Quite Contrary (29 page)

Read Quite Contrary Online

Authors: Richard Roberts

Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #Genre Fiction, #Horror, #Dark Fantasy, #Mythology & Folk Tales, #Fairy Tales, #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Fantasy

BOOK: Quite Contrary
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This place had to be bursting at the seams with fairy tales, but still. “Hey Rat, why are we here?”

“Bringing the dead to life is hard, Miss Mary. Faking it is easy. To bring Scarecrow the rest of the way we’ll need strong magic and an expert.”

French accents, brightly colored wooden buildings, the river, lots of booze, lots of magic—it all fell together at once. “This is New Orleans, and we’re looking for a voodoo priest,” I said.

“A witch, if we can find one.” I reached a hand out and he jumped eagerly out of Scarecrow’s hands onto my palm, then climbed up my sleeve to cling to it where it cut off and left my shoulder bare.

“Can I have one of those lanterns?” Scarecrow asked.

“No,” I refused, “I’m pretty sure there’s some stupid curse attached.”

“Okay. How do we find a voodoo witch?” she said.

“First, we give me a minute.” I stepped out of the doorway and went down to the boardwalk. It was much like the one we’d left. Well, it was only like the one we’d left in that it was a boardwalk. These were all wooden planks, there were only a few piers and those were also wood, and had none of the machinery. I walked out to the edge, crossed my arms over the wooden railing and stared out at the sea.

Not the river, the sea. I’d never expected it to be a big deal. It was just a lot of water. Being this close, it wasn’t. Dark water rippled, and there was no end to it. The water went on and on, out of sight, until dark blue water became dark blue sky. The breeze rolled over me. This was that extra scent I’d caught on the other side of the club. Like standing in a fog.

Scarecrow folded her arms on the railing a few feet down, copying my position exactly. Whatever. I stared for another minute. The sky kept getting darker, and so did the sea, and I honestly couldn’t tell where the horizon was.

“Can we stay here? This place makes you happy,” Scarecrow asked.

Rat waved his hand in front of his muzzle trying to shut her up. I ought to smack him for it.

“No.” I looked around. This place should be swarming with seagulls, but I couldn’t see any. Instead, it had crows. Lots and lots of crows.

I walked up to one, and it stopped pecking at a blob of slime on the boards to eye me suspiciously. “You know where we need to go, right? Lead on,” I ordered it.

It kept giving me that look, and I couldn’t blame it. I’d have kicked me if I’d tried that on myself. Apparently, crows are better sports than me, because it took off, only to land at the intersection of a less gaudily lit street and hop around the corner. My vague worries that it was just avoiding me disappeared when other crows flew over to perch on buildings at that same corner, or fly around it and stare at me expectantly from the other street.

I followed. I didn’t even like to be led when I’d asked to be led, which showed what an idiot I could be. I swallowed the uncomfortable feeling and followed the crow as it did its dance, flying from light post to light post, and around a corner, before swooping into an alley to land in the back yard of a large house.

This was the place, alright. The crows filled the back yard, leaving me a path up to the back door. They even perched on the door’s lintel, fighting for room where every movement threatened to spill them off.

If this wasn’t the place, I was putting crows on the hate list right underneath fairies and above wolves.

There was no doorbell, or anything formal. I knocked on the back door loudly.

“Come in,” a woman’s voice called. In case I hadn’t gotten the message, door opened by itself.

Okay, final confirmation. Voodoo witch home. It looked like a gypsy fortuneteller’s parlor, just more sinister. You had the gaudy red paisley cloths over everything, painted white masks lined up on the walls, lots of mirrors, jars full of lumpy things arranged on a shelf, and best of all, a mannequin in an elaborate ruffly red gown slumped in a rocking chair with a huge hat and veil hanging down to cover its face. China and gold statues, bells, and other items that might be awesome magical artifacts or tacky nick-knacks crowded side tables and bookshelves. She had to be a real voodoo witch, because if a fake lived here a real one would soon come and kick her out and take it.

