Felixity
By: Tanith Lee
* * * *
The name sounds a
little like “felicity,” or happiness, and a little like “felix,”
or luck. Felixity, the quintessential poor little
rich girl, seems to be neither happy nor lucky. In any fairy story, such a girl
would have compensations of brain or talent and marry a handsome prince. Felixity can’t even do good watercolors. And when she
chooses a husband—don’t even ask.
Let Tanith Lee tell you in this ironic and
elegantly decadent story. I could compare “Felixity”
to the works of Oscar Wilde or Angela Carter—but I think I’ll say that this is Tanith Lee at the top of her form, and leave it at that.
* * * *
Felixity’s parents were so beautiful
that everywhere they went they were attended by a low murmuring, like that of a
beehive. Even when pregnant with her child, Felixity’s
mother was lovely, an ormolu madonna.
But when Felixity was born, her mother died.
Among the riches of her father, then, in a succession of elaborate
houses, surrounded by gardens which sometimes led to a cobalt sea, Felixity grew up, motherless. Her father watched her
grow—he must have— although nannies tended her, servants waited on her, and
tutors gave her lessons. Sometimes in the evening, when the heat of the day had
settled and the stars had come out, Felixity’s father
would interview his daughter on the lamplit terrace
above the philodendrons.
“Now tell me what you learned today.”
But Felixity, confronted by her beautiful and
elegant father burnished on the dark with pale electricity, was tongue-tied. She
twisted her single plait around her finger and hunched her knees. She was an
ugly child, ungraceful and gauche, with muddy skin and thin unshining
hair. She had no energy, and even when put out to play, wandered slowly about
the garden walks, or tried tiredly to skip, giving up after five or six heavy
jumps. She was slow at her studies, worried over them, and suffered headaches.
She was meek. Her teeth were always needing fillings,
and she bore this unpleasantness with resignation.
“Surely there must have been something of note in your day?”
“I went to the dentist, Papa.”
“Your mother,” said Felixity’s father, “had
only one tiny filling in her entire head. It was the size of a pin’s point. It
was gold.” He said this without cruelty, more in wonder. “You must have some
more dresses,” he added presently.
Felixity hated it when clothes were bought for her. She looked
so awful in anything attractive or pretty, but they had never given up.
Glamorously dressed, she resembled a chrysalis clad in the butterfly. When she
could, she put on her drabbest, most nondescript clothes.
After half an hour or so of his daughter’s unstimulating company, Felixity’s
father sent her away. He was tactful, but Felixity was under no
illusions. Beneath the dentist’s numbing cocaine, she was aware her teeth were
being drilled to the nerve, and that shortly, when the
anesthetic wore off, they would hurt her.
Inevitably, as time passed, Felixity grew up
and became a woman. Her body changed, but it did not improve. If anyone had
been hoping for some magical transformation, they were disappointed. When she
was sixteen, Felixity was, nevertheless, launched
into society. Not a ripple attended the event, although she wore a red dress
and a most lifelike wig fashioned by a famous coiffeur. Following this
beginning, Felixity was often on the edges of social
activities, where she was never noticed, gave neither offense nor inspiration,
and before some of which she was physically sick several times from
neurasthenia. As the years went by, however, her terror gradually left her. She
no longer expected anything momentous with which she would not be able to cope.
Felixity’s father aged marvelously. He remained slim and limber,
was scarcely lined and that only in a way to make him more interesting. His
hair and teeth were like a boy’s.
“How that color suited your mother,” he remarked to Felixity,
as she crossed the room in a gown of translucent lemon silk, which made her look like an uncooked tuber. “I remember three such dresses,
and a long fringed scarf. She was so partial to it.” Again, he was not being
cruel. Perhaps he was entitled to be perplexed. They had anticipated an
exquisite child, the best of both of them. But then, they had also expected to
live out their lives together.
When she was thirty-three, Felixity stopped
moving in society, and attended only those functions she could not, from
politeness, avoid. Her father did not remonstrate with her, indeed he only saw
her now once a week, at a rite he referred to as “Dining with my Daughter.” Although
his first vision of her was always a slight shock, he did not disenjoy these dinners, which lasted two hours exactly, and
at which he was able to reminisce at great length about his beautiful wife. If
anyone had asked him, he would have said he did this for Felixity’s
sake. Otherwise, he assumed she was quite happy. She read books, and
occasionally painted rather poor watercolors. Her teeth, which had of necessity
been overfilled, had begun to break at regular intervals, but aside from this
her life was tranquil, and passed in luxury. There was nothing more that could
be done for her.
