The Night Zoe & Michele Raised Hell
Introduction:
Kids say the darndest things.
-Cotton Mather
***
âZoe,â Michele said, âI donât think we should be doing this.â
A draft blew through the basement as both girls crouched on the concrete floor, still wearing bits and pieces of their trick or treat costumes. Zoe was dressed as a witch; Michele was her black cat. It was almost midnight.
They were supposed to be asleep hours ago, but Zoeâs mother had gone to a grown-up Halloween party with her boyfriend, and as soon as their car pulled away the girls crept down here like theyâd planned. Or like Zoe had planned anyway.
Michele gobbled another Hershey bar from her plastic pumpkin bucket. Sheâd left a trail of empty wrappers all through the house. Meanwhile, Zoe laid out everything theyâd need: the black candle, the knife, the bell, and her book.
âWe have to do this,â Zoe said, opening the book and thumbing to the right page. âTonightâs the very best night for it. It wonât work as well any other night.â
Picking up the colored chalk that Michele had helped her steal from school, Zoe drew a kind of funny circle on the floor. Michele hugged her pumpkin bucket tighter as she watched.
The circle took a long time, since Zoe had to keep checking the notebook to add the squiggly letters around it. âPerfect, I think,â she said when she was done, wiping chalk dust on her witchâs skirts. âDoes it look right to you?â
âLetâs just stop,â Michele said again. âIâm tired from trick or treating.â
âQuit being a baby,â Zoe said. âGet the blood ready.â
Michele sighed. The blood was in a purple Tupperware container that sheâd kept in the back of the fridge all week and smuggled over here in the bottom of her trick or treat bag. Of all the things they needed for tonight it had been the hardest to find; even harder than the black candle from the funny smelling store on Cole Street.
But Zoe had insisted they needed blood for the magic to work right, so Michele talked her mother into buying some from a butcher, saying that it was part of a science experiment for school (which she decided was probably only half of a lie).
Now, at Zoeâs insistence, she peeled the plastic lid back. The blood looked cold and icky. Michele poured most of it into the chalk circle so that it made a dark, disgusting puddle. Michele hated the way her own reflection looked in its glossy surface, but Zoe appeared pleased.
âPerfect,â she said again. âPut the rest in here.â She offered a cup for Michele to deposit the remainder of the pigâs blood. Michele held her nose as she did.
Outside the basement windows the streets were dark and quiet, the other trick or treaters all back home by now. Zoe shut the basement door and lit the black candle. It made just barely enough light to see by. Then she said, âAre you ready?â
âNo,â said Michele (around a mouthful of Kit Kat).
Zoe rolled her eyes. âThis was all your idea, remember?â
That was sort of true. Michele had seen a rerun of âBewitchedâ on TV and told Zoe they should grow up to be witches, and that it would be a fun way to fix their problems.
It was supposed to be a joke, but Zoe hadnât laughed. Instead, sheâd started making plansâŠ
âItâs stupid,â Michele said now. âMagic isnât real anyway.â
Sheâd made this argument several times in the past few weeks, angling to portray Zoeâs plan as kidâs stuff and therefore beneath them at this age. (Eleven for Zoe, 11 and a half for Michele.)
Problem was, Zoe had impressed herself by securing what she called âgrown-up magic,â copied from a book at the library that they werenât allowed to check out. She spent an entire afternoon laboriously reproducing important pages in her school binder. This kind of magic must be real, she insisted. Otherwise why would anyone write a book about it?
âWe can call up whatever we want with this,â Zoe said, showing the pages to Michele. âAnd itâll give us anything we ask for.â
âBut what do WE have to give to IT?â Michele had asked. Zoe just shrugged the question away.
Now the flickering candlelight turned the pages of Zoeâs notebook fiery orange in the dark basement. As she traced the letters of the spell with the tip of her finger she said, âLook, you know what an asshole Eddie is. Heâs going to be my stepdad if we donât do something about it. Do you want that?â
Reluctantly, Michele shook her head. Sheâd never liked Eddie any more than Zoe had, though sheâd tried for all of the 11 months that he and Zoeâs mom had dated.
âWell this is how weâre going to stop it,â Zoe continued. âIâll wish for it tonight and then itâll happen. And your wish will come true too.â
All that Michele wanted was help with school. Sheâd almost been held back last year, and the threat of being in a different class than Zoe terrified her. They fought all the time, but theyâd been friends since age four. The idea of being apart was scary. Even scarier than black magicâŠ
So when Zoe declared it was time to start, Michele took her place outside of the chalk circle despite her shaking knees. She tried to tell herself again that only babies believe in magic. It was just like Santa or the Tooth Fairy. Just a storyâŠ
When Zoe gave the signal, Michele rang the bell to signal the start. Its tinkle sounded much louder than it should in the dark, silent basement. Then, throwing one hand over her head to create a dramatic shadow on the wall, Zoe read:
âIn nomine Dei nostri Satanas Luciferi excelsi.â
Sheâd spent all week practicing how to say it. Neither of them were sure what it meant, but it sounded cool.
Zoe read on:
âIn the name of Satan, the Ruler of the earth, the King of the world, I command the forces of darkness to bestow their power upon me!â
The house creaked. Michele jumped, then felt stupid. Nothing is going to happen, she reminded herselfâŠ
âOpen wide the gates of Hell and come forth from the abyss to greet us as your sisters and friends. Answer to your four names by manifesting our desires!â
Then it was Micheleâs turn. At first she panicked because she couldnât remember what to say; Zoe had forced her to memorize the four special names, but suddenly her mind was blank.
The look on Zoeâs face grew increasingly pointed as she waited, and Michele writhed. It occurred to her that if she couldnât remember the names there was no way they could keep goingâŠ
But then just like that they popped back into her head. Reluctantly, she said them one by one, ringing the bell after each:
âSatan.â
Ring.
âLucifer.â
Ring.
âBelial.â
Ring.
âLeviathan.â
Ring.
A noise came from the corner. Michele glanced over her shoulder. Nothing was there, of course, but the basement was so dark that it was hard not to imagine things. She wished theyâd had enough money for more than one candleâŠ
âNow drink,â Zoe said, passing the cup of leftover blood. Theyâd mixed it with water so that it wouldnât be as bad, but it still smelled dark and gross. The candy in Micheleâs stomach curdled. âDrink,â Zoe said again. âYou only need to swallow a little.â
Forcing down a sip, Michele crammed in two Jolly Ranchers at once (sour apple and cherry) to get rid of the taste. Zoe almost emptied the cup when it was her turn, although Michele could tell it made her sick too. It was a second before she was able to say the next part:
âOh great lurkers in the darkness, oh guardians of the way, present yourselves to us who believe and are stricken with ad-ver-sa-tees.â
âZoe, somebodyâs upstairs.â
âNo theyâre not.â
âI hear them moving. I think your mom is home early.â
âThatâs just the house. Now shut up, youâre not supposed to talk at this part.â
The candle flame seemed to shrink and the shadows moved closer. Michele tried to hold Zoeâs hand but Zoe was too busy holding the book and the knife. She gestured with the blade while she read:
âSuccor us through fire and water, earth and air. Strike dumb our ad-ver-sare-ees. Allow no misfortune to allay our path, and restore us to unending dominion. This we command in the name of Satan, whose mercies flourish and whose susâsustiâsusââ
âSustenance.â
âThanks. And whose sustenance will prevail! Hail Satan!â
Zoe nudged Michele in the ribs. âHail Satan,â Michele said.
