The Missing Bride – a mystery by Alysse Aallyn

We were silent in the elevator.

Feeling naked

I clutched the fur I’d borrowed 

Summoning up the nerve for

Questions but

Mirabel’s mood seemed depressed.

Encumbered, perhaps?

With me? With Verne?

With family – obligation –

Tradition – without her help

I couldn’t map it out.

 “When did he propose?”

My query’s girlish gaucheness echoed

Off the shiny doors

That bent our reflected beauty so

Unflatteringly we seemed 

Haunted.

“It’s not when he proposed,” she said

“It’s when I accepted. He

Proposed the first night I met him –

Five years ago.

Said he’d marry me

If I’d change from blonde to red.’”

Wow. I didn’t know what to say

To that except

Why was he never in her pictures?

What shame could there be? 

“Was it a secret?”

“He hates the press – it

Treats him so unfairly in his own country –

And he wants me to himself. I was so unready – 

Seeing other people,

Savoring my options.”

We nodded at the doorman

And the driver of 

The waiting limo –

“He slowly won me over.

He was so suave, so

International. Adoring.”

She let me climb in first,

Then backed away as if she’d seen a ghost.

“I forgot something. Tell Verne I’ll be along.”

The car swept away, leaving Mirabel 

Huddled alone, by the curb in her mink coat.

Chapter 4 – Cocktailing

Had I been played?

It’s what you do to children.

I couldn’t shuck the memory of

My own mother through the years –

Lofty & deceitful –

Briskly turning “road trip” turned into

“Summer camp” and “one night” 

Into seven. 

I hated being “managed”, but really

Who could blame Mirabel?

Quoting Mom: “Guests must

Be adaptable, obliging – a guest has

No one to blame but herself

For her bad treatment.”

Was it something I’d said? Or

Something I’d done?

Or simply one more humiliation as

Baby sister. Why did she keep throwing me

Alone together with this man?

Did I want to get to know him?

I wanted to get to know HER.

The driver helped me out of the car

And I saw his frank expression.

Another stunner. It was

Admiration. I looked too good. I

Was too tall.  Had I insulted the bride

By overreaching?

I blame the heels – when

I towered over her –

She must have hated it.

She’d gone back to reposition – 

To pivot, as they say,

While Verne sat in comfort at the bar.

He rose at the sight of me and once again

I saw that face. Tribute

To my manufactured beauty and yet

I saw the calculation – was he 

Managing me too?

Naturally, he’d have to be –

They had a goal of some kind

Inviting me here –

Weaseling their way back into the

Famiglia, the family that gave up on them

For whatever purpose.

He seemed satisfied that

I was alone –

The arm that contained me 

Was decidedly un-brotherly:

Squiring me away from his 

Desultory conversation –

He didn’t bother to introduce me. 

He enjoyed them seeing he was meeting

Some strange woman.

“Let’s get you dinner.”

Anything better than a bar

That looked me over as if 

I was some Russian call girl.

As we turned I was confronted

By the mirrors: I looked like

Some Russian call girl.

Can I blame champagne, allowing

Mirabel to paint me up?

Or the society that wants –

Expects me to look this way.

None of this is my fault.

I said in my best-guest manner,

“Should we wait for Mirabel?”

He demurred.

“Waiting for Mirabel’s never a good idea.

Putting yourself out only encourages her.”

He snuck an angry glance at his phone

As the headwaiter flashing menus

Manhandled us

 Towards a darkened booth.

Perhaps this engagement was far too long –

Were they tired of each other already?

“Turtle soup’s very good here,”

Said Verne: I longed to claim

To be a vegan but also yearned

To sample everything.

Sucked my water greedily

As a martini-bearing waiter 

Assessed me so attentively. 

“A Virgin Mary?”

Verne seemed startled but

The more knowledgeable waiter sped away.

“Without the vodka.”

He seemed relieved.

“Something Mirabel said let me

 Feared you were religious.”

It was too complex to enlighten him.

Famiglia’s religious but

I’m free choice. I’ve yet

To make up my mind about

A lot of things. Switched it up.

“What kind of ceremony will you have?”

He seemed stunned as if I’d proposed

Barbarian rites, then vague.

“Some judge. A ballroom.”

Shrugged his shoulders.

“Mirabel says you proposed

First night you met.”

He laughed sharply.

“I was young and stupid.”

Well THAT was tough to follow up.

Could both be afflicted with

Cold feet? But Verne could

Switch it up as well.

 “I recognize the signs,” he said.

“What signs are those?”

Struggling to regain my footing.

“Mirabel can be very shattering, can’t she?”

I shrugged, dismissed 

Disloyalty, opting for

Vagueness.  As he did.

“Life comes at us so fast.”

“I tried to free her from the life,” said Verne.

“I don’t believe she’ll really let me.”

Which life was that?

This was depressing – my parents hoping

For good news, find a bride and groom stuck

In mutual complaining.

 “Mirabel proposed to me.”

He said coldly. “It’s the title.

They all do that. 

She was no virgin when I met her.”

I was stung on her behalf – who wants his

Moth-eaten old royalty?

And what cretin expects 

Virgins among New York models?

“She said she accepted

The proposal you’d made long ago.

And you said yes!”

My Virgin Mary was 

Too spicy to be truly virginal.  I

Almost choked.

Sipping slowly to wonder

If I liked it.  Doesn’t hot sauce 

Wreck your palate?

As the waiter manifested a fresh martini, 

I assessed Verne’s subtle desire

To put me in the “wrong”.

Lack of breeding?

Was my hair not red enough?

Too bad for him –

I am well used to disapproval.

 “Mirabel said you like red hair,”

I teased him.

“I wanted her natural color –

Yours, I assume?”

Who could say?

My memory was of long ago.

“I think people should make themselves,”

I defended, arguing

Too fiercely.

Soup arrived, bread slathered with 

Mozzarella, pesto & tomato. Mini-pizzas!

I sighed ecstatically and felt from him 

An answering thaw.

“When you inherit an ancient world,”

He pontificated, “you learn to value the past.”

“So you have a castle?”

I asked through my full mouth.

Turtle soup OK. Too much sherry for my taste

Or was that stuff curry?

Are turtles seafood?  Just like my sister

I got a bored “I do.”

He checked his phone.

“It’s a bit of a ruin with tourists crawling

Everywhere. Mirabel doesn’t care for it.”

Phone again. Was Mirabel texting?

I studied mine to be

Companionable. My folks again.

Always, with the questions.

“She’s not answering,” he sighed.

We’re not as attractive as

Her double life.”

This gave me a jolt.

“She has a double life?”

“Probably triplicate by now.”

He snorted.

I tried my father’s ploy.

Get ‘em talking.

“Why don’t you just tell me about it?”

Comments

Leave a comment