One evening, as Felixity was being driven home
to one of her father’s city houses, a young man ran from a side street out
across the boulevard, in front of the car. The chauffeur put on his brakes at
once. But the large silver vehicle lightly touched the young man’s side, and he
fell in front of it. A crowd gathered instantly, at the periphery of which
three dark-clad men might be seen looking on. But these soon after went away.
The chauffeur came to Felixity’s door to tell
her that the young man was apparently unhurt, but shaken. The crowd began to
adopt factions, some saying that the young man was to blame for the accident,
others that the car had been driven too fast. In the midst of this, the young
man himself appeared at Felixity’s door. In years he
was about twenty-six, smartly if showily dressed in an ice-cream white suit now
somewhat dusty from the road. His blue-black hair curled thickly on his neck;
he was extremely handsome. He stared at the woman in the car with amontillado
eyes. He said, “No, no, it was not your fault.” And then he collapsed on the
ground.
The crowd ascended into uproar. The young man must be taken immediately
to the hospital.
Felixity was flustered, and it may have been this which caused
her to open her door, and to instruct the chauffeur and a bystander to assist
the young man into the car. As it was done, the young man revived a little.
“Put him here, beside me,” said Felixity,
although her voice trembled with alarm.
The car door was closed again, and the chauffeur told to proceed to a
hospital. The crowd made loud sounds as they drove off.
To Felixity’s relief, and faint fright, the
young man now completely revived. He assured her that it was not essential to
go to the hospital, but that if she were kind enough to allow him to rest a
moment in her house, and maybe swallow a glass of water, he would be well
enough to continue on his way. He had been hurrying, he explained, because he
had arranged to see his aunt, and was late. Felixity
was afraid that the drive to her house would prolong this lateness, but the
young man, who said his name was Roland, admitted that he was often tardy on
visits to his aunt, and she would forgive him.
Felixity, knowing no better, therefore permitted Roland to be
driven with her to the house. Its electric gates and ectomorphic
pillars did not seem to antagonize him, and ten minutes later, he was seated in
the blond, eighteenth-century drawing room, drinking bottled carbonated water
with slices of lime. Felixity asked him whether she
should call her father’s doctor, who was in residence. But Roland said again
that he had no need of medical attention. Felixity
believed him. He had all the hallmarks of strength, elasticity, and vitality
she had noted in others. She was both glad and strangely sorry when he rose springingly up again, thanked her, and said that now he
would be leaving.
When he had left, she found that she shook all over, sweat beaded her
forehead, and she felt quite sick. That night she could not sleep, and the next
morning, at breakfast, she broke another tooth on a roll.
Two days after, a bouquet of pink roses, from a
fashionable florist, arrived for Felixity. That very afternoon Roland
came to the gates and inquired if he might see her. The servants, the guards at
the gate, were so unused to anyone seeking Felixity—indeed,
it was unique—that they conveyed the message to her without question. And, of
course, Felixity, wan with nauseous amazement and a
hammering heart, invited Roland in.
“I’ve been unable to stop thinking about you,” said Roland. “I’ve never
before met with a woman so gracious and so kind.”
Roland said many things, more or less in this vein, as they walked about
the garden among the imported catalpas and the orchids. He confessed to Felixity that his aunt was dead; it was her grave he had
been going to visit; he had no one in the world.
Felixity did not know what she felt, but never before had she
felt anything like it. In the dim past of her childhood, when some vague
attempts had been made to prepare or alter her, she had been given to
understand that she might, when she gained them, entertain her friends in her
father’s houses, and that her suitors would be formally welcomed. Neither
friend nor suitor had ever crossed the thresholds of the houses, but now Felixity fell into a kind of delayed response, and in a
while she had offered Roland wine on the terrace.
As they sat sipping it, her sick elation faded and a mute sweetness
possessed her.
It was not that she thought herself lovable; she thought herself
nothing. It was that one had come to her who had made her the center of the
day. The monumental trees and exotic flowers had become a backdrop, the heat,
the house, the servants who brought them things. She
had met before people like Roland, the gorgeous magicians, who never saw her.
