So, he said eventually.
How have you been? asked one of them. We haven’t seen you for a while. How’s…?
She’s fine, he said. She’s upstairs.
He refilled their wine glasses and they all drank in silence. The sick friend swilled the wine around his mouth to ease the pieces from between his teeth before swallowing, and when he swallowed he vomited again, down his front this time. It dripped from the corners of his mouth apologetically and his face was pitiful and deeply sorry. He couldn’t lean forwards without spilling the sick in a hot pile from his sweater to the floor at his feet, and so reached blindly around him at arm’s length for a cloth or some such item with which he would wipe his face. His fingers closed around a tea towel sloppy with putrefied insides, and he had raised it to his face before he had seen what was on it, and just as soon as he did he heaved purge of his own straight onto it. The hammer sank easily into his head and his feet kicked as though his last thought was of swimming somewhere distant and his grip on the tea towel tightened and tightened and then loosened and he fell to the floor, the hammer jutting from his head like a physiological appendage of some kind. His friend dropped the flowers and wanted to stand but felt unable to do so. He was crying and holding a mostly full glass of wine in his other hand.
Would you like to see her? he said, his hand spattered with blood. Their mutual friend had fallen forwards off of the armchair and onto the crisp floor where the largest blood stain had been. Blood pooled around him in spurts from the hammer wound and he relished the coincidence. He observed the other friend wetting his trousers and was pleased. Everything came from mess and filth and amounted to nothing but. The nutty smell of frightened piss belonged to the process. It fit perfectly here.
Oh god, he said. Oh no. What have you done.
Come on, he said, pulling him up to his feet.
As they climbed the stairs they could hear the great performance of the flies that became unbearable as they reached the bedroom door. He opened it and their friend pleaded no and other such efforts but entered regardless, his legs working through instinct alone. He didn’t dare look but did so, at the bed, the dreadful palette so alien from life, the remains, the happening circle. The ravenous appetites of death. All amounted to this nothing that was everything. He lurched backwards and fell against the desk and cut his forehead open, and stood and tried to run. He was in the doorway waiting for him and pushed him to the carpet.
He knelt upon his chest and sawed around the neckline with a kitchen knife and tugged and hacked at the windpipe and sails of skin and meat until the head was detached and the screams had overcome even the flies and then ceased, and when it was done he placed the head upon the pillow alongside her and returned for the wine for he felt a prodigious thirst.
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