Alice slips through the front door, her angel wings rustling
as they brush against the door jamb. She pauses, waiting to see if anyone
noticed the soft sound. Voices drift from the room to the right, involved in
conversation, oblivious to her presence.
The angel
drifts to the stairs and begins the journey up, careful to avoid the fifth
creaky riser. At the second door on the left, Alice pauses, her hand resting on
the brass door knob.
With a
single finger, she taps softly, twice.
“Come in,”
the voice matches the volume of her knock, and she almost misses it.
The knob
turns with ease, the door swinging silently on well-oiled hinges. Alice enters
Max’s room, a smile upon her lips, heaven in her eyes.
“You look
lovely.” Max says, gesturing for her to spin. She does, her skirt floating out
like a cloud around her. “Stunning.”
Alice
smiles, “You are looking handsome yourself. I like it,” she nods at the heavy
velvet cape draped across his shoulders. “Is it time?” she asks, gliding to
Max’s side and resting a cool hand on his cheek.
Max nods.
“Did you bring it?”
Alice
reaches into the folds of her white gown, withdrawing two vials from a hidden
pocket.
Max reaches
out a hand, gently brushing the smooth blue glass. “They’re beautiful. Like
you.”
Alice
blushes and ducks her eyes.
“Shall I go
first? I don’t think I can watch you do it.”
Max nods,
“Go ahead.”
The angel
hands Max a vial before uncapping the other. “I’ll see you in the next life,”
as she brings the vial to her lips and tips the contents into her mouth.
Alice sinks
to her knees, then sprawls back onto the floor, her breaths already shallow.
Max kneels at her side, gripping her hand tightly in his own. “Alice, wait…” he
begins, but it is too late. The blue has already crept across her lips.
Momentarily
torn between life and death, Max pauses. It is almost too long. But he uncorks
his vial and chugs the tiny beverage, falling to the floor beside his beloved
angel.
Alice gasps
as she sits up, drawing air deep into her lungs. She turns to see the man
laying beside her, her hands moving to his throat, feeling for a pulse that
isn’t there. She leans close, resting her lips on his, feeling the chill
already setting in. “You know I’ve always loved Romeo and Juliet.”
Her hands
move to his, plucking the empty vial and cork from his grasp, tucking them back
into the pocket they came from. Her vial follows.
Alice
pauses near the door to look at her reflection in the mirror. Her skin is paler
than usual, lips still slightly dusky. Her fingers reach to pinch her cheeks
before she decides that the paleness enhances the costume.
She glides
out the door, down the stairs (again avoiding the creaker) and into the foyer.
The voices are louder, now, and music has joined the party. Alice joins it, as
well. The angel slides around the wall, taking a spot near the wall, watching
the costumed couples dance in the middle of the room.
No one
notices her arrival. They never have.
She wonders
how long it will take for one of them to notice the body upstairs.
A bottle of
ketchup runs into the room, “Call an ambulance! Someone is hurt upstairs!”
Chaos
breaks out, cell phones are dug out of pockets, purses, and bras. Alice is
serene stillness on the outside, but aflutter inside. Hurt? He should be dead.
Alice moves
closer to the ketchup, trying to overhear his conversation over the cacophony.
“… some guy
in a cape,” the ketchup bottle states.
“Did …… for
a pulse?” This from a nun.
“No!”
Ketchup turns and runs for the stairs. The angel follows.
Alice arrives
at the door to the room and sees that everything is fine. Max is dead. Ketchup
is crying, the nun offering a hand on his shoulder as comfort.
“Who is
it?” the nun asks.
“I don’t
know,” Ketchup sobs.
The nun looks perplexed at tears
for a unknown man. “It’ll be okay.” She pats him twice, then looks around the
room for someone to rescue her. Her eyes glide right over Alice to the
paramedics stepping through the door.
The angel drifts back out of the
door and to the stairs, passing a stream of animals, demons, and cartoon
characters looking to be part of the story. She moves out the front door and
stands on the front porch, her hand resting on a pillar. Flashing red and blue
dance across the canvas of her dress and wings.
The angel smiles and begins walking.
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