The Mammoth Book of SF Stories by Women (57 page)

BOOK: The Mammoth Book of SF Stories by Women
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“Out,” says Rue, and draws his dolly, which slacks open, gaping foolish; but Goss steps up to her with silver, got groping in the Oover’s belly. “Leave us go.”

The beggar quirks at the bowl. The silver falls among small things, silver. “What’s that to me? Is’t thine?”

Goss lifts her chin. “Is’t yours? All that lot?”

“Nay, all theirs as leave. And not until.”

There’s odd things in the bowl, thinks Goss. Spectacles. A torn-up photograph. A tooth. A torch, all eaten up with rust. A heap of long red hair. The beggar scrabbles in the bowl, hands back the coins. “Owt else?”

A handful of crayons. The beggar finicks through them. Blue-green. Redviolet. The stub of
black. She measures Gosslyn with a glance. “All this? Thou’s overdrawn thysel.” As if the dole were kingdoms.

“What I has.”

They’re taken; then the beggar turns to Rue. He’s got the dolly god hooked over his shoulder, and he’s turning out pocket fluff. Three black birdsweets and a marble on his sticky palm. Blue clouded, with a fleck like a falling leaf. That too. The beggar holds it to her
eye, shakes back her hair to squint. And laughs.

No riddles this time. “Put up thy brolly. I’ll not eat thee.”

“Dolly brolly.” Rue’s delighted.

“Gerroff wi’ yer. Left, left, down close and top o’t stairs.”

As they turn, she calls out, mocking, “Did tha want thy change?” And flicks a bit of chalk at Gosslyn. It skitters, spinning on the tiles, and veering, rolling toward abyss. Goss darts for
it before it’s lost. They hurry on.

They can see the turnstile now, the lightspill on the stairs.

Amazed at the wind, they stand: high tumult and the ragged moon. “Will’t
hatch
?” says Rue. Turning round, heads back, they stare. Cloud, red beneath with burning. Wrack and scurry backlit by the scatheless sailing moon. Unfathomed cliffs of tower, sheer and derelict. Unwarded streets. Leaves paper
litter rising. Whirl and flacker in a ghostly dance. They’ve not felt wind afore. Goss laughs, whirling widearmed. Rue scuffles and twirls, he surges through the leaftrash in a glorious roar and crackle, swashing with his stick. They spin themselves giddy. They are catseyes, whorled with shadow, wound with moon.

They’ve fallen down. Clouds towers leaves wheel round them.

A voice calls. “Crows!”

Another, “Here’s inwits for yer supper. Crows!”

“Hey, crows!”

They are laughing.

There are children in the dark. They run by night: a shifting crew of mortals. Old and young, they’re driven by a fey mood, a sudden quick desire to shake the fear, to dance unwarded under heaven. Back of law. They bring no wards, no form of worship to their tryst, evading death by chance, by offhand magic: a patchwork
of tinkering and brilliant dodges, crazy risks. Chancers, they call themselves. Some run a moment, whirled away like moonclocks; others, crazed or clever, live a night, two nights, a week of dancing.

There are shadows in the moon: huge knots of hawklike darkness, sheering. As they turn, they catch the moonlight, glint and vanish, skyblack into sky. They are bright beneath, with women’s bodies;
they are cold, with starless wings. No rise and wheeling of the dance in them, no scrawl of stars: all timeless and unstoried night. Cloud coils from them, unsilvering the moon. Their breath is tarnish, is forgetting. And their talons – ah, they rend the soul. They take.

Close now, the running and the calling start, from street to street, from shadow into shadow, in and out of light. Rue and
Gosslyn stagger up and after, witch-led, drunk with air. The world swerves sideways, lurches them at walls. The brolly bangs and bruises, tangles in their feet. The voices mock and rally.
Tigged last! Telled witch of yer!
A twitch, a tug at skirt or sleeve. Whirl round and no one. Whispering. And there, a white face, round a corner? Gone. Phantasmal creatures loom, elude them, dwindling into junk.
And all around them tunes the bedlam jazz band of the wind. Scritch and jangle. Howl and hurly. Scrape and clattering and sough. A clang on a skeleton of stair, above; a sheet of paper, burning, falling. See, it’s eyed with cinders, blinded one by one. An ash. It’s nothing in Rue’s hand. Goss feels a soft slap on her cheek. Another. And another. No one, pattering, and all around. They stand,
astonished, in the briefest lash of rain.

They’ve come into a wide square, set with shattered baulks of stone: a great cat with a muffled head, a riven owl, a witch in flinders. There are fires here and there, some leaping and some embers, ashes. Some long cold. And some a-building: leaves and boxes, doors and drawers and random trash. Children heap frail crazy towers: sticks stacks crows’ nests,
all to burn. Some run with
brands, they leap and whirl them in a swarm of sparks. They write great fading loops of spells. Three drag a gnarled branch to the fires, its dry and leafy fingers clagged with tins, as many as the rings on a witch’s hand. And still it scrabbles, rakes for more.

