Authors: Tara Bray Smith
A bell chimed. The
FASTEN SEAT BELT
sign had been lit. A woman’s voice came over the PA.
“Ladies and gentleman, Captain Thomas has turned on the fasten seat belt sign in preparation for landing at Chicago O’Hare.
Please return to your seats if you’re moving about the cabin and —”
Tray tables, seat backs. Ondine was just about to take a sip from her club soda when a flight attendant appeared to collect
her cup. This one had frizzy blond hair and coral lip-stick and a smoker’s ring of wrinkles around her lips. Ondine rose to
look for the earlier stewardess, bumping her tray table and causing her seatmate to wake suddenly with a small “Oh dear!”
The woman started, her hands flying. The glass of club soda spilled all over Ondine’s lap.
“Hon, tray table up.” The blond stewardess reached across her for her empty cup.
Ondine, sopping, forced herself to speak.
“I’m sorry. Can you call the stewardess —”
“Flight attendant?” the woman corrected, her eyebrows raised.
“I mean flight attendant. Can you call the flight attendant who was just here? Who gave me my club soda?”
“I’m sorry, hon, but we’re about to land. Can I help you in
some way?” As she spoke she deposited Ondine’s cup in a trash bag and locked the tray table up in one continuous, well-practiced
motion. She even managed to push Ondine’s seat-back button, so that she was propelled suddenly forward. “Sorry,” the woman
said through a tight smile. “FAA regulations. Here are some napkins.”
“It’s okay; it’s okay.” Ondine readjusted, trying to keep the woman’s attention. “She’s black, the stew — the flight attendant.
She gave me my club soda and I wanted to ask her something.”
The blond woman’s face was blank. She shook her head and pursed her seamed lips. Ondine felt her seatmate trying to pat away
some of the water that had spilled on her knees, mumbling, “Oh dear, I’m sorry. I’m so sorry.”
“No flight attendant on this aircraft who’s black, darling.” And, smiling blandly, she turned down the aisle.
Ondine pulled the napkin from her jacket pocket with wet fingers and looked at it. The words were still there:
Tomorrow morning. Grant Park.
She looked out the window at the sky, completely dark now. Her heart beat faster. In the reflection she could see her neighbor
pulling a packet of tissue out of her purse.
“I am really such a klutz. God —”
“It’s okay. It’s okay.” Ondine turned and showed her the napkin. “Can you read this to me?”
The woman looked up once, as if to try to understand why
she wanted her to do the task. She put the soaked tissues in the seat-back pocket in front of her and began to pronounce the
words:
“Tomorrow —” She paused, cleared her throat, and started again. “Tomorrow morning. Grant Park, the rose garden. We can talk
there.” Her accent was slightly nasal:
tawk
for talk. Ondine figured she was from the East Coast. “Okay?”
“Thanks. I’m just … I’m just having trouble with my vision.”
The neighbor nodded knowingly. She had curly brown hair and deep-set, pinkish eyes. “Happens all the time on flights. Believe
me. I used to sell industrial chemicals — traveled all over creation. Good
gawd
my eyes were dry. Drops?” She rifled through her purse and pulled out a bottle of Visine.
“No. No, thanks.” Ondine waved it away.
“Listen, I’m really sorry about the drink.”
“It’s all right. Don’t worry about it.” The water was the last thing on her mind. She concentrated on what was happening around
her. The woman talking. The lights of the grid of Chicago rising up to meet the plane, the dimming cabin, movements of one
of the flight attendants somewhere ahead. A baby’s cough.
“Well, it was just really klutzy of me. And I deprived you of necessary hydration! These long flights, they’re killers. When
I was in corporate, I told my husband, Mike, I said, ‘Mike, remind
me to buy Visine before I go on a trip.’ Of course, he’s the forgetful one…. I typically am the, you know, anal one. Virgo.
But Sagittarius moon, which makes us get along well, Mike and me. Anyway …”
And the saleswoman of Ondine’s former life continued this way until they landed. Mike; astrology; Des Plaines, Illinois; Visine
versus propolis eyedrops; the Midwest; O’Hare; and reverse commute. Chicago hot dogs versus East Coast franks.
The rose garden in Grant Park. Oh, that is beautiful.
