My sister was a bit like you were as a little girl. She was the bright spark of the family, the one who everyone relied on to shine, the one who tried to keep everyone from fighting. I think because of Mom’s story about how May brought our family together, she felt like it was her job to keep it that way.
When we’d be at the dinner table, if Mom and Dad were fighting, I would sit there silently, trying not to cry. But May would disappear and come back wearing her leotard. She’d go into the living room, where we could all see her, and she’d start doing back walkovers and pirouettes. The way May was, it was impossible not to look at her. She’d do cartwheels and long leaps, and if they hadn’t stopped fighting yet, she’d do handsprings down the runner of the rug. She’d say, “Look!” and flip right there. We’d clap for May, and when she had finished her show, she’d say, “Can we have ice cream for dessert?” So Mom would get the bowls, and everything bad was gone for the moment.
But once in a while, there were times when Mom was having a “bad night,” and no matter how many handsprings May did, or songs she sang, or jokes she told, she couldn’t make Mom snap out of it. Mom would put her hand on May’s forehead and say, “I’m sorry, honey, but I’m having a bad night.” Mom would say she was too tired for a bedtime story. She’d tuck us in early and disappear into her room. Dad would follow her in and try to calm her down. Sometimes, if it didn’t work, we’d hear him leave the house.
We’d be in bed, May and I, both of us pretending to be asleep but still wide awake, and we’d hear Mom cry through the wall. I didn’t realize it then, but maybe she was thinking of her own mom who drank too much, or her dad who died, or the life she thought she’d have when she wanted to move to California to be an actress, and everything that didn’t come true. Those were the nights when May and I weren’t enough. And even though we couldn’t say it, or even think it, somehow I think we both knew it.
It was one of those nights, one of Mom’s bad nights, when May taught me magic. I guess I was maybe five. I whispered from the bottom bunk of the bed we used to share, before we got our own rooms as teenagers, “May? I’m scared.”
She climbed down her ladder and lay next to me. “What are you scared of?” she asked.
“I don’t know.”
“I know what it is,” May said. “You’re scared of the witches. The bad witches are here, but it’s okay, we can beat them. We have magic.”
“We do?” I asked.
“I’ve been waiting to tell you until you were old enough. But I think you’re ready.”
The sound of Mom crying had faded away with the rest of the world. All that mattered was May and the secret that she was about to tell me. I leaned in, waiting. “What?” I asked eagerly.
May whispered, “We’re fairies.”
She explained that every seventh generation of children in our family inherits the magic. It’s in our genes, she said. And she said that because we were fairies, we had the power to fight the invisible evil witches.
“Come on!” she said, pulling me out of bed. “Are you ready to learn your first spell?” We snuck through the dark house and out the back door to gather up the ingredients. The moonlit yard was a world all our own. I followed her onto the grass, the feet of my pajamas wet with the dew, the cicadas making a strange sort of music. We needed three empty snail shells, the soft kind of sand, a bundle of berries, and the bark of one of the baby elms that sprang up at the edge of the garden. When we’d gathered all of our ingredients into a pail, we carried them back into our bedroom, and May stirred it up and said the spell in a whisper.
“Beem-am-boom-am-bomb-am-witches-be-gone!” She thrust her hands like she was throwing tiny stars from her fingers.
“See?” She turned to me, grinning. “They’re gone.”
And they were.
We put the potion under the bed, and May said that as long as we kept it there, the witches couldn’t get us. In that moment, I knew that as long as I had May, everything would be okay.
Now that May isn’t here, I have to find another way to make magic. And it feels like she’s sending me a spell that might help. This is what happened. At the beginning of class, I asked Mrs. Buster for a pass. Instead of going to the bathroom, I walked up and down the empty hallways, peeking into the tiny windows of the classroom doors, as if I could find something that I was looking for.
Then I passed by one of the cases they use to display trophies for sports and debate and science fairs, and I noticed my reflection swimming in the blurry glass. Everything about me looked wrong. I couldn’t very well try to rearrange my face then and there, so I started with my hair. I was smoothing my ponytail for the third time when Sky turned the corner.
“Do you want to go on a drive or something?” he just asked me right then. The second time we’d ever talked.
“Um, I’m in English.”
Love Letters to the Dead
Ava Dellaira's books
- Flat-Out Love
- The Curse_Touch of Eternity (The Curse series)
- Four Divergent Stories: The Transfer, The Initiate, The Son, and The Traitor (Divergent Series)
- Sea Horses: Gathering Storm
- WASTELANDS(Stories of the Apocalypse)
- The Belial Stone (The Belial Series)
- The Infinite Sea
- Isla and the Happily Ever After
- I'll Give You the Sun
- The Truth About Alice
- The Young Elites
- Illustrated Theory of Everythin
- The Impossible Knife of Memory
- The Truth About Alice
- The Tyrant's Daughter
- The Winner's Curse
- Breath of Yesterday (The Curse Series)
- Fractured (Guards of the Shadowlands, Book Two)
- In the Band by Jean Haus
- Sanctum (Guards of the Shadowlands, Book 1)
- The Glass Magician
- The Paper Magician
- The Shadows
- Wire Mesh Mothers
- With the Band
- The Hunger Games
- The Giver (illustrated; gift edition)
- THE HOBBIT OR THERE AND BACK AGAIN
- The Hunger Games: Official Illustrated Movie Companion
- The Maze Runner Files (Maze Runner Trilogy)
- The Princess Bride
- The One
- The Princess Bride
- THE LORD OF THE RINGS
- All the Rage
- An Ember in the Ashes
- My Life With the Walter Boys
- The Sheikh's Last Seduction