SEVEN
It took me until the early hours of the morning to find all the leaks and place receptacles beneath them. Ralph followed me, jumping in and out of the pots and jars I set up as if playing a game. I found the last leaky spot in the extension off the kitchen where Dahlia LaMotte’s heir Matilda had lived, and when I placed a Wedgewood cachepot beneath it, the rain abruptly stopped—as if I’d plugged a hole in the clouds with my motley assortment of cooking pots and ceramic crockery. Weak gray light seeped through the windows of Matilda’s bedroom. I went into the kitchen, turned on the coffeepot, and sat at the porcelain-topped table I’d bought a few weeks ago at the Antiques Barn. I’d planned to refinish the wood base this summer because I was going to haveplentyof time to fix up my house. I’d promised myself that I would spend the summer making a real home out of the great big rambling Victorian I’d bought on impulse last fall. I didn’t want to be one of those single women who don’t commit to their living spaces because they think a man is going to come along and make their lives complete. I wanted to prove that I was content living on my own and that I could take care ofthis monster of a house on my own. But clearly I couldn’t. The house had been cobbled together by Brock’s loving ministrations. Without him, it would fall apart…
The smell of fresh-brewed coffee jarred me out of this bout of self-pity. How petty to be worrying about home repairs while Brock lay in a deathlike coma, his soul traveling in the fog world, and all because I’d pissed off an undine and hadn’t known better than to cast a spell in Faerie. I couldn’t afford to wallow in recrimination and self-pity. I picked up the phone and called Dory Browne for proper directions to Brock and Ike’s house. She told me that the spell circle was meeting there this morning. I should come as soon as possible.
I hung up with a nervous flutter in my stomach at the thought of meeting the spell circle so soon. But at least I’d finally be getting some real training so I might avoid stupid mistakes. Maybe I could even learn a spell for fixing leaky roofs.
I drove down Elm Street, past neighbors busy clearing their yards of branches that had fallen in the storm. I spotted Evangeline Sprague, eighty if she was a day, dragging an enormous tree limb out to her curb. I was about to pull over and help, but then saw Abby and Russell Goodnough, the town veterinarians and Evangeline’s neighbors, heading across their yard toward her. They had it covered. Good neighbors, Dory had called them last year after the ice storm, and they were. Not in the sense that they were fey. As far as I knew, the Goodnoughs and Evangeline were entirely human, and if they suspected the presence of supernatural creatures in their midst, they didn’t make too big a deal about it. They were just good people who helped one another out in a fix.
I crossed Main and headed out of town on Trask Road,Dory’s directions on a Post-it note affixed to my dashboard. The storm had passed, leaving a freshly scoured blue sky and polished green leaves. The world looked newly made and invested with an otherworldly radiance, the thick swaths of sunshine lying on the fields and woods like a coating of honey…
Like the Aelvesgold I’d seen in Faerie and dreamed of last night. The dream came back to me, how he’d filled me with the hot gold light, how I had felt, making love with him, as if I’d become a part of the stream and the grass, as if we were merging into the elements and into each other. I could almost feel it now as I looked into the dark forest to my left, and the purple and green grasses swaying in the fields to my right—a sense of being connected to the world in a way I’d never before experienced. A delicious melting…
A pickup truck honked its horn at me as I strayed over the yellow line into its lane. I startled out of the erotic reverie…and realized I had no idea where I was.
I checked Dory’s directions. I was supposed to follow Trask Road past Hoot’s Hollow Road and the farm stand at Butt’s Corners and then turn onto Olsen Road. But I couldn’t remember if I’d passed Hoot’s Hollow or Butt’s Corners. Trask Road looked pretty much the same wherever you were on it: dense forest to the east, farms on the west. Scanning the road for helpful signs I found one offeringGOATS FOR SELL, an advertisement forHUGH-NAME-IT HANDYMAN, and another offering to grind my beaver stumps.
Beaver stumps?
The sign featured a cartoon of a toothy beaver-chainsaw hybrid ravishing a tree stump. It brought to mind the undines’ fear of beaver zombies. Perhaps this gruesome sign was the source of their fear. The Undine ran not far from Trask Road. Dory had said if I crossed the stream I’d gone too far…
Water flashed to my left and I saw a narrow, stone bridge ahead of me with an old wooden sign that said,THE UNDINE—BEST FISHING IN THE CATSKILLS!above a faded painting of a gaitered fisherman pulling a speckled trout out of rushing water. I slowed and looked for a place to turn around. Just before the bridge was a driveway. I turned into it and was momentarily so blinded by the flash of sun off the water that I was forced to stop the car. I put down my sun visor and blinked into the glare. Ahead was an old, green-trimmed, white farmhouse, perched so close to the edge of the stream that it resembled a boat about to set sail—although it didn’t look like it would get very far. The old clapboards were nearly stripped of their paint and looked soft and rotten. The green shutters drooped and the porch listed to one side. The entire dilapidated structure was leaning toward the water as though yearning to cast itself into the bright rapids speeding over the rocks below.
An abandoned fisherman’s shack, I decided, but then I noticed a thin stream of smoke coming out of the chimney. I took another glance around the property and saw a shaggy patch of tomato plants and a trellis made of string, on which morning glories and sweetpeas climbed up onto the porch, forming a green screen within which hung bits of tin and glass that swayed in the breeze, making a tinny music that threaded in and out of the gurgle of running water. The surface of the house seemed to ripple in the wavery reflections from the water, making it appear even more run-down and insubstantial—as if the whole place might vanish if I blinked—but also lending it a shabby charm. An orange cat napped on a rocking chair with peeling paint. Nearby, a fishing pole leaned against the porch railing.
