About
"Would you like to dance?" she asked me. I died that night. It was cold, winter, but though the outside cold never touched us, the inside cold eclipsed the warmth of the fire blazing on her terrace, growing outward to meet the chill of the season on its own terms. We danced, my hand on the small of her back, yet she led me nonetheless. The music came from... somewhere. Strings. A piano. That was all. I never saw the players, though I heard their tune. It was a strange piece to dance to: a dirge, almost a requiem. The wind moved the curtains. We danced and she moved in close, as if to kiss my neck. It was not a kiss, however, but the sweetest damnation. She took my life, then, and I felt the vitality ebb from my throat in a crimson bloom. And then she gave it back.
The city spread out beneath us, its lights twinkling like the flames of a thousand faraway candles.
"One night," she said, "all of this below us will be yours. "For now, though, would you like to dance?"
And I heard the strings and piano.
Journal
Musings
you probably really don't care anyways
Signature
Vincent Kain,
The Lord of Fate
Comments
Viewing 10 of 20 comments.