Lena knew I was there. It was hard to drag myself away, but she had figured out the truth. That
was the main thing. Amma and Lena. I was two for two. It was a start.
And I was exhausted.
Now I had to find my way back to her for good. I crossed back in about ten seconds flat. If
only the rest of the way was that easy.
I knew I should go home and tell my mom everything, but I also knew how worried she’d be
about me going to the Far Keep. From what Genevieve and my mom and Aunt Prue and Obidias
Trueblood had said, the Far Keep seemed like the last place a person would voluntarily go.
Especially a person with a mother.
I cataloged everything I needed to do, everywhere I needed to go. The river. The book. The
river eyes—two smooth black stones. That’s what Obidias Trueblood said I needed. My mind kept
going back to it, over and over.
How many smooth black stones could there be in the world? And how was I going to know
which ones happened to be the eyes of the river, whatever that even meant?
Maybe I’d find them on the way. Or maybe I’d already found them, and I didn’t even know it.
A magical black rock, the eye of the river.
It sounded strangely familiar. Had I heard it before?
I thought back to Amma, to all the charms, every tiny bone, every bit of graveyard dirt and
salt, every piece of string she’d given me to wear.
Then I remembered.
It wasn’t one of Amma’s charms. It was from the vision I saw when I opened the bottle in her
room.
I had seen the stone hanging around Sulla’s neck. Sulla the Prophet. In the vision Amma had
called it “the eye.”
The river’s eye.
Which meant I knew where to find it and how to get there—as long as I could figure out how
to find my way to Wader’s Creek on this side.
It couldn’t be avoided, intimidating as it was. It was time to pay a visit to the Greats.
I unfolded Aunt Prue’s map. Now that I knew how to read the map, it wasn’t that hard to see
where the Doorwells were marked. I found the red X on the Doorwell that led to Obidias’ place—
the one at the Snow family crypt—so after that I went looking for every red mark I could find.
There were plenty of red Xs, but which of those Doorwells would take me to Wader’s Creek?
Their destinations weren’t exactly marked like exits on the interstate—and I didn’t want to stumble
into any of the surprises that could be waiting for a guy behind Otherworld door number three.
Snakes for fingers might be getting off easy.
There had to be some kind of logic. I didn’t know what connected the Doorwell behind the
Snow family plot to the rocky path that had taken me to Obidias Trueblood, but there had to be
something. Seeing as we were all related to one another around here, that something was probably
blood. What would connect one of these plots in His Garden of Perpetual Peace to the Greats? If there
was a liquor store in the graveyard—or a buried coffin full of Uncle Abner’s Wild Turkey, or the
ruins of a haunted bakery known for lemon meringue pie—he wouldn’t have been far behind me.
But Wader’s Creek had its own graveyard. There wasn’t a crypt or a plot for Ivy, Abner, Sulla,
or Delilah in Perpetual Peace.
Then I found a red X behind what my mom had said was one of the oldest tribute markers in
the graveyard, and I knew it had to be the one.
So I folded up the map and decided to check it out.
Minutes later, I found myself staring at a white marble obelisk.
Sure enough, the word SACRED was carved into the crumbling veined stone, right above a
gloomy-looking skull with empty eyes that stared at you straight on. I never understood why a
single creepy skull marked a handful of Gatlin’s oldest graves. But we all knew about this particular
tribute, even though it was tucked away on the far edge of Perpetual Peace, where the heart of the
old graveyard sat, long before the new one was built up around it.
The Confederate Needle—that’s what folks around Gatlin called it, not because of its pointed
shape but because of the ladies who had put it there. Katherine Cooper Sewell, who founded the
Gatlin chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution—probably not long after the Revolution
itself—had seen to it that the DAR raised enough money for the obelisk before she died.
She had married Samuel Sewell.
Samuel Sewell had built and run the Palmetto Brewery, the first distillery in Gatlin County.
Palmetto Brewery made one thing and one thing only.
Wild Turkey.
“Pretty smart,” I said, circling to the back of the obelisk, where the twisted wrought iron
fencing bowed and broke into pieces. I didn’t know if I would’ve been able to see it back home, but
here in the Otherworld, the trapdoor of a Doorwell cut into the base of the rock was plain as day.
The rectangular outline of the entrance snaked between rows of engraved shells and angels.
