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The Year's Best Dark Fantasy & Horror 2012

Page 64

by Guran, Paula


  “We can trade war stories some other time,” he says. “Right now I’m going to bed.”

  I do the same. We’ve got a long day ahead of us tomorrow. But I lie in bed for a time, just grinning at the ceiling, and when I do fall asleep, instead of dreaming about being back in juvie, I dream about people who not only walk around with faerie wings, but they can fly, too.

  As soon as we get finished up with the job on Saturday, I go home and take a shower. Afterward I’m standing there in my jeans looking at the half-dozen T-shirts I own when Uncle Herbert comes in. Maybe Juliana won’t be able to see what I’m wearing in any kind of detail, but I still want to look good when I’m with her.

  Uncle Herbert tosses a long-sleeved shirt onto the bed.

  “I think this’ll fit you,” he says.

  I hold it up. It’s a soft, thick white cotton with a Kikimi pattern embroidered above the pockets in rusts and pale greens and browns. The colors of the desert.

  “I can’t take your shirt,” I say.

  “It’s just a loan. But if you’re going to be seeing much of this girl you might want to take a few dollars that you’ve got saved up for that truck of yours and buy a couple of nice shirts.”

  “Thanks. I will.”

  “How’re you getting there?”

  “The No. 12 goes right by the hotel,” I tell him.

  I didn’t want to ask him for a lift.

  He nods, then hands me the keys to his truck.

  “I’ve found,” he says, “that a girl likes a guy to have his own transportation.”

  “I don’t know what to say.”

  It’s not just the fact that he’s loaning me the truck. It’s that he trusts me enough to not screw things up.

  He grips my shoulder and gives it a squeeze.

  “You’ve been doing so well since you got here,” he says, “that Tía Luba thinks I’m bullshitting when she calls to see how you are. You’ve earned a few perks, Joey.”

  I’m not much of a touchy-feely guy, but I give Uncle Herbert a hug.

  I find Juliana sitting on the edge of a seat in the lobby when I come into the hotel—she has to, just to make room for her wings. They have to be three feet long, gossamer sparkling wings that lift above her head. Her hair is piled high, showing off her slender neck and the little pointed tips on the ends of her ears, and instead of sunglasses she’s wearing one of her dad’s masks—a slender green wave of leather with the tiniest of eyeholes.

  Alana went all out with Juliana’s dress. It’s the color of a deep forest with a tight bodice that’s all brocade and lace. There’s more skirt flooding down from her waist than I’ve ever seen on a girl. All she needs is a crown to be one of those Faerie Queens she loves.

  “You look gorgeous,” I say when I reach her chair.

  She jumps to her feet and throws her arms around my neck.

  “You came!” she breathes in my ear.

  “You didn’t think I would?”

  She kisses my neck, then lets her arms drop. She tucks her hand into the crook of my arm.

  “I didn’t know what to think,” she says, “since we’re just getting to know each other.”

  “Which I hope will be a long, fruitful journey.”

  I don’t know why those fancy words popped into my head. I’m acting so weird I hardly know myself, but she squeezes my arm and rests her head against my shoulder for a moment. Then she gives me a tug.

  “Come on,” she says. “You have to come see the faeries and describe them all to me.”

  It’s chaos in the hotel’s lobby and halls. Everywhichway you turn there are faeries and goblins and I-don’t-know-what-alls, and people taking pictures of them and each other. It’s one thing to be checking out this kind of a scene from the back corridors where the crew and I are bringing in the tables and chairs, but a whole other to be right in the middle of it all. It’s wall-to-wall people. The ones with wings sometimes have to turn sideways just to get through the crowd.

  I do my best to describe them to Juliana. I think she gets a kick out of me stumbling over my descriptions, but come on, really. What can I do? After awhile you just run out of words.

  But some stand out. A couple of scarecrows with straw sticking out of their hats and sleeves make me smile. A mermaid with blue hair. A totally wild woman, green body paint on every bit of skin showing, shrieking in a mad cackling voice. A gnome with a tall red, conical hat. A man dressed like a crow walking on stilts that lift him a few feet above the rest of the crowd.

