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Authors: Catherynne M Valente

Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Fiction

The Girl Who Circumnavigated Fairyland In a Ship of Her Own Making (18 page)

BOOK: The Girl Who Circumnavigated Fairyland In a Ship of Her Own Making
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“What a dear heart you have, girl,” said Nor. “Of course, that’s how she’ll catch you, in the end.”

“How did you--”

“I know shoes, little one. And I know
those
shoes.” The Nasnas shrugged helplessly. “I can’t be late to work, you know. Other beasts in the world have troubles.”

Nor slid her finger into the glowing seam between them and the two popped apart. Not bowed to her sister and bounded away. Nor punched her card in the machine near the silver door of the factory.

September let the half-lady go. She walked back over the heath with the little black flowers waving. Down at the beach, she wriggled out of her dress again and strung up her sail. She pushed off with her wrench into the current and watched the island dwindle.

“I’m not one of them,” she said to herself. “No matter what they say. I don’t work at some awful old factory, and my shadow isn’t half myself.”

But she thought of Ell and Saturday, lost at the bottom of the world, bound up in the dark. And some part of her hurt, a part which had been joined to them as if along a glowing seam.

 

#

 

 

 

 

Local Thunder
Chapter XVI: Until We Stop

 

In Which September Feeds Herself, By Gruesome Means

 

“I
shall
catch a fish, just see how I do!” cried September to no one but the moon. The moon, for his part, smiled behind one white hand and tried to look very serious.

But September had been thinking about the problem of a hook, and when she had her lock of hair tied up to the wrench again, she suddenly seized the hilt of the wrench and brought it banging down on the curlicued head of one of the silver sceptres. The wrench, eager for something to do, quite crushed the wand’s head, and bits of metal flew over the deck of the raft. September picked out a likely shard and knotted it into her long, braided strands of hair.

“Now for bait,” she said, “which I’ve none of
at all.”

September suddenly cursed herself, that she had not thought to save a few berries from the beach.

“No points for ought to have,” she sighed.

September pushed the makeshift hook into the pad of her thumb until she could not help but yelp in pain. Blood welled up, and she rubbed the hook in it, all over, until it shone red. Her eyes watered, but she did not cry. The sound of her stomach was louder than the pain of her thumb. Slowly, she sunk the bloody hook into the water, and waited.

Fishing, as many of you know, is a very tedious activity. Fish are stubborn and do not like to be killed and eaten. One has to stay very still, so still one almost falls asleep, and even then no fish might come. Even the moon busied itself elsewhere, watching a pine forest full of martens and harpies chase each other round in circles. The stars moved overhead, racing on their long silver track, and still September sat, her line in the water, patient as death.

Finally, the line went taut and tugged beneath the mild waves. September leapt up. “What have I caught?” she cried with excitement. “What will it be? Why, this is like Christmas, when you’ve no idea what might be in the packages!”

September hauled hard on the wrench, and fell backwards as her prize flew up onto the deck. It was pink, the very color of a pink crayon, and its eyes bulged huge and emerald. It gaped pitifully, suddenly forced to contend with air instead of water. September felt sorry for it, all in a rush.

“I know you don’t want to be eaten,” she said wretchedly. “And I don’t want to eat you! But it’s been two days now and I must have something!”

The fish gaped.

“If only you were a magic fish, you could grant a wish, and I could have more of the lovely spriggans’ feast, or Ell’s radishes.”

The fish sucked at the air but found no sea to breathe there.

“I am so sorry,” she whispered finally. “I don’t want to chew up another creature just to keep on for another day! You’re alive. But I’m alive, too! Alive doesn’t much care about anything but staying that way. Just like you meant to eat my blood, and that’s why you were caught. I suppose I ought to stop talking. I don’t think you are a magic fish.”

September did not know anything about killing fish, really. Her mother and grandfather usually did that part. But she could think logically enough. She brought the hilt of the wrench down hard on the pink fish’s head. She shut her eyes at the last moment, though, and missed. Twice more and she had it, though she quite wished she hadn’t. However, September knew that was not the worst part. You couldn’t just bite into a fish. The guts had to come out. Wincing, not wanting to watch what her hands were doing, September took up the hook and brought it down on the fish’s soft pink belly. The skin was tougher than she thought, and she had to saw at it. Her hands got quite soaked in blood, which looked black in the moonlight. Finally, she got the belly open and reached inside, where it was warm and slimy and she was crying by then, big, hot tears rolling down her face and into the ruined fish. With one pull she hauled the fish’s organ-parts out and threw them overboard, sobbing on her knees over her supper.

You mustn’t think poorly of her for crying. Up until that moment, fish had mainly come into her life cooked filleted and salted with lemon juice on top. It is a hard thing, to be starving and alone with no one to show you how to do it right. She got such sprays of blood on her face, and on her knees.

