Beautiful Darkness
“As do we.” The Incubuses moved closer to the casket.
“Then let him be Cast to the world beyond. Redi in pace, ad Ignem Atrum ex quo venisti.” The Gravecaster held the light high over his head, and it flared brighter. “Go in peace, back to the Dark Fire from where you came.” He threw the light into the air, and sparks showered down onto the coffin, searing into the wood where they fell. As if on cue, Lena’s family and the Incubuses threw their hands into the air, releasing tiny silver objects not much bigger than quarters, which rained down onto Macon’s coffin amidst the gold flames. The sky was starting to change color, from the black of night to the blue before the sunrise. I strained to see what the objects were, but it was too dark.
“His dictis, solutus est. With these words, he is free.”
An almost blinding white light emanated from the casket. I could barely see the Gravecaster a few feet in front of me, as if his voice was transporting us and we were no longer standing over a gravesite in Gatlin.
Uncle Macon! No!
The light flashed, like lightning striking, and died out. We were all back in the circle, looking at a mound of dirt and flowers. The burial was over. The coffin was gone. Aunt Del put her arms protectively around Reece and Ryan.
Macon was gone.
Lena fell forward onto her knees in the muddy grass.
The gate around Macon’s plot slammed shut behind her, without so much as a finger touching it. This wasn’t over for her. No one was going anywhere.
Lena?
The rain started to pick up almost immediately, the weather still tethered to her powers as a Natural, the ultimate elemental in the Caster world. She pulled herself to her feet.
Lena! This isn’t going to change anything!
The air filled with hundreds of cheap white carnations and plastic flowers and palmetto fronds and flags from every grave visited in the last month, all flying loose in the air, tumbling airborne down the hill. Fifty years from now, folks in town would still be talking about the day the wind almost blew down every magnolia in His Garden of Perpetual Peace. The gale came on so fierce and fast, it was a slap in the face to everyone there, a hit so hard you had to stagger to stay on your feet. Only Lena stood straight and tall, holding fast to the stone marker next to her. Her hair had unraveled from its awkward knot and whipped in the air around her. She was no longer all darkness and shadow. She was the opposite—the one bright spot in the storm, as if the yellowish-gold lightning splitting the sky above us was emanating from her body. Boo Radley, Macon’s dog, whimpered and flattened his ears at Lena’s feet.
He wouldn’t want this, L.
Lena put her face in her hands, and a sudden gust blew the canopy out from where it was staked in the wet earth, sending it tumbling backward down the hill.
Gramma stepped in front of Lena, closed her eyes, and touched a single finger to her granddaughter’s cheek. The moment she touched Lena, everything stopped, and I knew Gramma had used her abilities as an Empath to absorb Lena’s powers temporarily. But she couldn’t absorb Lena’s anger. None of us were strong enough to do that.
The wind died down, and the rain slowed to a drizzle. Gramma pulled her hand away from Lena and opened her eyes.
The Succubus, looking unusually disheveled, stared up at the sky. “It’s almost sunrise.” The sun was beginning to burn its way up through the clouds and over the horizon, scattering odd splinters of light and life across the uneven rows of headstones. Nothing else had to be said. The Incubuses started to dematerialize, the sound of suction filling the air. Ripping was how I thought of it, the way they pulled open the sky and disappeared.
I started to walk toward Lena, but Amma yanked my arm. “What? They’re gone.”
“Not all a them. Look—”
She was right. At the edge of the plot, there was only one Incubus remaining, leaning against a weathered headstone adorned with a weeping angel. He looked older than I was, maybe nineteen, with short, black hair and the same pale skin as the rest of his kind. But unlike the other Incubuses, he hadn’t disappeared before the dawn. As I watched him, he moved out from under the shadow of the oak directly into the bright morning light, with his eyes closed and his face tilted toward the sun, as if it was only shining for him.
Amma was wrong. He couldn’t be one of them. He stood there basking in the sunlight, an impossibility for an Incubus.
What was he? And what was he doing here?
