Read Speak Through the Wind Online
Authors: Allison Pittman
Once safely on the ground floor, she brushed past me and took the lead, her white gown iridescent in the night shadows of my family home. It never occurred to me at the time to wonder why I was following her, why she took the lead in navigating through our front parlor, our morning room, our receiving hall. I suppose her frequent visits—sometimes lasting for weeks on end—made her feel less like a guest than did my other cousins who were all gathered in what used to be our formal dining room. Where twelve perfectly carved and upholstered high-backed chairs once stood, a litter of bedrolls and blankets covered the floor. When Phoebe and I walked into the room, the bundles sprang to life, and six girls were up on their feet, hair streaming unplaited down their backs. They burst into whispered anticipation, then exchanged even louder admonitions to be quiet until Phoebe had to actually raise her voice to achieve silence.
“Is everybody ready?” Phoebe said.
“Yes, yes!” they chorused, first quite loud, then softer in response to Phoebe’s scolding finger.
“Come on, then.” The pack of little girls—the youngest not quite eight years old—followed us out of the dining room and into the kitchen.
This is where I took over. Phoebe might have been able to stride her way through the vastness of our rooms, but she knew nothing of the intricacies of the working part of the house. After handing her the mirror and candle, I reached into the box on the shelf above the stove and took out a match, drawing it swiftly across the striking surface attached to the wall. The sulfurous odor leant an additional air of mystery to our little adventure, and the “girls let out a spontaneous collective gasp and shiver at the ordinary spark and light. I touched the new flame to the stub of candle Phoebe held, then brought the match to my lips to blow it out.
“No,” Phoebe said, her tone insistent enough to stop me.
“You can light the other candles off this one,” I said, not happy about being in a power struggle in front of these younger girls.
“Each candle must have its own flame.” Her voice took on a deep, earthy quality, and I could sense the excited shivers of my younger cousins. I, however, was not impressed.
“It’s going to burn my fingers.”
“Only if we waste time arguing about it.”
“So we’ll stop arguing.” I gave a decisive snap of my wrist, extinguishing the flame. The only light in the kitchen came from the candle Phoebe held close to her face, her pale skin now ghostly, her blond hair transparent. She narrowed her perpetually pink-rimmed eyes to angry slits.
“You’re going to ruin everything.” She shouldered in close so the other cousins wouldn’t hear.
“We shouldn’t be doing this anyway, and you know it,” I said, matching her tone. “Mother would skin us all alive if she knew.”
“That’s why nobody is going to tell her.” She slowly turned and faced the whole group. “Nobody’s going to tell anyone.” The cousins took a collective step back, twelve wide eyes nodding in pale faces. Then she turned directly to me. “Now, what can we use to break the mirror?”
“Isn’t that bad luck?” I asked.
“Only if you believe it is.”
“I got this for my birthday.”
Phoebe leaned in close. “Listen, Belinda, you chicken out on me now, and I’ll march right upstairs, wake your mother, and tell her this was all your idea.”
I believed her threat, so I snatched the candle out of her hand and used it to light my search for any leftover tea towel and some heavy utensil not yet confiscated by a needy neighbor. I quickly found a scrap left crumpled on top of the counter after being used to wipe it clean, and a rusty potato masher left to languish in a drawer.
I offered these to Phoebe, who took them with the solemn air of a presiding priestess. As the girls craned to see over her shoulder, she placed the mirror on the kitchen counter, covered it with the tea towel, and with one decisive
whack
of the potato peeler’s handle, produced the distinctive sound of broken glass. We all jumped back at that moment, as if expecting the shards to fly straight into our faces, but surged forward again when Phoebe removed the towel to reveal the broken surface of the mirror. She gingerly poked around and handed me the largest piece.
“For your soul and your soul mate,” Phoebe said in that eerie voice she seemed to have affected just for this evening. She repeated the gift and the incantation until each—even the youngest—held a sharp-sided piece of mirrored glass. “Now, whoever goes first will have to be very, very brave. I’m sixteen, the oldest, but I can’t go because I’m holding”—she looked pointedly at me—“the first flame.”
“So Belinda’s next,” my cousins chorused, pointing slender white fingers at me.
