"By the pricking of my thumbs,
Something wicked this way comes."
-William Shakespeare, "Macbeth"
***
Grace was an old woman now, and she was about to die, but neither of those things were really what was bothering her.
Rather, she was thinking about the conversation she would have before she died, one she'd known was coming all along but still wasn't ready for. Because when are we ever ready, really?
Grace was so old that all of her children were dead themselves--her oldest had been 80 when he finally passed on last year--and even her grandchildren were graying and increasingly prone to forgetfulness. She had great and great-great grandchildren, but they were young and she didn't know them well, since young people rarely paid much mind to very old relatives like her--it had been so ever since she was that age herself.
She was old, but her mind was still as sharp and nimble as when she was 30, and she could still walk all the way up every flight of stairs to her little apartment on the ninth floor. Not as easily as she had once, maybe, but her bones rolled when she told them to and that was the important part.
She wasn't weak or silly or dull like a lot of people when they got close to her age, and she felt proud and even a little haughty over it--she didn't get nearly the credit that she deserved, she felt.
It had a good run by any account--99 years last October, and time had been kind.
Nevertheless, she was going to die--she'd woken up knowing it would happen, and feeling annoyed; she had other things she wanted to get done today.
But there was nothing for it--she would go quietly in her sleep that very night.
The thing to do, then, was not to sleep--let death come in and do the business face to face if he dared, but she wasn't going to make it easy on him.
As the sun went down she continued pottering around her apartment, and she made up her appointments calendar for the next week, just like usual. (She'd kept busy all these years, never wanting to be one of those sad sack old people who never see anyone.)
When that was done she'd put on coffee--she'd drank good, strong, black coffee every night since she could remember, and it never kept her up, because when it was time to sleep she slept and that was all there was to it--and when the power went out around 11 PM ("Oh well now this is just what I need.") she continued to drink it cold.
When the whole pot was done she changed into her nightgown, stopped in the privy to take one last piss for posterity's sake, and went off to bed but emphatically not to sleep.
Her bare feet padded along the rug in the short hallway leading to the bedroom. She'd lived in this apartment ever since George died--so, longer than she'd lived in every other place combined. Most of the people she'd known once had moved out of the city, buying houses in dreary little towns and then driving 90 minutes to come here every week anyway; Grace never left.
There was a picture of George on the mantle that had sat there so long that the spot on the wall behind it was a different color. Whenever the topic of dying came up--as inevitably it did when you got old--people assured her that when the time came she'd see George again, and wouldn't that be wonderful?
Naturally she'd agreed and said the sentimental things that were expected of her, but if she'd been honest with anyone, she'd probably have asked how in the hell was she to know?
It'd been 50 goddamn years since she'd seen him--more than twice as long as they'd been married in the first place. And now she was expected to contemplate eternity with the man? With a man who had, for all intents and purposes, been married to a completely different woman?
Everyone is a lot of different people over a lifetime--only the dead stay the same.
But nobody wanted to hear that, so she didn't say it. In any case, George wasn't on her mind tonight. He wasn't the one she was going to see now.
She went to bed but didn't sleep. Instead she lit candles and, feeling vaguely foolish about it, opened up her Bible; it was one of the only things in the apartment that wasn't particularly old, having been given to her 13 years ago by a well-meaning but actually quite stupid friend who noticed she didn't seem to have one.
"I used to have an old family one of course, but it was lost in the move," she'd said at the time. This wasn't true--the family Bible had been George's, and in fact she'd not lost it while moving, but thrown it away.
Now she started reading, not out of any particular desire to but just the sense that it would be appropriate. After about ten minutes she gave up--how did anyone ever tolerate this nonsense, she wondered? She switched to reading Vonnegut instead; it made the dying go easier.
This went on for an hour or two, and then as the clock approached 1 AM, that was when she finally heard it:
Footsteps on the stairs.
No, not footsteps exactly; but something very like them, deep and heavy, and coming up the steps one at a time. They started all the way at the bottom of the stairwell and, one by one, they thumped their way up to the ninth floor, never speeding up or slowing down, but always that hard and inevitable:
THUMP. THUMP. THUMP.
She expected to also hear the sound of dragging chains, like Jacob Marley coming to visit old Scrooge, but there wasn't anything. Every footfall made her heart speed faster, until by the end it vibrated like a hummingbird in her chest. She was sure no one else in the building could hear the steps approaching; it came only for her.
Finally the sound clattered its way down the hall and up to her very front door, and then Grace held her breath, waiting to see if it might batter the door down or, Marley-like again, float right through it.
Instead it knocked, three times. And then came the sound of some huge shape, some enormous THING, shifting its body around as it waited. When the third knock sounded, the candles went out in Grace's room, leaving her in darkness.
Sliding down a bit in her bed, she thought, Maybe if I don't say anything he'll just go away...
But no, that was foolish—and she'd always prided herself on never becoming a foolish woman. Instead she straightened up, swallowed hard, and said as loud as she could, "You can't come in."
There was a pause. And then a terrible voice—a great and terrible voice that made the boards of the door shake—said:
"I've come for you, Grace Sower. Just as I said I would."
"Well you're too late," Grace said. "I'm dying now. Not of anything interesting, just old. So I'd like some privacy—and besides, you've got the wrong woman, I'm Grace Nelson. Have been for longer than I can remember."
"But you DO remember," the voice said, and it made some more noise as the great body stirred behind it. To think that there was nothing between her and it except for a few inches of pine...
Except that wasn't true, she realized. He couldn't come in unless she let him--it must be so, otherwise he'd have barged in already, because just like every other man she'd ever known he was a complete ox when there was something he wanted. This put starch into her resolve.
The voice rolled on: "There was a time before that man tried to put his name on your body, and you've never forgotten it. You remember the very day we met."
"That was so long ago now, I couldn't possibly..."
"A lie," the voice said immediately, and she realized she'd made a mistake: Lies were his specialty, and she'd never beat him at his own game.
And besides, he was right: Grace DID remember. She'd been a girl then, although of an age when she wouldn't be a girl much longer, and her grandmother and her Aunt Jennet both asked her to come with them for a walk on the red bank north of the river, at twilight, interrupting her while she was playing with her little cat, Graemalkin, and while her mother was busy in the kitchen and not paying attention to anything.
All this she'd thought was strange, but she was curious enough to go along, and anyway if Mother found out she'd raise hell, and at that age Grace had loved to do anything that gave her mother a fright.
It had been a beautiful black night, and the woods were secret and close. It was one of those nights when you felt not just alive but awake, in a way that the inconsiderate intrusions of daylight never allowed.
Along the way, Grandmother and Aunt Jennet had explained to her that she was never to tell anybody else about the things they were going to do--that what happened tonight was sacred and meant to stay private from people like her mother, and especially from men.
"You have to swear," Aunt Jennet said. "Not one of those lying swears, like you give at church: Swear so that the words stick to the roof of your mouth."
And Grace, her heart racing with intrigue, had sworn, and meant it, for once in her life.
When they reached the riverbank she grew uncertain, because they told her to keep going but there seemed to be no way to cross. Then Grandmother whistled, and from the woods around them came certain...things.
They were tall and black and man-shaped, more or less; but they had no faces, and Grace shrank against her aunt's skirts at the sight of them.
The older women told her not to act so silly. First one and then the other, she watched as the black things carried her aunt and grandmother across the river, picking them up in their arms like they were children and walking across the rushing black waters and setting them down again as easy as anything.