He moved closer and caught my eye, as if he could feel me watching him. That’s when I saw his eyes. They weren’t the black eyes of an Incubus.
They were Caster green.
He stopped in front of Lena, jamming his hands in his pockets, tipping his head slightly. Not a bow, but an awkward show of deference, which somehow seemed more honest. He had crossed the invisible aisle, and in a moment of real Southern gentility, he could have been the son of Macon Ravenwood himself. Which made me hate him.
“I’m sorry for your loss.”
He opened her hand and placed a small silver object in it, like the ones everyone had thrown onto Macon’s casket. Her fingers closed around it. Before I could move a muscle, the unmistakable ripping sound tore through the air, and he was gone.
Ethan?
I saw her legs begin to buckle under the weight of the morning—the loss, the storm, even the final rip in the sky. By the time I made it to her side and slid my arm under her, she was gone, too. I carried her down the sloping hill, away from Macon and the cemetery.
She slept curled in my bed, on and off, for a night and a day. She had a few stray twigs matted in her hair, and her face was still flecked with mud, but she wouldn’t go home to Ravenwood, and no one asked her to. I had given her my oldest, softest sweatshirt and wrapped her in our thickest patchwork quilt, but she never stopped shivering, even in her sleep. Boo lay at her feet, and Amma appeared in the doorway every now and then. I sat in the chair by the window, the one I never sat in, and stared out at the sky. I couldn’t open it, because a storm was still brewing.
As Lena was sleeping, her fingers uncurled. In them was a tiny bird made of silver, a sparrow. A gift from the stranger at Macon’s funeral. I tried to take it from her hand just as her fingers tightened around it.
Two months later, and I still couldn’t look at a bird without hearing the sound of the sky ripping open.
4.17
Burnt Waffles
Four eggs, four strips of bacon, a basket of scratch biscuits (which by Amma’s standard meant a spoon had never touched the batter), three kinds of freezer jam, and a slab of butter drizzled with honey. And from the smell of it, across the counter buttermilk batter was separating into squares, turning crisp in the old waffle iron. For the last two months, Amma had been cooking night and day. The counter was piled high with Pyrex dishes—cheese grits, green bean casserole, fried chicken, and of course, Bing cherry salad, which was really a fancy name for a Jell-O mold with cherries, pineapple, and Coca-Cola in it. Past that, I could make out a coconut cake, orange rolls, and what looked like bourbon bread pudding, but I knew there was more. Since Macon died and my dad left, Amma kept cooking and baking and stacking, as if she could cook her sadness away. We both knew she couldn’t.
Amma hadn’t gone this dark since my mom died. She’d known Macon Ravenwood a lifetime longer than I had, even longer than Lena. No matter how unlikely or unpredictable their relationship was, it had meant something to both of them. They were friends, though I wasn’t sure either of them would’ve admitted it. But I knew the truth. Amma was wearing it all over her face and stacking it all over our kitchen.
“Got a call from Dr. Summers.” My dad’s psychiatrist. Amma didn’t look up from the waffle iron, and I didn’t point out that you didn’t actually need to stare at a waffle iron for it to cook the waffles.
“What’d he say?” I studied her back from my seat at the old oak table, her apron strings tied in the middle. I remembered how many times I had tried to sneak up on her and untie those strings. Amma was so
short they hung down almost as long as the apron itself, and I thought about that for as long as I could. Anything was better than thinking about my father.
“He thinks your daddy’s about ready to come home.”
I held up my empty glass and stared through it, where things looked as distorted as they really were. My dad had been at Blue Horizons, in Columbia, for two months. After Amma found out about the nonexistent book he was pretending to write all year, and the “incident,” which is how she referred to my dad nearly jumping off a balcony, she called my Aunt Caroline. My aunt drove him to Blue Horizons that same day—she called it a spa. The kind of spa you sent your crazy relatives to if they needed what folks in Gatlin referred to as “individual attention,” or what everyone outside of the South would call therapy.
“Great.”
