The Waters & the Wild Read online




  The Waters & the Wild

  Francesca Lia Block

  FOR MY CHANGELINGS

  The seasons alter…

  And this same progeny of evils comes

  From our debate, from our dissension;

  We are their parents and original.

  —William Shakespeare, A Midsummer Night’s Dream

  Contents

  Epigraph

  Thirteen Ways to Know You are a Changeling

  1

  Haze

  2

  Identity Thing

  3

  Strange Fruit

  4

  The Alien

  5

  Fetch

  6

  The Peculiar Institution

  7

  Invisible

  8

  Flight

  9

  Hand in Hand

  10

  The Imposter

  Test for a Changeling

  11

  Test

  12

  “Tiend to Hell”

  13

  The Journey

  Progeny

  14

  Progeny

  Acknowledgments

  About the Author

  Other Books by Francesca Lia Block

  Credits

  Copyright

  About the Publisher

  thirteen ways to know you are a changeling

  you have never felt as if you quite belonged

  when you love someone it is like immolation or drowning

  you yearn for the earth, even fantasize about eating it in handfuls

  your skin does not seem like your own

  metal frightens you

  light on shallow water causes you to gasp

  as do the carcasses of sea lions prepared by taxidermists for the coldly lit cases of dark museums

  touch is one of the only ways you know to get back to yourself

  but with the wrong human it can take you farther and farther away until you almost cease to exist

  you have repeated dreams of flying even though it takes tremendous effort and feels more like running a race

  you have abandonment issues without necessarily any obvious cause

  you are always secretly seeking ways to hurt yourself, as if this might prove to whoever is in charge that your tasks are done

  hopefully, when you are young you discover something called love, which is really just another name for going home

  1

  Haze

  When Bee woke up, there was a girl standing in her room.

  “You are me,” the girl said.

  Then she was gone.

  The eucalyptus leaves, rung by the night breeze, tinkled as if the salt from the sea air had crystallized, turned them to glass. Bee got out of bed, flung herself to the window and looked out at the sleeping garden. The polished glass chips in the flower beds and the sequins on the saris hanging over the gazebo reflected the light of the full spring moon and made the air phosphorescent.

  But there was not even the shadow of a girl.

  The loneliness Bee always felt—had felt since she could remember feeling anything at all—was so big now, so alive, that it was almost a creature. And after what she had seen, it felt colder, crueler than ever.

  As a little girl she couldn’t make friends. She was too quiet, unable to read. Her teachers thought she had a learning disability, and for a while she was in Occupational Therapy trying to learn how to interpret facial expressions and the tones of people’s voices. Now she struggled through school, just passing every semester.

  “You’re smart,” her mother said. “It has nothing to do with intelligence. Some of the most creative minds were diagnosed with learning disabilities.”

  School wasn’t the only problem. Even with the O.T. it was hard to know how to act with people. And everything about Bee was odd. She couldn’t eat animal flesh or watch all that television, try to talk about what celebrities were wearing or the war in Iraq. She preferred the solitude of her mother’s garden.

  “Miss Green Thumb,” her mom called her. When she was little she fantasized about eating handfuls of dirt to be closer to nature. The red, yellow and sterling roses bloomed bigger than cupcakes. The water hyacinth in the pond burst into edible-looking purple-and-white blossoms. As she got older she tended that pond, lovingly, feeding the koi, gently lifting out the plants with their long trailing roots to clean the filter, drain and refill the water. On the mossy bank by the pool she set out rose-petal beds and an abalone-shell bath, filled with water that brought out its rainbows. She squeezed lemons from the tree and picked figs, made lemonade and fig cakes in tiny cupcake holders, put them out on doll-house china. In the morning the food was gone and the beds looked slept in.

  That is the world I belong in, she thought. The tiny garden world. Not this.

  Ever since she was a small child, Bee knew she couldn’t tell her mom about the mystery in the garden. Now she had another secret: the girl in her room. Deena didn’t believe in the supernatural. She was a born scientist; everything had a tangible cause, related to some function of the brain. But for Bee this way of looking at the world felt empty, as if you were trying to explain away angels as static in the temporal lobe, deities as no more than electricity.

  Joseph Hayes, or “Haze,” as they called him. He might know something about all of this. He always had a book with him, and those thick glasses to hide behind. People said he thought he was an alien. After last night she would have believed almost anything.

  Haze was sitting alone as usual at lunch-time. She slid onto the chair across from him. He glanced up. She hadn’t noticed his eyes before, with those glasses and all. But they were huge and dark, and even this far across the table she thought she saw herself reflected in them like two little dolls.

  She thought, He’s weird, in a good way. Weird like me.

  He was reading his book. It was a withered old volume, leather-bound. It looked ancient but preserved, like a mummy inside its linen binding. Bee wondered what it was about.

  “Hello,” she said.

  He seemed startled that she would sit here at all, let alone talk to him. They said he stuttered, but she’d never heard him speak once. Not that she talked much herself, but her life had changed overnight.

  “I’m Bee.”

