The Girl and the Crow - Part 5
“Elara,” it whispered again, no longer trying quite so hard to sound like someone she loved. “Open.”
The word stayed in the passage after the voice was gone. Elara stood before the crow-carved door with the cold key closed in her fist. The blue lantern burned on its hook, small and sickly, throwing light over the dark wood. All the little carved birds seemed to watch her. Their beaks were open. Their wings were cut deep, as if they had been trapped there mid-flight and left to warn anyone who came too close.
The crow stayed near the lantern and did not speak, and that made Elara more afraid. For a little while there was only the faint hiss of the flame and the slow drip of water somewhere in the stones. The bones in the niches lay wrapped in gray cloth. The black-waxed jars sat with their sealed mouths turned toward the passage. Everything below Saint Brigid’s seemed old enough to have forgotten mercy.
“Elara,” her mother’s voice said again.
Not quite right, but close. Close enough that her heart moved toward it before the rest of her could stop it.
“I’m tired,” the voice said. “Please.”
Elara’s fingers tightened around the key. The metal hurt her palm now. It had been warm in the cemetery, warm when it turned in the first iron door, warm when the bolts shifted and the old hinge broke and she dragged the door aside. Now it was cold enough to ache.
“Elara,” the voice whispered. “I waited for you.”
The crow shifted once on the hook. Its claws made a tiny sound against the iron. Elara did not look at it. She looked at the door, at the hidden lock beneath one carved wing, at the black seam where the wood met the frame, at the place where something on the other side had dragged one nail down from top to bottom.
Her mother was gone. She knew that. She had seen the sheet. She had smelled lavender water in the room. She had watched Aunt Mara close the curtains with shaking hands. But grief did not care what she knew. Grief had its own foolish hands. It reached for latches. It reached for voices. It reached for anything that sounded almost like what had been lost.
“Elara,” the thing said, softer now. “My sweet girl.”
Her breath caught. There it was again. Wrong. Her mother had never called her that, not once. Still, Elara took one step closer. The lantern flame leaned toward the door, and behind the wood something breathed in. The crow opened its wings a little, but it did not fly at her. Not yet.
Elara raised the key. Her hand was shaking, and she hated that. Hated that the thing could hear it, or feel it, or whatever it did from the other side. Hated that some part of her still wanted the voice to be real. Hated that she could know better and still almost obey.
The key hovered just short of the lock.
“Elara,” the voice said. “Please.”
Her hand moved another inch. Then she stopped, not because the crow warned her, and not because the passage changed, but because the voice had said please exactly the way a stranger thought a mother would say it. Soft. Sweet. Empty.
Elara kept the key raised, but she did not put it in the lock.
“Before I open it,” she said.
Her voice sounded small in the passage. The thing behind the door went still.
Elara swallowed. “Tell me what you said when I broke the blue cup.”
The silence that followed was immediate. So immediate that it felt like a held breath. The crow turned its head toward the door, and the lantern flame bent low. For one moment Elara thought the thing would not answer.
Then her mother’s voice came back, warm and gentle and wrong.
“I said it was all right, my sweet girl. I said accidents happen.”
Elara went cold in a way the passage had not made her cold.
No.
Her mother had not said that.
She had been small then, small enough that the table had seemed high, small enough that helping in the kitchen still felt like being trusted with something important. Her mother had been using the blue cup to scoop flour. Elara had wanted to help. She remembered standing close to her mother’s skirt, both hands out, serious as a priest.
The cup had slipped. It hit the floor and broke hard, and flour puffed up over her sleeves, white to the elbows. For a second she had only stared at the pieces. Then panic took over in that quick, childlike way, where hiding the thing felt the same as fixing it.
She had gathered the biggest pieces in both hands and tucked them under the clean dish towel by the stove. Not well. The handle stuck out. Her mother had found her standing beside it, trying to look innocent with flour all over both arms.
For a moment her mother had only stared. Then she laughed. Not a cruel laugh. Not angry. She laughed so hard she had to put one hand on the side of the table.
“Elara,” she had said, breathless, “you hid the handle.”
That was what her mother had said. Not accidents happen. Not my sweet girl.
Elara lowered the key.
Behind the door, the voice did not speak. The silence changed. It was no longer waiting. It was listening.
Elara took one step back, then another. The crow dropped from the lantern hook and landed on the stones beside her boot.
The thing behind the door exhaled.
When it spoke again, it did not sound like her mother. Not enough to fool anyone.
“You think that saves you?”
Elara did not answer.
“You think one little memory makes you safe?”
The voice had gone thin and rough, still shaped like her mother’s in places, but stretched too far now. There was something underneath it. Something wet. Something old. Something angry that had forgotten how to sound kind.
“You came down,” the thing said. “You listened.”
Elara backed away from the crow-carved door. The blue lantern flickered, and the carved birds seemed to move in the uneven light, though she knew they were only wood.
“You wanted her,” the thing said.
That landed harder than the lie. Elara’s throat tightened. The thing knew that much. It knew the shape of her wanting. It knew where grief had made her foolish. It had not known the blue cup, but it had known where to press.
