The Graveyard Book by Neil Gaiman


  “Me too,” said Bod.

  “There were people before the Romans,” she said. “Way back. They lived, I mean, when they died they put them underground in these hills, with treasure and stuff. And they were called barrows.”

  “Oh. Right,” said Bod. “That explains it. Do you want to come and see one?”

  “Now?” Scarlett looked doubtful. “You don’t really know where one is, do you? And you know I can’t always follow you where you go.” She had seen him slip through walls, like a shadow.

  In reply, he held up a large, rusted, iron key. “This was in the chapel,” he said. “It should open most of the gates up there. They used the same key for all of them. It was less work.”

  She scrambled up the hillside beside him.

  “You’re telling the truth?”

  He nodded, a pleased smile dancing at the corners of his lips. “Come on,” he said.

  It was a perfect spring day, and the air was alive with birdsong and bee hum. The daffodils bustled in the breeze and here and there on the side of the hill a few early tulips nodded. A blue powdering of forget-me-nots and fine, fat yellow primroses punctuated the green of the slope as the two children walked up the hill toward the Frobishers’ little mausoleum.

  It was old and simple in design, a small, forgotten stone house with a metal gate for a door. Bod unlocked the gate with his key, and they went in.

  “It’s a hole,” said Bod. “Or a door. Behind one of the coffins.”

  They found it behind a coffin on the bottom shelf—a simple crawl space. “Down there,” said Bod. “We go down there.”

  Scarlett found herself suddenly enjoying the adventure rather less. She said, “We can’t see down there. It’s dark.”

  “I don’t need light,” said Bod. “Not while I’m in the graveyard.”

  “I do,” said Scarlett. “It’s dark.”

  Bod thought about the reassuring things that he could say, like “there’s nothing bad down there,” but the tales of hair turning white and people never returning meant that he could not have said them with a clear conscience, so he said, “I’ll go down. You wait for me up here.”

  Scarlett frowned. “You shouldn’t leave me,” she said.

  “I’ll go down,” said Bod, “and I’ll see who’s there, and I’ll come back and tell you all about it.”

  He turned to the opening, bent down, and clambered through on his hands and knees. He was in a space big enough to stand up in, and he could see steps cut into the stone. “I’m going down the steps now,” he said.

  “Do they go down a long way?”

  “I think so.”

  “If you held my hand and told me where I was walking,” she said, “then I could come with you. If you make sure I’m okay.”

  “Of course,” said Bod, and before he had finished speaking the girl was coming through the hole on her hands and her knees.

  “You can stand up,” Bod told her. He took her hand. “The steps are just here. If you put a foot forward you can find it. There. Now I’ll go first.”

  “Can you really see?” she asked.

  “It’s dark,” said Bod. “But I can see.”

  He began to lead Scarlett down the steps, deep into the hill, and to describe what he saw to her as they went. “It’s steps down,” he said. “Made of stone. And there’s stone all above us. Someone’s made a painting on the wall.”

  “What kind of painting?”

  “A big hairy C is for Cow, I think. With horns. Then something that’s more like a pattern, like a big knot. It’s sort of carved in the stone too, not just painted, see?” and he took her fingers and placed them onto the carved knot-work.

  “I can feel it!” she said.

  “Now the steps are getting bigger. We are coming out into some kind of big room, now, but the steps are still going. Don’t move. Okay, now I am between you and the room. Keep your left hand on the wall.”

  They kept going down. “One more step and we are on the rock floor,” said Bod. “It’s a bit uneven.”

  The room was small. There was a slab of stone on the ground, and a low ledge in one corner, with some small objects on it. There were bones on the ground, very old bones indeed, although below where the steps entered the room Bod could see a crumpled corpse, dressed in the remains of a long brown coat—the young man who had dreamed of riches, Bod decided. He must have slipped and fallen in the dark.

  The noise began all about them, a rustling slither, like a snake twining through dry leaves. Scarlett’s grip on Bod’s hand was harder.

  “What’s that? Do you see anything?”

  “No.”

  Scarlett made a noise that was half gasp and half wail, and Bod saw something, and he knew without asking that she could see it too.

