A History of Glitter and Blood
To Leah G. and John C.
Who always, always, always believed in fairies.
Copyright © 2015 by Hannah Moskowitz.
Illustration on page 35 copyright © 2015 by Sam Weber.
Illustrations on pages 17, 28, 45, 104, 199, 215, and 236 copyright © 2015 by Cathy G. Johnson.
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form without written permission from the publisher.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data:
Moskowitz, Hannah, author.
A History of Glitter and Blood / by Hannah Moskowitz
pages cm
Summary: Beckan, an immortal teenage fairy, and Tier, a young activist, are on opposite sides of a war, but strike up an unlikely friendship anyway.
ISBN 978-1-4521-2942-6 (hc)
ISBN 978-1-4521-4097-1 (epub & mobi)
1. Fairies—Juvenile fiction. 2. Gnomes—Juvenile fiction. 3. Friendship—Juvenile fiction. 4. War stories. [1. Fairies—Fiction. 2. Gnomes—Fiction. 3. Friendship—Fiction. 4. War—Fiction. 5. Fantasy.] I. Title.
PZ7.M84947Sc2015
[Fic]—dc23
Design by Kelsey Premo Jones.
Typeset in Bulmer MT, Eveleth, 1820 Modern, Formosa, Rougfhouse, Times New Roman, FF Justlefthand,
Bulletin Typewriter, and Quickpen.
The illustration in this book by Sam Weber was rendered digitally.
The illustrations in this book by Cathy G. Johnson were rendered in graphite.
Quotations on pages v and 200 are from “somewhere I have never travelled, gladly beyond” by E.E. Cummings.
Chronicle Books LLC
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San Francisco, CA 94107
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i do not know what it is about you that closes
and opens
—E.E. Cummings
1
Once upon a time there were four fairies in the city who hadn’t been maimed.
The second youngest, the only girl, was Beckan Moloy.
She was sixteen, and there were fifteen fairy children her junior in the city, but most of them had been in a day care a few years ago that was attacked by a gnome custodian, and others had lost eyes and tongues and fingers in various other incidents. Another handful around her age lost feet when they were ten and had gone down to the mines on a dare at a birthday party. Beckan hadn’t been invited.
Missing body parts were nothing to cry about and nothing to take too seriously. Ferrum (the oldest fairy city, the living, gasping legend) was nine square miles of cracked cobblestone and iron scaffolding and playgrounds and libraries and was hardly a hazardous space, all in all, so the chunks of fairy that ended up in gnome stomachs were reasonable collateral damage. They were conveniently located around the waterways and farmlands, and they had gnomes to drive their buses and sweep their streets. Sometimes some fairy limbs had to be sacrificed to keep all of that. Call it a tax.
It was only an interesting coincidence that had Beckan make it to this age unscathed, and to have Josha, her best friend, tall, happy, several years older; Scrap, two months and two centimeters below her, eyes like something burned; Cricket, Scrap’s cousin, music in his ears, eyes on Josha—somehow slip through as well. Somehow the four of them came to feel like their own generation, as if they were the last vestiges from an old world where things didn’t eat each other. But if a world like that had ever existed, these fairies wouldn’t know. These fairies had never been outside Ferrum.
So if someone could have predicted the start of the war, which to this historian’s approximation was three hundred and forty days ago, it would not have been Beckan. She didn’t need a job, as she lived comfortably off her father’s money, and he, with only a tooth left by way of a mouth (and only an eye and an ear besides), could protest very little. She stayed home and worked on her welding and thought about skirting around the city on roller skates delivering newspapers, like Josha, or doing whoknewwhat with Scrap and his cousin, Cricket, who somehow afforded to keep one of the cottages dotting the hills on the rims of the city that otherwise housed the richest and oldest and most exhausted with city life. But for Beckan, usually, her father was her only company. The gnome king, Crate, ate most of him when she was ten. A boy gnome—one she didn’t realize until much later was Tier—respectfully delivered his remains. She didn’t cry. She knew her world. She made hot-glue flowers and stuck them to the lid of a jar and tossed her father inside. Like most of the fairies, all of whom came from non-fairy mothers (due to every lady-fairy’s lack of uterus, a condition that sometimes left Beckan in front of her mirror for long periods, smoothing imaginary lumps on her belly), Beckan never knew her mother. Beckan was half gnome, and that was the only real burden she carried—that and her father in his jam jar, usually stuffed in the bottom of her bag.
Beckan was invincible.
Now, it’s a year later—a year into the war—and Beckan stands in front of the mirror thinking about getting dolled up in heels and hair spray (and she thinks about back when she used to wear whatever she wanted).
She touches her hair and immediately wishes she hadn’t, because now she can’t avoid thinking about how long it has been since she’s showered. But the dirtier her skin gets, the less the glitter shows, and the less the gnomes glare and complain and gnash their teeth when she goes down to the mines. She figured that trick out on her own.
She shoves her hair under a black cap. Her sleeves are long enough to cover her hands.
She knocks on Josha’s door and says, “Sure you’re not coming?”
He doesn’t even grunt.
