Read The May Queen Murders Online
Authors: Jude,Sarah
their hooves, the points of their ears, and even the spray from their
noses as they huffed.
“Let’s go riding, Ivy.”
“It ain’t safe,” I said. “I’ll be in trouble if my parents find out.”
“You won’t be alone. I’ll be with you.”
He had a point. Veil nickered at me, eager to nuzzle my hair and
skirt no matter how Rook shooed him, as we pulled out our reins
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from the tack room. I clipped Whimsy’s reins to her halter. Her head
bowed. She knew things were different. Not just with Journey. With
me. That I missed a piece of me. A tide of sadness swept inward on
me, and I propped myself up against my horse, my hands on her
withers, my face in my forearms. She was strong and wouldn’t let me
sink no matter how great the weight.
“The first time I rode Veil, it was almost impossible to make my-
self get on,” Rook said. “I kept thinkin’ ’bout Journey and how you
and I rode off together that last time. I’d convinced myself the same
thing would happen to any horse I rode, but it hasn’t happened yet. I
tell myself it won’t happen again.”
I needed to hear that.
We rode through the fields. Clouds rolled in from the southwest,
and Rook tipped his head back as if expecting rain. There’d be none.
The leaves didn’t flip over.
I knew what Rook wanted to do. He was taking me riding because
he knew how much I loved being out with Whimsy, and I hadn’t rid-
den her in far too long. Sitting on my horse’s back, feeling her move
beneath me, her body and mine as one, I needed that freedom, that
forgetting.
Rook sped up Veil’s pace to match Whimsy’s until we rode be-
side each other. He was so at ease with his horse. It was the simple
things — the flex of his thighs, the tightness of his stomach, things I
couldn’t see in myself — that I enjoyed watching in him.
He halted Veil and watched Whimsy and me trot, every part of me
bouncing. “View’s nice here, Ivy.”
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“Oh, shut up.”
“You’re doin’ it on purpose,” he said, and kicked Veil to catch up
with Whimsy. We both laughed. Riding with him felt good, and —
Heather was gone.
How dare I feel good and enjoy that moment when I had no idea
where she was?
“Ivy,” Rook called. “Hey! Did you hear me?”
I saw him again. “I’m sorry. What?”
“We should water the horses,” he said. “Denial Mil ’s up ahead. We
can stop there.”
We guided the horses to the water. The mill groaned as the wheel
turned, a constant whirring against the liquid babble spilling over
rocks. The river was shallow, the lack of rain during April and a dry
winter speeding the shores dry. Only the middle had any depth.
Shoals submerged in rainier seasons formed a rocky bridge across
the banks. I unclipped Whimsy’s reins before she lowered her head
to drink while I stooped to admire a tan snail shell in the dirt. Lav-
ender wisps and a hint of green spun over the shel .
Rook had Veil’s reins in his hands when he joined me. “You’re not
real y here, are you?”
“What do you mean?” I asked.
“Most of the time, you seem far away. I don’t know if it’s ’cause you
always watch people or you’re thinkin’. Sometimes it’s like watching
a ghost haunt the same place the same way day after day. You hold
back, and it makes me wonder if you’re ever real y in the moment.”
I lived a guarded life. There was trust in the shadows.
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“I don’t know how to be me right now,” I admitted. “Heather al-
ways pushes me when I pull back.”
Rook’s hand rested on the sway in my back. I pressed my body
against his — legs to legs, his front to mine, arms wrapping around
me. His forehead rested on mine, and his glasses slipped down his
nose so my eyelashes blinked against the lenses. “Sometimes when
you hold back, what you hang on to winds up hurting you.”
I closed my eyes, shivered while Rook’s fingers traveled to my
hips. I didn’t want to hold back with him. I wanted to know what it
was to sweep away all fetters restraining me. The scruff on his chin
scratched my forehead. Warm air swirled above us while cool water
misted my ankles and, higher up, beneath my skirt.
