Year's Best Weird Fiction, Vol. 2

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Year's Best Weird Fiction, Vol. 2 Page 21

by Nathan Ballingrud


  Fucking amateurs.

  In the old days, I used to construct harps out of this shit, and human spines.

  A phantom hitchhiker ain’t nothin’. It’s a fingerprint. A cosmic smudge on the night. Me, I’m the real deal, the genuine article. The thing what left the smudge. Unleashed! Thanks to the spirit of intermunicipal cooperation.

  And you got me for forty grand! Not too shabby, ace.

  So what I am going to do now is tie one end of your nervous system to your brain stem, and another to this bright little star I have in my pocket, and then I’m going to let go of it, see, and it’s going fly up up up into the firmament, stretching the tissue till it licks the edge of space.

  Move over.

  Hahaha, I kid, I kid.

  Forgive the nudge, I know you can’t move over.

  Let me just nestle down here, and cuddle on up next to you.

  The asphalt’s nice and warm, thanks to the skidding. Good job with that.

  Doesn’t it look cool up there, my little star? It’s like an awesome little kite, the string leading down to your nose.

  You have a very distinguished looking nose. The nose of kings, friend!

  It’s nice out here in Rehoboth. Not a lot of streetlamps, or tall buildings, so you can really see the stars.

  One more nudge. See, look at that? Doesn’t all the glass on the street look a lot like the stars? And the little snowflakes that are starting to fall? They look like the stars too, the teensy ones we can only see if we live out in the country and eat our carrots, like mama said.

  That’s some cool shit right there, ace.

  Okay. Now what you need to do, and I’ll hold your hand and squeeze it until you do, is inhale.

  That’s right, suck it all back in.

  We’ve got all night. Hell, we’ve got all night, every night. I hitchhike through space, not through time. I’m already all over this whole stretch of time.

  Aw, do your fingers hurt? Well, inhale more, you dirty little fuck!

  Like you’re eating spaghetti with your nose. Slurp it all back in to your body.

  And no, had you shown up wearing one of those streaming Internet glasses, I just would have ripped your face off. Fuck you apes, and your YouTube.

  Keep it up. Snort snort. Oink for me, baby.

  There is no alternative. Any way you slice it, and I can slice it any which way, you need to get all this stuff back into you, and I need my little star back.

  It’s a good luck charm.

  You’re doing real good. Real good. See, you can feel your face again. Yeah, it fucking hurts.

  Don’t cry.

  I’ll give you some more cherry stuff. Let me just—

  There we go. Keep your head on my lap, just like a little baby, and drink all you like. I’m gonna let it pour right down my chin.

  And keep snuffling your nerve tissues back into your body.

  Let me tell you a bit more about the old woman. She picked me up once, even though women in those days didn’t often drive on their own, and didn’t ever stop for strangers.

  She liked anonymous dick. There’s nothing wrong with it. Lots of people do. You do, don’t you?

  People just don’t like to think of civicminded ladies as horny little nymphs wearing nothing but bush beneath their sundresses. She was a smart girl too. Went to Radcliffe, back when girls went to Radcliffe instead of Harvard proper. And when she picked me up, she sang:

  But if I should leave my husband dear,

  Likewise my little son also,

  What have you to maintain me withal,

  If I along with you should go?

  She’d spotted me right off. James Harris, the Daemon Lover. I’m a goddamn English ballad, sport. But I had no ships upon the sea, no mariners to wait upon thee, anymore. They’re all at the bottom of the Atlantic. Especially those fucking mariners. They got me here, to America, but they had to die.

  So I have to hitchhike.

  She picked me up. We had a wild time, a good one. I buried myself deep inside her. So deep she could never stop thinking of me, no matter how many husbands she burned through—and she’s had four—nor how many other anonymous lovers she’s had.

  How many? Count the stars, son. How many can you see, on a clear night like this, through blurred and stinging eyes? And keep sucking!

  She tried to forget me, but she couldn’t.

  She’s watching right now.

  Don’t look around.

  Anyway, this is how she likes it. It’s how I like it too.

  Anyways, there are so many things I like to do. And little old ladies are one of them. And my little old lady likes selling kitsch. There’s a T-shirt in your goodie bag, back at the hotel.

  I SURVIVED THE HAUNTED STRETCH OF REHOBOTH.

  It says that, for real. It was blank before, but you’re doing such a good job. Tell your friends about us.

  There. You’re almost done. It’s almost dawn.

  Don’t look around. Not at that hill on the right, that shines so clear to see. Not on the hill to the left, that looks so dark to thee. You look straight fucking ahead. Don’t make me break your neck. Eyes ahead, you little shitsack. Anyway, anyways, you can.

  SUNNY MORAINE

  –

  So Sharp That Blood Must Flow

  IN THE END, the water goes black with the witch’s blood.

  Before this happens, the little mermaid understands that a deal is a deal, a bargain a bargain, and there can’t be reneging. But this isn’t reneging, she tells herself as she sinks down, down, down into water so black that in truth it would be difficult to discern witch’s blood within it even had a hundred witches been slaughtered in its depths.

