Page 3
Story: The Exorcism of Faeries
T he dash clock blinked 7:06 and swore, whipping her car into the farthest spot from her dorm. If she hurried, she’d have just enough time to shower, change, and make it to her 8:00 Biodiversity lecture. Provided Imogen or Colin wasn’t hogging the bathroom. Or one of the degenerates they dragged home. There were no sounds of running water coming from the bathroom when she passed by, so things were looking up.
tossed her bag onto her bed and gently extracted the flora she’d plucked from the cadaver’s lung. Unwilling to repeat her earlier reaction to it, she left the blossom wrapped in wax paper and tucked it away in her desk drawer to inspect later. She grabbed her robe and rushed for the bathroom before one of her roommates could sneak in.
Rather than stripping down, decided to hop in the shower fully clothed and let the hot water wash most of the mud and guck down the drain. It was a heavenly sort of hot burn after the drenching of cold rain. Summer hadn’t fully gone, but it was certainly well on its way out.
wrapped the sopping clothes in a towel and shoved them under a cabinet to retrieve later when no one was home. She’d just returned to the shower and was washing her hair when the bathroom door opened wide, bringing with it the sounds of humming and snatching all the warmth from the steam.
“Christ sake,” bit out. “I’m in the shower.”
“Just me,” Imogen’s voice sang.
scrubbed shampoo into her long, chestnut locks, attempting to keep her irritation at bay. “You’re up early,” she commented rather stupidly. On principle, Imogen didn’t rise before 10 a.m. and probably hadn’t had a class before 11 a.m. since she was able to choose her own schedule.
“Up late.” Imogen’s words were a tad slurred. Probably had been since late last night.
“Ah.”
could tell by the lack of sink and drawer commotion that Imogen was likely undressing. Or taking a piss. She sighed. Having roommates wasn’t her cup of tea. Granted, between undergrad and moving back home, she’d never lived alone before, but she didn’t need to experience it to know it was preferable to sharing a bathroom.
A cold burst of air made her squeal as the shower curtain was yanked back. “Imogen!”
“Can you see this?” She ignored ’s protests, pointing to a very visible lip-shaped spot on her neck that was mottled purple.
“Clear as day.” shut the shower curtain and huddled under the hot water, but not before she’d noticed what her roommate was wearing. “You really shouldn’t be going to parties, Imogen.”
“Blah, blah. There aren’t any restrictions against parties .”
turned off the water and grabbed her towel, wrapping it around her body and stepping out onto the plush bath mat she purchased herself after one of Colin’s buddies puked on the old one. She often asked herself why her roommates were pursuing a postgraduate degree at all.
Colin, she surmised, was trying to get back into his father’s good graces—and bank account. Imogen, she wasn’t sure about. Scared of going out into the real world, maybe.
had been outside the collegiate bubble for six years after undergrad and could confirm it was not all it was cracked up to be, Plague or not.
Imogen was studying the hickey in her reflection. “Could I borrow one of your frumpy turtlenecks to cover this?” She looked at in the mirror, golden hair still perfect but her makeup clearly in disarray after a night of doing things didn’t care to consider.
“My turtlenecks are not frumpy.”
“Em, okay,” Imogen snorted.
let it go, pushing at the more serious matter Imogen had skated right past. “There may not be any rules against gatherings, but it’s still unwise to spend your time out at night with loads of people until we understand more about the Plague.”
“You’re such a buzzkill. They say that’s not even how it spreads.” Imogen rolled her eyes and began removing her shirt with enough difficulty that it was clear she was still sloshed.
She wasn’t wrong, though. The Health Protection Surveillance Centre had deployed several arms of their organisation, such as Achilles House, to study the Plague after the first patient succumbed to the strange disease. Many of those arms of the HPSC are quiet shadow organisations the general populace knows nothing about—it’s a wonder even heard about Achilles House at all—but all findings are reported to HPSC. Though they have certain precautions advised in Dublin, they have made it clear the Plague does not pass to individuals as a communicable disease does.
In the last six years, that’s about all the HPSC has announced.
If they discovered the flora, she suspected that could all change very soon.
“Imogen,” pressed, looking away from her roommate’s bare breasts in the mirror. “This Plague is only going to get worse. You can’t just keep putting all of us at risk. No, it doesn’t spread like a virus, but it’s too much of a risk to be swapping bodily fluids with people and coming home to drink out of the milk carton.” loathed that Imogen did that, like a child.
