I am sitting down to write this
half-way between Paris and Lille which I hope to reach before
tomorrow night. I am tired from the journey, and being with child has
affected my capacity to reminisce – nonetheless, dear loyal reader,
I will now attempt to bring back with words some of the painful
events that have plagued me since I last wrote here.
'Tis two years now since I fled infected
London for Paris – two wonderful, peaceful years, when the only
upsetting events were the occasional loss of a dear friend to the
guillotine. 'Tis in Paris that I met my dear beloved Imlay, adored
companion and father of my child to be. France is mercifully free of
zombies. I believe the revolutionary practice of using the guillotine
often and plenty has so far prevented a general infection of the
country: the blade that slices through the neck is democratic enough in that
it kills zombies and royalists alike. M. Guillotine, I should note,
was one of the early proponents of the view to which I fully
subscribe that in order to destroy a zombie and prevent it from
rising again, one should separate its head from its body.
Back in London, my experience with
educating zombies so that they may claim their rights having failed
rather than succeeded, I retreated for a while to my own affairs.
After a spell in Ireland, where I was put in charge of protecting six
children from their zombified mother, I came home to start a school
with my beloved Fanny. Such happiness, however, would not last. Fanny
was bitten, by one of my own sisters (a story I shall tell on a later
occasion). I entreated her to leave England for Portugal, where I
hoped the weather would be more favourable to her condition. I soon
received reports that she was worsening, and still in hope that I
might assist a recovery, I decided to join her. I lost no time in
setting out and endured a tolerable passage in a ship ridden with
zombies. My days were spent cutting through necks and limbs, and my
nights locked away in a tiny, rank smelling cabin. As soon as I set
foot in Portugal, I realised that there could be no hope. Not a
single living soul remained: all had been zombified, which should
have come as no surprised had I reflected on the extreme catholicism
of the natives. My dear Fanny expired in my arms, after I had
decapitated her.
Desolate, I returned to London,
whatever small lust for life I had left all but used up in slaying my
way through the journey back. Fortunately, my good friend Johnson
approached me and offered me work in which I was able to lose my
sorrowful self. I reviewed, edited, translated, even wrote book,
which, I am not afraid to say, gathered a little success of their
own. Twas then also I met the treacherous Fuseli. Straightaway I was
charmed by his wit, and his worldliness, and I do not flatter myself
I believe when I say that he did not find my company unpleasant, at
least at first. But as s oon as I had persuaded myself that he
returned my affections, Fuseli found himself obliged to marry a
relation whose sole capital were looks and an income.
Soon after the
wedding – to which I was not invited – it became apparent to me
that the young Mrs Fuseli was in fact entirely devoid of brains –
except for the ones it was her practice to devour at breakfast. Yes,
Fuseli had succeeded where I had so spectacularly failed: he had
tamed a zombie and taken her for his wife. Full of admiration for him
and pity for her, I immediately offered myself as complement to their
household. I argued in a convincing enough manner that whereas he
had apparently succeeded in training his dead wife so that he could
use her body as he pleased without risk of infection, he must sorely
miss the intellectual company of a real woman. I put myself entirely
at their mercy, humbly requesting that they should take me into their
home. To my great horror, Fuseli laughed in my face, and his wife
growled at me in such a way that I came to fear for my life. Twas
then I decided to leave for Paris where I have at last found bliss,
in the person of Imlay, a tall handsome American (Fuseli is Swiss and
Short), with whom I am expecting to start a family in a short few
weeks.
click on Zombie Mary for more stories. |
2 comments:
Ever so glad to hear from the zombie-slayer again! May I take this a step further, and cross-post this whole episode to A Vindication of the Rights of Mary? With full credit and backlinks, of course.
Please help yourself!
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