A Universe of Wishes : a We Need Diverse Books Fantasy Anthology
- Binding: Hardcover
- Publisher: Bantam Doubleday Dell Large Print Group, Inco
- Publish date: 01/01/2021
Description:
A Universe of Wishes Tara Sim He had taken to making wishes whenever he could. At the last morning star, on the edges of tarnished coins, along the cracks of bones that split in fires. It was never enough. No matter how often or how aggressively he wished, his words were never heard, his pleas went unanswered. And then one day, he learned why: wishes could not be made on innocent things, innocuous things, like stars and coins and clovers. Because wishes were granted only by the dead. The city of Rastre was pumping like a heart, people moving through its streets as blood flows through veins. It was the end of the day, and the sun burned copper on the horizon, casting long shadows out of the spires and rooftops around him. Thorn waited in the shadow of a cathedral''s bell tower, crouched on the slanted roof with his arms braced on his knees. The wind blew, and he huddled deeper into his threadbare jacket. He''d have to get a new one soon. Eventually the door across the street opened, emitting a tall, slender boy who couldn''t be much older than he was. The boy closed the door behind him, locked it, and headed toward the eastern sector. Thorn waited several minutes to be sure. When the sun had bled fully into the earth, the sky deepening into a two-day bruise, Thorn slid to the edge of the roof. Jade lanterns flickered to life, casting Rastre in a glowing, starry light. That light didn''t reach the street below. Thorn hopped down into that welcome darkness. Beyond he could hear the sounds of passersby, a child screaming in delight, the tinny first notes of a street musician. Thorn popped the collar of his jacket and crouched before the door. He tickled the lock with his pick until it gave way and he could slip inside. His breathing was loud in the silence that greeted him. Thorn swallowed and willed his heart to slow. He usually prowled the cemetery in the western sector, but one too many close calls with the groundskeeper had made him leery enough to try another approach. That, and he was getting tired of constantly washing grave soil out of his clothes and from the beds of his fingernails. Not like this was much better--but at least it was cleaner. The building was modest in size, large enough to contain two stories. The ground floor was used for receiving and accommodating customers. Upstairs was a collection of coffins and caskets. But he knew, after a week of observation and more than his fair share of peeking through the window, that there was actually a third story. It was just underground. Thorn moved past an open display coffin and a reception desk, around to the back, where a smaller desk sat covered in papers and parchment and pens. And animal figurines, of all things. Beyond that stood a door, and jiggering the lock rewarded him with a waft of cooler air. A familiar eagerness filled his belly, the taste of magic already on his lips. He licked them and crept down a wooden staircase, feeling his way through the dark until he found a jade lantern at the bottom. It flared to life when he tapped it, illuminating a couple of autopsy tables and a rack of tools that could have doubled as torture devices. And rows and rows of crystal capsules. That was what gave off all this cold. Crystals were used for storing perishable goods, or keeping houses cool in the height of summer . . . or keeping dead bodies fresh. Thorn approached the nearest capsule. They were built into the wall like drawers. He fumbled with the frozen handle until he could yank it open, pulling out the capsule''s sole occupant. The man was waxen and stiff. His skin had become a light blue. Thorn had heard people speak of the dead, had heard words like sleeping and peaceful, but this man didn''t fit either of those. He seemed troubled even in death, his thick eyebrows lowered over sunken eyes, his mouth flat and unimpressed. Thorn paused, looking at the freshly sutured Y-shaped line running down the man''s naked belly. He wasn''t used to this. Touching the dead, yes; digging up bodies, yes. He''d grown accustomed to the smell of earthy ozone and decay, the creeping mold and mulch of graveyards, the chill of stone and nights without moonlight. This, though, was something altogether different. This was clean and clinical. It was crystal and chalcedony. It was . . . wrong. Thorn took a deep breath. He felt that breathing was somehow disrespectful, standing above a body that was no longer capable of the task. And what a strange concept, for this man to have existed only between the span of two breaths--his first and his last--to become merely a