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The Mammoth Book of Dark Magic

Page 10

by Mike Ashley

He shrugged, uncomfortable. “Not really. Sometimes.”

  “Girls mostly just talk about each other. And that can get nasty, believe me. But they don’t tend to . . . hit each other so much. I feel for you.”

  “It’s no big deal. I can handle it.”

  “No doubt,” she said, and though he was acutely attuned to sounds of sarcasm and contempt, he didn’t detect either in her voice. “Which bus do you ride?”

  “228.”

  “Hey, me, too. Where do you live?”

  “In a subdivision called Foxglove.”

  “Cool,” she said, nodding. “My family just moved there. We’re the last house on the street, down by the circle, right up against the woods. I haven’t met anybody else in the neighborhood.”

  He shrugged, looking off toward the road, unsure whether to be nervous or pleased to hear she was his neighbor. “There isn’t really anybody else our age. Some little kids is all.”

  “Maybe we could play basketball or something. My dad put a hoop up over the garage.”

  “I’m not very good at basketball.”

  She shrugged. “So play with me and you’ll get better, right?”

  “Yeah, I guess so.” She was a jock. She’d stomp him at basketball. Wouldn’t that be fun? She hadn’t laughed at him yet, but she would. Everyone did eventually.

  The stoners came wandering from behind the gym, and a minute later the bus appeared.

  Survived another day, Cory thought. He glanced at Heather. Got rescued by a girl.

  He got onto the bus and took his usual seat halfway back, on the passenger side. He looked out the window at the parking lot.

  Heather plopped down next to him. “This seat taken?”

  She wanted to sit next to him? What did that mean? “No.”

  “You mind if I sit with you? I mean, I know there’s lots of room and all, but it gets boring sitting by yourself.”

  “No, it’s fine.”

  “So what do you do for fun?” She had her hockey stick in her hand, and she thumped it against the back of the seat in front of them while she talked.

  He shrugged. “I watch a lot of movies. My dad has a big library of videos.”

  “Cool!” She said. “I saw The Burning Witch last week – have you seen it?”

  He shook his head The Burning Witch was a horror movie – from the previews it looked to be mostly about a woman who cackled and set things on fire with her mind, and then some teenagers defeated her. It looked pretty dumb. “No, I haven’t. I like mostly old movies. Black and white stuff.”

  She frowned. “Like It’s A Wonderful Life?”

  “No . . . like The Big Sleep and Lady in the Lake and The Thin Man . . .” She was looking at him blankly. “Um . . . Casablanca? The Maltese Falcon?”

  “Oh, yeah,” she said, nodding. “Wow. You like that stuff, huh?”

  She didn’t seem contemptuous, exactly, just . . . surprised. “Yeah, well, my Dad really likes them, so we watch them together sometimes. He likes Humphrey Bogart and Lauren Bacall a lot. We watched a movie called Key Largo a couple of weeks ago. There’s a guy in that movie named Rocko who looks a lot like . . .” He trailed off.

  “Like who?”

  He sighed. “Like that guy back at school.”

  “So he looks like a smiling frog?”

  Cory laughed. “Yeah.” He glanced at her. She was nice. Not like most of the other girls, who always found something in him to laugh at – his shoes, his hair, the way he walked, the way he talked. It didn’t much matter – they always found something. Even the ones who didn’t tease him just ignored him.

  “I haven’t seen many old movies. Maybe we could watch one sometime?”

  His dad would tease him so much if he brought a girl home! He’d mean it in a good-natured way, but Cory was already wincing at the thought. Still . . . if Heather thought the movies were cool, it could be worth a little teasing.

  “Sure. I’d like that.” He reached out and tapped the handle of her hockey stick. “Don’t they usually keep these at school?”

  She rolled her eyes. “I’m supposed to practise at home, try to get ‘better control’ the coach says. I’ve got a stick of my own, but it hasn’t come from California yet. My parents have so much stuff, it’s two big truckloads. My dad’s driving back with the last of it this week.”

  “You’re from California?”

  “Monterey,” she said. “Lived there my whole life.”

  Cory grimaced. “From California to North Carolina. Seems like a step in the wrong direction.”

