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Authors: Charles de Lint

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BOOK: Ivory and the Horn
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I don’t think the well ever was cursed. The only curse comes from the ghosts a person brings to it.

I still think about my dad a lot. I guess we had more in common than I thought, since we both screwed up our lives pretty badly. I think he’d be proud of me for finding a solution different from the one he did.

WKPN’s on the radio when I drive home. “Rock and gold, without the hard rock and rap.” They’re playing Buddy Holly.

Wella, wella.

I turn the dial, chasing static and stations until I hear a black woman’s voice, clipped rhymes, ghetto poetry riding the back of a sliding beat that’s so contagious my pulse can’t help but keep time with it. She’s talking about standing up for herself, being herself, facing the world with what she calls a buffalo stance.

You can keep your “rock and gold,” I think. I’m tired of living in the past. I’m like the wishing well, in a lot of ways, full of old ghosts that I just can’t seem to exorcise. They’re what keeps dragging me down. It’s when I listen to them, when I start to believe that all the unhappy things they’re saying about me is true, that I’m at my worst.

What I want is what this woman’s singing about, something that’s here and now. What I need is my own buffalo stance.

I think I’m finally on the right road to finding it

D
EAD
M
AN’S
S
HOES

 

 

 

There are people who take the heart out of you, and there are people who put it back.
—Elizabeth David

 

 

 

 

In her office, her head rests upon her arms, her arms upon the desk. She is alone. The only sounds are those of the clock on the wall, monotonously repeating its two-syllable vocabulary, and the faint noise of the street coming in through her closed windows. Her next appointment isn’t until nine
P.M.

She meant merely to rest her eyes for a few moments; instead, she has fallen asleep.

In her dream, the rain falls in a mist. It crouches thicker at knee level, twining across the street. The dead man approaches her through the rain with a pantherlike grace he never displayed when alive. He is nothing like Hollywood’s shambling portrayals of animated corpses; confronted by the dead man, she is the one whose movements are stuttered and slow.

Because she is trapped in flesh, she thinks.

Because in this dreamscape, he is pure spirit, unfettered by gravity or body weight, while she still carries the burden of life. The world beyond this night’s dreams retains a firm grip, shackling her own spirit’s grace with the knowledge of its existence and her place in it.

Not so the dead man.

The rain has pressed the unruly thicket of his hair flat against his scalp. His features are expressionless, except for the need in his eyes. He carries a somewhat bulky object in his arms, bundled up in wet newspapers. She can’t quite identify it. She knows what he carries is roundish, about the size of a soccer ball, but that is all. All other details have been swallowed in the play of shadow that the rain has drawn from the neon signs overhead and the streetlight on the corner.

She is not afraid of the dead man, only puzzled. Because she knows him in life. Because she has seen him glowering from the mouths of alleyways, sleeping in doorways. He has never been truly dangerous, despite his appearance to the contrary.

What are you doing here? she wants to ask him. What do you want from me? But her voice betrays her as much as her body, and what issues forth are only sounds, unrecognizable as words.

She wakes just as he begins to hand her what he is carrying.

The dream was very much upon Angel’s mind as she later looked down at the pathetic bundle of rag-covered bones Everett Hoyle’s corpse made at the back of the alley. But since she had always believed that the supernatural belonged only to the realm of fiction, film and the tabloids, she refused to allow the dream to take root in her imagination.

Jilly would call what she had experienced prescience; she thought of it only as an unhappy coincidence, and let it go no further. Instead she focused her attention on the latest addition to the city’s murder-victim statistics.

No one was going to miss Everett, she thought, least of all her. Still, she couldn’t help but feel sorry for him. It was an alien reaction insofar as Everett was concerned.

The streets were filled with angry individuals, but the reasons behind their anger usually made sense: lost homes, lost jobs, lost families. Drink, or drugs. Institutions turning out their chronic psychiatric patients because the government couldn’t afford their care. Victims of neglect or abuse who discovered too late that escaping to a life on the street wasn’t the answer.

But Everett was simply mean-spirited.

