On Unfaithful Wings (3 page)

Read On Unfaithful Wings Online

Authors: Bruce Blake

BOOK: On Unfaithful Wings
6.12Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

But maybe it was a chance to see my son again.

I walked toward the curtain, reached out my hand to push it aside, but my fingers passed through like it wasn’t there. Like I wasn’t there.

Every bed in the ER was full. Some of the curtains were pulled closed, like mine had been, others were open. A man sat on one holding a blood-soaked compress on his arm. In another, a white-haired woman reclined with her eyes closed and her breath fogging the clear plastic oxygen mask covering her nose and mouth; a curious gray halo surrounded her head, like a dirty outline on the pillowcase. In a third bed, a feverish boy a year or two short of puberty glanced around the room with nervous eyes; his mother stood at the side of his bed, brushing hair from his sweaty forehead.

I stopped and watched them for a moment, my chest aching for them as I remembered Trevor at age two, fever raging, his dry lips quivering as he muttered about the hallucinations the high fever caused. I’d never been so scared in my life.

Before the sight of them made me cry, I moved on.

I passed through the ER without garnering a look from anyone and exited through an open door into the over-crowded waiting room. People sat on uncomfortable chairs doing their best to avoid eye contact with everyone else in the room. A TV mounted high in one corner showed a talking head with no voice--a news anchor talking about tonight’s top story. I wondered if it might be me.

I turned to leave, to wander out into the spring storm, a spirit in search of his son, when a familiar figure caught my attention.

Sister Mary-Therese.

She stood off to one side, Dr. Overbite standing in front of her with my blood on the front of his scrubs. From across the room, I couldn’t hear what he was saying, but the sister’s reaction told me all I needed to know.

The doctor put his hand on her shoulder and her expression sagged. Her head dropped forward and her hands came up to cover her face. Dr. Overbite spoke again, but this time I could clearly read his lips:


I’m sorry.”

He stood with her a moment longer, then guided her to one of the uncomfortable chairs and excused himself. She sat leaning forward with her elbows on her knees. Her shoulders rose and fell with her sobs and, each time they did, an unseen hand squeezed tighter around my lungs.

I took a step toward the sister--the person in my life closest to a mother. I wanted to comfort her, to tell her everything would be all right, because I suddenly wished it was. Most of all, I wanted to apologize to her for losing touch over the years, for failing her after she put so much into making sure I survived the choices I made in life.

The light in the room brightened. The white walls became glaring, other colors faded and washed-out until my world seemed buried deep inside a drift of the purest snow. I shielded my eyes until the light became a bearable white nothingness.

“Sister,” I called, but the word died at my lips.

I saw her outline still, a shape burned on my retinas by the light, and rushed forward, hoping to reach her. I thought my fingers brushed the wool of her sweater, then it was gone.

And I was alone.

I paced a circle, searched the big empty, my feet touching something and nothing, but there was only me left wondering once more if this could be real. Maybe I still lay on the church lawn, rain pelting my bleeding body. Maybe no one found me and this was my brain making things tolerable for my body.

Then I saw the door.

One second it wasn’t there, then it was. With no point of comparison, it was impossible to distinguish whether it was very small or a long way off. I took three steps and found neither to be the case as those few strides brought me immediately before it. It might have been a door in any house or apartment--off-white, plain, its surface broken only by the knob--but the sight of it calmed me, brought a smile to my face.

I guess this is what they mean about being on death’s doorstep.

I chuckled soundlessly. The door swung open and I stared through it to the same white nothing on the other side, pondering what to do.

If I was dead, I was meant to go through. If this wasn’t real, what did I have to lose?

I stepped across the threshold.