  She is not sea foam. That was the first lie.

  She is also not alive. That was truth.

  Being not alive, she has no need to breathe. This is terribly convenient, given what she needs to do next.

  *

  Surrounded by a hundred crystal lanterns, a prince dances with his princess. This is iconic, archetypal; many of the people in the assembly sense this on some level and take pleasure in its even perfection. This is the ending of all the stories they have ever been told as children, all the stories they have ever told their children, all the stories their children will tell. The prince marries his princess and they dance and are blissfully happy.

  She watches them from the parapet, her eyes burning and her feet cut to ribbons by invisible knives.

  This was not her ending. And she sees no reason why she should take it gracefully.

  The water is dark and deep below her and she arcs down into it, her gown fluttering around her. She takes particular care to hit the water at such an angle as to break her neck, and so she sinks before she can dissolve on the little waves.

  She dies with purpose. This is a truth she makes.

  *

  If she were sea foam, she thinks—and perhaps this is after and perhaps it is before or perhaps it is both things simultaneously—she could become the rain and patter down onto his windowpanes, trickle down the glass and watch him inside in his bright warmth. Or in a storm she could come to him riding, or walking, or anywhere unsheltered, and cut down through the air to strike his cheeks. She could fling herself at him and run down his body like sweat, down his face like tears.

  She aches with it. It’s worse than the knives ever were. The witch never told her that the knives on which she danced would be the lesser pain.

  Did she know? She must have. Witches know all the secrets of love; it’s what gives them the power to bargain with all its points and angles and gemstone facets.

  If she were sea foam. But she is not. Before, she wants it. After, she wonders at what possessed her, but even in the cold heart of the water she still knows.

  It takes her a long time to sink, a long time for the deep currents to carry her. Sometimes she thinks she can still hear the music. It works its way into her ears like droppers of poison, and though the cold water denies her rictus she feels her t
eeth clench and grind.

  As tiny fish nibble on her legs and toes—she still has them, even now, and hates them more every passing second though the knives have at least allowed her a reprieve—she wonders about death, turns the fact of it over in her mind. She is dead, she’s sure of that much, but either the witch lied, and that is why she is not foam on the waves—or something else has happened.

  Her spirit is not free. And has not passed away.

  Perhaps this is what rage does.

  She has never felt rage like this, all-consuming, like the coals of deep-sea volcanoes in the core of her breast. She wanted. She reached for. She did everything she should have done. And him.

  Him.

  But if she’s still here, there are other options.

  *

  She whispers to the current. It still knows her, and carries her corpse to where she wants to be.

  It sets her gently down at the mouth of the sea witch’s cavern and there she comes to rest against the rocks, the waving fronds of poseidonia caressing her limbs. She waits.

  “Why have you come back to me?” All at once, without any stirring of the water at her coming, the witch is looming over her, the rags of her twelve tails like surf-beaten kelp, the thin strands of her hair like ancient seaweed. Her eyes are like the coals that burn in the mermaid’s heart. “You should be foam on the waves, daughter.”

  By the witch’s magic, the mermaid knows she’ll be heard, the voice of that coal as it burns higher and more violent. I’m no daughter of yours.

  “No. At that, not. So, then.” The witch reaches down and lifts the mermaid under the arms, clasps her cold body close to hers, which is hot for a host of dark and unnatural reasons. “This tale has ended badly for you.”

  You meant it to.

  “I meant to exact a price. I would in any case. You must know how these things work. I don’t make the rules.”

  The witch glides backward through the water, back into her cavern, carrying the little mermaid with her. It is an embrace, close and dangerous, not intending comfort, not intending any good, but the mermaid has suffered and is dead and is now not afraid of anything. She has spent some of her time of sinking in wondering what might happen to her now, whether the witch might cut her into pieces and use her disparate parts for her magics, whether she might be skinned and used as a bag or a drifting blanket, whether her muscles and fat might be peeled away and eaten raw, her blood spilling down the witch’s chin and floating like red gauze in the little currents.

  But now she doesn’t think those things will happen. Pressed to the witch’s bare sagging breasts, she can sense the direction of movements. She can see ways ahead with her blank, dead eyes.

  The witch lays her down in a bed of kelp. The bones of whales hang from the cavern’s ceiling and make a soft clunk sound when the shifting water brings them into contact with each other. The water itself smells of blood, crushed plants, decay, dark things. The blood might draw sharks but the rest keeps them away. Keeps everything away but the desperate.

  And the dead.

  The witch floats above her, arms loose at her sides.

  I want to make a deal.

  The witch cocks her head on one side. This close, the mermaid sees that tiny, pale shrimp are crawling through the strands of her hair, picking over her scalp. “Another? The way this one has ended? Be serious with me, girl. What could you offer me? And what would you want?”

  You know.

  The witch is silent for a time. Her fingers wander over the mermaid’s body. Perhaps she is learning humanity. Perhaps she has never touched a human woman.

  “It would be difficult,” she says at last. “It would require much. Heavy magic. Dense and drawn from the core of the world, through the fire towers in the deepest of deeps. And that still leaves open the question of what you could give me in trade. What would be worth so much effort and such a cost to me.”