Warily entranced, Rue watches, edges round them, keeping hold of Goss. She stoops for a bit of paper, torn
and scattering. No images. All scratches, black as birds. She lets it go.

A dark lad’s hurling dustbins down a flight of steps, with a bang and clangor and a long-drawn rumbling. Whuff! He lights one, lofts it blazing with a trembling hollow roar; and howling, casts it down in ruin. Children rush to kick and scuffle at the spill of embers, stamp them out.

Leaning close in the curl of newel at
the broad stair’s foot, two girls play cat’s cradles with red yarn. They pick their crosses carefully, perplex and intricate. Undergo; then overturn.

Children tumble from a carapace of engine, with its soft maw sprung to wires, and its shattered eyes. They’re all in flutterings of rags, torn and knotted, with their coats turned inside out. They’ve ashes on their faces, tins of pebbles in their
hands. Mute as ghosts, they prowl and shake their rattles.

All alone, a small child huddles on a step; he rocks and sucks the ragdoll babby at his cheek. But his lullaby’s from elsewhere, voices in the dark. “Lay down, my dear sister …”

Still in shadow, Goss and Rue slip by.

In a sidestreet by a railing, by a tree scant of leaves, a knot of children call and chant. They are whirling clapping
in a game.

Tell B for the beast at the ending of the wood
Goodnight, Goodnight

Well, he eat all the children when they wouldn’t be good
Goodnight, Goodnight, Goodnight

And “Good night,” the voices cry in antiphon, like birds; as if there were a greener world indwelling in these streets. A wood. Their city’s crowded, crowned with visionary trees. There’s no way in; they weave themselves a hedge.
Goss lingers for a moment, drawn and doubtful; Rue tugs her on.

Still others turn a rope, and leap through it in turn. Brown legs, scratched legs. Jauncing plaits. In turn there is no one jumping, but they call the dark, they bid it in. The rope whips round and round, slapping at the stones.

Not all are children. A man in a soft hat and a muddy suit, unshaven, stands and shouts. At nothing,
at the sky. Not angry, thinks Goss. Amazed.

The rope slaps to their chant, his chant.

       “Babylon is fallen.”

              “Is fallen.”

                     “Is fallen.”

       “Babylon is fallen.”

              “To rise no more.”

By a shattered window, by a lamp, a boy kneels, dark amid the glittering. He keeps to the fringes of the light, penumbral; coming closer, they can see he’s
thin and fairish, scowling, with bent mended specs. He’s working at something. A cosmos of black wire, all in tension, with a long spiring tail. It glitters blackly; it jangles. He shakes the long coil of it, and leaves rags paper dance.

Goss says, “What’s that for?”

“Catching crows,” he says. “Summat I thought on.”

“What
day?”

“Yer must be inwits,” he says, tilting his scarred glasses. “It’s
nights here Outwith. All as it comes.” They can see his scabbed knees, his scarry fingers. Stained burned slashed. Soft hair like flocking, whitey-brown. “There’s all sort of chancers runs. Some clever and some mad. There’s ranters and goners—” He nods at the shabby man. “And guisers – them wi’ ashes. Then there’s howkers and tigs, and there’s ticers. What I is. A niner, come daybreak.”

“Ticers?”
(What do they do? Could I?)

“Get by. Call crows. Get round ’em.” He lights the kite’s tail of his strange device; for a moment now his face is eerie, ambered from below. “Happen talk with them.” He pinches out his spill.

And as the shadow stoops, he cries, “Run, will yer!”

The man falls open-armed, ecstatic.

They run.

Behind them comes a whirring and a cry. The shock embrittles them, turns
all their blood to branching ice. Blindly they stumble on until Rue falls, tripped up on his brolly. Goss muffles him against her breast, she strokes the black frost from his hair. They crouch, as still as rats. No shadow of the bird strikes, wheels, returning to her prey. After a time, Goss dabbles at his scrapes,
then at hers; she wipes his streaked and snotted face. Her own. Then they share
what she has left: a scrawny orange. Cradling, she snuffs at it before she breaks it open. Pith and bittersweet and curving.

It was beautiful, the bird.

They wander on, at random, turning down this street, that crescent, past the naked windows and the empty rooms.

A shout. Boys snatch the brolly, toss it high above his sobbing reach, the fury of her nails; they hurly down the street, thwacking
it at tins and bottles, quarreling; until the tallest leaps and hooks it to a high bar, where it dangles, all agape and stark.

They vanish.

