“Honestly, Simon.
Sometimes I wonder whether the fairies switched you out at birth. How else could we have such a perfect child?”
Simon
beamed up at their parents, all guileless blue eyes and soft golden curls.
“You’ve got
it wrong, Bet,” said their father. “He’s
the one the fairies tried to make away with but failed.”
“Of course,
dear—they’d never let him go if they’d had him.
Ha, ha!”
“Ha, ha!”
Jim
clutched his fork and kept his head down.
He had tried, in the first few days after their mother had come home
from the hospital with Simon, to privately ask his parents whether the boy wasn’t
maturing too quickly. But the more he
pressed his point, the more his parents either patted him on the head or became
angry and started accusing him of being a jealous ingrate.
In their
calmest moments, the moments they were most like themselves, they explained, “We
don’t love you any less or Simon any more because he’s our natural-born
son. We’ve never regretted letting you
make your home with us, and we never will.”
Jim
believed them: they were that sort of people.
Loving, overly generous, and fair.
Under normal circumstances, circumstances in which they stayed in their
right minds—
He clutched
his spoon and kept his eyes down.
“Aren’t you
going to try some, Brother?” Simon asked charmingly—Simon, who had been born a
month before. Simon, who had just served
them the four-course meal he’d made himself.
Jim had been wondering when he’d make his move.
“My stomach’s
upset,” Jim said. “Maybe later.”
“Don’t be
offended, Simon dear,” their mother said; “he’s never been a big eater.”
“I
understand,” Simon said, tears pricking his eyes.
“Really,
Jim, I’d think you could try some!” said their father.
“Please,”
said Jim, “may I go lie down? I’m not
well.” He got up, deathly pale—but he’d
always been pale; iron deficiency, the doctor said—and made his way to his low-ceiling
attic bedroom. He lay down on his bed
and waited, certain Simon would come.
He was
right. Simon came to his room just
before midnight, perhaps thinking to wake him, and began poking around Jim’s belongings—the
gifts lavished upon him by the people who let him call them Dad and Mom. His family.
“I wasn’t
sure before,” Simon said—so perhaps he did know Jim was awake. Adult flatness had replaced the sweetness of
his voice. “It isn’t unusual for human
children to be jealous of us. But you
really can see through my glamour. Can’t
you.”
“Earthworms
and dirt water,” Jim said, sitting up. “How
dare you feed them that, how dare you treat them like that when they’ve taken
you in and giving you their love! Don’t
your kind have laws about guests and hosts?”
“There’s no
virtue in their caring for me,” Simon said comfortably; “I didn’t give them a
choice. Besides, they think I’m their
spawn. They think I’m perfect. I don’t notice them calling you that.”
“Because I
choose to honor the integrity of their minds!”
“Because
you aren’t good enough.”
“They
invited me into their home,” Jim shot back.
“You kidnapped their child and put yourself in his place. What have you done with the real Simon?”
Simon shrugged,
picking up a picture of their parents.
There were no pictures with Jim—he didn’t photograph well—but the room
was full of candid shots of friends and family.
“How should I know?” he asked.
Fury flashed
Jim’s vision red, and he flew across the room.
He caught Simon’s neck, fingernails drawing blood. “Let’s try again,” he snarled. “This is MY family, and I will rip out your
throat and drink your blood before I let you abuse them.”
Simon
struggled and squeaked, but Jim’s grip was like iron.
“Where. Is.
The real. Simon.”
“I don’t
know!” the boy gasped. “I wasn’t in
charge of that!”
“Then you
will help me find him.”
“I won’t.”
“You will,”
Jim said, slowing down his words and forcing Simon to look deep into his eyes. “You will help me find Simon and restore him
to my family. And then you will leave us
alone until and unless I call for you.”
“Yes,”
Simon whispered, face slack, “master.”
----
What on Earth was that nonsense? Let me explain . . .
A: Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy by Douglas Adams and The Goblin Emperor by Katherine Addison. (from which I took “hitchhiker” and “goblin”)
That’s the one I just wrote. Some turn out better, some worse; some longer and some shorter, but never under 500 words. Tomorrow is Those Who Hunt the Night by Barbara Hambly + Scottish
Myth’s and Legends by Judy Hamilton.