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Authors: Carolyn Turgeon

Godmother (27 page)

BOOK: Godmother
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I looked up at the moon. Now that I knew what I was going to do, I had to hurry. “I have to leave you,” I said. “We have only until midnight. But I will come back.”

“Please,” she said, standing up and reaching for me. “Don't go. Please help me. I need you!”

“No,” I said. I pushed her away. “I will be back soon. Wait here.”

I turned, concentrated. Focused all my energy. I reached down and picked up a leaf. I rubbed it between my thumbs, felt it start to come apart, threw it to the ground.

A pair of glass slippers appeared. Glittered like two chunks of ice from the grass.

I walked to a tree, pried away a bit of bark with my fingers. I crumbled it in my hands and dropped it over me, imagining, as it fell, my hair sweeping past my shoulders. I gathered up a pile of leaves and blew them over my body. A dress appeared on my form, like a river shifting in the light.

“What are you doing?” she said behind me.

“I will not be long,” I said as I slid my feet into the slippers, one by one. “I will be back soon.”

“Why are you dressed like that?” she said. “Stay and help me, please! I can't go back there. I need you!”

I looked at her. She was desperate now, trembling. Her memories tumbled over me, and I swatted them off. I had offered her the perfect life, and she had refused it. How could we ever have thought she could be with the prince?

And then something in me softened. It was not her fault. None of it was.

“Wait here, my child,” I said. “I will return soon. I promise. I will help you then.” I reached out and pulled her to me, held her close. “Shh,” I said, stroking her hair. “Just wait a little while longer, and I will help you.”

“Hurry,” she said. “Please.”

I let go of her, then turned and stepped into the coach, which seemed to flicker to life as I entered it. The horses stamped their feet, and the driver looked back at me, his face translucent, the night fully visible behind him.

I felt amazing, powerful. In this world I could have
everything. I could devour it. Him. I could go to the ball and make them forget everything else. I could have the powers the fairy world gave me but also be one of them. I could wield this power and still feel the love and pain and desire move through me. The rot and despair.

I leaned toward the window, reaching for the door, and then the horses snapped into action, the driver yelled into the night air, and we were off. The coach bounced and rumbled along the narrow road. I looked back at her, lying in the grass now, under the moon, her dress already flickering as the magic began to wear away, and at the same time I could feel
him,
waiting.

And for that moment I felt as if everything was exactly as it should be.

VERONICA LIVED
right off of Tompkins Square Park, on Seventh Street between Avenues A and B. The early evening was crisp, and it was the first time it felt as though summer was actually ending. The whole city seemed to be coming to life again after the months of heat and haze.

I cut through the park to get to her. I slipped along the paths that were usually open to the world but now felt like part of some secret, enchanted place. I loved everything. I ran my fingers along the benches and railings and the bark of the trees. I pulled off pieces of bark, bits of leaf and twig, and gathered them in my palms. A few people lay sleeping on the benches—homeless men with bags piled beneath them—but even they seemed enchanted, like princes who had fallen under a spell. I imagined myself perched on a tree branch, watching Veronica, and had to stifle my laugh.

I stepped up to her building.
This is it,
I thought. Every moment, every horrible day I'd spent on this earth, had led me here. My pain was forgotten. Trying to fly, trying to find them all before now—I had just been impatient. All the signs had been there. And they had all led me to this moment, right now.

Bit by bit I dropped the bark and leaves and twigs to the ground, imagining, as they fell, a dress and a pair of shoes and a pair of crystal earrings rising in their places.

I rang her bell. She buzzed me in. As I walked down the hallway, I could barely breathe.

She stood waiting for me, and as soon as I saw her, I knew it had worked. All the magic I had summoned up for her. “Your hair,” I said, smiling. It was so blond it was almost white. It was stunning next to her pale skin, her bright blue eyes.

“Yes!” she said. She gleamed with excitement, tilted her head left and then right. “What do you think?”

“You look beautiful. You look … classic. I had no idea you could look so …”

“Glamorous?” she asked.

“Very glamorous,” I said. “And it's so long suddenly …” Her hair swung down to her shoulders, curling up at the ends. Perfect moon hair.

