Read The May Queen Murders Online
Authors: Jude,Sarah
woods where they thought no one’d find it. As mystical this place
was, a hollowness crept through me. She was reckless. She turned
her back on Mamie’s stories. The omens had warned her. She’d ig-
nored them.
She didn’t want to believe.
She didn’t want to be part of the Glen.
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“We’re gonna catch him,” I said.
Emmie crossed her arms over her chest. She looked so much like
her brother in the face, in the swagger of her gait — her skirt want-
ing to shimmy down her plank-straight hips. All she needed was a
cigarette glued to her lips.
She scoffed. “Catching him don’t bring back Heather. Can’t bring
back Terra MacAvoy. She’s bones by now.”
Milo put his arm around his sister. They edged away to leave the
clearing, but Rook hopped up and called to them.
“Hey, before you go, just curious what your mama’s name was,” he
said.
Milo glanced over his shoulder. “Laurel.”
He turned away, and together, he and Emmie retreated from
Heather’s hideaway to cut through the trees, not bothering to stick
to a path. They were twin cryptids, creatures of no classification, as
they were visible for only a few steps before the underbrush folded
around them.
I picked up one of the jewel-colored pillows and sat. Once I was
home, I’d bundle up under Mamie’s blanket and drink her tea. Pray-
ing my nightmares about teeth and knives and bloody skin would
stop for a few hours.
Rook took a spot beside me with his knees pulled to his chest. The
woods were muted, no crackles of unseen squirrels or deer moving
between trees. Even the birds hushed. Perhaps in mourning for the
girl who used to dance here.
I laid my head on Rook’s shoulder. “What’d you think of what
Milo and Emmie?”
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“That they know too much about the old May Queen,” Rook an-
swered.
“What if —” Bringing the words to sound meant unleashing an
idea, a terrible idea. “The MacAvoys ain’t in the Glen anymore. Do
you think they’re Terra MacAvoy’s kin?”
Rook gave it a moment of consideration. “If they are, they’d have
a hell of a grudge against the Glen.”
"
My eyelids twitched. The acridity of smoke burned my nose, and I
sat up, looking first for a house fire, then to my lamp where a smoke
plume danced from the wick. The oil had burned dry after I’d carried
my drawings to bed to page through and fallen asleep. The papers
were scattered across my blanket, and every place I glanced, Heather
stared back.
Poisoned wine. Terra. Milo.
Heather’s necklace draped across the front of my nightgown. I felt
along the metal links until I came to Milo’s ring, which I’d strung on
the chain.
Why was Heather by that river?
To find me.
“She didn’t care,” my sleep-muzzy mouth fumbled.
She did. What if she came to apologize?
If I kept thinking these thoughts, I’d scream and wake the house.
My hand flopped around my nightstand, searching for my mug in
hope maybe some scant tea drops remained to dull my brain. My fin-
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gers caught the mug’s curved handle, and with an awkward spin, the
cup crashed against the floor. I waited for Mama’s feet to bombard
the hal .
Silence.
With Mamie’s blanket on my shoulders, I climbed out of bed, past
my window, white with condensation. Heather used to write mes-
sages on the glass, made me figure out the backwards spelling. Our
code. I dragged my fingers down the pane, removing the fog. Some-
thing lay on the windowsill outside.
I cranked open my window and picked up a piece of agate wrapped
in wire. I’d been with Heather when she unearthed it. She polished it
and made it a charm for her necklace. I’d noticed it was missing, but
here it was on my windowsil . Smudged with dried blood.
I dropped the stone charm. It landed on the floor and rolled a few
inches before coming to rest against the wal .
Heather’s blood.
I tried to scream, though my tongue seemed too large. Someone
was standing in the field.
“D-d-dreaming,” I told myself. “Or a scarecrow.”
I didn’t want to touch anything, but I urged myself — fingers slid-
ing down the window to shut it. But then I couldn’t see where the fig-
ure was, if it neared. My palm flattened against the glass and slashed
up to down, like a gash through the fog.
“No!” I choked on the word.
The shape in the field loomed tal , shrouded with moonlight
around the cape of animal pelts. The torch fires’ gory red glow, the
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neigh of a horse ridden by a guard somewhere far off. Despite the
closed window, I smelled decay and heard the flies buzzing.
Birch Markle stared at me.
I plummeted to the floor, with my knees tucked against my
breasts, and I didn’t move until the robins began their morning song.
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Chapter Seventeen
Just ’cause a fellow’s mad don’t mean he can’t know the
land and how to live off it. Birch’s been out there all these
years. Only a few times, anybody’s caught a glimpse of
him in his animal skins, living off wild honey, bugs, and
blood like some kinda demented John the Baptist.
Copper circles like pennies dried on the field. Some creature died
last night, and its blood fed the Glen’s soil.
As soon as I awakened, I’d braided a garland of basil and clover.
The stems twisted in my fingers, each movement in time with the
memory of Mamie’s tales.
