Wednesday, July 9, 2025

White Rabbit Story - July 2025

 Dead Yet

 

He supposes he should call someone to tell them that she’s dead.

That would be the proper thing to do. The right thing. The normal thing.

He doesn’t know why he didn’t think of it before, when he first found her lying on the kitchen floor, except that it could have been the shock.

                Yeah. The shock. That’s what he’ll tell them when, eventually, he does call.

                But not yet.

                He glances at her again. She’s sitting upright in the armchair they bought from an antique shop that’s been closed for years now. The bookshelves behind her look as if there are shadows clumped against the spines of the old books she collected. Her grey hair looks wispy, like webbing. Her eyes are cloudy. Her skin looks grey, like dirty sheets.

                Why did she have to die first? He’s ten years older than her; it should have been him. That’s what they’d both expected: that he would go first, and she would cope on her own. It had never entered his mind that it might be him doing the coping. Or not. Because he wasn’t. Coping, that is. Oh, no, he wasn’t.

                Coping would have been calling an ambulance, or the police, to tell them that she was dead.

                He puts down his laptop, stands and walks slowly towards her, one hand out, the other held by his side. He stops and stares at the top of her head. Doesn’t touch her. Can’t do that.

                Idly, he reads a few of the titles from the bookshelf in his immediate eyeline: Dark Grimoire, On Speaking with the Dead, A miscellany of Witches… so different from the books he owns, the ones he never lets her see – the ones he can only get from specialist dealers on the Dark Web.

                “What am I supposed to do on my own?”

                She can’t answer. He knows that. At least now she’ll never find out about those books, and the USB drives, and the external hard drive he keeps locked up in his study.

                He glances behind him, at the laptop on the little table beside the sofa.

                “I can’t do this.”

                He kneels in front of her, his face level with hers, and looks for signs of life – the life that has left her, the life that once was but will never be again.

                “I know you never loved me. I never loved you. But we were okay together, keeping each other company. Isn’t that better than some kind of romantic myth? Being together…protecting each other. Keeping secrets that nobody else would understand.”

                She turns her head. The movement is jerky; a marionette on loose strings.

                “I can’t do this,” he says again.

                Her mouth twitches into a weird smile, baring her teeth. Her eyes go dark. Black. The wig slips as she begins to stand, exposing the blotched, scabby skull beneath. She raises her hands, clutching at the air above her head. Her slipper-clad feet whisper on the carpet.

                She’s miming something, as if she were playing a game of charades. A book…it looks like she’s opening a book.

                Does she know?

                Has she seen his private library after all?

                She starts to move her fingers in a way that suggests typing, as if she’s working on an invisible keyboard.

                He looks again at the laptop, then brings his gaze back to her.

                When he blinks, she is no longer there. It was all some kind of hallucination, a mad vision brought about by stress. Awkwardly, he stands and turns around, walks across the room towards the kitchen. A cup of tea, that’s what he needs. Weak and sweet. Just like the subjects of the photos in the books and film clips he enjoys so much.

                She’s lying on the kitchen floor. Her hands twisted into claws. Her wig tilted at an obscene angle. Her mouth is open, showing brown-stained teeth. Her eyes are as black as the liquorice sweets he always buys her for Christmases and birthdays. Clutched in her hands, and pressed tightly against her chest, is a dusty old book whose title he cannot make out.

                Is the book hers, or is it one of his?

                His vision begins to blur. His throat is dry. He can smell something old and foul and deathless on the air.

                She pushes herself upwards, bending at the waist. Sitting motionless on the lino and still clutching the book to her old, saggy chest.

                What is this?

                Some kind of hallucination…a vision brought on by stress…

                Or perhaps a premonition…

                “Now,” she growls, her voice the sound of rocks grinding together. “Where were we?”

 

© Gary McMahon

 

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