Nevernever
Page 1
Nevernever
Title Page
Chapter 1—Dating Outside of Your Species
Chapter 2—Magic Rules!
Chapter 3—Finders, Keepers
Chapter 4—Night of the Hunter’s Moon
Chapter 5—Understandings
Chapter 6—Fast Forward #1
Chapter 7—Danceland Blood
Chapter 8—Silver Suits and Copper Cards
Chapter 9—Losers, Weepers
Chapter 10—Things Go Boom
Chapter 11—The Roses of Elfland
Chapter 12—Fast Forward #2
Chapter 13—Dancing at the Dead Warlock’s Ball
Chapter 14—Vengeance Is Mine
Chapter 15—Wild Times with the Wild Elves
Chapter 16—Homeward Bound
About the Author
Nevernever
a Bordertown novel by Will Shetterly
Copyright
© 1993, 2011 by Will Shetterly
Published by CatYelling.
Edited by Jane Yolen
Bordertown and the Borderlands were created by Terri Windling, with creative input from Mark Alan Arnold and the authors of the stories in the anthologies Borderland (NAL 1986), Bordertown (NAL 1986), and Life on the Border (Tor Books, 1991): Bellamy Bach, Steven R. Boyett, Emma Bull, Kara Dalkey, Charles de Lint, Craig Shaw Gardner, Michael Korolenko, Ellen Kushner, Will Shetterly, and Midori Snyder. Borderland is used by permission of Terri Windling, The Endicott Studio.
Smashwords Edition.
Dedication
For Beth Davis and Barbara Friedman.
Acknowledgment
When Jane Yolen requested an encore, Terri Windling permitted my players to use her stage again. If I can be more than eternally grateful, I am.
Chapter 1—Dating Outside of Your Species
You expect people to get quiet when a werewolf walks into a restaurant. You only expect them to scream when a werewolf runs in. I walked in as if the only thing on my mind was finding a seat, a waiter, and a plate of spaghetti, in that order. Everyone in the room—about fifty kids—got quiet. No one screamed. I was learning the rules. That amused me, so I smiled.
My smile widened when I spotted Sparks’s blue-black hair at the back of the room. Engrossed in a paperback, she was the only person who hadn’t seen me enter. I wanted to yell and wave. I contented myself with a flash of white, sharp teeth—
A definite mistake, even in a place like Godmom’s, where anything might wander in from Bordertown’s streets.
Someone gasped. A waiter dropped a tray, splashing spaghetti, calzones, and tomato sauce onto the black-and-white tile floor. A human in Pack black, from biker boots to dyed hair, and a silverlocked elf in True Blood red leather stood side by side, faces grim, right hands deep in their jacket pockets. I doubted they were fingering good luck charms.
I couldn’t smile to say I was harmless; my fangs had created this predicament. I couldn’t turn and run; the fifty or so kids in Godmom’s would have been after me like the village mob in every Frankenstein movie ever made.
Most of the humans were triple-checking the location of the back door. A few touched their knives and forks as if hoping werewolf legends were true and Godmom used real silverware. Who knows what the elves were thinking? Clearly, they were feeling something profound, maybe fear, maybe amusement, because they weren’t showing any emotion at all.
The song on the juke—Oyster Band’s “Angels of the River”—ended then. Silence is the scariest thing I’ve ever heard.
My greatest danger came from the unlikely allies, the Packer and the True Blood. Each had a few gang members sitting nearby, ready to follow their leader’s move. In Godmom’s, it wasn’t supposed to matter whether you were Bordertown born or you came from the World or Faerie, whether you were a member of any of Soho’s many gangs or no gang at all. If you wanted the best pizza in town, you ignored anyone you couldn’t treat civilly. But the Packer and the True didn’t know I knew that. And no one knew if Godmom’s truce included creatures no one had seen before.
I looked for a friendly face, someone whose smile would say I belonged here. I couldn’t think of any way to interrupt Sparks’s reading that wouldn’t seem threatening.
I looked over one shoulder and out the window. Something small might’ve moved on the street in the shadows, but I didn’t have time to wonder about that. I looked back at the crowd, then over my other shoulder. Then I bent my head down, sniffed each of my armpits, raised my head, and lifted both hands in a gesture of complete bafflement.
Someone snickered. A few people smiled cautiously. The True and the Packer did not.
