Sunlight punched Rienford through the skull. He sat up in the shower, freezing water pouring over him, curtain and door wide open. He had no memory of getting in, but at least he wasn’t covered in vomit anymore. At least his water hadn’t been shut off yet. It was the smallest of things that got him through the day. Give it time, though…
One shaky hand seized the handle and turned until the flow ceased. He stepped out, trying not to glance at his reflection before exiting the bathroom. He failed. Just like everything else, he failed.
The hair on his head and face were greying, long, and out of control. His cheeks were hollow and corpse-like. His green eyes were dull, devoid of life, bugged out from his disintegrating face. If he stared at his reflection, his pupils narrowed until there was almost nothing but iris. Tiny planets in an expanse of angry red electrical storms.
He thought about brushing his teeth before giving in to another booze binge, but the dead bug on his toothbrush changed his mind. Instead, he grasped the cold plastic and chucked both brush and bug out of the bathroom door and into the living room. It joined the clutter of papers and vomit that littered the once shiny wooden floors.
With a sigh, he gave his reflection another once over, too exhausted to put forth the effort necessary to clean himself up more than the ice-cold shower already accomplished. Maybe that carcass was a blessing in disguise. In the past, he’d at least crack a smile at such absurd optimism, but his face was stone set. Timothy Rienford didn’t smile. Not anymore.
He shambled to the living room, searching for something he swore calmed his nerves but really made him more on edge than ever before. Remnants of powder dusted the coffee table, not enough to give him the extra push to true relaxation, absolute nirvana, or at least that’s what he thought, at least it was what he believed. It wasn’t enough to make his head buzz in what he swore was empty clarity, but it was enough to smear into the grime of his forefinger and rub along the inside of his mouth. He couldn’t taste it. He felt like he should be able to, but he guessed that after everything his tongue had been through it was numb to the flavor.
If there was such a thing as spirits, he hoped Tish’s would hang out in the bedroom with her remains. It was the only spot in the house free of clutter and piss and booze and drugs. A shrine. He imagined her as an angel waiting patiently for him to join her in eternity. She would look just the same as she was before the world crumbled.
It was easy to remember her that way while he was awake. Beautiful, smooth, dark skin. Hair sleek and shiny from clockwork beauty shop appointments. Her left eye was just a little bigger than her right. But you’d never notice it. Not unless you’d spent years looking into them for hours at a time. Tish hated it when he stared at her like that. At least, she said she hated it, but she wore a sly smile whenever she brought it up. Timothy never knew if she was joking or not. Now he never would.
Thinking on Tish was a blessing.
Most of the time.
In his dreams, his nightmares, she was only a fragment of the way he remembered her by. Her teeth and nails were long and jagged. She’d chase him through his old office, back when he still had an office to go to, the halls and rooms a maze with dead ends and no exit. She was shrouded in darkness, hiding in shadows, somehow always a few steps ahead of him. Everything sharp gleamed in the dim light, but he preferred the lighting that way. He couldn’t see her face in the dark.
Oh God, her face.
Half the skull crushed in from impact. Patches of hair missing as if she’d ripped them out herself in all her misery. The skin of her lower jaw was torn away, exposing tendons and bone. Cubes of glass hung in what remained of her matted, dirty hair like glitter. Her eyes bulged, one dramatically bigger than the other now, and when he gazed into them, he couldn’t decide if she looked more angry or afraid. Dear God, it was probably a little bit of both.
“God,” he whispered. He’d never been much of a praying man, but…
Desperate times called for desperate measures. Or maybe it wasn’t desperation at all. Something that tasted more sour than bittersweet. Guilt. There was the word.
“I want to come home.”
If there was a heaven, Tish would be in it.
Rienford looked at the back of his hands on the grungy coffee table. His veins bubbled up to the surface, begging him to make the first cut, to really come home, to seal his fate once and for all. But no. He didn’t know if he was a coward or if he feared punishment in the afterlife, but for him, it wasn’t an option. Death from accidental alcohol poisoning wasn’t completely out of the picture. Nor an overdose of a bad batch of nose candy. Nor accidentally slipping and cracking his skull open. Accidentally stepping into the street without looking first for the shiny new supercharged car pushing the rev to red. Accidents were God’s will, but he couldn’t explain away intentionally cutting his life short, literally.
If he killed himself, where would he go?
If they hadn’t fought before her death, would he care?
He had no memory of walking or crawling to the bathroom, but he lifted his right hand all the same, making a fist, drawing it back, ready to kiss the mirror with knuckles and brute force. Inches away, he stopped himself. Why? Why bother? Instead of busting the glass, Timothy Rienford screamed. He screamed until he ran out of air, and then he screamed again. He kept on until his throat was raw and his voice was gone.