But Roland did see her. He had fixed on her. He spoke to her of his sad
beleaguered life, how his father had gambled away a fortune, how he had been
sadistically misled on his chances of film stardom. He wanted her to know him.
He gazed into her eyes, and saw in her, it was plain, vast continents of
possibility.
He stayed with her until the dinner hour, and begged that he might be
able to return. He had not told her she was beautiful, or any lie of that
nature. He had said she was good, and luminously kind, and that never before
had he met these qualities in a young woman, and that she must not shut him out
as he could not bear it.
On his second visit, under a palm tree, Felixity
was taken by compunction. “Six of my teeth are crowned,” she said. “And this—is
a wig!” And she snatched it off to reveal her thin cropped hair.
Roland gave a gentle smile. “How you honor me,” he said. “I’m so happy
that you trust me. But what does any of this matter? Throw the silly wig away.
You are yourself. There has never been anyone like you. Not in the whole world.”
When Felixity and Roland had been meeting for
a month, Felixity received a summons from her
incredible father.
Felixity went to see him with a new type of courage. Some of
her awe had lessened, although she would not have put this into words. She had
been with a creature of fires. It seemed she knew her father a little better.
“I’m afraid,” said Felixity’s father, “that it
is my grim task to disillusion you. The young man you’ve made your companion is
a deceiver.”
“Oh,” said Felixity. She looked blank.
“Yes, my child. I don’t know what he has told you, but I’ve had him
investigated. He is the bastard son of a prostitute, and has lived so far by
dealings with thieves and shady organizations. He was in flight from one of
these when he ran in front of your car. Obviously now he is in pursuit of your
money, both your own finances and those which you’ll inherit on my death.”
Felixity did not say she would not hear ill of Roland. She
thought about what her father had told her, and slowly she nodded. Then, from
the patois of her curtailed emotions, she translated her heart into normal
human emotional terms. “But I love him.”
Felixity’s father looked down at her with crucial pity. It was a
fact, he did not truly think of her as his daughter, for his daughter would
have been lovely. He accepted her as a pathetic dependent, until now always
needing him, a jest of God upon a flawless delight which had been rent away.
“If you love him, Felixity,” he said, “you
must send him to me.”
Felixity nodded again. Beings of fire communicated with each
other. She had no fears.
The next day she waited on the terrace, and eventually Roland came out
of the house into the sunlight. He seemed a little pale, but he spoke to her
brightly. “What a man he is. We are to marry, my beloved. That is, if you’ll
have me. I’m to care for you. What a golden future lies before us!” Roland did
not detail his conversation with Felixity’s father.
He did not relate, for example, that Felixity’s
father had courteously touched on Roland’s career as crook and gigolo. Or that Felixity’s father had informed Roland that he grasped
perfectly his aims, but that those aims were to be gratified, for Felixity’s sake. “She has had little enough,” said Felixity’s father. “Providing you are kind to her, a model
husband, and don’t enlighten her in the matter of your real feelings, I am
prepared to let you live at her expense.” Roland had protested feebly that he
adored Felixity, her tenderness had won his heart. Roland did not recount
to Felixity either that her father had greeted this
effusion with the words: “You will not, please, try your formula on me.”
In the days which succeeded Roland’s dialogue with Felixity’s
father, the now-betrothed couple were blissful, each
for their own reasons.
Then Felixity’s father flew to another city on
a business venture, the engine of his plane malfunctioned, and it crashed into
the forests. Before the month was up, his remarkable but dead body had been
recovered, woven with lianas and chewed by jaguars. Felixity
became the heiress to his fortune.
During this time of tragedy, Roland supported Felixity
with unswerving attention. Felixity was bewildered at
her loss, for she could not properly persuade herself she had lost anything.
The funeral took place with extreme pomp, and soon after the lovers
sought a quiet civil wedding. Felixity had chosen her
own dress, which was a swampy brown. The groom wore vanilla and scarlet. When
the legalities were completed, Roland drove Felixity
away in his new white car, toward a sixty-roomed villa on the coast.
As she was driven, a little too fast, along the dusty road, Felixity was saturated by an incoherent but intense nervousness.