  There was a light at the end of the room, and in the light a man came walking, walking through the rock, and Bod heard Scarlett choking back a scream.

  The man looked well-preserved, but still like something that had been dead for a long while. His skin was painted (Bod thought) or tattooed (Scarlett thought) with purple designs and patterns. Around his neck hung a necklace of sharp, long teeth.

  “I am the master of this place!” said the figure, in words so ancient and gutteral that they were scarcely words at all. “I guard this place from all who would harm it!”

  His eyes were huge in his head. Bod realized it was because he had circles drawn around them in purple, making his face look like an owl’s.

  “Who are you?” asked Bod. He squeezed Scarlett’s hand as he said it.

  The Indigo Man did not seem to have heard the question. He looked at them fiercely.

  “Leave this place!” he said in words that Bod heard in his head, words that were also a gutteral growl.

  “Is he going to hurt us?” asked Scarlett.

  “I don’t think so,” said Bod. Then, to the Indigo Man, he said, as he had been taught, “I have the Freedom of the Graveyard and I may walk where I choose.”

  There was no reaction to this by the Indigo Man, which puzzled Bod even more because even the most irritable inhabitants of the graveyard had been calmed by this statement. Bod said, “Scarlett, can you see him?”

  “Of course I can see him. He’s a big scary tattooey man and he wants to kill us. Bod, make him go away!”

  Bod looked at the remains of the gentleman in the brown coat. There was a lamp beside him, broken on the rocky floor. “He ran away,” said Bod aloud. “He ran because he was scared. And he slipped or he tripped on the stairs and he fell off.”

  “Who did?”

  “The man on the floor.”

  Scarlett sounded irritated now, as well as puzzled and scared. “What man on the floor? It’s too dark. The only man I can see is the tattooey man.”

  And then, as if to make quite sure that they knew that he was there, the Indigo Man threw back his head and let out a series of yodeling screams, a full-throated ululation that made Scarlett grip Bod’s hand so tightly that her fingernails pressed into his flesh.

  Bod was no longer scared, though.

  “I’m sorry I said they were imaginary,” said Scarlett. “I believe now. They’re real.”

  The Indigo Man raised something over his head. It looked like a sharp stone blade. “All who invade this place will die!” he shouted, in his gutteral speech. Bod thought about the man whose hair had turned white after he had discovered the chamber, how he would never return to the graveyard or speak of what he had seen.

  “No,” said Bod. “I think you’re right. I think this one is.”

  “Is what?”

  “Imaginary.”

  “Don’t be stupid,” said Scarlett. “I can see it.”

  “Yes,” said Bod. “And you can’t see dead people.” He looked around the chamber. “You can stop now,” he said. “We know it’s not real.”

  “I will feast on your liver!” screamed the Indigo Man.

  “No, you won’t,” said Scarlett, with a huge sigh. “Bod’s right.”
Then she said, “I think maybe it’s a scarecrow.”

  “What’s a scarecrow?” asked Bod.

  “It’s a thing farmers put in fields to scare crows.”

  “Why would they do that?” Bod quite liked crows. He thought they were funny, and he liked the way they helped to keep the graveyard tidy.

  “I don’t know exactly. I’ll ask Mummy. But I saw one from a train and I asked what it was. Crows think it’s a real person. It’s just a made-up thing, that looks like a person, but it’s not. It’s just to scare the crows away.”

  Bod looked around the chamber. He said, “Whoever you are, it isn’t working. It doesn’t scare us. We know it isn’t real. Just stop.”

  The Indigo Man stopped. It walked over to the rock slab and it lay down on it. Then it was gone.

  For Scarlett the chamber was once more swallowed by the darkness. But in the darkness, she could hear the twining sound again, getting louder and louder, as if something were circling the round room.

  Something said, WE ARE THE SLEER.

  The hairs on the back of Bod’s neck began to prickle. The voice in his head was something very old and very dry, like the scraping of a dead twig against the window of the chapel, and it seemed to Bod that there was more than one voice there, that they were talking in unison.

  “Did you hear that?” he asked Scarlett.