The crow clicked its beak once. Small. Sharp. Enough.
Elara turned, not all at once. She was afraid to give the door her back too quickly. She stepped backward until the passage widened enough for her to move, then turned toward the stairs.
Behind her, the thing struck the inside of the door. The sound filled the passage. Dust fell from the stone above the frame, and the blue lantern swung on its hook, making the carved crows leap and twist across the wood.
Elara ran. The crow flew low beside her. She passed the wrapped bones, the black-waxed jars, the empty niches. She did not look into any of them. The stairs rose ahead, pale with the thin light from above.
The thing struck the door again.
“Elara!”
This time it used her mother’s voice perfectly. Elara caught the wall with one hand and kept climbing.
“Elara, come back!”
Her mother calling from the kitchen. Her mother calling from the garden. Her mother calling from the foot of the stairs when supper was ready.
“Elara!”
She climbed faster. The crow flew ahead of her, then back again, wings brushing the stone walls. Behind them, far below, the thing began to cry. Not loudly. That was worse. It cried the way her mother had cried once when she thought Elara was asleep.
Elara pressed the key against her chest.
“I know,” she whispered, though she did not know who she was saying it to. “I know.”
The stairs were narrow and steep, but they were only stairs. One way down. One way up. No turning passages. No hidden rooms. Just the old stone throat beneath the cemetery, and the square of night waiting above.
Then the crying stopped below her.
The sudden silence made Elara falter more than the voice had. From the dark under the stairs, the thing hissed, no longer sounding like her mother at all.
“Ask Mara where your mother really died.”
Elara froze with one hand against the wall. The words seemed to climb after her, cold and thin, slipping into places in her mind she had not meant to open. Aunt Mara’s red hands. The smell of lye in the kitchen. The way Mara had stood between Elara and the stairs that morning and told her to go back to her room.
The crow circled back, beating its wings hard in the tight space.
“Elara.”
It was the only word it said, and that was enough.
Elara forced herself up the last steps. By the time she reached the top, her legs burned and her breath hurt in her chest.
The first iron door was still shoved crookedly aside beneath the cracked angel, hanging wrong from the hinge that had broken when she opened it. The gap was just wide enough for her to squeeze through. She stumbled out into the cemetery grass, cold air hitting her face so sharply that she nearly cried from relief.
The crow shot out after her and landed on the faceless angel. Below, something struck the lower door again, the sound rising through the open stairwell.
Elara turned at once and grabbed the edge of the iron door with both hands. It was heavy, and it scraped badly over the stone because of the broken hinge, but it moved. She pushed her shoulder against it and shoved until the crooked slab dragged back over the opening.
For a second it sat wrong in the frame. Elara caught it with both hands, breath shaking, and forced it the last little bit into place. The lock was stiff, but not impossible. She lifted it, set it, and heard it catch.
The sound was small. That made it feel real.
The cemetery went quiet. No mother’s voice came from under the ground. No knocking answered her. No fingernails dragged along stone. Only the wind moved through the dead grass, and the crow watched from the angel with its black feathers ruffled around its neck.
Elara kept one hand on the locked door a moment longer, waiting for it to move. It did not, so she let go.
She did not look at her mother’s grave. She knew where it was, fresh and dark among the old stones, but if she looked at it now she was afraid she would hear the voice again. Not from below this time, but from inside herself.
She started home.
The hill below Saint Brigid’s was wet with early morning mist. The broken cemetery wall crouched behind her, and beyond it the field stretched pale and uneven toward the house. Elara walked quickly at first, almost running, but by the time she crossed the field her legs had begun to shake. The key stayed closed in her fist. She did not remember deciding to keep it. It was just there, cold against her skin, as if it belonged to her now whether she wanted it or not.
The crow followed from fencepost to low branch to roofline. It did not speak again, and Elara was grateful for that. She had no room left for riddles.
The thing’s last words followed her instead.
Ask Mara where your mother really died.
Elara tried not to think about them. She tried to tell herself it had only been another hook, another lie, another way to keep her close to the door. But lies were easier to ignore when they did not fit into anything. This one found places waiting for it.
Aunt Mara’s hands, scrubbed raw. The kitchen floor smelling too sharply clean. The back steps damp before the rain had come. Mara’s voice, tight and strange, telling her to go upstairs.
Elara slowed when the house came into view.
Most of it was dark. The kitchen window showed nothing. The parlor window showed nothing. The roofline sat black against the paling sky, ordinary and still, the same house she had left only hours before.
But upstairs, at the far end, a yellow light burned behind Aunt Mara’s curtains.
Elara stopped in the wet grass.
Her aunt was awake. Not turning in her sleep. Not rising early by chance. Awake, with her lamp lit before dawn.
The crow landed on the fence beside her.
Elara looked up at Mara’s window and felt the cold from below Saint Brigid’s settle deeper into her bones.
What did Mara know?
The light flickered once behind the curtain.
Elara tightened her hand around the key.
And what had she done?
Belladusk
"Friend to Crows and Strange Things"