Clover keeps the bad away, and where
there’s basil, no evil can a-enter.
I hung it over my window.
I didn’t want to go back to school. Classes were insignificant now.
What was there to learn? All the teaching couldn’t prepare you for
death. Once I’d been a good student, wanted passing grades, but now
it was a routine I didn’t care about. I’d been away since Heather first
disappeared, and the only reason I went back was because Papa said
I must.
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No one was around when I left for school with Rook. Mama was
at Mamie’s house, helping after Marsh banged on our door in the
middle of the night. He had a limp from where Aunt Rue hit him.
“Woman trouble,” he called it. Not the baby kind, either. Aunt Rue
was in the field, naked under the moon, and hollering for Birch to
take her.
I tried sleeping again, even covering my ears and drinking more
tea, but the screams found me.
During class, I felt the stares, heard the whispers. As much as we
liked to pretend the Glen was an enclave unto itself, it wasn’t true.
The inside and outside mingled, not much but enough that neither
could be unaware of the ripples running through their individual
streams.
The dead girl,
someone whispered.
She’s one of them,
another voice stroked my neck.
I was a dead girl. I’d joined the ranks of Terra and Heather, felt the
chill settle and turn to peace before Rook ripped me away. To walk
between the worlds was my fate. How could I explain that I wasn’t
who I once was but something haunted?
I wanted to live.
I wanted to be Ivy. I hadn’t been ready before, but without Heath-
er, the shade where I dwelled grounded me in a way I had never been
when she pulled me toward the light.
I missed her, though.
The whispers were too loud, and I raised my hand to be excused
to the bathroom. My literature teacher dismissed me. Milo lifted his
head from playing with his cell phone. The classroom was too small
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and tight, the whispers too hot in my ears, and my throat constricted
around itself until I couldn’t breathe. I hurried down the hal way to
a drinking fountain, gulping, gulping, gulping water until the fever
went out of my cheeks.
I rifled through my pockets for a paper. Heather’s words were the
last things of hers I had, even if they were to Milo and spoke of their
promises, the nakedness of their fears.
H,
You say you don’t want to hurt me. Then come with me. We’ll
leave. I’ll help you get out of this middle-of-nowhere hel hole.
Where we go, who we are won’t matter. On May Day, after sun-
set, I promise I’ll wait for you in our place in the woods. That’s
when we’ll go. All those secrets, you won’t have to worry about
anyone finding out. Not your family. Not Ivy. No one. It’ll be just
you and me.
Trust me.
— M
M,
I’m scared.
— H
H,
Don’t be scared.
I’ll be with you. We got this.
— M
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I crushed the paper and shut my eyes. No more crying.
Footsteps shuffled down the hal . Even with my closed eyes, I
sensed Milo’s tallness looming over me. He smelled of smoke and
medicine. His hand rested on my shoulder and then slipped down
my arm to take the paper from me.
I waited a minute before opening my eyes and asking, “Did you
mean it?”
He swallowed and covered his full lips. His skin was scruffy with
light brown stubble. He mimicked my posture with my back to the
lockers and then slid down the metal, slumped with legs splayed out.
“Fucking Heather.” His nose reddened. “It ain’t supposed to be
this way.”
I sat beside him. My hand hovered above his back, and when I
dared touch his shoulder, he was bonier than expected, quivering
with each breath. This roller boy hid his face and muffled the sounds
of his crying. He could be hard and mouthy, but how much was a
reaction to life being hard and mouthy to him?
From what Heather had told me that foggy morning, I believed
she’d loved him. I never considered he actual y loved her with the
same depth. No one loved like Heather.
Hesitant, afraid, I wrapped my arms around him, pulled his head
to rest against my shoulder, and warm teardrops fell from his face to
land on my hand.
He sniffed. “People like Heather, they’re so bright they burn out
too fast.”
Except Heather didn’t burn out. She was extinguished.
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At the end of the school day, Rook and I walked along the road
toward the Glen in a slow, thoughtful stride. My brain dizzied with
Milo’s grief, the love letter I once again scrunched in my hand.
Rook eyed the scrap of paper. “You’re being quiet.”
“I have too many questions,” I answered.
“Start with asking one.”
“What if Milo promised to run away with Heather and never in-
tended to follow through? Or what if they were gonna go but Emmie
stopped them?” I grabbed my head. “What if we’re just wrong about
everything?”
“Hold up. I said to ask one question, not all of them.” Rook forced
a smile. “I don’t trust Milo, but he was in the woods waiting for her.
His sister, though . . .”
We neared the trailer park and walked along the chain-link fence.
Heather was a ghost here, a memory of a laugh, a sudden stream
of red curls. I’d walked beside her for years. Her footsteps carried a
certain weight that I always knew when she was close by.
We were near the gate of the trailer park. Milo’s trailer was visible
with a heavily rusted truck sticking out of the carport.