  But mostly it’s faeries.

  Faeries. Faeries. Faeries.

  Baby faeries and old ones. Fat ones and skinny ones.

  I think some of the bad ones are here a night early because there are more than a few girls and women wearing seriously sexy outfits. But here’s the thing. No matter whether the people are going for a dark look, the vaguely S&M look, or taking the flower faerie route, everybody just seems genuinely nice. They’re respectful and appreciative of each other. Maybe away from a gathering like this they go in for the usual petty crap that everybody seems to, but they appear to have left it behind when they came here. And while I get what Juliana means about her disability being like a third person in the room, people seem happy for her to be here, even if they’re wearing sympathy in their eyes at the same time.

  I’m one of only a few people not in costume, but they’re pretty welcoming to me as well.

  When we get to the big room where the bands will play, there’s already piped in music and people dancing. I see Alana and Tom across the room and give them a wave.

  “Your parents are here,” I say.

  “What are they wearing?”

  “Well, your dad looks like a tree and your mom . . . well, she’s kind of got the leafy look going on, too, but she looks way better than the Green Men.”

  “She’s a dryad.”

  “Which is?”

  “The spirit of a tree.”

  “That makes sense,” I say. “You can tell she’s got a spiritual thing going for her.”

  “What she has,” Juliana says, “is a gift for reading character. She can tell a lot by just looking at someone, but if she has physical contact, they’re laid out for her like reading a book.”

  I think about how long she was holding my hand yesterday.

  “Great,” I say.

  “Oh, don’t worry. You likes you. She said if she had to sum you up in two words they’d be ‘loyal’ and ‘kind.’ She also said you could be dangerous, but never to me.”

  I don’t know what to say to that.

  “She’s teaching me and Dad how to do it,” she goes on, “but he’s better than I am at it.”

  I smile, but she can’t see it.

  “So did you ‘read’ me yesterday?” I ask.

  She nods and starts to blush.

  “You know you’re blushing?”

  She ducks her head now.

  “Oh, come on,” I say. “What did you get?”

  She mumbles something and I think I catch the words “soul mate.” I don’t push her, but I give her hand a squeeze.

  It explains a lot. Her quick acceptance of me and the way I feel about her after knowing her for such a short time. I’m not sure what I think, or what I believe. But I know what I feel. It makes me happy and nervous at the same time and I can see she feels the same way.

  Uncle Herbert would say the little thunders are whispering to us.

  When the first band comes on they play music I’ve never heard before. It’s somewhere between traditional folk songs and European dance music. I like holding Juliana in my arms but we listen as much as we dance. At one point a couple of very athletic faeries do a fire dance using long orange and yellow ribbons as their flames. In the flickering light, with the music throbbing, you can almost believe they’re using real fire.

  When the set’s over Juliana’s parents join us and Alana takes Juliana to the ladies’ room.

  “I’m glad you could make it,” Tom says. “I’ve never se
en Juliana so happy as she is tonight.”

  I guess this is the concerned dad talk.

  “I know it seems to be going really fast,” I tell him. “It seems like that to me, too. But I really like her.”

  “I can see that from how you look at her. But what I like better is how you look out for her—because I see that as well.”

  “I try. But she’s pretty independent.”

  It’s a little weird talking to a guy in a mask of leaves where all you can see is his eyes.

  “Tell me about it,” he says.

  When the next band starts to play he claims his daughter for a dance so I partner with Alana.

  “You’ve got strong, artistic hands,” she says. “Do you play music or paint?”

  “I do some woodcarving.”

  She smiles. “I envy you. I’ve never been able to do three-dimensional work myself.”

  “I’m not that good. I’ve just been figuring it out as I go along.”

  “Well, if you’ve ever wanted to try your hand at leatherwork, Tom’s been looking for an apprentice for ages.”

  I just look at her.