âAs Satan reigns, so shall we. Zoe May Carter is the vessel who flesh is as the earth. Life everlasting, world without end.â
Next she turned to look at Michele, and her eyes held every expectation in the world. Michele was old enough to know what a look like that meant: It said, âDonât let me down.â
So, swallowing her fear, Michele said: âMichele Ocampo Bautista is the vessel whose flesh is as the earth. Life everlasting, world without end.â
Looking satisfied, Zoe nodded. Michele said, âNow what?â
âThe most important part,â said Zoe, producing a folded piece of notebook paper. âOn this we write down our wish: Whatever we want in the whole world. Everything weâd give our souls for.â
âI donât want to sell my soul.â
âYou donât even believe in souls, dummy. Youâve never even been to church except with your crazy alcoholic aunt.â
âYeah, well you and your mom go to church every month.â
âWeâre Unitarians, that doesnât count. Anyway, I wrote your wish for you: Youâll get good grades and always pass tests no matter what. And weâll be friends forever,â she added. Michele perked up a little at this part.
âAnd my mom will get rid of Eddie, and never bring another stupid guy around who wants to be my stepdad,â Zoe continued. âAnd my nightmares will stop. In fact, Iâll never have another dream again.â
This part made Michele curious. Zoe had never mentioned nightmares. But before she could ask about it Zoe put the corner of the paper into the candle flame, and when the whole thing was on fire she threw it into the magic circle.
The burning paper fluttered and flared, and then the embers burnt out in seconds. Silence descended. Michele counted to ten in her head before asking: âHow do we know if it worked?â
The sound of riffling pages filled the basement as Zoe flipped through her notes. âIt doesnât say. I thought, I donât know, that we would just know.â
She paused. âThereâs one last part. Maybeââ
And then the basement door flew open with a bang and light from the hall framed a figure on the stairs. Both girls screamed and grabbed each other. The candle blew out.
The person on the stairs began walking down one step at a time. Michele and Zoe backed away.
âThatâs not your mother,â Michele said.
âNo.â
âIs it Eddie?â
âItâs definitely not Eddie.â
The man (thing?) was halfway to them almost before they knew it. Michele tried to remember any prayers her crazy aunt had taught her, but her mind was blank. The closest she could get was the ABCs song, and she almost blurted that out instead.
Just as she was about to curl up in a ball in the corner and hope for this to all turn out to be a dream, Zoe surprised her by letting go of her hand and stepping forward. Michele was even more surprised when she realized Zoe was smiling.
âWait a minute,â Zoe said, bouncing up and down in sudden excitement. âMichele, donât be scared. Donât you get it? We called him and he came. The magic worked.â
âNo it didnât!â said Michele, backing away even more.
But Zoe said it again. âIt worked. Canât you tell? Just look!â
Michele looked but couldnât see anything. The man on the stairs was just a black shape. Zoeâs eyes shone, but Michele couldnât see whatever it was that made her so excited. Only shadows.
The man in the dark reached out, and Zoe took him by the hand. She kept smiling. The dark man kept his other hand out, but Michele didnât want to take it. Fear latched onto her heart. I just want to go home, she thought. Please, please, please, just let me go homeâŠ
âCome on Michele, youâll ruin it,â said Zoe.
âI donât want to,â Michele said, as loud as she dared.
âMichele!â
âI donât want to! IâŠI just want to go home!â Michele said. And she screamed and screamed and covered her head with her hands, and thenâŠ
It was morning. Michele opened her eyes and sat up in her own bed. Her costume from the night before and a bucketful of Halloween candy were both spread all over the floor.
There was no sign of Zoe. Or ofâŠanyone else.
Rubbing her eyes, Michele crawled to the candy pile and shook a box of milk duds into her open mouth. Chewing, she tried to remember what had happened last night. She was supposed to sleep over at Zoeâs after trick or treating; how did she get back here? The last thing she remembered was going down to the basement.
No, that wasnât quite true: She remembered the black candle, and the blood, and Zoe reading from the book. But after thatâŠnothing.
At breakfast, Micheleâs mother put a hand to her forehead. âYou look sick, but you donât feel hot. Everything all right?â
Prodding at her Count Chocula with a spoon Michele tried to remember last night again, but the longer the morning went on the harder it was. âEverythingâs fine,â she said. âToo much candy is all.â
âWell hurry up and eat, you donât want Zoe waiting for the bus alone,â Mom said.
But Zoe wasnât at the bus stop. In fact, she wasnât in class at all. Michele called her house that night to see if she was okay and her mother answered. âZoeâs been sick in bed all day,â she said. âToo much candy I think.â
âOh, is that it?â said Michele. âI thoughtâŠâ But she didnât really know what else to say, so she just said thank you and hung up.
When she went back upstairs, she threw the rest of her Halloween candy away. It tasted sour all of a sudden. And the sight of it made her afraid.
***
âMichele? Michele?â
âHuh?â
Michele turned around, blinking at the afternoon sun streaming in through the dorm room window. She stood with her purse open, having just swept an armful of things off the top of a dresser and into it. Bulging, she struggled to get it zipped shut.
From the other side of the room, Malcolm (who was sitting on her suitcase in an attempt to get it closed for) was still looking at her. âYou spaced out for a second,â he said.
âSorry, I was thinking aboutâŠsomething from a long time ago. What were we saying?â
âYou donât like Halloween.â
âOh, right. Yeah, ever since I was a kid. Itâs just not my thing.â
She looked around again at the disarray of the dorm, trying to get her bearings back. She was supposed to be sorting things she needed for the weekend from things she didnât, but now she decided to just plain give up and take whatever would fit into her bags easiest.
It was Thursday. Two of her Friday classes had cancelled tomorrow, so she was skipping the third and leaving campus to take a long weekend back home. That was her plan, anyway; Malcolm was making a belated attempt at luring her into his roommateâs Halloween party this weekend instead.
He finally got her suitcase to close with a snap and then bounded up in triumph. âSo whatâs wrong with Halloween?â he said, handing it to her.
Shrugging, Michele pretended to be busy looking through a stack of bio books and notes from organic chemistry, next to a plastic vase with fresh flowers Malcolm had delivered himself the previous day.
âIt reminds me of bad things is all,â she said. âYou know: death, monsters, childhood. The worst of the worst.â
Malcolm put his arms around her waist and kissed her ear. She turned to look at him; he was a freshman and younger than her by three years, but since he was taller and was growing in a beard he looked older, like he was getting ready to graduate in the spring. âI think Halloween is sexy,â he said. âYouâd look hot as hell in a nurseâs costume.â
âIâm going to be wearing a nurseâs uniform for the rest of my life, why do I want one on Halloween?â
âSomething else then. A cat costume. Or a witch.â
Michele choked, then feigned clearing her throat to cover up for it. âNice try, tiger,â she said, turning and giving him a kiss. âThis is one thing weâre just not going to see eye to eye on.â
âOkay then,â Malcolm said, and got on his knees. She laughed.
âLook, Iâd come to the party make you happy, and Iâd EVEN wear the nurseâs outfit if youâre good,â she said. âBut itâs Momâs 50th birthday this weekend, so I have to be there.â
This was a lie; Momâs birthday wasnât until March, and sheâd be 48. But the real reason she was going would have taken longer to explain. And would have led to questions she wasnât ready to answer yetâŠ
âAre you sure you donât want me to come with you?â Malcolm said. He was still on his knees, taking advantage of the low angle to stroke her calves. âI mean, I should meet your family and see where you grew up, right? If weâre really serious about the future?â
âYeah, of course you should. Itâs justâŠâ Think fast. âThis isnât the best time. Momâs a little self-conscious about the birthday. Itâll be better if we wait. Besides, I wouldnât want you missing the big party just to hang around my boring old hometown.â
Discovering that sheâd almost forgotten her toothbrush she ducked into the bathroom, then came back and pointed it at Malcolm, shaking the bristles as she talked. âNow no running off with any nurses at that party,â she said. âOr witches. Orââ
âPussies?â
She giggled. âYou ass.â
âIs that not what you were going to say? Ah wellâŠâ
And then he grabbed her. Michele shrieked and batted at him. âYouâll make me late,â she said.