September had no way to cook it. The sodden smoking jacket wanted to make fire for her, but that was beyond its power. The moon wished her a hearth, but had to content himself with watching the young girl, kneeling on her raft as the sea rushed by around her as she pulled raw fish from the bone in strips. September ate slowly, deliberately. Some instinct told her that she had to have the blood, too, for at sea water is so scarce. It took her until morning to eat the fish. She wept all the while, a terrible circuit, all the water she drank from the fish pouring out again.

 

Just before dawn, September spied the shark’s fin. Something deep in the ancestral memories of humans quakes in sight of a shark fin, even if that human grew up in Omaha and never saw a shark in all her days. It rose dark and sharp in the pearly gloaming just before the sun peeked up. The fin made a long, lazy circle around September’s raft. The wind was utterly calm. September’s dress hung slack on the Spoon-mast. Little ripples glinted in the water, and the current moved her along, but it had been slow going for several hours, and September had not slept. But now she was awake, and the stars were winking out one by one, and in the distance the unmistakable triangle of a shark’s head circled slowly, unconcerned.

This sort of thing happens in pirate stories
, September remembered.
As soon as someone goes overboard, voila! Sharks
.
But I am not a pirate. But then, pirates are often eaten by sharks. So perhaps I shall not have a pirate’s luck with them, if I do not have a cutlass or a feathered hat?

It circled closer, and September could see its shadow in the water. It did not seem
huge
, but certainly big enough. Perhaps it was a baby, and would leave her alone.

It circled closer. September scrunched up into the center of the raft, as far as she could get from water on all sides, which was not very far at all. Finally, it circled so close to the raft that it jostled the sceptres, and September cried out fearfully. She held the wrench ready to whack the shark as hard as she might, her knuckles white on the handle.
If they all want to call it a sword
, she thought,
I’ll use it as one!
She was quite wild with terror.

“Please,” she whispered. “Don’t eat me. I’m sorry I ate the fish.”

The shark swam lazily around the raft. It rolled up a little, showing its black belly--for the shark was all black, with a few wild golden stripes running down the side, and its eyes were golden, too, rolling up out of the water to stare mercilessly at September.

“Why are you sorry?” it said softly, its voice rasping and rough. “I eat fish. That’s what fish are for.”

“I daresay you think that’s what little girls are for, too.”

The shark blinked. “Some of them.”

“And who eats you?”

“Bigger fish.”

The shark kept swimming around the raft, rolling up towards the breaking surf to speak.

“Are you going to eat me?”

“You ought to stop talking about eating. It’s making me hungry.”

September shut her mouth with a little snap. “You’re making me dizzy, with all your swimming in circles,” she whispered.

“I can’t stop,” the shark rasped. “If I stop I shall sink and die. That’s the way I’m made. I have to keep going, always, and even when I get where I’m going I’ll have to keep on. That’s living.”

“Is it?”

“If you’re a shark.”

September rubbed at the blood on her knee. “Am I a shark?” she said faintly.

“You don’t look like one, but I’m not a scientist.”

“Am I dreaming? This feels like a dream.”

“I don’t think so. I could bite you, to see if it hurts.”

“No, thank you.” September looked out at the flat gray water, all severe and stark in the sunrise. “I have to keep going,” she whispered.

“Yes.”

“I have to keep going, so that I can keep going after that, forever and ever.”

“Not forever.”

“Why haven’t you eaten me, shark? I ate the fish, I ought to be eaten.”

“It doesn’t work like that.”

“But you’re a shark. Eating is what you do.”

“No. I swim. I roar. I race. I sleep. I dream. I know what Fairyland looks like from underneath, all her dark places. And I have a daughter. Who might have died, but for a girl in an orange dress who traded away her shadow. A shadow who might have known not to mourn over fish.”

September stared. “The Pooka girl?”

The shark rolled over entirely in the water, her huge fins rearing up out of the waves and slicing down again.

“We all just keep moving, September. We keep moving until we stop.”

The shark broke off and plowed through a sudden, heavy swell that soaked September in its crashing. Just as she dove under the surf, September could see the great black tail shiver into legs, disappearing beneath the violet sea.

#

 

 

 

 

Local Thunder
Chapter XVII: One Hundred Years Old

 

In Which September Discovers a Great Amount of Old Furniture and Finds Herself in a Very Dark Place, With Only a Little Light

 

This time, September saw the island coming. It glimmered on the edge of the horizon, fitfully green and golden. In the evening of her fifth day at sea, September steered her raft towards it. She longed to feel land beneath her again, to drink real water, to eat bread. She fell gratefully onto warm sand, rolling in it like a puppy, for pleasure. She found several coconuts strewn over the beach and cracked one in a single blow against a stone.

The sea makes a girl strong, you know.

