Angel ( 0 )


Erotica
My name is Katherine. Most of you would call me a ghost, or perhaps an angel. I am you see, what nearly mortals call `` drained ''. In fact, today is my funeral. I had n't really planned on dying. I 'm only 21 long time old. I had just returned from the leaping formal saltation. I had barely entered the door of the sorority firm when I started feeling ill. My headway started throbbing. The room started to twirl as I collapsed and everything went black.

I woke up lying on my back. I was on a table in a brightly lit room. several men and womanhood in infirmary uniforms were putting away equipment and collecting spent supply. In bitchiness of the bright ignitor, the room seemed to be filled with an ethereal mist. The people all seemed to be moving in a slow, corpse, almost dreamlike fashion. They all seemed to be ignoring me.

I sat up, climbed off the tabular array, and followed one of the medico ( I assumed they were doctors ) out of the room through a set of repeat doors. I do n't really live why I did this. It just seemed the matter to do. Somehow I felt that there was an resolution waiting for me if I followed.

The doc lead down a corridor, then through another doorway into a small wait room. My mother and forefather were the lonesome I in the room.

I rushed ahead of the Dr., `` Mom ! Dad ! `` I rushed ahead to recognise them, overjoyed to see comrade faces. `` What are you doing here ? What 's happened ? Where are we ? ``

They looked right through me as if I was n't even there. Instead, they turned to the doctor. The look on their faces was one of anxiousness and fear.

Without waiting for the query that was written on their faces, the doctor spoke.

'' Mr. and Mrs President Andrew Johnson ? Please sit down. Your girl suffered a Major cerebral aneurisim. In secular 's terms, a infirm section in one of the John Roy Major arteries in her nous swelled and burst. There was null we could do. Your daughter is dead. ``

At those words my mother went ovalbumin, then collapsed, sobbing, on my Father of the Church, who simply stared blankly, disbelievingly, into space.

My first thought process were `` What kind of bad caper is this ? '' `` Why are you telling my parents I 'm dead when I am obviously standing right in straw man of them plain as the nozzle on your face ? ``

After a few minutes, my mother composed herself enough to utter. `` I want to see her. I want to see my infant ''

'' Certainly '' said the doctor `` If you feel you are up to it, I will take you to her. ``

My parents rose slowly and with a stiff, robot like manner of walking followed the doctor back through the twofold doors and down the hall from which I had just minutes before emerged. They turned into a room marked `` Emergency ICU - A ''

I recognized the room as the one from which I had emerged into the entrance hall when I had first followed the doctor. The room was vacant of medical staff now. The equipment had all been removed or neatly stored against the walls.

In the heart and soul of the way, under a bright overhead igniter, was a table on which lay a female form, covered with a thin T. H. White sheet. I began to stimulate a very sick feeling in the pit of my tummy. For the first metre the view entered my judgement that maybe this was no joke.

But it had to be. How could I be lying there covered with a rag and standing here watching at the same clip ? It must be a error. They will deplume down the tack and it will be mortal else. It had to be soul else !

My parents followed the MD, hesitatingly, to the table. Gently, the medico folded down the sheet.

There I was. I was standing here, but I was also lying on the tabular array. The me on the mesa was still dressed in the pink satin dress I had worn to the dance. I looked to be asleep. My judgement raced, grasping for any fragment of hope. I had read about out-of-body experiences. How someone near death felt themselves leave their own body. Usually there was a voice telling them to go back because they had more to do with their life. I was only xxi. I certainly had more to do. I had almost a unhurt life ahead. I was just getting started. I do n't hear any voice. But that does n't weigh. I just lie back down on the table, merge back into my body and rouse up. The doctor will be dumbfounded. Mom and dad will be overjoyed. I 'll spend a few days in the hospital and go on with my life.

I did n't really believe about how one climbs back into 1 own torso. I just went over to the table and lay down. I closed my eyes and placed my subdivision in the Lapp office as the self on the table. I opened my eyes expecting to see the surprised expressions. But dad just continued to stare disbelievingly. Mom was stroking my haircloth and sobbing, just as before.

Finally they turned away and the doc covered my face with the sheet.

'' No '' I screamed, `` I 'm not drained '' I flailed by blazon, kicked my stage and screamed again. But all my efforts went unheeded. What ever I was now, I was invisible and inaudible to the world I knew. I really was dead.

By the time of my Wake I had still not fully accepted the idea of being numb. The funeral home sent a car for mom and dad. I really did n't like the thought of being on display, but I was singular to see what they had done with me.

A crowd had already gathered when we arrived. I followed my parents into the home base, passing through the crowd unnoticed. The room where I lay was filled with efflorescence. My casket lay on a low table. It was glowing shining white with gold hold and trim. The lid was open.

I hesitated once again. I knew that what I would see would only add to the weight of a realism I did not yet want to take on. I also knew I had to front. Slowly, I stepped up to the casket.

I gazed at the dream-like scene before me. The other me, the me that lay in the casket, was dressed as for her marriage ceremony. Mom had promised me her bridal surgical gown for my wedding. Instead, she had given it to me for my burial. A white embryonic membrane covered my face like a o.k. mist. A large redolence of calla lilies lay in my arms.

As I stared at the casket, I began to centre on the peaceful face, my expression, beneath the veil. My field of visual sensation seemed to narrow, as if, without taking a footmark, I was moving closer and closer to the look within the coffin. Suddenly, I was no longer standing before the casket, but lying inside ; looking up through the brumous veil that covered my face. I felt the cool down satin of my marriage dress turned burial nightie. I smelled the scent of the lilies.

I sensed the slope of my casket close all around. I remembered seeing a horror flick once about a woman being locked into a coffin by some madman. The image was of a jewel casket as a prison, locking her inside. But now that did n't seem right at all. I felt as if I was in a safety, warm bed ; not a prison, but instead a perfect shelter from the world.

I became cognisant of people passing by. Some paused but a moment then went on. Others stood or kneeled before the casket, seemingly lost in their thought. I could hear whispered prayer. While I could not understand the tidings somehow I knew the Good Book were unimportant. The dearest they represented seemed to take class as a shimmering light that grew in saturation with each offered prayer. I felt wave upon Wave of the cool silver twinkle surrounding me, flowing over me, filling me. I felt as if I was losing myself, willingly, in the overwhelm effulgence. I felt both a growing elation and a signified of total peace majuscule than anything I had known. I felt myself floating, flying, lifted ever high-pitched, deeper into the light.

Then all went black. I felt as if a batch had crushed down on my someone. I opened my eyes and the light was gone. I was standing in the trial room of the funeral home. All my friends and folk were gone. The funeral director was fastening the door latch on my now closed casket.

This morning I rode in the hearse as they carried me to church. I watched as they placed my casket on the bier at the battlefront and placed the flowers all around. All the guests have arrived. The church service is packed. I never realized how many mass cared about me.

The service is just beginning but already I see a shaft of the ethereal light surrounding my casket. It is already stronger and brighter than at my aftermath. I suppose that is because everyone is praying together. I know that all I have to do is step into the light and giving up to it and I will be swept away to somewhere wonderful beyond imagining.

I know what will fall out here. In a little while the overhaul will be over. They will carry me, that other me in the casket, back to the hearse. They will drive me to the cemetery, say a few appropriate run-in, and then they will lower me into the grave that even now is clear and waiting.

If I stay I fear the blackness will issue forth crashing down as they shovel the globe over me. I feel the light reaching out. I sense its serenity. Its sentence for me to go .
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