Her Perfect Green Eyes

“You know, I used to date a boy in high-school just like him.”

Cara’s cat like features perfected her green-eyed stare. Gazing out upon the crowded dance floor, watching the gyrating, perspiring bodies weave and bob away the troubles of low pay, glutted administrative jobs and a world tearing apart their parental implanted belief system set a fascinated glow to her luminous eyes.

Watching people her own age thrash about, sweating off makeup and deodorant to banging music and flashing lights left her half philosophical, half angry. The laughing, hysterical crowd before us would wake up to faces they had not seen before and discuss how to increase their sexual performance in a calm, matter-of-fact manner over coffee in a watery grey morning just before another day’s work.

Watching Cara, I worried for her. She took any slight directed toward me as personal. The hours of discussion melted from her mind; as a plain person I am looked over, snubbed and ridiculed. The fact did not distress me and in some places in the world, mostly Europe, my plain jane looks gave me an advantaged over the flamboyant. Here in the United States, my demeanor and my looks did not please. Despite my not being offended Cara’s green eyes gave her away, she was angry.

Cara’s flashing green eyes, her emotion and frankly her laughable sense of injustice drew me to her side, broke me down and weakened me so much that I told her my secrets. When we first met in a darkened alley, she rushed forward to defend me from harm. Glad for the opportunity to study her hunter like prowess, I sense to this day a recklessness about her. The surrounding atmosphere didn’t matter to me; it was a means to an end. To Cara, the crowd warranted a chance to avenge what she deemed the downtrodden. I disliked the loud, disconcerting music, but Cara thrived on it and I thrived on her expression and her perfect green eyes.

“I thought you too old for high-school remembrances,” I said, not focused on comment but on her emerald glow. Wanting her focus to remain upon the man who had just rejected me for another partner, concentrating on the thrum and throb of her calculating emotions, I felt the lift of anticipation.

“What sort of remark is that?” she asked.

“Oh, I don’t know,” I shrugged and looked away; her question shocking me into disappointing depletion. Perhaps her understanding of me was quickening. Her wrath directed toward me may be interesting. An undercurrent of electric anger between us may enhance an already welcomed partnership… or not. I felt an uptick in my sense of smell and taste when faced with the unpredictable.

The world had long left me flat and rather despondent, Cara surprised and kept me off center. She chose me, selected me, stalked me after our first encounter when she attempted to come to my rescue. I could have left her long ago or perished at her hands, but I allowed her to capture me, so I captured her. Narrowing her eyes, she speechlessly demanded a better answer of me. Looking away, focusing on some other salient point of interest, I countered her childish demand; “You seem timeless, too old for the nonsense of high school and all its silliness.”

“I endured like all the rest of these poor slobs,” she said with a shrug, immediately losing interest in the conversation.

My mind goes dark when confronting the mundane 21st century. Her response disappointed me, and it wasn’t the first time. Hating the hardened soldier, or bitter martyr tone she took, I shook my head in rejection to her response. Knowing the music or what passed as music to these craven and luckless lot I turned to scan the crowded dance floor. I felt the night funneling into dawn and the thought of time wearied me. Teaching Cara to understand that there were better places, stronger people, higher planes of existence than the jungle of despondency she insisted upon, seemed impossible. I returned my focus on my more basic needs and gazed about the long lines of lythe young people about me.

Reading me, connecting to my more basic wants, she looked toward the bar where most men leaned, gazing out at the dance floor; their faces reflecting the flashing lights that glared from the ceiling, floor and walls of the club. Her pristine skin and darkly painted lips attracted the man who had rejected me only moments ago.

When will you allow yourself culture? When will you pull yourself out of these pits? I longed to ask her these questions. Maybe some day.

Facing me again, unaware of my disgruntled emotions, she wore a wicked smile on her face, “Are you worried I’ll turn to extreme tattooing and piercings?” Mocking me was her only defense against the instinct she had in knowing she offended me. Warning her against taunting me with deadly earnestness, she would bring up my threat of having nothing more to do with her if she marred her beauty with smears of unnatural color upon her skin. Barbaric. Narrowing my eyes in her direction, she seemed about to say something more but laughed instead, as if realizing she was about to say too much.

“So what was this boy in high school like?” I asked, annoyed at myself for lowering our conversation to meet her needs and rescuing her from any further embarrassment with me. We both acknowledged our personal needs to each other and there were times I felt cheated by my surrender to her. The man whom she gave a coaxing look moments ago moved slowly toward our small table.

