Spellbound with a Kiss
By Cuirbouilli
Prelude
A sleek
new 2007 Black Raven Cadillac rolled up the driveway to a red brick Colonial
Revival mansion and stopped in front of the two-car garage.
Autumn-colored leaves fluttered to the ground as the white garage door nearest
the house raised automatically. The
finely-tuned engine hummed almost imperceptibly as the driver slowly pulled the
car in and parked.
Marvin
Harper climbed out of the Cadillac, his brown leather bomber jacket creaking
against the leather seat. He was a tall, vigorous man in his mid-fifties,
casually dressed in a turtleneck and loafers.
As owner and president of a successful manufacturing company in downtown
Boston, Massachusetts a business suit was his most common attire, but it was a
Saturday afternoon and he was not in the office.
He
thumped the car door shut and was glad to see the red 2004 Mercedes-Benz
convertible parked in the space beside him. It meant that his wife had
returned from running her errands while he was gone.
He made
his way around the front of the Cadillac and entered the house through the
interior garage doorway. The delicious aroma of simmering, freshly-made
apple cider greeted him as he passed through the kitchen
"Cassandra?
Are you home?" he called aloud rhetorically.
"In
here," her voice answered dulcetly from her solarium at the other side of
their home.
Marvin
walked down the hallway and found his lovely wife sitting at her writing
desk. She met with their broker over brunch before going grocery
shopping, and she was reviewing the investment portfolio he had given to her.
"Did
you get the oil changed in the Cadillac?" she inquired, tossing her thick
red hair from her pretty face as she turned toward him.
"Yes
dear. I had them do a complete tune-up. You should be ship-shape
for another three thousand miles," he answered dutifully as he bent to
kiss her.
She
received his adoring smooch on her porcelain cheek, not letting him smudge her
glossy crimson lipstick.
“And do
you have your luggage all packed for your trip and ready to go?” she nagged.
“It’s all
set and in the foyer waiting for your inspection,” he reassured her with a
patient grin.
She
cocked her arched eyebrows at his remark. Her penetrating green eyes
glimmered at him with the loving reproach he was long accustomed to.
"So.
What did Carl have to say?" he asked about her meeting with their broker.
"Oh.
Nothing too surprising," she replied, pursing her lips shrewdly.
“He
advised that we not touch our annuities, of course. We will never get a
rate of 11.0% again, especially if the economy keeps looking as unfavorable as
it does.”
Marvin
nodded in agreement.
“Otherwise,
I asked him to stabilize some of our other investments and I shifted some money
in my personal accounts. Oh, and I invested your IRA into a CD,” she
summarized briefly, closing the portfolio.
“Why did
you do that? Isn’t there a penalty?” Marvin asked.
“Not if
it is rolled into a new IRA that is already invested in a CD. It will
earn almost double the interest and you know what I always say; every penny counts,”
she smiled, plucking the pristine white shirt collar that was layered over a
crimson turtleneck at her throat.
“Sounds
smart to me dear,” Marvin agreed, jingling his keys in his pants pocket.
“You’re a
good woman.”
“I
know,” she chimed along with his endearing compliment.
The smile
on her full red lips broadened complacently.
Cassandra
was always very prudent with their money. Marvin trusted her to handle
their household finances, and he was glad he did not have to manage them
himself. Running his corporation was enough stress by itself.
He
noticed that the long, black leather coat she was wearing when she left that
morning was draped over the arm of the sofa. It was unusual for Cassandra
to not hang her coat up in the foyer closet if she did not intend to put it on
again shortly and the sight of it prompted his next question.
“So, have
you decided to come to Jeff’s party with me?” Marvin asked, referring to a
Halloween party being held by the vice president of his company that afternoon.
She let
out a perturbed sigh and turned away without answering him.
“You said
you were still thinking about it,” he continued, qualifying his question
gingerly as he glanced at the Rolex watch on his wrist.