Slurping the watery milk and crunching the meat of it, September dismantled her raft and dressed, making sure to tie the sash of the smoking jacket tight around her waist. She began to walk inland in hopes of better food. Surely she was near the Lonely Gaol by now. Surely she could spare a moment for lunch, if it meant not having to go through the dreadful ordeal of fishing again.

But there was no village in the interior of that grassy little island. No sweet houses, their chimneys smoking away. No herald’s square, no ringing churchbell. All she found was junk.

The beach-sand gave way to long, whispering sea-grass, and in that long meadow lay a tremendous number of odd things, as though it were a garbage-yard. Old sandals, tea kettles, broken umbrellas, clay jars, torn silk screens, cowboy’s spurs, smashed clocks, lanterns, rosaries, rusted swords.

“Hello?” September called. The wind answered, buffeting the grass, but no one else.

“What a lonely place! I believe someone has forgotten to clean up after himself…for a good while, I suppose. Ah, well, perhaps I shall find a new pair of shoes…”

“I think
not
!”

September jumped half out of her skin, quite ready to run back to her raft and never make eyes at an island again. But her curiosity defeated her good sense. She peered over the grass to see who the voice might belong to. All she could see was an old pair of straw sandals with a bit of leather wrapped around the sole.

As she tiptoed over to get a better look, two old yellow eyes opened in the heels of the shoes.

“Who said you could have me? Not me and I say whose feet I have to smush up against all day, I should rightly think!”

“I…I beg your pardon! I didn’t know you were alive!”

“Well that’s folk with feet for you. Always thinking of themselves.”

Some of the other bits of junk crept closer to September: the swords unfolded long steely arms and the jars sprouted thick, muscled feet. The silk screens accordioned their way to her, the tea kettles turned their spouts toward the earth and spat steam until they popped upward. A great orange lantern floated on the wind, glowing slightly, and from beneath it a green tassel hung, fluttering. A great clatter sounded as the garbage gathered around.

“Mr. Shoes…”

“My name is Hannibal, if you don’t mind.”

“Hannibal…I have read a great many books, and I have met spriggans and pooka and even a Wyverary, but I cannot begin to imagine what you are!”

“WHO!” bellowed the shoes, hopping upright, straps flapping in indignation. “'What' is an
indirect dative
reserved for
things
. I am alive! I am a WHO. Or a whom, if you must. And we are Tsukumogami.”

September smiled uncertainly. The word meant no more to her than Mr. Map’s
Fftthit.
A pair of spurs whirred and clicked on spindly spidery legs.

“We’re a hundred years old,” they said, as though that explained it all.

The great orange lantern, which September could not help comparing to a pumpkin, flashed briefly for attention. Slowly, gracefully, golden, fiery letters began to write themselves on the papery surface of the lamp:

 

You use the things in your house

and think nothing of them. It leaves us bitter.

 

September put her hands on her hips. “I’m sorry! I didn’t know! If a couch just sits there, looking like a couch, I can’t be expected to know it isn’t one.”

 

That’s the trouble.

But when a household object turns one hundred years old,

it wakes up. It becomes alive. It gets a name and griefs and
ambitions and unhappy love affairs. It is not always a good bargain. Sometimes we cannot forget the sorrows and joys of the house we lived in. Sometimes we cannot remember them.

Tsukumogami are one hundred years old. They are awake.

 

“All my house…just sleeping until their birthdays?” September bit her lip, and looked out on the lonely grass. “That’s strange and sad. I often lose things, and break them, long before they turn one hundred. But…why haven’t you any houses of your own? Or a village?”

 

We spent a century closed up in four walls and a roof.

We are claustrophobic.

We prefer the sun and the wind and the sea,

though it bites some of us,

who are made of metal, and tears papery hearts.

 

“How old are you?” snorted Hannibal, the pair of straw sandals.

“I’m eleven, sir.”

A great consternation went up: kettles shrieked, swords rattled, shoes stomped.

“Well, that’s no good
at all
!” Hannibal yelled. “Never trust anyone under one hundred!” The throng of Tsukumogami rustled agreement. “I’m afraid you’ll have to leave. Folk under one hundred can’t be borne--they’re not mature enough. Not seasoned. They haven’t seen grandchildren come and go, or been left to gather dust in the winter while their family swans off to the sea for holiday! They’re unpredictable! They could go off at any second! All caught up in
walking around
and
doing things
!”

“Eleven!” sniffed the spurs. “Why, that’s barely fifty!”

“It’s not fifty at all,” snapped a silk screen. “It’s not even twenty. She might be a revolutionary! Young people go in for that sort of thing.”

The orange lantern flashed:

 

If she were a revolutionary I think she would have a rifle…

 

No one paid the lantern any attention.

“I certainly don’t want to be a bother,” demurred September. ”I'll go, I will. Only, I wonder if you might have something I could eat? It is a harsh life, at sea.”

