Ray Bradbury. The April Witch

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                Ray Bradbury
                http://blogs.myspace.com/mysteryal

                The April Witch
                1952

     Into  the  air, over the valleys, under the stars, above a river, a pond, a
road,  flew  Cecy.  Invisible as new spring winds, fresh as the breath of clover
rising  from  twilight  fields,  she  flew. She soared in doves as soft as white
ermine,  stopped  in  trees and lived in blossoms, showering away in petals when
the  breeze  blew.  She  perched  in a limegreen frog, cool as mint by a shining
pool.  She  trotted in a brambly dog and barked to hear echoes from the sides of
distant  barns.  She  lived  in new April grasses, in sweet clear liquids rising
from the musky earth.
     It's  spring,  thought  Cecy.  I'll  be  in every living thing in the world
tonight.
     Now  she inhabited neat crickets on the tar-pool roads, now prickled in dew
on  an iron gate. Hers was an adapt-ably quick mind flowing unseen upon Illinois
winds on this one evening of her life when she was just seventeen.
     "I want to be in love," she said.
     She  had  said  it  at  supper.  And her parents had widened their eyes and
stiffened  back  in  their chairs. "Patience," had been their advice. "Remember,
you're remarkable. Our whole family is odd and remarkable. We can't mix or marry
with ordinary folk. We'd lose our magical powers if we did. You wouldn't want to
lose your ability to 'travel' by magic, would you? Then be careful. Be careful!"
     But  in  her  high  bedroom,  Cecy  had  touched  perfume to her throat and
stretched  out,  trembling  and  apprehensive, on her four-poster, as a moon the
colour  of milk rose over Illinois country, turning rivers to cream and roads to
platinum.
     "Yes,"  she sighed. "I'm one of an odd family. We sleep days and fly nights
like  black  kites  on  the  wind. If we want, we can sleep in moles through the
winter,  in  the warm earth. I can live in anything at all - a pebble, a crocus,
or a praying mantis. I can leave my plain, bony body behind and send my mind far
out for adventure. Now!"
     The wind whipped her away over fields and meadows.
     She  saw the warm spring lights of cottages and farms glowing with twilight
colours.
     If  I  can't be in love, myself, because I'm plain and odd, then I'll be in
love through someone else, she thought.
     Outside  a  farmhouse  in the spring night a dark-haired girl, no more than
nineteen, drew up water from a deep stone well. She was singing.
     Cecy  fell - a green leaf- into the well. She lay in the tender moss of the
well,  gazing  up  through  dark  coolness.  Now  she quickened in a fluttering,
invisible  amoeba.  Now in a water droplet! At last, within a cold cup, she felt
herself  lifted  to  the  girl's  warm  lips.  There  was  a soft night sound of
drinking.
     Ceсy looked out from the girl's eyes.
     She entered into the dark head and gazed from the shining eyes at the hands
pulling  the  rough  rope.  She  listened  through the shell ears to this girl's
world.  She  smelled a particular universe through these delicate nostrils, felt
this special heart beating, beating. Felt this strange tongue move with singing.
     Does she know I'm here? thought Cecy.
     The girl gasped. She stared into the night meadows.
     "Who's there?"
     No answer.
     "Only the wind," whispered Cecy.
     "Only the wind." The girl laughed at herself, but shivered.
     It was a good body, this girl's body. It held bones of finest slender ivory
hidden  and  roundly  fleshed.  This  brain  was  like  a pink tea rose, hung in
darkness,  and  there  was  cider-wine  in  this mouth. The lips lay firm on the
white,  white  teeth and the brows arched neatly at the world, and the hair blew
soft and fine on her milky neck. The pores knit small and close. The nose tilted
at  the  moon  and  the  cheeks  glowed  like small fires. The body drifted with
feather-balances from one motion to another and seemed always singing to itself.
Being  in this body, this head, was like basking in a hearth fire, living in the
purr  of  a  sleeping cat, stirring in warm creek waters that flowed by night to
the sea.
     I'll like it here, thought Cecy.
     "What?" asked the girl, as if she'd heard a voice.
     "What's your name?" asked Cecy carefully.
     "Ann Leary." The girl twitched. "Now why should I say that out loud?"
     "Ann, Ann," whispered Cecy. "Ann, you're going to be in love."
     As  if  to  answer this, a great roar sprang from the road, a clatter and a
ring  of  wheels on gravel. A tall man drove up in a rig, holding the reins high
with his monstrous arms, his smile glowing across the yard.
     "Is that you, Tom?"
     "Who else?" Leaping from the rig, he tied the reins to the fence.
     "I'm not speaking to you!" Ann whirled, the bucket in her hands slopping.
