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Authors: Eugene Woodbury

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Chapter 49
The heart knows what the mind denies

T
hree months passed.

Milada found an empty seat in the baggage claim area of the Salt Lake airport. Through the plate-glass windows, she watched the snow swirling through the headlight beams of the cabs and shuttle buses in front of the terminal.

The skies had been dark and the air freezing cold and filled with ice that late afternoon in London as well. The Little Ice Age had begun, she imagined, the day she was born and plumbed its depths the day Rakosi died.

White snow fell on her shoulders. Her heart was black as coal. Fear weighed heavily upon her as the guards escorted her through the catacombs of Newgate Prison to the Master’s cell. Rakosi’s desiccated body lay on a dirty straw mattress. The fetid air smelled of rotting flesh. He had the cell to himself. No one would get anywhere near him. The way his skin sloughed off in sallow flakes, the way the air itself ate away at his tissues until there was hardly anything left of him but powder on bones—the guards imagined he must be dying of leprosy or plague or some even more terrible disease.

And yet he was somehow still alive. His eyes focused on her. “I have missed you, Milada.”

“I betrayed you.”

“You had the right.”

She turned away and wept. Her last moment of true human sorrow in four hundred years, and for this man of all men. “You must not die, not like this.”

His voice rose in a disjointed monotone, quoting the seventeenth chapter of Leviticus: “
Whatsoever man there be of the house of Israel, or of the strangers that sojourn among you, that eateth any manner of blood, I will cut him off from among his people.
” He said, “It is so lonely.” His voice spent, he expelled his last breath. His chest collapsed in a cloud of gritty ash.

Ashes to ashes.

The guards—no, the prisoners, commanded and threatened and forced by the guards—burned the mattress, scorched the stone with oil of vitriol, and washed the remains into the dank sewers, into the mud, into the sea.

We all fall down.

For Kammy, the moving finger, having written, moved on. She couldn’t stand to hear Milada say it, but children
did
become their parents. The image of the man who sired them was imprinted on Milada’s mind and soul. For all her exasperation, Kammy never really denied Milada’s culpability. Deep down in her subconscious, she knew it was true: Milada wanted a family, companions to share the long night of eternity with. Yet it was their time with
him
that she clung to as the ideal.

And like her sire, not all of her desires lent her their abilities. She was in no way prepared to be a parent, a job that would fit Kamilla like a glove.

You met the wrong sister,
Milada had told Rachel Forsythe, and she was right.

The squawk of the warning bell shook Milada out of her reverie. The luggage carrel began to revolve. A minute later, the suitcases and backpacks and skiing paraphernalia started arriving, spilling off the end of the conveyor belt and tumbling down into the stainless-steel carousel.

Jennifer planted herself in front of the conveyer. Her pink knapsack was strapped to her back, the bright green tail of the Dilbert dragon poking incongruously out of the top. Kamilla hovered over her, hands resting lightly on her shoulders, as they took turns guessing which of the suitcases crawling up the ramp would be theirs.

“There’s mine!” Jennifer shouted. And then, “We missed!”

Kammy laughed. “C’mon,” she said, taking Jennifer’s hand and skipping around the carousel in the opposite direction. “We’ll sneak up on it.”

Milada had thought that giving Kammy a company in which she could invest her intellectual passions would make her happy. But nothing like this.
Nothing like this.
Kammy only needed to be reminded about what she was capable of, and she could do it. She’d always been that way, and her older sister was the person to provide the motivation.

This was not a responsibility Milada could shoulder.
The iniquity of Eli’s house shall not be purged with sacrifice nor offering.
Rachel had promised her forgiveness. But Milada had left off the last word of that verse:
forever.
She had eaten from the tree of life and would live forever in her sins.

The taste of that bitter fruit had grown almost palatable. It might grow sweet in time. She harbored no expectations. This was simply the way the world was. Some truths about herself were not difficult to accept. In any event, she made a good aunt.

“Miss Daranyi.”

“Oh, Steven.” Milada glanced up with a tired smile. “Your service wasn’t sure you’d be available.”

“School doesn’t start until the middle of January,” he explained. He picked up her garment bag and looped the strap over his shoulder.

“You’re still on holiday, then?”

“We didn’t go anywhere this Christmas. Cynthia’s parents invited us to their place, but I guess there comes a point when your family is who you go home to every night. I’m sorry, did you have any other luggage?”

“Milly!” Kammy called out on cue. Jennifer chimed in, “Come and get your stuff!”

“Yes,” Milada said. “And speaking of which, you’ve got a few more passengers this time around.”

