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Four and Twenty Blackbirds
Four and Twenty Blackbirds
Four and Twenty Blackbirds
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Four and Twenty Blackbirds

Rating: 4 out of 5 stars

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Although she was orphaned at birth, Eden Moore is never alone. Three dead women watch from the shadows, bound to protect her from harm. But in the woods a gunman waits, convinced that Eden is destined to follow her wicked great-grandfather--an African magician with the power to curse the living and raise the dead.

Now Eden must decipher the secret of the ghostly trio before a new enemy more dangerous than the fanatical assassin destroys what is left of her family. She will sift through lies in a Georgian ante-bellum mansion and climb through the haunted ruins of a 19th century hospital, desperately seeking the truth that will save her beloved aunt from the curse that threatens her life.



At the Publisher's request, this title is being sold without Digital Rights Management Software (DRM) applied.

LanguageEnglish
Release dateOct 1, 2005
ISBN9781429944434
Four and Twenty Blackbirds
Author

Cherie Priest

Cherie Priest is the author of two dozen books and novellas, including the horror novel The Toll, acclaimed gothic Maplecroft, and the award-winning Clockwork Century series, beginning with Boneshaker. She has been nominated for the Hugo Award and the Nebula Award, and she won the Locus Award for best horror novel. Her books have been translated into nine languages in eleven countries. She lives in Seattle, Washington, with her husband and a menagerie of exceedingly photogenic pets.

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Rating: 3.817669112781955 out of 5 stars
4/5

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  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5

    This is a wonderful Southern ghost story. The paranormal elements creep in so slowly, they seem perfectly normal; until you realize just how weird things have gotten.

    The writing, the plot, and the characters drew me in, holding me to the last page. I was up late last night reading the end :) I'm definitely looking for more from this author.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Four and Twenty Blackbirds introduces Eden Moore. Eden sees ghosts, and has done since she was a small child. There are more than one kind of ghosts, however, and it is people from real life who send Eden hunting in the past. Her life and the life of her sister depend on her success.

    This first novel by Cherie Priest is one part horror, one part detective story, one part literary fiction. Something for everyone no matter what your favorite genre.
    The prose is quite good, and I read it fairly compulsively. Eden is a very vibrant character and the author develops her nicely. It was too bad that some of the other promising characters couldn't have been extended, like the little girl that shared her ability and went to camp with her when she was a child.

    In any case, I really enjoyed the book. It kept me reading and I will diffidently continue with this author.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I enjoy it more each time I read it. Thanks
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    Beginning was so good to read but later it was no impressive,complicated and too much character invloved.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    I really like Cherie's blog (cmpriest on livejournal), so I decided to check out one of her books. This will make her the third author whose books I read after I was already a fan of their blog. I am not a big fan of horror, though, so I made my sister read it first, so she could tell me if I'd be able to read it or not.Eden is an orphan who occasionally sees the ghosts of her dead relatives, has a cousin who keeps trying to kill her, and that's just the beginning of her family dysfunctions. She finds out just how crazy it all is when she starts probing into her family's past - but if she hadn't, things could have turned out a whole lot worse...I did like it, although not quite as much as I expected. Eden never seemed to take much of anything seriously, and the book was in first person, so the whole book had a rather sarcastic tone and a pretty even level of emotion. Which on the one hand, meant it wasn't especially scary, even for a horror-phobe like me, but on the other hand...it felt like it should have been scarier.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Southern gothic mystery, with swamps, ghosts, abandoned hospitals, family secrets, etc. Entertaining enough, but extremely lightweight--not YA really, but I felt like this would have appealed more to a younger reader. The family secrets plot is very convoluted and doesn't quite hang together. There is an excellent scene near the beginning that takes place in a bathroom at a summer camp, but it never connects to anything, unfortunately.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    3.5***

    Eden Moore has always been special. Her mother died giving birth to her and she has been raised by her Aunt Lulu. From an early age she has been able to see and hear ghosts. In kindergarten she drew a picture of a swamp scene totally different from the wooded mountain area she lives in. At ten a deranged man tries to kill her, and the resulting media attention brings up references she doesn’t understand. As she begins asking questions, she learns a little of her complicated family tree.

    This is a dark fantasy and a Southern gothic mystery. Totally not my usual reading fare, but I have to say I was captivated by the story and it held my attention. Some of the plot twists seemed too far-fetched (I am not a fan of paranormal mysteries, so I’m sure that’s part of it). Some of the supporting characters could have used more definition. Eliza was too mysterious and her fate is hinted at but never explicitly explained. Malachi’s quasi-transformation was not believable. I did like that for the most part Eden gets herself out of any jam she gets into. She’s strong, intelligent, resourceful, courageous and determined. She is also compassionate and loving.

