Music of the Night (14 page)

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Authors: Suzy McKee Charnas

Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #Short Stories & Anthologies, #Short Stories, #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Fantasy, #Contemporary Fiction, #Single Authors, #Sci-Fi Short

BOOK: Music of the Night
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Jesus
, Fran thought, striding quickly around the corner and back down the street toward her own place.
I
shouldn’t have waved at her, I should have fired a rock through her damned window! Who the
hell does she think she is, the witch! The lanes are city property, I can walk in them if I like.
What if she has a gun? A paranoid like that, she probably does. Hell, I bet she could shoot me and
say she thought I was a burglar and get away with it! People like that shouldn’t be allowed to live
on their own. The woman should be in an institution.

The mushrooms were back the next morning, but they were different. Fran couldn’t help noticing them when she went out on the porch to look for the mail. They were brown and flat, growing in overlapping layers along the shaggy arm of root that seemed to be the seat of the infestation. She went over to squat down and examine them. They were wet from the overnight showers and their frilled edges glistened a pallid pink.

“Yuch!” she said aloud. “What evil-looking mushrooms!” She prodded them gingerly with a twig dropped by the huge old cottonwood above her.

“They’re your evil thoughts.”

It was a hoarse voice from the sidewalk, the voice of the crazy lady (Fran knew this before she looked up; who else could it be, saying that, in that voice?). There she stood, disconcertingly thin and slight in a pastel pantsuit, a cigarette smoldering between two of her sharp-knuckled fingers. She had enough lipstick on for six mouths, and she wasn’t smiling.

Fran gaped at her, at a loss for words. The woman looked like a bona fide witch out of a modern fairy tale, and what do you say to a witch who comes calling? With intense satisfaction Fran said to herself,
She’s older than I am. She’s older, old, like an old witch is supposed to be!

The crazy lady said, “Have you seen a little dog? He’s about a foot high, with black and white spots.”

“No, sorry,” Fran said with forced heartiness. “I’ve been in the back of the house, working.”

“He got out this morning,” the crazy lady said, looking around with a frown. Did she think the dog might pop up at any moment from under Fran’s lawn?

Fran said, “If I do see him, I’ll be sure and let you know.”

“Thank you,” the crazy lady said, as if she had never banged on the window or screamed at Fran—maybe she didn’t recognize her? She walked away, holding her cigarette out from her side at an elegant angle that she must have picked up from Bette Davis or some other glamour queen from the days of black-and-white movies.

Fran stared at the mushrooms. “
Those are your evil thoughts”?
What kind of a thing was that to say to her?

The woman was a crackpot just as Betsy had said, one step short of being a bag-lady talking to herself on the street. She must be living on an inheritance or the pension left by a dead husband, so she could keep a roof over her head. A person like that couldn’t possibly hold down a job. But the mushrooms really did look evil, old and wrinkled and evil. They looked like—

Fran sat back on her heels, blushing. What an idea! They looked like an exaggerated parody of the folds of her vagina, that was what they looked like. No, not hers, some old hag’s swollen and discolored sex. She scrambled to her feet muttering, “Don’t be an idiot, you idiot,” and with the back of the straight rake she whacked the new crop of fungus to flying fragments.

Over pizza that night with a few of Jeffrey’s friends from law school, she didn’t mention the conversation with the crazy lady. She didn’t feel altogether comfortable with Jeffrey’s friends, except for a woman a little older than herself who had begun law school after a divorce.

On her way next day to pick up some tapes from a backup source who sometimes gave her work, Fran saw the crazy lady’s dog, or anyway it might have been the crazy lady’s dog, jittering back and forth on the far side of Rhoades Avenue. It made one mad dash to cross, was honked at by an approaching car, and dodged back again to the far side where it hopped up and down furiously on its stiff little legs and barked ferociously at the traffic.

She considered driving back to tell the crazy lady, but she had lost time over the pizza and beer last night and she was in a hurry now. And when she did get back, she didn’t see the dog again and besides the crazy lady was occupied.

She was having an altercation with a jogger, from the safety of her porch. Fran parked and sat in the Volks and watched.

The jogger marked time at the curb, his head turned toward 408 with its two round windows flanking the open doorway. “I’m not doing anything in your yard, lady,” he declared. “I didn’t touch your yard.”