  He nodded. He had high, fine cheekbones and lips like a starlet’s. A little acne on his high forehead where a black lock of hair fell forward over his eyes.

  Haze. Who was this boy? Everyone made fun of him. He stammered. He was smart. Unironically ugly, thick-lensed, thick-framed glasses. Problem skin. Beautiful eyes. Hands with tapered fingers and prominent veins, although his nails were bitten so much it looked painful. He had nice lips. Did anyone notice those lips? Did he really believe he was an alien? He read big thick books about stuff most people didn’t believe existed.

  “You’re Haze, right?”

  He nodded again, looked down at his book.

  “What are you reading?”

  He closed and turned it so she could see the cover.

  The Encyclopedia of the Paranormal. She knew he was the right one to talk to.

  “I have a question for you and your book.”

  This sparked his interest, she could tell. His eyes got darker behind the lenses of his glasses and he tilted his head almost imperceptibly to the side, watching her. She realized he hadn’t said a word this whole time, but it felt like he had, somehow.

  “Is there some phenomenon about someone who looks just like you, like a twin? What’s that called? This twin who shows up and then just disappears?”

  He was finding something in his book, flipping through it—he knew what he wan
ted. Yes, there it was. He pushed it across the table to her.

  “Doppelganger,” it said.

  She read the definition. A chill grazed her spine, as if he’d slipped an ice cube down her shirt. But Haze would never have done that. He wasn’t a tease. He wasn’t a flirt. And the chill was worse, too, than ice. So cold it went through her skin and penetrated to the marrow of her bones.

  She read further. “The sighting of one’s doppelganger is often associated with a premonition of the viewer’s imminent death.”

  “‘Ere Babylon was dust,

  The Magus Zoroaster, my dead child,

  Met his own image walking in the garden.

  That apparition, sole of men, he saw.

  For know there are two worlds of life and death:

  One that which thou beholdest; but the other

  Is underneath the grave, where do inhabit

  The shadows of all forms that think and live

  Till death unite them and they part no more…’”

  “What?” The words were like a cold, bittersweet elixir that made her spine tingle. “Who wrote that?” she asked, but it was suddenly hard to talk.

  “Sh-helley,” Haze stammered. His voice, quoting the poem, had been like ironed silk or still water. “We all die, though, you know? It isn’t that bad really.”

  She got up from the table. The cafeteria floor was so sticky that her sneakers made a soft popping when she moved; it sounded as if someone was following her. All around her was noise and the sickening smells of grease. Her stomach tumbled, nauseous, and the faces of the other kids eating their lunches glowed with a bilious yellow-greenish light, the color of fear. Why had she talked to him at all?

  “Wait.”

  But she was hurrying away from him. In the glass cafeteria wall a girl was running beside her.

  2

  Identity Thing

  Lew was in the garden, under the plum tree, when she got home from school. Doing someone’s chart. As practical as her mom was, Lew was the opposite. Just dreaming all the time. Making a living from astrology and tarot readings, publishing the occasional esoteric article. He pushed his wheelchair back from the table when she got there. There were purple plum stains on the brick patio.

  “Are you okay?” she asked him.

  “I was just going to ask you that.”

  “You look pale.”

  “So do you. Did you eat?”

  “I don’t have much appetite. It was a rough night.”

  “Bad dreams?”

  Lew was watching her carefully now. He did look pale. She wondered how much pain he was in all the time, pretending he wasn’t. A pale bluish halo of light surrounded his gray hair.

  “What does that mean?” he asked.

  She wanted to confide in him. She needed to talk to someone and he would understand better than her mom would, but it was difficult for her to say it.

  Finally she blurted out, “What do you know about doppelgangers?”

  “Supposedly Abraham Lincoln saw one. And Percy Shelley. John Donne. Your mom thinks it’s related to stress. They were all ill, under stress at the time. John Donne’s wife had a stillborn baby. I don’t know much more. That’s from Wikipedia.”

  She sat down on the grass and started pulling the heads off of the little daisies that bordered the wall of bougainvillea. Crushing them in her fingers until they felt wet, like with blood; tossing them aside.

  “Why? What’s wrong? Too much stress at school?”

  She shook her head. “I don’t fit in. So boring. Every teenager feels like that.”

  “That doesn’t mean it’s easy.”

  Really, she didn’t believe that she felt like every teenager at all. She was much more of a freak. Than anyone, probably, except maybe Haze.

  “I had an experience,” Bee said. It was a risk to tell Lew. He might tell her mom. But she couldn’t hold it back anymore.

  “Do you think this is something for your mother? Is it about boys?”

  She grimaced. “No. Not that. Don’t worry.”

  “Okay, sorry. Tell me, kiddo.”

  “I saw someone in my room last night.”

  Lew jerked forward so abruptly she was afraid he’d fall.

  “A girl,” she added.

  “In your room?”

  “She looked just like me.”

  “So that’s what this doppelganger talk is about.”

  “Yes, well. I don’t know. She was just standing there, and then she said, ‘You are me,’ and disappeared. I didn’t dream it.”

