Ray Bradbury Stories, Volume 1

Read Ray Bradbury Stories, Volume 1 for Free Online Page B

Book: Read Ray Bradbury Stories, Volume 1 for Free Online
Authors: Ray Bradbury
he’s done. Quite done,’ Cecy’s calm sleeper’s lips turned up. The languid words fell slowly from her shaping mouth. ‘Inside this woman’s skull I am, looking out, watching the sea that does not move, and is so quiet it makes you afraid. I sit on the porch and wait for my husband to come home. Occasionally, a fish leaps, falls back, starlight edging it. Thevalley, the sea, the few cars, the wooden porch, my rocking chair, myself, the silence.’
    ‘What now, Cecy?’
    ‘I’m getting up from my rocking chair,’ she said.
    ‘Yes?’
    ‘I’m walking off the porch, toward the mud pots. Planes fly over, like primordial birds. Then it is quiet, so quiet.’
    ‘How long will you stay inside her, Cecy?’
    ‘Until I’ve listened and looked and felt enough: until I’ve changed her life some way. I’m walking off the porch and along the wooden boards. My feet knock on the planks, tiredly, slowly.’
    ‘And now?’
    ‘Now the sulphur fumes are all around me. I stare at the bubbles as they break and smooth. A bird darts by my temple, shrieking. Suddenly I am in the bird and fly away! And as I fly, inside my new small glassbead eyes I see a woman below me, on a boardwalk, take one two three steps forward into the mud pots. I hear a sound as of a boulder plunged into molten depths. I keep flying, circle back. I see a white hand, like a spider, wriggle and disappear into the gray lava pool. The lava seals over. Now I’m flying home, swift, swift, swift!’
    Something clapped hard against the window. Timothy started.
    Cecy flicked her eyes wide, bright, full, happy, exhilarated.
    ‘Now I’m home !’ she said.
    After a pause, Timothy ventured. ‘The Homecoming’s on. And everybody’s here.’
    ‘Then why are you upstairs?’ She took his hand. ‘Well, ask me.’ She smiled slyly. ‘Ask me what you came to ask.’
    ‘I didn’t come to ask anything,’ he said. ‘Well, almost nothing. Well—oh, Cecy!’ It came from him in one long rapid flow. ‘I want to do something at the party to make them look at me, something to make me good as them, something to make me belong, but there’s nothing I can do and I feel funny and, well. I thought you might…’
    ‘I might,’ she said, closing her eyes, smiling inwardly. ‘Stand up straight. Stand very still.’ He obeyed. ‘Now, shut your eyes and blank out your thought.’
    He stood very straight and thought of nothing, or at least thought of thinking nothing.
    She sighed. ‘Shall we go downstairs now, Timothy?’ Like a hand into a glove, Cecy was within him.
    ‘Look everybody!’ Timothy held the glass of warm red liquid. He held up the glass so that the whole house turned to watch him. Aunts, uncles, cousins, brothers, sisters!
    He drank it straight down.
    He jerked a hand at his sister Laura. He held her gaze, whispering to her in a subtle voice that kept her silent, frozen. He felt tall as the trees as he walked to her. The party now slowed. It waited on all sides of him, watching. From all the room doors the faces peered. They were not laughing. Mother’s face was astonished. Dad looked bewildered, but pleased and getting prouder every instant.
    He nipped Laura, gently, over the neck vein. The candle flames swayed drunkenly. The wind climbed around on the roof outside. The relatives stared from all the doors. He popped toadstools into his mouth, swallowed, then beat his arms against his flanks and circled. ‘Look, Uncle Einar! I can fly, at last!’ Beat went his hands. Up and down pumped his feet. The faces flashed past him.
    At the top of the stairs, flapping, he heard his mother cry, ‘Stop, Timothy!’ far below. ‘Hey!’ shouted Timothy, and leaped off the top of the well, thrashing.
    Halfway down, the wings he thought he owned dissolved. He screamed. Uncle Einar caught him.
    Timothy flailed whitely in the receiving arms. A voice burst out of his lips, unbidden. ‘This is Cecy! This is Cecy! Come see me, all of you, upstairs, first room on the

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