“But, if
you are coming we need to leave soon. It’s already after two o’clock and
we aren’t going to be able to stay for too long before I have to leave for the
airport.”
She
opened her desk drawer, placed the portfolio inside of it, and closed it
again. The long, black leather skirt she had on rustled as she stood up
and pushed her chair in neatly.
“Oh,
Marvin. I cannot decide,” she admitted, tugging the creases out of her
cashmere cardigan sweater.
She
clasped her hands over her slim waist and fidgeted.
The
decision to go to the party presented more of a dilemma for her than most
people would guess, but Marvin understood his wife well.
Cassandra
was a very particular woman to say the least. She was meticulous
about her appearance, precise about her habits, and selective about who she
associated with. For his part Marvin preferred that she be a discerning
lady of good taste, but she did not always socialize well with people of lesser
standards. She was often accused of being a snob. Marvin would argue that maybe she was just a
little too “refined”.
Regardless,
she did not fit in with the blue collar employees of his company at all.
She was even a bit too proper for most of his office staff. As a result she found it difficult to enjoy
herself at company social events and she avoided them if possible. She
usually would never consider going to a party like the one being held that
day. However, when Marvin mentioned
offhand that one of his engineers named Nathaniel might show up in an authentic
Puritan costume she suddenly expressed an uncharacteristic interest in
going.
That was
two weeks ago, and she had been anxiously wavering ever since.
“Are you
certain Nathaniel is coming?” she clarified for the umpteenth time.
“He told
me he was when I saw him on Wednesday,” Marvin answered.
“And he
said he was going to wear armor like he does at those historical events he goes
to.”
Cassandra
was only acquainted with Nathaniel from the few company-hosted events she went
to, but she was rather fond of him for reasons she could not explain.
Perhaps it was simply because he was one of the few people in Marvin’s
corporation who behaved with any courtesy or respect around her, but something
about him struck her as oddly familiar. If he was not such a young man
she would actually question whether she had met him sometime years ago,
although she could not place when or where.
Granted
that she already liked Nathaniel, the thought of seeing him dressed as a
Puritan soldier piqued her curiosity enough for her to think about going the
party. She impulsively bought a witch hat to wear as a costume, but she
was still unsure if she wanted to go.
She kept debating if it was worth subjecting herself to the other
obnoxious guests just to visit with Nathaniel briefly. Besides that, she
was afraid his “authentic” outfit would turn out to be a nothing more than a
ridiculous, polyester Halloween costume.
“He is
not one of those silly carnival performers from a renaissance festival is he?”
she scoffed.
“I don’t
know, dear,” Marvin shrugged.
“You are
a better judge of that stuff than I am. All I can tell you is that he
says he will look like a pilgrim that just stepped off the Mayflower and
the kid sounds like a history professor when he talks.”
She
fretted, tugging the buttoned cuffs of her white blouse from the sleeves of her
sweater.
Cassandra
kept current with clothing and hairstyles. She took modern conveniences
for granted like any other woman and expected to get a new car every couple
years. But, otherwise her mannerisms often tended to be quite
old-fashioned.
She
possessed a unique sensibility for history that often left Marvin
baffled. The past and the present did not always seem distinct to
her. She could be talking about
something she read in the morning newspaper one minute and then recite details
about a similar event that happened two hundred years ago the next minute as if
it was common knowledge. The heritage of old towns like Plymouth,
Nantucket, and Salem was so intimately familiar to her that Marvin joked she
ought to be a tour guide. She harbored a
singular, romantic obsession with the early Puritan history of New England and,
indeed, many of the morals and virtues she conducted herself by were rather
puritanical.
Thus, it
was not surprising that she was interested in seeing Nathaniel’s costume,
although Marvin was beginning to regret mentioning it. Her deliberations
were exhausting him.
“If you
don’t want to come to the party it’s alright, sweetheart. You don’t come
to most of these office parties and I don’t expect you to. Nobody will
think less of you,” he assured her.