    For a genre of which I am not a fan, this was a pretty good read.
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    Lost interest in storyMaybe a YA bookJust too much dialogue
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    I didn't like this as much as I'd hoped to. I was ambivalent toward Boneshaker, but I really love Bloodshot and Hellbent (my girlfriend is in the doghouse a little bit for finding them boring), so I had high hopes about this one. I know it was her debut novel, but still. There's something compelling about this -- the mix of races involved, the use of the location, history, etc... But the narrative voice isn't that different from the later Raylene of the Chesire Red books (except she has less of an issue with OCD, and she rambles a bit less!).Some bits of it were a bit creepy, but mostly the ghosts felt fairly benign. I want to know more of the whys and wherefores of this world, though, so I'm definitely sticking around: it may well grow on me. Lulu, for one thing, is an amazing character -- I hope she has more to do in future.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I got this book from the library on a whim - I was looking to see if they had any Christopher Priest books and walked away with a book by Cherie Priest instead. It's rather Anne-Rice's-Witching-Hourish in that it's a "southern gothic" story about a girl who can see ghosts, and her mysterious ancestors. It's the first in a trilogy, and hopefully it won't all go downhill into a fiery disaster the way Anne Rice's trilogy did, because Four and Twenty Blackbirds is really awesome. It's mysterious and eerie and really keeps you guessing until the last page. What's really promising is that it's Cherie Priest's debut, and surely she can only get better from here.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Four and Twenty Blackbirds was Cherie Priest's first novel, and it was a very good beginning. Eden Moore is an orphan of mixed race, living in the Tennessee mountains with her aunt and uncle. Her mother died giving birth to her, but Eden has inherited her looks and her second sight: she is one of a long line of females who see ghosts on a regular basis. For Eden, the ghosts whose world she is able to see are sometimes reassuring old companions, sometimes menacing and scary, and sometimes downright murderous. A quest for her roots leads Eden to the home of a malicious relative living in Georgia in a huge antebellum mansion, to a monastery in St. Augustine, and finally to the swamps of southern Florida, where Eden must either kill or be killed in order that some things stay dead where they belong. I enjoyed the book and most of the writing. The ending was weak, and the fight scenes difficult to follow, as was the genealogy and cast of characters. Still, for a first book, it was a promising beginning, and I will definitely be back for more of Priest's novels.
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    This book seemed really good in the beginning. I read almost half of it in one night and could not wait to finish it. Unfortunately, it went downhill quickly from that point. As I got closer to the end, I couldn't even stand to finish it, so I just skimmed through and read parts to see how it ended.