Before anything could happen, a large woman in a flowered dress and a hat like a bowl of fruit came flying out of the kitchen. Maybe literally: I can’t swear that her feet touched the ground. She stopped before me, blocking my way and shielding me from the diners, and said, “May I help you?” I couldn’t tell whether she meant, “May I help you out the door?” or “May I help you change your life?”
I nodded toward the back of the room. Sparks still hadn’t looked up from her book. Godmom followed my gaze, then winked at me.
“Ah!” She saw two kids meeting for dinner and looking their best, Sparks in a fringed motorcycle jacket, a green-and-yellow sundress, and blue cowboy boots, me in a long-sleeved black T-shirt, baggy purple trousers, and red sneakers. She assumed romance was on someone’s mind, even though Sparks was obviously human and I looked like I’d escaped from the wildest lands of the Nevernever.
Godmom couldn’t be more wrong, I thought as she stepped aside and flipped a coin across the room. Almost every eye in the house tracked it.
The waiter who’d dropped the tray laughed, caught the coin, spun smoothly about, and slapped it into the jukebox. The tension in the room disappeared with the coin. Cats Laughing’s cover of “Stomping at the Savoy” filled the air. People began to talk as if they’d never paused. I was the subject of a few whispers: “Born that way?” and “Must be a spell,” and “Saw ‘im at Danceland the other night,” and “Man, some people will do anything to be noticed.”
The Packer and the True looked at me, then at each other. The elf curled his lip in a fine sneer. The Packer managed to bump him hard as she moved to let me pass. He didn’t say anything, so the truce held a little longer in Godmom’s.
When my shadow fell on Sparks’s table, she glanced up with an is-that-the-person-I-was-expecting-oh-it’s-a-monster-from-the-darkest-pits-my-date-must-be-late look. She turned back to her paperback, an Oscar Wilde collection. When I put my hand on the chair across from her, she gave me her best Why-are-you-stopping-here-when-you-must-be-planning-to-maul-someone-at-another-table?
I pointed a claw at myself and tried to smile without showing my teeth. Sparks frowned. I began to sit. She said, “Sorry, I’m—”
I held up a hand, pulled a pencil stub and a notepad from my pants pocket, then leaned over the table to write, IT’S ME.
She blinked at that, squinted at me, then squinted at my writing again, undoubtedly comparing it with the invitation I had sent her.
I added, I SHOULD’VE WARNED YOU.
She said, “R—”
I raised a finger to stop her. WOLFBOY. I tapped my chest.
She said softly, “Oh, Ron.”
I smiled, shook my head, and wrote, IT’S OK. BETTER THAN: IT’S GREAT.
She said, not quite a question, “You can’t talk.”
I wrote, DIDN’T SAY IT WAS PERFECT.
“What—” She noticed that a lot of people were trying very hard to ignore us. “Sit down.”
I smirked and sat. When there’s nothing else to do, be amused or be amusing—it was a new philosophy for me, but it seemed to work.
Sparks stare
d at my face. I thought I knew what she was seeing: golden eyes, reddish fur, extended jaw, gleaming fangs. She looked at my furry, black-clawed hands. When she glanced up, I had a grin ready to show her everything really was fine.
Two tears rolled down either side of her nose.
We stared at each other until she jabbed her napkin at the corners of her eyes. “I hate it when I cry.”
I pointed a finger tentatively at the penultimate line I’d written.
“Okay?” she read.
I nodded.
“Why?”
I shrugged, then wrote, I WAS A GEEK.
“No way. You were cute.”
I wrote, TOO LATE TO DO ANYTHING ABOUT IT NOW.
“Maybe.”
I glanced at her. She laughed self-consciously and said, “What’s it like?”
I was grateful for the chance to look away. It hadn’t occurred to me that she might still have a crush on me.
I wrote, BEING KID COYOTE?
She nodded.
I wrote, I HEAR BETTER. NOT EVERYTHING AT ONCE, THO. HAVE TO SORT THINGS OUT. SMELLS, DITTO. I SNIFFED TO ILLUSTRATE. SOMEONE BURNED SAUSAGE IN THE KITCHEN. THERE’S LOTS OF ROSEMARY IN THE TOMATO SAUCE. GUY OVER THERE— I lifted my chin toward a distant table. —HAS A COLOGNE, SMELLS LIKE JASMINE. YOU— I’d already started, so I wrote quickly, hoping she wouldn’t notice that I’d paused. —SMELL LIKE AUTUMN: PINE NEEDLES AND WOOD SMOKE.
