Authors: Sarah Mussi
I straightened my shoulders. You can do this, Serafina, I told myself.
All a-tremble I turned to Marcus. My heart beating wildly, my throat like I'd swallowed the entire Sinai desert. I pursed my lips, tried a smile, let shimmering glory glow around me. âYuk', that was so angelly. Got rid of the shimmering glory.
It was so scary
. I glanced at the clock. If I carried on dithering there'd be no time left.
This was it.
âAwake, dear one,' I breathed. I stood over him. I blew two fiery kisses, one for each closed eyelid. He stirred. He turned. He opened his eyes. He stretched his arms.
âOuch,' he said.
I smiled my most radiant smile to date. It was hotter than a thousand suns; starlight danced in my eyes, roses bloomed on my lips.
He coughed. He coughed and coughed. He carried on coughing. At last he muttered, âOh Hell.'
It seemed a strange greeting. I stopped, bewildered. I'd never tried to have a relationship with a human being before.
His arms were still outstretched. Unable to restrain myself I closed my eyes, and leaned forward. I felt his heart beating; felt his bodily reality
so near
, felt
my
heart pounding,
my
pulse racing. And as he closed his arms around me (well, closed his arms. Not exactly around me, because I'm not of the same ether), I imagined the fierce touch of his skin. I imagined the way he'd tighten and tighten his embrace, his muscles crushing me to him.
I opened my eyes and looked up into his.
His face was grey and strained.
âMarcus?' I whispered.
He closed his eyes.
I waited. When he opened his eyes again and reached for a tumbler of water, I waved a tiny fingery wave in front of his face. âMarcus?'
He ignored me.
I frowned, puzzled. I tried again: the kisses, the smile; I skipped the imagined hello hug and the Heavenly crushing and made the finger wave much more haughty, an angelic summoning.
He missed my smile.
He didn't notice the angelic command.
He was oblivious to everything.
My heart stopped. I grew cold all over. Something had changed.
Marcus couldn't see me.
I took a step back. Confused. I didn't get it. The night before last, he'd seen me. He'd winked at me, for Heaven's sake. It'd been a sign. I knew it had. It was one of the reasons I'd broken all the Rules for him.
Our destinies were entwined.
They had to be.
I flumped down on the chair. Now what was I going to do? Why couldn't he see me any more? There must be a reason.
I tried to remember everything I'd ever learned at Early Years Angel Academy in the junior section of the Cloisters, but honestly that was aeons ago, and I couldn't remember much. I'd probably been too busy passing notes or worrying about getting on the swim team (not easy for us fiery angels). Though now I came to think of it, I did sort of vaguely remember something about angels appearing in their true glory to humans at near-death moments.
I made my mind go back, until I actually remembered the textbook. It'd been written by one of the visiting apostles who'd made the study of angels his afterlife's work. I recalled the actual page: 70.
101 Curious Facts About Angels
75. Angels appear in their true glory to humans at near-death moments.
76. Angels appear in their true glory during the actual instant of Passing Over.
77. Angels appear in their true glory at their own demise.
78. Angels appear in their true glory at their own volition through a process called
apparitioning
.
That was it!
That's why he'd seen me.
It hadn't been an omen or anything extra-ordinary or destined. Just the same old near-death stuff. My shoulders slumped. I felt very small and very miserable and very stupid.
You see, I had to talk to him, and short of taking him to the point of death again, there was obviously only one other way to do it. I sighed. My shoulders sank even lower. My feathers drooped. I was going to have to break
more
rules. I was going to have to apparition.
Apparitioning, except on Heavenly business and on express commission from the Senior Team, is forbidden. Plus it's risky. It means stepping into semi-human form with all its frailties. You're really vulnerable when you do that. What if a bus hit you? Imagine the problems that'd cause for the Senior Team.
But as I contemplated it, I saw its advantages too. A real body, well, very
nearly
real. One realm closer. What
would
it feel like? A hand I could hold Marcus's with, sort of â even if it felt a bit funny. And the fact that I'd had always secretly wanted to do it.
