The Kingdom of Kevin Malone (12 page)

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Authors: Suzy McKee Charnas

Tags: #Fantasy, #Young Adult, #Speculative Fiction

BOOK: The Kingdom of Kevin Malone
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“I'm telling you,” I said, “that was the moorim controlling what I said!”

“The moorim.” Rachel cocked a skeptical, plucked eyebrow. She reached up to poke one of the moorim's paws with one finger. The paw twitched and was withdrawn into the dog-purse. “So this is a creature from Kevin Somebody's fantasy world, and it's followed you home into reality? That's a lot to swallow, Amy.”

“If it's not a weasel, it's a RAT,” moaned Claudia, hugging her legs tight to her as if afraid the moorim would bite off her toes if she left them exposed. “I can never use that purse AGAIN.”

“Well, it's a very special rat, then,” I said. “For one thing, it was the moorim that convinced the Branglefolk to give us the prophecy, and for another—”

“It talks?” Rachel said, rolling her eyes.

“Well, not to me,” I said. “Only to the Branglefolk, I think, and maybe only in prophecies, not conversations. Now listen, will you? This concerns both of you, too, believe it or not; at least I think it does.”

Claudia watched her purse, which didn't move except for the very faint rise and fall that showed the moorim was asleep rather than dead, while I told them both all about my adventures in the Brangle. Rachel ate popcorn from a blue plastic bowl, one piece at a time, pretending not to listen. I couldn't figure out why she was acting so unfriendly.

Claudia looked from her purse to me and back again. “Wow!” she said.

Wow.
What a fabulous, articulate response! All the tension went out of me. I suddenly wanted to do nothing but sleep. Maybe when I woke up Rachel would be my best friend again, and Claudia would talk sense. What kind of a princess was Claudia the Ditz going to make in the Fayre Farre, for goodness' sake?

Rachel frowned. “So how does this prophecy go, exactly?” She sounded sarcastic, but she was interested, all right.

“I don't know,” I admitted. “I can only remember bits and snatches. Well, it was
long
—”

“What's it doing now?” Claudia interrupted feverishly. “What's it doing in there in my PURSE? It's making a noise, don't you hear that?”

We listened. The moorim was certainly making a noise; a noise I recognized. It was singing the tune that went with the words of the prophecy.

I went over and lay down on the bed, putting my head close to the PursePet. The faint, wavery sound rang in my head. So did Claudia's little screams of horror, and her helpful warning, “Amy, look out, what if it bites YOUR FACE OFF?”

“You come listen,” I said, motioning Claudia over next to me. “It's in your purse, Claudia, and it sounds like—I can almost hear words—”

Claudia, her dark eyes wide, crawled onto the bed and put her head very nervously near the purse. She jumped, looking stunned. Then she shut her eyes, licked her lips, and began to sing in a very wavery, scratchy voice—the words of the prophecy:

 

“A princess in mourning, a princess in gold,
A princess with talents as yet to unfold,
Shall join with the strength of the hero foretold,
And win, if their hearts be both tender and bold.
One princess must press on through terrors and fears
And solve the great riddle of using the years.
One princess must choose for a guide and a friend
A being she fears but will love in the end.
One princess must bring from her distant home's heart
A magic more mighty than any smith's art.
These three, imprisoned in walls made of stone,
Pressed to the uttermost, bounded by bone,
Using a weapon they already own,
Can bring the prince worthily home to his throne.”

 

Claudia finished in a small voice, “Are you sure any of this is about me? I'm not brave.”

Rachel ripped a sheet of notebook paper from a pad on Claudia's bureau, and then motioned to Claudia to sing it all again, which she did—three times, one for each of us, I guess—while Rachel scribbled down the words with a chewed-up pencil stub from her pocket.

“Well, I got it all, I think,” she said, chomping nervously on the pencil as she read and re-read her transcription. “Boy. Is this for real?”

But she knew as well as I did that Claudia couldn't have made up that poem.

Somehow their getting the prophecy seemed to let me off the hook for a while. The two of them could go fix things for Rotten Kevin. I was a princess in mourning; I wasn't supposed to be wrestling with moorims for truth. I was supposed to be back home giving visitors coffee and listening to them tell me how wonderful Cousin Shelly had been. I rolled off Claudia's bed and stretched out on the floor.