âNo I wonât, weâll use protection.â
âThatâs notâOH!âwhat I meant. I need toâŠI need toâŠâ
âYou need to what?â Malcolm said, kissing her neck. Her eyes rolled in her head as his teeth grazed the soft skin near her collarbone. Michele dropped her bag.
âOh, fuck it,â she said.
âThatâs the spirit.â
She pounced on him, pulling down for an open-mouthed kiss. Micheleâs roommate was still in class so there was no need to leave a hangar on the door; without looking, she gave the door a solid kick to make sure that it was closed. It was an old building and sometimes that door would pop open on its own at the worst possible time…
Michele forced Malcolm back until he almost tripped over the bed, then pushed him down to it and hopped right on top, stripping off her shirt and tossing it on top of her nearby suitcase so that she wouldnât be more late trying to find it later.
Malcolm was about to say something but she clapped a hand over his mouth playfully, then grinned as she pulled his belt off. Outside the window someone shouted to someone else from across the quad. Michele held Malcolmâs wrists down and then looped his belt around them before securing it to the bed frame.
He squirmed a little bit. âHey!â he said.
âIâve got to give you something to remember me by while Iâm gone for the weekend, right?â Michele said, pulling his shirt up and kissing his abs. He had a swimmerâs body and did laps obsessively but said he never planned trying out for the team because âItâs not fun if someone is making you do it.â
âBesides,â she added, âyouâre the one who started this. No fair wimping out now.â
She cinched the belt tight and, once she was sure he wasnât going anywhere, unhooked her bra and leaned over him until he strained to get his mouth at her naked breasts.
Giggling, she ran her fingers through his hair and bent down to let him have a taste a little bit at a time, always pulled back before he could get a real mouthful. He responded by tickling one of her nipples with the tip of his tongue until she squealed.
Sliding down the front of Malcolmâs body, Michele stuck her hands down his pants and squeezed. Malcolm groaned and rolled his eyes in approval; the rest of his body was hot but his balls felt cool in her hands.
Pulling his pants down to his knees she kissed the side of his cock, then licked it and coiled her tongue around the shaft, teasing it until she heard him suck a hard breath between his teeth, following up by licking around and around the tip until he jerked and tugged at the belt. She laughed.
Slipping his entire cock into her mouth, Michele watched his chest swell and contract as his breathing picked up. Seeing Malcolm shirtless always made her wet; it used to make her feel shallow, but now she figured fuck it. Sucking her way down him, she wrapped her lips around his cock as tight as she could and gave two or three firm tugs with her mouth until he was practically writhing, then closed her eyes and paced herself. The wet sound of sucking filled the small room.
After a while she slid him back out with a satisfying popping nose, then said, âNow itâs your turn.â Wriggling out of her shorts and her panties and tossing them both on her suitcase she shimmied up Malcolmâs body (letting his smooth, supple skin caress the insides of her thighsâŠ) and then, before he could say anything else, sat down on his face so that her wet pussy pressed onto his pretty mouth.
Immediately dutiful, he kisses her slippery lips and pushed the tip of his tongue right inside, licking up and down her slit. Every nerve in Micheleâs body stood up and sang. âOhhh shit,â she said, squirming herself now.
He was still trying to get his hands loose. She slapped at them until he stopped, riding his face all the while as his sweet lips licked and sucked at her until she was absolutely dripping.
Biting her thumb to keep from screaming, Michele swiveled around and dropped back down so that she lay face down on top of Malcolm with his cock stuffed into her mouth even while she spread her legs and continued feeding him her pussy, swiveling her ass in the air as he went to work.
He came so hard and fast that Michele risked choking, but she pulled back just enough at the last moment and got a hot mouthful. She let it dribble over her tongue until the salty taste touched the back of her throat, then swallowed it down and wiped her mouth on the back of her hand in satisfaction.
âYouâd better hurry up and finish me off too if Iâm going to leave on timeâŠâ she said, sitting up again.
âIâm working as hard as I can,â Malcom saidâor tried to say, his voice muffled. Michele made a tsk tsk noise.
âAre you sure aboutââ Michele said. But that was all she could say, because at that moment she looked down and almost screamed.
Instead of Malcolm, splayed out on the bed she saw the dark figure of a man with no face, or rather with a face that she couldnât see, hidden as it was in the shadows.
But even though she couldnât see him she still couldnât shake the idea that she recognized him from years agoâŠ
And then she blinked and it was gone, and it was just Malcolm on the bed again.
Michele hadnât quite screamed, but he must have been able to tell that something was wrong because he tried once again to sit upâso hard and so fast that he nearly broke the beltâand put a comforting arm around her shoulder as soon as she untied him.
âBaby, whatâs wrong?â
âNothing,â she said, clamping her mouth shut as soon as the lie was out.
âYou looked like youâd seen a ghost.â
âOh no,â Michele said, forcing herself to smile as she reached for her clothes. âI just realized how late itâs getting. I really have to go. Iâll see you again Monday. Have fun without me, but not TOO much fun, okay?â
âAll rightâŠâ Malcolm said, letting her kiss him. She hurried to leave before he could ask anything else. Sheâd told enough lies for one afternoon already.
***
It was still late by the time she got on the road, and the highway was pitch black once she got up into the hills. Sheâd forgotten just how dark things were once you got away from the city lights. Down there it was still sunny and warm, but up here in the mountains winter had practically already started.
Why does anyone still live out here, she thought? Then she scolded herself: Just because I donât like living in the boonies doesnât mean itâs not good for anyone else. Mom still loves it up here, she reminded herself. And ZoeâŠ
Ah ah, she thought, no dwelling on Zoe. Plenty of time for that later. She realized she was speeding and made herself slow down. The flicker of her headlights passing over the reflectors at the side of the road made her think of candle flames.
It was nearly a quarter to eleven by the time Michele rolled in; at a distance, town and forest looked almost indistinguishable except for the narrow strip of streetlamps along Main Street. Here and there the yellow square of light glowed behind the blinds of some neighbor who dared court town gossips by being visibly awake past 10 PM on a weeknight.
Micheleâs mother had just moved to a smaller place (âNo sense paying for a lot of rooms Iâm not going to use,â sheâd said over the phone). She was still up when Michele arrived, with bathrobe on and late-night gin martini in hand. They hugged one-armed so that it wouldnât spill.
âSorry Iâm late,â Michele said, putting her bags down in the hall.
âYour loss, I already ate all of the fatted calf. Are you hungry, by the way?â
âA little bit, but I brought dinner: macaroni and baked potato, your favorite, as best we could manage in the dorm kitchenette anyway. It just needs the microwave now.â
âWell if I canât feed you then how about a drink?â Mom shook her half empty martini glass.
âI shouldnâtâŠactually, yes that sounds great.â
So they ended up with martinis and macaroni by the fire as autumn wind shook the trees outside. Michele listened to the whistling through the pines and felt the hairs on the back of her neck stand up with delicious remembered fears from childhood. âI like the new place,â she said. âItâs cozy.â
âItâs cheap. So whatâs the occasion?â
âOccasion?â
Mom leaned back in her easy chair. âYouâre here out of the blue. Iâm not complaining, but I figure thereâs a reason.â
The wind picked up. Michele took a drink to hide her face in the glass. âI just missed you. And home.â
âMe Iâll believe, but this place never. Iâve never seen somebody as quick to get out of her hometown as you were at 18, and weâve seen you back here all of three times in three years. I figured you must have had some fight with that boy, whatâs his name?â
âMalcolm. No, everythingâs fine with us. More than fine, actually. Two of my Friday classes cancelled and I just wanted come back for a long weekend here. Is that so hard to believe?â
âMaybe Iâll believe it easier with another round,â Mom said, rising.
