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Bouquets: A Dinner Story
The man walking home that evening was unaware of all that passed around him. His eyes were glaring at the ground in front of him and his hands were shoved in his pockets as he narrowly avoided walking head on into the path of a horse and carriage. His mind was flitting angrily around a series of deaths that had occurred over the last year - and over his suspicions that they were not natural or accidents. the only flaw was that he had no proof, no suspect, no motive connecting these deaths. All he had were coincidences, lost items, and a niggling fear in the back of his mind - hardly enough to open an investigation that would reopen closed cases and consume much money and time. No, it was easier for everyone else to just let it go - to accept the tidy conclusion - and leave it at that.
Mentally, he reviewed his list of connections between the deaths as he walked. There had been ten deaths so far, in as many months; and all had been well to do bachelor men living alone without help or neighbors - or the neighbors were out of town at the times of death. A week before their deaths, all had found different items that were commonly owned by women and had opened ads in the paper to find the owner. However, none of the items had been found in the houses; and the ads had never been answered. The other similarity between the ten was where they died. All died in the dining room with leftover food from dinner - which consisted of quail, a salad, bread, honey and red wine - still on the table. The men were all killed early on the weekend and not found until Monday, along with a bouquet of nightshade and oleander on their chair.
He scowled fiercely as he thought and laid out the connections - how could no one else see this? Glancing up from the ground, his stormy expression lifted as he saw his home and realized his walk was done. Opening the door, he entered the foyer and hung his coat and hat up. Walking to the end of the hall, he saw his wife step out of the dining room. He breathed her name, and her face lit up with a smile.
"John! You're home!"
He stepped forward and wrapped her in a hug. "Yes, and I've been given some time off, so I'll be home for the entire weekend."
She pulled back a little bit. "Really? That's wonderful!" She exclaimed when he nodded. "And how was your day?"
He sighed. "Stressful. There was another death today too..."
"The deaths with the nightshade bouquets?"
"Yes." he answered curtly, before shaking his head and changing the subject. " But enough of my job - I'm sure it's nothing you'd be interested in. How was you're own day?"
She blushed. "I made you dinner tonight after I gave the cooks and maids some time off..."
He laughed at her discomfort, and a smile brightened her face as she joined in. "I'm sure it will taste even better. And do I get to eat it now?" he asked hopefully, a teasing glint still in his eye.
"Of course you do! As if I'd deny my honest, loving, hardworking husband his evening meal!" She shooed him towards his chair. "You just sit there while I get it out."
He sat down and relaxed as she efficiently set his food before him. In a few minutes, she sat down as well, and they began to eat. He ate his salad first and listened as she talked incessantly of the newest style in jacket or train and shared with him the best gossip, knowing her chatter would calm him. Soon, his salad and quail were done; and he leaned back into his chair, content and sated.
As he began to relax, and drift in sleep, her conversation began to change from gossip to poisons, and from fashion to murder.
Drowsy, he slumped in his chair, wondering why it was so imperative he find out why the alarm in his head was ringing so insistently. After several minutes, he finally registered where his wife's conversation had wandered too, and what she was saying, and he lifted his head to stare at her in confusion.
When she saw him look up at her, she grinned and clapped her hands. "Ah! And you see me!" Assuming a look of wide-eyes innocence, she asked, "Are you alright? You look almost as if you've eaten poison..."
He blinked and tried to focus his attention on her as she laughed. His stomach cramped and the alarm in his head began screaming at him.
"Oh dear, it seems my food did not agree with you! What an unforeseen disappointment..."
Glancing across the remains of their dinner at his mocking wife, the alarm in his head finally began to register - too late.
"You...you..."
"Yes? Me?" She got up from her seat and sidled down the table towards him.
"Why..."
"Why?" She giggled, a cheerful sound if not for the darkness in her eyes. "Because it's fun! Does a girl always have to have a reason?"
"There's...always...a reason." he gasped.
She pouted and picked up the wine glass. "You're not any fun, Johnnie... Here." She placed the cup at his lips. "This will make you feel better - I promise."
He opened his mouth to drink, knowing wine would help ease the painful cramps in his muscles. When it was almost gone, she took it back and set it on the table, carrying on a one-sided, rambling conversation while he began choking.
"I'll miss you, you know - I really will." She wiped a tear away from the corner of her eye. "Everyone else was a stranger - just practice. You were the exam, the challenge." She grinned. " If I could fool you, I could fool the world. And don't you worry either." She gently patted his hand. "I'm not even thought to be here. I'll come home from my vacation on Monday and find your body lying here and -oh! How the new widow shall mourn her precious, loving husband. Because you were, you know - you were precious and living, and I almost wish this wasn't necessary. In the next few months, more men will die, and - after reading of the events in the papers - the widow's mind will break, and she will take a pilgrimage away form England's fair shores to stay with her dearest sister in France." She sighed, but the dancing smile in her eyes belied her. "And so, I shall be reborn and free, and the widow shall fade away with your memory. I'll miss you most terribly..."
She watched with an almost curious look on her face as he slid bonelessly to the floor from his seat. Taking the remaining wine, she threw it to the ground beside him and dropped the glass. Leaving the room for a few seconds, she returned carrying a bouquet of nightshade and oleander which she lay on his chair. Kneeling down beside him, she gazed into his dying eyes and whispered, "Good-bye, John."
_________________ "Lords of the Mountains, come down from your heights. Come down to the valleys beneath diamond nights."
"Maids of the Valleys, we come from our heights To dance in your forests beneath the sky's lights."
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