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  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    To really understand this first book, I think I need to read the second one in the series. There was too much set-up here; I'm hoping the next book will distill the character down and allow the mystery/ghost story to happen a bit more naturally.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    This is a wonderful first book by Cherie Priest. It has an interesting family history, a few terrifyingly scary moments, and a great leading lady who is interesting. It does suffer from first book syndrome - a simple tale with some threads not finished, others too involved. For example, the scariest part (for me) was not the main story, but a small side story about a girl named Cora. I also tended to get lost in the relatedness of Eden's extended family.But, Eden is so awesome - she is a mixed race child, but that isn't really much of an issue for the majority of the book. Cherie Priest also didn't go with the stereotype of a poor black southern family. Eden's Aunt and Uncle are not red-neck, in fact, I would probably call them Seattle Style Hipster (to use another stereotype). It would have been all to easy to follow stereotypes. Its what makes this book interesting, rather than cliché. That is to say, there isn't stereotypical characters. Eden Great Aunt, Eliza is a very typical Old Southern Single Lady from old money. She has all the prejudices that come with it. As mentioned before, this story lacks a few important backstory. For example, why Eden's mother choose to spend time in a home for unstable teenagers or how she even met Eden's Father. There also is no explanation for how the Eden's Family and Eliza's Family know each other enough to have formed an opinion. These are holes that if filled, would have made this a great book.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I'm not normally a fan of horror books, mostly because I don't like a lot of blood and gore, but since this series was written by Cherie Priest--one of my favorite authors--I decided to give it a try. And I wasn't disappointed. Instead I was quite taken in by the story that she weaves and the characters that she's created.Eden grows up with the ability to see ghosts. In particular she sees three ghosts that watch over her and at times protect her. And they know the secrets of her family, the secrets her Aunt Lulu refuses to reveal. When a crazed half-cousin comes gunning for her, Eden is drawn into the family secrets that she's been looking for...secrets that might kill her and everyone that she knows.Priest creates and builds an appropriately moody and spooky environment, that will give you chills down your spine at just the right moments. She captures the environment to a T and builds places that become vividly real in the mind, lending to a sense of fear. The characters that creates are memorable, eerily familiar and yet strange and distant all at the same time. I found myself continually pulling and rooting for Eden to find out what her past was and wondering what dark secrets her family tree was hiding. And as I mentioned above I'm not really a fan of horror because of the blood and gore factor that creeps into so many of them, but Priest creates a sense of horror without drenching pages with blood and guts. Blood shows up on occasion, but it makes sense for the plot and story.I can't wait to read the two other books in the series and I'd highly recommend this one, even to people who aren't normally fans of horror.
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    This book had all the classic elements of a spooky, mysterious book - swamps, crumbling hospital/asylum, ghosts, murderous relatives, and an unknown past. Like an adult version of Scooby-Doo almost, and I was (am) a huge Scooby Doo fan. And it had a few creepy moments- like a certain scene at a summer camp, and the vision of how the three women died. But the book itself fell flat. Eden was boring. She also seemed to be removed from her own life, and not really care about what is happening to her. She has a relative who is trying to kill her, but even says in the book that she is not really afraid of him. If she is not, we sure are not going to be. And if we aren't, then what is the point? That completely removes any tension from the book, and without some suspense, it is boring. And Eden is kind of tough to like. A co-worker, albeit an annoying one, is killed in front of her, and Eden doesn't care since she never liked the woman anyway. That just seems soulless. The book does pick up some excitement at the very end, where Eden is fighting for her life. And she finally seems to care. But that was it - the rest of the book could have been mysteriously scary, but since Eden didn't care, neither did I.This is a case of never judge a book by its cover: This book looked like it was going to be a great read, but turned out it just wasn't.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    This is Cherie Priest's first novel and as such, has a few rough patches. However, I still really liked it. One thing Priest always does well, especially in her steampunk offerings, is write a pretty sentence and builds atmosphere - that's evident here. When very young, Eden gets a bit of a shock when 3 female ghosts appear to her the 1st time. As she grows up, they appear a few more times (stress/danger), throw in some weird dreams, attempts on her life by a religious zealot, and very complex family tree/history and that is the basis for this tale (book 1 in series). As I said, it's not perfect; certain story threads get a bit...kinked at convenience and some explanations are either overdone or overly convenient. Still, if you like a bit of Southern Gothic in your speculative fiction, give it a whirl - I found it enjoyable and fun.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    The Book Report: In a fun twist on Haley Joel Osment's famous line, "I see dead people," young Eden discovers she can see and hear three dead women when they save her life, preventing her from being shot by an insane cousin who believes Eden to be the reincarnation of an evil figure from their shared family past. The dead women appear to Eden only at times of great danger and stress, which come increasingly often as she grows into a strange young womanhood. Her life's trajectory appears to be set by the existence of an evil ancestor, whose final disappearance into death is fast approaching. He uses all his sorcerous powers to fashion Eden into his tool to return to the living. This plan fails because Eden isn't having it, and if you know anything at all about Southern women, that's enough said right there.My Review: Yet again we have a giant missed opportunity of a book. This idea, and the expository 50pp, are terrific. I loved them, and I was so excited to read the book I couldn't wait to get back to it!Hit the middle, and found myself wandering around uninterested in the middle of a nothing-much kind of a life.Came the ending, I was ticked off at the presumption evident in the author that we her readers would buy pretty much anything. Threads got dropped, threads got yanked into places they weren't heading before, and all through it, the reason I got interested in the first place...the three ghostly sisters...are used only as deus ex machina, which was a cheat AND a bore.I am so disappointed! This chickie can write good sentences, and she can dream up great ideas, but the execution of this novel, at least, is poor. Very Neil Gaiman...great idea, give it to someone else to write so it will be used to best advantage instead of mangled and squished and generally crapped up.Do I even need to add "not recommended" at the end of the review?