     "No!" cried Cecy.
     Ann  froze.  She looked at the hills and the first spring stars. She stared
at the man named Tom. Cecy made her drop the bucket.
     "Look what you've done!"
     Tom ran up.
     "Look what you made me do!"
     He wiped her shoes with a kerchief, laughing.
     "Get  away!" She kicked at his hands, but he laughed again, and gazing down
on  him  from  miles away, Cecy saw the turn of his head, the size of his skull,
the  flare of his nose, the shine of his eye, the girth of his shoulder, and the
hard  strength  of  his  hands  doing this delicate thing with the handkerchief.
Peering  down  from  the  secret attic of this lovely head, Cecy yanked a hidden
copper ventriloquist's wire and the pretty mouth popped wide: "Thank you!"
     "Oh,  so you have manners?" The smell of leather on his hands, the smell of
the  horse  rose  from  his clothes into the tender nostrils, and Cecy, far, far
away  over  night meadows and flowered fields, stirred as with some dream in her
bed.
     "Not for you, no!" said Ann.
     "Hush,  speak  gently," said Cecy. She moved Ann's fingers out toward Tom's
head. Ann snatched them back.
     "I've gone mad!"
     "You  have." He nodded, smiling but bewildered. "Were you going to touch me
then?"
     "I don't know. Oh, go away!" Her cheeks glowed with pink charcoals.
     "Why  don't  you  run? I'm not stopping you." Tom got up. "Have you changed
your  mind? Will you go to the dance with me tonight? It's special. Tell you why
later."
     "No," said Ann.
     "Yes!"  cried  Cecy. "I've never danced. I want to dance. I've never worn a
long  gown, all rustly. I want that. I want to dance all night. I've never known
what  it's  like to be in a woman, dancing; Father and Mother would never permit
it.  Dogs,  cats,  locusts,  leaves, everything else in the world at one time or
another I've known, but never a woman in the spring, never on a night like this.
Oh, please - we must go to that dance!"
     She spread her thought like the fingers of a hand within a new glove.
     "Yes," said Ann Leary, "I'll go. I don't know why, but I'll go to the dance
with you tonight, Tom."
     "Now  inside, quick!" cried Cecy. "You must wash, tell your folks, get your
gown ready, out with the iron, into your room!"
     "Mother," said Ann, "I've changed my mind!"

    
     The  rig was galloping off down the pike, the rooms of the farmhouse jumped
to  life,  water  was  boiling for a bath, the coal stove was heating an iron to
press  the  gown,  the mother was rushing about with a fringe of hairpins in her
mouth. "What's come over you, Ann? You don't like Tom!"
     "That's true." Ann stopped amidst the great fever.
     But it's spring! thought Cecy.
     "It's spring," said Ann.
     And it's a fine night for dancing, thought Cecy.
     "... for dancing," murmured Ann, Leary.
     Then  she was in the tub and the soap creaming on her white seal shoulders,
small  nests  of soap beneath her arms, and the flesh of her warm breasts moving
in  her  hands  and Cecy moving the mouth, making the smile, keeping the actions
going. There must be no pause, no hesitation, or the entire pantomime might fall
in  ruins!  Ann Leary must be kept moving, doing, acting, wash here, soap there,
now out! Rub with a towel! Now perfume and powder!
     "You!"  Ann  caught  herself in the mirror, all whiteness and pinkness like
lilies and carnations. "Who are you tonight?"
     "I'm a girl seventeen." Cecy gazed from her violet eyes. "You can't see me.
Do you know I'm here?"
     Ann  Leary  shook  her  head.  "I've  rented my body to an April witch, for
sure."
     "Close, very close!" laughed Cecy. "Now, on with your dressing."
     The  luxury  of  feeling good clothes move over an ample body! And then the
halloo outside.
     "Ann, Tom's back!"
     "Tell  him to wait." Ann sat down suddenly. "Tell him I'm not going to that
dance."
     "What?" said her mother, in the door.
     Cecy  snapped  back  into  attention. It had been a fatal relaxing, a fatal
moment  of  leaving  Ann's  body  for only an instant. She had heard the distant
sound  of horses' hoofs and the rig rambling through moonlit spring country. For
a  second  she  thought,  I'll go find Tom and sit in his head and see what it's
like  to  be in a man of twenty-two on a night like this. And so she had started
quickly  across  a  heather field, but now, like a bird to a cage, flew back and
rustled and beat about in Ann Leary's head.
     "Tell him to go away!"
     "Ann!" Cecy settled down and spread her thoughts.
     But Ann had the bit in her mouth now. "No, no, I hate him!"
