I’m in Annabel Lee’s garden when sun abandons the sky. It’s
taken me a month to distill the right flowers: a poppy pod, some valerian, a bit of passion
flower. Nothing as obvious as deadly
nightshade. I don’t want to die; I merely want to slip into purgatory for a few
hours.
The small angel that marks Annabel’s memorial glimmers in
the fading light, and the moonflowers unfurl their fragrant bells to welcome
the darkness. I’ve no reason to be impatient now that I’ve made sure everything
will go my way.
Annabel designed this garden to come alive at night, and it
does. The frogs begin singing. The
nighthawks swoop to capture whining mosquitoes. The weeping willow rubs its
branches melodically. The moonlight spreads out like silk on the pond, and a
thousand white flowers glow along the water’s edges.
Sitting in Annabel’s dark heaven, I smile as I sip from my
vial. Just enough to ease my way. I know
I’m not welcome where I am going.
Annabel is not watching for me when she enters her garden.
She’s running her hands along the flowers, searching for anything that needs
her tending. She checks the pond for debris, then drifts over to pluck a dead
branch from the holly. She’s focused on her little world, utterly unconcerned
about me and my suffering.
“Annabel,” I whisper, and she ignores me. “Annabel,” I say
louder. She stoops closer to her flowers, and I suspect she is smiling slightly
as she runs her thumb over the petals. I stand and step closer. “Annabel,” I
say in my warning voice. She stands and starts to move away. She thinks I’m
powerless and weak. She thinks she can leave me.
“Annabel, you will pay attention to me,” I say firmly. I emerge
from my dreams and grab her arms to turn her toward me. Her dismay at my power is as it should be.
She is so stunned she tries to pry herself free, something she had not done for
years before her death. “Annabel,” I say
in my kindest, sternest tone, “you should not have tried to leave me. That is
not allowed.” Her years of training do their work; she shifts her gaze to me
and says woodenly but without resistance, “Yes, dear husband. What do you
want?”
Now she knows there is no parting from me.