The Brides of Rollrock Island

BOOK: The Brides of Rollrock Island
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Also by MARGO LANAGAN

Tender Morsels

Red Spikes

Black Juice

White Time

THIS IS A BORZOI BOOK PUBLISHED BY ALFRED A. KNOPF

This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.

Text copyright © 2012 by Margo Lanagan
Jacket photograph copyright © 2012 by Lara Jade

All rights reserved. Published in the United States by Alfred A. Knopf, an imprint of Random House Children’s Books, a division of Random House, Inc., New York. Also published in Great Britain by David Fickling Books, an imprint of Random House Children’s Books, a division of the Random House Group Ltd., London, and in Australia as
Sea Hearts
by Allen & Unwin, Sydney.

Knopf, Borzoi Books, and the colophon are registered trademarks of Random House, Inc.

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Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Lanagan, Margo.
The brides of Rollrock Island / Margo Lanagan.
p. cm.
Summary: On remote Rollrock Island, men go to sea to make their livings—and to catch their wives. The witch Misskaella knows the way of drawing a girl from the heart of a seal, of luring the beauty out of the beast. And for a price a man may buy himself a lovely sea-wife. He may have and hold and keep her. And he will tell himself that he is her master. But from his first look into those wide, questioning, liquid eyes, he will be just as transformed as she. He will be equally ensnared. And the witch will have her true payment.
eISBN: 978-0-375-98930-8
[1. Witches—Fiction. 2. Selkies—Fiction. 3. Magic—Fiction. 4. Islands—Fiction.] I. Title.
PZ7.L21Br 2012
[Fic]—dc23
2011047466

Random House Children’s Books supports the First Amendment and celebrates the right to read.

v3.1

“T
he old witch is there,” said Raditch, peering over the top to Six-Mile Beach. “Well settled with her knitting.”

“It’s all right. We’re plenty,” said Grinny.

“We’re plenty and we have business,” James said with some bluster—he was as scared of her as anyone. He shook his empty sack. “We have been sent by our mams. We’re to provide for our families.”

“Yes, we’ve come all this way,” said Oswald Cawdron.

“We have.”

And down the cliff we went. It was a poisonous day. Every now and again the wind would take a rest from pressing us to the wall, and try to pull us off it instead. We would grab together and sit then, making a bigger person’s weight that it could not remove. The sea was gray with white dabs of temper all over it; the sky hung full of ragged strips of cloud.

We spilled out onto the sand. You can fetch sea-hearts two
ways. You can go up the tide wrack; you will find more there, but they will be harder, drier for lying there, and many of them dead. You can still eat them, but they will take more cooking and, unless your mam boils them through the night, more chewing. They are altogether more difficult.

Those of us whose mams had sighed or dads had smacked their heads for bringing that sort went down toward the water. Grinny ran ahead and picked up the first heart, but nobody raced him; hearts lay all along the sea-shined sand there, plenty for all our families. They do not keep, once collected. They can lie drying in the tide wrack for days and still be tolerable eating, but put them in a house and they’ll do any number of awful things: collapse in a smell, sprout white fur, explode themselves across your pantry shelf. So there is no point grabbing up more than your mam can use.

Along we went, in a bunch because of the witch. She sat some way along the distance we needed to go, and exactly halfway between tide line and water, as if she meant to catch the lot of us. She had a grand pile of weed that she was knitting up beside her, and another pile of blanket she had already made, and the end of her bone knitting hook jittered and danced at her shoulder as she made more, and the rest of her looked as immovable as rocks, except her swiveling head, which watched us, watched the sea, swung to face us again.

“Oh,” breathed James. “Maybe we can come back later.”

“Come now, look at this catch,” I said. “We will gather them all up and run home and it will be done. Think how pleased your mam will be! Look at this!” I lifted one; it was a doubler, one sea-heart clammed upon another like hedgehogs in the spring.

“She spelled Duster Kimes potty,” he whimpered.

“Kimeses are all potty,” I said. How like my dad I sounded, so sensible, knowing everything. “Duster is just more frightenable than the rest. Come, look.” And I thrust a good big heart into his hands, sharp with barnacles to wake him up.

The ones that still float are the best, the most tender, though the ones that have landed, leaning in the wet with sea-spit bubbled around them, are fine, and even those that have sat only a little, up there along the drying foam, are still good. The other boys were dancing along the wrack up there, gathering too much, especially Kit Cawdron. He was only little and he had no sense; why didn’t Raditch stop him? We would have to tip most of that sack out, or half the town would stink up with the waste.

“They’ll not need to go as far as us,” said Grinny at my elbow.

I dropped a nice heavy-wet heart in my sack. “We could get them back down here, to walk along with us, maybe.”

No sooner had I said it than Grinny was off up the beach fetching them. He must have been scareder than he looked.

I busied myself catching floating hearts without sogging my pants hems. Some folk ate the best hearts raw, particularly mams; they drank up the liquor inside, and if there was more than one mam there they would exclaim how delicious it was, and if not they would go quiet and stare away from everyone. If it was only dads there, they would say to each other, “I cannot see the attraction myself,” and smack their lips and toss the heart skin in the pot for boiling with the rest. If you boiled the heart up whole, that clear liquor went to an orange curd; we were all brought up on that, spooned and spooned into us, and some lads never lost the taste. I quite liked it myself, but only
when I was ailing. It was bab food, and a growing lad needed bread and meat, mostly.

Anyway, the wrack hunters came down and made a big crowd with us. Harper picked up a wet heart and weighed and turned it, and emptied his sack of dry ones to start again. Kit Cawdron watched him, in great doubt now.

“Why don’t you take a few of these, Kit,” I said, “instead of those jawbreakers? Your mam will think you a champion.”

He stared at the heart glistening by his foot, and then came alive and upended his sack. Oh, he had some rubbish in there; they bounced down the shore dry as pompons.

His brother Oswald was dancing in and out of the water-edge, not caring what Kit gathered. I picked up a few good hearts, if small. “See how the shells are closed on it? And the thready weed still has some juice in it, see? Those are the signs, if you want to make mams happy.”

“Do they want small or big?” Kit said, taking one.

“Depends on her taste. Does she want small and quicker to cook, or fat and full of juice? My mam likes both, so I take a variety.”

And now we were quite close to the witch, in the back of the bunch, which was closer, quieter, and not half so lively as before, oh no. And she was fixed on us, the face of our night horrors, white and creased and greedy.

“Move along past,” I muttered. “Plenty on further.”

“Oh,
plenty
!” said Misskaella, making me jump and stiffen. “But no one wants to pause by old Misska and be knitted up, eh? No one wants to become piglets in a blanket!” Her eyes bulged in their cavities like glistening rock-pool creatures; I’d have wet myself, if I’d had anything in me to wet with.

“We’re only collecting sea-hearts, Misskaella,” said Grinny politely, and I was grateful to him for dragging her sights off me.

“Only!” she said, and her voice would tear tin plate. “
Only
collecting!”

“That’s right, for our mams’ dinners.”

She snorted, and matter flew out one of her nostrils and into the blanket. She knitted on savagely. The bone’s rustling in the weed sent my boy-sacks up inside me like startled mice to their hole. “That’s right. Keep ’em sweet, keep ’em sweet, those pretty mams.”

There was a pause, she sounded so nasty, but Grinny took his life in his hands and went on. “That’s what we aim to do, ma’am.”

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