Alex wasnโt far from Taraโs apartment. Sheโd driven these streets with Darlington at the start of her freshman year, walked them when she was hunting Taraโs killer. It had been winter then, the branches bare, the tiny yards crusted with dirty mounds of snow. This neighborhood looked better in the still-warm days of early October, clouds of green leaves softening the edges of the rooflines, ivy climbing over the chain-link fences, all of it made gentle and dreamy by the glint of streetlights carving golden circles into the soft hours of dusk.
She was standing in the well of shadow between two row houses, watching the street that fronted the Taurus Cafe, a windowless lump of brick decorated by signs promising keno and lotto and Corona. Alex could hear the thump of music from somewhere inside. Small rings of people smoked and chatted beneath the lights, despite the sign beside the door that readย No loitering police take notice.ย She was glad of the noise, but less happy at the prospect of so many witnesses seeing her come and go. Better to come back in the daytime when the street would be deserted, but she didnโt have that luxury.
She knew the bar would be packed with Grays, drawn by sweat, bodies pressed together, the damp clink of beer bottles; she wanted someone closer to hand.
Thereโa Gray in a parka and a beanie, hovering by an arguing couple, undisturbed by the heavy heat of a too-long summer. She made eye contact with him, his baby face an uncomfortable jolt. Heโd died young.
โCome on along,โ she sang under her breath, then gave a disgusted snort. She had that goofy song in her head. Some a cappella group had been
practicing in the courtyard when Alex was getting ready to leave the dorm. โHow are they already starting that shit?โ Lauren had complained,
sorting through her crates of vinyl, her blond hair even brighter after a summer spent lifeguarding.
โItโs Irving Berlin,โ Mercy had noted. โI donโt care.โ
โItโs also racist.โ
โThat shit is racist!โ Lauren had called out of the window and put AC/DC on her record player, turning the volume all the way up.
Alex loved every minute of it. Sheโd been surprised at how much sheโd missed Lauren and Mercy over the summer, their easy talk and gossip, the shared worry over classes, the arguments about music and clothes, all of it like a tether she could grasp to bring her back to the ordinary world.ย This is my life, sheโd told herself, curled up on the couch in front of a noisy fan, watching Mercy hang a garland of stars over the fireplace in their new common room, quite a change from their cramped rooms on Old Campus. The couch and recliner had made it into their new suite, the coffee table theyโd all assembled together at the start of freshman year, the toaster and its seemingly inexhaustible supply of Pop-Tarts sent courtesy of Laurenโs mom. Alex had asked Lethe for a bike and a printer and a new tutor at the end of last year. Theyโd been happy to agree, and she wished sheโd asked for more.
Their freshman dorm on Old Campus had been the most beautiful place Alex had ever lived, but the residential collegeโJE properโfelt real, solid and elegant, permanent. She liked the stained glass windows, the stonework faces in every corner of the courtyard, the scuffed wood floors, the heavily carved fireplace that didnโt work but that theyโd decorated with candles and a vintage globe. She even liked the little Gray in an old-fashioned dress, a child with hair done up in crisp curls who liked to linger in the branches above the tree swing.
She and Mercy were sharing a double because Lauren had won the single in their draw. Alex was sure sheโd cheated, but she didnโt much mind. It would have been easier to come and go if she had a room to herself, but there was also something comforting about lying in bed at night
and hearing Mercy snore across the room. And at least they werenโt stuck in bunks anymore.
Alex had planned on hanging out with Mercy and Lauren for a few hours before she had to leave to oversee a ritual at Book and Snake, listening to records and trying to ignore the annoyingย mmmm oohย of a singing group punishing โAlexanderโs Ragtime Band.โ
Come on along. Come on along. Let me take you by the hand.
But then the text from Eitan had appeared.
So now she was eyeing the Taurus Cafe. She was about to step out of the shadows when a black-and-white drove by, a new cruiser, sleek and quiet as a deep-sea predator. It flashed its lights and gave a brief belch of the siren, a warning that the New Haven PD did indeed take notice.