“No! I, um, I gave the sacrifice of the looking glass.” I tried to sound as eerily authoritative as Phoebe. “In fact, I can choose not to participate at all.”
Before Phoebe could argue, my cousin Ida—just a month younger than I—stepped forward, holding out her candle stub. “I’ll go.”
“Very well,” Phoebe said, squaring herself in front of Ida. “But remember, you must follow the instructions exactly.”.
Ida nodded.
“First, light your candle.” Ida touched the black wick of her tallow stub to the flame. “You must stand on the top step, with your back to the cellar, and say, ‘I descend into the darkness to see the face of my true love.’”
We all shivered at the word
darkness.
“Then,” Phoebe continued, “you walk down the steps, backwards, to symbolize that you are able to trust yourself. You mustn’t try to steady your steps by clinging to the wall, or else you will never fall in love. Hold the candle and mirror in front of you. Do not look down, or your husband will find an early grave. Do not look into the flame, or your true love’s eyes will burn for another. You must look only into your own eyes, the reflection you see by the light of the candle. In this way, you are looking into your very soul.”
By the time she finished speaking, her voice was a mere whisper, and we all might have stood there in our little semicircle until dawn if Augustine, the littlest one of all, hadn’t piped up to ask, “Then what?”
“Then,” Phoebe continued, her voice even deeper, “when you know you are on the cellar floor, without taking your eyes off your reflection, blow the candle out!”
We gasped.
“In that split second, before everything goes completely dark, you will see the face of your true love reflected in the glass.”
All of us, Phoebe included, burst into nervous giggles. When we had sufficiently hushed ourselves, Phoebe asked Ida if she was ready to take her journey down the steps.
“Yes,” Ida whispered. She held her lit candle in front of her and walked toward the cellar door. It was closed but not locked, and there was an unspoken understanding that I was the one who should pull it open. Our candles illuminated only the top two steps; after that it was a dark, gaping maw
“You don’t have to do this if you don’t want to,” I told Ida, looking into her wide, staring eyes.
“We all promised we would,” Phoebe said in that bossy tone nobody ever seemed to have the will to fight against.
“I’m fine,” Ida said. She positioned herself at the edge of the top step against a canvas of black and took a deep breath. “I descend into the darkness to see the face of my true love.”
Step by careful step, she drew away from us. We all gathered at the doorway, so close we could each feel the heartbeat of another. Nobody said a word, and Ida’s gaze never left its target. She grew smaller and smaller, the darkness seeming to crowd around her, then finally she stopped. We heard the sharp intake of her breath, and at once the tiny flame that revealed her to us was gone, and Ida was consumed.
Silence, and then a voice from the abyss. “I saw him!”
The girls nearly threw themselves down the stairs, exhaling the common breath we all held. For the briefest moment, I doubted my own disbelief, wondering if there might be something to this voodoo folderol that my cousin Phoebe had roped us all into. I made my way to the front of the crowd, cupped my hand to my mouth and said, “Who’d you see?”
“Michael Foster!”
Phoebe caught my eye and sent me a look of smug confirmation, but I was nowhere near convinced. Cousin Ida had been talking about Michael Foster in her letters to me for at least three years. His father owned a textile mill, which Michael would surely inherit. I met him once when we went up to visit; his hair stood on end like porcupine spikes and his hands were softer than mine, but Ida had her heart and mind set on marrying him. I would have been more surprised if she
hadn’t
seen his face in the glass.
Ida’s supernatural success infused all the girls with anticipation—except Augustine, who, being not quite eight years old, insisted she was too little to have a true love.
The honor went to Lillian, who had just turned thirteen, but had the face and figure of a much older girl. She and her family lived twenty miles away, and Mother often said she was glad, because Lillian had all the earmarks of a girl who would grow up too fast, and a girl like that could ruin the reputation of an entire family.
As Lillian poised herself at the top of the stairs, saying, “I descend into the darkness to see the face of my true love,” Phoebe elbowed me in the ribs and muttered something about being certain Lillian had descended into darkness before, causing me to giggle and draw a reproachful glare from the other girls waiting their turn. When her little light extinguished below, we once again leaned forward, waiting.
