Where Bluebirds Fly (12 page)

Read Where Bluebirds Fly Online

Authors: Brynn Chapman

Tags: #Romance, #Time Travel, #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Fantasy, #Historical, #Romantic

BOOK: Where Bluebirds Fly
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Mercy and I trail behind the men as we file into the building. Awaiting our troop is a somber-faced John Corwin. And to his right, an equally distressed John Hathorne.

“It’s the hanging judge,” I whisper, low enough so only Mercy can hear.

“Constables,” begins Thomas Putnam, “it grieves us greatly to convene, but action must be taken.”

I feel Mercy tighten beneath my hand; an undulation of muscles courses up her arm like an invisible vice. Mercy’s eyes turn to me, wide with horror as the fit arrives.

Her expression is a woman falling.

“Good Sir Putnam, she be afflicted again!” I scream.

Mercy collapses in a heap, her head hammering on the wood floor like Indian war-drums. The sound unearths long-buried visions.

Dead, scalped bodies. The sweet smell of burning flesh.

Sweat beads my brow and the hornets restart their song.

Mercy’s limp hand reaches up as her eyes roll white in her head. She manages a strangled, wet cry.

“Oh Mercy, oh Mercy.”
 

I drop beside her, cradling her hand, letting my touch tell her I will protect her.
If I can.

The shaking stops. Mercy’s pink tongue juts out between her parted lips.

I give it a discrete poke, tucking it back in her cheek.
 

I gather her into my arms and rock; just as I’ve rocked John through so many nights of pain.

“Give her to me, Verity.”

Thomas Putnam stoops, sweeping Mercy into his arms. He ferries her into a back room, following the direction of Constable Corwin’s outstretched finger.

I hurry behind, hovering, waiting.
 

After a long whispered conversation, they finally leave us. I perch beside Mercy on the rickety cot. The door is ajar, and their voices filter in through the darkness.
 

“As you can see, the fits seem to be stronger than an epilepsy. Much mischief has been done to Elizabeth Parris, Abigail Williams, Ann Putnam and Elizabeth Hubbard. Sundry times, within these two months, and lately also done at Salem Village contrary to the peace of our Sovereign Lord and Lady William and Mary, King and Queen of England….”*

Their voices are drowned by the scream of hornets infesting my ears.
 

I cup my hands over them, but it’s no use.

I see the word
hornets
, dripped in purple flames, and picture them licking along my ear canal on their way to eat my addled brain.

My mind flips through the pictures of the accused like a horrid walk to the gallows. Bridget Bishop. Tituba. John.

All different.
None meant any harm nor malice. My hands shake again.
 

Hathorne’s voice cuts through my terror-fog, silencing my hateful insects. “I hereby issue warrants for Sarah Good, Tituba Indian, and Sarah Osborne under suspicion of witchcraft.”

 

*Starred portions are snippets from the original transcripts of this meeting.

* * *

 

Chapter 10

 

Truman squared his shoulders and inhaled deeply, preparing his mind. Each hour in Occupational Therapy was a physical, mental cage-match.

April, the social worker from their sister orphanage, dragged the slip of a girl down the entrance hall, into the clinic. Her tiny body flopped to the floor, flailing against April’s hand, which encircled her wrist. The woman’s tall frame tottered on her high heels. She looked like a flamingo, tilting on one leg as the writhing girl knocked her off balance.

Truman vaulted to the rescue, taking the little girl’s hand in his own.

Tiny, tearful eyes met his as she howled in disdain. Her eyes darted like a trapped animal, taking in the unfamiliar surroundings.

“So the orders are a continuous feeding at night by the tube and she is now P.O. during the day?”
 

He automatically lifted his foot, blocking a kick from her tiny tennis shoe without glancing down.
 

“What’s P.O.?” April looked harried.

Her normally perfect hair hung in her face. She examined her manicure for injuries. Truman fought the urge to roll his eyes.

“I mean she is allowed to eat, now? Her barium swallow came back without precautions? Her file said she was aspirating on thin liquids before, leaking into her lungs—the cause of the frequent pneumonia?”

“Yes, yes. I hope you fare better than us. She’s eaten nothing since we took her in a day ago. If it continues, we’ll have to take her in for dehydration.”

Truman took a mental sigh. “We’re okay. You’re a distraction. I’ll have Sunshine text you when we’re through.”

April’s face was decidedly relieved as she closed the door to the clinic.

Even professionals don’t know what to do with these kids,
his mind retorted to her expression.

He released the girl. She backed away, never taking her eyes off him. Black, wild hair flowed from her head, reaching her buttocks. It was
woolly
with thick tangles and knots.

She was like a little black sheep; welcome to my world, little one
. The smile splitting his lips was painful. And familiar.

Sunshine entered, closing the door. The girl bolted forward, intent on escape. The door slammed a second before she could slip her foot out. Her body collapsed to the floor; she flailed, kicking and spitting.

 
Her tiny chin quivered. A wail, shrill as nails on a chalkboard, ripped from her mouth.

She flipped over, swinging like mad. Her forehead smashed against the floor with a wet thud.

“Oh, come on.”

Truman flew for her, but Sunshine arrived first, pulling the child into her arms.

She hummed a lullaby in her ear.

“Oh, Truman.” She kept her eyes downcast.

She bit her lip, wrestling to keep her professional face on; but her voice had a telling quake.

The girl was getting under his assistant’s skin.

She was outlined in black—the color he associated with physical pain.
 

Sunshine’s color was red; a direct contradiction to her typical resplendent shade of orange. It now flickered like dappled sunlight as her feelings shifted.