โYeah, fuck you,โ someone growled, but the crowd dispersed, drifting into the club or weaving down the sidewalk to find their cars. It wasnโt properly late yet. There was still plenty of time to find another party, another chance at something good.
Alex didnโt want to think about the cops or getting caught or what Turner might say if she got dragged in on a B&E or, worse, an assault charge. She hadnโt heard from the detective since the end of her freshman year, and she doubted heโd be glad to see her under the best of circumstances.
Once the cruiser was gone, Alex made sure the sidewalk was clear of possible witnesses and crossed the street to an ugly white duplex, just a couple doors down from the bar. Funny how all sad places looked the same. Trash cans overflowing. Weed-choked yards and junked-up porches.ย Iโll get around to it or I wonโt.ย But there was a new truck in the driveway of this particular house, complete with personalized license plate: ODMNOUT. At least she knew she had the right spot.
Alex drew a mirrored compact from the pocket of her jeans. When she hadnโt been mapping New Havenโs infinite churches for Dawes, sheโd spent the summer digging through the drawers of Il Bastoneโs armory. She told herself it was a good way to waste time, get familiar with Lethe, maybe eye up what might be worth stealing if it came to that, but the truth was that when she was rummaging in the armory cabinets, reading the little
handwritten cardsโthe Carpet of Ozymandias;ย Monsoon Rings for calling rain, incomplete set;ย Palillos del Diosโshe could feel Darlington with her, peering over her shoulder.ย Those castanets will banish a poltergeist, Stern, if one plays the correct rhythm. But youโll still walk away with your fingers burned black.
It was comforting and troubling at the same time. Invariably, that steady scholarโs voice turned accusing.ย Where are you, Stern? Why havenโt you come?
Alex rolled her shoulders, trying to shrug off her guilt. She needed to stay focused. That morning, sheโd held the pocket mirror up to the TV to see if she could capture a glamour from the screen. She hadnโt been sure it would work, but it had. Now she popped it open and let the illusion fall over her. She jogged up the steps to the porch and knocked.
The man who answered the door was huge and heavily muscled, his neck thick and pink as a cartoon ham. She didnโt need to consult the image on her phone. This was Chris Owens, also known as Oddman, record as long as he was and twice as wide.
โHoly shit,โ he said when he saw Alex at the door, his eyes trained on the space a foot above her head. The glamour had added twelve inches to her height.
She raised her hand and waved.
โI โฆ Can I help you?โ Oddman asked.
Alex bobbed her chin toward the apartment interior.
Oddman shook his head as if waking from a dream. โYeah, of course.โ He stepped aside, sweeping his arm out in a grand gesture of welcome.
The living room was surprisingly neat: a halogen lamp tucked into the corner, a big leather couch with a matching recliner arranged to face a massive flat-screen tuned to ESPN. โYou want something to drink orโฆโ He hesitated, and Alex knew the calculation he was making. There was only one reason a celebrity would turn up on his doorstep on a Thursday nightโ any night really. โYou looking to score?โ
Alex hadnโt really needed confirmation, but now she had it. โYou owe twelve large.โ
Oddman took a lurching step back as if heโd suddenly lost his balance. Because he was hearing Alexโs voice. She hadnโt bothered to try to disguise it, and the dissonance between her voice and the glamour of Tom Brady created by the mirror had caused the illusion to waver. It didnโt matter. Alex had only needed the magic to get inside Oddmanโs apartment without a fuss.
โWhat the fuckโโ
โTwelve large,โ Alex repeated.
Now he saw her as she was, a tiny girl standing in his living room, black hair parted in the middle, so skinny she might slip straight through the floorboards.
โI donโt know who the fuck you are,โ he bellowed, โbut youโre in the wrong damn house.โ
He was already striding toward her, his bulk making the room shake.
