Chapter 18

Chapter 18221 wordsCompleted

Salome narrates a disorienting morning after a night of excess. She awakens with a head resting on the pillow beside her, describing its dark, matted hair, reddish‑lighter beard, deep‑lined eyes, and a crimson mouth she kisses before noting it feels colder than pewter. She questions the man's identity—Peter, Simon, Andrew, or John—then declares a craving for tea and dry toast, prompting her to summon the maid. The maid's clatter of cups, plates, and regional chatter provides the needed domestic order as Salome, hungover and “wrecked from a night on the batter,” resolves to clean her act: to get fitter, quit booze, cigarettes, and promiscuous sex. She vows to eliminate the “blighter” who entered her bed like a lamb to the slaughter. In front of a mirror she sees her eyes glitter, flings back the sticky red sheets, and reveals the man's head displayed on a platter, confirming the murder.