Listening to the sound of the martini shaker from the kitchenette, Michele counted to ten in her head and tried to sound casual when she said, âAs long as Iâm here I thought Iâd look up Zoe. Sheâs still around, right?â
âSure, I see her all the time. Sheâs a bartender over at the Eastside.â
âSeriously?â
âUh huh,. She started out at the Club but they fired her.â
There were two bars in town: the reasonably respectable, slightly hip one on Main Street called just the Club, and then the Eastside, where people who wouldnât afford the Clubâor had achieved lifetime bans from itâwent to drink instead.
âCanât remember why Charlie let her go,â Mom said, returning. âNot going down on him on payday like he asked, maybe.â
âMom!â
âOh, that man would try to stick it in a vacuum cleaner if it gave him the time of day. Mind you he was plenty good looking once.â
âI donât need to hear this.â
âHereâs to covering your ears then,â Mom said, clinking their glasses. âShe asks about you all the time you know.â
âZoe?â
âUh huh. I tell youâre doing good, getting ready for nursing school. She says sheâll call you but I guess she never does. You two were so close as kids. Up until you werenât anymore, I mean. I donât think sheâs got much in the way of friends these days. Sheâll be happy to see you, I think.â
That night, Michele stood at the mirror on her motherâs bureau, brushing her hair. (Mom insisted on letting Michele sleep in her room and took the couch herself, despite Micheleâs protestations.) It was the same antique mirror where she and Zoe had played âBloody Maryâ on Halloween night in first grade and scared themselves silly.
Would Zoe really be glad to see her after all this time, she wondered? She couldnât be sure. She had trouble remembering the last time they talked. Michele had, she was aware, been avoiding this town more or less as a means of avoiding Zoe, treating one as a proxy for another.
Finished with her hair, Michele set the brush on the dresser but paused before turning away from the mirror. The sound of the wind reminded her again of previous, long-lost Halloweens, and she smoothed her nightgown out before looking her reflection in the eye and saying, almost tentatively:
âBlood MaryâŠâ
The lamp went out. The entire room became black. Michele jumped.
It was just a power outage, of course. Wires blew down around here all the time. Still, she couldnât help looking over her shoulder, expecting a dark and faceless man to be waiting for herâŠ
But nothing was there.
Even so, she crawled into bed with the covers over her head and wished suddenly for trick or treat candy to stress eat before nodding off. Some things never change, she thought.
***
The Eastside bar was dim, the bottles faded, the TV only half-functional, and the walls covered with hunting trophies from a previous century, antlers bristling like a phalanx of spears trying to prod Michele away.
It was noon exactly, and Zoe was the only one working, tying her curly hair back with a scrunchie and wearing a black tank top despite the cold weather. Sheâd grown curvier and more full in the face since Michele saw her last, but still mostly like her old self. Michele approached the bar but didnât sit at first, waiting for Zoe to see her and register surprise.
But she didnât look surprised at all. She just turned from the tap sheâd been pouringâSierra Nevada Nooner Pilsner, Micheleâs favoriteâand slammed it down right in front of Michele with the foam still streaming down the side and said, âYouâre here.â
Sitting on a stool, Michele held her purse between her legs. âYeah, Iâm here. Surprise.â
âI was expecting you.â
âMom told you I was coming?â
âNope. Just expecting you is all. This first oneâs on me. Celebration for your big homecoming. Come here and let me see you.â
Zoe reached across the bar and cupped Micheleâs face, turning it left and right to inspect, and Michele was so surprised for a second that she didnât object.
âYou look good,â Zoe said. âI was kind of hoping you wouldnât. Less pressure on me, you know? That means youâre buying the next round.â
She poured herself a Blindfold Ale, her arms snapping the tap on and off with machine-like precision. When she was finished she half-raised her pint in a toast. âHereâs to good reunions,â she said, and drank half of hers in one go. âYouâre not drinking?â
âItâs barely noon.â
âI know, but Iâve got to stay buzzed to keep ahead the hangover from last night.â
Then she smiled, a quick white flash that moved her entire face, and for a startling second made her look exactly like she had when they were ten. Leaning across the bar, she hugged Micheleânot a casual, single-armed hug, but a big, full embraceâand Michele found herself smiling and hugging back.
âYou do look good,â Zoe said. âYour mom said you were doing okay and now I know sheâs not lying. You sure stayed away long enough.â
Sipping her beer, Michele said, âIâve been back a few times. I justââ
âDidnât see me. Yeah, itâs okay. I wouldnât see me either, and I am me.â She paused to pour a beer for someone else âYou gonna want another one?â
âIâm not done withââ
âIâll start a tab for you. Since youâre never coming back youâll never have to pay it. Works out.â She smiled again, but this time she didnât look so young.
It got later. They had a few more drinks. They talked about friends from high schoolâor more accurately, about Micheleâs friends, since Zoe had few to speak ofâand strained to remember stories from childhood.. Zoe asked about Micheleâs classes and looked genuinely interested in the answers.
At first Michele was surprised by how natural it felt for the two of them to be talking again. But after a while she forgot to even bother with surprise. Neither of them left when Zoeâs shift ended, instead retiring to a corner table with a pitcher that seemed to refill as if by magic.
âSo he fired me last year,â Zoe was saying. âBut anyway, heâd do it with a vacuum cleaner if he got bored enough.â
âOh god, thatâs what Mom said too,â Michele said, snorting.
âShe knows âem when she sees âem. So tell me about this guy youâre fucking?â
Blinking, Michele sat up straight. âMalcolm? Heâs my boyfriend. We met over the summer. It hasnât been that long but weâreâŠkind of engaged? Sort of thinking about being engaged?â She put a hand on her head, theyâd gone through too many pitchers for her to be sorting through the ins and outs of her relationship now.
Shaking her head, Zoe said, âNo youâre not. Come on. Youâre, what, barely 21? Youâre not going to marry some guy now. Stupidest thing you could do.â
âNot now. Just, you know, sometime.â Michele gestured and knocked the pitcher, but it didnât fall over.
âIâll believe it when I see it,â Zoe said. âAnd Iâm not coming to the wedding, so Iâll never see it. Iâm not big on weddings. Not the marrying type.â
âYouâre the type to spit out a guyâs bones and bury them in the yard.â
âUh uh. I never spit. Always swallow.â
Michele laughed again. Now Zoe leaned back too and looked at her sideways. âHow about you tell me why youâre dropping in all of a sudden?â she said.
âHuh?â
âI mean, catching up and all is fine. Plus, drinking with you for an afternoon counts as socializing, instead of drinking alone, which only counts as a problem. But youâre up here out of nowhere on a weekday during the school year and suddenly you want to see me. So whatâs the deal?â
Geez, do I really seem so suspicious, Michele thought? She wanted to get defensive but realized she couldnât. âIâŠâ She let the word linger for as long as she could, then changed the subject. âYou expected me,â she said.
âYeah.â
âHow?â
âJust got a good feeling. Youâre not going to tell me whatâs up? Guess Iâll have to get you even more drunk than you are now.â
âIâm not drunk.â
âStand up.â
As soon as she did Michele stumbled. Zoe caught her. The bar had filled up a bit, and some people looked. Steadying herself with a hand on the wall, Michele almost lost a finger to a pair of low-hanging antlers.