I pressed my hand against the soft stone and felt it give way beneath me, swinging from
sunlight into shadow.
A dozen uneven stone steps later, I found myself on what sounded like a gravel pathway. I
made my way around a turn in the passage and caught sight of light pooling in the distance. As I got
closer, I smelled swamp grass and waterlogged palmettos. There was no mistaking that smell.
This was the right place.
I reached a warped wooden door, propped halfway open. Nothing could keep out the light now
—or the hot, sticky air, which only got hotter and stickier as I climbed the steps on the other side
of the door.
Wader’s Creek was waiting for me. I couldn’t see past the first fringe of tall cypress trees, but
I knew it was there. If I followed the muddy path in front of me, I would find my way to Amma’s
home away from home.
I pushed through the palmetto branches and saw a row of tiny houses, just off the edge of the
water.
The Greats. It had to be.
As I made my way down the path, I heard voices. On the nearest veranda, three women were
crowded around a table with a deck of cards. They were fussing and swatting at one another the
way the Sisters did when they played Scrabble.
I recognized Twyla from a distance. I suspected she was going to join the Greats when she
died on the night of the Seventeenth Moon. Still, it was strange to see her here, hanging out on the
porch and playing cards with them.
“Now, you can’t throw that card, Twyla, and you know it. You think I can’t see you
cheatin’?” A woman in a colorful shawl pushed the card back toward Twyla.
“Now, Sulla. You may be a Seer, cher. But there’s nothin’ there to see,” Twyla responded.
Sulla. That’s who she was. Now I recognized her from the vision—Sulla the Prophet, Amma’s
most famous ancestor of all.
“Well, I think you’re both cheatin’.” The third woman tossed her cards down and adjusted her
round glasses. Her shawl was bright yellow. “And I don’t want ta play with either one a you.” I
tried not to laugh, but the scene was too familiar; I might as well be home.
“Don’t you be such a sourpuss, Delilah.” Sulla wagged her head.
Delilah. She was the one in the glasses.
A fourth woman was sitting in a rocking chair at the edge of the porch, with a hoop in one
hand and a needle in the other. “Why don’t you go on in and cut your old Aunt Ivy a slice a pie?
I’m busy with my stitchin’.”
Ivy. It was weird to finally see her in person after the visions.
“Pie? Ha!” An old man laughed from his rocking chair—a bottle of Wild Turkey in one hand
and a pipe in the other.
Uncle Abner.
I felt like I knew the man personally, though we’d never met. After all, I’d been in the kitchen
when Amma made him more than a hundred pies over the years—maybe a thousand.
The giant crow flew down and landed on Uncle Abner’s shoulder. “Won’t find any pie in there,
Delilah. We’re runnin’ low.”
Delilah stopped, one hand on the screen door. “Why would we be runnin’ low, Abner?”
He nodded in my direction. “I’m guessin’ Amarie’s busy bakin’ for him now.” He emptied his
pipe, tapping the old tobacco over the side of the porch railing.
“Who, me?” I couldn’t believe Uncle Abner was actually talking to me. I took a step closer to
all of them. “I mean, hello, sir.”
He ignored me. “I’m guessin’ I won’t be seein’ another lemon meringue unless it’s the boy’s
favorite, too.”
“Are you gonna stand there starin’ or come on over here already?” Sulla had her back to me,
but she still knew I was there.
Twyla squinted into the sunlight. “Ethan? That you, cher?”
I walked toward the house, as much as I felt like staying where I was. I don’t know why I
was so nervous. I hadn’t expected the Greats to seem so regular. They could’ve been any group of
old folks, hanging out on the porch on a sunny afternoon. Except that they were all dead.
“Yeah. I mean, yes, ma’am. It’s me.”
Uncle Abner stood up and walked over to the railing to get a better look. The enormous crow
was still perched on his shoulder. It flapped its wings, and he didn’t even flinch. “Like I said, we
won’t be gettin’ any pie—or much else—now that the boy’s up here with us.”
Twyla waved me over. “Maybe he’ll share a bit a his with you.”
I climbed up the scuffed wooden steps, and the wind chimes tapped against one another. There
wasn’t so much as a breeze.
“He’s a spirit, all right,” Sulla said. There was a tiny brown bird hopping around the table. A
sparrow.