She had never had any female friends, but she had read a number of
books, and she guessed that her unease sprang from sexual apprehension. Never,
in all their courtship, had Roland done more than press her hands or her lips lightly with his own. She had valued this decorum in him,
even though disappointment sometimes chilled her. At the impress of his flesh,
however light, her pulses raced. She was actually very passionate, and had
never before had the chance of realizing it. Nevertheless, Roland had told her
that, along with her kindness, he worshiped her purity. She knew she must wait
for their wedding night to learn of the demons of love.
Now it seemed she was afraid. But what was there to dread? Her reading,
which if not salacious, had at least been comprehensive, had given her the gist
of the nuptial act. She was prepared to suffer the natural pain of deflowerment in order to offer joy to her partner. She
imagined that Roland would be as grave and gentle in lovemaking as he had
always been in all their dealings. Therefore, why her unease?
Along the road the copper-green pyramids of coffee trees spun past, and
on the horizon’s edge, the forests kept pace with the car.
By midnight, Felixity thought, I shall be
different.
They arrived before sunset at the villa, where Felixity
had spent some of her childhood. Felixity was
surprised to find that no servants came out to greet them. Her bafflement grew
when, on entering the house, she found the rooms polished and vacant.
“Don’t concern yourself with that,” said Roland. “Come with me. I want
to show you something.”
Felixity went obediently. Roland had somehow given her to
understand that, along with kindness and purity, he liked docility. They moved
up the grand stairway, along corridors, and so into the upper regions of the
house, which were reached by narrow twining flights of steps. Up here,
somewhere, Roland unlocked and opened a door.
They went into a bare whitewashed room. A few utilitarian pieces of
furniture were in it, a chair or two, a slender bed, a round mirror. In one
wall a door gave on a bathroom closet. There was a window, but it was caged in
a complex if ornamental grill.
“Here we are,” said Roland.
Felixity looked at him, confused.
“Where?” she asked.
“Your apartment.”
Felixity considered this must be a joke, and laughed falsely,
as she had sometimes done in her society days.
“I have you at a disadvantage,” said Roland. “Let me explain.”
He did so. This room was where Felixity was to
live. If there was anything else she wanted—he knew she was fond of books—it
could be supplied. Food would be put in through that flap, there, near the
bottom of the door. She should return her empty trays via the same aperture.
She would find the bathroom stocked with clean towels, soap, and toothpaste.
These would be replaced at proper intervals. Whatever else she required, she
should list—see the notepad and pencil on the table—and these things too would
be delivered. She could have a radio, if she liked. And
perhaps a gramophone.
“But—” said Felixity, “but—”
“Oh, surely you didn’t think I would ever cohabit with you?”
asked Roland reasonably. “I admit, I might have had to
awhile, if your father had survived, but maybe not even then. He was so glad to
be rid of you, a letter from you every six months, dictated by me, would have sufficed. No, you will live up here. And I shall
live in the house and do as I want. Now and then I’ll ask you to sign the odd
document, in order to assist my access to your money. But otherwise I won’t
trouble you at all. And so, dear Felixity,
thank you, and au revoir. I wish you a pleasant evening.”
And having said this, Roland went out, before Felixity
could shift hand or limb, and she heard the key turning in the lock. And then a raucous silence.
At first she did not credit what had happened. She ran about like a
trapped insect, to the door, to the window. But both were closed fast and the
window looked out on a desolate plain that stretched away beyond the house to
the mountains. The sun was going down, and the sky was indelibly hot and
merciless.
Roland would come back, of course. This was some game, to tease her.
But darkness came, and Roland did not. And much later a tray of bread
and chicken and coffee was put through the door. Felixity
ran to the door again, shrieking for help. But whoever had brought the tray
took no notice.
Felixity sat through her wedding night on a hard chair,
shivering with terror and incipient madness, by the light of the one electric
lamp she had found on the table.
In the villa, far off, she thought she heard music, but it might only
have been the rhythm of the sea.
Near dawn, she came to accept what had occurred. It was only what she
should have expected. She wept for half an hour, and then lay down on the mean
bed to sleep.
For weeks, and probably months, Felixity
existed in the whitewashed room with the grilled window.