  The little mermaid has had an answer for this ready since her body hit the water. She wishes she could smile.

  There is one thing. And against all possibility, the corners of her mouth twitch.

  *

  Life and strength flow back into the mermaid both together, a great rush like a wave crashing on the shore of her heart.

  Her body wrenches itself upward, a great heave, her chest twisting in on itself with the lungs she no longer has. Her legs are bound and blended, her feet splay and stretch into fins. She opens her mouth wide in a scream with no voice to make it heard.

  The witch watches her in silence. She was pale before; now her skin is almost translucent. She is exactly the color of the shrimp that infest her hair. She looks as if she’s trying to smile but can’t, as if she’s taken a little of the mermaid’s death into herself, because of course she has.

  Death always has to go somewhere.

  But that leaves the rest of it. The death the mermaid has promised.

  The witch places the silver blade into the mermaid’s hand. Two seconds later its point is buried in the witch’s breast.

  This was not part of the deal, not the promised death in trade. But the witch doesn’t look particularly shocked as she dies.

  The little mermaid sits in the center of the black-gauze witch’s blood. It flows into her gills. She opens her mouth and tastes its old metal and rotten wood. What she promised the witch, what she’s offered in exchange—she’s done offering. Done exchanging.

  This is all for her.

  *

  She can hear the music of the prince’s ship as she nears the surface.

  It’s music to dance to, and for a moment she stops just beneath the surface, head cocked, listening. She danced once, danced on the blades of knives and never bled, never screamed, and it had not just been that she had no voice. Love silenced her, terrible love, and she only had eyes for him as he laid his hands on her and spun her across the floor. Alone she had danced for his delight, her eyes beseeching him. She had believed he saw and answered her in the same kind. She had believed that he had entered the cloak of silence that covered her. That when his lips touched hers he had shared in it all.

  Now she listens, cold as the water around her.

  She breaks the surface. The knife is very heavy in her hand.

  The ship is strung with fairylights, bathed in starlight. On the deck she can see bodies turning, turning. She can’t see the prince or his precious princess, but she can feel him there. Whether or not he meant to, he did share himself with her—if, as she now knows, not his better part. Not the part he’s given now.

  She stabs the blade into the wood of the ship’s side and begins to climb.

  *

  She knows they won’t see her, not at first. They had never seen her, not even him, and now will be no different, though she’s a thing of legend, of fairytale, as much as the prince and his princess. She’s not a thing of this fairytale, has no place here, and so will be unseen. She is supposed to be dead. To them, she is.

  She can make use of this.

  She pulls herself onto the deck behind a table laden with food. Her gills should make this difficult but some part of her remembers, some part of her unable to shed that form just as she can’t yet shed all of her death, so the air she pulls into her is harsh, sharp, a little like the knives that used to torment her. Her tail is strong and she uses it to push herself across the deck, behind the guests, behind the men in their fine suits of clothing and the ladies in their rich gowns. Behind the musicians with their strings and pipes and delicate drums.

  And there, in the center of the gathering, him and her.

  The mermaid closes her hand on the edge of the shear’s blade and bleeds. Because what’s a little more blood?

  The prince and his princess turn around each other, spinning and laughing, voices high and clear over the music. The mermaid, in spite of herself, briefly loses herself in watching them. They are so lovely in light that dances as they do, fire and stars, and for an instant—a traitorous instant—she wants this again. Wishes. Dr
eams. Because it might, it might, have been worth the pain.

  She lets out a sharp hiss.

  All at once, the prince and his princess stop, standing in the center of the circle, gaze to gaze, hand in hand, breathless and flushed and so clearly happy.

  This is the last scene of the fairytale, the point at which it ends, the book closes, the light goes out and all the good little children snuggle into their covers and drift to sleep on waves of sea foam.

  The little mermaid slaps her tail against the deck and leaps.

  There’s silence. She can hear it. The world itself gone frozen and still, and all eyes on her. Her hands hit the prince squarely in the chest, one hand over his heart, and the shock on his face gives her pleasure as keen as any blade that has ever touched her.

  From somewhere in the crowd, a scream. The prince himself is opening his mouth to do the same. The little mermaid opens her own in mimicry of him, and before he can utter a sound she plunges her head down and sinks her teeth into his throat.

  He convulses under her. His choked-off scream comes out as a gurgle as her teeth dig in and in; hot blood floods her mouth, flesh giving under the force of her bite, and the prince twists, trying to get away, and this is all the help she needs as she whips her head to the side and tears out his throat, meat and voice sweet together on her tongue.

  She swallows. The prince lies there, twitching, drowning in his own blood.

  Voiceless.

  Now the screams, a chorus of them, women and men alike, and the sweetest scream of his princess, but the little mermaid barely hears any of this over the sound of her own laughter, hard and high and like all the songs she used to sing to him unheard beneath the waves. She eats his scream, the blood running down her chin, and as her death flows into the gaping hole in him, his life burns hot in her belly.

  Why, he’s mouthing. Silent and already half dead. Why.

 

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