“Oh, you know. After we kissed for the first time and I found him wanting, he went about with any girl who would have him. He wanted none except me, but something inside him drove him to show me how happy he was; how very much happier he was with her or her or even her than with me.” Cara shrugged, looking around again with perfect timing. The man was before her.

It was my turn to laugh, and I did so. I almost felt a joy hammering with the loud, stubborn beat of electronic music which pumped throughout the hellish club. I looked again at the man now dancing with Cara. So simple; we easily catch the certain soul in any trap.

Watching him gyrated and swirl around Cara and looking oh so handsome on the crowded floor and in the flashing light, an animal exultation surged through my body. Examining myself and searching for any falsehood within myself, the thought of my share of the man did not disappoint me. I did not resent Cara’s powers as her beauty did not reflect against time. Did my relationship with Cara draw me down to the level of animal attraction? Yes. Most assuredly. I looked at the man again, his catlike movements and his masculinity exuding out of every flash of demonic light. He could enhance the beauty of the woman he danced with, but the beauty seemed to return to him; keeping what his ego demanded underscoring his selfishness and self-serving nature. I determined to capture his stolen beauty.

Cara’s perfect green eyes connected with me for a moment. In a burst of energy she lifted her long slender arms and danced as if around an ancient camp fire. She felt my determination.

I left the club. I moved into the icy night seeking silence. Cara’s laugher and feigned giddiness warned me of her approach. I pushed forth my desire, and she stumbled against the man she was with. I knew she felt my presence.

She wasted no time in pulling men to her need. I waited, for I understood she had needs too. I regretted their excursions weakened him but when he understood what I was; he put up satisfying resistance. Cara’s fascinated stare baffled him as he sank away into nonexistence.

“You won’t ever feed on me, will you?” she asked. Her partner tonight was more determined than most; more from disbelief that any harm dare touch him than from out-and-out fear.

“You must invite me, Cara.” I said. Her weariness allowed satisfaction from my answer. The invite she will not question which is 21st century style – so literal. So very literal.

Vilmos

Love? No, not love. That idea left me centuries ago. Laugh in disbelief if that buoys your courage. But I do not love her, though I admire and respect her. And yes, I want her with me.

I’ve watched her for some time now. At first my curiosity was simply piqued; nothing more. Her survival impressed me, her resistance incensed me (still does) and her tenacity in seeking truth impresses me. The reason I want her is to save her.

She has no feeble-minded idea that truth is indescribable or a sense or a feeling. She understands words, ideas and striving to know revealed truth. But she is naïve, she believes truth will strengthen her. She believes because that old man whom she calls teacher and friend teaches her to believe truth, though painful, is better than constant distraction. 

Ha! Those who crave distraction in work or pleasure are calling out to be servants or prey. I accommodate their cravings. I seek truth and find it daily. Does God exist? Yes, of course He does, and He dogs us, He demands and He commands and He thwarts freedom. So I thwart Him.

And yes, I’ve thwarted Him for some time.

Someday soon she will understand the old man lied to her, her father lied to her and Quincey lied to her. They are like the men who stand at altars and pray. They are like the men who stand behind their crosses rather than face me. They are subtle, but their desire is the same as mine – power.

The difference? I want her on equal standing with me. I want to ride the airwaves with her, eddy the currents like the great eagle who sores above mountain tops. I want her to see the night as it really is; endless, vast, and free. She has too strong a mind to feel gratitude. She will join with me in watching from above those who breathe, suffer and die. We will watch for eternity the continual wave and break of humanity against the rocks of destruction and the slime of rebirth.

Yes, she will watch with me and understand that humanity needs no religion or God but our own.

I Could Have Been Teaching Fiction Not Living It

It’s important for me to remain invisible. Impossible? Well, you’re right, it is impossible. So I do my best.

As a young wallflower, I was exceptional.  When I grew older, I’ll admit I didn’t want to be so invisible. Until I met him and then I met them. It’s complicated, as they used to say. I’ll try to be brief. Why? Well, there’s a trick to being nearly invisible. Keep moving. I learned that almost too late. I’ll forget it someday, out of exhaustion.

I mentioned I was a wallflower. Yeah, it was painful through my teen years and the surrounding girls in my high school weren’t too kind. Sure, I had core friends, one especially, Jennifer. She’ll picture in later.