Rue and Goss gaze up. It’s hanging from a gate of iron, in a wall. They clamber up and flail at it with sticks; at last they knock it down.

Beyond the gate’s another square, but silent, sheeted all with moon. No fire and no games. Stones cracked with weeds.
And stony, too, the white girl crowned with leaves, with leaves and flowers in her stony lap. Her fountain’s dry.

Rue slips between the rusted bars, undoes the latch for Gosslyn. They go in.

But there’s someone there, behind the circle of the stony dance, her grove of girls: another girl, a real one, in a nightdress and slippers, squatting on her heels. Quite a grown girl, thin and ginger, with
a cat’s curly smile. Her cardigan won’t button round her middle, but her freckly arms and legs are thin. She’s drawing on the paving stones with chalk, white and red. They’ve seen her with her mam’s brood, down the Wall: jerking stragglers howling after, wiping noses, soothing, fratching. Goss glances at her belly.

“Mrs. Stemmon?”

“Not Mrs.” She chalks another line. “Outwith, I’s Phib.”

“Goss.
Yon’s Rue.”

“Know yer. Hey up, brat.”

Scrape goes the ferrule. “What is’t yer drawing?”

“Snakes and ladders.” Nodding at Goss, she holds out a bit of chalk. “Halfs?”

Goss fumbles at her pocket. “Got a bit.”

Laddery as stockings, what Phib’s drawn, with blotches in it, red as poppies, red as blood. As if they’d scattered as she ran.

Kneeling on the pavement, Goss chalks angles, spirals, mazes
round and round them. They are holes, doors, houses; they are earth and heaven. White on black. They make a grammar as they go. Halt runes becoming terse and supple, turning to a rime, a rant, a summoning. No more her mother tongue: new heaven and new earth. Her line’s a labyrinth, her thread of moonlight, winding on the spindle of the moon. She draws it down.

Hawklike, darkness knots itself
and stoops: not fury but a fall of chance. The air’s like black glass shattering. Rue whirls the umbrella, heavy suddenly with wind. He’s staggered, but he holds it fast with both hands, blown askew. It wrenches at him, bucks and judders on the pavement, scraping stone; it leaps and bellies out. For a breath, its bones are lightning and its web is sky. Its godcrow sister cries to it; she wheels and
counters, and the white thread snares her. Goss draws it tighter still, until the jess must snap, the falcon strike. She’s drawing on its dark, she’s drawing on the night itself. The chalk is crumbling. What she writes with it are stars and clouds of stars, ascendancies in nightfall. With the powder of her end, she sets them dancing.

The Mrs. looks about the bare room, the scrubbed wall, with
her shrewd embittered eye. The box still flickers with its frieze of birds, still gloating on their eggs. Leave that. There’s another, always. Got her bacca, got her hairpins. Smokebook. Feather dress and comb. She folds away the last wards in her cheap case, snecks the latch. Unhooks the mirror from the wall. Cord’s coiled, Oover’s gutted, nets are drawn. She’ll get herself another place, then.
Somewhere further down t’Wall. Deeper in. Then. Long time since she’s had a make. Last man were sackless. Got her brats, but. Thankless. And t’last afore him. Time sometime to get another. Screw him. Time enough.

She broods.

SING

Karin Tidbeck

The cold dawn light creeps onto the mountaintops; they emerge like islands in the valley’s dark sea, tendrils of steam rising up from the thickets clinging to the rock. Right now there’s no sound of birdsong or crickets, no hiss of wind in the trees. When Maderakka’s great shadow has sunk back below the horizon, twitter and chirp will return in a shocking explosion of sound.
For now, we sit in complete silence.

The birds have left. Petr lies with his head in my lap, his chest rising and falling so quickly it’s almost a flutter, his pulse rushing under the skin. The bits of eggshell I couldn’t get out of his mouth, those that have already made their way into him, spread whiteness into the surrounding flesh. If only I could hear that he’s breathing properly. His eyes
are rolled back into his head, his arms and legs curled up against his body like a baby’s. If he’s conscious, he must be in pain. I hope he’s not conscious.

A strangely shaped man came in the door and stepped up to the counter. He made a full turn to look at the mess in my workshop: the fabrics, the cutting table, the bits of pattern. Then he looked directly at me. He was definitely not from
here – no one had told him not to do that. I almost wanted to correct him:
leave, you’re not supposed to make contact like that, you’re supposed to pretend you can’t see me and tell the air what you want
. But I was curious about what he might do. I was too used to avoiding eye contact, so I concentrated carefully on the rest of him: the squat body with its weirdly broad shoulders, the swelling
upper arms and legs. The cropped copper on his head. I’d never seen anything like it.

BOOK: The Mammoth Book of SF Stories by Women
2.4Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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