  “‘You are me’? What do you think it’s about?”

  “I have no idea. Mom would say it’s a hallucination. Too much stress, like you said. Don’t tell her.”

  “Well, you are our little Gemini after all.”

  “Very funny. So says the astrologer.”

  “No, I mean seriously, from a symbology perspective. Let’s say she wasn’t a real girl. What do you think the significance is? Is it about growing up?”

  “What does that mean?”

  “An identity thing. ‘You are me.’ Leaving one self behind for a new one. But the old self is always part of you, too. Does that sound right?”

  “No. I don’t know.”

  “Who are you, then?”

  She scowled at him. Even if she pretended (I am a thirteen-year-old double Gemini girl—Scorpio moon—who lives with her therapist mom and her mom’s astrologer boyfriend in Venice, California; I go to school, where I get bad grades; I write poetry with my left hand, dance in my room, read books, listen to music, Google images of goblins and the tattoos my mom won’t let me get, dream of devouring my garden), she really had no idea.

  In some ways that was nearly as frightening as seeing the girl in her room.

  “Some people think you begin to grow up when you stop trying to figure out who you are,” Lew said.

  3

  Strange Fruit

  The girl was singing to herself under the jacaranda tree, her eyes looking skyward and her full mouth unapologetic. She was singing about Southern trees with strange, bloody fruit, bodies swinging in the breeze. She wore a checked cotton dress, and her hair was in nappy braids. Kids stared at her, hurried past, snickered. It didn’t matter that her voice was rich and sweet as orange-blossom honey, Bee thought. It didn’t matter that only the setting made her strange. On a stage in a long gold satin gown, under a few lights, she would have been purely stunning.

  “Stunning,” Bee said aloud, without meaning to. It was a relief to not think about the doppelganger for a moment; the singing had done that.

  “Fat, however.” The girl had stopped singing. Up close, her gorgeous lips were chapped. Her palms were pink against the dark of the rest of her skin.

  “What?”

  “I’m too big to be stunning.”

  “No you’re not.”

  “It’s the truth. I am. They won’t sign you if you’re overweight. It wasn’t that way in Billie’s day.”

  “That was a Billie Holiday song, right?”

  “Yes. She is my idol.”

  “And it’s about lynching.”

  “That’s right. How do you know it?”

  “My mom and her boyfriend are very politically correct. They’ve been educating me in injustice since I was little.”

  “Bless them.”

  “I guess. I mean, it’s good to know it all. I just think it verges on abuse when you tell a five-year-old about Hiroshima and Hitler and slavery.”

  “Yes, I suppose so. My family just ignores the whole subject. They would rather forget. I don’t think you can.”

  “What’s your name?” Bee asked.

  “I’m Sarah.”

  “Hello. I’m Bee.”

  “As in honeybee?”

  “Yes. Well, that’s how I spell it. It was originally Beatrice.”

  “You’re more a bee.”

  “Thanks. I think.”

  “Oh yes, it’s a compliment. Bees are amazing. They have a queen, you
know?”

  “That’s right,” Bee said. “A queen.”

  Bee shivered in the heat as she said the word but she had no idea why. A queen. A girl who sang like an angel. An alien boy quoting poetry. A double. “Fetch” was another word for “doppelganger”; she’d looked it up last night. The name itself made her stomach lurch and her nape prickle. All these things fascinated and frightened her at the same time. She wanted to understand.

  “I better get to class,” Sarah said.

  “Yeah. See you later.”

  Bee looked up at the jacaranda, imagining, among the clouds of purple blossoms and the ferny foliage, bodies hanging, pulpy as fruit, making the tree groan with weight and despair. She shivered again, wondering if the girl who looked just like her was hidden somewhere, watching. Had she really been there? And why had she come?

  4

  The Alien

  Bee had hardly slept all night, wondering if the fetch would return.

  What would happen then? Would Bee scream, run, call for her mother or just say “Hello, fetch. By the way, who are you and what the hell do you want?”

  Finally she gave up on sleep and got out of bed to bathe and drink some green tea. The silty, jade-colored liquid didn’t calm her or bring her fully awake, and the air in the house felt stuffy. She had a sudden desire to be outside, near the ocean and away from the place she had seen the girl.

  Bee passed wooden porches, fenced-in gardens with birdbaths, wicker chairs, clambering roses. She kept walking on the little paths, under the arcade of fake Italian columns, down the walkways where the little boys with sun-bleached dreadlocks set up their skateboard ramps. Eventually she got to the sea. It was usually overcast this early in the morning; the vendors hadn’t set up yet and the boardwalk was still empty. People admired the palm trees, but Bee didn’t quite get it; they looked ragged and sickly, out of place. Someone had imported them a long time ago. That was how she felt most of the time. Weirdly transplanted, though she had been in the same beach shack her whole life. She was even born there, her mother reclining on a pile of towels on the floor, a basin of hot water and a midwife at her side. But in spite of this, none of it felt like home.