“No!” snapped Hannibal, snapping his straps. “Get out! Young cretin!”

September knew when she was not wanted. At least, when someone hollered at her to get out, she could guess as much. But she was wounded--so many folk had been so kind to her in Fairyland. Her face burned with shame in the face of the cast-off furniture. But then, perhaps in the hinterlands, in the wild islands, the Marquess had not yet had a chance to force niceness upon them. She turned to go--and oh, she oughtn’t to have turned her back on them! But perhaps it was not her fault. Perhaps it was the sudden, trouble-making breeze that came along and drew aside the tall grass, just far enough that the flash of September’s black shoes shone through the blades.

Several broken bells clanged an alarm, and Hannibal stomped after her like a muskox. He tackled her, the soft smack of straw sandals slapped her back and knocked her forward.

“Shoes!” he crowed from atop September’s body. “Black shoes, ahoy!”

“Get off me!” yelled September, struggling under the sandals and trying to grab at them.

“Told you, told you! Even ninety-niners are suspect. Eleven? Why, that’s as good as saying:
wicked and up to no good
!”

“I’m
not
up to no good! I’m trying to rescue my friends!”

“Don’t care, don’t care!” howled the sandals. “Grab her, Swords! Don’t be too careful with your blades, either! Down the well she goes!”

Cold, sharp hands grabbed her arms. Kettle steam scalded her feet until she screamed, scrambling to get up. The Swords’ grip cut into her arms. They hauled her over the grass while Hannibal giggled and sang along with his compatriots.

“She’ll reward us, you’ll see!” he assured them. “We’ll have our own young kettles for tea, and not have to brew up the earl grey in Mildred anymore!

“She?” cried September. “Who told you to do this? Was it the Marquess?”

“We don’t share state secrets with youngsters!”

The throng stopped suddenly short as a black hole opened up in the earth. It was lined in stone, all the way down. September could not see its bottom, but she thought she could hear the sea down there, splashing darkly.

“No!” she wept, trying to tear away from that terrible darkness. The Swords cut deeper, and pain flooded her vision. Her skin was slippery with blood.

The orange lantern bobbed in front of her, just over the pit. The lovely handwriting flowed over its face.

 

The Marquess said to look for a girl

wearing beautiful black shoes. I’m sorry.

 

“And do what?” shrieked September.

 

Kill her.

 

The Swords threw September down into the black.

She fell a long way.

 

At first, September was not sure she was awake. She saw no difference, whether she opened her eyes or no. Slowly, she felt the cold wetness of sitting in several inches of seawater. Her bleeding, she thought, had stopped, at least mostly stopped. But she could not move her arms, and she suspected her leg was broken. It surely was not supposed to bend that way beneath her. The cold water numbed her all over, and softly, quietly, September cried in the dark.

“I want to go home,” she said shakily to the dark. And she meant it, for the first time. Not as the lie which got her into Fairyland, but the real and honest truth. Her lips trembled. Her teeth chattered. “It’s all so scary here, Mom,” she whispered. “I miss you.”

September put her cheek to the cold stone wall. It was fuzzy and wet with slime. She tried to think of Saturday, pressing his cheek against a dire wall like this one, waiting for her, believing she would come for him and smash his cage, as she had before. She tried to think of Ell’s warm bulk, curled against her in the dark.

“Help!” she yelled hoarsely. “Oh, help…”

But no help came. September saw the day come pale and blue over the rim of the well. It seemed very far away. But the thin sunlight gave some courage. She tried to fill her mind with the scent of Lye’s golden bath, fireplaces crackling and warm cinnamon and autumn leaves crunching underfoot. She put all of her weight onto her good leg, and pushed up out of the water--only her body buckled underneath her and she fell back down, gasping for air.

Some time later, a soft thing brushed her face. September could not tell time at the bottom of the well, but it must have been night, because she could not see what it was. Blindly, she reached out. Orange light flooded the well. Sinking down to her came the lantern, beautiful and round as a pumpkin. Its tassel hung down below it, and tied to the tassel was a huge green fruit. September snatched at it and tore it open with her teeth, slurping the pink juice and devouring the meat. She did not say thank you--she was quite beyond manners. The lantern watched her eat. When she had done, September panted with the exertion of eating, looking wildly about.

Very slowly and gingerly, as though it was afraid to be caught out at the deed, a slim hand rose up out of the top of the lantern. And then another. The pale greenish hands clutched the lantern-sides and pulled up the orange globe--so that two girl’s legs could stretch out beneath it. September waited, but no head came.

“Please help me get out,” whispered September.

Golden writing spooled out across the surface of the lamp.

I cannot.

BOOK: The Girl Who Circumnavigated Fairyland In a Ship of Her Own Making
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