So, during my wallflower years I read lots of novels and decided I liked to read. I went to a higher end but smaller college back east and something happened. My skin cleared up, I lost weight, and even my parents were hesitant when I came home for Christmas. After four years at said college I decided I wanted to teach literature on a higher level and by golly I started in for my PhD. What a ride, except for a major interruption.

Now this may sound petty, but a highlight for me was my 10-year high school reunion. Yup, I dressed it up and walked in on demure and smiling. No one knew me, but I made sure that I met all the thick-waisted moms who tormented me in the hallways. I didn’t speak to them, just their balding husbands. I stayed maybe an hour when who should walk in but my old friend Jennifer.

Jennifer had changed from thick glasses, long straight hair, and dowdy dresses to a sleek, slender, gorgeous woman in high heels and tight jeans. What changed the most was the tall, dark stranger who escorted her in. We hugged, cried, and laughed at our own petty drama. Her boyfriend stood and smiled at us like a benevolent older uncle. We left the school gym and met at a local bar. Her boyfriend wasn’t with her?

“Was he a prop?” I asked.

“No. Well, sort of. We… travel together.”

“Where did you meet?”

“College. He’s a professor. You know my attraction for older men.”

“No, I didn’t realize that, but you were always sort of secretive.”

“Are you staying with your parents?” Jennifer asked. The question gave me a chill.

“No,” I lied, “they moved to Florida.”  My parents would no more think of moving to Florida than they would move to Alaska, but I felt a quiver of distrust. Suddenly Jennifer looked like a wax figure; beautiful and unchangeable. We seemed to realize at once a chill; she was my enemy and I hers.

“I’m sorry it had to end this way,” Jennifer’s voice was suddenly a hiss and snake like. “It’s the good and evil thing you understand.” She left the table and walked away. Her friend was waiting outside.

I sat in that bar all night. I panicked when I had to leave, so hustled to the nearest church. Closed. Dark. I saw shadows everywhere. They met me outside Saint Monica’s. What choice did I have but to join them?

“Is she a vampire?” I asked.

“A demon. Her choice. We work to eliminate them.”

“Eliminate?”

“Yes.” The man in black stared at me without blinking. It was a test, I know.

“I’m in,” I said.

Sure, my immediate family knows. It’s not so bad. The old buildings, the ancient writings, all appeal to me. I’ve been around the world and I’m on my third workable language. You wouldn’t believe how evil gets around. If I make it to 55, I’m automatically retired to a basement somewhere in Paris or Rome, they won’t tell me. I don’t blame them. It won’t be bad, the daylight still means freedom in this fight.

Yeah, I’m looking forward to meeting Jennifer again. Life could have been a little different; I could have been teaching fiction, not living it.

Her New Ancestral Home

“I say we go, right.”

“I say we don’t, we should go left.”

“Arthur, left is down, we should go right and up.”

Arthur fought the urge to be glib. It was her fault they were in the mess they were in. She was the explorer, the woman who wanted to know every inch of Ring, her soon-to-be ancestral home. He would have said so too if he didn’t sound like a schoolboy. “Well, this is your soon-to-be ancestral home I suppose you know best.”  It was a juvenile and sarcastic remark, but he didn’t care.

“Shut up, Arthur, this is serious, we are lost!  Something is down here, and we need to find a way out!”

“Will you try to stay calm, Julie, your panic is not helping in this situation.”

“Shut. Up.  Can’t you say anything original?”

“Pardon me dear, but I seem at a loss on how to please you.”

“I don’t want to be pleased; I want some serious insight during a serious time!”

Arthur remained silent and stared at her.  He wondered why he found her attractive; especially now.  She had been crying. Her hair looked like she had showered under raw sewage and her clothes smelled.  In her defense, she had just been through a harrowing experience.  Perhaps when this was all done, he would reconsider their engagement.  She could keep the ring.

“You can keep your damned ring, Arthur.”

Arthur started; had she read his mind?

“I know you had to buy the brand-new shiny thing that cost more than I can hawk it for because your family wasn’t about to relinquish a tiny morsel of the family jewels to bedeck a woman like me.”

“Like you, dear?”

“Yes, like me.  The girl who must work, the girl you met in the shop.  The only shining modicum of thankfulness they have about me is that I worked in a leather goods shop and not a pub.  Well, I’ll tell you what Sir Arthur what’s-your-name, I will apply at the first pub I come across if I get out of this mess.  The. First.  And I will live well, and I will save my money for the books I want to read, and I will buy a little cottage and I will join the CATHOLIC church, you bastard!”