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    If I hadn't read it in one of the blurbs, I would never guess that this is Cherie Priest's first novel. It's atmospheric, intense, creepy, and imaginative. The characters are flawed but likeable -- except for the ones the reader isn't supposed to like, who are mainly nasty, dense, wacko, or pure evil.Eden Moore has been seeing ghosts since childhood. Not every ghost in the neighborhood, but three ghosts -- three sisters -- who have some mysterious bearing on Eden's past life (lives?) and future. She sees someone else, too -- a crazy fellow with murderous intent who is very much alive. As she matures, she becomes curious -- about her long-dead mother, about the ghosts who follow her, about the crazy man who wants to kill her, about the mystery of her life. Her search for answers will take her to some very spooky places, pit her against powers of darkness, and place her in grave peril -- but it just may save her life and her kin's lives, too. If she can survive . . .
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Eden Moore grew up knowing that the three ghostly women who always hovered somewhere near were tasked with protecting here. For a long time, she believed they were protecting her from her Tatie Eliza and her cousin Malachi who attempted to kill her when she was younger, both believing her to be as wicked as her great-grandfather. She should have felt at peace with the protection of the women, but dreams of a mysterious book with a severed hand at the back and the mystery surrounding her Mother's death and those of the three women pique her curiosity. She sets out on a dangerous course through an abandoned hospital and her Tatie Eliza's antebellum mansion to discover the truth about herself and her family before the past comes to take control of her.Cherie Priest's debut novel is pure Southern gothic horror, complete with a crumbling mansion filled with family secrets as well as hidden rooms, a hospital haunted not just by the history of what happened there but by an angry spirit sent to harm the heroine, a creepy swamp, ghosts both good and bad, and dark magic. Her heroine, Eden Moore, is smart, strong-willed, no-nonsense and incredibly likable. Tatie Eliza and cousin Malachi are the perfect obstacles for her, blinded by family birthright, tradition and the belief that what they are doing is just. When Tatie smiles at Eden, you can feel the hatred dripping from her lips.I also liked the pacing. Nothing seemed to drag and the action/suspense had me reading every word to make sure I didn't miss anything (instead of glossing over them like I sometimes do when I feel the book needs to be moving a bit faster)."Four and Twenty Blackbirds" is a fun story, filled with action and supernatural thrills that I think fans of ghost stories and horror novels should take a chance to read.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Creepy, twisty, and full of atmosphere, this story was good, scary fun. I really liked Eden. While she does have suspiciously useful poetry, knife, and car identification skills, she was a believable characters, and pulled me along on her search for answers in deeply held family secrets.The beginning scenes from her childhood didn't rig quite true for me, but once it settled into present time, I started to care for Eden and her adopted parents. I look forward to the next instalment.The landscape is particularly well used to add to the growing tension in the story - forest, swamp, old family graveyard, gothic mansion, and abandoned institution, all these clichéd settings were given fresh life, and described so clearly I could smell them
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    "Four and Twenty Blackbirds" is more creepy than horrifying, but it's a constant creeping dread, even when you figure out much of what's going on before the protagonist does. An odd decision by one of the characters later on in the book saps some of the tension out as it doesn't seem to be justified by anything other than narrative necessity, but the climax is still gripping.Cherie Priest's horror novel follows the seemingly haunted Eden, as she grows up in an adopted family, in atmosphere suffused with family secrets. Secrets tied to why a man attempted to kill her when she was still a child, and who exactly the ghosts haunting her - or protecting her - are. Priest keeps up the tension surrounding the central mystery, but the physical threat to Eden is never entirely convincing until it gets ratcheted up at the end; and the incompetence of the police is odd. It's still a good horror novel, with blood and family center stage.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Spooky and excellently written. Best read at 3 in the morning for full effect.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Good Gothicky Southern horror. Eden sees dead people. More specifically she sees three sisters killed by one man. She first knew about them when she drew a picture of them in school. She is a strange child. Eventually she's called to the guidance counselor's office for a chat (a few years later) during which she has a vision and ends up doing a little physical harm to the counselor during the vision.Eden also knows things most people don't. She knows she's lived before. She knows her mother was taken to a place she calls Pine Trees and there died, leaving Eden to be raised by her aunt Lulu and eventually her Uncle Dave. After an attempt on her life by a boy who refers to her as Avery, Eden learns there's quite a bit more to her family than Lulu will tell her (Lulu keeps insisting she'll tell Eden when Eden is older). After a trip through an abandoned asylum, a brief stay at a Southern mansion, a trip to St. Augustine, Florida, and eventually an encounter in the swamps of Florida, Eden discovers exactly who John Gray was and what he means to her family, and to her.My sister found this creepier than I did. I'm not sure if I'm just jaded, or if it's because she lives in the South and I have no experience of it. I must say that horror set in the northeast gets to me more, so it may be a place thing. Though I am also affected by horror set in the UK...
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I read this in one sitting because I didn't want to put it down. Would I recommend it? Yes -- to those who like a good ghost story (such as myself). This is not quite as deep or as chilling as many of the ghost stories in my collection (for example, The House That Jack Built by Graham Masterson is one of the creepiest ghost stories ever which scared the crap out of me when I read it) but it's pretty good.A brief synopsis: Eden Moore has known ghosts all of her life. They talk to her and they protect her from harm when her life is threatened. But underneath it all, she doesn't really know who these ghosts are and why they are attached to her specifically. Eden is being raised by Lulu, her aunt, who does know the answers but won't tell. When Eden is old enough, she goes in search of information about her mother, who ended her life in a terrible place called Pine Breeze, and what she finds leads her to a destiny that only she can fulfill.I thought it was fun and the supernatural elements were done well. At places in the story I thought things turned out a little too coincidental & too pat and I had to keep notes as to exactly who was related to whom as it got sort of complicated. But considering it is her first novel, I think she did a great job.

