Read Her Mad Hatter Online

Authors: Marie Hall

Her Mad Hatter (16 page)

Why couldn’t he have come home with her? She sucked in a breath, body shaking. She’d said she would say good-bye and go anywhere. She’d be happy, so long as they were together, it didn’t matter where. Here. Earth. Anywhere.

The tears came harder, fatter, and hotter. She could hardly breathe out of her nose. Blue light shimmered in front of her and then she stood face to face with the door.

Alice looked around. The Ferris wheel was gone; the woodshop was gone. She stood in the middle of an empty field.

Heart miserable, she reached out and took hold of the knob. Her foot stood poised above the threshold as the memory of his words to her in the hospital room crowded her mind.

“Everything has beauty,” she said, “but not everyone sees it.” Her stomach hurt, her eyes burned. “I saw you, Hatter.” Her words whispered through the night. “I saw you.”

She walked away.

 

***

 

Hatter stood behind the shadow of a tree and watched her walk away; taking the last shreds of his heart with her. She’d lied. Just like the others. Told him she loved him, but she hadn’t. Because Wonderland would have said yes. She’d been perfect. So perfect, his tiny Alice with her piercing eyes and wicked mouth. He trembled, remembering her touch, her tongue.

“I saw you too, Alice.” His words carried like a whisper on the breeze. Wonderland shuddered, the wind sang with a choir of a thousand bells and the ground swayed.

Hatter gripped the tree and horror blanketed his mind. Wonderland said yes, not because of her words, but because of his.

 

 

 

 

 

Chapter 12

 

Alice was gone and his heart bled crimson. Hatter grabbed his temples. She’d not lied when she’d said she loved him. Wonderland accepted her, wanted her. And she’d left them both.

Because of him. He’d not told her the truth, why he couldn’t go with her. Why he could never leave. She’d thought he’d rejected her. He should have told her the truth.

“Damn me,” he pounded his fist on his chair. The sky outside the window rolled with thunder, black clouds bloated with rain drenched the lands. She’d left and it was all his fault.

Frogs dropped from the sky by the thousands, their dying croaks lingering in his ear like a macabre lullaby.

All his fault.

Dueling rams knocked horns, their strikes raged with the sound of thunder. His house shook, but Hatter wouldn’t move. He’d stay and watch as Wonderland ripped herself apart. 

He swallowed the bile in his throat.

He should never have kissed her. Touched those soft pink lips, tasted the dew between her thighs. Heat spiraled down his legs, made him weak in the knees and stirred his blood. Gods she’d smelled so good.

Like salt and caramel. His mouth watered, wishing he could taste it again, sink into the mindless oblivion of her beauty.

He was the Mad Hatter; he should have known he could never have a happy ending. He’d never allow it.

“Insane. Stupid. Insane.” He muttered. “And the raven, never flitting, still is sitting on the pallid bust of Pallas just above my chamber door; And his eyes have all the seeming of a demon that is dreaming, and the lamp-light o’er him streaming throws his shadow on the floor; And my soul from out that shadow that lies floating on the floor Shall be lifted nevermore...”

“Hatter.” A golden ball of light materialized before him, the humming flit of wings became an irritating buzz. He swatted at her.

“Damn you,” he snarled, eyeing Danika. “Why did you bring her?”

Her blue eyes grew wide and sparkled with tears. “Oh, Hatter.” She grabbed her chest. “What can I do? I cannot bring another Alice, she’s been found and Wonderland...”

Hatter pounded his fist. Black birds dropped like cannon against his roof, landing in front of his window with unblinking eyes. “I don’t want another! I want her. I want my Alice. My AlicemyAlicemyAlice.”

He grabbed his head, it hurt. It hurt to think of her, he closed his eyes and she was there, but when he opened them she was gone. Gone, gone, gone, and he was lost.

Come to me my, Hatter.
The words tore through his skull. He dropped to his knees, heart thundering. “Alice!” he screamed.
Come to me my, love. Come to me,tometometome…

“Alice!” Hatter cried. He heard her— she called to him. Wanted him. Needed him, just like before. But there was only blackness, no white clouds, blackness and beeping and his heart tore into a thousand fragments of fear because he tasted her sickness, the bitter nip of cancer spread inside and through his head. “Alice?” he screamed again, but the faint voice did not return.

“I cannot go to her. I cannot find her. Lost to me. Should have told her. Should have said why... She’ll never know...” He rocked, grabbing his chest and moaning loud. Why had he sent her away? Stupid Hatter. Stupid. A dark void swirled in his vision; thoughts crowded his brain sucking him down into a bog of nonsense. He couldn’t go to her. Couldn’t find her.

Danika shook him. “Look at me, Hatter. Tell her what?”

He shook his head. Thoughts scattering, rolling, mucking him up. Sweat beaded on his forehead as he squeezed the last lucid memory from his mind. “Love her. Alice is dying. My Alice. My Alice. Get her, Danika. Please…”

Then the voices crowded him, a million talk talking sounds and he stopped fighting. Too hard to remember, too easy to forget.

“Prophet! said I, ‘thing of evil!’ – prophet still, if bird or devil! – Whether tempter sent, or whether tempest tossed thee here ashore...” Hatter never tore his eyes from the storm, his nails bled from scratching at the wood of his armrest as the madness of his mind consumed him.

 

 

 

 

 

Chapter 13

 

All Alice wanted was her room and her bed. She wanted to lay down and never move, never have to remember or think about the man who’d stolen her heart. Again. She almost crawled up the last flight of stairs, shaking the knob with weary hands. It was locked.

She frowned and patted her body. She was wearing the cami and shorts she’d worn the first night. No purse, which meant no keys and no cell phone. And it was late.