“I have
no illusions about that!” she clucked.
“Nobody
there would miss me and, personally, I would rather not freeze outside in the
cold with a bunch of people I have nothing in common with. I would much
rather stay here snuggled under a blanket, drink a warm mug of cider, and read
a book by the fireplace.”
“It’s up
to you. I don’t want you to be miserable on my account. If you
don’t come it will be quicker for me to just go straight to the airport from
the party,” he hinted.
“Oh!
But, Nancy and Jeff always put so much time and effort into their
parties. It would be rude of me not to go,” she vacillated.
“They are
always glad to see you,” Marvin agreed evenly.
“I
suppose Barb, Linda, and Kathy will be there,” she predicted with trepidation,
hooking a manicured finger on the long, double-stranded pearl necklace that
looped down the front of her bosom.
“You know
they will be,” Marvin confirmed.
“They
offered to help Nancy with food and decorations as soon as Jeff announced the
party.”
The three
women she named were the office secretaries. They had been with the
company many years and performed their jobs well enough, but they were
notorious busybodies. Marvin was aware that Cassandra was a target of
their gossip. He found it tiresome, but
inconsequential. His wife did not
appreciate it at all, however, and she had little regard for them.
The heels
of Cassandra’s tall, black leather boots tapped pensively on the hardwood floor
as she paced.
“Why you
put up with those hateful shrews is simply beyond me!” she blustered.
“We’ve
been through this before, dear,” he groaned.
“Like I
said, if you want to just stay home it’s alright.”
“No!
I have made up my mind!” she decreed.
She
dropped her hands to her thighs, smacking them sharply against her leather
skirt as if to punctuate her statement.
“I am
going to the party with you!”
“Are you
sure?” he confirmed cautiously.
“Yes!”
she proclaimed.
“I will
not give any of them a reason to talk about me behind my back. If I do
not go with you they will gossip all week about what a horrible wife I am not
giving my husband a proper farewell before he travels overseas.”
She
stepped over to the couch and snatched up her leather coat by the collar.
“But, if
one of them says anything rude to me while we are there we are leaving
immediately!”
A vast
wave of shiny black lambskin swooshed to her ankles as she swung the coat
around her shoulders and slipped her arms into the satin-lined sleeves.
She walked over to the full-length cheval mirror in the far corner, pulling the
coat flaps close about herself.
“I didn’t
know you cared so much about what those women said,” Marvin commented.
“Oh,
their opinion means nothing to me, I assure you,” she huffed.
“I really
should spend as much time with you as I can before you are gone.”
“I
appreciate the sentiment, dear, but it’s not like this is the first time I have
flown to Germany,” he pointed out.
“You
don’t need to go out of your way for me. Besides, I’m only going to be
gone for a week. I’ll be back home
before you know it.”
“I know
darling, and I will pray that you return home to me safe and sound every night
you are away,” she sighed.
Marvin
was leaving for Hanover, Germany that evening to finalize a major deal with one
of his company’s biggest parts manufacturers. Cassandra was not happy
about him going on the trip and she made him well aware of it over the past
several weeks. It was her nature to
worry, but she usually did not complain much when he traveled for
business. For some strange reason she was overly concerned with his
safety this time. She even tried using
their wedding anniversary as an excuse for him not to go, but that was not for
another month. He figured she just heard
too many reports about plane crashes in the news.
“Anyhow,
the more I think about it I really do feel it is best that I should go to this
party. My intuition is telling me it is the right thing to do,” she
declared resolutely.
Her
leather coat creaked softly as she buttoned it down the single-breasted
placket.
“Well, I
guess that settles it then! I know better than to question your woman’s
intuition!” he chuckled.
“You’ve
predicted the future correctly too many times for me to argue with you about
that!”
