Part 5 (2/2)
Kiera was s.h.i.+vering and wetter than ever. 'Is our mom here or not?' she called out.
The bald man nodded. 'Yes, she's here OK. But I don't know if you'll be very glad to see her.'
'Just tell us where she is,' said Kieran. 'We'll decide if we're glad to see her when we see her.'
'Very well,' the bald man agreed, with a sigh. He turned back toward the interior of the caravan and said, sharply, 'Stay here, will you? I'm taking these young people to see Demi.'
Kiera couldn't hear the reply clearly, but it sounded harsh and guttural. She looked at Kieran as he climbed down from the back of the caravan but Kieran could only shrug and pull a face to show that he didn't understand what the Rat Man was saying, either.
The bald man closed the two windows in the stable door but reappeared a few moments later wearing a black ankle-length raincoat and a wide-brimmed waterproof hat. He came down the steps and approached them. He wasn't tall, but there was a strongman solidity about him which Kiera found quite intimidating. She felt that you would need to hit him very hard, over and over again, with something like a ball-peen hammer, before he would even blink.
'You're certain you want to do this?' he asked them. He p.r.o.nounced it 'vont'.
'Yes, we do vont,' said Kieran, trying to sound challenging.
Without another word, the bald man turned and started to walk away, beckoning them to follow him. He led them between the trailers and the caravans, past a fenced-off corral in which twenty or thirty miserable-looking horses were standing in the rain, their heads down and their manes dripping, and a line of ma.s.sive black Diamond-T trucks, pre-World War Two vintage by the look of them.
They came at last to a small black pavilion, with an awning in front of it which had filled up with so much rainwater that it was sagging between its poles. The bald man drew back the entrance flap and Kieran and Kiera could see that the interior was illuminated by an oil-lamp with a dim green gla.s.s shade.
'Demi!' the bald man called out. 'Demi, it's Zachary!'
Kiera looked at Kieran and said, under her breath, 'Mom's name was Jenyfer. Why is he calling her ”Demi”?'
Kieran shook his head. 'Maybe it's like a stage name.'
'Demi, you're not sleeping are you? I brung two young people to see you. I think you might recognize them.'
Kiera heard a faint, sibilant voice saying 'What time is it?'
'It's ten minutes of two. You weren't sleeping, were you?'
'No. You know me. I haven't slept in days.'
'You want to see these young people or not? It's up to you, my darling. You don't have to if you don't want to.'
'No... all right. I'll see them.'
The bald man pulled back the flap and said to Kieran and Kiera, 'Go on. You can go inside. But remember that she is very delicate. I don't want you to upset her, no matter what you think.'
Kiera ducked her head and went inside the pavilion, with Kieran right behind her. They found themselves in an airless living area lined with moth-eaten velvet drapes in faded maroon. On the right-hand side of the pavilion there was a gilded couch with maroon velvet cus.h.i.+ons to match the drapes, and a gilded table with a bowl of black grapes on it. A ghostly-looking gray cat was sleeping on the couch, but as they came into the pavilion it opened its eyes and stared at them with suspicion.
But it was the tall gilded chair on the left-hand side of the pavilion that riveted their attention. It was more like a royal throne than a chair, and the woman who was sitting in it was wearing a coronet of dried flowers. She was startlingly pale, and very thin, and her hair was dead white instead of blonde, but there was no mistaking her resemblance to Kieran and Kiera. She had the same sea-green eyes and the same straight nose and the same sensual curve to her lips.
She was wearing a tight black velvet dress with a high collar and a row of small jet b.u.t.tons all the way down the front. Her thin, bony hands were resting on the arms of the chair, with long black-varnished fingernails and silver rings on every finger.
The bald man joined them inside the pavilion and took off his hat, deliberately shaking the raindrops over the cat so that it flinched and hissed at him.
'Here is Demi,' he announced. 'Demi, here is your twins.'
'My twins?' asked the woman. Her voice was weak but it was very clear. 'How could I have children?'
Kiera could hardly breathe. The interior of the pavilion was very stuffy and here she was, face-to-face with the mother she had always believed to be dead.
'Mom?' she said. 'It's Kiera - Kiera and Kieran.'
The woman frowned at her. 'My twins?' she repeated.
'That's right, Mom. You had twins but they said you had a stroke and died.'
'How could I have children?'
'Because you had a husband who loved you, Mom. You had a husband who loved you and he's been grieving for you all of this time.'
'But, my dear,' the woman insisted. 'I can't have children.'
With that, she started to unb.u.t.ton the front of her dress, from the hem upward. As she did so, Kiera suddenly realized with a deep, cold feeling of dread that the woman had no legs. The lower half of her dress which was hanging over the seat of the chair was empty and flat.
She stared at the woman in alarm and said, 'What are you doing? Mom - what's happened to you? What are you doing?'
Kieran said, 'Stop, Mom! Stop! We don't need to see!' But the woman carried on unb.u.t.toning her dress, higher and higher, one small b.u.t.ton after another.
Kiera turned to the bald man and said, 'Stop her, please!'
The bald man remained impa.s.sive. 'She is a sideshow. She is doing what sideshows always do. They show you what you paid to see.'
'But we didn't pay to see this, for Christ's sake! We're her children! Stop her!'
'I cannot. I would not. She is explaining what she is. She needs to. And you need to understand.'
Now the woman had unfastened her dress all the way up to her breastbone. She was still staring at Kieran and Kiera - not defiantly, not truculently, but with a terrible look of pride in her eyes that almost made Kiera faint with horror.
She parted her dress with both hands to reveal a bony white midriff, and that was all. She had no pelvis, no hips and no legs. Her abdomen ended as a lumpy bag, with the criss-cross scars of sutures all the way around it.
'You see, my dears?' she said. 'I could not possibly have children. I am Demi, the Demi-G.o.ddess, the Half-Woman. I am surprised that you have not heard of me before. I am famous from coast to coast, isn't that true, Zachary?'
The bald man nodded. 'Coast to coast, Demi, my darling. Coast to coast.'
Kiera turned around and collided with Kieran. He grabbed hold of her sleeve, but she twisted herself away from him and pushed her way out of the pavilion. Once she was outside, she began to run back between the trailers and the caravans, past the trucks, past the horses, in between the tents.
She could hear herself panting and see the red lights jiggling in front of her eyes. She ran out of the carnival encampment and bounded down the sloping field, toward the lighted doorway of her bedroom.
'Don't close,' she gasped. 'Please don't close.'
She turned her head around only once, to make sure that Kieran was following her, which she knew that he would, and of course he was. In fact he was less than twenty yards behind her, and gaining on her.
Soon the two of them were running side by side with the thunder rumbling all around them like heavy artillery and the long wet gra.s.s whipping at their ankles. They reached the bedroom doorway and Kiera ran straight into it without even breaking her stride. Kieran came hurtling after her and slammed the door behind him.
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