“I definitely saw someone,” Lillian said, “but I couldn’t make out the face clearly. He had curly hair, though.”
“Maybe it’s someone you haven’t met yet,” Ida’s voice chimed in from the darkness.
“Maybe there’s just too many for the fates to choose from,” Phoebe said, and all of us upstairs laughed.
Next were the twins—first Violet, then Virginia—twelve years old and identical with the exception of the scars each one sported after an agreed-upon wounding to establish separate identities. Violet swore she saw a distinct face in the glass, but refused to divulge a name until Virginia had descended. Nobody was surprised to learn that both girls saw the same face—some boy named Virgil who worked as a day laborer on a neighboring farm. The ensuing squabble might have lasted until dawn if a mysterious scuffle hadn’t brought it to an abrupt halt.
Then came Rachel, eleven, a levelheaded girl who must have shared my skepticism about the night’s events. When she delivered her line about descending into the darkness, she did so in a warbled falsetto, dragging out the word “loooooove” for at least the first three steps. When she hit the bottom and doused her candle, she swore she’d seen the face of Thomas Jefferson.
That left only Phoebe, me, and little Augustine at the top of the cellar steps, and when Phoebe tried to maneuver the girl into her starting position, she was met with a swift kick in the shin.
“I said I didn’t want to!” Augustine stamped her little foot and settled her face in a determined pout.
“And I said you have to. Otherwise, you’ll be left up here all alone in the kitchen. Is that what you want? To be the only one in here when Uncle Robert comes down to see what all the ruckus is?”
Phoebe’s Uncle Robert was my father, and the thoughts of facing him in a dark kitchen in the middle of the night with a bevy of would-be witches tucked away in the cellar was not a soothing one. It was some kind of miracle that he hadn’t heard us at all—yet.
“What if we let Augustine go down face forward?” I nudged Phoebe. “Just let her keep her candle lit, walk down the stairs holding on to the wall, and join everybody else at the bottom.”
“Yeah,” Augustine said. “I don’t want no true love anyway. Boys stink.”
Phoebe rolled her eyes at the grand concession. “Just go.”
I watched little Augustine make her way down the stairs, feeling guilty for having brought her into this mess. I also knew there was no way that little girl would be able to keep this a secret for long, and I was glad to know that I would be deep into the Great Plains before she cracked.
“All right, Belinda,” Phoebe said, holding out her candle to me. “Now it’s your turn.”
“Ah, Phoebe, you know I don’t believe any of this. It’s … it’s evil, it’s witchcraft.”
“It’s not
witchcraft,”
Phoebe said, her voice full of disdain. “It’s just, it’s—”
“Wrong. It’s just wrong. It’s sinful.”
“So you’re perfectly fine with letting the rest of us sin, but you’re too good?”
“You’re welcome to do what you want, but I can’t.”
“You promised.”
“I didn’t know what it would be like. I thought it would just be like the apple peels.” That was another of Phoebe’s favorites: peeling off a strip of apple skin and seeing what letter it formed when dropped into a dish of sugar. Mine was always a J; hers a
C
.
“This isn’t any different,” Phoebe said. “Besides, if you don’t believe, it won’t even work for you. It will just be a walk down some stairs.”
Compliance seemed to be the only way to bring this wretched night to a close, so comply I did. I tipped my wick into Phoebe’s flame and stood at the mouth of the cellar. “Idescendintothedarknesstoseethefaceofmytruelove.”
I could have cheated, could have stumbled into the wall and used it to guide me down, could have cast my eyes down to follow my feet, but once I saw my reflection, illuminated by that small flame, I had an overwhelming desire to know if what the other girls experienced was real. The piece of glass I held was almost a perfect triangle, curved slightly along its longest side, and it afforded me a full view of just one eye obscured by a few strands of long, loose hair. I kept my focus on that eye, seeing not my soul, but something completely detached. A tiny flame dancing in a deep, dark orb.
The cellar steps were rough and cool beneath my bare feet—a marked change from the soft carpets of the house and the smooth finish of the kitchen floor. I put one foot gingerly down behind me, fought for balance, then brought down the other. I told myself I was just playing a game, appeasing my cousins, participating in a ritual as harmless as tossing spilled salt over my shoulder.