  She shrugged. “All depends on the people, right? If I can make good friends here, it’ll be just as good as home was.”

  She flashed him that braces-and-all smile, and just then Cory would have done anything for her.

  Rocko watched bus 228 pull away, his face expressionless. His two associates had drifted off, probably to smoke in the bathroom. Rocko went back outside and sat on the curb. He picked up a rock and held it up to the light, watching the bright flecks flash. He thought about dissections.

  Suddenly a bicycle was before him, its rider a woman with dusky red hair and a black leather beret. She was somewhere past young, but not all the way gone into middle aged. She looked like a hippie in her long dress and tights, but her boots were a biker’s, and she wore chrome rings. She looked down at him from the bike’s high seat. The bicycle seemed to complement her, and he realized its color matched that of her hair.

  “Rocko,” she said, her voice somewhere between a purr and a rasp.

  He frowned. “That’s not my name, lady.” He didn’t like sitting here, with her peering down at him – he felt vulnerable, like a frog in a dissecting pan. He started to get up.

  “Frog in a pan,” she said. “Nice image, Rocko. But now you’re pithed.”

  He froze, his ass just inches from the concrete, stopped in the act of rising. His legs began to quiver immediately from the strain of holding him up. He felt his heart beating, but he couldn’t blink, couldn’t move. Like a live frog pithed for dissection, his spine pierced with a metal rod, everything but the most basic physical functions suspended. His fear even had a detached quality; it was wholly intellectual, with no emotional component. He wondered clinically – and he could be very clinical – whether his glands were working, whether adrenaline was pumping into his veins. He thought not.

  “Sit down,” she said, and his butt hit the curb. She leaned over, the rose curtain of her hair almost touching his face. “I call you Rocko because that’s what the Boy calls you.”

  Rocko heard the emphasis she put on the word “Boy,” knew that she meant it as more than a generic term. “This is about the Boy, and the Girl, so I’ll call you what they do.”

  Rocko was trying to move his arms. He wanted to lash out at her, knock her over in a tangle of legs, skirt, chrome, and chain. He thought about his psychiatrist – “testing boundaries” – he’d never had boundaries as tight as this, trapped in his own body.

  “But you can have a place in this, too, Rocko. You can be the Rival. You do like her, don’t you? The Girl?”

  Rocko growled – or tried to. He didn’t make a sound.

  She laughed. “She snubbed you, didn’t she? And for that dogshit, that Boy you hate without reason.”

  Without reason? Rocko always had reasons, and that kid, that Cory.

  What? Well, he was a piece of shit, always had his nose in a book, he slouched around, stank of cowardice, thought he was better than everyone else . . . There. Lots of reasons. A whole truckload of reasons.

  That girl, though . . . she was something else. He had no doubt she’d have used that stick today, if she’d needed to. She was pretty, but not snotty, not afraid to get sweaty and play hard. Not like Cory, who’d probably never sweated in his life.

  “Yes,” the woman said, nodding. “You can be the Rival. You are the Rival.” She crooked her finger and he jerked upright. It felt like a rope wrapped around his chest, pulling him to his feet.

  Sh
e’s a witch, he thought, with that same, intellectual fear.

  “Would you like to kill the Boy, and win the Girl?” she asked.

  Kill? Rocko had a certain interest in the subject, but killing anyone would be so messy in the particulars. Just like beating someone up – he didn’t much enjoy that, though he often desired the consequences. That was so often a problem; to achieve a certain end, he had to resort to ugly means. If only he could skip those intermediate states, wave his hands and have someone die, or put them on the ground writhing in pain.

  He looked at the woman (he had no choice, he couldn’t even blink, but now he looked). She’d pithed him like a frog without even saying a word, and he suspected that she didn’t need to hear him speak, because she could read his mind. Maybe he could learn power like that from her. The power of ends, and the circumvention of clumsy, inelegant means.

  “Kill?” he said, and now his voice worked. The idea of killing lacked emotional color, too. He could kill someone easily, if he felt like this while doing it. “Sure. I could do that.”

  She grinned. “A will to kill is a wonderful thing. It means you always have a last resort. But you really just want the Girl, yes?”