She blubbered again and faced the two tunnels; the decision was one or the other.  Arthur felt an unreasonable disgust.  The situation was sobering, but not necessarily hopeless.  Either tunnel would lead back to Ring; one to the cliff side and the other to the cemetery; the family crypt.  But the crypt was the less inviting, and with the recent panic attack that Julie had, he wanted to avoid the moldering old place.   If he had been with Margaret, she wouldn’t have melted into hysterics.  Her rather long straight nose would have lifted as if she could sniff the correct direction and she would have made her recommendation.  If he had been with Margaret, he would have had proper lighting, good sturdy shoes and a methodical map laid out upon the note pad she always had with her.  She was a romantic woman, but a practical one.

“Yes, yes, you pathetic little man. If Margaret were here, no doubt she would have made everything right, but she’s not here.  I suggest you decide.”

“All right, Julie, but only if you stop that infernal sobbing and tell me right now that you will not blame me if the decision is wrong.  I do not want to spend the next hour or two of my life listening to hack and sob all over the old bricks.  There’s enough water down here and dangers of slipping and sliding, I don’t want you adding to; I can’t stomach that.”

Julie stood gaping at him. 

“Well?”

“All right, I promise,” she said, sniffing hard and wiping her eyes as best she could while squaring her shoulders.  Arthur felt no pang of passion but a softening of his heart.  Julie turned from being a besmirched raving woman to a young vulnerable girl despite the muck and the smell. 

“We go left.  You stay behind me and close.  Here, grab onto my belt.  Don’t let go.  If this is wrong, if there is a dead end, we turn about and try the other tunnels.  No more of your running mad.”

Julie’s eyes watered, but she held onto her emotions and nodded. Arthur knew she wanted to defend herself again, to insist that she saw a woman, a woman in white garb just behind him while they wandered the tunnels he knew.  Julie had screamed, turned in terror and fled.  He had no recourse but to follow, and they had lost their way.  His entire family and staff were no doubt out shouting his name; they had been in the tunnels for at least three hours.  The thought of his mother in any distress caused him to grind his teeth in frustration. 

The tunnel was dripping with water, the old stones were soft with mildew, and the squelching noise beneath their feet would probably haunt Arthur’s dreams if he lived to see another night’s rest. 

“I’m… I’m very sorry I panicked.”

“It happens.”

“But I lead you away from that awful woman.”

Arthur turned around, his ire was rising, “Julie, there was no woman.”

Julie gave a violent hiccup, and her eyes were wide with fear. She nodded at Arthur. He stared at her a moment, hesitated, looked at her once more and then continued in silence. After several minutes, he felt the ground beneath him inclined upward.

He knew that below his home was a deep aqua flow.  The flow was the life-giving force of the place and throughout the history of his family, especially during the broad middle ages, the aqua flow gave the inhabitants of the old keep a source of water during sieges of armies and weather.  Tunnels made by hundreds of hands over hundreds of years intersect below the old keep.  What he wanted to avoid more than anything was a dead end, or a collapsed wall. Back tracking in these labyrinths of darkness would only melt Julie into more hysterics.

Yes, the tunnel was taking a definite slant upward.  He had been correct.  This tunnel was one of the oldest, and they used it in the early middle ages to fetch water from a deep well.  His grandfather had made repairs to the old tunnel when he himself was a young man, when Victoria was early on the throne.  He made a silent prayer of thanks for his family’s bizarre bend toward the macabre. His hand then found something hard and sharp-edged.  Jumping despite he hung on to what he found. With trembling fingertip he traced the lines of a cross, then brushing off the years of dust and mud, he traced the lines of a crucifix.  Success, he had been right; it was the old tunnel, and it would soon open to the night air if memory served right.

“We are close, Julie.”  But he was aware, with his words, that she wasn’t behind him.  Not noticing that the grip on his belt had loosened, so consumed with their forward progress, he turned with a jerk and surprise to no one there.  All he saw was blackness.  No, no, this could not be.  He could not allow her the terror of eternal darkness, afraid and alone, but he struggled to turn back and retrace his steps.  Why?  The answer was obvious; it terrified him.