     I  shouldn't  have  left - even for a moment. Cecy poured her mind into the
hands  of  the  young girl, into the heart, into the head, softly, softly. Stand
up, she thought.
     Ann stood.
     Put on your coat!
     Ann put on her coat.
     Now, march!
     No! thought Ann Leary.
     March!
     "Ann,"  said her mother, "don't keep Tom waiting another minute. You get on
out there now and no nonsense. What's come over you?"
     "Nothing, Mother. Good night. We'll be home late."
     Ann and Cecy ran together into the spring evening.

    
     A  room  full  of  softly  dancing  pigeons  ruffling their quiet, trailing
feathers,  a  room full of peacocks, a room full of rainbow eyes and lights. And
in the center of it, around, around, around, danced Ann Leary.
     "Oh, it is a fine evening," said Cecy.
     "Oh, it's a fine evening," said Ann.
     "You're odd," said Tom.
     The  music  whirled  them in dimness, in rivers of song, they floated, they
bobbed,  they  sank  down,  they  arose for air, they gasped, they clutched each
other like drowning people and whirled on again, in fan motions, in whispers and
sighs, to "Beautiful Ohio."
     Cecy hummed. Ann's lips parted and the music came out.
     "Yes, I'm odd," said Cecy.
     "You're not the same," said Tom.
     "No, not tonight."
     "You're not the Ann Leary I knew."
     "No, not at all, at all," whispered Cecy, miles and miles away. "No, not at
all," said the moved lips.
     "I've the funniest feeling," said Tom.
     "About what?"
     "About  you."  He  held her back and danced her and looked into her glowing
face, watching for something. "Your eyes," he said, "I can't figure it."
     "Do you see me?" asked Cecy.
     "Part of you's here, Ann, and part of you's not." Tom turned her carefully,
his face uneasy.
     "Yes."
     "Why did you come with me?"
     "I didn't want to come," said Ann.
     "Why, then?"
     "Something made me."
     "What?"
     "I don't know." Ann's voice was faintly hysterical.
     "Now, now, hush, hush," whispered Cecy. "Hush, that's it. Around, around."
     They  whispered  and  rustled and rose and fell away in the dark room, with
the music moving and turning them.
     "But you did come to the dance," said Tom.
     "I did," said Cecy.
     "Here."  And  he danced her lightly out an open door and walked her quietly
away from the hall and the music and the people.
     They climbed up and sat together in the rig.
     "Ann," he said, taking her hands, trembling. "Ann." But the way he said the
name  it  was as if it wasn't her name. He kept glancing into her pale face, and
now her eyes were open again. "I used to love you, you know that," he said.
     "I know."
     "But you've always been fickle and I didn't want to be hurt."
     "It's just as well, we're very young," said Ann.
     "No, I mean to say, I'm sorry," said Cecy.
     "What do you mean?" Tom dropped her hands and stiffened.
     The  night  was warm and the smell of the earth shimmered up all about them
where  they  sat,  and  the  fresh  trees breathed one leaf against another in a
shaking and rustling.
     "I don't know," said Ann.
     "Oh, but I know," said Cecy. "You're tall and you're the finest-looking man
in  all  the  world.  This  is  a  good  evening; this is an evening I'll always
remember, being with you." She put out the alien cold hand to find his reluctant
hand again and bring it back, and warm it and hold it very tight.
     "But,"  said  Tom, blinking, "tonight you're here, you're there. One minute
one  way, the next minute another. I wanted to take you to the dance tonight for
old times' sake. I meant nothing by it when I first asked you. And then, when we
were  standing  at the well, I knew something had changed, really changed, about
you.  You  were  different.  There  was something new and soft, something..." He
groped  for  a  word.  "I don't know, I can't say. The way you looked. Something
about your voice. And I know I'm in love with you again."
     "No," said Cecy. "With me, with we."
     "And  I'm  afraid  of  being  in  love  with you," he said. "You'll hurt me
again."
     "I might," said Ann.
     No,  no,  I'd love you with all my heart! thought Cecy. Ann, say it to him,
say it for me. Say you'd love him with all your heart.
     Ann said nothing.
     Tom  moved  quietly closer and put his hand up to hold her chin. "I'm going
away. I've got a job a hundred miles from here. Will you miss me?"
     "Yes," said Ann and Cecy.
     "May I kiss you good-bye, then?"
     "Yes," said Cecy before anyone else could speak.
     He placed his lips to the strange mouth. He kissed the strange mouth and he
was trembling.
     Ann sat like a white statue.
     "Ann!" said Cecy. "Move your arms, hold him!"
     She sat like a carved wooden doll in the moonlight.
     Again he kissed her lips.