  Rocko grunted. He didn’t want the girl to think he was nothing, that was for sure, and he couldn’t stand to see her with a dogshit like Cory.

  “So the best thing to do would be to humiliate the Boy, somehow, and let her find out about it, maybe even witness it. Then she’d know he’s nothing, and that you’re clever, and brave, and much more worth her attention. Yes?”

  Rocko could feel her eyes boring into him from behind her black glasses. “Yeah. Yeah, that would do it.”

  “You and your little friends can come up with something, can’t you? Something suitable?”

  “Something suitable for a shit like him,” Rocko said, getting an idea. Of course. Everyone had to use the bathroom sometime, didn’t they? “I think so.”

  “Good,” she said. “It’s better than murder, at least for now. If you’ve never buried a body, you don’t know how much trouble it can be.”

  “Cory!” his mom called. “You have a visitor!”

  Cory looked up from his homework – just a worksheet on ecology, boring as mud – and frowned. Who could—

  Oh. His throat tightened a little. Could it be Heather? Already? “Coming, mom!” He stopped in front of the mirror, raking his fingers through his shaggy brown hair, then gave it up as a bad job. Heather’d seen him at very nearly his worst this afternoon, and she’d seemed to like him fine then.

  He hurried downstairs, into the living room.

  He hardly recognized the girl he found there. Heather had been sweaty, grass-stained, red-cheeked and mussed before. But this girl – she could be one of the prettiest girls in school. She had blue ribbons braided into her hair, and wore a plain white t-shirt tucked into khaki shorts. Her sneakers were clean, too, not the scuffed ones she’d been wearing before. He could faintly see the lace of her bra under the shirt, and he looked away, blushing.

  “Heather tells me you met at school today,” his mom said.

  “Yeah,” Cory said. “She just moved to the neighborhood.”

  “Welcome to town, Heather,” Cory’s mom said. “I’ll have to go meet your parents sometime.”

  “Sure,” Heather said. “My dad’s not here yet, he’s driving in another truck full of stuff. He’ll be around next week, though.”

  “I’ll make a point of introducing myself,” she said. “There’s brownies in the kitchen, if you guys want a snack. Would you like to stay for dinner, Heather?”

  She glanced at Cory. He shrugged. Heather rolled her eyes at him. “Sure. That’d be great!”

  “I’ll leave you two alone,” Cory’s mom said, glancing at Cory with a small, secret smile – a smile that meant she’d be asking him about this nice new girl later on. She went into the kitchen.

  “She bakes brownies and she makes dinner?” Heather said. “What, did you win the mom lottery? We eat Chinese and pizza most of the time at my house.”

  “Chinese and pizza sounds pretty good to me. Mom’s a research assistant for a lawyer, and she works from home about half the time. She usually makes something for dinner on the days she’s home.”

  “How come she doesn’t pick you up from school?”

  He shrugged. “She says just because she’s home doesn’t mean she’s not working.”

  “Well, that’s too bad. It means you get to keep me company on the bus, though.” She twirled around, an impromptu ballerina. “How do I look?”

  Cory had never dealt with a girl his own age in such proximity before. How did you answer that? What would she think if he said she looked pretty? Would she think he liked her? Did he like her? “You look fine,” he said cautiously.

  “Aren’t you a charmer?” she said, but it was good-natured. “I was just going to come right over, but my mom’s big on making good first impressions, she said I shouldn’t meet the neighbors for the first time looking all grubby. She braided my hair and made me change – she wanted me to wear a dress! I don’t even like wearing dresses to church.”

  Cory wouldn’t have known what to think if Heather had shown up here in a dress – he certainly would have felt uncomfortable in his own jeans and t-shirt, even if this was his house.

  “Want to see my room?” Cory asked.

  “Sure.” She followed him up the stairs. “You’ll have to come to my house sometime, and check out the woods out back. They’re really cool.”

  “I go back there a lot, actually. There’s some really nice, quiet places. The woods are pretty big, too, bigger than you think at first.”

  “Ever get lost?”