âOhhh shoot,â she said. âI canât drive home now. To Momâs, I mean.â
âYouâre not going home,â Zoe said, slinging Micheleâs arm over her shoulder like a wounded soldier being carried off the battlefield. âMy place is just behind the Safeway on Jackson, we can walk it. Your mom knows youâre staying over.â
âShe does?â
âYeah. Come on, upsy-daisy, one foot at a time.â
They half stumbled to the parking lot. Michele was stunned to see that it was night already. âHow long were we in there?â
âLong enough. Fucking hell, is this fastest you can walk?â
âI donât like to drink that muchâŠâ
âCould have fooled me.â
The walk home took a while. Zoeâs place was on the ground floor of the Garden Homes apartments. It was a two bedroom apartment, but it looked like she lived alone. Michele saw that the extra bedroom was closed with a heavy padlock on the outside, but as drunk as she was she didnât bother asking why.
As soon as they were in the door Zoe broke out the hard liquor. Michele knew she shouldnât have any, but she couldnât say no. A few more drinks and she wouldnât be able to say anything at allâŠ
They drank screwdrivers on the couch. Nothing but a string of white Christmas lights lit the living roomââCheaper on the PG&E bill,â Zoe said. Michele watched the contents of her glass as she swirled it.
âI think I needed that,â she said. âThis I mean. What weâre doing.â
âDrinking on the couch?â
âNo, justâŠâ She fumbled. âI missed you.â
âCareful, Iâll get teary.â
âCunt.â
âYou love it.â She paused. âI missed you too though. Even before you left. You know, back when you got all weird and stopped talking to me.â
âI didnât get weird, you got weird.â
âI was always weird. You got normal. And that was weird.â
âIt wasnât that. It wasâŠâ
Zoe sat forward. âOhhh, now weâre getting to the interesting part. Finally feel like spilling whatâs been on your mind?â
Going to take another drink, Michele found that her glass was empty. She put it down. âHalloween is Sunday. Day after tomorrow.â
âYeah.â
âDo you rememberâŠI mean, when we were kids, ten years ago. Do you remember when weâŠâ
âCalled up the devil?â
âNo. I mean, yes, thatâs what we wanted to do.â
âAnd we did it. You donât remember?â
âI rememberâŠâ
For a second Michele had a vivid hallucination of a man whose face she couldnât see walking down the darkened basement steps. But she batted it away almost instantly.
âI donât remember what I remember. But I know we did something we shouldnât have. It scared me. And it didnât scare you, and that scared me worse.â
Zoe put her own glass down. It was still sweating. âThatâs why you came back? Halloween?â
âIâŠyes. Iâve been thinking about it a lot lately. So I came here to ask if we can, you know, undo it? Whatever we did. If that makes sense?â
Michele searched Zoeâs face, expecting confusion, amusement, or even mockery. What she saw instead surprised her: absolute shock, laced with genuine hurt.
âAre you kidding me?â Zoe said, almost standing up. âThat was the best thing that ever happened to us!â
Blinking, Michele said, âIt was?â
âOf course you idiot. Didnât you ever realize? Look, youâre doing premed now? I bet you barely study for your tests but always gets Aâs, right?â
âIâm smart.â
âBut what did you wish for on Halloween?â
âI donât know, you wished for me.â
âThat youâd always get good grades no matter what. And you always did.â
âOkay, butââ
âAnd what did I want? No more Eddie, no more boyfriends for mom. A week later Mom dumped Eddie, and there was never anyone else.â
âYeah, okayââ
âAll the good stuff in life is because of what we did that night,â Zoe said, plowing on.
âWhat about the bad stuff?â
âWho knows? All I know isâfuck this, I need shots. Come on.â
In the kitchen, Zoe splashed tequila into plastic shot glasses. She tossed hers back right away and signaled with a rotating finger that Michele should do the same, then slapped her on the back as she coughed afterward.
âWhy is this coming up now anyway?â Zoe said. âHoly shit, this isnât something about that guy, is it? Mark?â
âMalcolm. Yeah, I mean, thatâs part of it. But the real reason is I never liked it. I never thought we should do it. I want to get rid of it finally. And also Iâve beenâŠseeing things. SometimesâŠâ
They stared at each other for a long time. Michele thought about the North-Going Zax and the South-Going Zax, stuck looking at each other forever because neither would budge.
But Zoe broke the stare down first by rolling her eyes. âYou sure thatâs the real reason you came? Donât you want something else?â
âLike what?â Michele said. She was trying very hard not to sway on her feet. Zoe propped her up with an arm around her, then looked her straight in the eyes.
âLike me, maybe?â Zoe said. Michele choked again.
âExcuse me?â
âCome on. Youâre not fooling me. Donât tell me you never thought about it?â
âIâŠthatâs none of your business,â Michele said, twisting away so that Zoe couldnât see her blush. She felt Zoeâs eyes on the back of her head.
âNone of my business, huh?â the other girl said. And then she swept the plastic glasses into the sink. âIf you say so. But why are you back here then?â
âI told you why.â
âI donât buy it. I think the real reason is you canât get me off your mind. Youâre crazy about me. Right?â
âNo!â Michele wanted to leave the kitchen but Zoe was in the way. The kitchen light behind Zoeâs head framed her in shadow. She moved in close now, smelling like tequila and perfume. âProve it. Give me one kiss and tell me you donât like it.â
âWhy would I do that?â
âFor old timeâs sake?â
Michele realized she was staring at Zoeâs lips. âIâm drunk,â she said. âYouâre drunk.â
âPerfect excuse. Kiss me.â
Their lips were only a few inches apart. Michele recognized the look in Zoeâs eyes; it was a look that said, âDonât let me down.â
âZoeâŠâ
And as they both leaned inâŠ
Thatâs all Michele could remember.
***
It was morning. Michele opened her eyes and sat up, not in her own bed. There was no sign of ZoeâŠno, wait, there was the sound of the shower, and steam coming from beneath the bathroom door.
Putting her hands over her face, Michele groaned. Oh my god, she thought. What happened last night? The last thing she remembered wasâno, she didnât want to remember the last thing she remembered.
Her head was killing her. And her stomachâŠ
âOh no.â
Bolting out of bed, she kicked the bathroom door open and just barely made it to the toilet in time, throwing he arms around it like a shipâs mast in a storm and sticking her head in the bowl.
Peering around the shower curtain, Zoe watched. âGood morning, sunshine,â she said. âGuess this means a morning quickie is out of the question.â
âDie,â Michele said, slumping next to the toilet. She felt marginally better now, although it was a low bar. Zoe pulled the shower open wider, inviting her in. Michele wanted to wash away the gross feeling, but didnât want to get in while Zoe was still there. Her face must have given it away, because Zoe glowered.
âSo thatâs how it is,â she said, turning the water off. âYouâre a piece of work.â
âMe? You got me drunk andââ
âYou got yourself drunk, I didnât force you. What, are you ashamed?â She threw the towel at Michele. âSelf-loathing lesbians are really boring you know.â
âI am not self-loathing. I donât loathe anything.â
âCanned pears.â
âAnything about myself.â
âWhy the attitude then? Shit, give me that towel back, Iâm dripping on the floor.â
Throwing the towel, Michele kicked off her panties (the only thing sheâd put back on last night) and got into the shower. âThe problem isâthis water is freezing!â
âJiggle the right handle if you want it hot.â Zoeâs voice came from the bedroom. âI get it: Youâre upset about your boyfriend or whatever. But heâs not here, right? Out of sight, out of mind.â
âThat doesnât make it okay. Wait, did we reallyâŠ?â
âReally what? Fuck all night?â
âYes, did we reallyâholy shit, now the waterâs scalding!â
âThereâs no pleasing you. Are you really telling me you donât remember?â
Wiping soap out of her eyes, Michele squirmed. âNo,â she admitted. Zoe, standing in the bathroom door, began laughing. Michele blushed even harder. âItâs not funny! I blacked out.â
âItâs so funny you wouldnât even believe it. It would serve you right if I never told you what really happened last nightâŠbut oh, all right, you can stop worrying, Iâm just messing with your head. Nothing happened. You passed out first.â
Sagging with relief, Michele leaned against the shower wall.
