Read Dreams Underfoot: A Newford Collection Online
Authors: Charles de Lint,John Jude Palencar
Tags: #Contemporary, #General, #Fantasy, #Newford (Imaginary Place), #Fiction, #Short Stories, #City and Town Life
She’d got that one from Geordie. The skookin took another step back and she stepped towards them, into the light, her eyes widening with shock. There was a small park there, vegetation dead, trees leafless and skeletal, shadows dancing from the light cast by a fire at either end of the open space. And it was teeming with skookin.
There seemed to be hundreds of the creatures. She could see some of the musicians who were making that awful din—holding their instruments as though they’d never played them before. They were gathered in a semi-circle around a dais made from slabs of pavement and building rubble. Standing on it was the weirdest looking skoo-kin she’d seen yet. He was kind of withered and stood stiffly. His eyes flashed with a kind of dead, cold light. He had the grimmest look about him that she’d seen on any of them yet.
There was no way her little bits of history were going to be enough to keep back this crew. She turned to look at her compan-ions. She couldn’t see Goon, but Meran was tugging her flute free from its carrying bag.
What good was that going to do? Jilly wondered.
“It’s another kind of truth,” Meran said as she brought the instru-ment up to her lips.
The flute’s clear tones echoed breathily along the street, cutting through the jangle of not-music like a glass knife through muddy water. Jilly held her breath. The music was so beautiful. The skookin cowered where they stood. Their cacophonic noise-making fal-tered, then fell silent.
No one moved.
For long moments, there was just the clear sound of Meran’s flute, breathing a slow plaintive air that echoed and sang down the street, winding from one end of the park to the other.
Another kind of truth, Jilly remembered Meran saying just before she began to play. That’s exactly what this music was, she realized. A kind of truth.
The flute-playing finally came to an achingly sweet finale and a hush fell in Old City. And then there was movement. Goon stepped from behind Jilly and walked through the still crowd of skookin to the dais where their king stood. He clambered up over the rubble until he was beside the king. He pulled a large clasp knife from the pocket of his coat. As he opened the blade, the skookin king made a jerky motion to get away, but Goon’s knife hand moved too quickly.
He slashed and cut.
Now he’s bloody done it, Jilly thought as the skookin king tumbled to the stones. But then she realized that Goon hadn’t cut the king. He’d cut the air above the king. He’d cut the—her sudden realization only confused her more—strings holding him?
“What ... ?” she said.
“Come,” Meran said.
She tucked her flute under her arm and led Jilly towards the dais. “This is your king,” Goon was saying.
He reached down and pulled the limp form up by the fine-webbed strings that were attached to the king’s arms and shoulders. The king dangled loosely under his strong grip—a broken mario-nette. A murmur rose from the crowd of skookin—part ugly, part wondering.
“The king is dead,” Goon said. “He’s been dead for moons. I wondered why Old City was closed to me this past half year, and now I know.”
There was movement at the far end of the park—a fleeing figure. It had been the king’s councilor, Goon told Jilly and Meran later. Some of the skookin made to chase him, but Goon called them back.
“Let him go,” he said. “He won’t return. We have other business at hand.”
Meran had drawn Jilly right up to the foot of the dais and was gently pushing her forward.
“Go on,” she said.
“Is he the king now?” Jilly asked.
Meran smiled and gave her another gentle push.
Jilly looked up. Goon seemed just like he always did when she saw him at Bramley’s—grumpy and out of sorts. Maybe it’s just his face, she told herself, trying to give herself courage. There were people who look grumpy no matter how happy they are. But the thought didn’t help contain her shaking much as she slowly made her way up to where Goon stood.
“You have something of ours,” Goon said.
His voice was grim. Christy’s story lay all too clearly in Jilly’s head. She swallowed dryly.
“Uh, I never meant ...” she began, then simply handed over the drum.
Goon took it reverently, then snatched her other hand before she could draw away. Her palm flared with sharp pain—all the skin, from the base of her hand to the ends of her fingers was black.