He had a face that would make children cry. He wasn’t deformed, he simply wore a look of rage that had frozen his features into a roadmap of constant fury. He stood a cadaverous six-four, which was more than merely intimidating to those from whom he was trying to cadge spare change; it could be downright frightening. With that manner, with his matted shock of dirty grey hair and tattered clothing, he didn’t seem so much a man down on his luck as some fearsome scarecrow that had ripped itself free from its support pole and gone out to make the world around him as unpleasant as he felt himself. Which put him about one step up from those men who had to kill their families before they put the gun in their own mouth and pulled the trigger.

No, Angel corrected herself. Think in the past tense now, because Everett had terrorized his last passerby.

Surprisingly, death had brought a certain calm to his features, smoothing away the worst of the anger that normally masked them. This must be what he looked like when he was sleeping, Angel thought. Except he wasn’t asleep. The blood pooled around his body bore stark testimony to that. She’d already checked for a pulse and found none. Having called the police before she left the office, now it was simply a matter of waiting for them to arrive.

The scene laid out before her held an anomaly that wouldn’t stop nagging her. She took a step closer and studied the body. It was like a puzzle with one piece missing, and it took her a few minutes before she could finally pinpoint what was bothering her. She turned to the young white boy who’d come to her office twenty minutes ago and brought her back to where he’d found the body.

“What happened to his boots, Robbie?” she asked.

Everett’s footwear had been distinctive: threadbare Oxfords transformed into boots by stitching the upper half of a pair of Wellingtons onto the leather of each of the shoes. Olive green with yellow trim on the left; black with red trim on the right. The Oxfords were so old and worn that they were devoid of any recognizable color themselves.

“I guess Macaulay took ‘em,” the boy replied.

“You never said Macaulay was here with you.”

Robbie shrugged.

She waited for him to elaborate, but Robbie simply stood beside her, face washed pale by the streetlight coming in from the mouth of the alley, thin shoulders stooped, one Dr. Marten kicking at the trash underfoot. His dirty-blonde hair was so short it was no more than stubble. He wouldn’t meet her gaze.

Angel sighed. “All right,” she said. “I’ll bite. Why did Macaulay take the boots?”

“Well, you know what the homes are saying, Miz Angel. Man gets nined, you got to take away his shoes or he’s gonna go walkin‘ after he’s dead. He’ll be lookin’ for who took him down, usually, but Everett now—he’s so mean I suppose anybody’d do.”

With all her years of working with street people, dealing with the myriad superstitions that ran rampant through the tenements and squats, Angel thought she’d heard it all. But this was a new one, even on her.

“You don’t believe that, do you?” she asked.

“No, ma’am. But I’d say Macaulay surely do.”

Robbie spoke casually enough, but Angel could tell there was more to what had happened here tonight than he was letting on. He was upset—a natural enough reaction, considering the circumstances. Keeping Everett’s corpse company until the police arrived had upset her as well. But the tension underlying Robbie’s seeming composure spoke of more.

Before she could find just the right way to persuade him to open up to her, one of the sirens that could be heard at all hours of the day or night in this part of the city disengaged itself from the general hubbub of night sounds and became more distinct. Moments later, a cruiser pulled up, blocking the mouth of the alley. The cherry-red lights of its beacons strobed inside the alley, turning the scene into a macabre funhouse. Backlit, the two officers who stepped out of the cruiser took on menacing shapes: shadows, devoid of features.

At Angel’s side, Robbie began to tremble, and she knew she wouldn’t get anything from him now. Hands kept carefully in view, she went to meet the approaching officers.

Angelina Marceau ran a youth distress center on Grasso Street, from which she got her nickname, the Grasso Street Angel. She looked like an angel as well: heart-shaped face surrounded by a cascade of dark curly hair, deep warm eyes, next to no makeup because she didn’t need it with her clear complexion. Her trim figure didn’t sport wings, and she leaned more toward baggy pants, T-shirts and hightops than she did harps and white gowns, but that didn’t matter to those living on the streets of Newford. So far as they were concerned, all she lacked was a visible halo.

BOOK: Ivory and the Horn
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