Read The May Queen Murders Online
Authors: Jude,Sarah
She might end up being scolded for gallivanting through stormy
fields when someone was murdering animals, but her punishment
never lasted. It was impossible to stay angry with her. She’d kiss and
swear she meant no harm — and she didn’t. She wasn’t cruel. What
Heather wanted, Heather did. She wasn’t uncaring. I suspected she
simply didn’t notice what impact she had on me, on others. How
freeing to be so unaffected.
A flare outside the kitchen glowed like the negative of a photo-
graph. The deafening boom made me jump while the pendant light
above the sink blinked out. From the dining room, my parents and
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Heather’s shuffled in search of candles. I fumbled along the cabinets
until I came to one holding extra candles and matches. Between the
mill and solar panels, the Glen had electricity, but the houses’ wir-
ing was rudimentary. Blackouts weren’t uncommon, even in good
weather. Most of us still used kerosene lamps for that reason.
I scratched a match. The rotten egg smell of sulfur was fleeting as
I lit a candle. Mama appeared in the doorway. “You
buena,
Ivy?”
“Sí.”
Thump.
The noise came from the window. I glanced at Mama. “What was
that?”
“The wind, probably,” she answered.
Thump.
Thump. Thump.
That wasn’t wind. My pulse quickened. I cupped the candle and
stood on my tiptoes, holding the flame to the window.
thump.
I jumped back from the jolted windowsil . In the living room,
Marsh called to check on Mama and me. By now she was beside me,
candle in hand, as we tried to see what was outside.
thump! thump! thump!
My heart rode into my throat. It didn’t sound like hail. The bangs
against the glass were too sporadic, frenzied.
“Luz?” Papa yelled. “What the hel ’s that?”
Against a faraway gleam of lighting, a black mass reeled from the
window as if taking a breath before soaring straight for the glass again.
thump! thump!
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I couldn’t move. The dark thing outside whisked from side to side.
It pulled back and —
crash!
With a yelp, I ducked the flying glass. Mama rushed over to the
wet, black thing flopping on the floor and, crying out in Spanish,
backed away. The glow of the candles revealed a blackbird. It wasn’t
dead, but from the way it flailed and twitched, it would be soon. My
scream stunned into silence, all I could do was watch the bird in its
death throes. Its crooked wings strained to lift, but its bones were
shattered.
Papa reached the kitchen, saw the dying bird, and recoiled. “Stay
back,” he ordered Mama and me.
I didn’t want to look, but the chaos of the bird desperate to remain
alive in spite of its gnarled body was impossible to ignore. Papa knelt,
his face a mixture of revulsion and pity, and took the bird into gentle
hands. His thumb stroked the tiny creature’s head.
Then he wrung the bird’s neck, its bones crunching.
For a minute, the only movement was the waver of the candle’s
flame pulling and pushing the shadows. Papa’s eyes closed, and I was
quite sure he said a prayer. Maybe to spirit away the bird. Maybe to
ask forgiveness for what he’d done. To bring death sometimes was
a kindness. He opened his hands; the bird had merciful y ceased
thrashing.
“Oh, God,” he whispered.
The bird in my father’s hands wasn’t one but two, a bird with a
conjoined twin. One body with two beaks, a single head with four
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beady eyes. Two birds so close they were one, and one’s death killed
the other.
"
I went after Heather.
Marsh ordered me to find her, too occupied with repairing the
kitchen window to chase her down himself. I was glad to leave. I
couldn’t stay knowing that
thing
had shattered the window and died
at my feet. The danger outside didn’t feel as real as the danger of
where my thoughts would go if I stayed in.
Where Heather went was a mystery. The storm moved northeast,
though the clouds still dashed white then dark. I hugged myself as
I forged down the muddy road. The Glen’s electricity was out, the
candles by windows ember-like in their dimness. Sheriff’s men relit
the torches along the fences. Nothing felt right, nothing safe. Some-
thing close flapped in a gust of wind. A figure loomed over me, taller
than anyone I knew.
“Wh-who’s there?” I called, wishing I didn’t sound so meek.
A shriek tore out across the sky, a high-pitched cackle from deep
within the woods.
I rammed into the crossbeam of the scarecrow. Its body was
mounted on a pole with its arms outstretched, its shirt weathered. A
puppet to frighten off birds from scrounging the Thomsons’ straw-
berries. Each family had its own way of crafting scarecrows — a few
with pumpkins or old leather sacks for heads, some bodies stuffed
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with wheatgrasses, whereas others were filled with dried corn stalks.
The birds came plague-like in their numbers once the berries rip-
ened, but during the dead months when there was nothing to har-
vest, one gazed to the fields to view scarecrow after scarecrow guard-
ing the barren land like impaled corpses left to rot.
This scarecrow’s head was a bag of dried beans. Desiccated
sprouts from last summer poked through the burlap only to curl
back inside. Soggy with rain, the bean sprouts beaded water, the
head sack slumped, one button eye lost and marked only by an X
in black thread. Its mouth was crooked, sloppy paint, most of which
had flaked away, giving the scarecrow a gray expression.
A second whooping cry sprang from the woods, raising every hair
on my neck and arms. I whipped around and surveyed the distance.
A horse neighed.
Whimsy.
Heather told me to say she’d gone to check
on the horses. There might be some truth in that. I peeled away from
the scarecrow’s path, cut through the mess of mud to the pasture
where my horse lived with a small herd. While most of the herd was
likely dozing, one spooked horse could infect the others and cause
an accident.