  He hesitated, always unwilling to make himself sound foolish. “Yeah, once. I finally came out of the woods about a mile away on the highway, and walked back from there.”

  “I haven’t gone far enough to get lost yet, but I’m sure I will.” It sounded like she relished the idea – like it would be more of an adventure than an embarrassment. Maybe, for her, it would be. And maybe if he went exploring with her, he could learn to look at getting lost in the same way.

  He showed her his new computer, and the Bogart poster he’d gotten for Christmas. She really liked his microscope, sitting dusty on a shelf – seemed a lot more interested in it than he’d ever been, truthfully. “Oh, good books!” she said, looking over his row of Charles de Lint and Orson Scott Card. She tapped a copy of Ender’s Game with her forefinger. “I read this in school last year.” She pulled down one of his Sandman trade paperbacks. “I’ve never read these. Are they any good?”

  “They’re awesome.”

  “Let me borrow them sometime? You can raid my shelves, too, if you want.”

  “Sounds good.” So what if she liked bad movies? She had good taste in books, at least.

  They talked about books for a while, then played video games. She was better than him at killing zombies, but he excelled at racing futuristic cars through decaying cityscapes

  Cory’s dad got home right before dinner. He was nice to Heather – he was always nice to everyone. His parents mostly talked to Heather during dinner, asking about her old hometown, what her parents did, and so on. Cory learned a lot about her that way, and Heather seemed perfectly at ease around his parents. Dinner was chicken parmesan with salad and some kind of sun-dried tomato bread – a nicer meal than they would’ve had if they didn’t have company over, Cory suspected.

  After dinner, Cory walked with Heather out in the yard. “Sorry about that,” he said. “My parents playing twenty questions with you that way.”

  “It’s okay. They’re parents, they do stuff like that. I didn’t mind. As long as you can play the same game when you come to have dinner at my house.”

  Cory felt warm. For the first time since school had started, he began to think that this year wouldn’t be horrible. It was possible Heather would meet other people, find out Cory wasn’t exactly at the top of the social ladder, a
nd drift away from him . . . but maybe she’d stick around and be his friend. That would make this year a lot better, even if they didn’t have any classes together.

  “Want to go down to the woods before it gets totally dark?” she asked. “There’s this really cool spot by a stream, it only takes about five minutes to get there from my house . . .” Unselfconsciously, she reached out and took his hand, pulling him along. Her hand was warm, and Cory wanted to hold it forever.

  Heather lived at the end of the street, and as they walked along, Cory noticed a woman riding toward them on a bicycle, moving in slow arcs, drifting from one side of the street to the other and back again, only incidentally making forward progress. She had long reddish hair, and dark glasses. She wore a long skirt, too, and Cory didn’t see how she could pedal the bicycle without getting the fabric caught in the chain and the gears. The woman stared at them as she approached, slowing down. She rolled past them so slowly that it seemed like her bicycle should fall over from a lack of forward momentum. Her skirt matched the bike frame, and her boots seemed almost a part of the pedals – looking at her made Cory’s eyes get blurry. The impression was hard for him to define, even to himself, but he had trouble telling where the woman left off and the bicycle began, like they were a single creature made of chrome and flesh, hair and leather.

  Heather’s hand tightened in his, and they stood still as she rolled past them, mere feet away. She grinned, and for an instant her teeth seemed to flash like chrome. Then she pedaled on, something in a bag clattering in the basket behind the bicycle seat, like pieces of metal clanging together.

  Cory and Heather stood for a moment, watching her go. “Does she live around here?” Heather asked.

  “Never seen her before in my life.”

  “Weird,” Heather said decisively, and then squeezed his hand and started walking again.

  That night, Cory woke in darkness. He sat up, disoriented. Something had awakened him, but he wasn’t sure what. Some noise outside, maybe? He went to the window and looked down into the backyard.

  Someone was pedaling a bicycle around a circle in the grass, a girl in a nightgown. Was that . . . Heather? It looked like her, still with the blue ribbon in her braid. He frowned, wondering what she was doing down there, wondering if he should go down himself. She just kept pedaling that big old-fashioned bike, going counter clockwise around the dogwood tree in the middle of the yard.

 

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