Her
emerald eyes sparkled at him with amusement in the mirror. She finished
buttoning her coat and rolled the notched collar halfway up behind her neck in
her signature way. She plucked the collar of her white blouse so that it
stood crisp from her lapels and tugged the shirt cuffs to her wrists inside her
coat sleeves. Sliding her hands down her flat abdomen she turned from
side to side, admiring her svelte figure as it gleamed in the black leather.
She
looked like she was going to an art gallery or the symphony, not to an outdoor
Halloween party on a farm. Marvin was not about to tell her she was
overdressed, though. Any less formal
outfit would be out of character for her. Cassandra was just being
herself and he liked her that way.
He
approached her from behind and placed his hands on her shoulders. Her
supple lambskin coat felt like cool butter beneath his fingers.
“You’re
just as beautiful as the day I married you,” he crooned in her ear, nuzzling
her silky red hair.
The
floral scent of her perfume filled his nostrils. He recognized from
familiarity that it was Timeless by Avon and it was certainly an
appropriately-named fragrance for her.
“That is
because I have a wonderful husband who provides so well for me,” she responded
sweetly, gazing contently at her reflection.
He did
not flatter her just to be affectionate. Maybe it was difficult for him
to tell because he had been with her for so long, but she truly looked the same
to him as she did twenty years ago. Most of Marvin’s hair had turned gray
and he was accumulating more wrinkles by the day. Cassandra seemed to be unaffected by her age,
though. She was just as lovely at
fifty-four as she was at thirty-two.
Marvin
considered himself very fortunate to have such a fine lady for a wife.
For all of her quirks and particularities Cassandra had proven to be a great
partner in every way. She played tennis and golf with him, and they
enjoyed boating together. She was his
intellectual equal, she was an excellent cook, and once the lights were out in
their bedroom she was far from prudish.
Marvin
was a bit of a playboy in his youth. He was handsome, athletic, and the
only child of a wealthy family. He casually dated more than his fair
share of beautiful women and enjoyed every minute of it. By his
early-thirties his parents were pressuring him to settle down and start a
business. He began looking for a potential
wife, but every Olivia Newton-John look-alike he picked up in a nightclub
turned out to be a gold-digging bimbo.
Then he
met Cassandra at a fundraising event in March of 1985. She was the most
striking woman he ever laid eyes on. Her
red hair and porcelain complexion caught his attention from across the
room. She was serenely composed and refreshingly elegant; buttoned up in
a burgundy leather blazer, a cream silk bow blouse, and a long, pleated wool
skirt. He was instantly attracted to her in a way he never felt before
and couldn’t help introducing himself.
“It is a
pleasure to meet you, Marvin. I am Cassandra Pell,” she blushed
vivaciously, accepting his handshake with her delicate fingers.
Cassandra
was a young widow recently moved to Boston. It was too traumatic for her
to ever speak of in detail, but her late husband died suddenly from a heart
attack. He left her well-off and she emerged from the tragedy a smart,
no-nonsense woman. She possessed the
savvy of a person from an affluent background, but she was humble enough to
work at a public library and donate her time to charity.
Marvin
discerned that she was looking for serious commitment and something in her
tender green eyes told him she was the one; the woman he could happily
provide for the rest of his life. Marrying her was the best decision he
ever made and after twenty-two years he had no regrets. Marvin could
hardly imagine having a better wife than Cassandra.
Her
leather coat crackled as she reached into her pockets and pulled out a pair of
black lambskin gloves.
“Well
then. I suppose we should be going,” she sighed.
She
turned and gave him a peck on the lips before stepping away.
“Go pull
the car around to the front door. That way you can load your luggage into
the trunk as we leave.”
“Sounds
like a plan,” Marvin agreed, hopping to her command without question.
“I’ll
meet you in the foyer while you check my bags.”
He spun
around and headed out the doorway, fishing his car keys out of his pocket.
“Oh!
And do not forget to pick up the apple pie I baked last night! It is
sitting on the kitchen counter! Just lay
it in the back seat of the car!” she called after him.
“Yes
dear!” he answered dutifully on his way down the hall.