Book preview

Four and Twenty Blackbirds - Cherie Priest

I

Eden

I

Draw me a picture of someplace you’ve been that you liked very much, Mrs. Patterson suggested, pronouncing each word with the firm, specific articulation peculiar to those who work with children. It can be anyplace at all—an amusement park, a playground, a tree house, or your bedroom. Maybe you went on vacation once and visited the beach. You could draw the ocean with seagulls and shells. Or maybe you went camping on the mountain. You might have gone down to the waterfall for a picnic, or up to Sunset Rock. Pick a place special to you, and when you’re finished, we’ll put your pictures up on the bulletin board in the hallway.

I cringed, staring down at the blank sheet of coarse cream paper. Before me was a plastic tub filled with fat, fruit-scented markers, ripe for the choosing. While the other kids at my table dove into a frenzy of scribbles I stalled for time, popping the lid off each color and sniffing for inspiration.

Red is for cherries. Purple is for grape. Green is for . . . I didn’t recognize the scent.

But green is for . . . yes, green is for water.

I jammed the lid onto the back of the marker and began to scrawl a wide pool across the bottom half of the sheet. Green is for water. And for alligators. I picked up the yellow marker (supposed to be lemons, but smelled like detergent) and drew two periscope eyeballs poking up through the swirls. Then I outlined them with black (licorice) and drew a long snout with two bumps for nostrils.

Brown. Brown was chocolate.

I sketched tall, thin trees that reached up past the top of the page. And snakes. Brown is for snakes. Wrapped around one trunk I placed a spiraled serpent with a wide open mouth. I gave him a strawberry pink tongue shaped like a Y.

But I was missing something. I chewed on my thumbnail and tapped the brown pen. A house. A brown house set on blocks for when the water rose too high, with a cherry red canoe tied to the front porch just in case. A brown chocolate house, made of flat boards with a sloping gray roof that let the fresh rainwater run into a barrel. Gray is for . . . A gray roof.

And gray is for . . .

Gray is for . . .

Mrs. Patterson’s hands fluttered into my vision. My goodness, Eden. What a vivid picture you’ve made! Now, where is this?

Gray is for ghosts! I blurted out.

For a moment the other kids were quiet, but then a few began to giggle. The giggle traveled halfway around the room, then died of shame under our teacher’s withering frown.

Class, she addressed it as a warning. Eden has drawn us a very good green swamp with alligators and snakes, and a house.

I sank down into my chair and repeated myself more softly. And gray is for ghosts, Mrs. Patterson. I haven’t put the ghosts in yet.

Mrs. Patterson understood. Small and frail, she was a shriveled and sweet black woman who’d emerged from retirement to figure-head my kindergarten class. She made cookies every night before she went to bed because she knew some of her kids didn’t get any breakfast before school. She crocheted all twenty of us little sweaters during the winter and took us to the city pool for free all summer. She was simply kind, but all the same, she terrified me.

Not on purpose, of course. She wouldn’t have scared me deliberately, but whenever I saw her tiny, wrinkled hands I thought of dead birds; and every time she breezed by my desk they were flapping their bony, naked wings.

I think my fear hurt her feelings, or perhaps she thought something terrible was going on at home for me to be so silent and frightened all the time; but all was normal in our household so far as normal goes. I was raised by my aunt Louise and uncle David. They had no children of their own, so it was just me and that was just fine.

Everything was fairly ordinary until I started school. Until then I’d never had much interest in doodling, finger painting, or any of the other sloppy activities of early childhood, but once I entered the hallowed halls of elementary school, people handed me crayons and watercolors at every turn. Suddenly there was construction paper, glitter glue, Popsicle sticks, yarn, and paste. We used ink to make thumbprint caterpillars and paper bags to make cartoon hand puppets. We had sidewalk chalk to make Van Gogh-esque night scenes on black paper or hopscotch squares on the four-square courts outside. Our educators wanted us to expand our brains, to think outside the box—to look inside our gray-matter nooks and bring forth art. Most of the time, it was fun.

So although I was deathly afraid of Mrs. Patterson and her skinny, swift-moving hands, I sought her approval, and I wanted to fit in. I crafted the standard benign animals out of modeling clay and rainbow scenery from felts, and I usually got gold foil star stickers or smiley faces on these uniform endeavors. But anytime we had free-thought art projects things got iffy. Any time I had to delve too deeply into my imagination I found myself confused and unnerved. The someplace special project was no exception.

