Read The May Queen Murders Online
Authors: Jude,Sarah
back to normal. My pops told my mama he owes it to Dr. Timothy to
keep you safe and is ridin’ me about it.”
Keep me safe? Why would Sheriff owe that to my father? I didn’t
want Rook escorting me only because Sheriff didn’t give him a
choice. Besides, everywhere I went, Heather went too.
“Folks say it’s Birch Markle come back. What do you think?” I
asked, taking a few more steps.
Rook gave a heavy sigh. “I think people run their mouths.”
“What’s that mean?”
“Nothin’.” He pressed his back to the door for the art hal way so we
faced one another.
“Rook, come on.”
“Just bothers me when rollers talk shit.” His mouth twitched into a
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frown. “They were saying stuff in history. They’re clueless about the
Glen.”
He rolled his eyes and leaned his head against the door. I stared
at him harder, like I could will him into speaking. “What’d they say?
Something about Heather?”
He looked down.
“About
me?
” I asked.
He hesitated. “All right, I’ll tell you. They were talking about how
your daddy’s the vet, and if someone’s killing animals, then it’s some-
one who’s done it before. Like Dr. Timothy. Because as a vet, he puts
animals to sleep.”
The hair on the nape of my neck tightened, and a prickle crawled
over my scalp until my hair and skin were a weave of dread. “My
father wouldn’t.”
“That’s what Heather told them, and they went after her instead.”
Would Heather have told me that if Rook hadn’t? She’d stood up
like Dahlia had. Their cruelty was for me, and she’d smothered it. She
did what a sister would. A bitter-tasting guilt puckered my mouth.
I wanted to believe I’d do the same for Heather, but the truth was I
didn’t know. I wasn’t that brave.
Once we reached the art room, I settled into my usual spot. The
room smelled chemical — glue and acrylic paint — mixing with the
earthen slop of clay. The art room was safe. Everyone was too into
their projects to bother with us but for a few wary glances when
Rook wandered over to the bin loaded with red mud. The townies’
cluster went silent as he neared. Then they veered inward, whispers
floating above their sacred circle.
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“ . . . dog . . . in pieces . . . You think they were there?”
Rook shot them a dirty look before claiming his seat beside me. I
broke apart some clay to roll out snakes for a coil vase with a perilous
tilt to the left. I had no il usions — it was ugly as sin. While drawing
came natural, sculpture wasn’t my gift of the spirit.
A glop of clay squished between my fingers. “What do you think
that guy Milo wanted with Heather?”
“It’s always Heather, isn’t it?” Rook grunted and rolled out the clay
for his own vase. “Milo’s scum. If Heather’s got some deal with him,
she’ll tell you, but from what I know, nothing good comes when that
guy’s around.”
“How do you know?” I asked. “It ain’t like you run with any rol ers.”
“No, but I know trouble when I see it.”
Crash!
The bang ended with the shatter of glass. I jumped from my seat,
and all around, the other students searched the wal s with startled
expressions to see what had fallen.
“What was that?” Rook asked.
I spied a broken picture frame on the ground. My stomach
dropped as I knelt beside the shards of glass covering my pencil
drawing of Whimsy from last year. Mrs. Fenton had liked it so much
she entered it into several contests. I won a couple. Now the rem-
nants were splintered on the floor, and I stooped to clear away the
broken pieces. It shouldn’t have fallen. That was bad luck.
Worse than bad. Fatal.
“Miss Templeton,” Mrs. Fenton said as she rushed over. “Are you
okay? Oh, your picture!”
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Rook approached with a broom and dustpan. “I bet it can be re-
framed.”
“It ain’t the picture.” I tamped the grains of glass into the dust-
pan and waited until another student distracted Mrs. Fenton before
I whispered to Rook, “Mamie says a picture that fal s without warnin’
brings death in the mornin’.”
His expression stayed neutral, and even though he didn’t tell me
I was off my rocker, heat circled around my neck and spread to my
jaw. Rook dumped the glass into the trash, returned the broom and
dustpan to their place, and found his seat. God, I must’ve sounded
so insane he didn’t know how to respond. Yet he crooked his finger
to beckon me to our table.
He murmured, “My pops gets wily if a bird flies into our house.”
A bird in a house means death is flyin’ about.
Mamie’s once-strong
voice echoed in my memory. She’d comb my hair with one hundred
strokes and tell me the hillfolks’ lore, stories of the backwoods. Ma-
mie went quiet when Gramps died, but when I was small and needed
coaxing to sleep, she recited the tales. The words she spoke wove
themselves into the ribbons of my veins and knitted together my
very soul.
Rook knew the stories too, and he didn’t outright dismiss them.
Not the way Heather did.
The front of his throat bobbed. I didn’t want to look like I was
studying him, but I was. Because I drew everything I remembered,
there’d be more pages of him in my sketchbook.
A loud laugh broke my focus. Heather beamed under the unfor-
giving hal way lights, laughing with someone away from the door’s
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view. She was willowy in a green halter laced to show off her slim
waist and small breasts. A gauzy black shirt beneath was painted on
like a second skin. When she lifted her arm to push away whomever
she talked with, she was like a cattail bending from the breeze.
I looked at my layers of shirts — a blue peasant top. Heavier with
hips and breasts, I was dowdy and cloaked, nothing like the bright
star of my cousin. Papa and my aunt Rue were Templetons, Mamie’s
children, and Heather had Mamie’s once-scarlet hair, our grand-
mother’s hair so red she’d even been named Ginger at birth. I was
darker, with wide lips and shadows under my walnut-black eyes. On
the surface, there was nothing proving Heather and I shared blood. I
was three weeks older than she, the only days I’d lived without her.
