Curnen stopped, threw back her head, and howled. It was the same sound Rob had heard that first night outside his room, and again at Doyle’s trailer. This close, it gave him goose bumps.
“Oh, stop it,” Bliss said. She fingered the fabric of the dress. “Whose garbage did you raid to get this, huh?”
Curnen slithered away—no other word described the quick, sinuous motion—and vanished into the darkness.
In the silence, Rob realized he heard nothing except insects and animals—no music, or traffic, or even airplanes overhead. No songs from the barn dance. Could he and Curnen have really run that far? Finally he asked, “So she got that dress from someone’s trash?”
“Yes. She’s mostly like a wild animal. She digs things up, buries things, thinks only in immediate sensation.”
“Because she’s inbred?”
Bliss’s eyes flashed with anger. “No. She’s my baby sister, I helped raise her and she was as normal as anyone once, she just—”
Then suddenly Bliss began to sob. She turned away and leaned against the nearest tree. Just like Rob at the picnic, things she’d kept under tight control burst out with no warning, all the pain and misery and loneliness.
Rob went to her, and she fell into his arms. He felt her tears against his still-bare chest, and she let him hold her up as her legs collapsed. “I’m sorry,” she said between cries, “I’m so sorry. I’m normally tougher than this, I just—”
“Shh, it’s okay,” Rob said. “Cry as long as you need to. You were there for me, I’m here for you.” He looked around the clearing for a sign of Curnen, but the other girl was gone. Above him, several of the kitelike objects flitted across the face of the full moon. The brief glimpse told him nothing, although he swore they had human legs and arms as well as big blurry wings.
Bliss was a dead weight now, her arms around his neck. He lowered her slowly to the ground and knelt beside her, trying to gently disentangle her. “Shh, it’s okay,” he said, stroking her hair. It was soft and deliciously smooth beneath his hand.
“It’s not okay!” she said fiercely, wrenching free to glare at him. “That was once a beautiful girl, with a voice like an angel! Now look at her!”
“Why do you let her live like this?” he asked. “What happened to her?”
“She lives like this because she has to,” Bliss said, wiping furiously at her eyes. “She’s the victim of someone’s hatred, the worst kind of curse.”
“Who?”
Bliss started to answer, but caught herself.
“Rockhouse?” he asked. “She’s got six fingers like he does. Is that who did it?”
She said nothing.
He sprawled back on the grass, wet against his spine, and gazed up at the stars. “Christ on a stick, Bliss. I don’t know what to believe here. You tell me you’re fairies, and that your sister’s cursed. You say I’m not a Tufa, but because someone smacked me in the head, I can see things only a Tufa can see. None of this makes any sense, you know.”
He turned to look at her. She gazed up at the moon, her back to him. Fireflies lazily swarmed around her, as if their light might provide consolation. Her shoulders shook with sobs, but she made no sound.
He got to his feet, stood behind her, and put his hands on her shoulders. “I’m sorry. I know you’re upset, and I’m not helping. Why don’t you just take me back to the motel and we’ll call it a night.”
She turned and looked up at him. “No. I need to sing you a song.”
“Why?”
“Because it’s our story, and you deserve to know it.”
“You don’t have to—”
“Yes, I do.” Curnen has claimed you, she wanted to say. If the curse is broken, she’ll be yours. If not, you’ll go down with her now and you don’t even know it. But she only repeated, “Yes, I do.”
She took his hands in hers, closed her eyes, and began:
When these hills were sharp as claws
Raked slow across the sky
We rode the wind that wore them smooth
And came to this place to die.
We thought our time had ended
As it does for all true things
But here we found a new green home
And room to spread our wings.
Oh, time makes men grow sad
And rivers change their ways
But the night wind and her riders
Will ever stay the same.”
She hummed a stanza of the melody before she resumed singing. As if she’d somehow conjured it, the treetops above them began to sway in the breeze. He shivered.
We sailed the slopes and valleys
Played in the hollers and hills
Our songs filled nights with wonder
Our tears the storms fulfilled.
Till men came over the mountains
And brought their changing ways
We loved them back when they loved us
And loved the children that we made.
She looked into his face. Her dark hair fell away from her ivory shoulders. She held his gaze as she sang:
And now we are the same as you
Our blood no longer tells
’Scept on nights when we spread our wings
And ride moonbeams cross the hills.
Now you, dear stranger, know our tale
Even though you don’t believe
So eat our bread and drink our wine
And you may never leave.
They stood quietly facing each other, holding hands. Another verse from that day at the post office went through his mind: Young women they’ll sing / Like birds in the bushes. It was almost as if the song had been a warning about the Overbay sisters.
She looked into his eyes. “So what do you think?”
He searched for the right word. “I’m… enchanted.”
She smiled, leaned closer, and softly, gently kissed him. It went on for a long time. It inspired no sexual passion, just a tenderness that drained away all anger and worry.
Curnen howled far in the distance. Coyotes joined in from all around, a chorus of loneliness counterpointing the lovers’ connection.
“Don’t worry, sister-girl,” she said to the night. “He’s still yours.”
“What do you mean by that?” he said, but a yawn cut him off.
It was dark outside when someone knocked on Rob’s door.
He blinked awake. The pressure in his bladder was horrendous. When he got to his feet, every muscle protested the movement, as if he hadn’t moved once during his sleep. “Coming,” he said, his voice raw in his dry throat.
Where the hell was he? The last thing he recalled, he was in the woods, in a clearing, with Bliss Overbay and her sister, Curnen, who had… Wait, what?
He rubbed his eyes and looked around. He was back in his room at the Catamount Corner. How the fuck had he gotten here? He squinted at the clock on the bedstand. The red numbers showed 4:14 A.M.
The knock came again. He opened it, squinting against the light from the hall outside.
Terry Kizer stood there, looking very tired and worried. “Can I come in and talk to you for a second?”
“Sure,” Rob croaked. “’Scuse me for just a minute. Make yourself comfortable.” He went into the bathroom and epically relieved himself. Then he brushed his teeth and drank what seemed like a gallon of water.
“I’ve got to go home to Michigan today,” Kizer said from the room. “I wasn’t prepared for an indefinite stay here. But I’m coming back tomorrow to help with the search.”
“She hasn’t turned up?” Rob asked as he came out of the bathroom.
“No, not a trace,” he said bitterly. “I mean, I can imagine her running off, even shacking up with some other guy for a while just to piss me off. But not without money, or her ID, or any of the stuff she swears she needs before she leaves the house. She’s always thought she was smarter and tougher than everyone else, no matter where we were. So yeah, I think something’s happened to her.”
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