âBut you definitely wanted me,â Zoe added. âI could tell.â
A denial was on Micheleâs lips before she was even done hearing what Zoe said. But then Zoe yanked the shower curtain aside, startling her. The other girl stood fully dressed and looking shockingly alert for a woman who should have been in an alcohol-induced coma after the last 24 hours.
âHey,â she said. âWhat you said last night, about how you wanted to know if thereâs any way to undo what we did as kids? If you really meant it, I think thereâs something we can try.â
Michele looked up from drying her hair off. âAre you sure? Last nightââ
âI said it was a terrible idea, and yeah, it is. But if itâs what you really wantâŠâ
âYouâd do that for me?â
âKiddo, Iâd do just about anything for you. Why do you think I started all of this in the first place?â
For a second Michele was speechless. Then Zoe grabbed her wrist and said, âGet dressed. Follow me.â
Across the hall was the second bedroom, with the padlock on the outside. Now sober enough to be properly curious about it, Michele peered over Zoeâs shoulder as she fumbled with the key. She wasnât prepared for what was on the other side.
Right away Michele recognized the magic circle painted on the bedroom floor. The wood was stained such a deep red that it was nearly black from having blood poured on it again and again. Books of every shape and size filled the shelves, some so old their spines had cracked, some so new they still smelled like a bookstore stock room.
Other shelves held all sorts of bells, cups, knives, statuettes, bones, bottles, bowls, and even stranger objects. And all manner and shape of candles, most of them black, but some white, red, and deep purple too.
On one side of the room, on a dais made from milk crates covered with a black cloth, sat a gold-colored statue of a figure with wings and horns almost as tall as Michele, its eyes seeming to wink whenever the light hit them. Letters inscribed on its base spelled:
âURIAN.â
Turning in a circle, Michele looked at everything and said, âWhatâŠIS all of this?â
âGrown-up magic,â Zoe replied, picking a book from the shelf and leafing through it. âDonât step in the circle.â
âHow long did it take you to collect all of this?â Curious, Michele touched a flat brass knife, then picked up a heavy silver bell to give it a small test ring.
âAt least this long,â Zoe said. âDo you remember what the phase of the moon was ten years ago? Never mind, Iâll look it up. Hey!â She snapped her fingers. âPay attention.â
Michele blinked. Sheâd caught herself staring into the eyes of the winged statue and for a second hadnât been able to look way.
Turning, she looked at the page of the book Zoe held out to her. âIs this theâŠmagicâŠwe want?â
âI think so,â Zoe said, nodding. âIf youâre sure you want to do this?â
Swallowing, Michele said. âYes. Iâm sorry if it hurts your feelings. I never realized you did all this forâŠanyway, yes, Iâm sure.â
Closing the book, Zoe nodded. âThen we can do it tonight.â
âWouldnât tomorrow be better?â
âTonightâs Devilâs Night. Thatâs the best time. But we shouldnât do it here. Outdoors will work better. You remember Cemetery Hill, on the east side of town?â
Michele nodded.
âWeâll meet there just after sundown. Sound good?â
Michele nodded again, even though she wasnât entirely sure that it did. Still reading, Zoe looked at her out of just the corner of her eye and added, âAnd Michele?â
âYes?â
âIâm sticking my neck out for you here. Donât let me down.â
***
Brushing her hair out of her face, Zoe knelt on the cemetery grass while Michele kept watch. âTell me if anybody is coming,â Zoe said again.
Beds of dead, gray leaves crunched under Micheleâs feet whenever she moved. The grassy hillside had grown patchy over the years, and the taller headstones had started to tilt, and it seemed nobody was keeping the place up anymore. It had been at least 100 years since anybody was buried here.
Michele said, âI donât mean to complainââ
âAnd yetâŠâ
âBut do we have to be here?â
âYou canât do these things just anywhere,â Zoe said. She was tracing a wide circle in the ground with the point of a knife, her brow furrowed as she worked to make the characters around the perimeter just right. âOutdoors is best. Isolation is best. And a place with ceremonial importance is best. Can you think of anywhere else?â
âLast time we did it in your momâs basement.â
âLast time I didnât know what I was doing. A lotâs changed since we were eleven.â
Not enough, Michele thought, as she handed Zoe a Tupperware container full of blood. She imagined it looked like the same purple container from when they were kids. But of course it couldnât be.
Any moment now Michele expected someone to catch them in the act, but there was nothing around except leaning trees and the spokes of the cemeteryâs iron fence. Tomorrow night this place would be full of teenagers, but now it was curiously empty, as if somehow everyone knew they would be here.
Pouring the blood into a wooden chalice, Zoe filled the rest with water and a splash of vodka (âYou can barely taste it after that,â she explained), then poured everything else into the circle. The hungry cemetery dirt swallowed it up.
âThis place always creeped me out,â Michele said. Zoe shook her head.
âNot always. You used to love coming here to play hide and seek, remember? We got in trouble once because you hid too well for anyone to even find you.â
Michele blinked. She had forgotten about that. Once she really had loved places like this, and Halloween, playing Bloody Mary, and scary movies on late night TV. Zoe was the one who would always get scared, even though she acted brave beforehand. It wasnât until that Halloween night in the basement things changed.
âAre you ready?â Zoe said. She held out a book; Michele recognized it as the same one theyâd copied in the library ten years ago, although this version was bigger and heavier. She found pages toward the back marked for her. âThis is it?â
âThe whole thing. Hey, you okay?â Zoe touched Micheleâs chin and lifted her face up from the book. âWe donât have to do this if you donât want to. If we back out now, itâs all the same.â
The suddenly soft look on Zoeâs face calmed Micheleâs pounding heart. âYeah, Iâm okay,â she said. âThank you for this. Really.â
Zoe smiled. âYou do my part this time,â she said, pointing to the book. âAnd Iâll do yours. Ready?â
Michele nodded.
A dozen candles glowed around the circle and Michele knelt to spread the book on the grass. The letters on the page came into sharp relief.
âIn nomine Dei nostri Satanas Luciferi excelsi. In the name of Satan, the Ruler of the earth, the King of the world, I command the forces of darkness to bestow their power upon meâŠâ
The words came easily, as if sheâd been practicing them for years. Zoe recited the four names and rang a black bell that sheâd prepared specially for tonight. Then she sipped from the wooden cup and gave the rest to Michele, who drank it in one go. The hard burn of the alcohol covered up the sludgy organic flavor of the blood.
Suddenly she realized something. âDamn it, I didnât write down my wish!â
âYou ditz.â Zoe produced a piece of lambskin parchment folded over twice and closed up with wax. âI took care of it. I even sealed it for you. Itâs better that way.â
Wind rustled the pines, and somewhere the cemetery gate creaked on its hinges, like an old movie cue. Michele took the paper. âWhat about yours?â
âI donât need one. Tonight is all about you.â
The candle flame lapped at the edge of the parchment as Michele held it out, and it curled at the corners, the smoke trailing up into the night air. Here goes nothing, she thought.
