Black Calliope

 Orphaned and abused, Eric and his little sister Diane decided to run away when (once again) the foster parents opened the doors to their rooms and helped themselves.

    In the aftermath, sore and wrathful, Eric came up with a plan.

    That night, as the foster parents slept, they did everything right.

    When they left they took the knives with them.

The hot nights on the run took their toll, and thievery was not their strength, so they took to begging, and took what came with it as summer turned inexorably into winter.

*******************

   The winter night was foggy when Eric and Diane were done begging on the streets.

    Diane had been pushed down, and Eric was punched when he tried to defend her.

   The day only got longer as their feet were sore trying to catch up with what dignity they had left.

   Today, there’d been enough money for them to eat. 

   The cook and waitress brought their meals to the alley, not wanting them to stink up the place.

   They were too hungry to care.

                                                        ***************

    Eric knew the ground would be wet from the fog, so he lined their sleeping space with the rags they found to keep out the dampness, and pulled Diane close to keep her warm. 

     Her frailty was a liability in the streets, and offers had been made, but Eric was a staunch defender and had to grow up fast. Diane’s nature wasn’t as hardened yet, but she came to see the practicality of her brother’s way of thinking. 

     She didn’t have to worry, she just had to do what he said.

     Over time, her reluctance to harm others slowly dissolved into quiet, feral self preservation.

     They were safe here in the abandoned amusement park. 

     There was only one security guard who only left the booth to stretch his legs, and he had no idea they were there.

      Next to their sleeping space, a broken, rusted calliope with warped wood and chipped painted animals, splintery benches for those with no desire to grab the brass ring, and pitted, pockmarked clown faces stood as a sad testimony to happier times Eric and Diane had never experienced.

      She imagined what it would be like to ride one, just once.

      Settling down, and settling against each other for warmth, her brother’s arm around her, Diane was soon asleep. 

      And though she seldom dreamed, she dreamed tonight.

                                                           ******************

      The ponies…didn’t look like that.

      She walked toward the calliope, its lights diffused by the fog.

      It began to slowly move, and the grinding noise made her stop and cover her ears.

      As she watched, the music started, its speed matching the slow wheeling. At first it sounded more like a dirge trying to be festive.

     The music…is not right. I have to tell the ticket man.

     There was no ticket man.

      I can get on for free?

      She moved toward it again, taking her hands off her ears as the music brightened and the horses began to move.

     It looks like fun.

     A voice called her, but she didn’t recognize it.

     I can ride for free now.

     The voice again, but she couldn’t see who was calling her.

     A pink horse with a white mane was in front of her, and its bright blue eye seemed to follow her as she got closer.

     The stirrup’s rust scraped her bare sole as it wobbled, but she managed to get into the dusty saddle.

     Again the voice. Louder this time. Closer.

     But the horse was moving now, and she grabbed the frayed reins as she looked around, and the voice faded. 

      As the horse ran and leaped in its slot, Diane began to laugh, and all the other children on the other horses began to laugh with her.

      The horse moved even faster, and the voice fell farther behind.

      That was good. She didn’t like when it called her. 

      It knew her name, and that scared her.

      She was glad when it was gone.

      And laughing, she let go of the frayed reins, and threw her arms out and her head back, and let the bright, festive, frantic music take over.

      Free of the daily, earthly darkness, she screamed with delight.

                                                     ****************

      Eric woke up, realizing Diane was no longer with him.

      He called her name and got no answer.

      He got up to search for her, and called again and again.

      But the fog was thicker than before, getting denser as he walked toward the calliope. 

      He saw her just before it obscured his vision.

      She was getting on one of the faded, broken, warped, dilapidated horses.

      He saw her hike herself into the saddle, and began to run toward her, calling louder.

He stopped when he saw the calliope was moving, then started running again.

One last time he called, the tears welling.

      He saw when she took the worn reins into her frail little hands, and her body spasmed and jerked her nose and eyes began to bleed, and she threw her arms out to her sides, and screamed.