But there was no getting round it being forbidden. I'd have to take all the responsibility for doing it myself. But I had Free Will, didn't I? And my intentions were pure. And actually I didn't care what the Senior Team thought. Marcus had seen me. It
had
been an omen. We
were
destined to be together. And I was going to save his soul even if I had to break the Rules to do it.
So I did it.
I apparitioned, right there and then, right in front of Marcus. Like I said, I'd never actually done it before, so that's why it was a bit sudden and clumsy. Probably next time I might want to do it more slowly, with fade in and out effects, rather than atomic-bomb style. But I wanted to hang on to the amazing smile with the stardust in my eyes impression â and it was kind of tricky.
I guess I was pretty âawesome'. (Although I was a bit disappointed with the texture of the body. It didn't feel quite right. It still didn't have that âtotally human feel' I'd expected.)
But I did it, and I was proud of myself. I looked eagerly at Marcus to see his reaction.
Oops.
His face had blanched. He'd gone completely grey beneath his skin. He closed his eyes and clutched his chest. Perhaps I'd overdone the sparkling aspect. A nearby monitor started bleeping very worryingly. I crossed the room and looked at it â tried to turn it off â couldn't work it out â so I raised my hand and said a quick Our Father over it. That shut it up.
The bleeping stopped. I looked again at Marcus. He squeezed his eyes. The look on his face was peculiar, almost as if he were in pain. (You know, I really should have practised a bit first.) He closed his mouth and twisted his lips. His breath grew shallow (I think he was blaspheming). He spread his arms forward and got hold of the steel supports on either side of the bed.
âHello?' I said.
âHel-lo,' he gasped back.
âDid I overdo it?' I asked, a bit worried.
He shook his head. I think he didn't want to upset me. He tried to smile. He looked at the bottle of pills beside his bed. He looked up at the drip going into his arm. He looked at the machine that had stopped bleeping. He looked at me.
â
Are you for real?
' he croaked.
I laughed. He looked so cute. âOf course,' I said.
He blinked. âLike really?'
âWould you like me to prove it?' I asked.
He just stared at me, eyes round as saucers.
âI can do a twirl,' I said. âJust watch this.'
âA twirl?' he whispered.
âExactly,' I said. And then I twirled. It was the best twirl I'd ever done. I was faster than the mightiest maelstrom ever. All the machines in the room started beeping and I swear even the walls rattled.
I looked at Marcus to see what he thought. He looked like he was about to choke, maybe cough again. Then suddenly he kind of snorted. Finally he
laughed.
Well, coughed and laughed. He wiped his eyes on his hospital gown, dabbed blood off his lips and sighed like he'd understood something. (There was nothing actually that funny.) âWhat do you do for an encore?' he said.
He'd laughed. I'd just apparitioned in all my glory, in defiance of Heaven, to save him. I'd done my best-ever twirl and he'd laughed. A blaze of hot indignation swept over me. I think I quite forgot myself.
He wanted me to prove myself? OK, he could have the full works. With a flash of my eyes thunder rolled in the distance. A sheet of ice crusted over the window. Flames leapt from the palms of my hands. I unfurled my wings (all six). I beat the air and made ready to sound trumpets.
Marcus struggled into a sitting position.
At once I saw the pain he was in. His flawless lips were driven quite pallid with the effort. His brow knitted up and tiny beads of sweat broke out along it. An understanding seemed to register in his eyes. â
You really ARE real?
' he stammered.
He looked about ready to pass out.
â
It's really you?
You're back?
'
Instantly I stopped all the theatrics. I crossed to his bedside and laid a hand on his.
âI thought it was the morphine,' he said.
I let the Balm of Paradise flow through my fingers, and the Stars of Heaven shine in my smile. His brow relaxed, his breathing became less laboured. I relaxed too â for touching him sent the oddest sensation into me, as if I'd been the one in pain â and by touching him my aching had been healed.
âHave you come to take me?' he said, a curious vulnerability in his voice.
