Page 33 of Flame in the Dark


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“Gross. The bleeding part. I get the talking-to-trees part. I been talking to plants since I was in diapers. So what are we?”

“I don’t know. A friend told me I wasyinehi, which is sorta like a fae.” At her blank look, I said, “Like a fairy.”

She looked down at herself. “Too big. Ain’t got no wings. Can’t fly.”

I laughed, the sound unexpected and stuttering. “Good point. I did some more research, but I still didn’t find us. I guess I need to expand my search parameters. Find out what we are.”

“Search parameters.Townie talk. And when you learn what’s what, you’ll tell me, right?”

I nodded my head and cradled the lemon ginger tea, letting it soothe me. “Soon as I know I’ll tell you.”

“So how’m I gonna get land? And how’m I gonnanotget courted in two years and married in four? And how’m I gonna be safe? I want land. It don’t have to be as good as Soulwood. I can make it grow if’n I work at it, right? I want a place a my own. No husband and no children.”

“You’re too young to know if you really want children or not.”

“Churchmen don’t care what I want. They decide and the womenfolk follow. All exceptin’ you’un. I want a real life. With the land.”

“Mmm. I’m still trying to make up my mind about young’uns and I’m nearly twenty-four years old.”

“Okay. I’ll decide if I want a man and babies after I’m twenty-four.”

I smiled. We both sipped.

“Why’nt you’un got no Christmas tree?”

I topped up our cups. “Well, sister mine, I’ve had no time to think about Christmas. Soon, though.”

“You’un tell me when and I’ll help you.”

“Deal.”

The three mouser cats raced down the stairs and leaped on the couch to curl on top of us and around us. The house warmed. And it occurred to me that... that maybe Mud could live here. With me. And that maybe I could give her a small part of my land. Like a land dowry. Or something. If Daddy would ever let her move in with me.

“You know you’un got green leaves growing out your’n fingers?”

I held out my hand, fingers splayed. “Yep.”

“Am I gonna grow green leaves?”

“I have no idea, sister mine.”

“I reckon we’ll figger it out as we go, then.”

“I reckon,” I agreed, ideas and possibilities racing around in my brain like bumper cars, all filled with excitement and delight slamming into concern and fear. All the things that could go wrong. All the things that I might have to reveal to my family. The tree I had to corral and harness and direct. Brother Ephraim to kill. Again. And all that very soon.

•••

My time with Mud was short, but I let her help me clip the foliage off my neck and away from my fingernails. She seemed to find it amusing, and giggled every time a leaf went flying. The laughter did us both good, but I was going to be late to work, and so I cut it short, gathering up my gear and herding the cats onto the back porch. Then I drove my sister back to the church compound, let her out, and watched her go inside the Nicholson house.

Not wanting to do it, but knowing I had to, I drove to the tree, parked, and got out, wrapping my coat tightly about me, shoving my hands deep into my pockets. The sun was setting, casting a red glow on the once-upon-a-time oak and dark shadows leaning long behind it.

The tree was no longer young and vibrant and full of life. It had dark, thick bark and abundant, swollen leaves, too thick and pliable to be a live oak or a deciduous tree. The leaves were more like the foliage of a succulent, with scarlet-lined veins that, when broken, dripped a red substance viscous as blood, gooey and oily.

The tree had grown wildly since I had used it to heal me. It now had the girth of an old-growth tree, bigger than five men holding hands could reach around, with branches that coiled and curled. Vines sprouted from the jointure of limbs and trunk, each covered with needle-like thorns. At the base lay the remains of a cement block wall, tumbled and fallen in shattered heaps, the wall the churchmen had constructed with the hope of keeping the tree confined. They had also tried chain saws, fire, herbicides, dynamite, and a bulldozer, which the tree had eaten. It was entombed inside the mass of leaves and vines and branches somewhere, the huge behemoth buried. This one tree looked like the forest of a child’s fairy tale, one capable of burying a kingdom.

Around its base, at the wide dripline, roots had sprouted up new growth. It looked as if the tree was trying to grow an enchanted—or cursed—forest.

“You figured out a way to kill that thing?”