I FIRST MET GEMMA FILES in Toronto in the early 1990s. I’d been a fanatical purchaser of vampire books and had a vast collection of titles (which now exceeds 1700, God help me!) Vampire volumes had come into vogue by then, and since I’d managed to acquire just about everything written prior to that time, I was relegated to the fresh blood of newly published works. Every month I would watch the cash register tally up four or more hardcover titles, depleting my finances and overburdening my bookshelves. I frequently purchased from Bakka Books, which at that time was Toronto’s only SF/F/H bookstore. John Rose, the owner, kept saying: “You must know Gemma. She’s the other vampire collector.”
So I’d heard about Gemma, but we never seemed to be browsing in Bakka on the same day of the night of the full moon. I’d also been informed by a discerning bookish pal Bob (Hadji) Knowlton about his friend Gemma: “You’ve got to meet this girl. She’s brilliant, and she loves vampires.” I didn’t put the two Gemmas together until the day I received a call. Gemma and I chatted a while, and I invited her to visit and see my book collection, and all the other vampire memorabilia (read: junk!) I’’d acquired over the years, like a piece of plaster from the Grand Theater in Derby where Dracula was first staged, a promotional keyring from Dracula’s Wallpaper Warehouse in Ontario, the four foot tall Nosferatu punching bag . . .
Right from the get-go, I knew Gemma was, as Bob said, “Brilliant.” This young thing was just wiggling out of journalism school. She was the precocious offspring of parents in the arts, which likely set her up for being highly educated, thoughtful, attracted to all things creative, a bit melancholy, and extremely well read in the wide world of books, not just those involving bloodsuckers and other demons of the night. She arrived at my door wearing her multi-colored Moroccan cap, serious but modern glasses, and carrying a huge backpack which she always seemed to be lugging around; we talked vampires for hours. Needless to say, I liked her immensely. Not only was it refreshing to chat with another vampirophile, but I found her open and honest and not fearful about plunging into free-rolling discussions involving the deeply existential and macabre subject matter I favor. I became a kind of loaning-library for books she hadn’t yet read, and a minor sounding board for projects, of which she had plenty in mind, so we met regularly for a while, until life impinged—for me, that meant the ending of a marriage and a move to Montreal.
At the time I met Gemma, she had been writing regular columns, mainly on film, for one of Toronto’s entertainment weeklies, EYE Magazine. Besides reading her published articles, she handed me bits of her fiction to peruse, and I always came away thinking the same thing about her work: “Brilliant.” Clearly this girl was destined for great things. So it surprised me not when she catapulted out of the small press and began selling her short stories to major anthologies like the cleverly-conceived, Stephen Jones-edited The Mammoth Book of Vampire Stories by Women, and Dark Terrors 6. Ellen Datlow picked up her amazing tale “The Emperor’s Old Bones” (originally published in Northern Frights 5, and which is included in this collection) for Year’s Best Horror and Fantasy (13.) Gemma also sold stories to television, and won the International Horror Critic’s Award. If I’d put money where my thoughts were about Gemma’s fate, I’d be rich now, but then who would have bet against me?
Gemma utilizes style and grace in her writing, and possesses an adventurous spirit that shows in her work. She kindly penned “Rose Sick” for Seductive Spectres, one of the erotic horror anthologies I edited under the nom de plume Amarantha Knight. I then invited her to submit another story for Demon Sex. That story, “Bottle of Smoke” (which you’ll read in this collection); was picked up by The Hunger, the HBO TV series of erotic horror shows, and then she went on to sell the program four more of her fine tales!
Now Gemma is all grown up as a writer, teaching film at a university, happily collecting accolades for her work. I take some sort of maternal pride in her successes. I’m one of the people who knew-her-when, who has never had a doubt that she will reside among the stars one day. Her writing is layered and textured. Her imagination and the subject matter she explores are reminiscent of Caitlin Kiernan’s work. At the same time, she chooses words with a cleverness and sensitivity that reminds me of Poppy Z. Brite’s short fiction. She shares the immediacy and accessibility of Neil Gaiman’s writing.
But don’t misunderstand me: Gemma Files is no copycat. She is part of the new wave of wordsmiths that add class to darker fiction by the intelligent use of language, and elevate the fantastic back to its rightful place as literature, reconnecting to its classical roots: Dracula, Frankenstein, The Picture of Dorian Grey, anything by Poe. Those beautifully constructed works that still, after more than a century, leave us shivering and breathless because their authors understood the power of words, that syntax could rupture readers, and do what Franz Kafka said it should, “melt the frozen sea within.” Under that broad umbrella of the resurrectionists of this terrifying genre, Gemma Files is unique. Her work may leave you breathless. It could awaken realms within. At times you might sit stunned, wondering at the richness of writing, reconnecting to the reasons you have always loved to read.
