was bouncing his baby daughter in her arms, and into the bedroom, where he snatched up the notepad he kept on his nightstand by the phone.
There, in his own blocky handwriting, was written the name William Creek and, under it, the number 12. He sat down hard on the bed, holding the notepad like it was a vial of explosives.
Behind him came the heavy steps of Mrs. Korjev as she followed him into the bedroom. "Mr. Asher, what is wrong? You run by like burning bear."
And Charlie, because he was a Beta Male, and there had evolved over millions of years a standard Beta response to things inexplicable, said, "Someone is fucking with me."
Lily was touching up her nail polish with a black Magic Marker when Stephan, the mailman, came through the shop door.
"'Sup, Darque?" Stephan said, sorting a stack of mail out of his bag. He was forty, short, muscular, and black. He wore wraparound sunglasses, which were almost always pushed back on his head over hair braided in tight cornrows. Lily had mixed feelings about him. She liked him because he called her Darque, short for Darquewillow Elventhing, the name under which she received mail at the shop, but because he was cheerful and seemed to like people, she deeply mistrusted him.
"Need you to sign," Stephan said, offering her an electronic pad, on which she scribbled Charles Baudelaire with great flourish and without even looking.
Stephan plopped the mail on the counter. "Working alone again? So where is everyone?"
"Ray's in the Philippines, Charlie's traumatized." She sighed. "Weight of the world falls on me - "
"Poor Charlie," Stephan said. "They say that's the worst thing you can go through, losing a spouse."
"Yeah, there's that, too. Today he's traumatized because he saw a guy get hit by a bus up on Columbus."
"Heard about that. He gonna be okay?"
"Well, fuck no, Stephan, he got hit by a bus." Lily looked up from her nails for the first time.
"I meant Charlie." Stephan winked, despite her harsh tone.
"Oh, he's Charlie."
"How's the baby?"
"Evidently she leaks noxious substances." Lily waved the Magic Marker under her nose as if it might mask the smell of ripened baby.
"All good, then," Stephan smiled. "That's it for today. You got anything for me?"
"I took in some red vinyl platforms yesterday. Men's size ten."
Stephan collected vintage seventies pimp wear. Lily was to be on the lookout for anything that came through the shop.
"How tall?"
"Four inches."
"Low altitude," Stephan said, as if that explained everything. "Take care, Darque."
Lily waved her Magic Marker at him as he left, and started sorting through the mail. There were mostly bills, a couple of flyers, but one thick black envelope that felt like a book or catalog. It was addressed to Charlie Asher "in care of" Asher's Secondhand and had a postmark from Night's Plutonian Shore, which evidently was in whatever state started with a U. (Lily found geography not only mind-numbingly boring, but also, in the age of the Internet, irrelevant.)
Was it not addressed to the care of Asher's Secondhand? Lily reasoned. And was she, Lily Darquewillow Elventhing, not manning the counter, the sole employee - nay - the de facto manager, of said secondhand store? And wasn't it her right - nay - her responsibility to open this envelope and spare Charlie the irritation of the task? Onward, Elventhing! Your destiny is set, and if it be not destiny, then surely there is plausible deniability, which in the parlance of politics is the same thing.
She drew a jewel-encrusted dagger from under the counter (the stones valued at over seventy-three cents) and slit the envelope, pulled out the book, and fell in love.
The cover was shiny, like a children's picture book, with a colorful illustration of a grinning skeleton with tiny people impaled on his fingertips, and all of them appeared to be having the time of their lives, as if they were enjoying a carnival ride that just happened to involve having a gaping hole being punched through the chest. It was festive - lots of flowers and candy in primary colors, done in the style of Mexican folk art. The Great Big Book of Death, was the title, spelled out across the top of the cover in cheerful, human femur font letters.
Lily opened the book to the first page, where a note was paper-clipped.
This should explain everything. I'm sorry.
- MF
Lily removed the note and opened the book to the first chapter: "So Now You're Death: Here's What You'll Need."