Read Twisted Winter Online

Authors: Catherine Butler

Twisted Winter (9 page)

Adam sighed, deep and long. It seemed to tremble through his entire body. “You've got it the wrong way around, Nell,” he said at last. “Mum and Dad and me – we haven't been hiding the truth from you. We've been sheltering
you
from the truth. Believe me, there's a difference.”

The way he said it – I've never heard anyone sound so lonely. I wanted to hug him. I wanted to run for my life.

“But you're right,” he said. “It's too late for pretending. The change has gone too far: no one can stop it now. There've been others in our family, way back, and the story's always the same. It only happens to boys. You seem to be normal till you hit sixteen, and then… you're not. Nell, each month sucks more of the human from me. By the time the Wolf Moon comes, there won't be much left.”

He beckoned me to him.

“Close your eyes, Nell, and touch my face.” He saw me flinch, and grabbed my wrist. “
Do it
.”

So I closed my eyes. As soon as I did, the touch of his hand upon my wrist seemed to change. It no longer felt like Adam. This grip was sinewy, coarse, with tapered nails that dug into my skin. It was strong, too, as it guided my fingers to his face. I felt the stubble of his cheek. Then I realised that it was not stubble after all. My fingers were moving over thick, bristly hair. Where his nose should be they found a muzzle, with a wet snout at its end. And beneath that…

I opened my eyes, wide.

“All the better to eat you with,” said Adam sadly.

* * *

Lucy got a dog that Christmas, just as she'd wanted. It turns out that her parents had put their name down for a floppy-eared spaniel at the Rescue Centre. It was like a china dog come to life, Lucy told me later. So they weren't too pleased to find an unexpected visitor on their back doorstep, three nights before Christmas Eve. A large dog with thick, grizzled hair, white by the light of the Wolf Moon. Lucy loved it on sight.

“It's so
big
,” Lucy's mother complained to mine. “I don't have time to walk a dog that size. Lucy says she will, but we'll see how long
that
lasts.”

He is big, too. When he growls, it's like someone fired up a chainsaw somewhere deep inside his throat. And you should see him run! There's a bit of husky in him, Lucy thinks, but more Alsatian. He'll win no prizes at Cruft's but he's beautiful, with brown eyes that look back at you in a way even Lucy's mum says is almost human. They call him Merlin.

I talk to him when Lucy's out of the room.

“Adam?” I say. “It
is
you, isn't it?”

His tail slaps the lino, though he cannot speak. What does
that
mean?

“I'm so sorry, Adam. I wish I'd known sooner. Maybe we could have done – something – ”

I choke on the words I don't have. It sounds pathetic, I realise. I'm almost glad he can't reply. Anything Adam had to say would be sarcastic. But dogs don't do sarcasm.

At first I wondered why he attached himself to Lucy's family, not ours. I resented it, to be honest. Then I saw how difficult it would have been. No teenage boy wants to be taken for walks by his little sister. Besides, no one could love a dog more than Lucy loves him. She really did want a pet as much as she had said.

Oh, but I miss my brother.

I spend a lot of time at Lucy's house these days. Mine isn't much fun, since Adam went missing. Christmas got cancelled, pretty much. Mum and Dad keep up the pretence even now, months later. They wonder aloud where Adam might be, and phone the Family Liaison Officer every week in case of news. I suppose they think they're still protecting me. I can't stand it.

I won't tell Lucy the truth, though. Adam has a good life, and I don't want to spoil things for either of them. And that, I suppose, is how this story ends. You might even call it a happy ending, looked at in the
right light. Or perhaps not so happy after all. Either way, for better or worse they're together, and not just for Christmas.

For them, more than for anyone, a dog is for life.

Home for the Holidays

Rhiannon Lassiter

Lazy as a sunbeam I wander through the meadows in the dying days of summer. My bare feet sink into the warm brown earth. The fields are gold and green and buzzing with butterflies and bees. The sky is an azure bowl upended over the world.

I wind white water lilies into a chain and plait them into my sun-streaked hair. My dress is white
muslin, simple as a shroud. Beneath it my skin is nut brown, hot and dry.