“Isn't it great? They're extensions. Kim did them for me. I didn't think I'd have time with finishing the dress and all, but we just stayed up the whole night and did it. I thought about having hair down to my lower back but went for the Veronica Lake look instead. I mean, it seems fitting.”

“It does,” I said. “It is.”

“Are you okay?” she asked. “You look like you've seen a ghost.”

“I think I have,” I said. “You just … look so much like someone I used to know.”

“Veronica Lake, maybe? Marlene Dietrich?” She posed, batted her lashes.

“Maybe,” I said.

“So come inside,” she said. “Make yourself at home. I know it's a mess. I
meant
to clean, though. Which I think counts for something. But yeah, there's clutter. I don't have medical insurance, but I've got two hundred pairs of shoes and fifty corsets.”

I stepped in. Her one-room apartment was like a jewelry box flung open: a crazy-quilt-covered bed practically lay on top of a sagging purple velvet couch; a dressmaker's mannequin with a sheet thrown over it stood next to it; clothes and lingerie and swatches of fabric were draped across the furniture and chairs and sewing table; gauzy red curtains hung in front of the windows. There seemed to be enough for two or three apartments crammed into one room. An old-fashioned vanity was sandwiched between the bed and the kitchen counter, and I walked over, fascinated by the elaborate hand mirror, the pots of gloss and blush and glitter and jewelry that lay on top.

“So how did it go? Where's the dress?” I asked. “I'm dying to see it.”

“You know what we need first, Lil?” she asked. “Some sangria and some ambience.” She lit a stick of incense that was poking out of a can on the coffee table, then went over to the refrigerator. “Go ahead, make yourself at home.”

I waded through the clutter on the floor to the couch. A black lace bra was draped over the arm, and I pushed it off and sat down.

She opened the small refrigerator and took out wine and seltzer and fruit. She reached down and pulled a bottle of liquor from a shelf below.

“So you really think this is the guy for me?” she asked, looking over at me.

“Yes,” I said. “I do.”

“How do you know?”

“I can see it.”

“I wish I could. I would have saved myself a lot of heartache, that's for sure.”

I looked around. Herbs and dried flowers hung in the doorways.
To attract fairies,
I thought, smiling. A deck of tarot cards lay on her windowsill.

A few minutes later, she handed me my drink. I sat forward and took a long sip, surprised by its sweetness.

“Okay,” she said, rubbing her hands together. “Ready?”

“Yes.”

“I spent hours of my life on this thing, Lil.”

“Show me!”

She moved to the mannequin, lifted the sheet, and flung it off.

I closed my eyes, pictured it. Willed it into being. And then I opened them.

The dress was a confection of ice blues and crystals, layers of silk and tulle, a petticoat underneath that made the skirt fluff out on either side. The tulle, strung through with crystals, hung over the silk like a watery net, just as I had envisioned. Underneath, the blue shimmered, seemed to change color.

I reached over, ran my palm along the fabric.

“Look at the back,” she said, turning the mannequin so that I could see the line of tiny silver eyelets laced through
with silk ribbon. “This silk is so soft. Cutting it was like cutting butter.”

“It feels like butter,” I said. I imagined it, my legs moving against it as I walked, the silk like water against me. “It's beautiful. It's … it's just stunning. I couldn't have imagined anything better.”

She reached over and hugged me spontaneously. “Thank you for everything.”

“You're welcome,” I said. “I envy you, the night you're going to have.”

“I just wish you were coming, too.”

“Now, don't be silly. You need to get ready, my child. The clock is ticking.”

She sighed. “It always is.”

She sat down at the vanity. Her long back facing me, curving in at the waist. Her hair dropping past her shoulders. I could see her face in the mirror, watching herself. Even in her T-shirt and black jeans, she was luminous.

She uncapped a small tube and held a wand up to her eye, drawing a thick black line along the curve of her lid. She did the same on the other side, pulling the line so that it swept up and out at the corner. “So I was wondering,” she said, looking at me in the mirror, “about the story you told us in the salon.”

“Story?”

She seemed nervous suddenly, shy. “The boy you loved. I don't mean to be nosy. I don't know how much you like talking about it. I'm just … Did you fall in love again, after that?”