When I was finally done, Mrs. Patterson dutifully tacked it up on our bulletin board with the rest, though she discreetly sent it to the lower left corner.

When the classroom emptied for gym or for recess, I don’t remember which, I lingered behind and stared at my creation with a morbid intrigue. My elderly teacher sent the class ahead with one of her colleagues and she stayed behind, letting the door quietly close us into privacy.

Who are they? she asked. Who are the three gray ghosts looking through the trees? You didn’t give them any faces.

I concentrated—tried hard to focus. I could hear their voices, singsong and sad, but sometimes fierce. Sometimes demanding. Always close.

Do you know who they are? she asked again, the same non-threatening tone she always used on me, like I was a stray cat on the verge of fleeing before she could slip me some cream.

They’re . . . The memory flitted fast, and was gone. They’re sisters who died. He killed them.

That’s very sad.

No, it’s very angry—they’re angry he did that to them. They loved him and he killed them. The words fell across my lips, dropping down into a pile at my feet and accumulating there before I could make sense of them. Now they stay in the swamp, because he cut them up and threw them into the water for the gators and the birds to pick apart. And their blood turned the green water black, but I didn’t do that part because I don’t like licorice.

You don’t like . . . oh. I see. The markers.

Yes. The markers. My whisper trailed away to something less audible, and I realized how foolish I sounded. With a flash of paranoia I turned to her and almost took one of her scary bird hands, then changed my mind at the last moment and folded mine together, praying to her instead. But you can’t say anything to anyone. If you do, they’ll send me to the pine trees, like they sent my mother, and you won’t let them do that to me, will you, Mrs. Patterson?

No, Eden, she assured me after a perplexed pause. A quick light brightened her face for a moment, but then her forehead wrinkled again. No one’s going to send you to the pine trees. No one’s going to send you away.

Mrs. Patterson tried hard to understand, but how could she have known? I didn’t know either, back then, that you’re not supposed to remember those things at all, those traces of the lives you’ve had before; but I’ve carried them with me as long as I can recall. Sometimes they rise out to meet me in subtle ways—in the gentle fears and convictions that old ghosts bring when they haunt you from the inside out. But sometimes they manifest in visions, in nightmares, or in kindergarten art projects.

I went back to drawing bubblegum butterflies and marshmallow puppies. Mrs. Patterson invited the social services people to come and observe me, but I put on a good show. I could give them what they wanted. Eventually she gave up trying to corner me and seemed to accept the undercurrent of madness that ran beneath my crayon creations.

But once in a while the three ghost women would cry, and I’d find myself inserting their six searching eyes into plastic-wrap windows, or cotton-ball clouds, or watercolor trees.

I wanted to make sure they could see me.

II

Here’s another one.

Later that same year. I’d not yet turned six.

I lived on Signal Mountain, one of a chain that surrounds Chattanooga like the rim of a bowl, split down the middle by the river. Signal is populated by rich white people on one side and poor white trash on the other, which made my family’s ethnic ambiguity something of an oddity. But I was a social creature, and the mountain was a safe playground for everyone. My cronies and I had free run of the tree-covered ridges, and we spent more time carousing through the woods than we did in our bedrooms.

Sometimes it was hide-and-seek, or tag, or—before I knew any better—blue versus gray. We wandered briskly in cutoff shorts and sneakers that let our legs get shredded by the brambles, and in long-sleeved shirts that caught on low branches and trapped pinecone seeds and needles. We stomped through streams and climbed up rocks. We chased one another senseless every day after the big yellow bus dropped us off at our neighborhood’s entrance. And most of the time, it was good.

Most of the time I ran with my friends until my lungs burst, alternately stalking them and being stalked, hiding behind wide round trunks and under piles of mulching leaves in shallow ravines. Most of the time I didn’t have to worry about anything more profound than spiders or ticks.

But then the women, no longer content to lie quiet and filtered, became dissatisfied.

One day, they began to speak.

I was behind a tree, squatting in a pile of leaves lest I be discovered—so I guess it was autumn. Yes, because come to think of it, I was wearing a chunky blue sweater over my shirt. When I saw the first woman she was standing still. A few dead leaves dropped from overhead, wafting back and forth until they settled at her feet. The mountain was dying its yearly death, and rot was in the air. Even the dirt between my sneaker treads smelled of compost. But until I saw them there that afternoon, what did I know of decay?

With the corner of my eye I caught a long flash of palest gray, almost white. I thought of an old dress, dangling on a wire hanger from a tree branch. I stood and turned to see better, not yet aware enough to be afraid, and even when I saw her more clearly I was only surprised. It took me a minute to remember I was not asleep.