High in the dome of the sky a black bird wheels and I shiver, goosebumps rising on my skin, seeing that predatory shadow.

This was where it all began, here in the water meadows. Imagine us seen from above, maidens scattered through the greenery like the wildflowers we are gathering, our hair and clothes bright and festive. The watcher descends, a long slow swoop, taking time to pick his target.

I am the target. Unwary, oblivious, innocent. In my memory the dark shape falls from above, the earth splits open beneath my feet, my mouth opens in an O and a scream escapes as I am caught.

This is where my story begins. Perhaps you already know how it must end.

Now the memories pale in the flood of sunshine, the distant shadow is cleared from the sky, I am alone in the fields. I choose to leave the river bank, walking through the stubbled fields where the short stalks lash my ankles and prickle my feet.

Fruit hangs heavy in the vineyards and orchards, dragging down the vines and boughs. My mother is
waiting for me under the trees. She is Demeter, the goddess of fertility. She is larger than life, glowing with health and vitality. She reaches out to claim me and twines her strong brown arms around my neck. She strokes my hair, gathering it through her hands like harvest wheat.

“It's so good to have you here,” she says. “Do you see how happy everyone is when you're home? You make us happy.”

She speaks as though it is my choice to stay, to leave, to bestow happiness like a gift. She speaks as though a whistle will summon me home – and so it will. But when summer ends it won't be her tune I dance to.

In the fields farmers bring home the harvest. Children chase each other through the maize and the older ones play games at the edge of the woods that are just becoming dangerous.

I watch as a young shepherd boy chases a nymph into a grove of cherry trees, bearing down on her until they fall laughing together into a drift of leaves. Their bodies intertwine and I turn away. The games of kiss chase are all part of the late summer madness that falls over everyone. It's
only me who sees the shadow of the trees and the drift of leaves as sinister. The shepherd and the nymph leave the grove hand in hand, leaning on each other.

Girls flare suddenly into womanhood, a harvest to be gathered. One second a child, a clocktick later a nubile nymph; suddenly part of someone else's story. Heroic men reach out and take.

The trees are aflame with autumn colours: the red of burning coals, orange tongues of fire, scorched yellow. I wear a crown of golden leaves at the harvest dances: spinning and whirling like a leaf in the wind. The peasant girls and nymphs form rings around me. The boys and men dance circles around us.

Food is abundant. All the fruits of the field and the orchard are spread in a feast. Apples, pears, wild cherries; plums the colour of bruises; melons ripe and succulent – but no pomegranates.

My mother is seated at the head of the high table, presiding over the festival. Her clothing is wine red and beaten gold and the women around her sink down in awe when she looks at them. Demeter is Queen of the Summer and her smiles fall like rays across the company.

When the black god hid me under the earth she roamed the earth in quest of me, a madwoman calling constantly for her lost child. Famine followed in her footsteps. The earth was barren as an empty womb. All creation cried out for succour but Demeter cared for nothing but the daughter she had lost. In the end the Great Gods were forced to intervene to save humanity – but too late to save me.

Now at the harvest dance Demeter seems radiant with joy. She is surrounded by her worshippers, she has her daughter once again, these are her rites that are celebrated. Am I the only one who sees it cannot last? Children grow up, belief fails as doubts are sown, and I am not the same girl who was snatched from the wildflower meadow. For half a year he held me hostage. Demeter chooses to forget, but I don't have that luxury.

The harvest cups run red with ruby wine. Faces are flushed with it, speech slurred, eyes brightened – or dulled. As the music becomes wilder and the drink stronger, Dionysus arrives with his company: goat-footed men and loose-limbed women with satirical smiles.

I eat bread soaked in honey mead. My lips are
sticky with it: my body heavy with the drug. The God of Wine catches me around the waist, daring where others dare not.

“Is it Persephone or Kore?” he asks. “Or Melindia or Hagne or Despoina?” His right hand tangles in my hair while his left draws me closer to his body. “How old are you now, anyway?”

“Old enough to be married,” I remind him and his hands drop away like dead leaves.