  “I didn’t hear anything, just a slithery noise. It made me feel strange. All prickly in my tummy. Like something horrible is going to happen.”

  “Nothing horrible is going to happen,” said Bod. Then, to the chamber, he said, “What are you?”

  WE ARE THE SLEER. WE GUARD AND WE PROTECT.

  “What do you protect?”

  THE RESTING PLACE OF THE MASTER. THIS IS THE HOLIEST OF ALL HOLY PLACES, AND IT IS GUARDED BY THE SLEER. “You can’t touch us,” said Bod. “All you can do is scare.”

  The twining voices sounded petulant. FEAR IS A WEAPON OF THE SLEER.

  Bod looked down at the ledge. “Are those the treasures of your master? An old brooch, a cup, and a little stone knife? They don’t look like much.”

  THE SLEER GUARDS THE TREASURES. THE BROOCH, THE GOBLET, THE KNIFE. WE GUARD THEM FOR THE MASTER, WHEN HE RETURNS. IT COMES BACK. IT ALWAYS COMES BACK. “How many of you are there?”

  But the Sleer said nothing. The inside of Bod’s head felt as if it were filled with cobwebs, and he shook it, trying to clear it. Then he squeezed Scarlett’s hand. “We should go,” he said.

  He led her past the dead man in the brown coat—and honestly, thought Bod, if he hadn’t got scared and fallen the man would have been disappointed in his hunt for treasure. The treasures of ten thousand years ago were not the treasures of today. Bod led Scarlett carefully up the steps, through the hill, into the jutting black masonry of the Frobisher mausoleum.

  Late spring sunlight shone through the breaks in the masonry and through the barred door, shocking in its brightness, and Scarlett blinked and covered her eyes at the suddenness of the glare. Birds sang in the bushes, a bumblebee droned past, everything was surprising in its normality.

  Bod pushed open the mausoleum door, and then locked it again behind them.

  Scarlett’s bright clothes were covered in grime and cobwebs, and her dark face and hands were pale with dust.

  Further down the hill somebody—quite a few some-bodies—was shouting. Shouting loudly. Shouting frantically.

  Someone called, “Scarlett? Scarlett Perkins?” and Scarlett said “Yes? Hello?” and before she and Bod had a chance to discuss what they had seen, or to talk about the Indigo Man, there was a woman in a fluorescent yellow jacket with POLICE on the back demanding to know if she was okay, and where she had been, and if someone had tried to kidnap her, and then the woman was talking on a radio, letting them know that the child had been found.

  Bod slipped along beside them as they walked down the hill. The door to the chapel was open, and inside both of Scarlett’s parents were waiting, her mother in tears, her father worriedly talking to people on a mobile phone, along with another policewoman. No one saw Bod as he waited in the corner.

  The people kept asking Scarlett what had happened to her, and she answered, as honestly as she could, told them about a boy called Nobody who took her deep inside a hill where a purple tattoo man appeared in the dark, but he was really a scarecrow. They gave her a chocolate bar and they wiped her face and asked if the tattooed man had ridden a motorbike, and Scarlett’s mother and father, now that they were relieved and not afraid for her any longer were angry with themselves and with her, and they told each other that it was the other one’s fault for letting their little girl play in a cemetery, even if it was a nature reserve, and that the world was a very dangerous place these days, and if you didn’t keep your eyes on your children every second you could not imagine what awful things they would be plunged into. Especially a child like Scarlett.

  Scarlett’s mother began sobbing, which made Scarlett cry, and one of the policewomen got into an argument with Scarlett’s father, who tried to tell her that he, as a taxpayer, paid her wages, and she told him that she was a taxpayer too and probably paid his wages, while Bod sat in the shadows in the corner of the chapel, unseen by anyone, not even Scarlett, and watched and listened until he could take no more.

  It was twilight in the graveyard by now, and Silas came and found Bod, up near the amphitheater, looking out over the town. He stood beside the boy and he said nothing, which was his way.

  “It wasn’t her fault,” said Bod. “It was mine. And now she’s in trouble.”

  “Where did you take her?” asked Silas.

