Young Witches & Warlocks

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Young Witches & Warlocks Page 9

by Asimov, Isaac


  She rose and dropped a swift curtsy. “I thank you very much, sir, but the sunlight at the front of the classroom hurts my eyes. There is always more comfort for me in darkness and in shade.” The barest, awkward flash of a grateful smile.

  I nodded, feeling uncomfortable at her formal, correct sentences.

  During the science lesson, I felt her eyes upon me wherever I moved. I found myself fumbling at the equipment under that unwinking scrutiny, and the children, sensing the cause, began to whisper and crane their necks to the back of the room.

  A case of mounted butterflies slid out of my hands. I stopped to pick it up. Suddenly a great gasp rippled over the room, coming simultaneously from thirty little throats.

  “Look! She’s doing it again!” I straightened.

  Sarietta Hawn hadn’t moved from her strange, stiff position. But her hair was a rich chestnut now; her eyes were blue; her cheeks and lips bore a delicate rose tint.

  My fingers dug into the unyielding surface of my desk. Impossible! Yet could light and shade play such fantastic tricks? But—impossible!

  Even as I gaped, unconscious of my pedagogical dignity, the child seemed to blush and a shadow over her straighten. I went back to cocoons and Lepidoptera with a quavering voice.

  A moment later, I noticed that her face and hair were of purest white once more. I wasn’t interested in explanation, however; neither was the class. The lesson was ruined.

  “She did exactly the same thing in my class,” Miss Drury exclaimed at lunch. “Exactly the same thing! Only it seemed to me that she was a dark brunette, with velvet black hair and snapping black eyes. It was just after she’d called me a fool—the nerve of that snip!—and I was reaching for the birch rod, when she seemed to go all dark and swarthy. I’d have made her change to red though, I can tell you, if that bell hadn’t rung a minute too early.”

  “Maybe,” I said. “But with that sort of delicate coloring any change in lighting would play wild tricks with your vision. I’m not so sure that I saw it after all. Sarietta Hawn is no chameleon.”

  The old teacher tightened her lips until they were a pale, pink line cutting across her wrinkled face. She shook her head and leaned across the crumb-bespattered table. “No chameleon. A witch. I know! And the Bible commands us to destroy witches, to burn them out of life.”

  My laugh echoed uncomfortably around the dirty school basement which was our lunchroom. “You can’t believe that! An eight-year-old girl—”

  “All the more reason to catch her before she grows up and does real harm. I tell you, Mr. Flynn, I know! One of my ancestors burned thirty witches in New England during the trials. My family has a special sense for the creatures. There can be no peace between us!”

  The other children shared an awed agreement with Miss Drury. They began calling the albino child “Mistress Sary.” Sarietta, on the other hand, seemed to relish the nickname. When Joey Richards tore into a group of children who were following her down the street and shouting the song, she stopped him.

  “Leave them alone, Joseph,” she warned him in her curious adult phraseology. “They are quite correct: I am just like a little fairy.”

  And Joey turned his freckled, puzzled face and unclenched his fists and walked slowly back to her side. He worshiped her. Possibly because of two of them were outcasts in that juvenile community, possibly because they were both orphans—his eternally soused father was slightly worse than no parent at all—they were always together. I’d find him squatting at her feet in the humid twilight when I came out on the boarding-house porch for my nightcap of fresh air. She would pause in mid-sentence, one tiny forefinger still poised sharply. Both of them would sit in absolute silence until I left the porch.

  Joey liked me a little. Thus I was one of the few privileged to hear of Mistress Sary’s earlier life. I turned one evening when I was out for a stroll to see Joey trotting behind me. He had just left the porch.

  “Gee,” he sighed. “Stogolo sure taught Mistress Sary a lot. I wish that guy was around to take care of Old Dreary. He’d teach her all right, all right.”

  “Stogolo?”

  “Sure. He was the witch-doctor who put the devilbirth curse on Sary’s mother before Sary was born ’cause she had him put in jail. Then when Sary’s mother died giving birth, Sary’s father started drinking, she says, worse’n my pop. Only she found Stogolo and made friends with him. They mixed blood and swore peace on the grave of Sary’s mother. And he taught her voodoo an’ the devil-birth curse an’ how to make love charms from hog liver an’—”

  “I’m surprised at you, Joey,” I interrupted. “Taking in that silly superstition! A boy who does as well as you in science! Mistress Sary—Sarietta grew up in a primitive community where people didn’t know any better. But you do!”