Spent, he got on his hands and knees and crawled the short distance from bathroom to bedroom. He stopped at the nightstand to marvel once more at the cream-colored urn. How could such a big personality fit in a pot so small? That body he caressed during heated moments went on and on for an eternity. There was no way it could be reduced to an area no wider than the palms of his hands, no hither than the length of his forearm. After all this time, it still didn’t seem real. His trembling finger traced an engraved curl lovingly. His sobs felt natural.
Time ceased to have meaning for a little while. The tears cut through the dirt on his face; he could feel them drying. He sat with his weary head in his hands and let his mind calm, staying that way for several minutes. At last, he looked up at the cobwebbed ceiling and spoke to someone he wasn’t certain could hear him, if they were even there.
“God, please.” Another wave of emotion threatened to take hold, but he swallowed it back. “Give me the strength to—”
A thump at the door.
Absentmindedly, Timothy reached for the dirty towel on the floor next to him and wrapped it around his waist. He wasn’t sure what exactly he was asking for strength for in the first place. To live? To die? The distraction was welcome.
Unless…
What if it was her? Not Rebecca: she stopped coming by months ago. Not Abbigale: she cut him off the year before. Not Tish, of course, because she was in the bedroom. But…her. What if she was finally coming back to finish him off in the worst way possible?
He had wanted to kill himself just a little while earlier. Now, death didn’t seem all that appealing. Not if he was going to be eaten alive by some shadow creature from hell. Rienford stayed rooted to the spot long enough for his fear to lessen to a dull tremor. If it was her, she would have busted the door in by now and taken him away. She would have slid through the gap between the jamb, her bony fingers hooked like claws so as to better rip his throat apart. The imagery sped up his heart rate but calmed his nerves. Of course it wasn’t her. If it was, he’d be dead already.
Be it her or not, he was slow to open the front door. Paranoia kept his hand on the knob even as he took a cautious step over the threshold. It was raining outside. He could have sworn it was daylight just minutes ago. He must have stood inside waiting for longer than he thought. That, or his head was so hazy from the bingeing (and, more importantly, crashing) over the past…how many days had it been? He supposed it didn’t matter.
Rienford took another hesitant step forward, only to jerk back when the bottom of his foot touched something that was not the porch he had built several years earlier. He dashed back inside and slammed the door behind him, cowering by the sofa, certain now that she was here, that the silence after the thump had just been a clever ploy to lure him outside. Death was toying with him. Any minute now, she’d come through the door and attack.
But he wouldn’t go down without a fight. No sir.
Rienford took hold of the closest thing on his left. He was armed, and he’d show that bitch a thing or two about coming into his home.
God, what he would give to have bump right now. Then he’d have just the edge he needed to take her on. He could overpower her before she opened the gateway to hell. Hell, even if she did, maybe if he had double the dose, he could take on the demon she summoned, too. Then he could tell Abbigale all about it and she’d be his friend again.
“Screw this shit, man.”
Waiting around for her to make the first move was bullshit. Why, she probably wanted him to cower in there for an eternity until he was nice and scared, then her demon pet could barge in and swallow him whole. The only way for him to come out ahead is if he charged her before she saw it coming. Then he could find his dealer and have a victory bump. Or he could call in a favor at the liquor store for some free booze. Some of those lowlifes owed him.
But he was getting sidetracked.
Rienford jumped up from the floor and charged the door full speed, fumbled with the knob again, and then dashed to the porch, bringing his weapon down as hard as he could on the monster on the ground. Again and again he beat it, ignoring the cool rain on his buttocks and thighs, not noticing the towel had come unraveled before he made it past the threshold.
When he looked down to see if any life was left in the demon, he stopped mid-hit. There wasn’t a demon on his porch, but a newspaper. He was beating a newspaper to death with an old shoe. A cold pocket of air rushed passed him, making him all too aware of his nudity. Luckily for the weather, no one else was outside to take notice, but even if they did, he doubted they’d be surprised by it. In fact, they probably would have been waiting for this exact moment. Just another thing for them to point their collective finger at and laugh about both behind his back and to his face.
He didn’t step inside to grab the towel again for them, but for him. He was going through a rough patch these last few months, and he’d make it through it, and by God, he still had his dignity. He grabbed the paper he almost beat to death gingerly, almost as if it would shed its skin and come to life if he touched it wrong. Turning heel to go back in for the night, he hesitated. Newspapers littered the porch, all wrapped in cheap plastic. When was the last time he brought the paper in? For the life of him, he couldn’t remember.
Something told him to pick the papers up. All of them. Right now. He needed to set them up in his house. Let them dry.
Timothy Rienford was looking for a sign. God delivered.








