Read The May Queen Murders Online
Authors: Jude,Sarah
Houghton Mifflin Harcourt
Boston New York
Copyright © 2016 by Sarah Jude
All rights reserved. For information about permission to reproduce selections
from this book, write to Permissions, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing
Company, 215 Park Avenue South, New York, New York 10003.
www.hmhco.com
Text set in Minion
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
tk
Manufactured in the United States of America
TK 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
45XXXXXXXX
To my sister Ericka, my tether,
who just
knows.
So you must wake and call me early, call me early, mother dear,
To-morrow ’ill be the happiest time of all the glad New-year:
To-morrow ’ill be of all the year the maddest merriest day,
For I’m to be Queen o’ the May, mother, I’m to be Queen o’ the May.
— Alfred Lord Tennyson
“The May Queen”
Prologue
Now
Kerosene slopped from the rusty pail and splashed against the aban-
doned stable. Fumes burned my eyes but didn’t blur my father’s sil-
houette as he faced the building, bucket in hand. It would burn and,
with it, the body inside.
“Go to hell!”
Papa’s shoulders twisted as he wheeled back, shouting, sweeping
the pail around. More kerosene rained against the wood while bile
scorched my throat. I was too tired to get sick on the hay, my body
wasted from screaming. I wiped my hand over my mouth and some-
thing snagged my lip. My fingernail was missing, a ragged root jut-
ting from the bloody bed. Bitten off and swallowed by someone who
wanted me dead.
This ain’t real.
Yet I smelled the kerosene and felt the spring air and the dust in
my nose, my feet firm on the ground. No matter how my mind ached
to fly away, it tethered to a stark truth. This was real.
“Ivy, stay back,” Papa warned, and then looked to Mama, close by
1
with an antique lantern shedding dim light. The night sky swelled
with clouds like spiders’ egg sacs ready to burst, but the storm would
miss Rowan’s Glen. The hay, the ground, the stable were kindling-
dry, and every movement kicked up brown clouds. Mama pulled me
until we were safely away. The clink of her silver bracelets racked
together as she eased her arm around my shoulder.
“Don’t worry.” Mama’s still-thick Mexican accent lilted her voice,
but her expression was stoic except for a pinch around her eyes. That
blankness scared me.
“This must be done,” she whispered.
I wadded my fingers into my long skirt. The blue patchwork was
smeared with blood and dirt. Last summer, my cousin Heather and
I sewed peasant skirts together. They flared when I spun, round and
round, always with Heather.
The last time I saw Heather, she was wearing a skirt with red ruf-
fles.
Papa trailed kerosene on the ground and retreated from the stable
before tossing the pail inside. I couldn’t see into the shadows. The
body lying on the stone floor might yet have a pulse. A shiver tugged
at my neck, my chest rising and falling with shallow breaths. One
clear thought pierced my mind’s muddle, and it sickened me.
I
wanted
that body to burn.
“Timothy.” Mama fished a book of matches from a pocket in her
apron and gave them to Papa. He took the matches and stretched
one hand to hold mine. He was strong. My throat ached when I swal-
lowed, from being choked in an attempt to silence me. Now I said
nothing as Papa struck the match.
2
The fire didn’t whoosh to life. First, the match hit the ground and
breathed. Then a blue worm of flames emerged from the earth and
devoured one blot of fuel before moving to the next. Upon reaching
the stable, the worm bloated into a dragon that blazed yellow and
orange. The wood planks hammered by my great-great-grandfather
when he was young crackled, bone-dry from drought. Fire twisted
through the stable while coils of smoke erupted from the windows.
The pulse of the body inside
thump-thump
ed in my head. Frantic.
Dying.
“Mamá?”
I whimpered.
“It’s only fair,” she said.
Papa didn’t speak. Rage had made him do the unspeakable.
For
me,
even though I’d survived. But also for those who hadn’t. Fire was
cleansing. Fire was vengeance. The flames burned red, as red as the
ruffles of Heather’s skirt. As red as Heather’s hair.
3
Chapter One
Now, Ivy girl, you gotta know there’s bad out in them
woods, and the worst kind of bad Rowan’s Glen has ever
known is Birch Markle. Things weren’t ever right with the
Markle boy. There was no real reason for the things he
done, but sometimes, well, evil’s like that.