In The Worm in Every Heart, Gemma’s eclectic se
cond collection, time and space are spanned: “Nigredo” is set in Warsaw during WW2, when gods beget monsters; “Ring of Fire” features a madman who uses the 1857 mutiny in India to his advantage; “The Guided Tour” takes us hitchhiking through the bountiful US of A; “Year Zero” reveals unexpected fallout from the French Revolution; the protagonist of “Flare” is an unusual Toronto arsonist; “Bottle of Smoke” puts a female spin on a tale that could be from the Arabian Nights; “Fly-by-Night” pits a modern military medico against an ancient vampire; “In the Poor Girl Taken by Surprise” revamps a werewolf legend from Quebec; a 19th century Russian scientist creates life in “A Single Shadow Make,” but who is man, who monster?; “The Land Beyond the Forest” indulges the recollections of an English vampire of noble birth; “The Kindly Ones” questions whether or not a mother from Scotland is capable of love; a centurion from ancient Rome captures the wrong British girl in “Sent Down”; “By the Mark” blends flora, poetry and witchy alienation; “The Emperor’s Old Bones” reveals a dark Chinese custom; and “The Narrow World” shows how sex magick can go awry.
The Worm In Every Heart beckons readers to a literary danse macabre that spans the ages and swirls through the cultural mosaic. The grim melody of life’s bleakness blends well with the dark harmonies offered in these stories. These are fatal rhythms, ones we’re all familiar with; the Reaper’s scythe keeps the time. And Gemma’s work is timeless. Destined to last. You can bet on it.
Nancy Kilpatrick
Montreal—2004
Nigredo
IT’S 1944, LATE SEPTEMBER, and Kotzeleh’s just about decided that God probably doesn’t exist—that that’s definitely the best way to think about it, at any rate. Since, otherwise, she’d be forced to conclude He meant all this deliberately, and find Him. And kill Him for it.
On the eastern bank of the Vistula, just visible from Warsaw’s borders, the Red Army have taken Praga; it was their lure which incited the Home Army to rise back in August, when they seized two-thirds of the city within three days: 40,000 armed insurrectionists with 210,000 unarmed helpers. But the Russians just squat there still, waiting, as reinforcements led by S.S. Lieutenant-General Erich von dem Bach-Zelewski—6,000 of their own defectors amongst them—continue to force the rebels back into Stare Miasto, the Old Town . . . down into miles and miles of sewers where food is scarce, water polluted, dysentery rife.
Warsaw’s is a history of invasion, as Lev the Rabbi tells Kotzeleh whenever they have enough free time for talk, and sometimes when they don’t; the city has been occupied more often than not, by anyone within marching distance. The Swedes, the Russians, the Prussians, the French—and after the French came the Russians again, a fact (Kotzeleh occasionally thinks) that really should have told the Home Army’s leaders something, within context.
“How far do these tunnels go down?” Kotzeleh asks Lev, absently. He shrugs.
“Five hundred years or more, maybe.”
“Nu? So long?”
“They’ve got catacombs here, just like in Paris. Pits of bone from the Plague. Some of them even feed into crypts where the churches used to be.”
“Before the bombs?”
He smiles. “Before this shithole was even a real city.”
Kotzeleh accepts this concept without question. Above them, the grating shakes with each new howitzer-hit, sifting stalactites of fecal matter down into the scum they wade in; von dem Bach’s ordinance uses shells almost a metre in diameter, able to penetrate two metres of concrete. At seventeen, Kotzeleh’s world has shrunk to nothing more than a compendium of holes where things used to be: Buildings, synagogues, people. Solidity, permanence, they’re things of the past; this is a New Age, as Tateh used to say.
“My little thorn,” he’d called her. “Be a thorn in their sides, my Kotzeleh. Go down smiling. Go down killing.”
Now she does her worst, which usually works. And when it doesn’t . . .
After Warsaw finally does fall, which (as it happens) won’t be all so very long from now—over and over and over again, in the long, dark century to come—Kotzeleh will map in dreams these tunnels which are her second birthright. Will wander them once more with knife and gun in hand, searching in vain for the secret step-parent who occupies them still. Somewhere.
Here in 1945, though, Kotzeleh’s shoes squish when she walks. Their soles are sodden cardboard, cloth sides soaked through, filled from top to bottom with sewer-water slush. When she takes her stockings off, her toes are a mass of white blisters she can peel away one-handed. Seams of dirt map her long, gaunt legs from calf to thigh.
How long have you been down here, dumpling? the contact asked her, cautiously, the last time she bought guns from him. It’s Katarczyna, am I right?
My name is Kotzeleh.
Kotzeleh. But seriously, dear—how long?
A month. Two, might be.
More like more.
As though time mattered, down here. Or up there.