Her dark hair fell in a curtain, hiding her expression.

Truman summoned his emotional wall. “She’s been neglected, I’m guessing since day one. The file says her father was an alcoholic and in jail, and her mother was declared mentally incompetent to stand trial. That hair hasn’t had a brush run through it in years. We might have to shave it.”

 
He fought the mental slideshow threatening behind his barricade.
 

His six-year-old self; filthy, smelly. Crying.

No, get it together. That was then. Make a difference now.

He kneeled, squirting warm lotion onto his hands and rubbing them together.
 

Carefully, he peeled off a tiny sock, leaving a ring of dirt lingering around her ankle.

She smelled like a rest-stop urinal.

He moved his hands in practiced, deep circles of massage and the girl instantly stilled, entranced.

“Wow, that’s working,” Sunshine whispered. “What a difference from Timmy.”

Truman raised a skeptical eyebrow. “Too early for that assumption, Watson.”

He grasped a tiny hand, and began to rub.

A primal scream erupted; she twisted, recoiling as if a million needles lodged under her fingernails.

She lunged backwards in a head-butt. Sunshine juked out of the way.

“You spoke too soon,” Truman said, still rubbing. “She’s tactilely defensive. Her nerves are working overtime. Think Princess and the Pea, but all over. Particularly with her hands.”

Sunshine released her and walked across the clinic, searching desperately for a toy. Anything to distract her.

Wild, dark eyes screamed at him. She lunged, shrieking in his face.

He met her gaze, holding very still. He shifted to the other hand, intensifying the massaging motions.

“If she can’t stand to touch things, she won’t eat either.”
 

The girl gagged at the word
eat
, filling his lap with a white, chunky, pile of sick.
 

He sighed. “Sunny, a little help here?”

* * *

Disgust burns my nose. Only hours have passed since Mercy’s fit, yet here she sits, prim and judgmental; encouraging Anne Jr. to condemn another in this endless night that’s conquered Salem.

“Who was it, Anne?” Mercy prods. “Was it Goody Proctor or Goody Osborne?”

“Yes, tell us child, whose spectral form torments you? Be it Sarah Good?” Anne Sr. prompts.

I peek around the corner to see Anne Jr. on the chair by the fire, her gaze unfocused.

“Someone sits in Grandmother’s chair across from me, even now. She is pale.”

I pretend to sweep near the main room, needing to hear Anne, Jr.’s condemnations.

I do not trust that girl. At times, she does appear afflicted, but others—I think she craves the attention. Needs it like a drunkard to his drink.
 

“Be it one of the Parris family?

I step into the other room, suppressing my gasp.

John’s stare is quizzical.

“What? What is going on?”

John is unable to decipher emotions. In order for him to understand someone’s anger, the person need strike him or curse him to his face.

The
language
of the eyes, that’s oft in complete contradiction to people’s words, is foreign to him. I am his interpreter.

My brother isn’t stupid, quite the opposite, but his inability to decipher faces left him constantly guessing, and anxious.

I sigh, wishing that the intensity of my love for him, would heal him. He feels like an immigrant, even among his own people.

“Goodwife Putnam just suggested
another
! I know not what shall become of this town.”

“Aye, Goody Nurse was always kind to me. Look what happened to her.”

“No, it could not be?”

“Pray what, sister? Speak plainly.”

“The Putnams have argued with the Nurses as long as I can recall about where their land halts, and the Nurses’ begins. Do you suppose they would suggest this to Anne to influence her? To get the land?”

John shrugs. “Some people’s hearts are black as ink.”

I grin. No doubt John took considerable time working out that comparison. And practiced it.

Anne Jr.’s voice rings out, and we both turn toward the sitting area. “Yes, I do believe it
was
Goodwife Nurse, ma’am.”

My mouth pops open, along with the floodgate of fear.

“As I live and breathe, John. Goodwife Nurse’s breaths be numbered. No soul be safe in Salem.”

* * *

 

Chapter 11

 

Saturday, October 28th, 5:30 a.m.

 

Dawn was seeping through the clouds again, its filtered rays shining through a mostly overcast morning.

Truman hurriedly typed ‘
Salem Witch Trials
’ into the search engine and held his breath.
 

A tottering pile of books surrounded him, all on the subject at hand. He stifled a yawn.

Obsession
was Ram’s diagnosis. His fingers compulsively rubbed Verity’s locket. His eyes flicked to the calendar.

Two weeks. No letters. No contact. No moon. Nothing.

If not for the bit of silver between his fingers, he’d be doubting his own sanity by now.

Sweat dampened his palms. He opened the journal to the last entry, re-reading it for the fifteenth time.
 

~ ~ ~

Truman…the whole town seems enchanted. People are accusing John.
 
It’s only a matter of time ’til they come for me. I will keep checking the door. I so wish to see you again. I fear I am not long for this world.
 

~ ~ ~

It’d been too long since he saw her. Each day, a worried, aching need burrowed deeper into his heart like an emotive parasite.
 

Only one thing would halt it: to see her, touch her, know she still lived.

Each day he checked the door, and each day it stayed maddeningly closed.

The more days past, the more his anxiety mounted. He took it with him to bed and in the morning it was breathing down his neck before he opened his eyes.

Focusing on his job was insanely difficult. He preferred to be a stalker at the bridge. Then he felt he was doing
something
.

Over a figment of your imagination!
Ram’s voice, a-
gain
.

His eyes flicked to the corn maze, finally finished yesterday, amidst fifty-million other duties leading up to the Fall Festival.

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