The fact that Casper comes into the pub damp in spite of
today’s clear skies causes more than a few puzzled expressions among the
earlybirds. Let them stare. They’ll lose interest, as onlookers often do. And
if they don’t, then they’re too invested to be mere passersby. Watchmen on the
streets, sentries behind every door, why won’t they let him be?
Casper checks the crowd for familiar faces. He doesn’t
recognize any, but he wasn’t in any state of mind to catalogue his stalkers
while he was running ragged through the streets. Could be staring them right in
the face and he wouldn’t know it. Troubling.
“You got something to say to me, boy?” Asks one of the patrons.
Casper
being too obvious, looking a little too wary, eyes lingering a little too long.
He tries to brush off his suspicious behavior. “Just wonderin’ if I’ve seen you
around. You look familiar, you know?”
“I was here yesterday with the guys.” The fellow motions
to others at his table. Some of them wave at Casper, one simply nods.
“Yeah… That’s probably it.” Just him jumping at his own
shadow again. (Get a grip!) Casper cards a hand through his mess of hair. The
damp strands stick to his fingers like his already too tight shirt constricts further
around his ribs and shoulders. Is it the damp that’s doing it or his nerves? If
only he had dry change of clothes. Pity no one left their laundry on the line
today.
The patron calls Casper back before he can leave to make
his order. “Now hang on a minute. You wouldn’t happen to be that traveler’s boy
Martha’s been a’telling us to keep an eye on?”
So they were spying on him. No, it’s not all in his head
after all, but the relief is bitter sweet. “Look. I don’t know any Marthas.
Whoever this lady is, I’ve never met her. Tell her whatever it is she thinks it
is I’ve gone and done, I got nuthin’ to do with it.” Casper doesn’t look their
way. Alarm bells are ringing and he knows the tension is bleeding through into
his expression. Fear is a sign of weakness; he’ll do whatever it takes to hide
his own (can’t hide forever).
“Easy now. It weren’t nothing along the lines of that. We
were a’wondering if you were in trouble, not a’making it.” It’s a phrase
lightly said and half-jokingly. It’s not taken in the same spirit that it was
uttered.
“What trouble?” His voice is higher than it should be,
louder than can be ignored. It’s the same mistake that Smith made, that tipped
Casper off about Glenholm’s wrongness even before he had a name. To add to his
faults, he’s facing the fellows at the table; he’s exposed himself and they see
how scared he’s trying not to be.
Another at the table speaks. “You been caught up in stuff
you shouldn’t be?” The first of their company looks between his friend and
Casper. The other two at the table exchange glances over the rims of their
mugs.
Yes. No. Casper’s head spins. The witch man. Eyes in
jars. Magic, gold, and more money than he’s seen in his life. The creepy old
house he lives in. Casper has no idea what he’s doing, no idea what trouble he’s
gotten himself into this time. He sighs. “All I know is that a bunch of
creepers-” He glares pointedly at the company at hand. “- have been following
me through the streets and I don’t know why.” He paces. “Why is
the hill no man’s land? What’s wrong with the witch man? What is
the witch man? Why is it so hard to get a bite to eat around here?” His
voice keeps cracking the tenser he gets (enough to break. Almost).
The gentleman at the table talk amongst themselves
quietly while he pulls himself together. One of them motions to someone behind
Casper. “Go on Alicia. You heard the little guy. Go get him something to eat,
would you?”
“Yeah… Okay.” And the footsteps disappear into the
kitchen before Casper can so much as catch sight of her.
He digs the heels of his palms into his eyes. He messed
up. He messed up bad.
“Come and have a sit,” They offer. An extra chair is dragged
over. There’s room enough for him.
Casper hesitates. “I shouldn’t. I’m not allowed to stay
long.”
“Says who?”
“Barkeep.”
On that topic, Casper sees the man coming in from the backroom, rolling in a
fresh barrel.
“I heard shouting.” The barkeep fixes them with a
hard stare. “Is there gonna be a problem here?”
“We all be friends here Frank, rest easy. Kid’s been
havin’ a tough go of things. You know how it be.”
