The Darkness in Lee's Closet and the Others Waiting There
By Roy Schwartz
()
About this ebook
Lee just wants her dad back. But the land of the dead is a dangerous place.
When her father dies, Lee's life is torn apart. The only comfort she finds is in the complete darkness of her closet, where she sleeps at night.
When she discovers the darkness leads to the afterlife, she hatches a plan—to find her dad and bring him back home.
With the help of four very talkative, very dead companions she finds trapped in the darkness, she sets off on a quest through the afterworlds.
But a little live girl does not belong there. Lee will have to face frightening dangers and use all her courage and cunning if she wishes to save her father, her friends, and herself.
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The Darkness in Lee's Closet and the Others Waiting There - Roy Schwartz
The Darkness in Lee’s Closet and the Others Waiting There
Roy Schwartz
Aelurus PublishingCopyright © 2018 by Roy Schwartz
Published by Aelurus Publishing
Cover art and interior illustrations by Patricia Vásquez De Velasco
All rights reserved.
No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without written permission from the author, except for the use of brief quotations in a book review.
ISBN 978-1-912775-02-6
Contents
Dedication
Acknowledgments
0
I
II
III
IV
V
VI
VII
VIII
IX
X
XI
XII
XIII
XIV
XV
XVI
XVII
About Roy Schwartz
To
Arik
Guy
Nimrod
Nir
Omer
Roy
My best friends in childhood and brothers in adulthood. We may have grown old, but we shall never grow up.
Acknowledgments
What makes an adventure worth going on are the companions you go on it with. I’d like to thank my co-adventurers, starting with my wonderful editor Rebecca Jaycox, who immersed herself in my story as if it was her own and made it better than it could have ever been without her. Also my publisher, Jeffrey Collyer of Aelurus Publishing, a member of a rarely-sighted, endangered species concerned more with what is good and unique than what is sure to sell. And the ridiculously talented Patricia Vásquez De Velasco—Patty—who plucked the illustrations for this book straight out of my mind.
My humble gratitude to the late Neil Gordon, my mentor and friend and the first person who told me I could write that I actually believed, because he didn’t have to. My thanks to Joshua Kendall, who guided me through writing my first novel the way a Sherpa guides a novice mountain climber, and to Lorna Owen, who helped me polish a primordial version of this book.
A huge thank-you to Dave Bergman, without whose support and conviction this book would never have been finished, let alone published. And to John Chartres, a true scholar and gentleman, who helped me make sure each character’s language and cultural nuance are correct.
Most of all, I am grateful to and for my wife Kim, for her guidance (as a bestselling author and editor in her own right) and patience (in changing more than her share of diapers while I shouted out things in different accents in the next room), but above all, for her endless sense of wonder, unfailing optimism, and unwavering goodness. She is my inspiration, every day.
0
Lee couldn’t wait for night to arrive so she could paint again. It was the weekend, which meant she got to stay up late. This was her favorite time to paint; the night was her perfect canvas, vast and full of promise.
She spent dinner shooting eager looks at her dad. He teased her, returning a mysterious, whimsical smile. She looked to her mom for a hint, but she would betray nothing. Her big brother Ron, as usual, was oblivious, going on about something or other at school. Lee didn’t pay attention. Every weekend, her dad would bring home one new item for her ever-expanding assortment of art supplies; a different tip brush, a new color paint tube, a canvas in a texture she’d never tried before. She wondered what he had gotten her this time. As soon as dinner was over she dashed to her room to wait for him. When at long last he showed up, he brought with him a whole new set of watercolors.
I know I promised you these for your birthday, but I couldn’t wait.
He was almost as excited as she was. What should we paint?
She ran up and gave him a big hug. She thought about it, looking over all the different color options. You!
Me?
He was surprised. She did, after all, paint him only a few weeks ago. Why me? You should paint something strange and wonderful. Like your mom.
Lee laughed. He usually managed to make her laugh. She liked painting portraits, and she loved painting his most of all. His face was strong, full of shape and color with an alertness she always found inspiring.
She sat with her back to the mirror on the wall, angling the easel so he could see what she was doing and guide her. He was the one who taught her how to paint. He wasn’t a professional painter—it was just a hobby—but it was a passion they both shared. And even though she was only ten and a half, she was already more talented. Or at least so he said.