The parchment flared and burned and turned their faces orange in the darkness, and Michele tossed it into the circle so that the ashes mixed with the spilled blood, and then they waited. Somewhere in a nearby yard a dog was going mad with barking, and if Michele strained she could hear the rattle of it running to the end of its chain and back.
âHow long is it supposed to take?â she said.
âIt depends.â
âIsnât there one more part? Maybe we shouldââ
âJust be patient. If it worked, Iâll know. In factâŠâ She paused, as if listening for something. âYeah, okay. Itâs time.â She turned back to Michele. âStep into the circle.â
Michele blinked. âBut you always saidââ
âDo you want to do this or not?â
âIf youâre sureâŠâ
Michele hesitated with one foot in the air before breaking the circle and then stepping all the way in. The candles all blew out. She jumped. The burnt remains of her wish swirled around her feet, whipped up by the breeze.
âNow what?â she said.
âNow nothing,â said Zoe. âYouâre stuck.â
Michele blinked. âWhat does that mean?â
âJust what I said. You canât leave the circle. Donât believe me? Try to step out again.â
Michele tried. She couldnât. For some reason every time she came back up to the line she was able to put a foot across it. In a few seconds she was red faced with the effort. âWhat the hell? What did you do to me?â
âYou did the whole thing yourself,â Zoe said. âI was over way over here.â
She leafed through the book again, planting a finger on it when she finally found the page she wanted. Michele tried again to walk away but still couldnât do it. âZoe? Zoe! Hey! What are you doing now?â she said.
âWhatâs gotta be done, kiddo.â Very, very carefully, Zoe erased some of the markings in the circle. âYou remember the other part of the wish I made for you back then? I wanted us to be together forever. Now that youâre finally back, Iâm not letting you go again.â
âLet me out of here!â
âNo.â
âI hate you!â
âYou love me,â Zoe said, stepping almost gingerly through the gap sheâd made in the circle, careful not to let her body pass over any intact part of the line. âYouâve always been in love with me. Arenât you tired of denying it?â
Standing up straighter, Michele said, âBelieve whatever you want, just let me go.â
âIâm not keeping you here. I told you, you did all this yourself. Youâve always done it yourself.â
âThatâs such bullshit.â
âKiss me and Iâll set you free,â Zoe said.
Michele hesitated. âIf I kiss you I can leave the circle?â she said.
âI didnât say Iâd let you go, I said Iâd set you free.â Zoe brushed the hair away from Micheleâs face. âWe both know the real reason you came back here.â
âI came back because I want to reverse the spell we cast as kids.â
âBut you donât even believe in magic. You never did.â
âIâŠâ
Zoe cupped Micheleâs face in her hands. Again Michele found she had a hard time looking way. âCome on, kiddo. Just a kiss. Donât you want to?â
âIâŠdonât know what I want. You always told me, ever since we were kids.â
âWeâre all grown up now. Hereâs your shot. Decide.â
Zoeâs lips looked cherry-red. Michele imagined them tasting sweet and fresh, and somewhere in the back of her mind a key turned.
Leaning in, she took Zoe by the face too and pressed her mouth to hers. Zoe melted into Micheleâs arms. They both still tasted like the blood potion, but Michele didnât mind; when Zoeâs tongue danced against hers it made her think of sweet chocolate and fresh fruit and dark rooms.
The kiss only lasted a second or two but Michele came up from it panting and red in the face. She waited for the world to end. It didnât. Zoe beamed at her, the biggest and most unembarrassed grin sheâd had since they were kids.
âI really did that, right?â said Michele. âItâs not magic?â
âYou always told me magic isnât real,â Zoe said.
They kissed again, slow and sweet, then hotter and faster. Zoe tangled her fingers in Micheleâs hair. The wind settled down, the leaves and the trees becoming as quiet and respectful as the graves around them. This really is a beautiful place, Michele decided. Why was I ever scared of it?
The grass in the circle seemed soft and comfortable as she lay down, pulling Zoe with her. Zoeâs skin was smooth and soft too. She kissed a spot underneath Micheleâs ear that drove her wild, and Michele giggled and kicked. âHowâd you know I like that?â she said.
âWord got around in high school,â said Zoe. âSo did you.â
âBitch.â
âCunt.â
âI love you.â
âI know,â Zoe said, kissing her again, lying on top of her so that their bodies fitted together like hand in glove. Michele was aware suddenly that she was lying in the bloody spot theyâd made in the grass, but she figured the hell with it. She saw too that the black candles were all blazing again; maybe theyâd never really blown out?
She let Zoe take her top off. The bare ground felt good against her naked back. So did Zoeâs mouth as she kissed her way down the front of Micheleâs body, teasing the spot between her breasts as Michele sighed, content, lacing her fingers at the back of Zoeâs head and licking her lips as the other girlâs trailing hair tickled her naked skin.
âSlower, slower, slower,â she whispered.
âAll you like to do is wait,â Zoe said, but reduced her pace, painting Micheleâs body with sweet, sensual kisses while her fingertips traced her up and down, back and front. Every few seconds Michele grabbed her and pulled her up for another kiss and then released her, breathless, to continue exploring, crawling down to where she tugged Micheleâs jeans off and deposited them over a nearby tombstone for safekeeping.
The night air felt good on her body. Everything felt good, as a matter of fact. Eager goosebumps covered her from head to toe and Michele groaned in gratification every time Zoe kissed them.
When Zoeâs mouth finally closed on one of Micheleâs breasts and gave it a long, sucking kiss she pushed upward with her entire body and groaned so loud that she worried someone might hear:
âOhhhhh fuckâŠmore.â
Zoeâs mouth was wet and hot. The breeze picked up and Michele almost couldnât stand the war between the heat of Zoe on top of her and the chill of the night air. Her fingers tore at the cemetery grass, digging furrows into the lawn.
Her tongue dancing across Micheleâs flesh, Zoe sucked her friendâs breasts one at a time, filling her mouth with Micheleâs body. Michele rocked and ached and stammered. She pulled at the other girlâs clothes, nearly tearing them in her haste and flinging them away without attention to where they landed. The feeling of their naked skin touching made her throb deep down inside.
Zoe pushed Micheleâs hair back again. âYou donât know how long Iâve been waiting for this.â
âYes I do,â Michele said, clasping Zoeâs hand. âIâm sorry I was afraid.â
âSâokay. Iâm a scary girl.â
âNot to me.â
âJust wait.â
Keeping the pressure light but firm, Zoe put her hand between Micheleâs legs and rubbed her warm, wet pussy through the fabric of her panties, taking Micheleâs breath away immediately.
âOh, oh, ohâŠâ was all she could say as she hung onto Zoeâs shoulders for support and reminded herself to breathe.
âStill want it slow?â Zoe said, her smile flashing white in the dark.
âMaybe just a little fasterâŠjust a little more.â
Despite the cool night, Michele became damp with sweat. Zoe kissed her thighs and Michele flopped back, writhing on the cemetery grass. As Zoe kissed higher up her legs and flicked the crease where her thigh joined her body with the tip of a tongue Michele suddenly started laughing and found she couldnât stop.
âWhatâs so funny?â
âI just remembered,â said Michele. âLast time I fucked Malcolm I ran off without letting him finish me. Now it kind of feels like youâre swapping in for him.â
âNot so worried about mister boyfriend anymore, huh?â Zoe said as she slipped Micheleâs panties down.
âWell, like you said, I donât see him around.â Michele threw her arms back and enjoyed the sheer awfulness of what sheâd just said. âBesides, this is special. This is more thanâOH!â
âWhat were you saying?â Zoe said, pausing before pressing her mouth back down to between Micheleâs legs.