She says, “We’ll let you know if we find him. Try to eat something?”
She is almost seventeen, and now she and Josha are the only fairies in Ferrum (in their whole world) who haven’t been maimed (and she is the youngest).
Scrap and Cricket’s cottage is home now, with its uneven maple floors and squeaky faucet knobs and peacefully necrotic bathroom ceiling. Even after everything, Beckan is still living in a dollhouse, where every chipped dish and mismatched mug and unread newspaper feels perfectly and cleanly placed.
The moonlight’s hitting Scrap hard through the glass-paned kitchen ceiling. Beckan has to rub her eyes for a minute after stepping in before she’s sure he’s really there.
Her sneakers are so thin that she feels the chill of the tile.
“Scrap.”
He looks up.
She stands in the doorway, her hand on the frame, her fingernails scraping up a few splinters.
She says, “You okay?”
He smiles at her and nods with just his eyes, a bit of paper still clamped between his lips, another bit torn and captured between sticky fingertips.
The rain outside sounds like someone running.
“You ready to go?”
He looks down at his manuscript. “Yeah. When I finish this page.”
“Soon?”
“Wouldn’t that be nice.”
“What are you even writing about? Hardly much happening.”
Throughout the war, Scrap has written dry diaries of the days. A few lines only, descriptions of the weather and body counts and what there was to eat.
The war has been so quiet these past few weeks, which doesn’t explain why he’s been writing more.
“Just transcribing,” he says. “Cross-referencing. Moving things”—he gestures to a torn-out page, then to a different book—“to other things. You know.”
She’s confused and crosses to the table to take his coffee cup so he can tug on his boots. His right arm is gone now, from just below the e
lbow, and they’re learning to make allowances for that, because there are things to do and pieces to find. (Not Scrap’s pieces. Something more important.)
At night, in the rain, their city is more alive than it has been since the start of the war. Beckan watches glitter drip from her fingers onto the ground.
Above them, they hear whispers, giggles, a fire crackling.
They don’t look up.
It still seems so quiet, compared to when Ferrum was a real city (when there were more fairies than just their lost little generation, when there was life) and when Ferrum was in the heyday of war (when there was only smoke and noise). Now everything is petered out, quiet. It’s not in a fairy’s nature to know what it means to sit still.
But it’s been a year since the city was really theirs. The fairies used to rule this place, above the ground, with their steel apartments, their manufacturing plants, their white-collar jobs in their industrial city, while the gnomes handled their dirty work in exchange for scraps of meat and the promise of a future immortal baby with a fairy boy. They played nice for their future generations. They loved the hope of having immortal children more than they loved your bones between their teeth. That was the reassurance fairy fathers whispered in gnome-nibbled fairy-children ears.
But gnomes were unpredictable and irresponsible, and a few fairies would always lose a few bits, a few fairies would sometimes lose a lot of bits, but every other fairy threw an extra bit of lamb meat (there was always extra, back then; this was never a thought) down the manholes every once in a while and in return got their trash taken and their jewels dug and their money minted and their roads paved, so who would complain? (They hadn’t.)
And then the tightropers came and brought the war and the fairies were caught, quite literally, in the middle of it all. The tightroper radio announcements and fliers used to call it a fairy liberation.
And maybe that was why, for the first time in decades, the fairies counted maimed family members on the remains of their fingers and decided they needed to be liberated from a city they’d built and a city they loved.
Anyway, those radio announcements and those fliers had petered out too.
“Fucking freezing,” Scrap mumbles.
“I’m hot.”
The words you’re always hot and you’re always cold hang in the air between them, and Beckan scrapes her shoe against the pavement to block out the silence.
“Meet back here in an hour,” she says. “Don’t wait past an hour and a half.”
Scrap swipes his hand under his nose. He’s in all black, like she is, but he’s wearing one of the lockets Beckan made, the heavy brass one he and Josha share. It’s empty. “Okay.”
Scrap heads north and she heads roughly west, tracing the streets of the city she used to draw from memory when she was bored. Now, without the storefronts and street signs, she’s embarrassed to say (she would never admit) that she gets lost. This is where the cheap apartments were, she thinks, where the newer immigrants, fairy families from other cities or visiting races foolishly trying to stay, usually ended up settling. There was a playground here once but it was gone long before the war, turned into a tiny restaurant with vats of vegetable soup served up by sweaty fairy teenagers. Josha worked there for a time. There were fairy protesters out front the year it was built with signs petitioning to get the elders to rebuild the playground. Do we really need more food? their signs said.
But they’ve already searched the square where Cricket died (was swallowed), and there isn’t a trace of him there. The gnomes cleaned up and they cleaned up well, but he has to be somewhere. They only need a bit. Something to talk to and pet and give to Josha. Cricket could be a jar fairy like her father.
(And parts of Cricket have to be out there. Every time Beckan eats now, she counts crumbs that fall onto her shirt or onto the table. There are always a few. It’s impossible to eat every single bit of bread. It’s impossible to eat every single bit of fairy.)