 

Chapter Two

 

I woke to an unfamiliar room which looked like no hospital room I’d ever seen: mass-produced dresser, bed, chair like you might find sitting behind a teacher’s desk, and a table supporting a huge old microwave--the kind that buzzed and moaned as it heated your TV dinner, leaking enough radiation to shrivel your balls to raisins in the process. A door leading to a darkened bathroom stood ajar while a second closed door presumably led to a corridor lined with many similar doors. A hotel room, one of the places where people did their business by the hour. The itchy wool bedspread tucked under my chin confirmed its wouldn’t make the cut for a Lonely Planet Travel Guide.

I stopped and took quick stock of myself. Physically, everything seemed fine: ten fingers, ten toes, arms, legs, head, all the essentials in the proper places. And no pain. I looked up again.

It was all a dream.

It had to have been, because I clearly wasn’t dead. Then a second thought occurred to me:
Where the fuck am I?

Somehow, the man sitting on a wooden chair in the corner had escaped my notice during my first inspection of the room.

And who the fuck is he?

His meticulously brushed hair fell to his shoulders in a style last popular when Kool and the Gang and roller skates ruled. The lamp on the dresser beside him cast a shadow across his face, hiding his features. He didn’t look up from the book in his lap.

So it had all been my imagination: the hospital, the doctors, the blood. But what about the men in the churchyard? Did I imagine them, too? None of it explained how I got here. I ground my teeth, bewildered, then looked back at the blond man still engrossed in his book and shivered a little. I cleared my throat; might as well find out what the hell’s going on.

“Ah, you’re awake.”

He leaned forward on the edge of the chair and I swear his eyes glowed. Not in the way of a poem, or a poorly written romance novel, but for a fraction of a second, it looked like they actually cast light. I fought an urge to crawl away.

The man laid his book on the dresser at his elbow, careful not to lose his page. “How do you feel?”

I looked at him, puzzled. “Dead?”

“Sort of.” A look of bemusement tugged the corner of his mouth. His flawless features reminded me of an artist’s rendering of a fairy tale Prince Charming.

“Where the fuck am I? Who are you?”

“You may call me Michael, Icarus.”

I raised an eyebrow; who but teachers use the word ‘may’?

“Call me Ric.”

“Where we are is of no consequence. The why is most important.”

“Don’t get ahead of me here, Mikey.” I pushed myself to a sitting position, making the wobbly headboard bang against the wall--part of the charm of rooms rented hourly. No pain as I shifted, but the memory of a knife blade piercing my flesh made me flinch.

It wasn’t real.

If my visitor noticed, he must have found it amusing because his grin remained intact. I wanted to slap it off.

“You have questions,” Mike said.

He dragged the chair to the side of the bed and sat again. The white dress shirt he wore open at the throat looked like he’d put it on straight out of the package and his dark red slacks dated from the same era as his hairstyle. The aroma of cinnamon and cloves wafted from him, like fresh-baked pumpkin pie. My stomach growled.

“What do you remember?”

“Trevor’s birthday. I missed it.” I looked into the beautiful man’s eyes--not blue or brown or green like eyes are supposed to be, but yellow, like a cat’s. Golden. The light I saw before flickered far in the back of them, almost unnoticeable; I wanted to look away, but couldn’t. “What happened to me?”

“Do you remember the two men in the churchyard? The wounds they inflicted led to the death of your earthly body.”

How does he know that?

I raised an eyebrow and gestured around the room. “And this is...?”

“A hotel room on east 38th.” He chuckled, a sound that made happiness bubble inside me, but I pushed it aside in favor of confusion and doubt, two sentiments which seemed more appropriate given my current situation.

“So you’re telling me I’m dead.”

He nodded.

“And staying in a shitty hotel.”

No response, only the grin.

The memory of the two men--their faces hidden, rain dripping from the edge of their hoods--was too real. It had happened. This, however, couldn’t possibly be reality--my mind was concocting it.

Play along, see what happens.

“I thought souls went to Heaven or Hell when the body died.”

“No you didn’t. You’re an unbeliever. You thought you disappeared into oblivion, that death was the end of everything.”

Touché.

