It begins with me, being a complete asshole as always. Why
she ever agreed to marry me, is beyond my understanding. Thinking about it now,
all the reasons I fell in love with her, were exactly the same reasons I
started taking her for granted. She was just too nice, you know what I mean? There was no challenge in her: in my marriage, in my life, and I blamed her for
it all.
It wasn’t long before I hated the way she ate; the way she
slept, the way she looked at me when I was being a complete arse, and the way
she never stood up to me. It was all her fault, it had to be. Who could blame
me for spending my nights getting drunk in the scum-filled bars of town, hoping
to get a knee-trembler from some gin soaked skank at the end of the night,
before stumbling back to my miserable life, and I did, you know, more than once.
That’s when it happened. I did what I always did, I opened
my big bloody mouth when I should have stayed dumb. He looked normal, nice
even. He listened to me whinging most to of the night, while our glasses went
from full to empty, to full again. I’m not sure when he asked me the question,
but I sure remember the answer, “God damn right, I wish she was gone.” He
looked so normal.
He left me there, drinking, talking shit, and trying to get
lucky. I was so drunk by the time I got home, I didn’t even notice if she were in
the bed, or not, I just passed out. When I woke, strong mid-day sun was streaming
through the window. I looked over and the bed was empty, I tried to rub the
pain from my head and the dust from my mouth, but that was a permanent fixture
of my life of late. Instead, I slept. When I woke again, the light was weaker,
and the house was silent.
I didn’t worry at first, I just enjoyed the silence. When
night fell and the front door was open, I began to worry. Her car was in the
drive and all her clothes were in the wardrobe. Inside me, something was
struggling to raise its head from the drunken swamp that was my life. By the
next day, I had to call the police. Her phone was on the bedside table, her
wallet was in the kitchen, that was when I remembered him, the normal guy.
The questions came in the thousands, the answers were all
the same, “I don’t know.” Days went by, weeks, TV cameras gathered, and I
stayed hidden. I wondered how he had done it; I wondered if it had been quick,
or if he had taken his share before it was time. Most of all, I wondered if they
would blame me for it all. That was when it happened.
She appeared before me like a spectre, her face white with
rage, the normal guy standing by her shoulder.
“You’re alive!” I yelled standing with my arms outstretched
to hold her. The steel flashed through he air like a spark, I nearly didn’t
feel the sting of it, bite into my wrist. My hand fell to the table with a wet
thud, blood spat into the air from the stump I still held aloft. She looked
at me with nothing but hatred, the samurai sword trembling in her grip, her lip
quivering with emotion.
“You bastard,” she said, lifting my lifeless hand from the
table, feeding my blood soaked finger into her mouth, before sucking greedily. She yanked
my dead flesh from her mouth, and dropped it on the table before me. She spat a
ring of gold into her palm, and said, “This is mine.”
They ran hand in hand from the house, giggling like high
teenagers. She ran into the night, clutching something shiny, damn her to hell.
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