The curse, she thought. It’s going to make my hand fall right off. I’m never going to paint again ....
Goon spat on her palm and the pain died as though it had never been. With wondering eyes, Jilly watched the blackness dry up and begin to flake away. Goon gave her hand a shake and the blemish scattered to fall to the ground. Her hand was completely unmarked. “But ... the curse,” she said. “The bounty on my head. What about Christy’s story ... ?”
“Your curse is knowledge,” Goon said.
“But ... ?”
He turned away to face the crowd, drum in hand. As Jilly made her careful descent back to where Meran was waiting for her, Goon tapped his fingers against the head of the drum. An eerie rhythm started up—a real rhythm. When the skookin musicians began to play, they held their instruments properly and called up a sweet stately music to march across the back of the rhythm. It was a rich tapestry of sound, as different from Meran’s solo flute as sunlight is from twilight, but it held its own power. Its own magic.
Goon led the playing with the rhythm he called up from the stone drum, led the music as though he’d always led it.
“He’s really the king, isn’t he?” Jilly whispered to her companion. Meran nodded.
“So then what was he doing working for Bramley?”
“I don’t know,” Meran replied. “I suppose a king—or a king’s son—can do pretty well what he wants just so long as he comes back here once a moon to fulfill his obligation as ruler.”
“Do you think he’ll go back to work for Bramley?”
“I know he will,” Meran replied.
Jilly looked out at the crowd of skookin. They didn’t seem at all threatening anymore. They just looked like little men—comical, with their tubby bodies and round heads and their little broomstick limbs—but men all the same. She listened to the music, felt its trueness and had to ask Meran why it didn’t hurt them.
“Because it’s their truth,” Meran replied.
“But truth’s just truth,” Jilly protested. “Something’s either true or it’s not.”
Meran just put her arm around Dilly’s shoulder. A touch of a smile came to the corners of her mouth.
“It’s time we went home,” she said.
“I got offpretty lightly, didn’t I?” Jilly said as they started back the way they’d come. “I mean, with the curse and all.”
“Knowledge can be a terrible burden,” Meran replied. “It’s what some believe cast Adam and Eve from Eden.”
“But that was a good thing, wasn’t it?”
Meran nodded. “I think so. But it brought pain with it—pain we still feel to this day.”
“I suppose.”
“Come on,” Meran said, as Jilly lagged a little to look back at the park.
Jilly quickened her step, but she carried the scene away with her. Goon and the stone drum. The crowd of skookin. The flickering light of their fires as it cast shadows over the Old City buildings.
And the music played on.
Professor Dapple had listened patiently to the story he’d been told, managing to keep from interrupting through at least half of the telling. Leaning back in his chair when it was done, he took off his glasses and began to needlessly polish them.
“It’s going to be very good,” he said finally.
Christy Riddell grinned from the club chair where he was sitting. “But Jilly’s not going to like it,”
Bramley went on. “You know how she feels about your stories.”
“But she’s the one who told me this one,” Christy said. Bramley rearranged his features to give the impression that he’d known this all along.
“Doesn’t seem like much of a curse,” he said, changing tack.
Christy raised his eyebrows. “What? To know that it’s all real? To have to seriously consider every time she hears about some seem-ingly preposterous thing, that it might very well be true? To have to keep on guard with what she says so that people won’t think she’s gone off the deep end?”
“Is that how people look at us?” Bramley asked.
“What do you think?” Christy replied with a laugh.
Bramley hrumphed. He fidgeted with the papers on his desk, making more of a mess of them, rather than less.
“But Goon,” he said, finally coming to the heart of what bothered him with what he’d been told. “It’s like some retelling of ‘The King of the Cats,’ isn’t it? Are you really going to put that bit in?”
Christy nodded. “It’s part of the story.”
“I can’t see Goon as a king of anything,” Bramley said. “And if he is a king, then what’s he doing still working for me?”
“Which do you think would be better,” Christy asked. “To be a king below, or a man above?”
Bramley didn’t have an answer for that.