She held there motionless, tugged only by the faint gusts that rustled the trees. The wind made her dress barely billow around her legs, so she must have been there, real in one way or another. Her face was as pallid and indeterminately hued as her dress, and her eyes were more of the same.

Hey, I said, not to greet her but to get her attention. Hey.

Her eyes rolled to meet mine.

She opened her mouth but did not yet speak. Instead it seemed every sound in the forest was pulled inside her gasping lungs and I was standing in the vacuum. I knew my friends were only yards away but I did not hear their small, fast feet shuffling through the undergrowth. No birds sang and no squirrels knocked winter nuts down into empty trees. Even the shadows stopped crawling across the rocks as the sky held the clouds above in place.

My breath snagged in my throat and refused to leave my chest.

Tears came to the woman’s eyes and dripped to the forest floor unchecked. Her head swiveled slowly, looking past her left shoulder and then her right. Her choked, thin voice cried out to the others.

Willa, Luannashe’s over here.

Two other women appeared, one on either side of her. They had the same vaguely African features as the first, with hair bound into submission by scarves tied in loose knots. Their faces might have been round once, but their skin was drawn back and their wide cheekbones made shelves that shadowed their hollow jaws. Their teeth were exaggerated by fleshy lips robbed of their firmness, and when they spoke to one another it was a terrible sight.

There she is, his darling one.

His pretty one.

Oh, Mae, she’s returned to you. She’s returned to us.

Mae crouched low to examine me with her enormous, brimming eyes. My baby, she said, reaching one scrawny arm to my face. My baby. Miabella.

But when the back of her hand brushed my cheek, the horror of her dusty, dead breath broke the spell and my screams split the supernatural quiet that had descended over the mountainside. I howled until my cries went hoarse, and the women withdrew. Mae left me last, turning with a slow, miserable sob and vanishing into the crowded trees. The last thing I saw before I shrieked myself unconscious was her retreating back, slashed and stained with long, dark streaks that could have been nothing but blood.

III

It should come as no surprise that I ended up a regular patron of the school counselor’s office. Mr. Schumann was short and wide, with red hair that grew shorter every year. His ears protruded north past the narrowing fringe, straining to listen even when his round blue eyes appeared impassive. He always watched me with squinty concentration, like the face a cat makes while trying to figure out a bathroom faucet.

Why don’t you tell me about some of these pictures you’ve made? he began our last session together. Mrs. Patterson thinks they’re very good, but she wants to know what they’re about.

I stared at my shoes. I already told her. They’re about the sisters.

Yes, the women who died. You said someone killed them.

Uh-huh.

His brown office chair squealed as he shifted his weight. He leaned forward and pressed his palms together. That’s a scary story to tell someone, don’t you think?

It’s for real. It’s a for-real story. I didn’t make it up.

Where did you hear it? Did you see it on TV or in a movie?

I shook my head, aggravated because I couldn’t make him understand. I didn’t hear it anywhere. I just know it. It’s in my head.

But stories like that have to get into your head from somewhere. Where did you pick them up?

Nowhere. I came that way. I was born with the story. It happened to me before I was born.

He tapped the tips of his index fingers against each other, then reached for a pad of paper and a pen. I’ve got an idea. Why don’t you tell me the whole thing, then—from start to finish.

I don’t know the whole thing, I sulked. He still didn’t believe me.

Then tell me the parts you do know. I’d like to hear them.

I closed my eyes and saw flashes, frames of action disconnected and surreal. A house like the one I’d sketched for Mrs. Patterson, surrounded by swirling green-black water. The slick jerking motion of an alligator sliding off a bank into a fetid pool of stagnant backwater.

One.

Two.

Three women. Me in their arms, passed from one to another.

My mother and her two sisters, I said, eyes still shut.

Mr. Schumann rifled through a folder before pausing to read something. I heard his asthmatic breath aimed down at the desk, blowing against his loose papers. He scratched his head with his pen. Eden, it’s my understanding that your mother died when she had you. I know you live with an aunt and uncle; is there another sister too?

Yes, but that’s not who I mean.

But you said—

I balled my hands into tight little fists, squeezing the story out like toothpaste from a tube. "Not my mother now. My mother then. When I was his prettiest one. It was a long time ago. Whole lives ago since he killed them."

Mr. Schumann held still for a minute. He thumped his wrist down on the desk and used his scritchy little pen to jot notes across his pad of lined paper. Who is this ‘he’ you mentioned? he finally asked.

I always saw the women so clearly, it seemed strange that I couldn’t conjure his face. I felt his arms, broad and muscular when they picked me up to sit on his shoulders. I recalled the sweat and musk and tobacco smoke I smelled when I pressed my cheek against the crook of his neck. But these were only photographs.

