Read The May Queen Murders Online
Authors: Jude,Sarah
“Ivy, no!”
The cold water around me met a growing cold inside me, begin-
ning in my gut and spreading down my veins. I peeled back Rook’s
fingers from my head and waded a half circle back to the water
wheel.
“Please don’t,” he begged and again sloshed with me through the
water. “You don’t wanna see that.”
But I had to see. I had to know.
Close to the wheel, I eased through the water until what appeared
to be wavy, reddish-brown marsh grass floated on the surface. My
bones hard and muscles harder, I slipped my fingers between the
grasses, except it wasn’t grass. It was wet hair. Wet curls. Soggy and
discolored from sitting in the water for days. Hair clinging to my
skin. Her May Day skirt wrapped around one of the wheel’s paddles.
My fingers pushed down beneath the water, and I felt her. The eyes
open and fringed by lashes, the straight nose, and hard pearls of her
teeth. Her lips were gone. All of her beneath the water, out of sight.
The mill wheel groaned. Heather’s body loosened and submerged
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further, yet I was stuck in the middle of the spinning water wheel.
Rook shouted, but I couldn’t understand him. One arm fished
through the wheel’s scaffold, then a leg. I held my wet skirt close
against me to keep it from snarling on the wheel. Almost free.
My head jerked, my hair knotted and pulled behind me. My head
rolled back on my neck and faced the glare of the sun overhead be-
fore I fel , my back splashing the water where there was only cold and
darkness.
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Chapter Thirteen
Terra’s fingers were all black and chewed up, and no one
was all that sure if the vultures got her or if it was that
damn Birch Markle. The devil had that boy crouchin’ over
her dead body and lickin’ the girl’s blood off his knife.
Ice water flooded my nose, my mouth. My hair clouded around my
head and over my face. Giving in to the lull of the water’s current
seemed much easier than propelling myself to the surface. The water
flowed around me until my soaked hair and skirt no longer weighed
me down — rather, I became weightless.
It was fitting in a way. To lose Heather, find her, and then lose
myself.
I could stay with her.
My fingers stretched through the water, and I turned my head.
Eyes opening to take in the murky river water. There was grit and
mud and grass, but there was also Heather’s fish-white face and con-
stel ations of freckles. Her dead head creaked on its neck, swiveling
to face me, lipless mouth forming words. Since she had no breath, no
bubbles escaped as she spoke.
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Find it.
“Find what?”
Her eyes were open, the green gone from them. Her teeth clacked
in blue-black gums.
Find it, Ivy.
My fingers bumped against hers. They felt like stumpy logs of clay,
and shreds of her skin flaked against mine.
I took hold anyway. Cousins. Almost sisters.
Together again.
"
“Help! Somebody, help me!”
The voice. It sounded like Rook, but not. He was molasses and
black earth, and this voice was jagged, full of rocks and twigs.
My cheek chilled as wind licked off water droplets. A hand cupped
my head while an arm wrapped behind my knees. “Ivy, wake up.
Please, God, no. I love you. Wake up . . .
Somebody fucking help me!
”
No. Don’t take me away.
I liked it in the water. In the dark. With Heather.
"
Cattails rustled while a horse gave an impatient stomp. My back
pressed against the shore. The underwater weightlessness vanished.
My arms, my legs, all my body was heavy, so much that if the shore
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wished to open and swallow me, it could. My mind was loosely aware
of buzzing.
“I gotta see my daughter!”
A hand pushed the hair drying across my forehead. A trail of
sludge wound down from my lips around my jaw and neck to pool
behind my ear. My eyelids crusted with sediment. Somehow, I wiped
my face enough to blink.
Sun so blinding. I flinched.
“Thank God.”
Rook sat beside me, and though I had no way of being certain, I
suspected he’d been crying. I tried to speak, but a clot of river wa-
ter forced up my throat to spill from my mouth. Rook pushed me
up and smacked my back to dislodge more. As the coughs settled, I
rubbed my nose to blot the water reeking of dirt from my face.
Horses. Denial Mil . I recalled going there with Rook and wading
in the river because the water wheel had stopped turning. Some hill-
men were examining the wheel with Flint and Jasper Denial. Near
the top of the riverside, my father rushed up to Sheriff, his cheeks
whitened. “Jay, they said Ivy’s down here. Is she —”
“We had a bad scare, but my boy got her breathin’ again. Promise
kept, Timothy. I wish I’d done better.”
Papa’s shoulders drooped. “Done better?”
Sheriff placed his hands on my father’s upper arms. I looked away
from the men, from Rook, and on the shore lay Heather. Not scream-
ing, not crying out, I crawled over to the gray girl in the red ruffled
skirt. The ruffles were tinged dingy brown, like her curls. Dark water
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beaded in her nostrils. Two silver coins covered her eyes. I knelt over
her, my hands in my lap, then on her forearm.
“Ivy?” Papa asked from behind me.
Heather’s mouth was too open, too wide without her lips. Such a
ghastly smile without any blood or color, so I ripped off my sleeve
and placed it over her face. Her shirt was stained with dark smears of
blood. She was stiff, so waxy, and chilled.