Every few days books were put through her door, along with the trays of
meals. The food was generally simple or meager, and always cold; still it
punctually arrived. A radio appeared, too, a few days after Felixity’s
internment. It seemed able to receive only one station, which put out endless
light music and melodramatic serials, but even so Felixity
came to have it on more and more. At midnight the station closed down. Then it
was replaced by a claustrophobic loud silence.
Other supplies were promptly presented through the door on her written
request. Clean towels, new soap, shampoo, toothpaste and toothbrushes, Felixity’s brand of analgesics for her headaches, and her
preferred form of sanitary protection.
There was no clock or calendar in the room, but the radio station
repeatedly gave the day and hour. At first Felixity
noticed the progress of time, until eventually she recognized that she was
counting it up like a prisoner, as if, when she had served her sentence, she
would be released. But, of course, her freedom would never come. Felixity ceased to attend to the progress of time.
In the beginning, too, she went on with her normal routines of
cleanliness and order. In her father’s houses, her bathrooms had been
spectacular, and she had liked using them, experimenting there with soaps and
foams, and with preparations which claimed they might make her hair thicker,
although they did not. With only the functional white bathroom at her disposal,
Felixity lost interest in hygiene, and several days
would sometimes elapse before she bathed. She had also to clean the bathroom
herself, which initially had proved challenging, but soon it became a chore she
did not bother with. Besides, she found the less she used the bathroom, the
less cleaning it needed.
Felixity would sit most of the day, listening with unfixed
open eyes to the radio. Now and then she would read part of a book.
Occasionally she would wander to the window and look out. But the view never
changed, and the glare of the distant mountains tired her eyes. Often she found
it very hard to focus on the printed word, and would read the same phrase in a
novel over and over, trying to make sense of it.
After perhaps three months had gone by, an afternoon came when she heard
the key turn in the lock of her door.
She was now too apathetic to be startled. Yet when Roland, gleaming in
his ice-cream clothes, came into the room, she knew a moment of shame. But then
she acknowledged it did not matter if he saw her unwashed in her robe, her thin
hair and unpowdered face greasy, for he had never
cared what she looked like; she was nothing to him.
And Roland approached with his usual charm, smiling at her, and holding
out some papers.
“Here I am,” he said, “I won’t keep you a minute. If
you’d just be kind enough to sign these.”
Felixity did not get up at once only because she was
lethargic. But she said softly, “What if I refuse?”
Roland continued to smile. “I should be forced to take away your radio
and books, and to starve you.”
Felixity believed him. After all, if he starved her to death,
he would inherit everything. It was really quite good of him to allow her to
live.
She went to the table and signed the papers.
“Thank you so much,” said Roland.
“Won’t you let me out?” said Felixity.
“Obviously I can’t.” He added logically, “It’s much better if you stay
here. Or you might be tempted to run away and divorce me. Or if you didn’t do
that, you’d be horribly in my way.”
Roland had, prior to their drive to the villa, sacked the original
servants and installed a second set, all of whom were bribed to his will,
served him unquestioningly, and held their tongues. Roland now lived the life
which ideally suited him, answerable to no one. He lay in bed until noon, breakfasted
extravagantly, spent the day lazily, and in the evening drove to the nearest
city to gamble and to drink. Frequently he would return to the villa in the
small hours with beautiful women, to whom, in a great scrolled bed, he made
ferocious love, casting them out again at dawn, in their spangled dresses, like
the rinds of eaten fruits.
“But,” said Felixity, “you see I’m afraid—if I
have to stay here—I may lose my mind.”
“Oh, don’t worry about that,” said Roland. “The servants already think I
locked you up because you were insane.”
Then he left her, and Felixity went to gaze
from her window. The mountains looked like the demarcation line at the end of
the world. Felixity turned on her radio.
That night, as she ate a piece of hard sausage, she broke a tooth.
She felt curiously humiliated by this, yet she had no choice but to set
the fact down on a page of the notepad, and append a request for a dentist.
This she slipped out through the flap in the door with a pallid misgiving. She
did not suppose for an instant Roland would permit her to leave the house and
what kind of mechanic would he send in to her?
For nine days, during which the broken tooth tore at her mouth and
finally made it bleed, Felixity awaited Roland’s
response. On the tenth day she came to see he would not trouble to respond at
all. He had spared her what suffering he could, under the circumstances, but to
put himself out over her teeth was too much to ask of him.
