2013 Brooklyn Non-Fiction Prize Finalist
We Were Witches Once
by
Taylor Sykes
by
Taylor Sykes
We were witches once. That night in Prospect Park, we
stayed after the lake drowned the sun. Draped in our capes—Mercury in her black
velvet fringed wrap, Scarlett with a faded rainbow scarf wrapped around her
head and shoulders so that her full lips and blonde hair were shadowed by
moonlight, and me, Onyx, lifting my arms to let the early October air run
through my red poncho which waved against my knees.
Those
weren’t our given names, of course, but birthright held no significance that
night. We were different women— triplets, fallen queens, a coven, claiming the
land, the entire park, as ours. We hailed from Indiana, but this was our new
realm. Mercury knelt to the ground, ripped grass at the root, inhaled, and kept
the bit of earth in her pocket.
Now,
the lake rippled before us, reflecting the lights of Brooklyn, and I knew that
a lady with long, green dreaded hair lived at the bottom-- she was the one who
had swallowed the sun and named me after the color of her realm at night. Our
favorite time. The three of us walked the footpath around the ring of water,
lost in the woods, yet unconcerned. Heavy clouds hid most of the moon but the
lady would keep us safe as long as we stayed close, for she knew we were of her
kind. I wanted to graze her hand, slippery and treacherous as an eel, but my
sisters warned me I would be too tempted to let her grab my wrist and tug, so I
resisted.
“I feel like… no one could possibly hurt, or threaten, or
even scare us right now,” Scarlett proclaimed, lifting her scarf in the air so
that it blew like my poncho.
“I
know exactly what you mean,” Mercury said, her high-pitched voice sounding more
melodic than usual. “I feel peaceful.”
In
our small town, there would have been no reason to fear the local park after
sunset, with its sturdy, symmetrically paved sidewalks, trimmed hedges, and one
swing that was blown by the wind as if a cautious suburban mother were pushing
a toddler. Greenwood Park neighbored Greenwood Cemetery, so late at night the three
of us would creep over the fence that separated them and make the graves our
playground. But here, in Brooklyn, walking at night in Flatbush was not an
option. As seen from afar, we were
three white, vulnerable, and arguably attractive, young women, so being in
Prospect Park after dark should have made us wary. Was it race or womanhood
that rendered us victims? Police strolled up and down those streets all night,
but they didn’t seem to touch the park, and I walked through arrests, fights,
and cat-calls regularly-- especially by Ocean Avenue, on the way to the B or Q
line, though always Q on the weekends-- at the Church Avenue Station. Those cherished 3 am night walks in
Indiana were no more.
So this act, simply
drifting through the park like lights on the lake, the clouds across the moon,
the night air through my poncho, felt like breaking all the rules that we’d
made for ourselves; it felt like breaking curfew. Still, it was necessary. Why
should we be trapped, locked indoors, barred from moonlit ramblings, by fear?
Witches knew no fear.
“I
feel powerful,” I added. “I feel weird.”
I’d put a name to the exact emotion, and we all began to giggle, quietly at
first, but then louder, and louder, until our cries made the wind and the lady
laugh with us. The waves in the lake flowed to our laughter.
Then,
drums. Without rhythm, hardly heard, echoing across the lake. They seemed to
have begun with our joy. We all stopped and looked into the blackness across
the lake where the sound originated and simultaneously decided to find
Drummer’s Grove. A small sign in the ground revealed the formal title of the
place where people brought and shared drums and dance on Sundays. We had walked
by many times during the day, always staying for a few moments and then
wandering away; we felt like outsiders amidst the sense of community.
Spectators, not participants. While we watched, though, I had felt that there
was something under the surface of the drums. The beats. The dances. The
chants.
Later,
I would learn that Haitian voodoo was a secretive practice in Flatbush, after
finding newspaper articles about a ritual-induced apartment fire. I knew
nothing more. Scarlett, Mercury and I moved from Indiana to live on the fourth
floor of a pre-war apartment building on the corner of Flatbush Avenue and
Albemarle Road, and the only other people we knew in Brooklyn were our
superintendent and his wife. Eventually I made a friend, an older black
man who sat outside all day smoking cigarettes, and we always chatted when I
came outside to walk my dog (“Ay boy, come here, boy,” knowing her name was
Lucy), but I dared not ask him about voodoo.
Voodoo.
A word I thought I understood as a child: a sinister doll strategically stuck
with pins, intending torture. My cousin and I had tried it once with a Barbie,
but our babysitter did not feel a thing. Other than that, the only witchcraft I
knew was Wicca. During those gothic teenage years that all three of us
underwent, I learned of alters, serpents, five-pointed stars, and my mother had
reacted with a fierce distaste—“You are not a Wiccan,” she spat, right
after telling me that smoldering my eyes with so much eyeliner made me look
hard. But I wanted to be hard, tough; I wanted to wear black eyeliner that made
my gray eyes like stones instead of murky bathwater; I craved otherworldly
powers that would make me impenetrable to pain or fear, powers that instead
could make me the source of pain and fear, if I so desired. I wanted to believe
that I could conjure such strength. At that point, believing that this power
wasn’t real was weaker than believing in a seemingly false religion.
Time
passed. I stopped believing in anything outside of myself.
As we made our way, I had a feeling that we were walking
towards something much more complex than my childish longings, and more
powerful than the magic the three of us could channel. The music pulled us
through the darkness and, trance-like, we followed the increasing volume, the
rapidity of the pounding. The drums knew. Ah, yes, three weak witches are
arriving. The lady must have mentioned us.