  He scuffed the weeds at the edge of the sidewalk with a swinging foot. “Yeah,” he said in a low voice. “Yeah. I’m sorry I mentioned it, Mr. Flynn.”

  Then he was off, a lithe streak in white blouse and corduroy knickers, tearing along the sidewalk to his home. I regretted my interruption, then, since Joey was rarely confidential and Sarietta spoke only when spoken to, even with her aunt.

  The weather grew surprisingly warmer. “I declare,” Miss Drury told me one morning, “I’ve never seen a winter like this in my life. Indian summers and heat waves are one thing, but to go on this way day after day without any sign of a break, land sakes!”

  “Scientists say the entire earth is developing a warmer climate. Of course, it’s almost imperceptible right now, but the Gulf Stream—”

  “The Gulf Stream,” she ridiculed. She wore the same starched and heavy clothes as always and the heat was reducing her short temper to a blazing point. “The Gulf Stream! Ever since that Hawn brat came to live in Nanville the world’s been turning turtle. My chalk is always breaking, my desk drawers get stuck, the erasers fall apart—the little witch is trying to put a spell on me!”

  “Now look here.” I stopped and faced her with my back to the school building. “This has gone far enough. If you do have to believe in witchcraft, keep it out of your relations with the children. They’re here to absorb knowledge, not the hysterical imaginings of a— of a—”

  “Of a sour old maid. Yes, go ahead, say it,” she snarled. “I know you think it, Mr. Flynn. You fawn all over her so she leaves you be. But I know what I know and so does the evil little thing you call Sarietta Hawn. It’s war between us, and the all-embracing battle between good and evil will never be over until one or the other of us is dead!” She turned in a spiral of skirts and swept up the path into the schoolhouse.

  I began to fear for her sanity then. I remembered her boast: “I’ve never read a novel published after 1893!”

  That was the day my arithmetic class entered slowly, quietly as if a bubble of silence enveloped them. The moment the door shut behind the last pupil, the bubble broke and whispers splattered all over the room.

  “Where’s Sarietta Hawn?” I asked. “And Joey Richards,” I amended, unable to find him either.

  Louise Bell rose, her starched pink dress curving in front of her scrawny body. “They’ve been naughty. Miss Drury caught Joey cutting a lock of hair off her head and she started to whip him. Then Mistress Sary stood up and said she wasn’t to touch him because he was under her pro-tec-tion. So Miss Drury sent us all out and now I bet she’s going to whip them both. She’s real mad!”

  I started for the back door rapidly. Abruptly a scream began. Sarietta’s voice! I tore down the corridor. The scream rose to a high treble, wavered for a second. Then stopped.

  As I jolted open the door of Miss Drury’s classroom, I was prepared for anything, including murder. I was not prepared for what I saw. I stood, my hand grasping the door knob, absorbing the tense tableau.

  Joey Richards was backed against the blackboard, squeezing a long tendril of brownish hair in his sweaty right palm. Mistress Sary stood in front of Miss Drury, her head bent to expose a brutal red welt on the back of her ch
alky neck. And Miss Drury was looking stupidly at a fragment of birch in her hand; the rest of the rod lay in scattered pieces at her feet.

  The children saw me and came to life. Mistress Sary straightened and with set lips moved toward the door. Joey Richards leaned forward. He rubbed the lock of hair against the back of the teacher’s dress, she completely oblivious to him. When he joined the girl at the door, I saw that the hair glistened with the perspiration picked up from Miss Drury’s blouse.

  At a slight nod from Mistress Sary, the boy passed the lock of hair over to her. She placed it very carefully in the pocket of her frock.

  Then, without a single word, they both skipped around me on their way to join the rest of the class.

  Evidently they were unharmed, at least seriously.

  I walked over to Miss Drury. She was trembling violently and talking to herself. She never removed her eyes from the fragment of birch.

  “It just flew to pieces. Flew to pieces! I was—when it flew to pieces!”