“No,” I said. And then, more quietly, “No. That was it for me.”The words hung in the air in front of me. I felt like I needed to explain them away, but I didn't know how. How could I explain all of it?

She dipped her finger into a pot of glitter, stroked it across her eyelids. To my surprise I realized she was close to tears. That she didn't want me to see.

She took a breath. “Why? What was it about him? Or you?”

“I don't know,” I said. My mind beat up against her questions. I had asked myself so many times over the years, but I could never fully understand why I'd reacted the way I had. “I guess … In a way I fell in love with the entire world when I met him. You know how one person can become so massive? I hadn't paid much attention to the world before that.”

She picked up a small brush and dipped it into some eye shadow spread out like artist's paint in front of her. I could see that her hands were shaking. “How do you mean?”

I wanted so badly to tell her. Could I tell her? My wings curled at the edges, ready to spread out. Couldn't I just say, “I was a fairy”? Tell her that I had fallen in love with a human who didn't belong to me, who'd been made for someone else? That tragedy was intertwined with our story? That I'd done a terrible thing? But how could I explain why I had done it? That I was only now setting it right all these centuries later?

And she looked just like Cinderella. Not Maybeth at all. I had to acknowledge that now.

She turned in her chair and folded her legs up under her. Her makeup was half done. Her eyes black-lined and glittering, like huge jewels. She waited for me to go on.

“I lived in my own world,” I said haltingly, “where every-thing was perfect. Perfect. In that world nothing bad could ever happen. Everything was beautiful. More than beautiful. It was a place without desire of any kind.” I paused. “I had never felt human before that. I hadn't had any interest
in human things, except from a distance. I hadn't understood them.”

“Go on,” she said, nodding.

“So when I saw him for the first time, I fell in love with everything at once. I loved how it felt to long for someone, to think about him and feel myself in his thoughts, to toss and turn because I couldn't stop thinking about how the back of his neck felt under my palm. When I knew what it was like to desire something, I felt alive for the first time. Human. The way I had been before—so reserved, cold, spoiled—didn't feel right anymore. And when I couldn't have him … Before that, I did not know what it meant to lose anything. Where I came from, my world, no one ever lost anything at all.”

I stopped, exhausted suddenly. There was so much beating in me, so much that I couldn't express.

“I understand,” she said simply.

“I know you do.”

“You do?”

She was crying then. Just a girl, I thought. That's all she was.

“Why don't you tell me?” I said, my voice as gentle as I could make it.

“I don't … I don't know how to talk about it. When I think about it, I feel like I'm going to die. I stopped talking about it. I know I should be healing, getting over it.”

“No,” I said. “You are so young.”

“My … He just … It all happened in one second, you know? Everything was normal, and then he was gone.”

“It's okay,” I said, standing up, going to her. “Shh. You don't have to talk about it if it's too hard.”

I sat on the bench next to her.

“I dream about him, Lil. I work so hard to forget him, and then I go to sleep and … I just miss him.”

“I'm sorry,” I said.

She lifted her head, looked at me. “I'm terrified. I don't think I can ever love anyone else. I'm always lonely, but I can t …

“I know,” I said, stroking her hair.

“I never talk about it,” she said, “how much it hurts me, all the time. It's empty without him.
I'm
empty. I'm afraid it will always be like this.”

“It won't,” I said. “It just takes time. You are so young, Veronica.”

She sat up, wiping her face. “I want to be better,” she said. “I was so into this night, making this dress. I felt truly happy, you know? But I feel guilty, feeling happy when he isn't here.”

“I know.”

I could have been back in the other world. Her moon hair, her shimmering face, her wide, wet-jewel eyes.
I'm sorry,
I wanted to say.
I'm sorry that I left you.

“Did it ever get easier for you, Lil?” she asked.

I stared at her. What could I say to her? It had never been easier for me. But she wasn't like me. She still had her world, her self.

“Yes,” I said. “It gets easier. But I made a mistake in this life, Veronica. I gave up on the world. I gave up on everything. You can't do that.”

BOOK: Godmother
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ads

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