The Weight of Feathers

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Book: Read The Weight of Feathers for Free Online
Authors: Anna-Marie McLemore
arguing about who had to sleep in the same room with him, calling not-it like they were still in grade school lessons. To them, his left-handedness and the red in his feathers made him dangerous as a matagot . Worse luck than a black cat brought across a stream. When the family went to church on la veille de Noël or le Vendredi saint, they did not bring him. So Pépère stayed home with him, reading from Luke. “Let them have their Latin and their hosties, ” he told Cluck.
    Pépère pointed out the window. “ Regarde .” He lifted his hand toward a flitter of movement. A red-winged blackbird, all dark feathers except for a brushstroke of deep coral on each shoulder, crossed the sky.
    This was his way of telling Cluck not to mind the red in his own feathers.
    Pépère set the parking break. “I left Eugenie’s wings for you. She tore the right one.”
    “Again?” Cluck slammed the door.
    “Malheureusement.”
    “I’ll get to it.”
    First Cluck got the tire pressure gauge from inside the costume trailer. If the Shasta would sit for the show’s run here, he had to make sure the tires weren’t sinking into the ground.
    He’d just put the gauge to the front right tire when Dax grabbed him by the back of the neck.
    “You just had to go start something, didn’t you?” Dax slammed him against the side of the trailer. He caught a handful of Cluck’s hair, pulling at the back of his scalp.
    “What?” Cluck asked.
    “Don’t ask me what.” Dax flicked Cluck’s temple. “This.”
    Pépère had made Cluck forget the bruising, the soreness. He always made him forget, no matter who gave him the bruise. Locals. Dax. His mother, when he was small, catching him in the eye with her elbow and then telling him “ Le petit imbécile, stay out of my way.”
    “You went to start a fight,” Dax said.
    The smell of Dax’s aftershave dried out Cluck’s mouth, his tongue a parched sponge.
    “I didn’t start anything,” Cluck said.
    “Then where’d you get this?” Dax pressed him into the aluminum siding so hard the ridges cut across his body.
    “Some guys in town,” Cluck said.
    “What guys?”
    “I don’t know.”
    “Don’t lie to me.” Dax pulled him off the side of the trailer enough to slam him into it again.
    Cluck held himself up, but didn’t fight. “I don’t know.” A metal seam pressed into his cheek.
    “If you went to settle the score, you better tell me now.”
    “What?” was all Cluck could get out.
    “Don’t go near them.” Dax held him harder, wringing out the muscle at the back of his neck. “Got it?”
    “Who?” Cluck turned his head.
    The rage in Dax’s face shifted, the edges ground down.
    He loosened his grip, dropped his hand. “You don’t know.”
    The back of Cluck’s neck cooled.
    “They’re in town,” Dax said. “That family.”
    That family .
    The Palomas were already here. They came back every year, never any guilt. Because of them, Clémentine’s oldest brother had lost his first wife twenty years ago. Cluck had heard stories about her, the woman with so much grace on the highest branches none of them could believe she had no fildefériste blood.
    La magie noire the Palomas carried in their birthmarks had taken her.
    The Palomas meant for every performer to die, drowned with those branches when the water flooded up onto its shores. All to steal the lake they thought belonged to them. It was only by the grace of God that the rest of the Corbeaus managed to swim against the pull of their own wings, scramble onto rocks, claw at the shore.
    The Palomas lost one of their own too, a man who must have been at the lake to draw the water onto the land, la magie noire ready in his hands. But the Palomas still set up their show where the trees had been, on that man’s grave and the grave of a Corbeau.
    Cluck’s family moved to the other side of the woods, as far as that stretch of forest would let them get from a family that danced where one of their own had

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