At the pasture, the six steeds at this end of the Glen were quiet,
their long necks drooped forward to lower their faces while they nib-
bled grass. They should’ve been in their stal s with buckets of oats,
safe from the storm, yet light leaked out from the barn.
I climbed the fence and pushed closer to the stable. The air was
heavy with the aroma of wet horses and sweet-pungent manure. A
chestnut gelding gave me a curious glance, and I nodded, hoping he
wasn’t apt to startle.
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Whimsy’s black coat camouflaged her, but her habit of kicking
the water trough gave away her location. She lifted her head, and her
ears perked, large eyes reflecting the light slivers coming from the
stable. The mare ambled behind me, her breath hot and constant,
puffing from her velveteen muzzle.
From inside the stable, a laugh rang out, a girlish chime.
Heather.
I edged around to the front, to the closed door, where I leaned
against the wood, my face pressed to a knothole. Inside was a can-
dlelit lantern. Heather’s skirt was all shadow as she twirled, her back
to me shining pale and naked. She stretched out her arms and spun
again, her necklace of found things rising and falling between her
bare breasts. Beyond her, out of the lantern’s gleam, someone shifted.
The scuffed toe of a boot and nothing more.
My heart plummeted, a gasp in my throat.
Heather jerked her head. Her lips pressed together. Her hair part-
ed and covered her breasts while each step she took toward the door
was deliberate.
“I know you’re out there,” she snapped.
“Wh-what are you doin’?” I whispered. “Who’s with you?”
She lowered her face and fixed her eye on mine. “Go home, Ivy.”
“I need you. It’s not safe out here.”
“Then leave.”
More shifting behind her. I tried to see past her, but she filled my
sight. Heather was everywhere I looked.
“Ivy . . . please.” A note of desperation crept into her voice.
“What’s happening?” I asked. “You tell me everything.”
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“No, I don’t. Now stop. You need to go. You didn’t see me.”
How was I supposed to act like I hadn’t?
“Heather, come on. Something terrible happened, and I don’t
wanna be alone.”
Her eye disappeared from the knothole. A moment later, the sta-
ble door creaked and she came out, arms crossed over her chest. “Are
you okay?”
“Th-there was a bird. And the w-w-window.” Putting together the
horror of the bird was harder than my throat would allow. “It was
bad.”
Heather peeked inside the stable as if waiting for her lover to
emerge. Her fingernails tapped against the bare arm covering her
chest. “I’ll be home soon.”
“You ain’t coming now?” I heard my whine and cringed. I didn’t
want to be that girl, the tagalong who didn’t realize when her friends
had outgrown her. Was that what had happened? Not long ago, it
would’ve been me she snuck out with.
Her and me. Cousins. Nearly sisters.
Forever.
She reached out and touched my hand. “I’ll be home. Soon.”
My throat was thick while I trudged back from the stable. Whim-
sy’s hooves padded the earth as she moved closer to me. I stroked the
side of my horse’s face and tucked my hand into my sleeve to wipe
away the hot streak of tears. Heather stayed behind. How could she
pick another over her family when we needed her? Over me?
I hurried through the pasture to the wet road. When I turned and
looked over my shoulder to the stable, the light was out.
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Chapter Four
The flies always buzzed ’round Birch ’cause flies always
come when death’s close.
I awakened to tapping on my window. When I peered through the
gauze of twisted wing and double beak dreams, Heather’s hand
pressed to the glass, the red thread knotted around her wrist. The
rest of her ghosted pale from the dewy film on the pane. Behind her,
starlight brushed the sky, the sun unready to rise.
“Ivy . . . Ivy, girl, c’mon.” Her voice was a songbird’s melody. “Open
the window.”
Never open the window when it’s dark,
Mamie used to say.
Even to
someone you know. Wickedness takes the shape of what you love.
I pushed back the quilt Mamie made when I was born and flipped
my braid down my back. That I was drowsy gave me time to linger
and remember the previous night — the bird, the ache of being sent
away. Now Heather had returned.
“Ivy,” she sang through the glass.
My feet hit the cold floor. My blue nightdress skimmed my ankles,
and I bunched the fabric in my fists. I was angry yet relieved she’d
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come — ready to choke her yet yearning to hug her and make her
promise she’d never shut me out again. Her fingertips squeaked on
the wet glass as her hand dropped. Through the spots left behind, I
watched her chew her lip. I flicked the metal lock and opened the
window.
“Oh, thank you,” she cheered and reached through the opening
to clutch my hands. Her skin was warm, despite the morning chil .
She smelled like Aunt Rue’s homemade lavender soap. “I’m
so
sorry
I couldn’t talk to you last night.”
All at once, I became a dull piece of ash compared to the glow of
Heather’s embers. She had fire and heat, and I was cold and so flimsy
the wind could whisk me away without remembering it ever carried
me.
“Heather, what time did you get home? It was after we left,” I said.
“I know. Did you tell them I was taking care of the horses?”
“Yes. I didn’t know what else to say.”
“Did they believe you?”
“They have no reason not to.”
We stared hard at each other. Heather averted her eyes first. She
hesitated before a flush bled pink into her freckled cheeks. “Thank
you. Can we talk?”
“Is it about what I saw in the stable?” I asked.
She went redder yet. “I want you to be happy for me. If it were you,