This is a tiny bit of my story "Swamp Witch and the Tea-Drinking Man," which appears in Cory Doctorow and Holly Phillips' Tesseracts Eleven, out from Edge Publishing. And it will be appearing in Monstrous Affections by David Nickle, due out from ChiZine Press in November 2009. What's it about? Read the title. And then read this bit...
* * *
SWAMP WITCH AND THE TEA-DRINKING MAN
Swamp witch
rode her dragonfly into town Saturday night, meaning to see old
Albert Farmer one more time. Albert ran the local smoke and book,
drove a gleaming red sports car from Italy, and smiled a smile to run
an iceberg wet. Many suspected he might be the Devil's kin and swamp
witch allowed as that may have been so; yet whether he be Devil or
Saint, swamp witch knew Albert Farmer to be the kindest man in the
whole of Okehole County. Hadn't he let her beat him at checkers that
time? Didn't he smile just right? Oh yes, swamp witch figured she'd
like to keep old Albert Farmer awhile and see him this night.
That
in the end she would succeed at one and fail at the other was a
matter of no small upset to swamp witch; for among the burdens they
carry, swamp witches are cursed with foresight, and this one could
see endings clearer than anything else. Not that it ever did her much
good; swamp witch could no more look long at an ending than she'd
spare the blazing sun more than a glance.
As for the end of
this night, she glanced on it not even an instant. For romance was
nothing but scut work if you knew already the beginning, the end and
all the points between. The smile on her lips was genuine, as she
steered past the bullfrogs, through the rushes and high over the
swamp road toward the glow of the town.
By the time she was
on the town's outskirts, walking on her own two feet with the tiny
reins of her dragonfly pinched between thumb and forefinger, the
swamp witch had a harder time keeping her mood high. Her feet were on
the ground, her senses chained and she could not ignore the wailing
of a woman beset.
It came from the house which sat nearest
the swamp -- the Farley house -- and the wailing was the work of
Linda Farley, the eldest daughter who swamp witch knew was having man
trouble of her own.
She had mixed feelings about Linda Farley,
but for all those feelings, swamp witch could not just walk by and
she knew it. There was that thing she had done with her checkers
winnings. It had made things right and made things wrong, and in the
end made swamp witch responsible.
"One night in a week,"
swamp witch grumbled as she stepped around the swing-set and onto the
back stoop. "Just Saturday. That's all I asked for."
* * *
Linda Farley was a
girl of twenty-one. Thick-armed and legged, but still beautiful by
the standards of the town, she had been ill-treated by no less than
three of its sons: lanky Jack Irving; foul-mouthed Harry Oates; Tommy
Balchy, the beautiful Reverend's son, who wrangled corner snakes for
his Papa and bragged to everyone that he'd seen Jesus in a rattler's
spittle. Swamp witch was sure it would be one of those three causing
the commotion. But when she came in, touched poor Linda's shoulder
where it slumped on the kitchen table, and followed her pointing
finger to the sitting room, she saw it was none of those fellows.
Sitting on her Papa's easy chair was a man swampwitch had
never seen before. Wearing a lemon-colored suit with a vest black as
night rain, he was skinny as sticks and looked just past the middle
of his life. He held a teacup and saucer in his hands, and looked up
at swamp witch with the sadness of the ages in his eye.
"Stay
put," said swamp witch to her dragonfly, letting go of its
reins. The dragonfly flew up and perched on an arm of the Farleys'
flea market chandelier. "Who is this one?"
The man
licked thin lips.
"He came this afternoon," said
Linda, sitting up and sniffling. "Came from outside. He says
awful things." She held her head in her hands. "Oh
woe!"
"Awful things." Swamp witch
stepped over to the tea-drinking man. "Outside. What's his
name?"
The tea-drinking man and raised his cup to his
mouth. He shook his head.
"He-he won't say."
Swamp
witch nodded slowly. "You won't say," she said to the
tea-drinking man and he shrugged. Swampwitch scowled. People who knew
enough to keep their names secret were trouble in swamp witch's
experience.
The tea-drinking man set his beverage down on the
arm of the chair and began to speak.
"What if you'd left
'em?" he said. "Left 'em to themselves?"
Swamp
witch glared. The tea-drinker paid her no mind, just continued:
"Why, think what they'd have done! Made up with the
Russians! The Chinese! Built rockets and climbed with them to the top
of the sky, and sat there a moment in spinning wheels with sandwiches
floating in front of their noses and their dreams all filled up. Sat
there and thought, about what they'd done, what they might do, and
looked far away. Then got off their duffs and built bigger rockets,
and flew 'em to the moon, and to Mars. Where'd they be?"
The
tea-drinking man was breathing hard now. He looked at her like a
crazy man, eyes wet. "What if they'd been left on their own?"
And then he went silent and watched.
The swamp witch
took a breath, felt it hitch in her chest. Then she let it out again,
in a low cough.
"You're infectious," she
said.
"What?" said Linda from behind
him.
"Infectious. The dream sickness," she said.
"You look at the past and start to think maybe that could be
better than now. You can't move it's so bad -- can't even think."
The tea-drinking man shrugged. "I been around,
madame."
"Around," said swamp witch.
"Surely not around here. This place is mine. There's no
sickness, no dreaming sadness. These folks are happy as they are. So
I'll say it: You're quarantined from this town." She glanced
back at Linda, who looked back at her miserably, awash in
inconsolable regret.
"That's how it is."
Swampwitch
glared once more at the tea-drinking man.
The tea-drinking man
smiled sadly.
"I am --"
"-- sorry,"
finished swamp witch. "I know."
And then swamp
witch raised up her arms, cast a wink up to her dragonfly, and set a
hex upon the tea-drinking man. "Begone," she
said.
He stood up. Set his saucer and cup down. Looked a
little sadder, if that were possible.
"I was just
leaving."
And with that, he stepped out the door, through
the yard, over the road and into the mist of the swampland.
"Stay
away from my hutch, mind you," swamp witch hollered after his
diminishing shade. "I mean it!" and she thought she saw him
shrug a bit before the wisps of mist engulfed him and took him, poor
dream-sick man that he was, away from the town that swampwitch loved
so.
To be continued...