      The scream faded as the calliope rumbled low as it circled faster and faster.

In helpless fright he watched as each time the horse passed him, Diane became translucent, and began to dissipate into the fog.

He was still on his knees, sobbing into his hands as the night shadows and quiet returned to mock his grief.

Alone in the Library Garden

      Ziun was still restless after spending his first week at Novice Hall.

      He was there because some magic user his mother knew saw that he was gifted with a seed of magic, though she didn’t know what kind.

      She told them the school would discover and nurture his talent, so his parents sent him there, where he quickly learned he was not an exciting exception of talent.

      It stung how quickly they bundled him off, but once there he was relieved as the courses progressed because he didn’t stand out, enduring the frustrations they all did at trying to develop and control their gifts..

      But this night….

      He supposed it was homesickness. 

      Donning his robe and slippers, he quietly left the others to their sleeping happens, noxious as some were, and walked down the shadow filled hall.

      The ensconced torches cast soft, dappled ambers, and created some shadows of their own. 

      The moon’s saffron beams were molded into coffin shaped rhombuses by the floor to ceiling windows that lined the east wall. 

      Ziun took a moment to admire the beauty of it..

      At the end of the hall were two floor length doors with glass that opened into the garden, and from there to the path leading to the library.

      There were stories about the library being haunted, and parts of it that were closed.

      He decided to put his walk to use and see what there was to see after hours.

                                                     ****************

      The door sentry was asleep. Even worse, he was sitting with his spear across his lap when he should have been standing watch and holding it.

       It was just as well. He would have brooked no argument and sent Siun back to the Hall to fight his insomnia on his own.

       He found the garden path, paved with stones that were uneven as the earth beneath and between them battled for sovereignty. Siun took his time lest he trip of stub a toe that would make him curse, wake the guard, and get him into trouble he wasn’t looking for.

      As he walked the path, he noted how quiet it was outside too. 

     There were no small creatures rustling the underbrush, no nightbirds, not even an owl.

     No plaintive, haunting howling came from the surrounding hills. 

     No deer bellowed in the night at catching his scent.

     No wonder the sentry fell asleep. 

     No sense of foreboding came over him to make him wary, but that didn’t mean he shouldn’t be vigilant. Unpleasant things could surprise someone, especially in such a lush garden.

     Stopping for a moment, he decided to try out a sensory spell to see if anything was hidden that meant him harm.

      A warmth spread over him, starting from his hands, and he closed his eyes.

      The warmth left him, pulsing into the high garden trees and over the flower beds, slinking along ivy vines and curling up tree trunks like rambunctious squirrels. 

      Nothing came back to him, and he opened his eyes. 

                                          **************

        As he continued walking around the library, heading toward the back of it, the garden began to change from lush to wild, as if the gardeners didn’t get to it as frequently.

       The moonlight had shifted to where it was now more toward the front of the library, so now     the garden in the back was darker, and Ziun’s arm hairs stood up, though he still saw nothing that threatened him.

       Turning a corner to go back to the hall, he passed an open window a little above his head.

       It had a lit lantern that sat on a small stack of books with others next to it.

       One of them was open to the middle. He couldn’t see the title from where he stood.

       Thinking it might have been another late night student, he waited to see if anyone emerged,

 but no one came.

       “Is anyone there?” 

       The lantern light flared and brightened.

       Ziun. You’ve come at last.

       He shivered. “What?”

       We’ve been waiting for you.

       “Who? Who are you? Why were you waiting for me?”

       He wanted to step back, but found himself walking toward the window. 

      Standing just beneath the sill, he saw the light flare again and felt what he thought might be a hand against his cheek.

       To help you.

       “Help me? Help me to do what?”

       As he stepped away the hand went from his cheek to the front of his robe, seizing him, pulling him back.

      The light in the lantern went out, and more unseen hands lifted him into the library as the window closed behind him, and the light flared to life again, and he saw all the spirits looking at him.

       One stepped forward, placing a spectral hand on his cheek.

       He saw the nails, and dared not move.

       Set us free.