Ondine didn’t have to speak once. Normally she would have been irritated to the point of nausea. But tonight — with the lights
of Chicago approaching quickly under them, like hieroglyphics explaining some future self Ondine would not, could not, understand
— she was grateful for the distraction.
T
HE MIDLEVEL BRICK BUILDINGS
of Portland’s seamier district bordering Burnside tapered to a sprawling D’Amici’s, a car dealership, cell shop, pizza parlor,
and finally, the pretty, shaded streets heading up toward Forest Park. The apartment buildings ended, yielding bigger, handsome
houses, and Nix stayed to the outside of the sidewalk, avoiding eye contact with the few desperate housewives and their mini
SUV strollers out on a cold, windy day. He would keep his eyes on the ground, but not for long. He was coming into something
and he knew it.
Without much effort he gained the top of the first hill and started to move through the forest pathways that afforded a shortcut
to the lookout. He remembered these trails. He thought of Finn, and missed him, and Evelyn, and his old, dust-mellowed life.
It was late afternoon; the sunset that was supposed to define the meeting time was more of a hopeful projection than a reality;
the sun was no more than a vague splotch of lighter gray sinking somewhere toward the hills behind him. There had been
a brief break in the rain during the morning, but it was coming again, from the north, and Nix knew that whatever meeting
there was would be a short one. He imagined Morgan D’Amici wouldn’t tolerate the whipping rain for more than a minute or two.
Her carefully blown-out hair wouldn’t stand for it.
He pulled his jacket around him, conscious of the fact that he’d now worn these clothes for several days straight and didn’t
smell a thing.
Crazy fairies’ shit don’t stink.
The unlikely thought made him laugh. He’d had a sense of humor once.
The bench was there, right where it used to be. On it, Moth, with his back to Nix, looking a bit more hunched than usual.
Next to him sat a figure in a toxic orange Final Home parka, the hood pulled up, smaller than Moth. Morgan. On time, of course.
Little Miss Can’t-Be-Wrong. They looked like any other disaffected, partially employed, overly educated young Portland hipster
couple, watching bad weather for kicks. Nix half expected Moth’s arm to casually drape around her. They’d kiss. Then some
entanglement involving facial piercings.
He walked up sideways, careful to let them see him first.
“Nix.” It was Morgan who spoke, almost kindly, a greeting he did not expect. Then Moth offered a hand. Nix was surprised to
see the little X tattoo still there, as if all the signs of the world had changed since their last meeting. Which, in a way,
they had.
Moth, seeing his gaze, exposed his wrist.
“That’s the mark. You probably recognize it already. All
lings have one. You’ll be getting one at the next gathering. You too, Morgan.” Moth moved his eyes to the girl.
Nix took Moth’s hand and shook it, and nodded to Morgan. She nodded back, her face warmed from the reflection of the orange
parka, against which her eyes, he noticed, looked particularly large and blue.
“So,” Moth said.
He’s never done this before, Nix thought, and as if in answer, Moth cleared his throat and began.
“I’ve never done this before. So —” He moved his eyes side to side. “You’ll have to forgive me if I fuck up now and again.
The first fuck-up is that Ondine isn’t here. And that you, Nix,” Moth said, nodding at him, “missed the initial lesson. Neither
of these things is unmanageable.” He smiled affably and Nix realized this was his great gift. Moth’s smile was big and white
and winning. And until proven otherwise, not very trustworthy.
“You’ll realize that fay like to speak in precise terms, so
unmanageable
is one.
Fatal
would be a misstatement, since very little is, in fact, fatal to us. To our bodies, yes.” He switched his glance to Morgan
and grimaced. “But that’s for later. Right now I want to make it clear to both of you that besides Ondine, you are it for
this ring. There are no other new changelings right now in Portland. And since you already sort of know each other — that
makes my job easier. It’s the one good thing about smaller places. In New York, god, I’ve met guides that have ten,
fifteen lings they have to deal with. Not that this is so awful, but man, it’s a lot of work. Anyway …”
Moth’s tangents and shaking knee irritated Nix.
What about Neve Clowes?
he wanted to scream.
And Tim Bleeker!
Standing listening to Moth ramble, Nix wondered whether he had missed Viv’s instructions for a reason. Was he meant to figure
this out by himself, using his own senses? Otherwise, he would risk faltering under the shaky guidance of the one who was
now moving erratically, circling, circling, into a long story about his experience with the bust in Eugene, a story complete
with keg stands and vomit.