Our path became simple and straight, as if the land had
morphed, leading us directly to our fated destination, and the wind pushed us
forward with her gentle, cold hands. We ceased our speech and laughter,
meditating. No one mentioned fear, no one asked, “Should we?” There was no
choice. I walked in the center, Mercury and Scarlett slightly behind me,
creating the tip of the star. The unspoken leader, I questioned my coronation.
Would I be the one to introduce us to the drummers? Would I be the one to
negotiate a peace treaty?
To the
left, a rustic hand-made structure, almost like a gazebo, hovered on the edge
of the lake (I wondered, briefly, if we could sleep there), and to our right,
the Parkside Avenue exit loomed, revealing the city that we’d escaped only
momentarily. Through the clearing in the trees we saw the semi-circle, formed
by so many bodies. Most were drumming or dancing around the small candle in the
center, but some were sitting on benches and basking. My sisters and I slowed.
Scarlett asked, “What now?” The hidden message: could we come and see without
conquering? What kind of witches were we?
Unabashed, incautious Mercury
responded by dropping her bag and spinning, throwing her arms up in the air,
the fringe flying through air like spiders clinging to her skin. The group
started to turn towards us. We were just on the edge, not yet completing their
circle. Were they wondering what three white girls could want? I had the urge to
grab Mercury, pull her back, remind her to know her place, now was the time to
observe, but then Scarlett joined and I was alone. Never before had I held
myself back or been left behind. Two girls our age started to laugh from the
benches and I knew we were fools. I was embarrassed for my sisters, embarrassed
for myself, until—well, until the singing. Ayyyyy-yiii-yii-yii, the
woman standing next to the girls sang. Ayyyy-yiii-yii-yii, she sang with
the drums. She was the most beautiful woman I had ever seen. Her hair was
twisted in an elaborate silk scarf, she had high, glowing cheekbones and lips
so red. I wondered if this could be the lady of the lake, risen and taken human
shape. By her smile I knew that she was singing for us.
With the lady’s insistence, I slithered into the circle
with my sisters and began to sway to the beats. Mm, the music, that was the
real magic. I wondered if we were intruding on a religious ritual, but I
stopped caring as I started dancing.
Ayyyy-yiii-yii-yii, the lady sang, and a man from within the greater circle
began to wave us over. He greeted us with a slight bow, and then signaled for
us to all join hands. I took his hesitantly (it was rough and thick, he didn’t
grasp mine tightly), but then I realized that this was the peace offering. The
man’s eyes were pure and his smile genuine. Could he really want to share with
us, knowing what we were? Mercury, always the freest of us three, grabbed his
hand and lifted their arms in the air, and even Scarlett looked comfortable to
be included. While we had excluded ourselves previously, now we had the chance
to join, partake, connect. I breathed, I let go of the false fear that I had
instilled upon myself, I squeezed his hand, I saw the men and women around us
smiling and smoking and drumming and laughing and kissing. I wanted to kiss
someone. Our circle spun around the candle, arms sweeping up and swooping down.
All the while, the lady sang Ayyy-yiii-yii-yii
with her smile in her voice; she sang it like she knew me.
“Wait, wait, wait,” the man said, releasing his hold.
“Watch.”
He crossed his wrists so that the back of his hands were
touching and then uncrossed them, closing his palms in prayer pose. Rolling his
shoulders and chest down (so tall, so thin, I remember thinking), he twirled
his hands, in no specific pattern, at his ankles. Slowly he rose, lifting his
arms over his head, and repeated the same motion, saying, “Now, you try.” We
clumsily followed his lead. I felt like a child again; we were all laughing at
ourselves. He was with us. No, we couldn’t quite pull off his move, but I know
now that his wanting to teach us meant something. The drums seemed to crescendo
again; they had a way of finding a mutual seat of beats, bringing the song to
its climax, and then starting anew. The rebirth was always uncertain as they
searched for the inevitable rhythm.
We stayed in the circle for what felt like an hour but
may have only been a few minutes. Dancers and drummers began to disburse.
Adults carried their children home, smiling in passing and the young girls and
their laughter had left without my noticing. The lady kept singing as she
sauntered away, her voice becoming muffled like a song sung under water. Our
friend took our hands again and lifted them towards the center of the circle, over
the candle.
Now that the drums had stopped, what was there to say? He
let us go.
“It’s nice to meet you,” I ventured awkwardly.
“It’s very nice,” he laughed, not at all awkward. “My name
is Abdul. I will walk you out. Just to there,” he pointed towards the Parkside
Avenue exit. “Just to there.” He repeated this, I think, for our reassurance.
It made me cringe. “Hold your sisters’ hands.” He reached out again. We formed
a diamond as we walked. He led us. Mercury and I, still connected to him, were
slightly behind, and Scarlett, connected to us, made the bottom point. On our
way, everyone lingering in the park (mostly the young black men, one who
yelled, “All three for you?”), looked at us like they knew. The witches were
protected.
We said goodbye to Abdul, he kissed our hands, he asked
us to return, he told us to be safe. I felt my magic diminish as we walked into
the streets and away from the park, but I did not wish to voice this. I wanted
to pretend. We would never know if the dancing and the drums were truly
witchcraft. We would not return to the grove, though we always smiled to
ourselves whenever we would pass. We had already received such a gift. As we
walked into the night undisturbed, as the moon still struggled to escape the
clouds, as the lady sank back into the lake, as Abdul watched us go away, I
wondered, would we ever be like this again?
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