I wasn’t sure she looked the role, but I wasn’t sure I knew what the role should look like. A woman too old for college and too young for gray hairs eyed me, holding a handful of nails she’d just scooped out of a jar. I wasn’t sure if she was pretty, but I at least was sure she wasn’t ugly. Her skinny dress had its own selection of ruffles and might have competed with the one on the mannequin if not for the clashing purple and red theme. They didn’t go that well with dark brown hair and dark brown skin. I couldn’t tell if she was black, white, Indian, South American, or what. She was just dark.

The witch dropped the nails back into the jar and asked me, “A shell, a magic rat, and a little girl with the power of Red Riding Hood wrapped around her. Are you the reason the streets are full of trouble tonight?”

I didn’t know how I’d missed it even this long. One of those eyes that stared at me so hard might be black, but the other was a polished silver ball. Voodoo witch in spades. “Don’t ask me. If I had any control over this Red Riding Hood crap, I’d get rid of it.”

“I can’t help you, either. Orleans is a city full of wolves. I could raise every god, angel, and swamp spirit in Louisiana to try and separate you from the curse, and the war that would start would burn both sides of New Orleans to the ground. Now, be on your way,” she lectured. That was what it felt like. She had a crisp schoolteacher voice, and no accent I could spot.

I stepped inside and leaned back against the wall, folding my arms over my chest. “This is really New Orleans?”

She stared down at me like I was a giant pain in the rear, which continued to impress me with her intelligence. Her skirt showed it had a lot more give than I’d have believed as she walked over and sank into the big stuffed chair behind her fortuneteller table. “So, you’re from the daylight half, too. Yes, little girl, this is New Orleans. Parts of New Orleans disappear all the time. Places, and people. We end up here, where the swamp magic’s been waiting all along.”

I was getting sick of her calling me little girl already, but if she wasn’t going to offer her name, I wasn’t going to whine until she used mine. “I’m not here for you to help me. I’m here for you to help her.” I looked over at Scarecrow. For pity’s sake. She was trying to poke the crows on top of the door, but she couldn’t reach. They kept nipping at her fingers when she got close.

“What do you want? There’s no curse on her. She is what she is, a woken up doll. What you see is what you get,” the witch replied testily.

“She wants to live,” I replied, just as testily.

The witch raised an eyebrow. “She wants?”.

I guess it could be hard to believe Scarecrow had a brain in her head, even metaphorically.

Scarecrow could prove that herself “Yes, please. I know I’m not alive. I can’t look forwards and I can’t feel backwards. I want that. I want to be real. Flesh and blood would be cool, too.”

I was impressed and a little surprised, and apparently, so was the witch. She stared at Scarecrow hard. “Whoever made you, made you well, doll child. Do you have a name?”

“I’m Scarecrow!” she chirped, toddling up to the table.

“Is that even a name?” The witch could win championships for a suspicious stare and sarcastic tone of voice.

“Sure,” Scarecrow chirped. “It could be Mary or Hofbrincl or Stew Beef, and it wouldn’t matter, would it? It’s my name. I’m Scarecrow.”

That answer definitely ticked off the witch. No, I was supposed to think it ticked her off. That long, narrow-eyed stare was too good, right? So, I wasn’t surprised after all when the witch said, “You have a name, and understand what it means to have one. You want things. You have bits of soul stuck to you, and love. You’re right on the edge of life. Yes, I can push you over. I can make you alive, and even give you a living human body if you want one. For a price.”

Here it came. There had to be a price. If there hadn’t been, she’d have been trying to cheat us. “What do you want?” was the question. Heck, I had a magic rat con artist. Whatever she wanted, he could get it.

“Magic. You trade magic for magic. There’s a lot of magic in that rat hanging from your sleeve. Useful magic. Clever magic. Give me one of his fingers, and I’ll make the shell into a real girl.”

“No way. Not even open for discussion,” I growled.

“Then you pay me something else. Magic or secrets. Money I can get from suckers,” she answered flatly.

“Don’t you have enough magic already? This thing blazes with magic. Is it alive?” Scarecrow asked, reaching for the tilted down hat on the overdressed mannequin.

