The Devil Reversed
May danced above him. She was the girl he’d grown up with, the lady he loved. She had been his rock, his strength to escape from the creeping darkness that crowded the vast pits of his souls and lingering insanity that twisted his imagination. And as she spun under the hazy ambience of the dim candle light like a daring, but dizzy diva, he wondered how he had gotten them to this point, to this place. They were just no longer children, adults by the right of their age. As he watched the woman he loved shed away the innocence of youth with each provocative pivot, however, he’d never felt so young, so helpless.The walls were red, the color of blood, and a darker hue of the same murderous tone graced the stage curtains. Sconces of dim flame lined the walls and a grim chandelier of candles dangled overhead. It seemed to spin ominously, spinning the gathered into a time long past. And of those gathered, they were dressed in their finest garb, three piece suit would not suffice as an adequate description. Truly, none wore anything brand named, other than Jack himself, each suit worn was custom tailored, privately commissioned. Despite renting a tuxedo for the occasion, he still stood out like a sore thumb. It was amazing that he had been admitted at all, but Jack had never had a problem talking his way into a place. It was a trick he picked up from May.
He wondered if she knew that he was gazing up at her from below as the sensuality flowed from her soul. He wasn’t the only one with his eyes on her of course, others gazed longingly, no hungrily at her exposed flawless, freckled skin, at the way her long, curly locks seemed to float around as if she were gently drifting through the air, and at the way her grace seemed to demonstrate a dominion over the body, a dominion they desperately sought to invade. They couldn’t see her face though. Like the rest of the women both on stage and on the floor below, she was masked. It was a simple thing, white in color that ran from her hairline down just above the curve of her lips. It glimmered as if made of glass. Even if they could, they wouldn’t have paid any mind to her eyes, Jack though, was sure he knew what those eyes were looking like.
He’d driven her away, he could never believe it had been anything else. He couldn’t believe that she had grown bored with their vagabond lifestyle, with their life on the run. He couldn’t believe that the thrill of the spotlight, the excitement of a needle prick high, could murder the restless artist that had warmed him on the coldest of nights. No, it had to have been him. It had to have been the contracts he’d turned down, the alcohol he found himself drinking, the lonely places he found himself thinking. It should have been paradise out West, but instead they wove themselves into a web of corruption and darkness. A web that had found themselves in as children, brand new in its way, but all the same when it came right down to it. Only this time they lost each other in the process, tore each other down instead of propping each other up.
Shadows seemed to slither all around him. It made the place seem more dense with men than it truly was. Perhaps though, the fades that lurked across the dark stained floor boards and in the murky corners were reflections of the true nature of the monsters and their empty brides that surrounded him. They were captains of industry and finance, political and corporate players, those that lurked behind the pretty faces in television and movie screens. They all knew one another, Jack was sure, but much like the slow moving, bare, beauties that entertained them, they were masked, though much more elaborately. It was how Jack hadn’t been discovered. His own mask had a sophisticated mardi gras flare to it, resembling a pale crescent moon. He’d rented it along with the tux. Black doorways lined the red walls each leading to a room where a man could live out his darkest desires all to the soft sounds of the piano. How had he come to find himself here? He’d befriended a rather popular musician who’d happened to have seen May at this particular venue only a week earlier. He’d warned Jack, begged him, pleaded with him, not to come, but in the end extended him the details, which included a series of passwords, which needed to be kept in memory for they could be requested at any moment.
May spun down and leaned her petite, slim, figure backward on the stage, her upside down eyes reaching his, they locked for a moment, before she jolted upright once more, her dance fading with the keys of the piano as the heavy curtain dragged to a close around her. Jack, downed the flute of white wine in his hand, and placed the empty glass on stage. He’d said he wouldn’t drink tonight, he’d promised himself a lot of things like that. The empty glass seemed to mock him as it stood under the murky red light. It hadn’t been his first drink of the evening, but it would be the last he’d have a chance to have. The quick bare footsteps, nearly stomps, pulled his attention away from the glass, from the bitterness of the stage it sat upon.
