The Missing Bride – a mystery by Alysse Aallyn

“I’m a vegetarian,” I said.

And pushed my plate away.

“A vegetarian who eats turtles?”

He challenged me.

 “I was trying to be polite.”

And now I’d stopped. 

Saw no reason to continue the game.

“Americans think food fuss

Makes them interesting,”

He snarled. But it turned out

His disgust was not for me.

“Oh, imagine that,”

snorted his Lordship scornfully, 

Talking to his phone.

“We’re on our own,

Mirabel can’t make it.

And now her phone is locked!

We’ll see about that! 

I’m ordering the car. Time to find out just what

This bride is playing at.”

Chapter 5 – Unavoidably Detained

She must have known he’d come

After her – the apartment was empty.

Of course she wasn’t there.

Furniture gazed at me

Forlornly as I wandered through

Expensive accommodations crying out

For individuality and life. 

The closets were still packed but

Some of her clothes and luggage

Could have been gone

How would I know?

The bathrooms were still littered with cosmetics –

Everything replaceable.

In the long, bare white kitchen I 

Started a pot of coffee.

The refrigerator was particularly sad: champagne, 

A month’s supply of celery juice. 

And three kinds of wedding cake in origami boxes.

Mirabel must have returned – however briefly –

Because someone drank the last of my wine.

Her dress lay discarded on the floor

One flounce torn 

And stepped on,

Ground beneath a fleeing heel.

When the coffee was ready

I sampled the cake –

I pick lemon though

Everyone likes coconut and

Some people are partial to 

Chocolate raspberry.

Found Verne collapsed in the bedroom,

Clutching Mirabel’s dress.

“I didn’t believe she’d really do it,”

He said. “I suppose the wedding’s off.” 

“Maybe she had an errand,”

I proposed stupidly. 

“She’ll be back.”

I bundled the fantasy garment

Back into its slick bag; a glittering

Promise too fragile to stand up to actual wear.

“Don’t you see what’s happened?”

demanded Verne,

Trying to recruit me on his case

“She doesn’t want to marry me. She

Probably she never did. All along

There’s been this game. Some another man;

I know it. Using me as leverage.”

Was this the double life he’d mentioned?

Crazy stuff. No way could he get me to sorrow

Over postponed parties; 

I saw plenty of reasons not to marry Lord Verne

And in case I was likely to forget, he demonstrated more.

He sat on the bed and

Reached out his arms, clearly thinking 

I would pet his shoulders

Or at the very least, kiss his hair

But chose not to comfort him.

I preferred to get some facts.

“Who?” I demanded. Sadly,

Both of them were bad at facts.

He held his head.

“There were so many.”

I came up with my most 

Comforting message;

“Of course she’ll return.

“Or why on earth invite me here?”

But a terrible possibility began to niggle in my brain.

He certainly was suspicious of her

So probably watched her

Like a hawk. What if the whole wedding – 

And my presence – was only to allow escape?

It was so thoughtless and cruel I knew nobody I dared

Explain it to; but it also sounded just like her;

The Mirabel who pretended to go to college, 

To have diseases,

To be in jail; All to wrest

Advantage from the poor old folks. 

What would she care about me?

Verne turned to me a tear-stained face –

I was amazed – and just

As I was thinking he couldn’t be a rapist –

Grabbed my shoulders and

Sucked me into a kiss.

The real “adult” kiss I’d pined for

Fantasized about and mimed

On all those lonely nights

After Ricky Stoekels ghosted me

Couldn’t be THIS one –

A full body penetration –

A probing grasping invasion

Shutting off my air.

I jerked away with so much force

I landed on the floor.

Verne threw himself 

On the bed, face down

Wracked with sobs

While I wiped my face

Stunned.

“Love the one you’re with”

Isn’t that what Ricky Stoekels says?

“She cheats, you cheat?”

I hope all men aren’t

All bastards.

“Forgive me,” shuddered Verne,

“I’m out of my mind.

I don’t know what I’m doing.”

Maybe. I recognize excuses.

I’ve used them.

“Don’t do it again,” I said. 

He said, “You’re so like her”

Which was an insult at this point.

I could stomp away, go home –

Explain to a mother trying desperately

To make it all my fault

Or I could find out about my sister’s life.

“Where would she go?

You must have some

Guy in mind?”

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