  “Into the middle of the hill, to see the oldest grave. Only there isn’t anybody in there. Just a snaky thing called a Sleer who scares people.”

  “Fascinating.”

  They walked back down the hill together, watched as the old chapel was locked up once more and the police and Scarlett and her parents went off into the night.

  “Miss Borrows will teach you joined-up letters,” said Silas. “Have you read The Cat in the Hat yet?”

  “Yes,” said Bod. “Ages ago. Can you bring me more books?”

  “I expect so,” said Silas.

  “Do you think I’ll ever see her again?”

  “The girl? I very much doubt it.”

  But Silas was wrong. Three weeks later, on a grey afternoon, Scarlett came to the graveyard, accompanied by both her parents.

  They insisted that she remain in sight at all times, although they trailed a little behind her. Scarlett’s mother occasionally exclaimed about how morbid this all was and how fine and good it was that they would soon be leaving it behind forever.

  When Scarlett’s parents began to talk to each other, Bod said, “Hello.”

  “Hi,” said Scarlett, very quietly.

  “I didn’t think I’d see you again.”

  “I told them I wouldn’t go with them unless they brought me back here one last time.”

  “Go where?”

  “Scotland. There’s a university there. For Dad to teach particle physics.”

  They walked on the path together, a small girl in a bright orange anorak and a small boy in a grey winding sheet.

  “Is Scotland a long way away?”

  “Yes,” she said.

  “Oh.”

  “I hoped you’d be here. To say good-bye.”

  “I’m always here.”

  “But you aren’t dead, are you, Nobody Owens?”

  “’Course not.”

  “Well, you can’t stay here all your life. Can you? One day you’ll grow up and then you will have to go and live in the world outside.”

  He shook his head. “It’s not safe for me out there.”

  “Who says?”

  “Silas. My family. Everybody.”

  She was silent.

  Her father called, “Scarlett! Come on, love. Time to go. You’ve had your last trip to the graveyard. Now let’s go home.”

  Scarlett said to
Bod, “You’re brave. You are the bravest person I know, and you are my friend. I don’t care if you are imaginary.” Then she fled down the path back the way they had come, to her parents and the world.

  CHAPTER THREE

  The Hounds of God

  ONE GRAVE IN EVERY graveyard belongs to the ghouls. Wander any graveyard long enough and you will find it—waterstained and bulging, with cracked or broken stone, scraggly grass or rank weeds about it, and a feeling, when you reach it, of abandonment. It may be colder than the other gravestones, too, and the name on the stone is all too often impossible to read. If there is a statue on the grave it will be headless or so scabbed with fungus and lichens as to look like a fungus itself. If one grave in a graveyard looks like a target for petty vandals, that is the ghoul-gate. If the grave makes you want to be somewhere else, that is the ghoul-gate.

  There was one in Bod’s graveyard.

  There is one in every graveyard.

  Silas was leaving.

  Bod had been upset by this when he had first learned about it. He was no longer upset. He was furious.

  “But why?” said Bod.

  “I told you. I need to obtain some information. In order to do that, I have to travel. To travel, I must leave here. We have already been over all this.”

  “What’s so important that you have to go away?” Bod’s six-year-old mind tried to imagine something that could make Silas want to leave him, and failed. “It’s not fair.”

  His guardian was unperturbed. “It is neither fair nor unfair, Nobody Owens. It simply is.”

  Bod was not impressed. “You’re meant to look after me. You said.”

  “As your guardian I have responsibility for you, yes. Fortunately, I am not the only individual in the world willing to take on this responsibility.”

  “Where are you going anyway?”

  “Out. Away. There are things I need to uncover that I cannot uncover here.”

  Bod snorted and walked off, kicking at imaginary stones. On the northwestern side of the graveyard things had become very overgrown and tangled, far beyond the ability of the groundskeeper or the Friends of the Graveyard to tame, and he ambled over there, and woke a family of Victorian children who had all died before their tenth birthdays, and they played at hide-and-go-seek in the moonlight in the ivy-twined jungle. Bod tried to pretend that Silas was not leaving, that nothing was going to change, but when the game was done and he ran back to the old chapel, he saw two things that changed his mind.

 
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