The Note, Part 2

I thought it would be safe to take a bath.  I got home at 5:56 just like usual, made dinner, enjoyed it in front of the tv with a glass of wine, and went for a soak.

I don’t usually fall asleep in the tub. Tonight was strange. It was the phone that woke me up.

Of course I remembered the note from yesterday. Of course I was tempted to rush out naked to answer it. But something told me I shouldn’t, even though my bath water had gone cold anyway.

I found it when I went back to my bedroom.

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“Who the hell are you?” I asked the empty room.

The time on my alarm clock was 10:03. The note was written at 10 on the dot. I put the note down and went back to the bathroom to get my clothes. When I came back to the bedroom, the note was gone.

Start from the beginning: The Note

The Note

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The note was weird, but I thought, okay, so I just wouldn’t take a bath last night. And yet it kept me awake all night. The date matched the day I found it, so I assumed the time was correct as well. But if someone had written it at 9:43 am, and I left home at 8:17am to go to work, how had the note ended up on my fridge before I got home at 5:56pm? I live alone.

When I got up this morning I looked for the note, where I had left it on the kitchen table. The note was gone. Nowhere to be found.

I assume it will be safe to take a bath tonight.

Late Autumn

How crisp is this day? When the leaves rustle like castanets in the hands of a child, chilled to the bone from playing outside too long; and the green grass is tipped with glittering white specks of frozen dew.

Ah, the joy of coming winter. The sun sets before our sup and refuses to rise in the morning, appearing in the east slowly, like a stubborn teenager.

Christmas is but a bargain away, All Hallows Eve a pile of wrappers hidden under the sofa cushion.

And the days are crisp, the nights desirous of a fireplace.

Ice Queen

The Ice Queen sat upon her throne and twiddled her thumbs. Her silver rings clicked together – the spectators could hear them in the back row, so quiet was it.

“You call that a performance?” she asked the man in the hat, who had just kissed a woman in a trenchcoat?

“I…I’m…” he stuttered.

“SILENCE!” She breathed through her nose. Someone in the back row coughed and with a flick of her wrist, off came the spectator’s head.

“Come here.” She curled a finger at the actor.

He staggered forward, the fear in his eyes all but thrummed.

“Kiss me,” the Ice Queen whispered. She puckered her lips.

The actor leaned forward… and vomited his dinner into the Ice Queen’s lap.

The Ice Queen screamed and the guards murdered the audience. Every last one of them. Only the Ice Queen, the actors and the guards were left standing.

She stood from her throne. She decreed that there should be a new audience.

The performance would be repeated the next night, as it had been every night for a year.

Tomorrow, perhaps the actor would get it right.

Everything Descends

On the final evening of their honeymoon, they sat side by side on the beach and watched as the darkening ocean consumed the sun.

“Everything has a purpose,” she said, resting her head against her new husband’s shoulder.

“Yes,” he whispered. He placed his hand on the tight mound below her breasts.

His son.

Keeping Up

“So, Jones,” said the boss as he seated himself behind his desk. “What do you do for fun when you’re alone?”

“Well, sir, I enjoy fishing…”

“No Jones, I mean when you’re alone.”

“Um… well, I sometimes go down into my basement…”

“Yes,” the boss said eagerly.

“…and work on my train set. It’s a 1:160 scale…”

“Jones?” the boss interrupted.

“Yes, sir?”

The boss leaned across the desk, close enough so Jones could see the pores in the man’s nose. They were deep and dark.

“What I want to know,” he wiped his brow, “is what you do for fun when you’re really alone. I mean, completely and utterly alone. Can you share that with me, Jones?”

“Well sir,” Jones blushed, “it’s rather personal. That’s why I do it when I’m alone.”

The boss sat back in his chair, clasped his hands across the expanse of his belly, and twiddled his thumbs. He smiled like a man satisfied that he was about to receive precisely what he wanted.

“I, um…” Jones swallowed. “I like to, um… dress up in my wife’s clothes, sir.”

A grin spread across the boss’s face, lifting his jowls and creasing his eyes. It wasn’t a malicious smile, nor was it meant to mock. It was merely a smile.

Jones relaxed a little.

“Jones, I have something for you.”

“You do?”

The boss reached under his desk and Jones expected him to come out with a gift bag, perhaps with a nice pair of heels or a frilly dress. Instead, a small device rested in the palm of the boss’s hand that looked like a tiny silver doughnut.

Jones leaned forward to have a closer look. “What’s this, sir?”

“It’s a listening device.”

“And what would you like me to do with it?”

“I would like you to break into Kramer’s house and plant it in his bedroom.”

Jones studied the boss’s face. He didn’t look like he was joking.

“Why should I do that, sir?”

“Well you see, Jones,” the boss placed the item on the desk and sat back again, “this is the very listening device we retrieved from your house this morning. I need it put into the next employee’s house to help us determine what he is doing when he is alone. The next one on the list, alphabetically is Kramer.”

“But… why?”

The boss leaned his elbows on his desk and regarded Jones seriously. “We’ve heard rumours, Jones.” He lowered his voice. “I can’t have you telling anyone this. Can I trust you, Jones?”

“Of course, sir.”

“All right. We have reports that say someone in the organization,” he whispered, “has been masturbating.”

Jones’s bottom jaw dropped. “You’re joking!”

The boss shook his head, as grim as night.

“I don’t need to tell you what that means for our company, do I Jones?”

“Of course not, sir!

“Harry Palmer Sterile Products would never be seen the same again!”

The Apple, The Tree

“I told you not to put it off.”

“I know.”

“And now look where you are.”

“Yeah, I know.”

“You could have arrived home on time…”

“I know.”

“And safe…”

“I know Dad!”

“But here you are with me in the hospital.”

“Hmph.”

“Wait, I know my tire flew off on the highway and I crashed because I didn’t take it to the mechanic on time, but why are you here again Dad?”

“I broke my pelvis.”

“Your pelvis? How?”

“Dad?”

“You remember that step your mother asked me to fix three weeks ago?”

A Secret

Let me tell you a secret. It’s a naughty secret, a nasty secret. It will chill you to your bones.

Let me whisper it softly in your ear. Come on, you can’t resist. Can you?

Now remember, this is an important secret. If you tell, it will change the world as we know it. Yes. It’s that important.

And trust me, only you will know.

I have faith in you, my friend, to keep this secret to yourself, forever more.

Are you ready?

Are you sure?

The tooth fairy is Santa Claus in drag.

Drop

daff

I always think of you, when I stand among the daffodils. The way their heavy heads bob on the breeze reminds me of when you agreed with me that one time. Do you remember?

I think we were driving to Niagara Falls. It was the first really warm day and the humidity was rising out of the ground from the rainfall we’d had earlier that morning. I remember that little detail, because, as I got into the car I stepped in a puddle and soaked my left sock… or was it the right one? No matter.

Anyway, we were on the QEW, approaching Burlington and the sun was coming up. It shone in the rearview mirror and just about blinded me and I said, “It looks like it’s going to be a nice day.”

That was when you nodded, and I thought of the daffodils.

And then we hit the patch of oil on the bridge. It was a long drop.

I miss you, mostly because it ended so perfectly.

Boxes

I spend all my time stepping over boxes. I’m always on the move. Packing and packing some more, stepping over boxes to get to other boxes – organizing what goes in here and which part goes in there.

The ones with the heads leak a lot.

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