She wrinkled her nose at in the mirror. “How do you know it’s going to get worse?”
thought of the foreign flora hidden away in her desk drawer, a melody singing in her blood, calling her to study it with her lenses. “Just stop going to parties all the time. You’re here to learn, anyway.”
Imogen groaned and turned around to face her, where she was dripping on the mat. “Were you more fun in undergrad? When you were young?” She made one of those idiotic faces reserved for D4 girls and girls drunk on Daddy’s money. Which was amusing because Imogen only pretended to be either one of those things. Sometimes both.
“Oh, look,” droned, “you made it nearly twenty-four hours without referring to my elderly age.”
Imogen giggled, and left before she had to watch her roommate undress any more than she already had.
At least she hadn’t been forced to share a room with anyone since her second year. Even still, she’d learned the hard way to take the extra second and spin the lock on the knob. The first night the three of them had spent in the suite, Colin came home from some Welcome Back party and walked in on changing. She still wasn’t quite sure if he’d been that hammered, thought it was his room, or assumed he could fall back on either of those as an excuse if need be. , in nothing but a bra and black stockings—ironically her current state of dress again—had kneed Colin in the groin and toppled him howling into the hall. The lock became her new best friend and Colin had just started speaking to her again a week ago. Not that he provided her with any titillating conversation she’d been missing out on.
Her insolent roommates were worth the headache in regards to the view living with them afforded her. Slipping on a brown and taupe plaid skirt, fastened the tortoise buttons as she looked past the trees toward Front Square, with its Gothic stone buildings and proud bell tower. She remembered walking through the arch of Campanile ceremoniously upon her first graduation from Trinity in 1987, her father’s bright smile and the click and whir of her mother’s camera.
That was before her father’s accident. Before the Plague. Before they needed her back in Galway.
shook her thoughts loose and dropped her attention from the view beyond down to the half-written essay on her desk and several crumpled attempts at a re-write. She didn’t have to think about that until after classes and her shift at Gallaghers’. The essay wasn’t going well, but she’d compiled a lovely botanical journal in the process, and ran her fingers fondly over a purple blossom pressed flat and forever beautifully dead in wax paper, a scrawled description below it.
Bottom lip tucked between her teeth, opened her desk drawer and pulled out the flora coated in black, diseased blood. Gingerly, she pulled back the top layer of wax paper irrevocably smudged and wondered if she had time to clean up the flower and press it. A quick glance at her antique desk clock pushed that idea away. Regretfully, she returned the flora to its hiding place for later.
Blowing a breath past her lips, slipped on her softest black turtleneck, her favourite tweed blazer and comfiest pair of black Oxfords. She buckled the thin band of her watch, refusing to look at the time again because she knew it wasn’t enough. A quick run of a brush through her still-damp locks was going to have to suffice. It was still drizzling out, anyway.
Books shoved into her leather satchel, snagged Imogen’s umbrella from the coat rack by the suite’s front door and rushed down the stairs of their building, waving hullo to one of the neighbours on her way out.
Table of Contents
- Page 1
- Page 2
- Page 3 (Reading here)
- Page 4
- Page 5
- Page 6
- Page 7
- Page 8
- Page 9
- Page 10
- Page 11
- Page 12
- Page 13
- Page 14
- Page 15
- Page 16
- Page 17
- Page 18
- Page 19
- Page 20
- Page 21
- Page 22
- Page 23
- Page 24
- Page 25
- Page 26
- Page 27
- Page 28
- Page 29
- Page 30
- Page 31
- Page 32
- Page 33
- Page 34
- Page 35
- Page 36
- Page 37
- Page 38
- Page 39
- Page 40
- Page 41
- Page 42
- Page 43
- Page 44
- Page 45
- Page 46
- Page 47
- Page 48
- Page 49
- Page 50
- Page 51
- Page 52
- Page 53
- Page 54
- Page 55
- Page 56
- Page 57
- Page 58
- Page 59
- Page 60
- Page 61
- Page 62
- Page 63
- Page 64
- Page 65
- Page 66
- Page 67
- Page 68
- Page 69
- Page 70
- Page 71
- Page 72
- Page 73