Beckan feels her own glitter as it falls to the ground and crunches beneath her feet. She’s used to it. She’s used to feeling the ground and the bottoms of shoes and the grout in the bathroom tiles with the bits of her that slough off and stay sentient. She never used to think about these wimpy bits of pain until Scrap’s stupid books about fairy anatomy started showing up everywhere in the house, stacked up on the floor just like their swept-up glitter, and no, she does not want to know about the complex sensory capabilities of every speck of her—she spends her time welding things together and laughing at stupid jokes and trying to feel very, very whole—but now she thinks about losing parts, and she fucking has to find some of Cricket.
A voice above her head says, “What are you looking for, empty girl?” The tightropers are civil during the day—they need the fairies; who else is going to justify their war—but there are no rules at night.
“Bite me,” Beckan says.
“So bitchy tonight, Beckan,” the voice growls back, because of course they know it’s her. They’re just trying on gnome insults—empty-girl, empty-girl—for fun.
She does not look up. They can’t hurt her.
They won’t hurt her.
She’s restless tonight. She can only dig through so many dumpsters and so many piles of rubble and dodge so many long, thin ropes hanging above her head before she has to be somewhere else. She’s at the laundromat now, close to the west edge of the city, and the walls seem like her best choice.
She thinks she remembers Scrap telling her once that Ferrum used to be a fortress. Or maybe she wants to believe there’s something other than racism that made a modestly sized fairy city surround itself with walls too high for anyone to climb. For as long as she’s known them, the gates have been unguarded and openable, and before the war, Beckan used to bring her father to the groves outside the city and keep her distance and avert her eyes from the gnomes tilling soil and scooping animal shit to stand on her tiptoes and pluck peaches from her trees. Now the gates are rusted over and some of the latches have been blown up and broken, so it’s hard for a fairy to leave. But the tightropers swing over the walls and the gnome tunnels extend underneath them and out to the farmlands, and sometimes when she is close to the wall she can hear voices on the other side, gnomes or tightropers strategizing or yelling or crying.
Like tonight, for instance, there are voices. Quiet.
She finds a thinner bit of mortar and presses her ear against it. Two voices: one high and one low. A tightroper and a gnome.
Then soft footsteps come up behind her, and she startles so hard her cheek scrapes against the stone. She bleeds thick and dirty.
“Just me,” Scrap whispers.
She nods and tugs him to the wall.
They hear words—treaty, peace, long enough.
They hear them over and over.
Treaty, peace, long enough.
Scrap picks her up with one arm and wraps her legs around his waist and spins her in Northwest Park Square and then they’re running home, breathless and incredible and childish, and Scrap says, “You should tell Josha. You should be the one.”
“This isn’t the news he’s waiting up for. I’m going to tell him”—she can’t say it, can’t say the war’s over because she’s afraid the words will fall off her lips and get lost—“and he’ll just be sitting there staring at me with that look until he figures out that I’m happy because of this and not because we found some of Cricket.”
“You’re better with him,” Scrap says. He and Josha hardly talk anymore, ever since Cricket died a few weeks ago. Ever since the world got so quiet.
They slow down, panting, blocks before they reach their house (which is just against the South gate, all the way on the other edge of the city, but Ferrum is small and they like to run). She presses her nose into the back of his neck when she smiles and smells sweat and glitter on his skin. Scrap’s glitter is blue and pink while hers is blue and black, but it somehow always surprises her to find a bit of Scrap’s glitter that matches hers. She??
?s always been used to looking like Josha, who is so close to her color that it would be hard for her to believe they weren’t related if she hadn’t spent her whole childhood filled with very unsiblinglike feelings for the boy (feelings that are, for better or worse, very, very over). Her feelings for Scrap aren’t nearly as complicated. Not for a while now, anyway. He’s the boy with the room next door. He’s the boy she leans into when she’s happy without any hesitation because she is just happy and he is just nearby. But it’s still hard to reconcile, sometimes, looking like Scrap.
They hike up their hill and Beckan walks backward for a few steps, like always. From the peak of their hill, the city is a blur of gray, useless, half-bombed buildings. If there was anyone on the streets, they would be too small for her to see, but when she looks up and focuses very, very hard, she can still find a few tightropers skittering from rope to rope like spiders on a web. The tightropers are bigger than the fairies, really, but from this cabin on the hill, everything looks very small but the sky looks a little nearer.
Then she smiles and says, “Hey, Scrap. We’re liberated.”
He wrestles his way out of his jacket. “Liberated!”
“Look at us!”
“Hug again,” he says, and wraps her up.
Then they’re unlocking the front door and racing down the hall to Josha’s room. They pound on it together, Scrap’s one hand and Beckan’s two, until they finally stop so they can hear him answer, yell at them, tell them they can fuck off or come in. But he says nothing.
“Josha,” Beckan says. “We’re coming in.”
Still no answer. Scrap tries the knob. Not locked.
Josha is only a lump in the bed and a bit of black hair sticking out from the top of the comforter.
“Josha, the fucking war’s ending. Scrap and I heard.”
She is still excited, but it feels so different now, as if it has solidified and sunk to her feet. It is so hard to be happy in front of Josha now. Hard to be anything but guilty.