It was May, she approached with an unassuming smile. She wrapped an arm around his waist and pulled him close to her. She leaned into his shoulder as she ran her free hand through the back of his wavy brown hair. Her pale skin was cool and refreshing against his own, even her breath had a coolness to it, a coolness that bled into the words that she whispered into his ear, “You shouldn’t be here.” “Neither should you,” Jack replied in a soft, but gruff tone, almost, automatically. “You’re drunk,” he could hear the venom on her tongue. “And you’re high,” he wanted to shout, but he kept his voice down. She pulled back from him in that moment and he immediately regretted his words. He could see the glare behind May’s mask and he knew he needed to keep her with him, this might be the only shot he had, “How’d ya’ know it was me?” She laughed, it was a high, sweet, singsong sound, but there was a bitterness to it, “Are you joking, I’d recognize those cold dead eyes anywhere,” there it was the full poison from her lips, but Jack could see her visibly recoil as she said it. There was truth to it. The life had been sucked from his eyes and lay somewhere in an empty bottle.“Why are we doing this? What would Sheena think?” Jack knew the answer, but he had to ask.
At those words the shadows seemed to close in on them. As a few sharp dressed gentlemen began to pass, masks turning to them, May pushed him against the stage, lifting his mask just enough to expose his lips, and forced a rough kiss upon him. A kiss to cancel his words, a kiss to keep him unnoticed. He welcomed it and yearned for more, even the sharp bite of his bottom lip that she threw in at the end, “get out, you don’t belong here, they’ll kill you if they find you.” May seemed to say each word with individual emphasis, but quick enough to not be overheard all the same. “Not without you…” he responded simply as she pulled the mask back down over his face. He could see the frustration in her large, green eyes, frustration that brought her to the verge of tears. She grabbed his wrist, “Come with me,” it wasn’t a request and he acquiesced.
She led him to one of the dark doors, pushing it open, May led Jack into the shadowy fade. She threw a light switch and the room came alight with a dim glow. It was similar to the red glow that permeated the main hall. There was a plush, antique, king size bed with metal restraints hanging from each of the hand carved posts. The symbols and pictures in the wood of those posts were unfamiliar, but seemed to be occult or pagan in nature. A winged creature with large eyes, resembling an owl, was beautifully crafted into the back of the bed frame. May sat on the edge of that bed, “There’s only one way out of this for me, Jack.” May slowly removed her mask and looked up at him as he stood gazing at her from his place near the door. He couldn’t help but love her as she sat there, he’d never have a drop of liquor again if it meant he could only hold her in his stare forever. She blushed suddenly as if she were Eve and realized for the first time that she were naked. She looked away from him and down at her knees, "How I missed those eyes…” she mummered through tears, “She’d be pissed,” she looked back up at Jack with a fury between those tears, “Sheena, she’d be pissed that we couldn’t do better, that we were ensnared like she was.” There was a pause as she wiped her face with a hand. Jack didn’t speak, he just moved to sit by her. May wrapped her arms around him and leaned her head on his shoulder. He moved to take off his mask, but she grabbed his hand to stop him, “Don’t, someone could walk in at any time. Just hold me tonight. Tell me stories about our life, that beautiful mind of yours seems to stockpile every moment.”
And so Jack did. May inserted the finer details that Jack would leave out, either purposefully or due to a lapse. They laughed and cried and kissed as they held each other in the murder glow of the lions den. Jack managed to slip out without being confronted and May returned to him the next afternoon. They left the city then, heading towards the south east. It was their escape, escape from the tendrils of corruption that had coiled around them and pulled them into the depths of the abyss. Their second escape, but now they were headed for the place they called home for so long. Unfortunately the cracken that hunted those depths had longer tentacles than they could ever imagine. Unfortunately they’d never make it home.