Alexโs arm shot out, reaching toward the window, toward the sidewalk in front of the Taurus Cafe. She felt the Gray in the beanie rush into her, tasted green apple Jolly Ranchers, smelled the skunk smoke of weed. His spirit felt unfinished and frantic, a bird slamming itself against a windowpane again and again. But his strength was pure and ferocious. She put up her hands, and her palms struck Oddman square in the chest.
The big man went flying. His body slammed into the TV, shattering the screen and knocking it to the floor. Alex couldnโt pretend it didnโt feel good to steal the Grayโs strength, to be dangerous just for a moment.
She crossed the room and stood over Oddman, waited for his dazed eyes to clear.
โTwelve large,โ she said again. โYou have a week to get it or I come back and break bones.โ Though it was possible sheโd cracked his sternum already.
โI donโt have it,โ Oddman said on a groan, his hand rubbing his chest. โMy sisterโs kidโโ
Alex knew the excuses; sheโd made them herself.ย My mom is in the hospital. My check is late. My car needs a new transmission and I canโt pay you if I canโt get to work.ย It didnโt really matter if they were true or not.
She squatted down. โI feel for you. I really do. But I have my job, you have yours. Twelve thousand dollars by next Friday or heโll make me come back and turn you into an example for every dime bag hump in the neighborhood. And I donโt want to do that.โ
She really didnโt.
Oddman seemed to believe her. โHe โฆ got something on you?โ
โEnough to bring me here tonight and to bring me back again.โ Alexโs temples gave a sudden throb, and the oversweet tang of apple candy burst into her mouth. โShit, man. You look bad.โ
It took Alex a second to realize she was the one speakingโwith someone elseโs voice.
Oddmanโs eyes widened. โDerrik?โ
โYeah!โ That wasnโt her voice, wasnโt her laugh.
Oddman reached out to touch her shoulder, something between wonder and fear making his hand shake. โYou โฆ I went to your wake.โ
Alex stood, nearly losing her footing. She caught a glimpse of herself in the reflection from the broken TV, but the person looking back at her wasnโt a scrawny girl in a tank top and jeans. It was a boy in a beanie and a parka.
She shoved the Gray out of her. For a moment, they stared at each other
โDerrik, apparently. She didnโt know what had killed him and she didnโt want to know. Heโd somehow pushed to the forefront of her consciousness, taken over her face, her voice. And she wanted none of that.
โBela Lugosiโs dead,โ she snarled at him. Theyโd become her favorite death words over the summer. He vanished.
Oddman had pressed himself against the wall as if he could disappear into it. His eyes were full of tears. โWhat the fuck is happening?โ
โDonโt worry about it,โ she said. โJust get the money and all this goes away.โ
Alex only wished she had it that easy.
Rete Mirabile
Provenance: Galway, Ireland; 18th century Donor: Book and Snake, 1962
The โwonderful netโ was procured by the Lettermen c. 1922. Specific date of origin and maker are unknown, but oral histories suggest it was created through Celtic song magic or possibly seidh (see the Norse sea giantess Rรกn). Analysis indicates the net itself is ordinary cotton, braided with human tendon. After a loved one had been lost at sea, the net could be thrown into the ocean while attached to a stake on shore. The next morning, the body would be returned, which some found comforting and others distressing, given the possible state of remains.
Gifted by Book and Snake when their attempts to recall specific corpses failed.
โ from the Lethe Armory Catalogue as revised and edited by
Pamela Dawes, Oculus
Why is it the boys at Book and Snake donโt seem to be able to cook up anything that works the way it should? First they resurrect a bunch of sailors who can only speak Irish. Next they empty their not insubstantial coffers to get their hands on an authenticated letter from the Egyptian Middle Kingdom before Wolfโs Head can drum up the cash. A letter for the resurrection of a king. But who do they get when they light that thing up in their tomb? Not Amenhotep or good olโ Tutankhamun, not even a headless Charles I at their door, but Elvis Presleyโtired, bloated, and hungry for a peanut butter and banana sandwich. They had a hell of a time getting him back to Memphis with no one the wiser.
โLethe Days Diary of Dez Carghillย (Branford College โ62)