“ ’Course he is.” Ivy sniffed. “Wouldn’t be up here otherwise.”
I gave Uncle Abner and his scavenger a wide berth.
When I was close enough, Twyla jumped up and threw her arms around me. “Can’t say I’m
happy you’re here, but I am happy to see you.”
I hugged her back. “Yeah, well, I’m not all that happy to be here either.”
Uncle Abner took a swig of whiskey. “Then why’d you go and jump off that fool tower?”
I didn’t know what to say, but Sulla answered before I had to think of anything. “You know
the answer to that, Abner, about as well as you know your own name. Now stop givin’ the boy a
hard time.”
The crow flapped its wings again. “Somebody should,” Uncle Abner said.
Sulla turned and gave Uncle Abner the look. I wondered if that was where Amma had learned
it. “Unless you were strong enough to stop the Wheel a Fate yourself, you know the boy didn’t
have a choice.”
Delilah brought a wicker chair over for me. “Now, you come on and sit down here with us.”
Sulla was still flipping cards, but these were ordinary playing cards.
“Can you read those, too?” It wouldn’t have surprised me.
She laughed, and the sparrow chirped. “No, we’re just playin’ gin.” Sulla slapped down her
cards. “Speakin’ a that—gin.”
Delilah pouted. “You always win.”
“Well, I’ve won again,” Sulla said. “So why don’t you sit down here, Ethan, and tell us what
brings you ’round our way.”
“I’m not sure how much you know.”
She lifted her eyebrows.
“Okay, so you probably already know that I went to see Obidias Trueblood, this old—”
“Mmm hmm.” She nodded.
“And if he’s telling the truth, there’s a way I can get back home.” I was stumbling over my
words. “I mean, to the home where I was alive.”
“Mmm hmm.”
“I have to get my page from—”
“The Caster Chronicles,” she finished for me. “I know all that. So why don’t you go on and
say what you need from us.”
I was sure she knew, but she wanted me to ask anyway. It was only proper.
“I need a stone.” I thought about the best way to describe it. “This will probably sound strange,
but I saw you wearing it once, in kind of a dream. It’s shiny and black….”
“This one?” Sulla held out her palm. There it was. The black stone I saw in my vision.
I nodded, relieved.
“Darn right you do.” She pressed the rock into my hand, closing my fingers around it. It pulsed
with a kind of strange warmth that seemed to come from inside.
Delilah looked at me. “You know what that is?”
I nodded. “Obidias said it’s called a river’s eye, and I need two of them to get across the
river.”
“Then I reckon you’re one short,” Uncle Abner said. He hadn’t moved from the railing. He was
busy packing his pipe with dry leaf tobacco.
“Oh, there’s another one.” Sulla smiled knowingly. “Don’t you know?”
I shook my head.
Twyla reached over and took my hand. A smile spread across her face, her long braids slipping
over her shoulder as she nodded. “Un cadeau. A gift. I remember when I gave it to Lena,” she said
in her heavy French Creole accent. “River’s eye is a powerful stone. Brings luck and a safe
journey.” As she spoke, I saw the charm from Lena’s necklace. The smooth black rock she always
wore hanging from the chain.
Of course.
Lena had the second stone I needed.
“You know how to get to the river and get on your way?” Twyla asked, dropping my hand.
I pulled Aunt Prue’s map out of my back pocket. “I have a map. My aunt gave it to me.”
“Maps are good,” Sulla said, looking it over. “But birds are better.” She made a clicking noise
with her tongue, and the sparrow fluttered onto her shoulder. “A map can lead you astray if you
don’t read it right. A bird always knows the way.”
“I wouldn’t want to take your bird.” She had already given me the stone. It felt like I was
taking too much. Plus, birds made me nervous. They were like old ladies but with sharper beaks.
Uncle Abner took a long puff of his pipe and walked toward us. Even though he wasn’t
looming over me from the sky, he was still taller than me. He had a slight limp, and I couldn’t help
but wonder what caused it.
He hooked his finger around one of the suspenders attached to his loose brown pants. “Then
take mine.”
“Excuse me, sir?”
“My bird.” He cocked his shoulder, and the huge crow’s feathers ruffled. “If you don’t wanna
take Sulla’s bird—which I understand, since it’s not much bigger than a field mouse—then take
mine.”
