kings had flashed among the translucent trees of the ghost forest. But on that day—an autumn day, when Joseph sat drawing beneath an elm tree and Genevieve swung from its lowest branch—a scream tore through the clearing, and a wall of bone materialized out of the hazy ghost forest. A skull king, the skull of a giant raptor or dinosaur, hurtled towards them. It swerved on treaded tires through the weeds that rimmed their clearing, looming over Genevieve.

  She screamed. She threw her arms around Joseph and pressed his head against her shoulder.

  But Bird leapt into the air, flapping immense black wings, squawking in a language that Genevieve didn’t know. The skull king screamed back, a sound that came from its mouth even though its long-dead jaw didn’t move. Decaying plants swayed in its eye sockets, scraped against the inside of its cranium.

  Bird squawked again, and the thin autumn sun caught the velvet petals, the thistle and thorn, of his black rose crown.

  The skull king growled, but it reversed, retreating towards the ghost forest.

  Bird landed among the ferns and flowers, wrapped Genevieve and her brother in his wings and crooned, You’re safe, little children, you’re safe.

  Genevieve snuggled against his downy feathers, knowing she would never come to harm.

  * * *

  “We have to find him.” Genevieve gathers crooked sticks out of the bed of moss and decaying leaves on the clearing floor.

  “What are you going to do about the skull kings? Tap them to death?” Joseph strokes the thin stubble on his hollow cheeks. “Genius.”

  “We’ll leave during the day, so the dangers in the ghost forest won’t be quite as bold.”

  “Gen.” Joseph runs his fingers along an oak’s trunk. “I don’t think we’re...I don’t think he wants to be found.”

  For a second, Genevieve feels as though she’s floating and about to fall. She cranes her neck at the cerulean sky above the rustling leaves, forces in a breath. Then she breaks off an oak branch. The snap echoes through the clearing and Joseph jumps.

  “We’re going to find Bird,” Genevieve snarls. “He told me about other clearings in this forest, other safe havens. He must have gone to another one of those, and we’re going to find him. That’s the last I want to hear about it.”

  “Don’t know why you’re so fixated on finding Bird,” Joseph mutters.

  “Who’s going to keep us warm when winter comes? Gather food for us?” Genevieve jabs a finger towards their meager collection of walnuts and berries sheltered in the roots of an elm tree. “Who’s going to protect us from the skull kings?”

  Joseph presses his hands against his stomach. “But if we go into the forest, there’s no way we’ll avoid the skull kings.”

  Genevieve ignores him and stacks her weapons.

  * * *

  Throughout Genevieve’s childhood, Bird told her stories: how Genevieve and Joseph had come from far-off forests called cities, where food and safety are in short supply. How parents from those places sometimes decided they couldn’t care for their children, so they swaddled them in blankets and brought them to the forest and found bird-protectors to promise to watch after them.

  “What happens if parents can’t find a bird-protector?” Joseph would ask, looking up from his sketchbook. And Bird would quickly launch into another story, perhaps about how he had become a protector by gathering the black roses of his crown from the rot-stinking undergrowth of the ghost forest. How you needed three roses to create a crown, how the crown conferred magic onto him so the skull kings shrank away.

  And Joseph would throw down his pencil and ask, “Why can you speak to the skull kings, Bird?”

  “You and your questions,” Genevieve would say, smacking her brother on the shoulder. “Don’t interrupt Bird’s story.”

  But as the years passed, Joseph’s blunt questions gnawed at Genevieve, as the skull kings chomped at the weeds at the edge of her haven and Bird, their protector, shrieked in a language she didn’t know.

  One night, last summer, she watched Bird as he sat at the edge of the clearing, his wings folded tight and his eyes glinting as they stared into the dark.

  “Bird,” she said. “Why do you speak the skull kings’ language?”

  Bird didn’t look at her. “Because going into the forest to gather black roses bears consequences.”

  * * *

  On a bright day in mid-autumn, Genevieve steps out of the clearing for the first time, slipping between two oaks into the ring of weeds between the clearing and the ghost forest.

  “Come on,” she hisses at Joseph, who’s teetering behind her, and she strikes out through the waist-high weeds. Something rustles a few feet to her left.

  “Joseph,” she calls. Her brother appears behind her, she grabs his clammy hand, and they race forward, until the weeds dwindle away.