How could he not notice she was no longer behind him?  How could she have tripped or let loose without a sound?  He pulled at the crucifix upon the wall until it inched upon the brick wall and then pulled away.  Without thought Arthur walked back down, tripped, and fell.  Getting up quickly among a tangle of arms and legs, he pushed himself back.  It was Julie and her body was repulsive to him, as if he had stumbled upon the remains of a stranger in the dark.

Taking a deep breath and keeping a firm grip on the old crucifix, he pulled her by her arms with little ceremony back toward the opening of the tunnel.  She was completely dead weight, her head lulled between her arms and her hair caught on the rough floor, causing her face, pale, open-eyed and ghastly, to look up at him in a blank expression.  Finally, out of desperation, he stooped down and wrapped his arms around her waist, allowing her head to rest upon his left shoulder, her forehead wedged upon his jaw.  It was here he sobbed because he could see that her eyes were glassy and that something had savaged her neck. 

“Arthur!”

His sister Estella’s voice.

“Arthur, where are you?”

He said nothing but kept pulling Julie forward, upward toward the door he knew would lead to the outside, to fresh air, to her cottage, her new job at the pub and all the romance novels she cared to read.

“Arthur!  Oh God, Arthur.  Father!  Father, he’s here.  Help us.”

But it was John Seward who first reached them.  He took the young woman from Arthur’s arms, Estella bent over her too. Silence only answered their entreaties. 

She Wanted Me To Have It

I didn’t believe her.  I told her I did, but I didn’t.  She smiled at me in a half-hearted or perhaps a whimsical way and said, ‘thank you.’  She whispered the two words to me and looked away.  Her soft hair, straw colored and wavy, veiled the side of her face in a cascading shade of brilliance as she looked down at her hands.

I felt a surge of male adrenaline.  Here was a woman who just a year ago was one of the up and comings of our group, a bright and shining star.  One trip to Rome and she came back a recluse. Now she sat before me, a damsel in distress or that Victorian lady, even the mad Ophelia.  I once pictured myself (me and several men of our mutual acquaintance), falling in love with her.  She published in the New Yorker before she graduated from college; she contemplated a job at The Washington Post and she just a year ago, all blogs, rags, newspapers and magazines were ready to publish her journalism.  She was a like a dog with a bone when pursuing ‘the truth’ and everybody wanted her.

That was a year ago.  Now this up-and-coming journalist was soliciting help from me in a busy bistro in New York.   From me!  And looking like a girl from a 1940s golden Hollywood film, telling me stories about the supernatural.  Things I used to laugh about in catechism class at age 8.  This is the 21st century.  My Baby-Boomer father would have succumbed to her soft strength, I did not.  I pocketed my anxiety about her, along with my surge of Freudian awareness, paid the bill and walked away.

She was a third generation fallen away Methodist, for Pete’s sake. What was she doing holding onto a crucifix and asking me questions for?  When we were sophomores in college, we were lovers for a brief time and afterward we would laugh at the moralist who would shake their finger at us.  No moralist shook their finger at us, but still it was something to laugh about.

So, I left her there, at the cafe.  I paid the bill and asked if she needed any money.  She shook her head and wouldn’t look at me.  “Thank you, Michael,” she said again.  A bum found her the next day, cold and dead.  The police questioned me and determined that I was the last to see her alive–outside of her murderer.

I did not kill her.

I did not.

I was at a party that night, celebrating my best friend’s engagement to a wonderful woman; strong, long legged, and well put together.  She an attorney and he an up-and-coming doctor.  Neither of them beyond child-bearing years, despite the time it took for them to fall in love between their accomplishments. Does that sound cynical?

I can still see her, living, breathing and frightened, sitting across from my incredulous self.  “Michael, nothing is certain.  Have some faith in me.  I’ve seen hell, please help me.  You’re the only one I know who was religious.  Help me!  What I saw was real. He snapped her like a twig and rose several stories.  He looked right at me while he killed her and smiled.  I know he is here.  I left Rome right away, but he is in New York.”

“I want to help you,” I said, reaching forward squeezing her delicate hands.  I was sincere.  Her hands, warm to my touch but only because they had held the warm paper coffee cup.  She looked frail, suffering.  I told her to stop, to leave it alone, but would she listen to me?  No, she had to know the truth.  What truth?  That such things existed, that the boogeyman was walking about New York, jet setting to Rome and picking his victims at his leisure around the world?  And since when did she worry about crime stories, the money and fame were in social issues, everyone knew that.