I stood there, dazed, beside him. So strange, this touching. And yet I wasn't truly corporeal at all.
I shook my head gently.
âOK,' he said. He clutched at his chest in a fresh spasm of pain. âSorry, I didn't rate the twirling. I thought I was seeing things.'
âOh,' I said.
âIt
was
a bit showy, though,' he whispered. âYou didn't need to try that hard â you've already got the advantage.' He closed his eyes and laid his head back on the pillow.
I kept my hand on his, marvelling at the feeling it gave me.
âSo?' He feebly tried to smile up at me.
âI've come to save your soul,' I said, getting straight to the point. (I was quite proud of myself for that.)
âYou've come to save my soul?' he repeated.
Right, this was it. âYes,' I said. âYour soul's in danger.'
Marcus struggled up a bit and raised his hand in a stop sign. âPlease,' he whispered. âMan knows you saved me â and I owe you â and man's really grateful. But Angel â it's just not that easy.'
Well, I wasn't giving up. I drew in a deep breath. âI know what you said.' I smiled in what I hoped was an encouraging way. âAnd I think it took great courage to say it â and the reasons you gave were honourable.' I must make every word count, however pompous I sounded.
âAnd it was your very honesty and integrity, how you said,
your heart had to be in it;
how you averred you
couldn't lie â not about something like that
â that persuaded me to keep on trying.' I kept my voice steady. âBut I believe once you fully understand the peril you're in, you'll think differently and change your mind.'
There was a silence.
Finally Marcus spoke. âThe trouble is,' he said, âif you repent you have to make a change, don't you?'
âDefinitely,' I said. âIt means you can make a fresh start and live in a new way without sin.'
âThat's the problem.'
âYou don't wish to change your sinful ways?' I said, alarmed. âEven though you may lose your soul to the fires of Hell?'
âEven if I wanted to, I can't,' said Marcus sadly. There was a very final note in his voice.
I was astonished. How was that? Surely that was the whole point of Free Will. He could choose to change â
especially
if he wanted to.
âYou don't understand,' he said. âOther people depend on me. If I don't bring in the Ps the mortgage won't get paid, Jasmine won't go to college, my nan won't get her care-home costs met . . .' He tried to give me a What-the-Hell smile. âAnd that's just the simple end of it.'
I opened my mouth to speak. I closed it again.
âOnce you're in,' he said, âI mean in a gang, you can't just leave.' He coughed.
This was a new complication. Nobody ever told me about being
trapped
in a life of crime . . .
âIt's all about the money, Angel,' he said.
Instantly I knew I was out of my depth. Money is not something we deal with in Heaven. I'd have to think about this. No wonder it was called the Root of all Evil.
Marcus must have seen my face fall for he tried to smile again and said, âBut if you want me to give it a go, don't let man put you off. I could try.'
I would not be put off. I'd go for an entirely different tack â an angle I felt much more confident in. âSurely you desire salvation?' I started. Didn't everyone?
Marcus rallied a little, as if he liked a good discussion. âForget salvation,' he said. âLife's for living, not creeping around afraid of your own shadow, or thinking about what comes after.'
I looked at him startled â stunned even. Forget salvation?
âBut aren't you afraid of death?' I asked. This was possibly my strongest argument.
âNo,' he said. âWhat's the point? Why waste time on it?' He tried a smile. âLife's too short.'
âBut isn't that the point?' I said. If life was too short, then death was to be feared.
âFear's dumb â who wants to live a boring life?'
I could hardly believe my ears. Was he teasing me? âThen what of demons?' I cried. I'd have him there.
Marcus laughed at that â or tried to. His laugh became another coughing fit. âDemons?' He opened his eyes, a little bit of colour returned to his cheek. âYou really haven't got a clue, have you?'
I thought of their oily presence, their foul smell. I was on home territory. I did have a clue. I knew a lot about demons.
âYou know something?' Marcus reached for a tissue and wiped more blood off his lips. âI think when they learn what I can do, demons might actually be afraid of me.'