A boy’s hand, all I saw of him, brushed his fingertips along Heath-
er’s arm. Milo? I couldn’t be sure. With a giggle, she tossed her curls.
His hand lingered in the air as if the touch was unfinished. Whatever
had upset her had dissolved. I was mesmerized and unblinking, not
from envy or anger but because she was magic and life and joy.
“Hey, you all right?” I asked once she joined our table. “I heard
what happened. Thank you.”
She pushed my hair from my face. “It’s fine, Ivy. Like I’m gonna let
anyone talk bad about my kinfolk. Those kind of guys are what’s left
after Uncle Timothy castrates the bul s — useless dicks.”
Rook snickered, but I tilted my head. How could she be cavalier?
She wore a brave face, but I had to wonder if she was so brave when
alone.
“Who was that?” I asked. “Out in the hal .”
“Some roller.” She lifted her bag off her shoulder and opened the
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flap. Inside was a paper bag with the top parted to reveal a dried
lump of herbs.
I squished some clay between my fingers, sighing. “Rose Connel y
has a whole pot field growing behind her house. If you want weed,
don’t go buyin’ it off that Milo creep.”
“Milo?” Heather’s eyes widened, and she slapped her bag shut.
“What do you know? Were you spying on me?”
“He cornered Ivy in the stairs,” Rook intervened.
“He say something about me?” She circled her fingers around my
wrist. I pulled back, but she squeezed harder. The half-moons of her
fingernails paled my skin. What a sudden shift in her.
“Heather, what’s your problem?” I asked. “He only said he was
looking for you.”
She dropped my hand, then wiped her palm on her shirt. “Wel , I
guess he found me.”
Her ass wiggled in her seat as if she was contemplating bolting
from class. Before Heather could get up, Mrs. Fenton came around to
survey our work and take attendance. The teacher took one gander
at my leaning vase and huffed before moving to the next table.
“Heather,” I pressed.
“Ivy, not now.”
Her bag lay on the floor between my shoes and hers. She nudged
it beneath her chair, the toes of her sneakers bumping mine as she
kicked it back.
Kept it away from me.
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Chapter Three
Animals ’round the Glen started missin’. First, the barn
cats. Jackdaw Meriweather’d find ’em in the dirt road.
Maybe one got under a wagon’s wheels, but two? Six?
No one knew how many. Then folks noticed birds and fur
’round the Markle house and the bones hangin’ in the trees.
My hands dove into soapy water. Warmth swirled around my fore-
arms while I drew the washrag in circles over the plate. My parents
and I had arrived at Mamie’s home before the skies cracked and
gushed rain, bellows of thunder rattling the windows.
From the sink, I had a view into the dining room where the
grownups relaxed around the table. Mama, Papa, and Heather’s step-
father, a hillman named Marsh Freeman, sipped wine, while Aunt
Rue rubbed her bel y, round with a June baby. Taking the evening
meal with kin was common in the Glen. I liked the closeness of our
families. For some folks, there were so many members, they dined in
a barn around a harvest table filled with dishes of mashed potatoes,
cornbread, roasted chickens, and salad greens piled high in bowls.
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Most years, the Glen’s growing season was good, and we shared the
bounty.
Mama’s fingers walked across the knotted pine to rub Papa’s arm,
her bracelets singing as she moved. He’d been in a quiet mood since
examining Bart’s remains. Mama exchanged a nervous glance with
Marsh. Few people read Papa’s moods like Marsh — he’d been read-
ing them since they were ten-year-olds with Sheriff trying to hook a
catfish that supposedly ate a pony in the river.
“Rue and I had tea with Iris Crenshaw.” Mama ventured a conver-
sation. “
Señoras
are planning a May Day celebration for the Glen.
Iris says it’s ’cause of all the horrible things happening, that it might
bring some joy.”
“Luz, you have no idea how wonderful the old May Days were.”
Aunt Rue beamed. “The parties went all night. There was singing
and dancing. We haven’t had one in over twenty years, but I can’t
wait! It’ll be such fun!”
Mama nodded. “
Sí,
sí.
Sounds very sweet.”
Aunt Rue continued. “We hung flowers on the houses. Oh! And
there was a maypole and a parade!”
I dried my hands on my apron and met Heather’s eyes. She
stopped braiding her mother’s hair and shrugged. We’d heard tales
about the May Days of Rowan’s Glen, but al that ended because of
Birch Markle. Maybe though, enough time had passed that folks
were wil ing to try again without the specter of murder haunting the
celebration.
“Ivy and Heather, you
señoritas
will have a good time,” my mother
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said. “Iris said she was May Queen one year. Maybe one of you will
be queen.”
Aunt Rue gave a stiff smile. “Maybe so. Either way, you’ll both be
in the parade. We have Mamie’s old dress. One of you should wear it.”
The May Queen. I’d seen old photographs in Mamie’s album, girls
in long dresses with flowers in their hair, girls dancing with spring
mud between their toes. They were new growth. The one chosen as
queen was the Glen’s very best, the embodiment of hope for prosper-
ity and harvest. With death haunting the fields, maybe a prayer and
dance for life would chase off the sorrow.
Perhaps I could be May Queen. Maybe. It’d be nice to be chosen.
I’d come out from my shadow and show how green and vivid I could
be.
Heather twisted a curl around her finger and asked, “Do you ran-
domly pick someone to be May Queen?”
Aunt Rue sipped from a mug of tea. “Any girl sixteen and older,
not yet married, can be May Queen. The women choose by a secret