She Who Does Not Laugh

For RDP Wednesday: MOCK

I remember a teacher of mine used to make fun of the way I smiled and laughed.

If I was near him and he heard me laugh, he would lean over stick his face close to mine and mimic my laugh.

It was pretty embarrassing. I hated him for a long time for doing that to me.

I was a Mortician’s apprentice when I saw him again.

He was now a minister and he was officiating the funeral I had directed.

Of course he didn’t recognize me. I was older, darker and taller.

After the service we were walking out of the chapel to the parking lot when he thanked me for my work I had done on the young man who had attended his church and died in a terrible auto accident  and I said,

” I hope you’ll call on me again.”

Then I smiled and when I did he pulled back a little. He flinched and then he said my

name and he said in recognition, ” it’s you, isn’t it. ”

I let his comment pass, then I put my hand on his arm and said with conviction, ” I’m looking forward to seeing you

again. ”

He pulled his arm away and tried to stride off, but he stumbled just a little and that little slip of his did my heart good.

 

Your Home Away From Home

WP Daily Prompt: If you were going to open up a shop, what would you sell?

Photographer Unknown

If I could open my own shop, I would find the most haunted building in the WORLD and I would design  catacombs that would run under it for miles and miles

and I would house the mummified remains of anyone- human or beast- that would like their human remains to spend their lifetime as art in my dark yet welcoming home.

However,there’s this question-Why do people want to visit places like the catacombs? Is it because the visitors are odd and macabre? That they are there for the thrill?

I think that people go  to places like the Catacombs in Italy  because they want to know what the face of death looks like so that when it shows up for them, they’ll know it and they won’t be scared of it.

That’s not such a bad thing- is it?

Photographer Unknown
The mummies of the Capuchin friars of the catacombs of Palermo, the oldest guests of this incredible place.

Photographer Unknown: Detail of some mummies in the Capuchin Catacombs of Palermo. Some are perfectly preserved, in others you can see the straw coming out of period clothes.