Great. I couldn’t see my dad coming home to Gatlin, walking around town in his duck pajamas. There was enough crazy around here already between Amma and me, wedged in between the cream-of-grief casseroles I’d be dropping off at First Methodist around dinnertime, as I did almost every night. I wasn’t an expert on feelings, but Amma’s were all stirred up in cake batter, and she wasn’t about to share them. She’d rather give away the cake.
I tried to talk to her about it once, the day after the funeral, but she had shut down the conversation before it even started. “Done is done. Gone is gone. Where Macon Ravenwood is now, not likely we’ll ever see him again, not in this world or the Other.” She sounded like she’d made her peace with it, but here I was, two months later, still delivering cakes and casseroles. She had lost the two men in her life the same night—my father and Macon. My dad wasn’t dead, but our kitchen didn’t make those kinds of distinctions. Like Amma said, gone was gone.
“I’m makin’ waffles. Hope you’re hungry.”
That was probably all I’d hear from her this morning. I picked up the carton of chocolate milk next to my glass and poured it full out of habit. Amma used to complain when I drank chocolate milk at breakfast. Now she would have cut me up a whole Tunnel of Fudge cake without a word, which only made me feel worse. Even more telling, the Sunday edition of the New York Times wasn’t open to the crossword, and her black, extra-sharp #2 pencils were hidden away in their drawer. Amma was staring out the kitchen window at the clouds choking the sky.
L. A. C. O. N. I. C. Seven across, which means I don’t have to say a thing, Ethan Wate. That’s what Amma would have said on any other day.
I took a gulp of my chocolate milk and almost choked. Sugar was too sweet, and Amma was too quiet. That’s how I knew things had changed.
That, and the burnt waffles smoking in the waffle iron.
I should have been on my way to school, but instead I turned onto Route 9 and headed for Ravenwood. Lena hadn’t been back to school since before her birthday. After Macon’s death, Principal Harper had generously granted her permission to work at home with a tutor until she felt up to coming back to Jackson. Considering he had helped Mrs. Lincoln in her campaign to get Lena expelled after the winter formal, I’m sure he was hoping that would be the day after never.
I admit, I was a little jealous. Lena didn’t have to listen to Mr. Lee drone on about the War of Northern Aggression and the plight of the Confederacy or sit on the Good-Eye Side in English. Abby Porter and I were the only ones sitting there now, so we had to answer all the Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde questions in class. What prompts Dr. Jekyll to turn into Mr. Hyde? Were they really any different after all? Nobody had the slightest clue, which was the reason everyone on Mrs. English’s glass-eye side was sleeping.
But Jackson wasn’t the same without Lena, at least not for me. That’s why after two months, I was begging her to come back. Yesterday, when she said she’d think about it, I told her she could think about it on the way to school.
I found myself back at the fork in the road. It was our old road, mine and Lena’s. The one that had taken me off Route 9 and up to Ravenwood the night we met. The first time I realized she was the same girl I’d been dreaming about, long before she ever moved to Gatlin.
As soon as I saw the road, I heard the song. It drifted into the Volvo as naturally as if I had turned on the radio. Same song. Same words. Same as it had for the last two months—when I turned on my iPod, stared at the ceiling, or read a single page of Silver Surfer over and over, without even seeing it.
Seventeen Moons. It was always there. I tried turning the dials on the radio, but it didn’t matter. Now it was playing in my head instead of coming out of the speakers, as if someone was Kelting the song to me.
Seventeen moons, seventeen years,
Eyes where Dark or Light appears,
Gold for yes and green for no,
Seventeen the last to know…
The song was gone. I knew better than to ignore it, but I also knew how Lena acted every time I tried to bring it up.
“It’s a song,” she would say dismissively. “It doesn’t mean anything.”
“Like Sixteen Moons didn’t mean anything? It’s about us.” It didn’t matter if she knew it or even if she agreed. Either way, it was the moment Lena usually switched from defense to offense, and the conversation veered off track.
“You mean it’s about me. Dark or Light? Whether or not I’m going to go all Sarafine on you? If you’ve already decided I’m going Dark, why don’t you admit it?”