âNothing,â Michele said, stammering. âDonât pay attention to what I say. Just keep doing it. Oh, oh, please, please keep doing that.â
Tangling Zoeâs hair in knots with her fingers, Michele put her legs up and dragged Zoe in closer. The fire of the candles glowed in the dark pools of Micheleâs eyes as she cried out, the sweat of the two girlâs clinging bodies dampening the grass underneath them. The trees seemed to lean in and cover them up, like giant, sheltering hands blocking the rest of the world out so that it didnât dare see.
The delicious feeling of Zoeâs mouth and tongue on Micheleâs pussy filled her up from head to toe. I donât ever want this to stop, she thought. Not even for one second for the rest of my life. Sheâd started to wish theyâd made the magic circle around a tombstone or a tree trunk so that sheâd have something to brace her back against and push into Zoe even harder.
Head swimming, Michele pulled Zoe down to the ground and rolled her onto her back, then lowered herself down to grind her pussy against Zoeâs mouth as she sat down over her face. With nothing else around to grab onto Michele hugged her arms around her own body, pressing her breasts as tightly against herself as she could.
The wild animal smell of sex filled her nostrils. The sound of Zoeâs lapping mouth drove her wild. Micheleâs head lolled to the side and her hair hung down her naked back as she bounced up and down. Just a little moreâŠjust a little moreâŠ
When Micheleâs orgasm finally hit she nearly fell over. Her body spasmed and she felt like she was burning away like the wicks of the candles, melting into a pool like the burnt wax all around them. She fell on top of Zoe and they panted together, then kissed until they were breathless again and then it started all over.
Michele lady her head on Zoeâs shoulder and murmured, dreamy, almost half asleep already from the unreal, dreamlike night sheâd had. What a strange thing to think that Iâm still the very same person who woke up this morning, she thought. Or am I? Maybe I was never even really that person at all.
A rustle in the leaves interrupted her thoughts, but she didnât look up until Zoe said to. âHey,â she said, nudging Michele. âPay attention. This part is important.â
âHmm?â
Confused, Michele looked up. Then she screamed, but clapped a hand over her own mouth when it was barely out.
The dark man with the shadowy face stood over them. He was at the eastern tip of the circle, looking at where both girls lay sprawled in each otherâs arms. The boughs of the trees seemed to shift again to provide enough shadow to keep his face hidden, and the rest of him was just a silhouette against nothing, like a shape cut from black construction paper.
The blood left Micheleâs face. She tried to speak but all that came out was one word: âNo.â
But Zoe just smiled, and took the black man by the hand. âItâs okay kiddo,â she said. âThereâs nothing to be afraid of. He wants to meet you finally is all.â
âItâs not supposed to be real,â Michele said, unable to speak much higher than a whisper.
âIt was always real to me,â said Zoe. âJust like you and me. Come on; what are you afraid of?â
Michele tried to shrink away, but she was at the edge of the circle again. The candles burned higher, much higher than they should have been able to, turning the cemetery lawn into a ring of Hell.
âItâll be okay,â Zoe said, holding her own hand out. âDonât you trust me?â
âYes, itâs justâŠwhy canât we see his face?â
âBecause youâre not really looking,â Zoe said. âTry again.â
Still confused, Michele tried to look away, but something in Zoeâs voice made it hard to say no. Bracing herself, she looked at the shadowy fully for the first time, andâŠ
It was Malcolm. Malcolm, with his beard still growing in, and his clothes off showing his swimmerâs body. He stood hand in hand with Zoe, naked in the circle.
But no, she quickly realized, it didnât look exactly like him. Something was off. It was the eyes; they were gold, and they glittered, and he never blinked. His face never changed at all, in fact, maintaining one smooth, mask-like expression, like the surface of a lake on the stillest day of the year.
And then, confusingly, it changed. Suddenly the man with the golden eyes wasnât a man at all; it was Zoe, a perfect copy standing next to herself. And then Michele gaped when the figure became herself instead, an almost perfect mirror image, and then another person after that, and another.
âWhatâs going on?â Michele said, whispering.
Zoe made an impatient gesture. âStop being so afraid of everything,â she said. âJust come on already.â
Amazingly, Michele didnât feel afraid anymore. The light in those deep golden eyes made her feel safe. Stepping up, she took the dark figureâs hand in hers. A feeling of relief settled on her, like sheâd just scratched an itch sheâd had her entire life.
âWhat happens now?â said Michele.
âNow he wants to give us everything weâve ever wanted,â Zoe said.
âAnd what do we have to give to him?â
âOnly what you want to. When we were kids I just gave him my Halloween candy.â
âReally?â It was so ridiculous that Michele barked a laugh. Zoe nodded.
âNow that weâre all grown up though, I have something much sweeter in mind.â
Zoe went first, wrapping the man with the golden eyes in her arms, kissing him and then letting him take her right on the lawn, bent over on all fours as he fucked her from behind while she made animal noises.
Michele watched as if in a dream; the dark man looked like Malcolm again, and she discovered that she liked the sight of him fucking Zoe. Her body flushed with a blush of arousal.
But it didnât look like Malcolm when her turn came. Lying down underneath the shadowy figure and spreading her legs, she found that it looked like Zoe again. Zoe, wearing a still mask of her own face. Zoe, with beautiful golden eyes. Zoe, somehow pressing a hard, bulging cock between Micheleâs legs and entering her, fucking her with hard and insistent strokes on the ground even as the real Zoe pillowed Micheleâs head in her lap, laughing and holding her as Michele cried out again and again.
Her vision of the man/woman/thing blurred. It wasnât dark at all, she realized. It was all made of gold, glistening from head to toe, and it unfurled the most beautiful wings over both of them, so beautiful that she couldnât stand to look at them.
Closing her eyes, Michele looked at nothing instead, turning the whole world as dark as a candle flame thatâs just been snuffed out, and for the rest of the night all she did was feel.
***
It was morning. Michele opened her eyes and sat up in her own bed.
When she rolled over she was briefly surprised to find Malcolm next to her. For a second she even gasped, and the sound woke him up. âWhatâs wrong?â he said, sitting up on one elbow. Michele gathered the covers to herself.
âNothing,â she said. âI had a dream. Are youââ
She was about to ask âAre you really you,â but it was such a bizarre question and she had no idea what it could mean, so she stopped.
Although it was dark, she could see she was in her own room at school. Just a dream, she thought again. A dream about Zoe. Sheâd had them before, but never quite like this. Shivering, she huddled against Malcolm.
âAre you okay?â he said an arm on her bare shoulder. âWhat were you dreaming about.â
âIâŠdonât remember,â Michele said. Then: âIâm going to the bathroom.â
Once the door closed she locked it and turned to the mirror, examining her nude body front and back. She didnât really know what she was looking for, but there was nothing out of the ordinary.
Leaning over the sink, she washed her face. Get a hold of yourself, she thought. Malcolm knocked on the door. âAre you okay?â
âIâm fine. I justââ
When Michele looked in the mirror, Zoe was standing behind her. The other girlâs smile nearly split her face in two.
Michele tried to scream but it stuck in her throat. Zoe gave a little wave and smiled even wider.
But when Michele turned around no one was there. Pale and shaking, she looked everywhere around the tiny bathroom, but of course it was empty. Malcolm knocked again. âIâll be out in a minute!â she said. Got to get a hold of yourself, she thought.
When she turned back to the mirror Zoe was still there in the reflection. She blew a kiss and then whispered in Micheleâs ear. Michele heard the voice:
âI told you: Weâll never be apart now.â
Zoe touched Micheleâs hair.
âEven when you donât see me youâll know that Iâm always with you. Like a good friend should be, right?â
Then Zoe gave her a long, lingering kiss. And when Michele opened her eyes again nobody was there. She was alone.
Except, of course, she wasnât.