thing. Well, there was still something inside him. And that was the whole point. Thorn took out his pocketknife and flipped it open. It gleamed in the jade light, deceptively clean despite its grisly purpose. He ran the knife over the autopsy incision, popping sutures and unraveling flesh. Much easier than hacking his way through dead tissue and muscle. He peeled back the man''s skin, exposing a torso that had been hollowed out like a pumpkin. The organs had been detached and taken . . . somewhere. Thorn didn''t want to know, and didn''t care. Instead, the man''s body was lined with cotton, as if he were being turned into some sort of morbid doll. His ribs were still there, however. They curved up like anxious smiles, or the claws of some forgotten beast. And there, residing between the fourth and fifth rib on his left side, was what Thorn had come here for. It was invisible, but he felt it, a tiny swirling galaxy of potential. It drew him in like a promise. A secret. Thorn took the obsidian from his pocket and held it against the man''s ribs. The little galaxy continued to swirl between his bones, confused and directionless, but the lure of the obsidian finally caught its attention. It seeped into the black, glassy rock, joining the other little galaxies Thorn had already taken. His own pocket-sized universe. He wondered if he finally had enough. But maybe, just to be sure, he should-- "What are you doing?" Thorn whipped around. Standing at the bottom of the stairs was the boy he''d seen leaving the funeral parlor. He had only a moment to take him in: skin a couple shades browner than his own, hair dark and curling at the ends, eyes that were the gray-green hue of moss. They were wide and spooked, darting between Thorn and the inelegantly opened corpse. Thorn shoved the obsidian back into his pocket and did the only thing he could think of: he pushed the man''s body off its crystal slab. The boy cried out in dismay and hurried forward to fix the mess. Thorn took his opening and darted for the stairs, his boots thundering on the wooden planks. He crashed into the desk up above, rattling the little animal figurines on its surface. He was almost to the front door when a hand clawed at his shoulder. Thorn twisted and reached for his pocketknife, but the boy was stronger than he looked, and one purposeful shove made Thorn stagger farther into the shop. The backs of his knees caught the edge of something, and he fell, landing with a hard thud that winded him. The lid to the display coffin fell shut on top of him. Panic welled in his throat. Thorn dropped his pocketknife and banged on the lid, shoving his shoulder against it, but it wouldn''t budge. A creak above told him the boy was likely sitting on top of it, his weight rendering the lid unmovable. "Who are you?" the boy demanded, voice muffled through the wood. Thorn didn''t answer. He was breathing fast; the coffin smelled like cedar and linseed oil, and something herbal--maybe rosemary. He tried pushing the lid again, but it gave only a mere centimeter. "How dare you come in here and deface the dead," the boy went on. "You realize that brings bad luck, don''t you?" Thorn was surprised by the rasping laugh that escaped him. "I''m used to bad luck." Silence. He could hear his own heart pounding, as if his body wanted to assure him that he was alive, despite his immediate surroundings. "I''m not going to let you out until you explain yourself," the boy said after a moment. "Poor Mr. Lichen didn''t deserve what you did to him." Thorn was inclined to agree, but he could still feel the little galaxy in his pocket, and he didn''t regret it. He couldn''t say that, though; he''d never be released from this wretched coffin if he did. When Thorn didn''t reply, the boy drummed his fingers against the lid. "If you don''t explain yourself," he said softly, almost too softly for Thorn to hear, "I''ll call the city guard." Dread pooled in his chest. He''d been evading the guard for two years; he couldn''t allow all his hard work to unravel in a single night. But he couldn''t easily explain what he''d been doing either. "I . . ." His face flared hot, though the rest of him burned cold. "I was harvesting magic." The boy above him was silent. Thump thump went Thorn''s heart, and Fool, fool went his mind. He worried his lower lip between his teeth and blurted: "It''s for wishes. This magic, it''s not something people understand, so they can''t access it while they''re alive. So it just stays inside them, even after they die. It''s a waste. So I . . . I was collecting it from the bodies. For wishes. It''s what I do." Then softer, pleading: "Please let me out." More silence. Thorn''s breaths were absorbed by the co
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