  “I know,” she says. She pretends to be embarrassed and raises an eyebrow. “Step too far?”

  I find myself wondering what it would be like to have parents that love you as much as the Hills love their daughter. My mother passed when I was twelve and the aunts took us kids in; no one knows what happened to my father. One day he just left the house and he never came back. He could be dead, or in jail, or living a whole other life somewhere. I’ll never know.

  But I do know that I feel like I’m in over my head. All of this is happening fast, but at the same time it doesn’t seem to be happening fast enough. Mostly I find it hard to believe that it’s real.

  “I’d have to ask my uncle,” I say.

  “Well, think about it,” she says.

  My next dance is with Juliana and I tell her what her mother said.

  “Wow,” she says. “Didn’t see that coming. What are you going to do?”

  “I don’t know. Making masks sounds a lot better than hauling around tables and chairs.”

  “Dad’s workshop is at the house,” she says, “and the way I hear it, apprentices usually live in their teacher’s home.”

  She doesn’t have to say any more. I can fill in the blanks.

  “I’m getting tired,” she tells me when the dance ends. “I’m not used to being around so many people for so long.”

  “What do you want to do?” I ask, willing to follow her lead.

  “How did you get here?”

  “Uncle Herbert lent me his truck.”

  “How about coming back to the house for awhile? I’ll play you romantic songs on my ukulele.”

  “Really? You play music?”

  She pokes me in the chest. “Don’t sound so surprised.”

  “I’m not. I’m delighted.”

  She grins. “So let’s find my parents and tell them where we’re going.”

  Juliana does play her ukulele for me, and not only is she good on it, the instrument’s got a lot more going for it than I’d have ever thought. In her hands it has a sweet, bell-like sound to match the bell-like tones in her voice.

  We talk some, too, and drink a herbal tea that tastes like cinnamon and nutmeg.

  But mostly we neck on the sofa until Juliana takes my hand and puts it on her breast.

  “Want to see my room?” she asks like she did last night.

  I have to clear my throat.

  “What about your parents?” I say.

  “They’ll be hours still.”

  She squeals when I pick her up, but then wraps her arms around my neck as I carry her through the house to her room.

  2.

  Uncle Herbert says that sometimes things are exactly what they seem to be. Since that’s how I want it to be with the Hills, that’s what I choose to believe.

  It’s not like I don’t get how everything’s happening so fast. I do. But I’m almost eighteen now. I wasted so many years in a drunken and stoned haze that I need things to move fast just so I can catch up with what I missed—all the things that normal kids get to do. But it’s not like I step right into the middle of a whirlwind. Connecting with Juliana and her parents happens quickly, but the day-to-day moves at a much more reasonable pace.

  Still, before I agree to anything, I make sure that Uncle Herbert has a chance to meet the Hills. I owe it to him and Tía Luba for giving me the break I would never have had if I’d stayed in the desert.

  A couple of nights after FaerieCon ends, we have dinner at the Hills’ house. I help Alana prepare the meal, Juliana sits on a stool chatting with us, while Tom and Uncle Herbert are out on the porch with the dogs, getting to know each other. I don’t have any worries about them getting along. Since Uncle Herbert was a medicine man back on the rez and Tom’s got that whole Green Man thing going, they have plenty to talk about.

  Uncle Herbert’s easier to read than Tía Luba has ever been. So when he starts talking over dinner about growing up on the rez, telling funny stories about his brothers and their adventures, I know he likes our hosts as much as I do. But I don’t get to know what he’s really thinking until it’s just the two of us in the cab of his truck and we’re driving home.

  “Well,” he says, “that Juliana’s a fine-looking young lady all right. It’s not hard to see what caught your eye with her.”

  “It’s not just that.”

  “Are you sure? You’ve only known her for a few days and here you are, already set on working for her daddy. Tom even tells me you can move into their house.”

  “It’s hard to explain.”

  “Try me.”

  I look out the windshield and try to find the words.