I was scared to stand next to that vulture-sized crow. I definitely didn’t want to take it
anywhere with me. But I had to be careful, because he was offering me something he valued, and I
didn’t want to insult him.
I really didn’t want to insult him.
“I appreciate it, sir. But I don’t want to take your bird either. It seems…” The crow squawked
loudly. “Really attached to you.”
The old man waved off my concern. “Nonsense. Exu is smart, named for the god of the
crossroads. He watches the doors between worlds and knows the way. Don’t you, boy?”
The bird sat proudly on the man’s shoulder as if he knew Uncle Abner was singing his praises.
Delilah walked over and held out her arm. Exu flapped his wings once, dropping down to land
on her. “The crow is also the only bird that can cross between the worlds—the veils between life
and death, and places far worse. That old heap a feathers is a powerful ally, and a better teacher,
Ethan.”
“Are you saying he can cross over to the Mortal realm?” Was that really possible?
Uncle Abner blew the thick pipe smoke in my face as he spoke. “ ’Course he can. There and
back, there and back again. Only place that bird can’t go is underwater. And that’s only ’cause I
never taught him to swim.”
“So he can show me the way to the river?”
“He can show you a lot more than that if you pay attention.” Uncle Abner nodded at the bird,
and it took off into the sky, circling above our heads. “He behaves best if you give a gift every now
and again, just like the god I named him after.”
I had no idea what kinds of gifts to offer a crow, a voodoo god, or a crow named after one. I
got the feeling regular birdseed wasn’t going to cut it.
But I didn’t have to worry, because Uncle Abner made sure I knew. “Take some a this.” He
poured whiskey into a dented flask and handed me a small tin. It was the same one he had opened
to fill his pipe.
“Your bird drinks whiskey and eats tobacco?”
The old man frowned. “Just be glad he doesn’t like eatin’ scrawny boys that don’t know their
way ’round the Otherworld.”
“Yes, sir.” I nodded.
“Now you get outta here and take my bird and that stone.” Uncle Abner shooed me away. “I
won’t get any a Amarie’s pie with you hangin’ ’round here.”
“Yes, sir.” I put the tobacco tin and the flask in my pocket with the map. “And thank you.”
I started down the stairs and stepped off the porch. I turned back to take one last look at the
Greats, gathered around a card table, sewing and fussing, scowling and drinking whiskey,
depending on which one of them you were talking about. I wanted to remember them this way, like
regular people who were great for reasons that had nothing to do with seeing the future or scaring
the hell out of Dark Casters.
They reminded me of Amma and everything I loved about her. The way she always had the
answers and sent me off with something strange in my pocket. The way she scowled at me when
she was worried, and reminded me of all the things I still didn’t know.
Sulla stood up and leaned over the porch rail. “When you see the River Master, you be sure to
say I sent ya, you hear?”
She said it like I should know what she was talking about. “River Master? Who is that,
ma’am?”
“You’ll know him when you see him,” she said.
“Yes, ma’am.” I started to turn away.
“Ethan,” Uncle Abner called, “when you get home, tell Amarie I’m expectin’ a lemon meringue
and a basket a fried chicken. Two big, fat drumsticks…. Make that four.”
I smiled. “I will.”
“And don’t forget to send my bird back. He gets ornery after a while.”
The crow circled above me as I made my way down the stairs. I had no idea where I was
going, not even with a map and a tobacco-eating bird that could cross over between worlds.
It didn’t matter if I had my mom, Aunt Prue, a Dark Caster who had escaped from the very
place I was trying to break into, and all the Greats, with Twyla thrown in for good measure.
I had one stone now, and the more I thought about Lena, the more I realized I’d always known
where to find the other one. She never took it off her charm necklace. Maybe that’s why Twyla
had given it to her when she was a little girl—for some kind of protection. Or for me.
After all, Twyla was a powerful Necromancer. Maybe she’d known that I’d need it.
I’m coming, L. As soon as I can.
I knew she couldn’t hear me Kelting, but I listened for her voice in the back of my mind
anyway. As if the memory of it could somehow replace hearing her.
I love you.
I imagined her black hair and her green and gold eyes, her beat-up Chucks and her chipped
black nail polish.
There was only one thing left to do, and it was time for me to do it.
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