On the porch the crazy lady stood with her hips shot to one side in an aggressive slouch and shouted furiously, “I saw you on my grass! You ran over my grass!”

“I don’t run on grass,” he answered. “It’s slippery, and you can’t see your footing.” He was middle-aged and a bit flabby around the middle, but he held his ground, running in place while he argued.

“I saw you!” the crazy lady yelled. Her remaining dog shot past her ankles, barking. It made mad little dashes in the direction of the jogger, none of which carried it more than halfway across the lawn. “This is private property! You stay off it!”

“Gladly,” the jogger retorted. “Lady, you’re nuts, you know that?” He headed on up toward the park, shaking his head, elbows pumping, pursued by the barking of the dog. The crazy lady began screaming at the dog, which finally gave up barking and skulked back into the house, whereupon the screen door gave another mighty bang, and all grew quiet.

Oh the hell with it
, Fran thought,
I’m not going to say a thing about the other dog. Someone like
that shouldn’t even have pets, any more than she should have kids. The little beast is probably
better off in the traffic.

She locked the car and walked up onto her own patch of grass, where she automatically checked the mushroom site. A new crop, and a different type again, seemed to have sprouted there overnight. There were six of them, tallish, on spindly stalks, and they had elongated, domed caps with dark, spidery markings along their lower fringes. Like odd, tiny lampshades trimmed with black lace, or six otherworldly missiles waiting to be launched.

Evil thoughts.

Oh, bull
, Fran thought, looking up the street at the crazy lady’s house. What about
her
evil thoughts, where were they displayed?

She didn’t touch the new crop. Let them just sit there and do whatever mushrooms did until they reached their natural term and died. She was tired of beating them to bits and then having them show up again. It was too much like losing some kind of struggle, which was ridiculous, because there was no struggle. You don’t have a struggle with a bunch of mushrooms.

She blew up at Jeffrey about the records he brought home that night. She hated salsa for starters, and then there was the expense. It didn’t help that they were used, of course, very cheap, from the secondhand bookstore on Rhoades.

Of course they made up, and made love. He was forgiving by nature, and she had no defense against his lanky charm. Look at the gangly length of him, the lively tumble of his auburn hair, his intent young face.
How did I get so lucky? Oh, how did I get so lucky, to have this lovely boy to love me?

Fran couldn’t sleep right away afterward. She lay on her back and amused herself wondering which of her evil thoughts those slender, silvery mushrooms represented.

She paid for the sleepless hours, as usual. In the morning she looked hagged-out. She always checked herself in the bathroom mirror when she woke up, searching for the dry skin and branching wrinkles that Jeffrey was bound to see someday, someday.

Not yet, though.

She crawled back into bed and stayed there while he made himself breakfast, so that he wouldn’t see her without the repairs of makeup. She looked too awful, sagging and bruised around the eyes. She was gratified to see that the overnight chill seemed to have killed some of the damned mushrooms. Four of the six had withered so that their caps hung upside-down from stalks that looked as if they had been pinched hard in the middle. The flattened caps drooped inside-out, exposing the blue-black slits of their undersides to the sky. She thought of the gills of strange fish, dead and decaying in the cool morning air, fossil remains of ancient forms from prehistoric seas.

On the other hand, several new growths had come up.

It hadn’t rained for two nights. The grass looked a little dry, but she didn’t turn on the sprinklers. That afternoon Fran took a welcome break from unpacking books and organizing them on the brick-and-board shelves Jeff had made (she had to re-set everything for balance, of course) and observed the crazy lady in what seemed at last like civilized conversation with a man out in front of 408. He was a heavy guy in gray work clothes and he stood with his head bent, listening to her. Then he would crouch down and examine something in the grass, and stand up and talk and listen some more, and they would move over a little and do it all again. For a moment Fran thought,
My God, she’s got
mushrooms too.
She felt a tilt of vertigo (more evil thoughts, out on show—hers? Or Fran’s, on some kind of northward mushroom-migration? The Thoughts That Ate Baker’s Park). Then she realized that the man was examining the heads of the crazy lady’s sprinkler system. You would never have guessed this from the way she minced and preened and waved her cigarette. Her voice, if not her words, carried: a high, artificial mewling tone like the voice of Betty Boop, while her red mouth twisted in a parody of a fetching smile.