  Placing an arm about her waist, I guided the spinster to a chair. She sat down and continued mumbling.

  “Once—I just struck her once. I was raising my arm for another blow—the birch was over my head—when it flew to pieces. Joey was off in a corner—he couldn’t have done it—the birch just flew to pieces.” She stared at the piece of wood in her hand and rocked her body back and forth slowly, like one mourning a great loss.

  I had a class. I got her a glass of water, notified the janitor to take care of her and hurried back.

  Somebody, in a childish spirit of ridicule or meanness, had scrawled a large verse across the blackboard in my room:

  One, two, three alary—

  1 spy Mistress Sary Sitting on a bumble-ary, Just like a little fairy!

  I turned angrily to the class. I noticed a change in seating arrangements. Joey Richards’ desk was empty.

  He had taken his place with Mistress Sary in the long, deep shadows at the back of the room.

  To my breathless relief, Mistress Sary didn’t mention the incident. As always she was silent at the supper table, her eyes fixed rigidly on her plate. She excused herself the moment the meal was over and slipped away. Mrs. Clayton was evidently too bustling and talkative to have heard of it. There would be no repercussions from that quarter.

  After supper I walked over to the old-fashioned gabled house where Miss Drury lived with her relatives. Lakes of perspiration formed on my body and I found it all but impossible to concentrate. Every leaf on every tree hung motionless in the humid, breezeless night.

  The old teacher was feeling much better. But she refused to drop the matter; to do, as I suggested, her best to reestablish amity. She rocked herself back and forth in great scoops of the colonial rocking chair and shook her head violently.

  “No, no, no I won’t make friends with that imp of darkness: sooner shake hands with Beelzebub himself. She hates me now worse than ever because—don’t you see—I forced her to declare herself. I’ve made her expose her witchery. Now—now I must grapple with her and overthrow her and Him who is her mentor. I must think, I must—only it’s so devilishly hot. So very hot! My mind—my mind doesn’t seem to work right.” She wiped her forehead with the heavy cashmere shawl.

  As I strolled back, I fumbled unhappily for a solution. Something would break soon at this rate; then the school board would be down upon us with an investigation and the school would go to pot. I tried to go over the possibilities calmly but my clothes stuck to my body and breathing was almost drudgery.

  Our porch was deserted. I saw movement in the garden and hurried over. Two shadows resolved into Mistress Sary and Joey Richards. They stared up as if waiting for me to declare myself.

  She was squatting on the ground and holding a doll in her hands. A small wax doll with brownish hair planted in her head that was caught in a stern bun just like the bun Miss Drury affected. A stiff little doll with a dirty piece of muslin for a dress cut in the same long, severe pattern as all of Miss Drury’s clothes. A carefully executed caricature in wax.

  “Don’t you think that’s a bit silly,” I managed to ask at last. “Miss Drury is sufficiently upset and sorry for what she did for you to play upon her superstitions in this horrible way. I’m sure if you try hard enough, we can all be friends.”

  They rose, Sarietta clutching the doll to her breast. “It is not silly, Mr. Flynn. That bad woman must be taught a lesson. A terrible lesson she will never forget. Excuse my abruptness, sir, but I have much work to do this night.”

  And then she was gone, a rustling patch of whiteness that slipped up the stairs and disappeared into the sleeping house.

  I turned to the boy.

  “Joey, you’re a pretty smart fellow. Man to man, now—

  “Excuse me, Mr. Flynn.” He started for the gate. “I—I got to go home.” I heard the rhythmic pad of his sneakers on the sidewalk grow faint and dissolve in the distance. I had evidently lost his allegiance.

  Sleep came hard that night. I tossed on entangling sheets, dozed, came awake and dozed again.

  About midnight, I woke shuddering. I punched the pillow and was about to attempt unconsciousness once more when my ears caught a faint note of sound. I recognized it. That was what had reached into my dreams and tugged my eyes open to fear. I sat upright.

  Sarietta’s voice!

  She was singing a song, a rapid song with unrecognizable words. Higher and higher up the scale it went, and faster and faster as if there were some eerie deadline she had to meet. At last, when it seemed that she would shrill beyond the limits of human audibility, she paused. Then, on a note so high that my ear drums ached, came a drawn-out, flowing “Kurunoo O Stogoloooo!”