She didn’t want anyone to see her like this, her face all puffy from crying. Tabby had told her once she was an ugly crier. It was true. Her nose always got cherry red at the tip and her eyes would turn puffy and purple.

Exhausted, annoyed, she kicked the door and then headed back down. She’d walk to the shop. Maybe Tabby was still there.

She grabbed her head. It was throbbing again. Somehow, and she couldn’t even remember doing it, she walked the three blocks to her storefront. Waikiki was dark, with few stragglers around. It had to be well past midnight, but things didn’t slow down until at least two or three in the morning.

“Dammit!” She sobbed, the tears started back up again. Last thing she wanted was to be locked out all night. She wanted to sleep, to forget him, to forget that. To forget it all.

In frustration, she yanked on the door and yelped when it gave way, nearly causing her to fall down as she stumbled through.

“Alice!” Tabby’s cry was unmistakable and filled with panic.

“Tabby?” she looked around the dark room, and finally saw a small movement slip away from shadow.

Then arms were crushing her and she was crying loud. “I knew it, I knew you’d come back here. Alice, where the hell have you been?”

Tabby clung to her so hard she could barely breathe. Wanting to kick herself all sorts of stupid, only just realizing she’d been gone three days. They’d all probably been sick with worry.

“I...” she pulled a blank, not knowing what to say, who would believe this story? She wouldn’t believe this story if she hadn’t lived it. “I’m fine,” she laughed, trying to play it off and disentangled Tabby’s arms from around her neck.

Tabby growled. She walked to the wall, flipped on the light switch and pointed at her. “How dare you leave like that? How dare you.” Her brown eyes were thin slits and Alice had never seen Tabby so angry. Vibrating with it. She looked like hell too.

Her eyes were puffy and dark, like she hadn’t slept in months.

“Do you know how hard it’s been running this place without you? Wondering if you were dead or alive? Your mom has been crazy with grief.”

She laughed. “Jeez, Tabs, I’ve only been gone three days. I’m sorry but...”

Her eyes widened. “Three days! Try three months, you asshole! Three months!”

“Shut up. Don’t be stupid.” She laughed, but Tabby didn’t crack a smile. In fact, she didn’t even blink. She walked up to Alice, grabbed her shoulders and shook. Panic so thick on her, Alice felt it choking the breath from her lungs like smoke from a fire. “Tabs?”

Her lips wobbled and Alice could see she had a hard time swallowing. “Three months, Alice.”

Knees suddenly gave out on her, thankfully Tabby anticipated that reaction, and pulled a chair out just in time. She plopped onto it. Grabbing her head. It was splitting and each time she swallowed she tasted metal on her tongue.

Alice shook.

Tabby dropped to her knees, wrapped her arms around her waist and held her tight. Hot tears soaked the front of her shirt. But Alice was cold. Calm. She knew.

The pain in her head, the visions. She closed her eyes. The loss of time.

“It’s back, isn’t it, Tabby?”

“Oh Alice, Alice,” she repeated her name like a litany. “Best doctors. Best care. We’ll catch it in time.”

Empty words. Three months. That was a long time. The longest blackout ever. They both knew. The tumor was back.

She should be crying. But there was nothing there now. She was empty. Devoid. And a part of her had suspected, when she’d told him her story. It was back. She closed her eyes, remembering dark brown eyes that made her want to melt at his feet. Made her want to forget this world.

Something wet slid from her nose and when she brushed the back of her hand against it a red streak smeared her hand and the strong scent of blood filled her head.

Had it only been a dream?

 

***

 

The doctors had done all they could. But the tumor was too large, too deep, and two weeks later she battled for life. Wonderland was a fairy tale that no longer existed for her in the new reality of doctors and cancer. In a matter of days she’d become an emaciated skeleton. Doctors had been shocked at her rapid decline. Even she’d been amazed, as if the three months she’d been missing and healthy suddenly spun time forward the moment she’d stepped foot back on Earth. She was skin and bones, with nothing but a few stray hairs on her head. She looked dead already.

She’d had a dream last night, one where she’d called his name and he’d screamed hers in return. It’d been wonderful, but too soon she’d woken up and now the pleasure was pain.

Tabby grabbed her hand. “This room’s so much nicer than the last one,” she said with a weak grin. “Yellow too,” she pointed to the walls, “your favorite color. Yup,” she nodded, “I like this one.”

“It’s okay, Tabs.” Her voice was weak. She was so tired, so very tired. It was time and she was ready. But first she had to let them know it was okay. “I’m dying. And it’s okay.”

Tabby’s beautiful face twisted up into an ugly mask and she pressed a white tissue to her face as the silent cry wracked her body. “I love you, Alice. You know that, right? Sisters?”

Alice smiled. “The best.”

Beany-- a.k.a. Mr. H.P.D.-- grabbed Tabby’s shoulders and gave them a gentle squeeze. Alice closed her eyes. Tabby would be okay-- she’d found her man. They were going to marry next year. For a second it hurt, hurt so bad Alice’s jaw trembled. They’d have beautiful kids, a beautiful life.

Tabby wiped her nose with a tissue. She glanced at Beany then back down at Alice. “You should know we’ve renamed the Shoppe. It’s now going to be called Alice and Hatter’s Cupcakery and Tea Shoppe.”

Tears lodged in her throat. She wouldn’t cry. It would kill Tabby to think she didn’t love it. She did, it was a comfort to know in a small way she’d always be a part of the place that’d brought her so much joy.

Alice opened her mouth to say thanks when a stab of pain shot down her spine and broke her out in a clammy sweat. She hissed.

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