She was positively grotesque. Fran watched from her own porch, fascinated and repelled, until the crazy lady sashayed back up to her front steps, trilling over her shoulder in an impossibly arch manner at the workman, and opened her screen door. Then came a flurry of screams, presumably at the little dog (it must be trying to get out), and finally the customary door-slam.

The man in gray headed for a truck parked in front of Betsy’s house.

“Excuse me!” Fran waved.

He ambled over.

“You’re a lawn-man, right?” she said. God, he was massive as a steer; she caught a whiff of stale tobacco and beer on his breath. This was what the crazy lady had been flirting with?

She felt a sudden stab of deep, embarrassed pity. After all, the crazy lady couldn’t be all that much older than Fran was herself, and Fran only had Jeffrey by wild, undeserved, and unpredictable good luck.

“Maybe you can advise me about this mess that keeps coming up over here.” She showed the man the mushrooms.

He hunkered down and stared at them. “I only do sprinklers,” he said. “Don’t know much about grass. But it’s been wet this fall, and it looks like you got a dead root running along under here. Mushrooms like to grow on old dead wood.”

Today the cluster had a new addition. There was a grayish round one, a small gourd-like shape, trailing a snaky little stalk like a withered umbilical cord. She preferred the silvery ones with their inky hems, which by comparison at least had a sort of gleaming style about them, the polished perfection of bullets aimed up at her out of the crooked elbow of the exposed root.

“That’s a dead root?” she said uncertainly. “I thought all these roots belonged to the big tree, there.”

He shook his head and looked around. “Nope. This one’s dead, and that root there looks dead too. Must have been another tree here once that got took out.”

“Oh,” she said. “I’ve never had a lawn before, I don’t know a thing about this. The mushrooms aren’t likely to spread, then, and crowd out the grass?”

“What, these fellers?” he said, drawing a blunt fingertip along the edge of one of the silvery ones. “Heck, no, they’re real fragile. Soon as it gets a little colder you won’t see no more of them.”

Fran suddenly saw the similarity of the silver mushrooms to penises, polished metal phalluses with a delicate tracery of dark veins under their thin skins. The lawn man’s grimy finger touching one of them made her skin prickle.

“Oh, right, sure, I noticed that myself,” she stammered, straightening up quickly. “They only last a day or two, and they just sort of wilt and shrivel up—”

Like an old man’s cock
, she thought, though these words didn’t get out, thank God. Worse and worse. She stood there smiling sickly and thinking,
I’m as loony a spectacle as the crazy lady herself, in my
own way.

As the sprinkler man drove off, Fran saw cigarette smoke curling up from the shadows under the porch of 408.

Jeffrey only had time for a short stroll that night, up to and around the park where a couple of dogs were chasing each other, no owners in sight. He remarked that people sure didn’t take care of their pets around here, letting them run loose like that. Fran thought about having seen the crazy lady’s other dog and not saying anything to her. She drew Jeffrey home along a parallel street two blocks away, so as not to pass the crazy lady’s house.

“Too bad we can’t eat those mushrooms,” Jeffrey said as they walked back up toward their front door.

“We’ve sure got a lot of them.”

The uplifted caps shone like pewter in the lofty radiance of the corner street light. Fran found herself oddly relieved that Jeffrey noticed them too, that he
saw
them. What would he say if she told him he was seeing her evil thoughts?

“What are you smiling about?” he said.

“Nothing,” she said. “A secret joke too dumb to say out loud.” She dug her keys out of her pocket and unlocked the front door. “I hate those damned mushrooms. I think I’ll see if I can buy something somewhere, some kind of poison I can use to get rid of them once and for all.”

Jeffrey laughed. “You want to poison some mushrooms? That’s cute. Speaking of food, by the way, my mom wants us to come for Thanksgiving.”

“What, already?” Fran said, instantly deflated and anxious. They stood in the dark little hall. “It’s still September, for God’s sake!”

He took her hand and squeezed it softly, thumbing her knuckles with sensuous pleasure. “She just wants to make sure we don’t make other plans first.”

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