Nieve brushed some clingy cobwebs away from her wardrobe mirror and studied her reflection. Do I look stupid? she asked herself. No way. She looked the same as ever: alert and intent, friendly, but no fool. During dinner she had not mentioned the Weed Inspector to her parents and now wondered if she should have. Was that being stupid? Would stupidity sneak up on her the way unhappiness had snuck up on them? The next time she gazed in the mirror, which didn’t happen very often – she wasn’t stuck on herself – it might be with dimmed blue eyes and a dummy’s vacant stare.
Dinner had been awkward. Even handling her knife and fork had make her feel self-conscious, as if it weren’t something she’d done every evening for most of her life. There had been no conversation and no dessert, both of which were the whole point of dinner as far as she was concerned. Usually her parents chatted and talked about their day; no incident was too minor to be of interest. She was always included. But tonight . . . nothing.
Sutton had cleared his throat at one point and asked, “So, how was school today, En?”
This just about floored her. It was the kind of desperate question you got from an adult who has no idea what to say to a kid.
“Dad,” she’d grimaced, feeling sorry for him. “It’s Saturday.”
Sophie gave a little scornful snort at this, but beyond that did not break her silence.
How could she have told them about the Weed Inspector? The silence had seemed to suck up all the sounds in the room. What would they have said about him anyway? Would they have believed her, told her she was being silly, her imagination running wild? Some poor homeless person they’d say, at the same time forbidding her to wander outside of town. Then again, maybe she should have tried. It might have given them something more important than their disagreement to fret about, which was stupid as far as she could see.
After dinner, Nieve had taken some leftovers (there were lots) downstairs to Mr. Mustard Seed and set the dish flush against the breadbox so that he could reach out and nab the scraps with his paw. Then she’d cleaned his litter box so he wouldn’t be too grossed-out to use it. Before she left, he poked his head out and she gently scrubbed the fur around his ears and under his chin. She told him that she knew something bad was happening, but not to worry, she’d take care of it. He purred briefly in response, offering encouragement. He believed in her, she liked to think, although she hoped he didn’t consider her to be all-powerful. No, he knew the score. Mr. Mustard Seed was no fool, either.
Nieve made a face in the mirror. She stuck out her tongue, bugged-out her eyes, placed a finger on the tip of her nose and pushed up until her nostrils flared. All-powerful? Yeah, right.
She walked over to her bedroom window and placed her palms flat against the glass as she stared out. Night had already fallen, which was a funny way of putting it, she thought. She had tried to watch night falling many times and that wasn’t what happened. Night crept upward, out of potholes and cracks, out of bushes and shadowy corners, out of the places that were dark even in daylight. Night happened almost too slowly to observe and then it was everywhere.
If it weren’t so late, she might run over to Gran’s place to tell her about the Weed Inspector. Gran wouldn’t doubt her. Her parents would never let her go now, though. She couldn’t call Gran, either. Despite her parents’ badgering – probably because of her parents’ badgering – Gran didn’t have a phone.
“I don’t trust phones,” she’d said. “They spread lies. The ringing is annoying. I prefer visits.”
What she hadn’t said, Nieve knew, was Don’t boss me around. Mind your own business. I don’t want a phone! “Whisht,” Gran sometimes said, which meant, basically, “Shut up, will you.”
Nieve heard someone thumping around upstairs in her parents’ room, likely her mum. Unless this Saturday night was different than any other (it sure felt different to her), then Sutton would be in the family room watching baseball – in winter, hockey – entranced, so involved in the game that he’d be talking to the TV, cheering or moaning or angrily giving his favourite team coaching advice. This meant that she could sneak out easily, make a quick visit to Gran’s and be back before either of them had a chance to clue-in. If she said her goodnights early, pleading exhaustion from a full day of running everywhere, they’d never suspect.
Since she was too restless to read, and too troubled to do anything else, this is what Nieve decided to do. She mounted the stairs slowly, dragging her feet and honing her yawning skills on the way up. She needn’t have bothered. Her mother was too busy pacing around the bedroom to notice whether she was faking or not. (Nor was going to bed early anything that parents got too worked-up about.) Sophie didn’t even ask Nieve if she was feeling all right. She was preoccupied, mulling something over as she paced, stopping briefly by her nightstand, then her dresser, distractedly picking things up and putting them down – a comb, her jewelry box, a bottle of perfume. After a couple of rounds of this, she walked over, gave Nieve a hug, and told her to “sleep tight.”
Likewise, back downstairs, Sutton gave her hand a squeeze and, without averting his face from the screen, sickly pale in the TV light, said, “Sweet dreams, En.”