At the edge of the company I stand apart, the woods at my back as I watch the revelry. In Spring the nymphs and dryads danced among the green buds and white blossom around a slender stem of an olive tree hung with laurel. Now it's Autumn and they dance again in drifts of fallen leaves around a blazing fire.

It's my story they are telling in the beat of drums and the rhythmic pounding of feet. It's my return they celebrate in springtime and my departure they grieve in the fall.

My story – but it doesn't feel as though it belongs to me. Perhaps because they never asked for my version. Our poets, like our heroes, are men – and it does not occur to them to ask.

It seems distant; a myth of long ago, a story with an ending everyone knows, a closed book. I draw away, under the shadow of the trees, the warmth of the fire at my back. These last few weeks whenever my mother sees me at the edge of the woods she comes running, her hair streaming behind her like a banner, her dress dishevelled into a flag of despair. She clutches at my hands, my feet, rocking me with her body, keeping me rooted to the earth.

Her moans and cries mean that she loves me. But what is love but the desire to have and to hold? She says that his love is only passion, possession, power. I have not told her he says the same of her.

The wind whistles: a shrill chilly sound that echoes through the forest. The trees shake their branches, casting their rustling garments to the ground to emerge stripped bare and skeletal. The dead leaves catch in my hair, dry and crackling. I step into the shadow of the wraith wood.

I am not sure if I am following a path or if the path is created as I walk. Beneath my feet the earth is cold and rimed with frost. The forest is ghostly, half-glimpsed shapes slip in and out of the shadows. The
rustle of leaves, the crackle of dead twigs, the moan of the wind: they whisper to me, speaking of subjects that summer cannot know.

There are stones on the road, sharp-edged flints that slice my feet. If I looked back would I see a trail of my own blood? But I do not look back.

I have walked this road before, in both directions. I know what lies at either end.

The road is steeper too. The trees thin down as the hillside rises, their trunks stunted or twisted against the battering onslaught of a cold wind. Above, the countenance of the sky is dark and stormy, frowning down at me.

A flurry of snow casts itself into the air, dusting my hair with ice crystals, chilling my skin and damping my dress. A freezing fog descends and the mountain steps spill gravel and hailstones in a rattling hammering scree. I brace myself against the storm, needles of frost stab down from the sky and are whipped away by the wailing wind. My face is reddened with the slap and sting of the cold. My lips are numb with its kisses.

Night is falling, like a black god descending through the heavens. It is a winter night, cold and
bleak and terrible. Spring is a long-gone memory, distant as childhood. Summer is erased as though it never was. Autumn has been left behind. Now there is only the stark face of night, the burning eyes of the stars, the world a blank page on which winter has written his name.

Ahead a black mouth yawns open in the hollow hill. The stone road leads through it: a lane to the land of the dead. Still my footsteps do not falter. There is nowhere to go but forward.

As I descend into the dark, the stone walls close in over and around me with a cold heavy embrace. Down into the depths, where the light dwindles and life decays, into the land of husks and rinds.

The first time I came this way was not so easy, no smooth passageway, no open road. Caught in the thunderous embrace of the lord of the underworld the earth shook and burst apart, a chasm opened, the swoop became a plunge, the air screamed past and we fell together into the dark.

This time I am granted the illusion of choice. The road winds slowly down into the mountain, taking its time, secure in the inevitability of its own ending.

I am alone on the road. But beside and behind me I hear the scrape of scales on stone, paws padding, insectine legs clacking and clicketing in a sudden scurry of movement. Leathery wings flap overhead, moths blunder blindly across my face kissing me with dust, webs cling and tangle in my hair.

The light is dying but this is a path I could walk blindfold. Emptiness gapes around me, the path thins down to a thread unreeling through the void of blackness. My steps are sure on the span of stone across the dizzying depths of the abyss.

I can hear water dripping, the trickle growing to a flow, drawn down as I am into the dark.

Acheron is the river of sorrow, it flows with the salt water of tears, the clay bed red as tear-stung eyes. Cocytus is named for lamentation, a howling waterfall that hurls itself from stone to stone, careless of itself as it plunges down. Phlegethon is a river of fire, the world broken open, as molten stone rages along well grooved channels.

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