Time Skip
Every time it rains a ghost comes walking.
He goes up by the stately old houses that line Stanton Street, down Henratty Lane to where it leads into the narrow streets and crowded backalleys of Crowsea, and then back up Stanton again in an unvarying routine.
He wears a worn tweed suit—mostly browns and greys with a faint rosy touch of heather. A shapeless cap presses down his brown curls. His features give no true indication of his age, while his eyes are both innocent and wise. His face gleams in the rain, slick and wet as that of a living person. When he reaches the streetlamp in front of the old Hamill estate, he wipes his eyes with a brown hand. Then he fades away.
Samantha Rey knew it was true because she’d seen him. More than once.
She saw him every time it rained.
“So, have you asked her out yet?” Jilly wanted to know.
We were sitting on a park bench, feeding pigeons the leftover crusts from our lunches. Jilly had worked with me at the post office, that Christmas they hired outside staff instead of letting the regular employees work the overtime, and we’d been friends ever since. These days she worked three nights a week as a waitress, while I made what I could busking on the Market with my father’s old Czech fiddle.
Jilly was slender, with a thick tangle of brown hair and pale blue eyes, electric as sapphires. She had a penchant for loose clothing and fingerless gloves when she wasn’t waitressing. There were times, when I met her on the streets in the evening, that I mistook her for a bag lady: skulking in an alleyway, gaze alternating between the sketchbook held in one hand and the faces of the people on the streets as they walked by. She had more sketches of me playing my fiddle than had any right to exist.
“She’s never going to know how you feel until you talk to her about it,” Jilly went on when I didn’t answer.
“I know.”
I’ll make no bones about it: I was putting the make on Sam Rey and had been ever since she’d started to work at Gypsy Records half a year ago. I never much went in for the blonde California beach girl type, but Sam had a look all her own. She had some indefinable quality that went beyond her basic cheerleader appearance. Right. I can hear you already. Rationalizations of the North American libido.
But it was true. I didn’t just want Sam in my bed; I wanted to know we were going to have a future together. I wanted to grow old with her. I wanted to build up a lifetime of shared memories.
About the most Sam knew about all this was that I hung around and talked to her a lot at the record store.
“Look,” Jilly said. “Just because she’s pretty, doesn’t mean she’s having a perfect life or anything.
Most guys look at someone like her and they won’t even approach her because they’re sure she’s got men coming out of her ears. Well, it doesn’t always work that way. For instance—” she touched her breastbone with a narrow hand and smiled “—consider yours truly.”
I looked at her long fingers. Paint had dried under her nails. “You’ve started a new canvas,” I said.
“And you’re changing the subject,” she replied. “Come on, Geordie. What’s the big deal? The most she can say is no.”
“Well, yeah. But ...”
“She intimidates you, doesn’t she?”
I shook my head. “I talk to her all the time.”
“Right. And that’s why I’ve got to listen to your constant moon-ing over her.” She gave me a sudden considering look, then grinned. “I’ll tell you what, Geordie, me lad. Here’s the bottom line: I’ll give you twenty-four hours to ask her out. If you haven’t got it together by then, I’ll talk to her myself “
“Don’t even joke about it.”
“Twenty-four hours,” Jilly said firmly. She looked at the choco-late-chip cookie in my hand. “Are you eating that?” she added in that certain tone of voice of hers that plainly said, all previous topics of conversation have been dealt with and completed. We are now changing topics.
So we did. But all the while we talked, I thought about going into the record store and asking Sam out, because if I didn’t, Jilly would do it for me. Whatever else she might be, Jilly wasn’t shy. Having her go in to plead my case would be as bad as having my mother do it for me. I’d never been able to show my face in there again.
Gypsy Records is on Williamson Street, one of the city’s main arteries. It begins as Highway 14
outside the city, lined with a sprawl of fast food outlets, malls and warehouses. On its way downtown, it begins to replace the commercial properties with ever-increasing handfuls of residential blocks until it reaches the downtown core where shops and low-rise apartments mingle in gossiping crowds.