I sniffed and smelled grilled fish. Whoever lived here had caught his or her lunch and was cooking it up. But eventuallythey might notice a bright green Honda Fit in their driveway. They no doubt had a gun as well as a fishing pole and probably didn’t appreciate strangers staring at their house.
I put the car into reverse and looked over my right shoulder to back up, but a flash from the stream nearly blinded me again. I squinted against it and pulled out into the road, hoping that this stretch was as deserted as it seemed. When I was back on the road, I paused for one more look at the old house. Something about it—its age and seclusion, the way it basked in the river light like a cat in the sun—had drawn me in, but when I looked back where the house should be I couldn’t see anything beyond the trees. It was as if I’d imagined it.
I retraced my way down Trask Road and found the turnoff for Olsen Road. There was only one house on it, a large Greek Revival of the same vintage as the riverside house, but as well cared for as the other wasn’t. Its white paint gleamed like fresh buttercream icing, against which the black Italianate brackets trimming the line of the roof stood out like black ink. Baskets of red geraniums hung from the eaves. The red barn was as neat and square as the house, the only touch of whimsy a painting of a stylized hammer. Thor’s hammer, I realized, recognizing the symbol from a Norse mythology class I’d taken in college.
I parked between a caramel-colored Volvo with a Fairwick College sticker and an ancient multicolored Volkswagen Beetle plastered with bumper stickers proclaimingMY OTHER CAR IS A BROOMSTICK, LIFE IS A WITCH AND THEN YOU FLY, andTHE GODDESS LOVES YOU. THE REST OF US THINK YOU’RE A JERK.
Great, I thought, walking up to the bright red front door,I’m going to be tutored by a bunch of New Age Wiccans.
I was greeted at the door by a plump woman with white hair pulled back into a bun and a red-and-green apron straining across her round belly. I introduced myself but in response she only smiled and, taking me by the hand, led me into the living room.
“Amma doesn’t speak English,” Liz Book said, patting an empty chair next to her. It was the only empty seat out of a dozen red ladder chairs arranged in a circle around a coffee table heaped with blue and white mugs and plates, nut-studded strudel, dishes of cookies, heaps of Danishes, and assorted rugelah. The scene would have resembled a suburban coffee klatch if not for Brock’s supine form on the couch.
I took a seat and looked around the circle. Diana and Soheila smiled at me. I also recognized Joan Ryan from Fairwick’s chemistry department and Dory Browne, Realtor and brownie. Her chin-length blond hair was held back by a pink gingham headband that matched her skirt. She always reminded me of those cheery Mary Engelbreit illustrations. Next to me sat an older white-haired woman who looked familiar.
“I’m Ann Chase,” she said in a friendly voice, but not offering to shake my hand. “We met at the Children’s House fund-raiser last month. We appreciated your generous donation.”
“Oh yes,” I said, remembering her now. Children’s House was a home for severely handicapped children. Ann Chase, who had run it for many years, had a reputation in town akin to sainthood. Glancing down at her hands, I also recalled that she had severe arthritis, which was why she hadn’t offered to shake my hand. If she was a witch, couldn’t she have cured her arthritis? Or perhaps she was another kind of creature. I looked around at those in the circle, wondering which camp each one fell into. The large woman wearing a T-shirt thatsaidNEVER PISS OFF A WITCHprobablywasa witch—and the owner of the VW. But I couldn’t begin to guess about a lean man with a prominent, beak-shaped nose, wearing a Levon Helm T-shirt and cowboy boots, or the pretty young woman in khakis and white blouse, or the young man with a goatee, Ray-Bans, and undersized porkpie hat.
The three women sitting closest to Brock, though, were almost certainly supernatural. A faint white mist was flowing out of their mouths, rising into the air and forming a wreath around Brock. Cold seemed to be emanating from this mist.
“Norns,” Liz whispered in my ear.
“Aren’t the Norns the Norse equivalent of the Fates?” I asked.
“Yes, usually they’re called in at childbirth to assure a child’s good future. The old woman on the left is Urd.” I took a surreptitious glance at the old woman sitting near Brock’s head. She looked much like Amma, plump, with a round, pink face and white hair, and a pile of thick wool in her lap. A sweet grandmotherly type, except that on a chain at her waist she wore a sickle-shaped silver blade, which didn’t look even remotely grandmotherly. Nor did the pointed knitting needles in her lap look benign. They were sharp as skewers. “Urd controls the past. Her sister, Verdandi, looks after the present.” Verdandi was a smart-looking blond woman in a tailored suit and hose. She was working on a piece of needlepoint, stabbing a sharp needle into the cloth as if angry with it. She, too, wore a sickle-shaped blade on a long chain from which also hung a pair of reading glasses. “And then there’s Skald.” The third of the trio was a young woman with obviously dyed black hair teased into a threatening-looking Mohawk; brow, nose, and lip piercings; and a tattoo of Thor’s hammer on her muscular bicep. She was dressed in tight leather jeans and a sleeveless white T-shirt. No knitting orneedlework for Skald. She was texting on a shiny silver phone. “Skald is our future. May the gods help us.”
“What are they doing?” I asked.
“They’re weaving the mists of Niflheim around Brock,” Liz answered.
I felt the chill of the Norns’ mist on my arms. I shivered, wishing I had brought a sweater. “Is that to keep him from…um…decaying?”