     "I  do  love  you,"  whispered Cecy. "I'm here, it's me you saw in her eyes
it's me, and I love you if she never will."
     He  moved  away  and  seemed like a man who had run a long distance. He sat
beside her. "I don't know what's happening. For a moment there..."
     "Yes?" asked Cecy.
     "For a moment I thought -" He put his hands to his eyes. "Never mind. Shall
I take you home now?"
     "Please," said Ann Leary.
     He clucked to the horse, snapped the reins tiredly, and drove the rig away.
They  rode  in  the  rustle  and slap and motion of the moonlit rig in the still
early,  only  eleven  o'clock  spring  night, with the shining meadows and sweet
fields of clover gliding by.
     And  Cecy,  looking  at the fields and meadows, thought, 'It would be worth
it,  it  would  be  worth everything to be with him from this night on.' And she
heard her parents' voices again, faintly, "Be careful. You wouldn't want to lose
your  magical  powers,  would  you  -  married to a mere mortal? Be careful. You
wouldn't want that."
     Yes,  yes,  thought  Cecy, even that I'd give up, here and now, if he would
have me. I wouldn't need to roam the spring nights then, I wouldn't need to live
in  birds  and  dogs and cats and foxes, I'd need only to be with him. Only him.
Only him.
     The road passed under, whispering.
     "Tom," said Ann at last.
     "What?"  He  stared  coldly at the road, the horse, the trees, the sky, the
stars.
     "If  you're ever, in years to come, at any time, in Green Town, Illinois, a
few miles from here, will you do me a favour?"
     "Perhaps."
     "Will  you  do  me the favour of stopping and seeing a friend of mine?" Ann
Leary said this haltingly, awkwardly.
     "Why?"
     "She's a good friend. I've told her of you. I'll give you her address. Just
a  moment."  When  the rig stopped at her farm she drew forth a pencil and paper
from her small purse and wrote in the moonlight, pressing the paper to her knee.
"There it is. Can you read it?"
     He glanced at the paper and nodded bewilderedly.
     "Cecy Elliott, 12 Willow Street, Green Town, Illinois," he said.
     "Will you visit her someday?" asked Ann.
     "Someday," he said.
     "Promise?"
     "What  has  this  to  do  with us?" he cried savagely. "What do I want with
names  and papers?" He crumpled the paper into a tight ball and shoved it in his
coat.
     "Oh, please promise!" begged Cecy.
     "... promise..." said Ann.
     "All right, all right, now let me be!" he shouted.
     I'm  tired,  thought  Cecy.  I can't stay I have to go home. I'm weakening.
I've  only the power to stay a few hours out like this in the night, travelling,
travelling. But before I go...
     "... before I go," said Ann.
     She kissed Tom on the lips.
     "This is me kissing you," said Cecy.
     Tom  held  her off and looked at Ann Leary and looked deep, deep inside. He
said  nothing,  but  his  face began to relax slowly, very slowly, and the lines
vanished  away,  and  his  mouth  softened from its hardness, and he looked deep
again into the moonlit face held here before him.
     Then he put her off the rig and without so much as a good night was driving
swiftly down the road.
     Cecy let go.
     Ann  Leary,  crying  out,  released  from  prison,  it seemed, raced up the
moonlit path to her house and slammed the door.
     Cecy lingered for only a little while. In the eyes of a cricket she saw the
spring night world. In the eyes of a frog she sat for a lonely moment by a pool.
In  the  eyes  of a night bird she looked down from a tall, moon-haunted elm and
saw  the  light go out in two farmhouses, one here, one a mile away. She thought
of  herself  and  her family, and her strange power, and the fact that no one in
the  family  could  ever marry any one of the people in this vast world out here
beyond the hills.
     "Tom?"  Her  weakening  mind  flew in a night bird under the trees and over
deep  fields  of wild mustard. "Have you still got the paper, Tom? Will you come
by someday, some year, sometime, to see me? Will you know me then? Will you look
in my face and remember then where it was you saw me last and know that you love
me as I love you, with all my heart for all time?"
     She  paused  in  the cool night air, a million miles from towns and people,
above farms and continents and rivers and hills. "Tom?" Softly.
     Tom  was  asleep.  It  was  deep  night; his clothes were hung on chairs or
folded neatly over the end of the bed. And in one silent, carefully upflung hand
upon  the  white pillow, by his head, was a small piece of paper with writing on
it.  Slowly,  slowly,  a  fraction of an inch at a time, his fingers closed down
upon  and  held it tightly. And he did not even stir or notice when a blackbird,
faintly, wondrously, beat softly for " moment against the clear moon crystals of
the windowpane, then, fluttering quietly, stopped and flew away toward the east,
over the sleeping earth.