She smiled. “That’s nice.”
I smiled back. I’d been about to write that I could smell something pleasantly tart and specifically Sparks. But that might’ve embarrassed her. It certainly embarrassed me. Maybe the best thing about being the Wolf was having fur to hide my blushes.
Then I decided that was silly. I wasn’t attracted to Sparks. She had acne scars, a small chin, an overbite that made her look like a gerbil, and posture at least as bad as mine. And I was the Amazing Mutt-man now. Those were all good reasons to keep thinking of her as just a friend.
Our waiter appeared then. “Tonight’s special is Pizza Florentine. That’s spinach and mushrooms in a cream sauce on a thick whole-wheat crust. For the carnivores—” She glanced at me and plunged bravely onward. “—we add shredded beef, smoked ham, or pepperoni. No seafood today, but we have everything else that’s on the menu.”
I looked at Sparks. She said, “Florentine sounds good. Vegetarian?”
I suddenly realized I didn’t like the idea of eating animals now that I was at least partly one. I nodded.
“To drink, there’s wine, beer, cider hot or cold, root beer, milk, iced Lemon Zinger tea—”
“Milk sounds good.”
I nodded again. The Wolf undoubtedly needed all the calcium and protein it could get.
The waiter gave me a nervous smile, said, “One Pizza Florentine, two milks, right away.” I watched her flee.
“That bother you?”
I shrugged, wrote, MICKEY SAYS IF I’M PATIENT, PEOPLE WILL LEARN I’M A PUPPY DOG INSIDE.
Sparks covered my writing hand with her palm and smiled. “A sheepdog. All shaggy and kind and dependable.”
I wrote, Oh. Part of me thought that was the corniest thing I’d ever heard. Part of me was blushing again. I wrote, WHO DO I SEE TO BE SLEEK, DANGEROUS, & UNPREDICTABLE?
She laughed, squeezed my hand, said, “Hey, I like sheepdogs. I had one when I was a kid. I fell in the Mad River, and she pulled me out. I could swim; I wasn’t really in danger. But she didn’t know that.”
OK, I wrote. I’M A SHEEPDOG. Sparks’s expression was so funny that I leaned over and licked the back of her hand.
She swatted my head and whispered loudly, “Down, boy! Down!”
I started to growl an answer. Something snagged a leg of my chair, twisting it from under me, dumping me onto the floor. I caught myself on one hand. Before I could spring up, a black motorcycle boot pressed my fingers against the tiles. I looked up. The Packer stood there, backed by a thin black guy and a stocky white guy, both dressed like her in black denim and leather.
Not having to decide what to put on in the morning must give you more time to solve world hunger and plan great works of art. Or maybe the Packers were just sartorially challenged.
“Sorry.” The leader didn’t sound very. “Gets crowded in here.” She smiled as she stepped off my hand. Under other circumstances, it would’ve been a nice smile. Her dark brown eyes and strong jaw reminded me of someone.
I didn’t have time to think about who. Sparks said, “Gorty!”
I recognized him then. It shouldn’t have been a surprise. Gorty had brought me to Godmom’s back when he, Sparks, and I had all lived at Castle Pup. Sparks had told me that he’d joined the Pack since then.
He gave us an arrogantly dim grin. He’d lost twenty pounds, grown his hair out and dyed it black, and joined the biggest and most boring of Bordertown’s human gangs, but he was still Gorty.
My little rush of fondness went away as soon as he said, “’Ey, Sparks! Plannin’ to do the wild thing with a real wild thing?”
The leader said, “You know her?”
Gorty said, “Oh, sure. Sparks there likes a bit of the other with the other.” He guffawed and poked a thumb toward me. “That’s about as other as you can get.”
Sparks said, “Oh, Gorty.”
The Pack leader looked from me to Sparks, narrowed her eyes, then turned away, saying, “C’mon.”
Gorty put his hands on his hips and said, “Sparks, you want a real man, you need a real man, know what I mean.”
The black Packer grabbed Gorty’s shoulder. “Gort, no need to give her my address. Word gets around.”
