THE SINGULAR & EXTRAORDINARY TALE OF MIRROR & GOLIATH from The Peculiar Adventures of John Loveheart, Esq., vol. I

 

It is the most beautiful day, and I am sitting in my garden with my pipe and my notebook, writing a new fairy story. The papers are still full of tales of Jack the Ripper, how he might be dressing up as a sailor, a soldier, a doctor. Costumes, games, riddle-like letters to the police, missing livers, missing hearts. There’s a real fairy tale villain. There’s a real monster.

 

Horace and the Magic Foot was, thank heavens, burnt on the fire. I feel I can write what I want now, whether the publisher wants it or not.

 

I’m not writing shit any more. I won’t do it.

 

 

 

 

 

October 1888

 

 

 

 

 

Detective Sergeant White & Constable Walnut

 

 

 

 

 

I’m in Brighton, sitting on the beach, enjoying a cup of tea. Sitting about twenty yards from me is a jewel thief called Perkins, whom I’ve followed from London. It’s taken weeks to track him but it should soon all be worthwhile. Patience is a virtue. Constable Walnut brings over a couple of ice creams.

 

“Is he doing anything, Sir?”

 

“No, he’s waiting like us.”

 

“Chocolate or vanilla?” says Walnut.

 

“Vanilla please,” and he hands it to me, melting round my fingers.

 

“Well, it’s a lovely day for catching criminals,” says Walnut.

 

And then we see another figure walking across the sands. He’s wearing a purple velvet jacket covered in red love hearts.

 

“Here comes trouble,” sighs Walnut.

 

Mr Loveheart approaches Perkins, who’s sitting dipping his toes in the sea. He takes out a long silver sword and with one swoop Perkins’ head flies off into the ocean.

 

“Oh for God’s sake,” I cry.

 

Mr Loveheart comes running over, smiling, and hands me a bag full of stolen emeralds.

 

“Believe me, Detective Sergeant White, he deserved to die. Nasty piece of work that one. Strangled his grandmother.”

 

“Why are you here, Mr Loveheart?”

 

“Well, it’s about that little favour you said you would do for me.”

 

“Go on,” I say, and lick the remainder of my ice cream.

 

“You must let me kill Tumbletee. No police interference. He is mine to play with.”

 

 

 

 

 

Mr Fingers

 

 

 

 

 

I am trapped in an eight foot tall mirror. It may as well be a coffin. I scream, I lick my tongue up and down the glass, and my boy watches me and laughs.

 

It may as well be a coffin.

 

 

 

 

 

Aunt Eva

 

 

 

 

 

I have been thinking again about that boy who broke my heart when I was seventeen. I have been questioning myself, questioning whether my actions were fair. I murdered him and ate his heart as an act of vengeance. Why do I always end up thinking about him? Why do I go back to the same memories, interrogate myself?

 

Because I loved him. Because I loved him. Because I loved him.

 

 

 

 

 

November 1888

 

 

 

 

 

Mr Tumbletee

 

 

 

 

 

I am dressed up as a doctor with my bag of knives.

 

Slice and dice.

 

Slice and dice

 

slice and dice

 

slice and dice.

 

I’m afraid Daddy disowned me after the last girl. I was beginning to embarrass him. I made rather a lot of mess. But I saved him the heart.

 

I’m bored now of this game. Want to play another.

 

A gentleman strolls past me and looks at me oddly.

 

I scream, “I will see your head in a bucket!”

 

I think I have become madness. I have melted into it like cream into hot chocolate, far too easily. The man has disappeared. I walk back to my lodgings, the fog thick and soupy. I walk across London Bridge; I can hear the clinking of blades in my black bag. Shiny crocodile teeth.

 

There’s a man standing on the other side of the bridge. He’s wearing funny-looking clothing. He’s dressed in black like me, but with red love hearts all over him like a disease. He has a long blade in his hands, silver like the moon. I walk towards him, step closer to this strange creature until I can see his face. He has black eyes, like me, and he is grinning.

 

“Hello, brother,” he says.

 

“Loveheart, it’s been such a very long time. I have missed you, baby brother,” and I draw my long knife out of my black bag. It glints like a celebrity. “Every star has its counterpoint, every wormhole in space its twin. And you are mine.”

 

“I’m going to stick your head on a pole outside Loveheart Manor,” he replies.

 

“Oh, really! I shall slice you up like a Battenberg. It’s such a shame – we are so similar, Loveheart. Why kill me?”

 

“Because I have standards,” he says.

 

 

 

 

Death

 

Time for the ending. I like the happy ones the best.

 

 

 

* * *

 

 

 

THE END

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