This, then, was where she had sunk to.
Four hours passed, and Felixity sat in her
chair listening to a serial about a sensational girl who could not choose
between her lovers. Behind her the window became feverish, then cool; and
darkness slid into the room.
Suddenly something strange happened. Felixity
sprang to her feet as if she had been electrically shocked. She rushed toward
the cheap mirror on the wall, and stared at herself in the fading crepuscule.
She did not need light, for she knew it all. She reached up and rent at her
thin hair and a scream burst out of her, lacerating her mouth freshly on the
sharp edge of broken enamel.
“Nononononono!” screamed Felixity.
She was denying only herself.
She jumped up and down before the mirror, shrieking, galvanized by a
scalding white thread inside her.
Only when this huge energy had left her, which took several minutes, did
she crawl back to the chair and collapse in it, weeping. She cried for hours
out of the well of pain. Her sobs were strong and violent, and the room seemed
to shake at them.
At midnight, the radio station closed down and the shattering silence
bounded into the room. Felixity looked up. Everything
was in blackness, the lamp unlit, and yet it seemed there had been a flash of
brilliance. Perhaps there was a storm above the mountains. Or, incredibly,
perhaps some human life went over the plain, a car driving on the dirt tracks
of it with headlights blazing.
Felixity moved to the window. Night covered the plain, and the
mountains were like dead coals. Above, the stars winked artificially, as they
had done in the planetarium where once she had been taken as a child.
The whip of light cracked, again. It was not out on the plain but inside
the room.
Felixity was still too stunned for ordinary fear.
She walked back slowly to her chair, and as she did so, she saw her
reflection in the round mirror on the wall.
Felixity stopped, and her reflection stopped, inevitably. Felixity raised her right arm, let it fall. Her left arm, let it fall. The reflection did the same. Felixity began to walk forward again, toward the mirror.
She walked directly up to it, and halted close enough to touch.
Earlier, in the twilight, the mirror had reflected Felixity
only too faithfully. It had shown the apex of her ungainly figure, her drab,
oily complexion, her ugly features and wispy hair. Now the mirror contained
something else. It was illuminated as if a lamp shone on it out of the dark
room. In the mirror, Felixity’s reflection was no
longer Felixity.
Instead, a woman stood in the mirror, copying exactly every gesture that
Felixity made.
This woman, to judge from her upper torso, was slender, with deeply
indented breasts. Her skin, which was visible in the low-cut bodice, at the
throat, and the lower part of the face, was the mildest gold, like dilute
honey. Her tightly fitting gown was a flame. On her upper face, across her
forehead and eyes, she wore a mask like yellow jade, from which long sprays of
sparkling feathers curved away. And above the mask and beneath ran thickly
coiling gilded hair, like golden snakes poured from a jar.
Felixity put both her hands up over her mouth. And the woman
in the mirror did as Felixity did. She wore long
gloves the color of topaz, streaked with scintillants.
The flash of brilliance snapped again. It was up in the black air above
the woman. A lyre of sparks came all unstrung: A firework. As it faded, an
entire scene was there at the woman’s back.
It was a city of steps and arches, plazas and tall buildings, through
which a brimstone river curled its way. But over the river, slim bridges ran
that were fruited with lamps of orange amber, and on the facades all about
roared torches of lava red. All these lights burned in the river, too,
wreathing it with fires.
Figures went across the levels of the city, in scarlet, brass, and
embers. Some led oxblood dogs, or carried incandescent parrots on their wrists.
A bronze alligator surfaced from the river, glittered like jewelry, and was
gone.
Felixity saw a large red star hung in the sky.
Within the woman’s mask, two eyes glimmered. She lowered her hands from
her mouth, and Felixity found that she had lowered
her hands. But then the woman turned from the mirror and walked away.
Felixity watched the woman walk to the end of a torchlit pier, and there she waited in her gown of flame,
until a flaming boat came by and she stepped into it and was borne off under
the bridges of lamps.
After this the scene melted, all its fires and colors spilling together
downward, and out by some nonexistent gutter at the mirror’s base.
Felixity took two or three paces back. In sheer darkness now
she went and lay on her bed. But the afterimages of the lights stayed on her
retinas for some while, in flickering floating patches. The mirror remained
black, and in it she could dimly see the room reflecting. Felixity
closed her eyes, and beheld the alligator surfacing in a gold garland of
ripples, and as it slipped under again, she slept.