There was nothing of her magic and light. She was a muted husk
of what was once radiant. I squeezed my eyes, burying my face
against Heather’s shoulder. Tears stung my skin as they slipped down
my cheeks. My chest and throat distended with a horrible pain. The
finality of sorrow. Its wail shoved out of me to echo above the river,
and I held her closer. All the softness went out of her.
Heather was murdered.
But I’d I returned from nearly dead. To find out who did this to
her.
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Chapter Fourteen
Oh, folks ran after Birch. Jackdaw Meriweather, his boy
Jay, all them with their hounds and rifles took off after
him into the woods. Thing is, Birch always liked the woods.
He knew them. He was the woods.
My mother’s feet formed twin shadows beneath my doorway. I rec-
ognized their shape, the thickness molding her calves. Sturdy legs
held up my world that had been obliterated two days prior.
Mamie’s blanket snuggled around my shoulders, and no mat-
ter the heat outside, I couldn’t warm up. “Death-touched,” Mamie
would’ve said.
When I was smal , a boy from the Glen called Jet Winslow became
death-touched. He was riding his bicycle near the highway when
a dairy truck collided with him. The damage to his head was bad
enough his hair from then on came in white where it should’ve been
brown. Jet’s folks called Mamie to pray over him with Pastor Gallo-
way. Doctoring with iodine and bandages did their part, but Mamie
had charms and herbs and a handful of tonics. She laid snakes on
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him so his cold blood went into the serpent, but that boy never got
warm again.
Later, he suffocated in a silo of livestock feed, but that was an ac-
cident.
In my room, I waited for Heather’s fingers to rap the window.
Dead Heather or living Heather, I’d take either. My pencil shaded
her neck, her thin lips and the freckle on her nose, her reckless hair
and willowy frame. I sketched for hours. Days. Until my eyes were
bleary. Until my paper was blotted with tears.
If only I could wish her back. Even if she were so angry she slapped
me, I’d do it. Just to have her.
Each night, I blew out the candle at my bedside, smelling beeswax
and smoke drift to the ceiling to raise with it my prayer that the next
morning Heather’d stumble down the dirt path and laugh.
She wasn’t coming back.
“
Bonita?
” Mama called through the door.
I crossed the room, still dressed in the blanket and nightdress. In
my mirror’s face, my skin was ashen, gray, as if someone had spilled
water on me and sopped away half my color. Mama waited with a
cup of steaming root tea. Mamie had written down the recipe —
Sleep-Away-Sorrow. Mama brought the tea to me around the clock
to numb my mind and stop the nightmares. If she missed a dose, my
screams shook the windows.
“Rook’s here,” Mama said, passing me the cup.
I sipped. The tea was cold. It turned cold the second the mug en-
tered my grip.
Mama followed me to the bed. “See him, Ivy.”
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I swallowed the rest of the tea in loud gulps. The herbs laid their
dumbing potion over me. Mama chose a cornflower-blue dress with
lacing up the front, then eased Mamie’s blanket off my shoulders,
untied my nightdress, and fluffed the blue dress over my head. She
didn’t say anything about the two necklaces I wore, Rook’s acorn to-
ken and Heather’s chain of found things.
After winding my hair in a loose braid, I found Rook in the kitch-
en. He stood on a stepladder affixing a potted strawberry vine by the
window. Pale berries poked out between glossy leaves.
“You only gotta water it,” he said as he descended the ladder.
I pulled out a chair from the table and flopped down on it. My
muscles were sand-heavy. No rain in days, and the house was dry.
Every surface — tabletop, counters, floors, pails — layered with dust.
A picnic basket covered by a checkered cloth rested on the table. At
first, I guessed food from Briar, but the buttery smell of Mama’s em-
panadas wafted out.
“You gonna talk?” Rook asked.
I eyed the back door. Rook stretched out his hand. My fingers
laced with his, and his skin was warm and toughened, and I stopped
from crying out because he felt so good and alive. I’d forgotten not
all skin felt like river mud.
“How much do you remember?” he asked once outside in the
yard.
“E-everything,” I replied.
“
Everything?
”
“What you said.” I studied my feet, too long and skinny for my
body. “W-when you wanted me to wake up. I heard you.”
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“The thought of losin’ you scares the hell outta me.”
His fingers traced my arm when my mother opened the door. He
hopped back a step, ramming into a crate of ale bottles with his boot.
Mama raised an eyebrow as she brought me the picnic basket from
the kitchen table.
“Take this to your
tía
’s house,” she instructed.
“You comin’?” I asked.
“Ivy, I’m tired,” Mama said and started back to the door. “I’ve been
in
la cocina
making food for days. Just do this for
Mamá.
Rook can
go with you,
sí?
Don’t wander.”
Mama went back inside, and I lifted the edge of the basket’s cloth
where she’d stacked a dozen flaky golden empanadas. With the bas-
ket slung into my elbow’s crook, I reached inside my dress and with-
drew Heather’s necklace, running the charms between my thumb
and forefinger before stuffing the chain inside my col ar where, its