The barkeep grunts. Might have been laugh, might have
been a sound of disregard. Either way, he goes about his business and pays them
no further heed. It’s a miracle.
The men at the table repeat their invitation. Casper
abstains. Something in him balks at the thought of sitting shoulder to
shoulder, closed in on both sides. He takes the offered chair and pulls it farther
away, far enough that he isn’t confined, yet close enough to talk comfortably.
He makes a place for himself there. “You got somethin’ to tell me? Well, I’m
dyin’ to hear it.”
The men give him funny looks. “You sure you aren’t
a’wanting to join us at the table? You’re allowed,” they add.
Casper’s sure.
They shrug, get themselves settled, and introduce
themselves. Casper forgets the names as soon as they’re said. They mean nothing
to him, a chance encounter with passersby he’ll never talk to again. Only the
one fellow stands out to him: stout man, broad across the chest, grim in a
quiet way. He’s the religious sort too. Casper dubs him ‘Brute’.
Turns
out, they’ve dragged him over to their corner to tell him a story. It’s not a
happy story. They don’t tell it well, but they say enough. It starts off fairly
innocuous, as most fairy tales do: a stranger comes to town one day, many years
ago, and brings disaster with him, as strangers are known to do in ole times
past. Naturally this stranger just so happens to be Glenholm’s own witch man.
Casper
doesn’t pay it any heed and treats it like dinner theater, all fun and games and
rumor and nothing he need concern himself about. Then they mention a monster on
the hill, a demon brought or summoned by the stranger to do his bidding.
A slaughter that same night at the house on the hill. Resistance made in vain
against the evil that seated itself there. A devastating defeat and a tenuous
truce made to bring the dead home to be buried, bodies burned beyond
recognition, arriving by the cartful.
As
much as Casper would like to brush it off as an old wife’s tale, or ancient history
at least, there are small, personal details that say otherwise. Brute was the
one to bring them back, he went where all others balked and lived to tell the
tale. Alicia speaks softly of fuzzy childhood memories about a mother that’s no
longer there, painfully absent. Pa slows and stops whatever he’s doing behind
the counter as he’s pretending not to listen; he leaves altogether when Alicia
begins to speak. The rest chip in their two pence as well and it dawns on
Casper this isn’t something he can ignore and hope it goes away. Too much fact
to be a pure fable. As for the dead themselves, they’re all named and accounted
for in the cemetery behind the church, there for anyone who wishes to seek them
out.
Casper’s glad he’s already eaten because he his prodigious
appetite is suddenly nowhere to be found. They still haven’t told him the most
important part however. “Why? Why’d he do it?”
Out of all the living souls in the tavern that day, not
one answers him. Nobody knows. No one except the witch man on the hill and not
a soul goes up there and comes back alive unless they’ve a prior arrangement or
struck a deal of some kind. Like Casper’s own arrangement with Balor, sealed
with a handshake like the naïve, unsuspecting idiot he is.
The truce between manor and town still stands in strained
silence. Nobody goes up the hill and they leave the witch man and his accomplices
be when they come by. There’s a clear line drawn in the sand; there’s no standing
on both sides. Question is, which one is Casper on? Casper himself doesn’t know,
doesn’t want to decide. “I gotta go now.” It’s a thin excuse from a question he’ll
have to inevitably answer, but sun’s on its way to setting nonetheless. Balor
will expect him to be back. (Does he want to go back? Should he?)
They
nod understandingly. “You go do what you need to. And kid? If you get to a
point where you need to get help, go to Martha,” they advise. “She’s the old
missus who’s runs the grocer’s. She’ll get you on the straight and narrow.” ‘For
when you come to your senses and join our side’, they mean. But they mean well…
Don’t they?
Casper mutters the appropriate ‘okays’, ‘thank yous’, and ‘goodbyes’ automatically. There’s a hurricane inside him, too much to consider and too many questions to ask in too short a time. He still can’t believe it, nor does he want to. What did you do, Balor? What did you do and why? But most of all, why?
Word count: halved in the best of ways. Never was quite satisfied with how this one turned out, but I think I've fixed it now. It should read better at least.
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