"Will they come after us?" Bobby asks and the question takes her by surprise, not the sort of thing she would ever have expected from him. She stops wrapping Gable's abdomen with the duct tape and stares silently at him for a moment, but he doesn't look back at her, keeps his eyes on that distant, jagged rind of daylight.
"They might," she tell him. "I don't know for sure. Are you afraid, Bobby?"
"I'll miss Miss Josephine," he says. "I'll miss the way she read us stories."
And Dead Girl nods her head and "Yes," she says. "Me too. But I'll always read you stories," and he smiles when she says that.
When Dead Girl is finally finished, they push Gable's body out into the water and follow it all the way down, wedge it tight between the roots of the sunken willow tree below Henderson Bridge. And then Bobby nestles close to Dead Girl and in a moment he's asleep, lost in his own dreams, and she closes her eyes and waits for the world to turn itself around again.
A North Light
Gwyneth Jones
Gwyneth Jones is an author and critic of science fiction and fantasy, and a writer of teenage fiction under the pseudonym "Ann Halam". Recent credits include Dr Franklin's Island, a horror story for teenagers, and Bold as Love, the first part of a near-future fantasy series .
" Maybe every writer of fantasy fiction has a vampire story in them," says Jones. "This is my second foray. My teenage vampire story (The Fear Man by Ann Halam) won the Dracula Society's Children of the Night Award in 1995; but that was a pro-vampire version, in which the children of the night were aliens among us, and some of them at least were capable of virtue .
" 'A North Light' takes a harsher view. It's sort of a modern version of the J. Sheridan Le Fanu story 'Carmilla' (note the coincidence in names), and treats of the vampire as tourist and tourist as vampire. I think there's a lot to be said for the analogy. But from personal experience, I am convinced that there are Bed and Breakfast landladies (in Erin's green isle and elsewhere!) who would be the match for any sophisticated undead bloodsucker.
"Poor Camilla! Redemption is such a humiliating fate."
A carefree traveller's life is full of evenings like this one. You have the money, you have the looks, you have the style; you even have what used to be called the letters of introduction , in the old days. Yet still you find yourself winding along the disturbingly narrow lanes, livid green pasture on either side, a voluptuous sunset overhead, and nowhere to spend the night. The grass, growing in a stiff mohican strip down the middle of the asphalt, confesses that this is a route only used by those high-slung, soot-belching, infuriating tractors. The desk staff at the quaint, olde-worlde (but surprisingly expensive) little inn that just turned you away — with the offensive smugness of a fully booked hostelry in high season obviously sent you on a wild-goose chase.
Never again! you say to yourself.
But the lure of the open road will prevail. Wanderlust.
"My God, here it is," breathed Camilla.
The house stood four-square and somewhat sinister in its bulk of yellow stone, at the top of one of those endless rank pastures. No trace of a garden, except for a bizarrely suburban machicolation of cypress hedge. The gate at the road announced the services of Jonas O'Driscoll, Builder. Also, vacancies. But vacancies cannot be trusted.
" Should be okay," said Sheridan, scanning the whereabouts and liking the isolation. "It's fucking huge for a B&B. Unreal!"
"Not at all," she corrected him. Camilla was always wise to the local ways. "Traditional Irish rural industry needs bedrooms. The only crop that thrives in this country is babies. Breed them up for emigration, ship them out and look forward to a comfortable retirement on their earnings."
"That's cold-blooded, isn't it?"
She laughed. "I like it. It shows a fine ruthlessness. Children as a business venture, why not?" She was childless herself.
"Bring me tangle-curled barefoot peasant girls," groaned Sheridan. "Bring me a reeking cottage with a pig looking out"
Mine hostess was at the door, a young woman with mouse-brown hair cropped short as a boy's, her large behind embraced in boyish dark blue jeans; pink cheeks, naive round hazel eyes and a cute, piggy turned-up nose. The tourists smothered their giggles as she welcomed them in to a stark, tiled hallway with a huge varnished pine dresser and varnished pine umbrella stand. Pokerwork signs hung on the walls, inscribed with the rules of the B&B (all credit cards, rooms must be vacated, etc.) — Miniature warming pans, decorative teacloths, china donkeys on a knick-knack shelf. Everything excruciatingly new. The travellers caught each other's eyes and sighed. Their hostess was Noreen O'Driscoll. She'd had a phone call from the inn, and she could show them to an ensuite room. She beamed naively when they accepted the astonishing price of a night's lodging; displayed flushed puzzlement when they insisted on shaking hands.
Camilla and Sheridan liked to shake hands with the natives. They followed her round denim bottom up the varnished pine stairs, savouring the touch of that scrubbed peasant skin — already worn down (she can't be more than twenty-five or so, poor girl) to the texture of spongy sandpaper.
Room number four, ensuite. How many rooms are there? Maybe six, maybe eight. Maybe it goes on for ever, into the antechambers of hell. Thick yellowy varnished pine, brass numberplates. The wallpaper in number four is the same as in the stairwelclass="underline" strawberries and strawberry flowers, in shades of pastel brown and pastel apricot. The bed takes up most of the space. The bedding is pastel apricot, polysomething, with the same debased, dreary strawberries and strawberry flowers. There's a fitted wardrobe, a vanity unit. A window with meagre flimsy curtains provides a magnificent sea view. As they stare at the room, Noreen frankly stares at them , these two exotic birds of passage, tall and slender, blonde and sophisticated (he is tall, she is blonde). Her round, bright eyes are filled with a peasant's ingenuous hunger for sensation.
"This is fine," says Sheridan briskly. "We'll take it."
Noreen looks at Cam, a little puzzled. (Camilla must remind Sher that he's in a country where menfolk do not make domestic decisions. It's his place to be silent!) But she also looks very happy. They are welcome, they are accepted, they are fascinating: all is as it should be.
When they were alone, Camilla sniffed the towels and moaned softly. The polyester sheets, cheap enough to start with, are worn to a grisly fungoid sheen; and why in the world, in a house so big, does this "double room" have to be so mean and cramped? It's a battery cage for tourists. "I can't stand these places," muttered Camilla. "I cannot bear them. The sheer effrontery! I thought Ireland was supposed to be romantic."
"That's my line," said Sheridan. He had to stoop a little to look out of the window. Beyond the pasture, a wide sea shore under a fabulous sweep of sky, but the back of the house is like a builder's yard. A heap of sand under a tarpaulin, a stack of roof tiles. The children are playing: two boys of that touching age between childhood and adolescence, trying to humiliate each other with BMX bike tricks. A girl a little older, chivvying a terrier puppy. A couple of infants. Unseen, above, he smiled on them benignly.
"The light is wonderful."
She could hear the children's voices. "How can you tell? It's nearly dark."
"Exactly." He turned with a knowing grin. "I'm sure you'll find something to do."