She was broke when she died.  It shocked me; I mean, she had money.  Her parents found old stuff in her apartment; rosaries, history books that looked handwritten, stuff that should have been in a museum.   Her parents couldn’t understand why she would have such superstitious things around her.

Don’t think me a total brute, please.  I would have taken her with me the night of the engagement party, fed her, introduced her back into the fold of our mutual friends, even though she looked a walking scarecrow, but she said no.

Anyway, so I’ll talk to this priest who called me and let it all go, get back to my life.  He said he got my number from her.  I will not wreck my life running after things that drive a sane person mad and raving about guys who levitate and break necks.  Demons left the world with leprechauns and the fairy queen, right?  I’ll get this Roman Catholic priest off my back and walk away.  I’ve had it with thinking about it.

Yeah, she made me take the rosary she was carrying.  She said she worried about me being seen with her.  I took it; she wanted me to have it. 

I felt a surge of male adrenaline.  Here was a woman who just a year ago was one of the up and comings of our group, a bright and shining star.  One trip to Rome and she came back a recluse. Now she sat before me, a damsel in distress or that Victorian lady, even the mad Ophelia.  I once pictured myself (me and several men of our mutual acquaintance), falling in love with her.  She published in the New Yorker before she graduated from college; she contemplated a job at The Washington Post and she just a year ago, all blogs, rags, newspapers and magazines were ready to publish her journalism.  She was a like a dog with a bone when pursuing ‘the truth’ and everybody wanted her.

That was a year ago.  Now this up-and-coming journalist was soliciting help from me in a busy bistro in New York.   From me!  And looking like a girl from a 1940s golden Hollywood film, telling me stories about the supernatural.  Things I used to laugh about in catechism class at age 8.  This is the 21st century.  My Baby-Boomer father would have succumbed to her soft strength, I did not.  I pocketed my anxiety about her, along with my surge of Freudian awareness, paid the bill and walked away.

She was a third generation fallen away Methodist, for Pete’s sake. What was she doing holding onto a crucifix and asking me questions for?  When we were sophomores in college, we were lovers for a brief time and afterward we would laugh at the moralist who would shake their finger at us.  No moralist shook their finger at us, but still it was something to laugh about.

So, I left her there, at the cafe.  I paid the bill and asked if she needed any money.  She shook her head and wouldn’t look at me.  “Thank you, Michael,” she said again.  A bum found her the next day, cold and dead.  The police questioned me and determined that I was the last to see her alive–outside of her murderer.

I did not kill her.

I did not.

I was at a party that night, celebrating my best friend’s engagement to a wonderful woman; strong, long legged, and well put together.  She an attorney and he an up-and-coming doctor.  Neither of them beyond child-bearing years, despite the time it took for them to fall in love between their accomplishments. Does that sound cynical?

I can still see her, living, breathing and frightened, sitting across from my incredulous self.  “Michael, nothing is certain.  Have some faith in me.  I’ve seen hell, please help me.  You’re the only one I know who was religious.  Help me!  What I saw was real. He snapped her like a twig and rose several stories.  He looked right at me while he killed her and smiled.  I know he is here.  I left Rome right away, but he is in New York.”

“I want to help you,” I said, reaching forward squeezing her delicate hands.  I was sincere.  Her hands, warm to my touch but only because they had held the warm paper coffee cup.  She looked frail, suffering.  I told her to stop, to leave it alone, but would she listen to me?  No, she had to know the truth.  What truth?  That such things existed, that the boogeyman was walking about New York, jet setting to Rome and picking his victims at his leisure around the world?  And since when did she worry about crime stories, the money and fame were in social issues, everyone knew that.

She was broke when she died.  It shocked me; I mean, she had money.  Her parents found old stuff in her apartment; rosaries, history books that looked handwritten, stuff that should have been in a museum.   Her parents couldn’t understand why she would have such superstitious things around her.

Don’t think me a total brute, please.  I would have taken her with me the night of the engagement party, fed her, introduced her back into the fold of our mutual friends, even though she looked a walking scarecrow, but she said no.

Anyway, so I’ll talk to this priest who called me and let it all go, get back to my life.  He said he got my number from her.  I will not wreck my life running after things that drive a sane person mad and raving about guys who levitate and break necks.  Demons left the world with leprechauns and the fairy queen, right?  I’ll get this Roman Catholic priest off my back and walk away.  I’ve had it with thinking about it.

Yeah, she made me take the rosary she was carrying.  She said she worried about me being seen with her.  I took it; she wanted me to have it.