Chapter 50
Blood is thicker than water

J
ennifer Forsythe reappeared in Cottonwood Estates as unexpectedly as she had vanished. Over the Christmas holidays she attended church with her parents and sister, accompanied by a striking young woman with fair skin and clear eyes, her long white hair drawn back in a ponytail.

“I swear they look like sisters.”

“Just like that other woman who was here—what was her name?”

The story went around that Kamilla was Jennifer’s au pair. An amended version said that she was her nurse. Kamilla sat in the foyer during services reading
The New England Journal of Medicine,
and Jennifer ran to her with a bright smile when Sunday school let out.

The bishop didn’t have to tell Troy Ellis to leave Kamilla alone.

And then she and Jennifer were gone again, without a word of public explanation. Some said they’d seen them around downtown Salt Lake. Some said they’d moved back to New York. Sister Millington said that Rachel told her Jennifer had been enrolled in a long-term cancer study sponsored by Deseret Children’s Hospital and Wylde Medical Informatics, thanks to a grant provided by the DEI Foundation.

Rachel deflected all further inquiries with a sad smile. A few short months before, she had steeled herself to listen again to the final stanza of the poem by Milton:

Then thou the mother of so sweet a child
Her false imagined loss cease to lament,
And wisely learn to curb thy sorrows wild;
Think what a present thou to God hast sent.

Attending the Bromleys’ funeral, the verse had struck her as hollow comfort. There was nothing falsely imagined about such a loss, these
thoughts that do often lie too deep for tears.
The separation felt to her as must the phantom pain from a severed limb.

And yet—
what an unexpected gift her daughter had brought back with her from across the river, a grace so vast it reached into the Underworld to redeem the living dead.

Now, instead, other words echoed though Rachel’s mind:
The Lord killeth, and maketh alive. He bringeth down to the grave, and bringeth up.
The hymn Hannah sang as she handed Samuel over to Eli’s eternal care.

About the Author

E
ugene Woodbury graduated from Brigham Young University with degrees in Japanese and TESOL. He has twice been a Utah Original Writing Competition finalist and is a recipient of the Sunstone Foundation Moonstone Award for short fiction. He lives in Orem, Utah, where he works as a free-lance writer and translator.

Peaks Island Press

Fox & Wolf
by Eugene Woodbury

A
mi Tokudaiji is a
kitsune
(a Japanese werefox) from an aristocratic family whose fortunes are threatened by a financial scandal. Yuki Yamakawa is a werewolf from the wrong side of the tracks. When they end up in the same homeroom class at Osaka’s most exclusive girl’s school, Yuki is determined to make Ami her new best friend—if they don’t kill each other in the process.

The Gentleman and the Rake
by Katherine Woodbury

T
his revised omnibus edition of
Mr. B Speaks!
and
A Man of Few Words
first takes a lighthearted look at the critical events in Jane Austen’s
Pride and Prejudice
from the perspective of Fitzwilliam Darcy. Then Mr. B, the redeemed rake of Samuel Richardson’s scandalous
Pamela,
gets to tell his side of the story. A lively romp through the roots of the modern romance novel!

The Path of Dreams
by Eugene Woodbury

A
lthough they’ve seen each other only once, at a train station in Japan, Elaine Chieko Packard and Connor McKenzie have been haunted ever since by passionate dreams they cannot control. They determine to resolve the tension between the moral strictures of their religion and their own overpowering emotions by eloping, a decision that triggers an unexpected series of events.

Persuadable
by Katherine Woodbury

T
his unique take on Jane Austen’s
Persuasion
records the major events of the novel from the perspective of the novel’s nemeses: the scheming Mrs. Clay and the wily Mr. Elliot. Exploring their uneven path to love,
Persuadable
challenges assumptions about class, money, and marriage that still persist two hundred years later. Who says a couple of gold diggers can’t find true love?

Serpent of Time
by Eugene Woodbury

R
yô is the last princess of Japan’s doomed Southern Court. When a revolt against the shogun fails, she flees with Sen, her loyal lady-in-waiting. Atop sacred Mt. Kôya, Sen’s uncle summons Kala Sarpa, the Serpent of Time, and transports Ryô to the present day. But the serpent harbors a grudge of its own against her family, forcing Ryô to travel back to the past to save her future.

Tokyo South
by Eugene Woodbury

I
n this largely autobiographical account of the author’s two-year proselyting mission to Japan during the late 1970s, a Mormon missionary confronts an overzealous religious bureaucracy and his own growing doubts as the work of preaching the gospel is turned into a cynical game of numbers and spiritual one-upmanship.

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