The witch slapped her hand away. “You don’t touch My Lady, doll child. I’m just a woman. I’ve got no magic of my own, and no human has much anyway. When I needed a god to call on, My Lady answered. That’s how it works. I don’t have power, I have knowledge. I use it to collect other powers and use them instead. So, I’m telling you, if you want me to spend magic and secrets on you, you pay me in magic or secrets to make up the difference. Otherwise, nothing. You want free magic? You go find a fairy.”

I didn’t know how to say it. You know what? This was a voodoo witch. I spat on her carpet.

Instead of getting mad, she got the hint. “So you’ve met fairies,” she said with a smirk.

I glared at her. I didn’t have to say it. She obviously knew what nasty little magic vermin they were.

“Miss Mary,” Rat spoke up from my sleeve.

Oh, geez. Oh, geez, Rat. That hesitant voice. You’d really give your finger to give Scarecrow her happy ending. I didn’t deserve this kind of rat.

“NO,” I almost yelled down at him, giving him the angriest glare I could fake in the hopes he’d give up.

“You know fairies,” the witch said, “Catch one for me. I’ll take a fairy in payment, and you don’t care what I’ll do with it.”

That might be worth a try. Or, “If you want fairy magic, I’ve got a secret for you. Knowledge is power, right?”

“I’m listening.” The witch’s tone was guarded, her stare suspicious. To anybody watching, this must look like a duel.

Unless that person was Scarecrow. “Hey, what’s with your eye?” she asked abruptly.

We ignored her. It took a lot of effort. On my part, the effort was to not bust out laughing. “The fairy queen has this wooden puzzle box that’s her favorite toy. More than a toy, she’s obsessed with it. She won’t put it down, won’t pay attention to anything else. I think she’s had it for decades, and she can’t figure it out. She’s started marking doors with it, even,” I said.

The witch stared at me for a good and long time. That sour expression told me I’d won. She nodded to confirm it. “Yes,” she drawled for the first time as she thought about it, “That’s a good secret. I can use that. It’s payment enough for my services.”

“Is it enough to hear about your eye, too?” Scarecrow asked. I tried not to laugh again, but I bet the witch could tell.

“I shouldn’t have to tell you,” the witch replied testily. Pushing up from her chair, she began rooting through the boxes and piles of probably magic garbage piled up everywhere. It gave her time to explain, “You’re a shell. You see power, because without life that’s what’s obvious in the world. The eye does the same for me. It was a test, when I was still learning. I was offered replacements for the eye I’d lost. This one shone like silver, but I was smart enough to tell it was just a worthless ball of pewter disguised as a treasure. Then, I was smart enough to realize it was true power disguised as trash disguised as treasure. I took it, and I didn’t regret my choice. Let’s hope you don’t regret yours.”

With those ominous words, she pulled a small, vicious looking hacksaw out of a toolbox. All hacksaws look vicious. Nothing it could do would be good. The voodoo witch caught Scarecrow’s hand reaching for the bottle of nails and smacked it down on her tabletop.

“How much do you want to be real, Scarecrow?” the witch asked, staring right into Scarecrow’s wooden eyes.

“If I’m not alive, I’m dead,” Scarecrow answered. She almost sounded serious.

“There’s a piece of life inside you. Not enough. It’s surrounded by all this wood, and it makes your thoughts as meaningless as a lump of wood. I’ll have to cut away all the wood until I find the part of you that’s really alive. Only then can I give it flesh.” The voodoo witch told her all of this in an even, businesslike voice as she laid the hacksaw to Scarecrow’s wrist. “Are you ready to go through this to become a real girl?”

Scarecrow hesitated. The jagged notches of the saw had already dug tiny splinters out of her arm. I’d seen her shoulders twitch when they did, a reflex of pricking pain.

“Oh, no. Not happening!” I yelled. I stomped forward, grabbed the back of the saw, and yanked it away. I grabbed Scarecrow’s arm too, and threw down the saw as I pulled her away from the table.

I wanted to yell at the witch some more, but there was nothing to say. Scarecrow might be dumb enough to agree to this, but I wasn’t enough of a bitch to let her. Scarecrow stumbled along as I dragged her out the door, grabbed the handle, and slammed it closed. The boom when it hit sent crows flapping off into the night in every direction.

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