  “She’s everything you said and more,” I tell him. “She’s smart and serious and funny and sexy. Anybody’d want to be with her.”

  “Even with her being almost blind?”

  “I don’t even think about it—I mean, not as a negative. It makes me want to look out for her, yeah, but it’s only a small part of who she is.”

  I keep staring out the windshield, hoping to pull what I want to say out of the darkness and the lights going by. Uncle Herbert waits patiently.

  “Maybe this is going to sound selfish,” I finally say, “but beyond everything I like about her that’s obvious, I also really like who I am when I’m with her. I’m not an addict or a recovering drunk. I’m not an ex-con. I’m not the guy just looking for someone to say the wrong thing so we can fight. I’m—I’m someone I never thought I’d get the chance to be: an ordinary guy. A happy ordinary guy.”

  “Do you think you make her feel better about herself?”

  “I don’t know. God, I hope so. But she’s got so much going for her—that’s the thing that worries me, I guess. What does she need from me?”

  Uncle Herbert chuckles. “You don’t see the way she looks at you?”

  “What do you mean? She can’t actually see me.”

  “I’m not talking about that kind of seeing. I’m talking about how whenever the two of you are in the same room her spirit starts to glow. You can almost see the light spilling out of her. She’s always turned in your direction, or leaning toward you like a flower following the sun.”

  “I don’t know about that kind of thing.”

  “That’s why I’m the medicine man and you’re not.”

  “I guess.” I shoot him a quick glance. “You can really see that kind of thing?”

  “Sure. I see all kinds of things. Like I see that there’s something sad in that house, too—mostly I get it from Alana. I couldn’t tell what it is and it’s not polite to go digging for that kind of thing when you’re a guest and no one asks you. But she’s got some concern about something.”

  I nod, but I’m still thinking about what he had to say about Juliana.

  “You really think Juliana feels that way?”

  He gives me another chuckle. “Why don’t you ask
her?”

  “She—she told me we were soul mates.”

  “I can see that.” We drive for another few blocks before he adds, “That feeling you were talking about—how you feel you’re a better person when you’re with her? That’s not selfish, Joey. That’s what makes a couple strong.”

  I think about that the rest of the way home.

  When we get out of the truck, I lean on the hood and look up at what I can see of the stars. It’s not like back home, but the good here is outweighing the things I miss.

  “I guess I’ll call Tía Luba in the morning,” I say. “See if she thinks it’s okay.”

  Uncle Herbert leans on the hood beside me.

  “You don’t have to ask anyone for permission,” he says.

  “But—”

  “Luba sent you here and I took you in because we wanted you to have a chance at a better life. But you had to choose to come. Just like you have to choose what you’re going to do with your life. If I thought you were making a bad choice, I’d try to talk you out of it, but I wouldn’t make you do anything.”

  I turn to look at him.

  “So,” I say. “Do you think it’s a good choice to work with Tom and live there with them?”

  Uncle Herbert grins. “With that girl? With a chance to have a real career instead of moving around dollies stacked with tables and chairs? Hell, yes.”

  We have a few years together. Amazing years.

  There are lots of high points, but it’s the little things that stick with you. The sweet routine of the day-to-day.

  Family breakfasts. That’s nothing I’ve had a lot of experience with—not unless you include a lot of drama and shouting, and usually several beers.

  Juliana’s home-schooled. She works with voice-activated computer lessons and Braille textbooks. She teaches me Braille. I put in the long hours of practice and it takes me awhile, but eventually I’m more comfortable “reading” with my eyes closed and a finger following the trail of words across the paper than I am otherwise.

  While she does her lessons, I study with Tom in his workshop, learning his craft from the bottom up. Turns out I have a real aptitude for it—Tom says—but I have to admit that it all comes easy to me. I start with the faerie and Green Man masks that are his specialty, but he soon has me working on things from my own imagination. When we start selling them later, mine don’t do as well at the faerie festivals—except for the bird masks: raven and owl, hawk and eagle—but there seems to be a huge market for them at the Renaissance Faires.

 

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