Page 17 of Never After


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“But you’re coming back?”

The smile grew faintly bewildered. “Of course, Micha, if you wish it.”

“What do my wishes have to do with it? You show up anyway.”

Thomas gave him a long, steady look. “You know you may stay here as long as you need.”

“And then what?”

“That’s up to you.”

“That’s not good enough.”

“What would be good enough?” Thomas spread his hands in a gesture of invitation. “What do you want from me, Micha? You refuse my help when I offer it, but I can see you’re worried about your future. You need not fear I would abandon you.”

“But you don’t know who I am.”

“Perhaps one day you will tell me. Perhaps not. I fail to see its relevance.”

“What if I am not worthy of your help? I could be a criminal.”

“And are you?”

Micha flinched from Thomas’s eyes. “I ...”

“It’s not my place to judge you.”

“No, but you will.”

Thomas only shook his head, leaving Micha to a tangle of unformed thoughts and restless slumber.

104

His wife stares into my eyes as he readies himself. Between them, I shiver in my nakedness. And when I turn my head away she puts a cold, gloved finger beneath my chin and holds me there. Her gaze slips past me to her husband. Her lips form a red crescent.

I feel something sour and unfamiliar. I think it might be envy. For I know this twisted, ugly thing is love, as true as any I once believed in.

Use him, she murmurs. Use him as a woman. Make him bleed. I wish to hear him scream.

The laudanum was done. Micha had knocked back the last of it two days ago. Which meant he was completely and utterly fucked.He tossed the empty glass aside and stared blankly at the far wall of the bedchamber. While he was not particularly enjoying his lengthy sojourn in one room, it was infinitely preferable to the alternative, which, as far as he could tell, was dying in a gutter. Though it had now reached the point that dying in a gutter might be his only remaining option. He ran through his extensive repertoire of obscenity but it brought him only scant relief.

Regret, he knew, was a fool’s game. Still, his feelings were awkward and conflicted. It did not please him to admit it, but this had been the closest thing to peace he had known for quite some time. He lived what was left of his life at the extremes of experience: the utter, sordid misery of selling his body and the wild, artificial ecstasies of opium. And, before that, he had known only the banality of his middle-class existence and then the dizzying joy of Isidore’s love. Here, life was simply quiet. Micha had been bored, resentful of his dependence, tormented by his reactions to Thomas and the driving need to keep his kindness at bay but, somehow, he had not been unhappy.

It had taken him a long time to recognise it. The strange, calm state of being not unhappy. Like a man expecting to drown, discovering he could float.

And now it was over.

It was time to move on before his truths caught up with him.

He pushed back the bedcovers, horrified at how much effort it took just to move the sheets around. Then he got out of bed. Then he fell over. Then he swore for a while.

Sweating and panting, he wrapped an arm about one of the bedposts and dragged himself first to his knees and finally back to his feet. He stood there, swaying, while the room lurched around him as moorless as a drunkard looking for somewhere to vomit. Micha closed his eyes and dug his fingernails into the wood until the world stopped spinning and he could breathe again.

On the other side of the room, out of sight of the bed, was a freestanding mirror in a wrought iron frame. Doggedly, step by step, pausingfrequently to rest and even more frequently to curse, Micha pulled himself towards it.

The stranger who watched his halting progress with dull black eyes was not a pretty sight. Micha touched disbelieving fingertips to the glass. And the figure within did likewise. He put a hand on his hip, took a swaggering pose. Fuck, there were cadavers with more game. He shrugged the nightshirt off his shoulders and let it slip slowly down his body. His chest was a grotesque patchwork of bony ridges and sallow skin, and he hastily covered himself up. He was not vain, for vanity required some shadow of pride, but he was accustomed to having—or rather being—something other people wanted. Right now, he couldn’t imagine anyone wanting him. Even if he was the one who paid.

He turned away from the mirror. He didn’t enjoy looking at himself at the best of times. It was like staring into a well, at his own corpse, blurry through deep water. He sometimes imagined he didn’t have skin at all. That he was just a paper man, hollow and heartless, upon whom other men left a muddle of rough handprints.