“He was fucked
up,
man.” Moth laughed. “
So
fucked up — I think he was pissing on someone’s stereo when he finally passed out —”
Nix interrupted him. “Moth,
dude.
We’ve already heard this story in several versions. You’re kind of — legendary, you know? Can we get to the point?”
Moth’s face got serious and Nix sensed something there he hadn’t noticed before. Hardness? Protection? Morgan, too, watched
the older boy from the corner of her too-blue eyes.
He stood up. “Sit down, son.”
“Naw, I’m fine.”
“No. You’re not. Sit down.”
Nix felt his legs weaken and then burn, as if exposed to some chemical. He reached down to touch them, but Moth shoved
him toward the bench and Nix, unclear as to what was happening to him, unwillingly took his seat.
“Good. Now. Some people take a little time to get into things. Don’t be a punk, all right? I’m your guide, and that’s how
it’s going to be for the time being. Like it or not. If you’re as good as Viv says you are, you will learn from a changeling
as clumsy and simple as me. Then you’ll go on to heights I can only dream of. Got it?”
Nix nodded and the burning in his legs ceased.
“You arrogant fucks. The reason why I was telling you that long-ass story was that Bleek was my partner. Okay? I know Bleek.
I’ve known him for a long time. Bleek was in my ring. He and I were close — as close as the two of you will get.”
Morgan and Nix looked at each other, and Morgan dropped her eyes.
“Our guide was terrible. Not really interested in preparing us for the exidis. Which is, as you already know … well, it’s
more than a little scary. Anyway, we didn’t understand. We had this idea — this first idea. Why not see what this dust stuff
the scia were giving to us at the Ring of Fire would do to the general population? We already knew it had once been used for
the pets — this wasn’t exactly broadcast, but our guide —” Moth shook his head. “Our guide, he trusted us. Too much. So that’s
what we did. Bleek got a supply and we started leaking it. Just a little at first, mostly for girls at parties, or to make
something happen.”
He looked at the two. “It’s the worst thing about this; I’ll tell you right now. The boredom. While you’re waiting for the
exidis. All you want to do, once you find out, is see what it will get you. Nothing in the human world seems off-limits anymore.”
Moth’s eyes were glazed. “Can you imagine how boring that is?”
Nix and Morgan stared, mystified, and Moth shook it off and continued. “Anyway. You will. So it was kind of a joke, see? A
lark.
Except it wasn’t. Bleek had it all figured out. He’d found out way more about what the stuff could do to humans than I had.
The man had a plan, you know? Me, I was just having fun.”
Morgan spoke. “And what happened?” Nix was surprised her voice was so measured.
“You know.”
“I
know
? What are you talking about?”
“You were at that party, Morgan. I remember. And Bleek remembers, too. We’ve known about you for a long time. You were too
young to be at that kind of party, by the way.” Moth smiled, and some touch of big brother came out. “But then, you always
were a little precocious.”
Morgan looked away and Nix wished he had access to the girl’s thoughts. He couldn’t read her in the way he did Moth, or even
Ondine, despite those clear, light eyes.
“Anyway, for your edification, Nix, since you were in Alaska — we got arrested, no one posted bail, but Bleek got off somehow.
I spent three months locked up.
Jail,
man. I couldn’t
do anything about it. There are things we can do, with magnetization and electricity — what I just did to you — and some stuff
using the bodies of other living creatures … morphing, basically —” Nix saw Morgan look up then and thought of the burning
in his legs a few moments before.
Morphing?
Was that what the crow was, in the clearing with Bleek and Neve, at the Ring of Fire? But Moth was speaking quickly and Nix
realized he had better pay attention if he was going to do anything about Neve.
“… But I didn’t know any of that then. I was just getting started. And Viv did exactly
nada
to change my situation. Maybe she was trying to teach me a lesson, or test me.” Moth observed the two, looking into their
eyes to make his point. “The scia are very careful about getting found out. They have to live in their bodies much longer
than the rest of us and must conserve their energies. They are also very particular about who undertakes the exidis. If your
will is not aligned, you don’t go. If you have a cutter in your ring, you don’t go.” He paused. “Until the cutter is eliminated.
But we’ll get to that.”