At that point, I would say something stupid to change the subject. Until I learned not to say anything at all. So we didn’t talk about the song that was playing in my head, same as it was in hers.
Seventeen Moons. We couldn’t avoid it.
The song had to be about Lena’s Claiming, the moment she would become Light or Dark forever. Which could only mean one thing: she wasn’t Claimed. Not yet. Gold for yes and green for no? I knew what the song meant—the gold eyes of a Dark Caster or the green eyes of a Light one. Since the night of Lena’s birthday, her Sixteenth Moon, I had tried to tell myself it was all over, that Lena didn’t have to be Claimed, that she was some kind of exception. Why couldn’t it be different for her, since everything else about her seemed to be so exceptional?
But it wasn’t different. Seventeen Moons was proof. I’d heard Sixteen Moons for months before Lena’s birthday, a harbinger of things to come. Now the words had changed again, and I was faced with another eerie prophecy. There was a choice to be made, and Lena hadn’t made it. The songs never lied. At least, they hadn’t yet.
I didn’t want to think about it. As I headed up the long rise leading to the gates of Ravenwood Manor, even the grinding sound of the tires on gravel seemed to repeat the one inescapable truth. If there was a Seventeenth Moon, then it had all been for nothing. Macon’s death had been for nothing.
Lena would still have to Claim herself for Light or Dark, deciding her fate forever. There was no turning back for Casters, no changing sides. And when she finally made her choice, half her family would die because of it. The Light Casters or the Dark Casters—the curse promised only one side could survive. But in a family where generations of Casters had no free will and had been Claimed for Light or Dark on their own sixteenth birthdays without any say in the matter, how was Lena supposed to make that kind of choice?
All she had wanted, her whole life, was to choose her own destiny. Now she could, and it was like some kind of cruel cosmic joke.
I stopped at the gates, turned off the engine, and closed my eyes, remembering—the rising panic, the visions, the dreams, the song. This time, Macon wouldn’t be there to steal away the unhappy endings. There was nobody left to get us out of trouble, and it was coming fast.
4.17
Lemons and Ash
When I pulled up in front of Ravenwood, Lena was sitting on the crumbling veranda, waiting. She was wearing an old button-down shirt and jeans and her beat-up Chuck Taylors. For a second, it seemed as if it could’ve been three months ago and today was just another day. But she was also wearing one of Macon’s pinstriped vests, and it wasn’t the same
. Now that Macon was gone, something about Ravenwood felt wrong. Like going to the Gatlin County Library if Marian, its only librarian, wasn’t there, or to the DAR without the most important daughter of the Daughters of the American Revolution herself, Mrs. Lincoln. Or to my parents’ study without my mom.
Ravenwood looked worse every time I came. Staring out at the archway of weeping willows, it was hard to imagine the garden had deteriorated so quickly. Beds of the same kinds of flowers Amma had painstakingly taught me to weed as a kid were fighting for space in the dry earth. Beneath the magnolias, clusters of hyacinth were tangled with hibiscus, and heliotrope infested the forget-me-nots, as if the garden itself was in mourning. Which was entirely possible. Ravenwood Manor had always seemed to have a mind of its own. Why should the gardens be any different? The weight of Lena’s grief probably wasn’t helping. The house was a mirror for her moods, the same way it had always been for Macon’s.
When he died, he left Ravenwood to Lena, and sometimes I wondered whether it would have been better if he hadn’t. The house was looking bleaker by the day, instead of better. Every time I drove up the hill, I found myself holding my breath, waiting for the smallest sign of life, something new, something blooming. Every time I reached the top, all I saw were more bare branches.
Lena climbed into the Volvo, a complaint already on her lips. “I don’t want to go.”
“No one wants to go to school.”
“You know what I mean. That place is awful. I’d rather stay here and study Latin all day.”
This wasn’t going to be easy. How could I convince her to go somewhere I didn’t even want to go? High school sucked. It was a universal truth, and whoever said these were supposed to be the best years of your life was probably drunk or delusional. I decided reverse psychology was my only shot. “High school is supposed to be the worst years of your life.”