In the morning, when she woke, Felixity did
not think she had been dreaming. It did occur to her that perhaps Roland had
played some kind of trick on her, but then she quickly dismissed this idea, for
Roland had no interest in her; why should he waste effort on such a thing? Had
she then suffered an hallucination? Was this the onset
of madness? Felixity discovered that she did not
thrill with horror. She felt curiously calm, almost complacent. She took a bath
and shampooed her hair, ate the meals that were shunted through the door,
ignoring as best she could the difficulty with the broken tooth, and listened
to the radio. She was waiting for the darkness to come back. And when it did
so, she switched off the radio and sat in her chair, watching the mirror.
Hours passed, and the mirror kept up its blackness, faintly reflecting
the room. Once Felixity thought there was a spark of
light, but it was only some spasm in her eyes.
Eventually Felixity put on the radio again. It
was midnight, and the station was closing down. Felixity
became alert, for it was at this moment on the previous night that the mirror
had come alive. However, the station went off the air and that was all. Felixity watched the mirror from her bed until sleep
overcame her.
Somewhere in the markerless black of early
morning, she awakened, and over the mirror was flowing
a ribbon of fire.
Felixity leapt from the bed and dashed to the mirror, but
already the fire had vanished, leaving no trace.
Felixity set herself to sleep by day and watch by night. This
was quite easy for her, for, rather like a caged animal, she had become able to
slumber almost at will. In the darkness she would sit, without the lamp,
sometimes not looking directly at the mirror. She let the radio play softly in
the background, and when the closedown came, she would tense. But nothing
happened.
Seven nights went by.
Felixity continued her bat-like existence.
Only one magical thing had ever taken place in her life before, her
betrothal to Roland; and that had been proved to be a sham. The magic of the
mirror she recognized, as sometimes a piece of music, never heard before, may
seem familiar. This music was for her.
On the eighth night, just after the radio had announced it was eleven o’clock,
the mirror turned to a coin of gold.
Without a sound, Felixity got up, went to the
mirror, and stared in.
It was a golden ballroom lit by bizarre chandeliers like the rosy
clustered hearts of pomegranates. There on the floor of obsidian a man and
woman danced in an austere yet sensual fashion. His were sophisticated carnival
clothes of black and blood, and he was masked in jet. She was Felixity’s reflection, and now she wore a dress of sulfur
beaded by magma rain. There was a tango playing on the radio, and it seemed
they moved in time to it.
Felixity felt herself dancing, although she did not stir, and
the man’s arm around her.
In a tall window was a sort of day, a sky that was coral pink and a huge
red sun or planet lying low.
The tango quivered to its end.
The man and woman separated, and all the colors pooled together and
sluiced down the mirror. Felixity made a wild motion,
as if to catch them as they flushed through the bottom of the glass. But, of
course, nothing ran out.
In the blackness of her room then, Felixity
solemnly danced a tango alone. She was stiff and unwieldy, and sometimes bumped
into the flimsy furniture. She knew now a raw craving and yearning, a nostalgia as if for an idyllic childhood. She had come to
understand who the woman was. She was Felixity, in
another world. Felixity’s brain had made the
intellectual and spiritual jump swiftly and completely. Here she was a lump,
unloved, unliked even, so
insignificant she could be made a prisoner forever. But there, she was a being
of fire.
Oh, to go through the mirror. Oh, to be one with her true
self.
And at last she touched the mirror, which was very warm against her
hand, as if the sun had just shone on it. But otherwise it gave no clue to its
remarkable properties. And certainly no hint of a way in.
After the vision at eleven o’clock on the eighth night, a month elapsed,
and the mirror never altered by night or day.
Felixity grew very sad. Although she had been thrown into an
abyss, idly tossed there, her reaction had been mostly passivity rather than
despair, for she was used to ill-treatment in one form or another. But the
images in the mirror had raised her up to a savage height, to a plateau of
lights she had never before achieved. That she grasped almost at once their
implication demonstrated how profoundly she had been affected. And now she was
left with the nothing which had always encompassed her and which Roland had
driven in beside her, into her cage.
She ceased to eat the scanty meals and only sipped the coffee or water.