“Amy, when do you have to get this magic sword to Kevin?” Rachel asked.

I tried to work it out. My brain drowsed. Maybe when the moorim slept I had to sleep, too? Or maybe I had just not had enough sleep back in the Brangle to hold me.

“Come on, Amy,” Rachel coaxed. “I'm sorry I was snippy with you.”

“Sure.” I yawned. “Kevin just said he needs the sword soon. Listen, I have to lie down.”

“You are lying down,” Claudia said. She took the sheet of paper from Rachel and studied it.

I curled up on the floor and dozed, but I could hear the two of them talking over the garble from Claudia's TV.

Claudia: “Let's finish the popcorn. We don't want to go to Kevin's country on an empty stomach.”

Rachel: “I thought you weren't brave enough to go.”

I heard getting-up sounds. I was so surprised I almost woke up.

“It doesn't say here that anybody dies,” Claudia said. “And I want to meet this Kevin. Isn't it romantic, having a boy pop into Amy's life from the past like that?”

Romantic! Kevin and me!
I snorted sarcastically, or thought I did.

The floor under my cheek vibrated slightly as Rachel paced. The rug under my nose smelled faintly of butter. Claudia did too much eating in her room.

“The timing is
terrible
,” Rachel said and thumped or kicked a piece of furniture. She got physical sometimes when she was upset. “We've got major reports and exams before spring break, you know? You'd think Amy could be more
considerate
.”

Claudia said, “You don't have to come with me.”

“Who says you're going anywhere? Amy has the only key to the place, that pin of hers. Are you going to take it?”

“Rachel Breakstone, I am not a
stealer
,” Claudia said. “I have my own way into the Fayre Farre. The moorim will take me.”

“The moorim is Amy's, too.” Now Rachel sounded snippy with Claudia. And she said
I
acted weird!

Claudia said, “Well, it's in my purse. I'll walk the purse through one of the park arches with the moorim inside it. Bet that will work, and I won't even have to touch the icky little rat-thing. Don't you want to meet this Kevin? Not everybody gets to meet a prince.”

“If you're going, I'll go too,” Rachel said with an exasperated sigh. “Listen, let me borrow this scarf for the trip, okay? It might be cold and windy at the Fayre Farre. If there's anything I hate, it's going someplace where my hair whips all over and gets in my eyes.”

I turned over on the floor because my left knee was hurting from leaning on it too long.

I thought I heard Rachel say, “Are you sure about this, Claudia? It could be dangerous,” and Claudia say, “It can't be any worse than writing my report about the Haymarket Riots for Mr. Kaplan.”

When I woke up, the room was empty, the TV was off. Zia Cynzia, in the doorway, said, “Your mother knows you sleeping here tonight?”

I got up from the floor. “Where are Rachel and Claudia?”

“Gone to the movies,” Zia Cynzia said. “What they told me. Claudia's mother want me to look after her.” She gazed somberly at me.

I looked away.

She sighed hugely. “Don't worry your mother like Claudia worry me, okay?”

On Claudia's bed, the lineup of stuffed animals faced me: the aardvark, a pair of floppy-nosed zebras, a very beat-up looking monkey—no purse in the form of a stuffed dog.

And no moorim on my head, either. I was really free.

I phoned Mom and told her I was on my way home.

 

Ten

Truth and Tomato Juice

 

 

 

W
ALKING DOWN THIRD AVENUE
in the chilly evening with a million other people, I felt very confused. Rachel and Claudia had abandoned me and run off with my adventure, but I had let them go without a murmur. It had even seemed right, somehow, for them to go ahead without me. Was I losing my mind over all this?

Well, what had I
thought
would happen?

I'd thought we would figure out the prophecy and all go together into Kevin's magic world, sort of Three Musketeers, since Claudia was apparently included whether I liked it or not. We'd be strong enough, the three of us, to make things come out all right even if we had to fight with Kevin—Prince Kavian himself—to do it.