I needed a scene. I cracked my eyes open enough to peek over at Mr. Schumann’s fidgeting hands. They fumbled, disassembling the pen into pieces and placing them in precise east-west alignment with a granite paperweight and a letter opener shaped like a sword. Such anxious hands. Not like my father’s at all. Not like the long, dark fingers so lean and strong and always sure.

My father’s fingers held glass vials filled with funny liquids and powders, and he poured them one into another, another into a greater one, and another onto a small burner. One more bottle. Three drops of brown, smelly stuff on top of it all. When all was done simmering, he removed it from the heat with a padded glove and poured it into a Mason jar that might have otherwise held peach preserves.

His sleek back stretched a damp undershirt to its breaking point. He was at a rough desk, reading something from a book beside the vials. He leaned his head backwards over the chair and gripped his hair with both hands. Tight black wool.

He was frustrated, angry. Something was missing.

Papa?

What are you doing in here? Get yourself away now.

But Papa, I wanted to know where—

I said, get yourself away now.

Papa?

Now! He shouted it, rising out of the chair with enough force to throw it towards me. His elbow struck the book and knocked it fluttering to the floor. The pages flipped from beginning to end with a shuffling flap. Another flash: the shuffling of cards in my mother’s hands before she laid them out in a cross-shaped pattern on a purple silk scarf. No. My father. His book.

I was fascinated by the yellowed, dirty pages as they waved back and forth. Back and forth. Back and forth until the thick cover clattered still. And before my father could whisk the book closed and throw it back up on the table, I saw what was mounted inside.

Dry and nasty, shrunken and crooked, a black, mummified hand with a gold ring on each finger was fixed against the inside back cover of my father’s book. Not a picture but a real one, with stick-fingers splayed open and lacquered shiny.

I screeched and popped out of my chair in Mr. Schumann’s office, forgetting for a moment where I was. I only wanted to step on the hand, to squash it, to kill it, to destroy it somehow. But my father was gone, and his book was gone, and the only hands I saw were the counselor’s confused ones that were putting his pen together again.

And his letter opener, conveniently shaped like a sword, was lying close to me. So close that I barely had to reach out to grab it, and it took less than a second to slam it down through his pasty white palm.

It took him almost a full second more to realize what had happened enough to join me in my screaming. Not until the blood spurted through both sides of the wound and sprayed his notepad and the pen fragments with sticky crimson did he find his voice enough to call out, and by then I was well on my way to running the mile and a half home.

Lulu was waiting for me at the door.

2

Lulu

Aunt Louise is a goddess. She’s nearly six feet tall, with huge, melon-firm breasts and a tiny waist. From my very earliest inklings of sexual aesthetics, I wanted to look like Lulu. I wanted her black, spiral curls, her olive skin, and her deep brown eyes. I wanted men to fall over themselves for me the way they did for her. She was my mother’s older sister, but only nineteen when she came to care for me. As Mr. Schumann said, my mother died when I was born and I was passed down along the maternal family members.

Back when I was a baby, we all lived with my grandmother and my mother’s younger sister, Michelle. Lulu assumed most of the responsibility for my upbringing, and she took me almost everywhere. By the time I was two I’d been to concerts, coffeehouses, and poetry readings enough to scar me for life. But if Lulu had been a homebody, she would have never met Dave, and then where would we be?

Dave, shortly to become my uncle David, found me wandering away from Lulu while she investigated the meager Dashiell Hammett selection at a used bookstore. I’d found a display offering free fudge samples, and although I could not yet read, I understood enough to help myself. Dave worked at the store part-time, and when he finally peeled me away from the fudge plate, I was smeared with enough chocolate to frost a cake. But he didn’t scold me, or demand to speak to my guardian. Instead, he propped me up on a pile of discarded books and left to get his camera.

Eventually Lulu noticed I was missing. She found me atop the pile, opening random volumes and pretending to read while Dave took pictures. What can I say? I was a doll. I did have Lulu’s curls and her skin, and I was probably the cutest thing the bored clerk had seen all day.

Of course, then he saw Lulu. And both of them promptly forgot about me.

So now a word on Dave.

Dave is roughly the color of the fudge I bathed in that day at the store. Back then his head sprouted long, erratic dreadlocks knotted with beads and hemp thread, and he wore clothes spattered with political slogans like Free Tibet and Stop Animal Testing. He asked Lulu if he could borrow me sometime to take pictures. He was working on his portfolio, and the folks at the Urban Art Institute were going to apprentice him out as soon as it was complete. For that matter, perhaps Lulu wouldn’t mind posing for him

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