In order to hide what she did— she was incoherently afraid of force-feeding—she
dropped the portions of food into the lavatory. Felixity
became extremely feeble, dizzy, and sick. Her head ached constantly, and she
could not keep down the painkillers. She lay on the bed all day, sinking in and
out of sleep. She could hardly hear the radio for the singing in her ears. At
night she tried to stay conscious, but the mirror was like a black void that
sucked her in. Her head whirled and spots of light burst over her eyes,
deceiving her, for there was nothing there. She cried softly, without passion.
She hoped she would die soon. Then she could sleep indefinitely.
On the first morning of the new month, before sunrise, Felixity raised her gluey lids and saw the woman who was
herself standing up against the inside of the mirror in her mask of yellow
jade, a dress like naphtha and the glinting vipers of her golden hair.
Felixity’s heart palpitated. She tried to get up, but she was
too weak.
Behind the woman who was the real Felixity,
there was, as at the start, only blackness. But now the mirror-Felixity lifted her ruby glove, and she held in her fingers
a single long coppery feather, the plume of some extraordinary bird.
If she would only take off her mask, Felixity
thought, I’d see that she is me. It would be my face, and it would be
beautiful.
But the woman did not remove the mask of yellow jade. Instead she turned
her head toward the feather, and she blew gently on it.
The breath that came out of her mouth was bloomed with a soft lightning.
It enveloped the tip of the feather, which at once caught fire.
Felixity watched, dazzled, until the flame went out and the
woman dissolved abruptly into glowing snow, and the
mirror was only a mirror again. Then Felixity turned
on her side and fell asleep.
When it was light, she woke refreshed, and going into the bathroom,
bathed and washed her hair. Presently when the tray of food came, she ate it.
Her stomach hurt for some while after, but she did not pay any attention. She
put on the radio and hummed along with the melodies, most of which she now knew
by heart.
In the afternoon, after the lunch tray, from which she ate everything,
the door was unlocked and Roland entered the room.
Felixity stood up. She had not realized he would arrive so
quickly.
“Here I am,” he said, “I won’t detain you a moment. Just some more of
these dull papers to sign.”
Felixity smiled, and Roland was surprised. He expected
acquiescence, but not happiness.
“Naturally I’ll sign them,” said Felixity. “But
first, you must kiss me.”
Roland now looked concerned.
“It seems inappropriate.”
“Not at all,” said Felixity. “I’m your wife.”
And at this, the gigolo must have triumphed over the thief, for Roland
approached Felixity and gravely bowed his head.
Indeed, at the press of her flesh on his, after the libidinous life he had been
leading, his lips parted from force of habit, and Felixity
blew into his mouth.
Roland sprang away. His face appeared congested and astonished. He went
on, stumbling backward, until he reached the door, and then he turned as if to
rush out of it.
So Felixity saw from the
back of him, the tailored suit and blue-black hair, and two jets of white flame
which spouted suddenly from his ears.
Roland spun on the spot, and now she saw his face, with yellow flames gouting from his nose and purple gases from his mouth. And
then he went up in a noiseless scream of fire, like petrol, or a torch.
The doorway was burning, and she could not get out of it. Flames were
darting around the room, consuming the sticks of furniture as they went. The
bed erupted like an opening rose. The mirror was gold again, and red.
How cold the flames were. Felixity felt them
eating her and gave herself eagerly, glad to be rid of
it, the vileness of her treacherous body. The last thing she saw was half the
burning floor give way and crash down into the lower
regions of the house, and the mirror flying after it like a bubble of the sun.
The servants escaped the blazing villa, and stood in the gardens of the
house above the sea, wailing and exclaiming. It was generally concluded that
their employer, Roland, and his mad invalid wife, had perished in the inferno.
With amazing rapidity, the house collapsed, sending up a pillar of red smoke
that could be seen for miles.
Unseen by anyone, however, Felixity emerged
out of the rubble.
She had not a mark or a smut upon her. She had instead the body of a
goddess and the face of an angel.
Her skin was like honey and her hair like a cascade of golden serpents
and in her mouth were the white and flawless teeth of a healthy predator.
Somehow she had had burned on to her, also, a lemon dress and amber
shoes.
She went among the philodendrons, Felixity,
out of sight. And so down toward the road, without a backward glance.