Cassandra’s
leather coat creaked tensely over her firm breasts as she inhaled a deep breath
and let out another long sigh. She always felt a little more secure
buttoned up inside of her long leather coat and at the moment she relished the
luxurious warmth of it more than ever. If it helped her shake off the
nervous chill that froze her to the bone she would gladly keep herself bundled
up in the coat for the rest of the weekend.
She was
extremely anxious about her husband leaving for Europe that evening. She
usually did not mind when he travelled.
He went on many business trips through the years, and, truthfully, she
very much enjoyed having the house all to herself while he was gone. The
present situation was different, though.
Cassandra’s
life was due to change on their twenty-second wedding anniversary and Marvin
flying four thousand miles away less than a month before left her in an uncomfortably vulnerable
position. She dared not tell him why, but it was absolutely vital for
Marvin to be with her on the night of their anniversary. If anything
happened to delay his return home by that date he would fail her
unforgivably. Many years of careful
planning would be ruined and she would be forced to take drastic measures
disturbing for her to even consider.
She
complained about the timing of the trip for weeks and pleaded with him to send
someone else in his place. But, Marvin was a typical man. He dismissed her needs as trivial and
stubbornly insisted that he had to go because “he was the only man who could do
the job”.
Of course, she realized that she worried herself needlessly
and she tried to convince herself that all would be well. Marvin would
return home to her safely just as he had so many times before. He would provide her what she deserved on their
anniversary and her life would go on same as it always had.
Her
cashmere-lined leather gloves squeaked softly as she pulled them onto her hands
and tucked them neatly into her cuffs. She glided around the loveseat in
the middle of the room to an alcove set within the bookshelves of the facing
wall. An antique oak wood chest occupied
the nook with a broom, a cauldron, and a witch hat arranged in a classic
Halloween display upon the lid.
A canvas
print of an old Dutch painting hung above the trunk. It was one of
Cassandra’s favorites and depicted a dashing officer clad in breastplate,
sword, and tall boots bowing gallantly before a lady in a white silk
dress. Cassandra long fancied such a gentleman greeting her in similar
fashion. If Nathaniel at all resembled
the cavalier in the painting, going to the party would be well worth her
while. She smiled wistfully to herself at the pleasant, but unlikely
notion.
She
picked the witch hat up by its point. It was the new one she bought
specifically for the party. It cost almost two hundred dollars because it
was crafted of genuine, smooth grain black leather with a stylish curve to the
wide brim and a gentle crook to the tall, tapered crown. The hat appealed
to Cassandra in a nostalgic way, otherwise she would have never spent so much
money on a costume piece.
She swept
over to a large mirror hanging above the console table in the adjacent
corner. She raised the hat over her head, holding it by the brim with
both hands. Her movements produced a rustling
of crisp fabric and creaking of leather that registered only subconsciously in
her ears; after all, it was merely the sumptuous atmosphere she inhabited every
day.
She
carefully placed the hat at an angle atop her fiery, side-parted
bouffant. Clasping her gloved hands together in front of her chest, she
beamed at her reflection with delight. The hat matched her coat
perfectly. What a smart, sophisticated
witch she was!
She
continued to stare intently at herself for several seconds as if hypnotized.
“If only you could see me now, Moira,” she murmured, speaking
to someone unseen.
“I have done just as you taught me and the spell has kept me
safe just as you promised. The time draws near for me to speak the
words again. I can feel it in my bones.
My body aches to be replenished once more. I am ready to begin a
fresh, new life and my husband shall provide well for me.”
Her
crimson lips curved into an inscrutable, decadent smile.
“Are you
coming, sweetheart? Or did you change your mind again?” Marvin boomed
impatiently from the foyer at the front of the house.
His voice
startled her and she gasped aloud.
She
quickly removed the witch hat and glanced in the mirror again to make sure her
hair was still in place.
“Coming!”
she answered.
Then she
swished away, the heels of her boots clicking on the hardwood floor.
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