  Genevieve rubs her arms as she steps into the ghost forest. She cranes her neck at the gnarled trees, with their heavy translucent leaves and hulking branches. She has never seen trees like this, so different from the straight proud oaks and birches of their clearing.

  “I hate this,” Joseph mutters. “Do you hear that sound? What is that sound?”

  The forest breathes, a humid sticky breath, emanating from the trees, from the loam beneath their boots.

  “Let’s hurry.” Genevieve strikes off due north—Bird told her that the nearest clearing is a three-week journey north of them—and her feet crunch against the jet-black tangle of spiked and thorny plants on the forest floor.

  As they wend their way north and the light dwindles, the hairs stand on Genevieve’s neck and she jumps at the crunch of her own footsteps. She’s wondering when they should stop for the night when something flickers through the fog.

  The whine of wheels skidding on soil, and then it hurtles towards them, the white of the skull flashing from trunk to trunk.

  Genevieve’s stomach leaps as Joseph whimpers behind her. She wants to scream for Bird, but instead she hurls a stick. It skitters and falls on the undergrowth nearby.

  “Leave us alone,” Genevieve shouts, then throws another stick. This one slices through the trunk of one of the ghost trees, disappearing in the dusk.

  The wheels grind towards them, and Genevieve and Joseph run. Genevieve’s breath tears in her chest, but they sprint until they no longer hear wheels behind them, until, for now, they have outstripped the skull king, survived another day without Bird to cradle them in his soft wings.

  * * *

  That night, they find a patch of forest floor with few thorns and spikes, and they huddle in the flat white light of the dead trees around them.

  Genevieve rummages in her coat pockets, extracts a handful of berries and two walnuts. After they gobble their meager supper, Genevieve listens for the rustle of skull kings while Joseph sketches the translucent trees. He keeps scrubbing his eraser against the page, and finally, he sets his pencil down.

  “What do the skull kings do to you, do you think?” His voice quavers.

  “They eat us, don’t they?” She clenches the stack of branches she gathered in their clearing.

  “Do they?”

  “Why, I...of course, of course that’s what they do.” Didn’t they? Isn’t that what Bird told her? He must have said so, at some point.

  Joseph bends to his sketchbook. “If you say so.”

  Genevieve frowns. She examines the plants next to her, brushes aside a few crinkled bits of burned paper, and prods a thorn. The thorn crumbles away, and something glints underneath: black velvet petals, a black stem, five prickly sepals beneath the cup of the flower.

  Genevieve plucks it out of the loamy ground, and Bird’s absence floods her, as though t
he black rose in her fingers is poison. Nearly a full season has passed since his feathers and roses gleamed in the crisp air in their clearing. Every fiber of her aches for him to pad through the ghost forest towards her.

  She allows herself to acknowledge that Bird is not her father or mother—those mysterious creatures who abandoned her and Joseph long ago—and not just her friend. For a second, she’s suspended, her breath stolen by the thought of all she wants Bird to be.

  Then she forces a breath into her chest. There’s no use thinking about it. She’ll reach the other clearing, she will, she’ll throw sticks at the skull kings and protect herself and Joseph, and then she’ll find Bird, waiting for her.

  * * *

  Joseph watches Genevieve’s serious face in this forest’s sinister light. Hunger claws at his stomach. He shoves it down and in its place rises worry about his sister. She’s so brave about journeying through the forest to find Bird, and yet so blind about questions that seem obvious to Joseph: what do the skull kings do to a person? Why is she so sure Bird’s in the other clearing?

  And, most importantly: why does she think Bird wants to be found?

  Joseph loved their childhood too: in his memory, their youth in the clearing plays like a lullaby. But the night Bird left, Joseph saw him slink out of the clearing. Bird’s glassy indifferent eyes fell on Joseph, and Joseph knew: Bird didn’t want to protect them anymore. It was over.

  They would have been better off staying in their clearing and building a life without Bird.

  But Joseph has never been able to persuade his sister of anything.

  * * *

  Genevieve and Joseph trudge through the ghost forest as its breath grows cold, as leaves drop onto Genevieve’s hair then melt away like mist, as the skull kings’ shrieks slice through the night and Genevieve clutches her black rose.

  One day, they climb an incline in the forest and before them spread trees of hoarfrost, with needles made of thin slivers of ice and snow plump around the bases.

 

‹ Prev