All of it was real. Right then. That second.
I circled my arms around him hard, because the harder I hugged,
the looser the knot in my throat grew. How could I like how he held
me when half of me was hollow?
“Rook?” I choked on his name.
“What?”
“I don’t want this to stop. This moment.”
He scrunched my skirt at my hips. The urge to cry out — in sor-
row, in confusion, in craving him — ballooned in my chest. It came
out instead as a gasp when he lowered his face into the curve of my
neck. As if awaiting my cue, he didn’t kiss me, and I didn’t know if I
wanted him to or if I wanted something else.
I missed Heather.
I missed the way things were before.
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Don’t stop.
I listened to Rook’s breathing, the trickle of water washing the
river stones. I listened to the creak of the mil ’s wheel as it turned and
the course of blood sloshing through my veins.
Down in the river’s valley, we became entangled and rested on a
piece of limestone. I brought my mouth to his. His tongue flicked
mine, his hands on my back and then lower. I traced along his shoul-
ders, the muscles from working fields, and yet there was softness to
him. That softness didn’t stay the longer we kissed. He pulled back
and looked around.
“What is it?” I asked.
“Making sure we’re alone,” he said.
“And what would you do if someone saw us?”
He smiled. “Pretend I was saving you from drowning.”
“I’d like it if you gave me mouth-to-mouth.”
His laugh was hushed but cut short because I seized him, knock-
ing his glasses askew as I kissed him. I took his face in my hands and
opened my mouth to him. I didn’t care how wet or messy it became.
I didn’t care if our teeth knocked together. I wanted him to take ev-
erything that hurt, to lick it from me, and replace it with
something
else. My fingers traced the buttons of his gray shirt, popping each
one open, one by one, until I came to the lowest button. He inhaled
and reached for my hand.
“If you don’t want to do this, it’s okay.”
But I did. My intention held firm. “I want this, Rook.”
He lost the shirt I’d unbuttoned and spread it out on the rock as a
makeshift blanket. I lay back and invited him to climb on top of me.
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My fingers ran along his arms to his shoulders damp with sweat, and
his mouth wandered from my lips to my neck. His trousers hardened
against my skirt, enough to take away my breath. It brought out a
curiosity in me, and when I reached down to unbutton his pants and
touch him there, he moved against my hand for more.
I wanted him. He wanted me.
That way.
His lips dressed my neck with gentle kisses until he came to the
col ar of my dress, and it was a new kind of thrill as his fingers eased
the top off my shoulder to kiss me there, too. I could lie under the
sun for hours with him kissing me like that, just enough pressure,
lips so warm that I shivered when the air cooled where he’d been.
I understood why Heather wouldn’t tell me who she was with in
the stable.
Sharing it ruined the delicacy of the two of you.
Rook’s fingers slid up the inside of my thigh, higher yet. I held my
breath, shuddering because he scared me. And amazed me. How I’d
known him my entire life but never in this way. I could never go back
to knowing him before this.
I slipped down the top of my dress so it rested at my waist, pulling
back my hair for him to see everything. Though I liked my shape, I
wondered what he thought of it. I also liked his smile, his dimpled
cheeks, especial y as he looked at my body. Heather’s necklace of
found things slid between my breasts. His hands moved across the
soft part of my abdomen before inching higher.
I studied him kissing my tummy. It’d make a good drawing, him
pushing up my skirt, his lips treading along my thighs. I tipped back
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my head, feeling all the ways he kissed me, listening. So much sound,
so much shifting around inside me. His mouth stayed gentle as I
rested my head with white sunlight in my eyes, and I rode higher
with each kiss.
Every breath came out shuddered, yet the elation cracked my
heart.
I smothered the sobs, covering my grimaced mouth. I had to hide
it from him, not because I didn’t like what he did — I did, I wanted it
— but rather the void in me ripped open, fresh and endless.
I reached down to touch his hair, my voice crackling to whisper,
“Stop.”
