I Raf You Big Sister Is A Witch
The first real wound to our arrangement did not come from outside the town. It came from a man who had been my friend since childhood—Rob, who once traded his lunch for my comic book and never asked for it back. Rob sat across from us in the kitchen while my sister brewed tea. He had the look of a man who carries a secret the size of a coin in his mouth.
She rescued people from their small, comfortable agonies. A man whose wife had become a whisper in her own house slept with the whisper returned in the morning. A girl who forgot how to cry learned again by inhaling a scrap of old rain. The favors always demanded prices—negligible, she assured me at first, and then not—but the town kept coming, dragging their griefs like suitcases to her door. People called her a healer, or eccentric; once, a priest crossed himself when she walked past the church. He was a man who would later become very important to the chronicle. i raf you big sister is a witch
He did. The coin plinked and sank with the sound of a small apology, and for a while Rob laughed again. But the laughter was brittle; the town still felt a shiver, like a premonition left in the folds of its curtains. The coins, I learned, have their own appetite. The first real wound to our arrangement did
She had been to the elsewhere and back. She had made friends with things that kept watch over thresholds and bartered for knowledge not in our tongues. She had seen the ledger of the world—the one that counted the soft things we trade without thinking—and she had seen how fast it grows when people try to make commerce of compassion. He had the look of a man who
I remember the shape of the doorway first: crooked, the frame carved with letters that weren't Swedish or Arabic or any script I could name, only a suggestion of meaning as if someone had written a promise and then erased most of it. The house smoked a little from its chimney, though it was late summer and no one in our town burned anything. A single lamp glowed through one curtained window, like an eye that hadn't fallen asleep.