Gorty said, “Heh, right,” to him, then, “Be seeing you, Sparks,” to her, and “Bye, Bowser,” to me. He tossed something small and foil wrapped onto our table and told Sparks, “You don’t know where Bowser’s been. And you’re too young for a litter, anyway.” He left guffawing to himself.
Sparks glared at a Grail brand condom. “I liked Gorty. I really did. He was always a jerk, but not like that.”
I picked up the condom. The Packers were watching from their table, so I dropped it into a shirt pocket, patted it once, and smiled at them. Gorty winced, making me wonder if he’d been interested in Sparks, or even involved with her.
At a nearby table, an elf whose clothes were a mix of Faerie finery and Bordertown rags said, “You’re well?” When I nodded, he added, “Pestilent mortals.”
“C’mon. Not all of us,” Sparks said. “It’s the Pack, mostly—”
“They are honest rogues at least, I give them that.” He turned back to his tablemates.
Sparks shook her head.
I wrote, DO ELVES HAVE TO PASS CONDESCENSION 101 BEFORE THEY’RE ALLOWED OUT OF FAERIE?
Sparks smiled. I hadn’t realized quite how cute an overbite could be.
Pizza and milk arrived then. While I cut a slice for Sparks, she said, “What’s with the Packers?”
I shrugged.
“Kids fooling around,” she answered herself. “Probably doesn’t mean anything.”
I glanced at the Packers. The leader was watching us while Gorty and the skinny black guy laughed. Beyond them, on the sidewalk in the flickering light of Godmom’s neon-and-faerie-dust sign, something pale darted by, a dog racing past or a sheet of paper tumbled by the wind.
“You haven’t said what happened. How you became Wolfboy.”
I pointed at my writing hand, which cradled a thick slice of pizza.
“You’ve got two hands. Right now that gives you the advantage.” She stuffed pizza into her face. When I didn’t respond, she swallowed and said, “You don’t have to tell me anything if you don’t want to, you know.”
I hate it when people are understanding. I shifted my slice to my other hand, took a bite, and wrote, LEDA HAPPENED.
Sparks frowned. “I thought she went back to Faerie.”
I wrote, SHE DID. I looked at that sentence and didn’t know what to add.
When I thought ab
out Leda, I remembered three people, and though I tried, I couldn’t merge them into one. They all looked the same: a small elf with silver-blue eyes and a cloud of mist white hair. One was the efficient leader of the Strange Pupae, the largest mixed gang of humans, elves, and halfies that Bordertown had ever seen, the gang I hung with when I first ran away to B-town. One was a kid who never turned down anything that could get her high. One was a Dragon’s Tooth Hill princess in new silks and leathers who sneered at poor kids in Soho. I’d had a crush on the first Leda, and I’d felt sorry for the second, but I hated the third.
“And?” Sparks asked.
I crammed a pizza crust in my mouth and scribbled, AFTER THE PUPS BROKE UP, I SAW HER WITH SOME DRAGON’S TOOTH ELVES. THEY WERE GROUSING ABOUT HUMAN MANNERS, ETC. I WAS THERE WITH SOME WHARF RATS. I SAID SOMETHING CLEVER, LIKE “YAP, YAP, YAP, YOU ELFLANDS BITCH.” FELT GOOD AT THE TIME.
“I can imagine.”
LEDA SMILED LIKE SHE’D RECOGNIZED ME FROM THE OLD DAYS—NOW I’M NOT SO SURE. SHE SAID, “SINCE YOU’RE SO INTERESTED IN DOGS...” THEN SHE SAID SOMETHING IN ELVISH THAT SOUNDED LIKE A COMMAND.
I stopped writing, held out my arms, and gestured at myself.
Sparks said, “And a star was born.”
I stared, then barked a laugh. Sparks’s sense of humor always took me by surprise.
Her smile disappeared. “You were right. What a bitch.”
I wrote, I WASN’T MR. DIPLOMACY.
“That makes it okay?”
MAYBE WE WERE BOTH HUNTING TROUBLE. I WON. SHE’LL GET HER TURN, ONE WAY OR ANOTHER.
Sparks sighed. “Poor Leda.”
I wanted to ask her how she could have so much sympathy for people whose lives were so much better than hers. Before I could ask anything, I saw another movement in the street.
Sparks turned to stare where I was looking. “What?”
I rose, making a Stay motion, and hurried out through Godmom’s heavy wooden door.