Tag Archives: florist

The Blood Reemerging

The door creaked open. The bald florist on the other side offered K the same expression he offers him every year on the thirtieth of December – looking somewhat like a vet explaining to a crying child the fate of her shar-pei.

“Happy anniversary, K,” said the florist, presenting the same maudlin bouquet of half-dead flowers he presents every thirtieth of December.

“Thanks,” replied K heavily, reaching one arm through the gap in the door. “No card, I suppose?”

The florist shook his head. “I’m afraid not.” He looked at K with no expression: “Why do you keep putting yourself through this?”

K propped the rotting flowers on his hip. “I don’t know. I keep hoping that maybe this year it will be her knocking instead of” – he paused – “well, you. Not that I don’t like you.”

“It won’t, K. It’s been five years. She’s not coming back. At least she remembers your wedding day,  I guess.” The florist shrugged and took his leave.

K closed the door and set the dying flowers – her favorites – on the kitchen table.

He then marked in his calendar exactly 51 weeks into the future, when he would place his next order with the bald florist.


The Unfinishable Exercise of Self-Trust

The florist was clear: you needed the petals from 450 roses. Just perfect, she thought, for she had always planned on asking for K’s hand approximately 450 days after their first date–thus one rose to commemorate each day spent together. Ever the progressive sort, she forbade K to ask her to marry him: When I’m ready, I’ll ask you, she said 300 days ago.

150 days later, she did just that. At a restaurant way out of her price range. It was romantic, if financially ill-advised. They swiftly made plans to marry and she dutifully began plucking the petals from 450 roses. See, she had this grand idea of spreading the petals over the floor of the catherdral where they would claim ownership of each other; a floral walkway from entrance to alter.

She coaxed her vision to fruition, successfully scattering the petals of 450 roses like the ashes of 450 dead things the morning of their wedding. Then she customarily hid herself away until the appropriate time.

But that time never came because K slipped on her rose petal path and broke his neck in an overdetermined fall.

The florist had said something about that possibility. But she pretended not to hear.