Then
Yet another lost dog sign marked the animal clinic’s window. This
one stung. Mrs. Knightley had brought her beagle Jones in for a
heartworm test only last week. I’d given him one of Aunt Rue’s dog
biscuits, and Jones’s tail had wagged with glee. Now he was one more
missing face. The curled papers blanketing the glass rustled against
the April wind. Some had been there since January, when the dogs
began disappearing. Papa wouldn’t take them down.
“There’s gotta be hope, Ivy.”
Glass shattered in an exam room, and I slid out from behind
the counter. My sketch of Whimsy, my Morgan mare, would wait.
4
Heather swept up remains from a broken jar and cotton bal s. More
glass crunched under her red Converse high-tops.
She pushed a tendril of hair from her forehead. “Uncle Timothy
needs to buy some Plexiglas jars. I’d break a lot less.”
“Plexiglas is p-poison,” I replied.
Heather snorted. Papa’s diatribes on warfare against pesticides and
plastics were common. Most Rowan’s Glen residents long ago decid-
ed that if we couldn’t raise, craft, or repurpose it, then we wouldn’t
use it. Over time, the buildings converted from no electricity to solar
energy. Our clothing was handmade, came secondhand from kin or
the town thrift store if splurging.
Glen kind looked different from the rollers in the trailer park and
the townies. We were hillfolk, with our boys in trousers and sus-
penders and girls clad in long skirts. Once a Missouri Ozarks out-
post for Scottish travelers searching for permanency, Rowan’s Glen
kept life simple and the outside world at bay.
It was my home.
The forever horizon of fields was dotted with horse pastures and
goats. Comfort came in knowing your neighbors and them knowing
not only you, but generations of your kin. It was a good place, even
with the screams that sometimes came from the forest, the screams
that had been there my whole life and longer.
“Rook’s almost as bad as Uncle Timothy,” Heather remarked. “Last
week in ecology, he claimed pol uted water gives men tits.”
The mention of Rook Meriweather fevered my cheeks. “You’re t-
terrible.”
5
She drew a circle with her shoe in the broken glass, her smile
taunting. “Don’t say you ain’t enjoying the subject. And what a sub-
ject Rook makes! I’ve seen your sketchbook.”
“Shouldn’t you clean up your mess?” I tried to smooth the bristle
in my voice, but Heather only laughed.
“I’m kidding with you, Ivy. You know that, right?”
She took my hand and squeezed. Of course I knew.
The day had wound down, which meant stocking the delivery
of Mama’s homeopathic flea powder would wait. There wouldn’t be
enough time to take Whimsy on a trail ride. Since the dogs began go-
ing missing, wandering the fields after dusk was frowned upon. Even
before then, we had stayed away from the woods. There were stories.
I returned to the waiting room and glanced to the clock.
“What’s wrong?” Heather asked.
“The clock stopped.”
The clock’s hands had halted at 4:44. It was a wood box with a pen-
dulum, older than anyone in the Glen. Normal y, the metal rapped
the wood in a perpetual, hollow note. Now it was mute.
“Fix it tomorrow.” Heather picked a section of my hair to braid
with her slender fingers.
“I have to fix the clock now,” I said. “Bad luck.”
Heather tsked. “You’re too superstitious. Mamie got you good.”
A draft plucked my neck. “You remember how when Gramps
died, Mamie stopped all the clocks in the house? She stopped death
from coming for more of us.”
“Huh. So that’s why. I should’ve guessed Mamie’d tell you.”
Heather’s fingers wove my hair. Bits of metal she’d found while
6
wandering the fields — part of a spoon, a coil, a lost buckle, a green
glass circle from the bottom of a bottle etched with her birthday
of March 27 — were strung on a silver necklace and jingled as she
moved. She unclipped her chain, chose a nut from some long-van-
ished screw, and fixed it to accent my braid.
She caught me staring at the stopped clock. “Ivy, don’t. It only
needs windin’.”
“It’s a death omen,” I said.
“Go ahead. Try to be a little more morbid, real y.”
“It ain’t morbid. It’s how things are,” I insisted. “Mamie knows this
stuff. She said —”
“When did she say?” Heather dropped my hair and crossed her
arms.
“It was a long time ago, when I was little.”
That was the last time Mamie spoke, before she went into the at-
tic. To live in silence.
Heather restrung her necklace. “I miss her stories too. Even the