She began with the outline of his head, putting down the foundation image. She had to ask him to stop making faces more than once, but as long as he held his pose and she wasn’t painting his mouth, he could talk. They went late into the night discussing a million different things, mostly the big vacation they were saving up for. The family was going to Europe in the summer, to England and France and then maybe Spain or Italy. Lee had never been to a foreign country before. She was especially looking forward to seeing all the art. They were both getting so excited they were having a hard time holding still, and she ended up making a bit of a mess of his left eye. But he didn’t mind. It was always about the fun of them painting together, not how the painting came out. Before long, she was done capturing him in portrait.
Lee stopped painting after her father died. He had a heart attack. Her mother found a job in a different town in a different state. When they moved, Lee didn’t pack her paints.
I
Lee’s new home was a small, white and red two-story house standing atop a small hill covered in apple trees. It overlooked a neighborhood of identical-looking houses arranged on a grid, as if it came out of a box. She spent most of her time alone at the house. Ron was usually out with his new friends, even on school nights, and their mom worked very long hours at her new job, managing a restaurant belonging to an old friend of hers.
She couldn’t fall asleep in the new house. She tried hard. But her new room was too big: twice as wide as her old one, and twice as tall, and twice as empty. And too much moonlight seeped into it at night through its large window drapes. She could feel the light slither across the bare walls and ceiling, even with her eyes closed. One night, without really thinking about it, she decided to take her pillow and blanket and lie on the floor of her closet, which was just large enough for her to curl up in. She liked being surrounded by the total blackness. From then on, every night she would wait for her mom to look in on her, then sneak into the closet. She had her own alarm clock, and in the mornings she would wake up a few minutes early to ruffle her bed, so it looked like it was slept in. She didn’t want to make her mom worry.
For almost a month, she spent each night in the closet in the utter silence. She’d let her imagination explore the depths of the darkness around her. With every night that passed, she could swear she could see farther and farther beyond the back of the closet. She could hear distant sounds, just for a split-second, right before she would fall asleep—until one night it was as if the closet unfolded into a vast, endless darkness. Lee stared into it. The sounds that came from deep within seemed less muffled now—like people talking.
She lay there for a while, trying to make out what was being said, before it occurred to her to see if she could pass through the back of the closet. She reached out; her hand continued past where the wall should have been. She stood up, slowly put one leg forward, and, to her surprise, found solid ground. It was colder there. She took another step, becoming aware she was barefoot and wearing only pajamas. She couldn’t see anything—not what she was walking on, not even her own hand when she held it right in front of her. She followed the sound of the voices for what felt like forever, until she saw a dim glow ahead of her. Tiptoeing closer and trying to be as quiet as she could, she approached the glimmering light.
She knew there were people there, but she couldn’t tell yet what they looked like, only that they were all sitting around in a large room with fancy couches. The room seemed to have only one actual wall, like the set of a play, with a burning fireplace that provided light. Above the fireplace, the wall was covered in old, flowery tapestry the color of cherries, and on its mantel stood a clock with a dark wood rim carved with wild shrubbery. It was the most magnificent clock Lee had ever seen.
Something small rolled on the floor toward her and came to a stop by the edge of the fire’s glow, just in front of her. She stepped into the warm light and picked it up. It was the color of ivory and weighed very little.
Allo,
came a sharp man’s voice with a Spanish accent.
Lee looked up sheepishly and was about to return the pebble when she saw the man standing in front of her. Only it wasn’t a man at all: It was a skeleton, smiling at her. She knew she should scream and run away—a skeleton. A smiling, talking skeleton! She wanted to, but she couldn’t find her legs. All she could do was stand there, staring. He was wearing white pants, a shiny, ocean-blue short-sleeve button shirt, which clung to his ribcage, and a hat, the kind worn by men in old black and white movies only made of straw. His pants, while perfectly clean and a shade brighter than the bare bones of his feet, were zigzagged with wrinkles of all sizes, a result of having only his pelvic bones to hang from. He tipped his hat hello,
his sleeve swinging from his arm bone like a sail from a ship’s mast.
My name is Óseo Gordo. Please, call me Óseo.
He stood on one leg and bent the other across it, took the white pebble out of her hand, and snapped it into the bottom of his foot. Yu know, there are two hundred and six bones in the human body.
And Gordo manages to lose every single one at least once a week,
a woman’s voice came from Lee’s right, heavy with a French accent but light as a cloud.
Lee turned her head: The woman was wearing a lilac velvet gown, with a very wide bottom that was covered in all kinds of flowers and ribbons. But where her head should have been she had a big glass jar, held in place with leather straps that ran under her arms. The jar had a small, round pillow in it that matched the dress, trimmed with golden lace and intertwining tiny peacock feathers. On it, the lady’s head was placed crookedly, almost sideways, ending mid-neck. She looked a little older than Lee’s mother and was very pretty, though Lee thought she wore far too much makeup.