Not that I'd thought out any of this beforehand. No, brilliant old Amy only caught on when it was too late, and everybody had abandoned her to go gallivanting off on their own to
her
magic place that
she
had been invited into by its creator because of a childhood
she
shared with him. Well, that's pushing it, but you get the idea.

Maybe the moorim wouldn't actually take them through to the Fayre Farre. But it seemed to me that the moorim had invited them in by singing the prophecy. So I had been used as some kind of pack-mule, carrying the moorim from the Fayre Farre to Claudia's apartment so that the creature could take the other two, the really
important
princesses, back to do their stuff in Kevin's story.

Feeling betrayed, I stumped along with my hands in my pockets and my head down, making everybody else walk around me.

So my job now was just to toddle off and fetch Kevin's magic sword, lug it back into the Fayre Farre, and give it to him. Well, nuts to that. Let him send one of his other precious princesses for it. He was only Rotten Kevin the Corner Kid. He didn't deserve three whole princesses running errands for him.

 

* * *

 

It was after nine when I got home. The apartment was quiet and dark and smelled of food, and it seemed  . . . crowded? I turned on the living-room light. There were a dozen houseplants from Shelly's apartment lined up on the windowsill. My eyes watered.

“Amy?” Mom's voice, from the kitchen.

My parents were sitting at the table in there, surrounded by stacked, racked, freshly washed dishes. They both looked beat, but relieved. The shiva was finally over.

All I could think of was how hungry I was, having missed dinner completely. On the table between my parents sat half a loaf of rye bread, a knife, and the butter dish. I sat down and cut myself some bread.

Dad leaned back, rubbing his eyes. “I'm glad tonight was the end of it,” he said. “With all the things people said about Shelly, all the memories, I started missing her worse than before.”

And I, of course, had missed it all because I'd been in the Fayre Farre, or sleeping. It seemed to me that I had barely thought of Shelly, really, in—days? Or was it only hours? Kevin and his world were distracting me from what really mattered.

Nobody noticed my hot, flushed face. Dad hadn't even been talking to me; his sad smile at Mom told me who he was really talking to. And Mom wasn't really looking at me. She was looking at my head, and she sort of relaxed all over when she saw that the moorim was gone.

I ripped the center out of the bread chunk I'd cut and began slathering butter on the crust. This was all I was good for, while thin, pretty, fake-best-friend Rachel and Claudia the Ditz waltzed off to play princesses for Kevin.

Mom said, “We've all been missing Shell. Amy most of all, maybe.”

“I just think it's so incredibly stupid and unfair that she died,” I said. God, it felt great to say what I felt straight out and true, with no moorim monitoring me.

Mom sighed, “I think so, too.” She dabbed at her eyes with a paper napkin.

“Everybody has to come to terms with it their own way,” Dad said.

I snarled, around a mouthful of bread, “I don't want to come to terms with it. Everybody does everything they can to forget that a person died, and then they say they've ‘come to terms with it.' I think that's disgusting.”

“It's not forgetting,” Dad began, looking pained.

“So,” Mom said, leaning forward with her elbows on the table, “what should we be doing instead?”

“Anything to hang onto them,” I said. “Not let death have them.” I thought of Sebbian, and of the Bone Men. “I mean—suppose you could bring somebody back? Or go after them at least partway for a while, so you wouldn't have to feel so left behind?”

Dad said quietly, “Shelly didn't die on purpose, Bunnyhunch. No use being angry with her.”

“I know,” I muttered, and tore into the bread again. “I never said she did; I'm not stupid, Dad. But I miss her. I don't have to go to her apartment or listen to people reminiscing about her to miss her, you know. There are things I'd like to talk about with her.”

“You know you can always—” Dad began, but Mom shook her head, and he stopped.

“It's not the same, Dad,” I said, “talking to you on the telephone in Los Angeles.”

Dad looked down at his plate with the crumbs on it and didn't say anything, and I felt truly horrible.

“Of course,” I hurried on, babbling insanely, “you being far away isn't the same as Shelly being dead, I'm not saying that. Only there are some similarities, that's all.” Worse and worse. Where was I?—and where had I been when I started this awful conversation?

Dad got up. “I've got some work to do,” he said. “See you later, Sarah. Amy—” He looked at me. “I don't know what else I can say to you about all this.”

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