Rook raised up from my skirt. He stared at me with spooked eyes,
pants hanging open. “Ivy? Are you okay?”
He hoisted me up to sitting and lifted my dress’s top to cover me
again. Then I must’ve seemed too prickly to touch. Nothing would
help me except to cry, and Rook gave me that. He buttoned up his
pants, slid into his shirt, and focused on the water spinning past us.
After a bit, he said, “Anytime you say no, I’ll listen. If it’s too fast,
I’ll back off. I’m . . . sorry.”
My eyes stung, hot, grainy, and liquid.
“It’s n-n-not you,” I croaked. “Why? Why right now? Why does
everything lead me b-back to feeling so lost and ruined?”
Worry, sadness, anger, everything wailed from my throat. My face
was hot, my hair tangled, and I hated how the wind dried the tears
pooling beneath my eyes.
Rook’s thumb brushed my cheek. “Let’s get you outta here.”
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Too tired to move, I shut my eyes, but that only made all the
sounds louder.
Pulse pounding. Rook shushing me. A crow squawked three
times.
I breathed. More noise. The rustle of my skirt falling back over my
legs. Water traveling over pebbles. Tree frogs peeping in the woods.
The mill was silent.
“It’s not turning,” I said.
“The mill?” Rook asked. “Maybe the water’s too low.”
“No, I heard it when we came here.”
I wiped my face and shook off everything surging out of me,
locked it back in my cel s. The wooden wheel had halted, or had it?
The bottom of the wheel pitched back and forth as if trying to turn,
but caught.
I hopped from one rock on the shoal to next, lifting my skirt out of
the water, and Rook jumped behind me until we reached the opposite
shore. Together, we trekked along the bank where the absent water
left a scooped-out hollow plagued by roots and algae-covered rocks.
Too dark with shadow and thick with mud, something had wedged
itself beneath the wheel. I remained on the shore as he wound his
long legs around the wheel’s scaffolding, slopping through the water
until he was higher than knee-deep.
“You see anything?” I asked.
He bent over, shielding his glasses from the sun. “I’m not sure.
There’s something stuck in the mud, I think.”
I glanced back to the horses, still drinking and oblivious. My
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tongue slicked over my lips before I gave up and followed Rook out
into the water. Cold welled around my legs, and my skirt became
heavier before billowing around me like a giant lily pad. I pushed it
behind me to stop it from becoming hooked on the wheel.
“Be careful,” I reminded Rook. “If the wheel spins while you’re
messing with it, you’ll get crushed.”
With a nod, he hung on to the scaffold, and I could see now where
he poked at a mass bobbing beneath the wheel with the driftwood.
He slipped his glasses into his pocket and with a splash, disappeared
into the water. I glanced up at the riverbank, the steep cove, and
counted.
One, two, three, four
. . .
My arms wrapped around my chest. My teeth chattered. Veil
neighed, the worried bellow horses give when something unsettles
them. A leaf swam by on the river’s surface.
If he became snagged on something. If his lungs ran out of air. If
he was swept downstream by the current.
If, if, if.
I slapped at the water, whipping around, looking for any sign of
him. He’d been underwater for too long.
“Rook?”
All was hushed. I was wading closer to the wheel when hands
grasped my wrists.
I yelped at the same time Rook broke through the river’s surface.
His breath was a sputtered mess of water and choking.
“There you are!” I cried. “What happened?”
He spun me away from Denial Mil , holding the sides of my head
so I couldn’t peek. Rivulets of water streamed down from my tem-
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ples to my cheeks where he held me. Each breath was ragged, a fight
not to scream.
“Don’t look. Ivy, whatever you do, don’t look!”
“What’s wrong?” I demanded. He coughed up more water and
tried rushing me to the shore, but I dug my heels into the silty river
bottom. “Rook, c’mon! What is it?”
“Go!” he final y managed. “Take Whimsy, and get my pops! Go
now!”
“W-what’d you see? You’re scarin’ me!”