Fat chance, she thought, returning to her room by way of the kitchen, where she had retrieved a flashlight from the odds-and-ends drawer. Then, window or back door? She pulled on her navy blue sweater and turned off the bedside light. Window, she decided. Best not to wander through the house again, and at night the doors were kept locked, front and back. The doors were squeaky and the locks, stiff from disuse, might be tricky to open. Locking-up was not something her parents had bothered to do until recently. About a month ago there had been a break-in at the pharmacy. Bored teenagers from the city, Theo Bax, the sole member of the town’s police force, had concluded. Nothing much had been stolen: some petty cash and a bottle of headache pills. People shrugged it off and forgot about it . . . but not entirely. At night, keys turned in locks.
Nieve unlatched her bedroom window and raised it slowly, smoothly. Before climbing up onto the ledge, she checked for dangling spiders by swishing her hand back and forth in the open space. The air felt cool, not much summer left in it. All clear, she climbed up and out, letting herself down carefully, landing in the flowerbed under her window, her shoes sinking into the soft earth.
She’d hardly had time to fill her lungs with the delicious night air when something hissed at her. Startled, she jumped aside, crashing into a prickly rose bush.
A cat out prowling? Or a skunk – not good! Nieve edged carefully out of the bush and retreated to the edge of the flowerbed before turning on her flashlight. It wasn’t an animal at all, but one of those repulsive leathery weeds growing right under her very own window! The thing hissed again and leaned toward her. She trained the beam on it, the way you do when you shine a flashlight in someone’s eyes (and they get pretty annoyed). It jerked backward, avoiding the beam, and she noted, Doesn’t like intense light. Fine, she’d give it intense light. Tomorrow she’d dig it up and burn it.
But at the moment she was on a mission. An even more urgent one, seeing as those abhorrent plants were spreading. Not that she saw any others when she strafed the garden with her flashlight, playing the beam over Chinese lanterns and chrysanthemums and clumps of dead nettle. All ordinary, unthreatening plants that she’d never before been so glad to see. She flicked off the flashlight and moved toward the front yard, waiting there briefly for her eyes to adjust fully to the dark. She figured that she could find her way to Gran’s blindfolded, but was glad all the same that the sky was clear with a nearly new moon rising and a brilliant array of stars on display. The Big Dipper was serving up a vast helping of night and Orion was striding along, unhobbled, despite having the star Rigel stuck in his left leg.
Nieve suddenly felt the thrill of being out late, unknown to anyone, the shrouded night-world so different from that of the day (although not as different as it was soon to become). She told herself that she should come out more often after dark, but then could almost hear Gran’s voice in her head saying, Do what you enjoy, Nievy, and do what you must. But don’t weigh yourself down with ‘shoulds’ and ‘oughts’. That’s like filling your pocket with rocks. “Right on, Gran,” she whispered, and darted off, no rocks in her pocket tonight.
Swiftly she crossed the yard, ducked through the hedge, and headed down the lane into town. Swiftly, almost flying, she pelted past the Post Office, the Library, the Town Hall, Warlock’s Books, Redfern’s Five & Dime – named at a time when you actually could buy something decent for 5 or 10 cents. Was it her imagination, she wondered, or did she run faster at night? Both feet seemed to lift right off the ground as she sped along. And then . . . was it her imagination, or was there some sort of pattering sound behind her? She stopped to listen. No sound. She started to run . . . and there it was again. A soft pat pat pat, as if someone were lightly tapping on a drum. Her excitement about being out and tearing down the deserted street turned into apprehension. A cold drop of fear trickled down her back. A spider of fear crawled back up. She ran harder, the street narrowing as it led out of the main part of town, past some houses, and then up the hill toward Gran’s cottage. The pattering sound was getting closer, but she knew better than to break her stride, or her nerve, by glancing back. She ran faster than she had ever done before in her life. She ran so fast that she felt as though she might fly apart. The only thing that seemed to be holding her together was a painful stitch in her side.
She was almost there, the cottage ahead began to loom larger and larger. But strangely it was wrapped in darkness. Not a single light was lit. Gran in bed already? She always stayed up late. Nieve tore up the path and lunged at the cottage door, rapping frantically, gasping for breath. No answer. “Gran!” she shouted. “Gran, it’s me!!” Still no answer. She rattled the handle. Locked! Locked?
Desperately, Nieve reached down and grabbed the broom that lay across the threshold and turned to face her pursuer. A crouched, black shape veered silently off the path and melted into wood that flanked the cottage.
Artichoke, she thought. Was it? Was it him? She called the dog’s name, but neither Artichoke nor any other being reappeared.