Seanan McGuire (seanan_mcguire) wrote,
Seanan McGuire
seanan_mcguire

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Rose Marshall was sixteen years old the summer that she died...

We're halfway down the road that runs from Sparrow Hill to the Last Chance Diner; we're halfway between the beginning and the end. And that means it's finally time for me to tell the one story Rose has that's been kept private up until now—the story of the way it all began, and the night that Rose Marshall, high school girl with her whole life ahead of her, became Rose Marshall, hitchhiking ghost.

It's June, and this is the story of the way Rose Marshall died.

Issue 54 of The Edge of Propinquity is live, and with it, the sixth of the Sparrow Hill Road stories is available. "Last Dance With Mary Jane" takes us back in time to 1945, where a teenage girl named Rose is about to lose her way forever. This is the ending that began everything. This is the real story behind the Phantom Prom Date, the Girl in the Diner...the Spirit of Sparrow Hill Road.

There are a lot of stories trapped and tangled in the twilight. This is only one of them. But it's the one I have to tell.

Welcome to the ghostroads.

Tags: short fiction, sparrow hill road
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  • 28 comments
Ok, I just killed an hour at work reading all of the Rose Marshall stories.

I blame you if I'm not ready for new student orientation. :) Not really. I really enjoyed them.
Yay!
Now I want a cheezeburger...
Welcome to Rose's world.
Absolutely loved learning Rose's ghost story. =)
I'm glad. :)
Is there a reason that the story has her death in '45 and the song in '53. or is that just the way the rhymes worked out?
Think "urban legend". :)

As Seanan's said before on LJ and in concerts, the song "Pretty Little Dead Girl" is intentionally inaccurate (or, as she puts it, "vile slander!") Note that it's not in the first person. It's not only the years that are different-- the song accuses poor Rose of luring men to race with her and killing them on purpose, when really all the poor thing wants is a warm coat and a cheeseburger!

The song's meant to be, as I understand it, the ghost stories the local high school kids tell each other about Rose. She's the town legend, passed down through the years. And like most such legends, the story has changed over time. The short stories are Rose finally getting to tell us the tale herself.

pocketnaomi

7 years ago

Well, I could say that was quite well done, like all the chapters before it, which would be true.

However, I don't want to seem like I'm giving praise by rote, so I shall say that I thought "Am I paying for deception with cheeseburgers?" was a great line.
Thank you!
Oh, my. Does Rose live in the same universe that has Aeslin mice, or is that just a coincidence?
Yes, she does!
And you love it.

dormouse_in_tea

7 years ago

As long as you are referring to the Aeslin mice of Michigan where the Marshall, Healy, and Daniels famlies live
Well, yes...
Yup.
Yep; she's mentioned in a Healy story or two, if I remember right.

seanan_mcguire

6 years ago

It was well worth the wait
I'm glad.
My spine is feeling all tingly now. Can't wait for the next one!
Yay!
I don't know as how I've mentioned it to your 'face' yet, but I thought I'd let you know that the Rose Marshall stories are a favorite of mine amongst the lot that you do. All the reasons why I could never get into Supernatural are all the reasons why I love the Sparrow Hill Road series, for what explanation that's worth.

And so, when I was poking about a site recently, and tripped over a reference to the Dullahan, it sparked my folklore memory to full roar, and I instantly thought of you, and the Twilight Highways.

Because you clearly don't have enough to keep you occupied already, of course.
Oh, that's wonderful.

Thank you.
love this series... and valkyrie cheerleaders!
Glee!