  Silence.

  Two hours later, I managed to fall asleep again.

  The sun burning redly through my eyelids wakened me. I dressed, feeling oddly listless and apathetic. I wasn’t hungry and, for the first morning of my life, went without breakfast.

  The heat came up from the sidewalk and drenched my face and hands. My feet felt the burning concrete through the soles of my shoes. Even the shade of the school building was an unnoticeable relief.

  Miss Drury’s appetite was gone too. She left her carefully wrapped lettuce sandwiches untouched on the basement table. She supported her head on her thin hands and stared at me out of red-rimmed eyes.

  “It’s so hot!” she whispered. “I can hardly stand it. Why everyone feels so sorry for that Hawn brat, I can’t understand. Just because I made her sit in the sunlight. I’ve been suffering from this heat a thousand times more than she.”

  “You . . . made—Sarietta . . . sit—in—”

  “Of course I did! She’s no privileged character. Always in the back of the room where it’s cool and comfortable. I made her change her desk so that she’s right near the large window, where the sunlight streams in. And she feels it too, let me tell you. Only—ever since, I’ve been feeling worse. As if I’m falling apart. I didn’t have a wink of sleep last night—those terrible, terrible dreams: great hands pulling and mauling me, knives pricking my face and my hands—”

  “But the child can’t stand sunlight! She’s an albino.”

  “Albino, fiddlesticks! She’s a witch. She’ll be making wax dolls next. Joey Richards didn’t try to cut my hair for a joke. He had orders to— Ooh!” She doubled in her chair. “Those cramps!”

  I waited until the attack subsided and watched her sweaty, haggard face. “Funny that you should mention wax dolls. You have the girl so convinced that she’s a witch that she’s actually making them. Believe it or not, last night, after I left you—”

  She had jumped to her feet and was rigid attention. One arm supporting her body against a steam pipe, she stood staring at me.

  “She made a wax doll. Of me?”

  “Well, you know how a child is. It was her idea of what you looked like. A little crude in design, but a good piece of workmanship. Personally, I think her talent merits encouragement.”

&n
bsp; Miss Drury hadn’t heard me. “Cramps!” she mused. “And I thought they were cramps! She’s been sticking pins into me! The little— I’ve got to— But I must be careful. Yet fast. Fast.”

  I got to my feet and tried to put my hand on her shoulder across the luncheon table. “Now pull yourself together. Surely this is going altogether too far.”

  She leaped away and stood near the stairs talking rapidly to herself. “I can’t use a stick or a club—she controls them. But my hands—if I can get my hands on her and choke fast enough, she can’t stop me. But I mustn’t give her a chance,” she almost sobbed, “Z mustn't give her a chance!''

  Then she had leaped up the stairs in a sudden, determined rush.

  I swept the table out of my way and bolted after her.

  Most of the children were eating their lunches along the long board fence at the end of the school yard. But they had stopped now and were watching something with frightened fascination. Sandwiches hung suspended in front of open mouths. I followed the direction of their stares.

  Miss Drury was slipping along the side of the building like an upright, skirted panther. She staggered now and then and held on to a wall. Some two feet in front of her, Sarietta Hawn and Joey Richards sat in the shade. They were looking intently at a wax doll in a muslin dress that had been set on the cement just outside the fringe of coolness. It lay on its back in the direct sunlight and, even at that distance, I could see it was melting.

  “Hi,” I shouted. “Miss Drury! Be sensible!” I ran for them.

  At my cry, both children looked up, startled. Miss Drury launched herself forward and fell, rather than leaped, on the little girl. Joey Richards grabbed the doll and rolled out of the way toward me. I tripped over him and hit the ground with a bone-breaking wallop. As I turned in midair, I caught a fast glimpse of Miss Drury’s right hand flailing over the girl. Sarietta had huddled into a pathetic little bundle under the teacher’s body.

  I sat up facing Joey. Behind me the children were screaming as I had never heard them scream before.

  Joey was squeezing the doll with both hands. As I watched, not daring to remove my eyes, the wax— already softened by the sunlight—lost its shape and came through the cracks in his tight freckled fingers. It dripped through the muslin dress and fell in blobs on the school yard cement.

 

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