“Poor choice of words. Religion says Heaven or Hell. If I’m dead, I may have been wrong about the oblivion thing.”

A bead of sweat rolled down my temple and I wiped it away on my bare forearm. I hadn’t noticed how warm it was in the room. A knot formed in my belly, equal parts dread and excitement. Maybe it wasn’t the best choice to skip confession all those times. Every time, really.

“You were mistaken. But, as you can see, this is clearly neither Heaven nor Hell. It is a hotel room. We needed somewhere to store you while you recovered.”

“So what? Purgatory?”

“There is no such place.”

I felt the puzzled look on my face again. Or maybe it never left. “Why did you say ‘sort of’ when I said I was dead?”

“Because you died, but you are no longer dead, Icarus.”

“Ric.” Butterflies beat delicate wings against the lining of my gut. “Why wouldn’t I be dead? Who the hell are you?”

“Tut, tut.”‘ He waggled his index finger at me. “Hell has nothing to do with me.”

“Fine.”
Answer the damn question
. “So who are you?”

He leaned forward, eyes flickering noticeably, dispelling all doubt about the light dwelling within. “As I said, my name is Michael.”

If my life--or death, or dream, whichever--was a movie, a heavenly choir would have burst into hymn in the background, indicating the dawn of realization.

“Michael?
The
Michael? The archangel?”

He leaned back, folded his arms across his chest. “Archangel is a term coined by men. It does have a nice ring, though, does it not?”

“So, you’re telling me you’re an angel.” I watched him through narrowed eyes.

He nodded.

This must be someone’s idea of a joke. In a few minutes he’d reveal a hidden camera behind the curtains or inside the microwave. Well, if I was being punk’d, I’d play along. I could take a joke.

“If you’re an angel, where are your wings?”

“Angels don’t have wings. Or halos.”

“Every statue and painting, every depiction of angels show wings. The ornaments on my Christmas tree have wings.” I hadn’t put up a Christmas tree since Rae kicked me out. I missed Christmas--the commercial version, not the religious one. I missed having a family at Christmas.

“They’re wrong.”

“All of them?”

“Every last one.”

“Well, that’s a pretty big muck up, isn’t it?”

Thanks to Father Dominic, I didn’t believe anything they taught in Sunday school, but you still get pictures in your head, like Santa dressed in red fur. If someone proved to you he was not only real, but wore black, it’d shake you. Like every kid, I’d believed in Santa, and I guess part of me wanted to believe in angels, maybe in God, too, but not believing was my way of punishing the priest for the treatment I received at his hand. The same part of me wanted to believe this man’s words held a shred of truth, but I couldn’t. Far more likely one or the other of us had lost the ability to connect the dots and form a recognizable picture.

Mikey’s face turned serious. “We need you, Icarus.”

“Ric.”

“We have a position open for which you are the ideal candidate.”

The puzzled look again. “You’re offering me a job?”

“You might call it that.”

“Doing what?”

A brief pause as he chose his words.

“Shepherding souls of the dead to Heaven.”

I laughed. It was apparent whose picnic basket was light a few snacks.

“Enough. Joke’s over. Where’s the camera?” I scanned the room again looking for wires or the telltale glint of a lens. “Who are you really? Is this some kind of drug thing? A hallucination?”

He looked at me without speaking.

“I’m outta here,” I said.

I threw the blankets aside and climbed out of bed, heading for the door in spite of my nakedness. It’d be difficult to explain wandering the streets in my birthday suit, but stopping to look for my clothes would drain the moment of its drama.

Other books

Interfictions by Delia Sherman
She's Gone: A Novel by Emmens, Joye
How to Be a Grown-up by Emma McLaughlin
The Missing Madonna by Sister Carol Anne O’Marie
The Queene's Cure by Karen Harper
Unforgiven by Calhoun, Anne
The Dancer Upstairs by Nicholas Shakespeare
Tiare in Bloom by Célestine Vaite