And that is Señora Coron,
Óseo explained, ¡who only lost her head once!
He seemed very amused.
"Ze name is Madame Couronne, she enunciated with a magical emphasis.
And I’ll have you know zat I used to be seventh in succession to ze crown of France."
Yes, ma’am,
Lee replied, trying to sound proper. She couldn’t help but consider that her sanity had perhaps derailed, and all this absurdity escaped its cargo.
Je je je je je,
Óseo snickered. Come, let me introduce yu tu the others.
He reached out his boney hand to her. His smile looked gigantic without lips or gums to cover his teeth.
Though Lee generally gave herself good advice, she seldom followed it, so she took his hand. It felt lightweight and brittle. He walked her to the center of the room.
Hello, dear,
a little old lady in a green nightdress said, smiling at her from an armchair. Her voice was as warm as summertime. Her left eye was turned out a bit, but otherwise there was nothing unusual about her appearance.
Hello, ma’am.
Lee beamed back.
What’s your name, dear?
My name’s Lee, ma’am.
Oh, it’s such a pleasure to meet such a fine, well-mannered young lady. My name is Mrs. Adocchiare.
She stood up to give Lee a kiss on the cheek, but as she leaned forward, her left eye squeezed out of place with a loud, wet "POP," rolled over Lee’s shoulder and down her back, across the floor, and under a couch. It left behind a moist trail on her pajamas that smelled like mildew.
Oh, my!
Mrs. Adocchiare put her hand over her empty eye socket and shuffled across to the couch. Excuse me, dear.
An old man, though not as old as Mrs. Adocchiare, got off the couch and bent down to look for the eyeball. Óseo glanced around, but was more interested in talking to Lee.
It happens all the time. I call her Señora Cíclope,
he said, giggling.
That’s not very nice,
Lee protested, even though she really was a little startled, as well as a little repulsed.
I’m afraid that Mr. Gordo here has a… shall we say, particularly unpalatable sense of humour,
said the older man with a hearty British accent. He had found the eyeball and was now rubbing it clean with a monogrammed handkerchief. His round belly, which seemed to start at his knees and end at his chin, rose and heaved as he stood up. He handed the eye to Mrs. Adocchiare, who slipped it back into its socket and returned to her armchair, slightly flushed.
I’m Percy.
He offered a slight bow, making Lee feel like a princess. The top of his head was bald and shiny, and he had white hair on the back and funny fuzz on his ears. He also had bushy white eyebrows and a large handlebar mustache, which covered his mouth and curled slightly upwards. It’s a pleasure to make your acquaintance.
Percival was on safari in Africa, and he wanted his picture taken with a rhino,
Óseo said. He could barely contain himself. And now he spends all his time calculating how much of his inheritance money his wife has spent on hats and shoes.
Lee wasn’t sure what Óseo was talking about. The whole thing was very confusing, really.
Alas,
Percy stated, tucking his puffy pants into his boots, he hath the joints of everything, but everything so out of joint. I’m afraid he’s right though, darling. Tossed me around like an omelette, it did. And the Missus went on to spend all my hard-earned wealth on bloody pish-posh.
Percy sighed, shook his head, and offered Lee a seat next to him on the couch. Everybody sat down, including Madame Couronne, who sat down very slowly and gracefully, though Lee wasn’t sure if it was because she was royalty or because she was afraid her jar would fall off.
What did you pass away from, dear, if you don’t mind me prying? You’re so young and pretty,
Mrs. Adocchiare asked with pity.
So wise so young, it’s a bloody shame.
Percy nodded.
‘Passed away’?
Now, she really was starting to get scared. She wasn’t dead—she couldn’t be. Her heart tried to beat its way out of her chest, which she took as proof that she was still very much alive. But I’m not dead—I just walked through the back of my closet!
Óseo, Percy, Mrs. Adocchiare, and Madame Couronne stared at one another, looking like skeptical wax figures in the light of the fireplace.
You mean to tell us, lass, that you got here on your own volition?
Percy’s great eyebrows arched.
Lee nodded as vigorously as her neck could bear.
Sacré bleu! Impossible,
Madame Couronne declared.
La niña está mal de la cabeza,
Óseo decided.
Shush.
Mrs. Adocchiare calmed everyone down. Lee, dear, do you think you can go back if you want to?
She hadn’t thought about it—what if she actually couldn’t? What if she was now trapped in this room?