by Rose, Lotus
“Glad you asked! Why my girl, I am so skilled a hookaher, that no matter the spice, no matter if I have ever smoked it or not, I can inhale precisely and exactly up to the very moment just before an overdose would occur. It is a simply uncanny skill I have and a testament to my skills and abilities. And so I am able to reach the pinnacle of pleasure that each spice offers, for it is right on that line just before you get too much that you get the most you can get without getting too much, you see?”
Alice nods eagerly. Even while, for so long, and right now even, she has wished that the Caterpillar would make a mistake some day and inhale just a little too long and die and be rid of himself. Because frankly, she doesn’t appreciate being the test subject for his tinkering.
Now the Caterpillar adjusts his monocle and launches into his favorite poem, which he recites often, and which so happens to be about himself.
I’m an insect hookaher of distinction and taste,
Who smokes the most exquisite spices!
And I know when to quit with the utmost of haste,
So as not to be killed by my vices!
Since I inhale right up to the point that I die,
I reach the highest point of pleasure,
And since my timing’s so precise, so clever am I,
Why I daresay that I am a treasure!
Alice claps at his recitation. She’s quite convincing, she thinks.
“Very good, my girl. Thank you for your support. I have a new spice for you…”
The Caterpillar likes to test all his newly acquired spices on her. He calls her his “guinea pig”. It has resulted in so much misery and recoveries over the years, she has grown to despise him. Yet she could never refuse him, because he threatened to tell the Queen, who would order guards to have her beaten or whipped if she made trouble.
She says, meekly, “I’d rather not try it. More for you, don’t you think?”
“Oh, no, my little girl. I’m unfamiliar with this particular spice. I need you to test it so I can watch you and know how much to take without overdosing. You know that. Must we go through this again?”
Alice sighs. So many times she’s wished the Caterpillar would overdose so he wouldn’t be able to torment her anymore. She’d fantasized about maybe “helping” him get a little too much over the edge, but she could never before bring herself to do it. But she has more things to worry about than revenge, she reminds herself.
“Okay,” she says smiling. “But before I toke, there’s something I’d like to discuss.”
He adjusts his monocle, blows some smoke. “Yes?”
“See, during my unhappy unbirthday party today…I know you weren’t there, but perhaps you might have heard something. I had something stolen. A very important item. Have you heard anything about it?”
“I’ve heard nothing, and why should I care? What was stolen? Don’t you take care of your possessions, silly girl?”
“Well it’s quite embarrassing. I’ll just say it was a body part. Are you sure you’ve heard nothing? You don’t happen to know where it might be, do you?”
“A body part? What body part?” He looks around theatrically. “Well it’s certainly not around here. Why, depending on which part, it would probably be quite huge compared to me. Have you not forgotten that you’re usually overly large? And your body parts would be overly large?” His tone of speaking suggests he thinks Alice is stupid.
“And you don’t happen to know—”
He waves four arms, dismissively. “No no, no one tells me anything. They consider me too tiny to speak to. When really it is they who are overly large! Now enough of your missing property. You look just fine to me! I’m so anxious to try my new spice. Now get up here girl! You wouldn’t want me to tell the Queen would you?”
Alice believes the Caterpillar knows nothing about her lost heart. If the Tweedle twins hadn’t been lying, the Mad Hatter had taken it, so he’s next on her list to visit.
The Caterpillar causes her to startle from her thoughts when he shouts, “Girl! Get up here, get up here now! I’ll tell the Queen if you don’t come this instant! I shall have you whipped, beaten, beheaded! A trivial missing body part will be the least of your worries when you’re missing your head! Now!” His face has grown crimson from rage and his monocle drops carelessly from his eye and swings from the angry jerking motions of his head.
A grin creeps up Alice’s face as she locks eyes with him. “Certainly.” She curtsies.
Come, we shall have some fun now. And perhaps when I toke, the high of the spice will be a jolly good time besides. I always felt such guilt at the pleasure before, but that was the old me.
The Caterpillar says, “I’m glad to see some obedience for a change.” As Alice begins to climb the mushroom, he says, “That’s a good girl.” Now that she’s on top of it, he says, “Come sit in my lap.”
The Caterpillar doesn’t actually have a lap in the human sense, but Alice snuggles in front of the Caterpillar, huggled by dozens of his waving arms.
The Caterpillar begins to put the spice into his hookah. The spice looks like dried green leaves. “Now this spice,” the Caterpillar says, “is supposed to cause imaginations in the mind, colors and tastes to fill your head. It’s quite powerful.” The new spice begins to burn. “Here now.” He holds the mouthpiece part up to her lips. “Just like always, with the two breaths.”
The usual routine is for Alice to take two tokes while the Caterpillar watches. He has an uncanny ability to judge how powerful any spice is just by watching, so that he knows exactly how long to inhale himself, right up to the exact moment before an overdose—that way, he can achieve the highest high possible.
Eagerly, Alice takes the mouthpiece into her mouth, inhales warm rough smoke, fills her lungs, does it again. She coughs up smoke. Now she feels a tingling in her head and a sensation as if her head is expanding.
“Ooh, I can’t wait,” the Caterpillar says. His voice sounds deeper than usual, and slower. He takes the pipe from her hand, lifts it to his mouth, and inhales.
Alice acts as quickly as she can, though she’s a little clumsy from the spice. She grabs the tape from her pocket. The Caterpillar is inhaling deeply, eyes closed, not noticing her.
Alice peels the tape, sticks one end to the back of the Caterpillar’s head then wraps the tape around, taping the hookah in place in the Caterpillar’s mouth.
The Caterpillar still has his eyes closed. Perhaps the spice has numbed his sense of touch.
Alice makes sure to tape over the Caterpillar’s nose holes.
She shouts, “Take that!”
The Caterpillar is slow to react, but his eyes dreamily open. He seems confused as he sees Alice staring deeply into his eyes. He looks around, then his eyes go wide in surprise as he realizes.
“Do you know what body part I lost?” Alice says as the Caterpillar tries to rip the tape off, but his arms are too weak and caterpillary. “My heart.” The whites of the Caterpillar’s eyes show quite a bit more as he glances at her. She glares back, and takes the tube in her hand, because she figures that’s what he’ll try next.
And he does—he tries to pull the tubing from the hookah. Alice slaps his hands away with her free hand. It’s easy to do, because his movements are clumsy and slow.
The Caterpillar yells a muffled scream of rage and terror from behind the tape. Alice figures the Caterpillar had been holding his breath, so screaming would lead to…
The Caterpillar takes a deep breath. He blinks and shakes his head, his eyes go wide, he begins to twitch.
Alice watches.
The Caterpillar begins to shake all over. His eyes roll up into the top of his head. He lurches to the side and drops off the mushroom, and Alice is yanked and falls too, because she is too clumsy from the spice.
The Caterpillar thuds heavily onto the ground on his backside. Alice lands on top of him. She hears the hookah land somewhere to her left.
She feels groggy and dazed and for a few long seconds, they li
e that way. She feels the Caterpillar’s chest rise as he takes in another deep breath.
Several long seconds pass. Alice looks around, trying to plan her mode of getting off the bastard. Should she just roll off and trust she’ll land okay?
But now the Caterpillar’s body starts convulsing, causing her to slide off. She sits up and watches.
The Caterpillar’s body is rippling spasmodically, his many dozens of legs twitching while moving, as if he is trying to run somewhere. His eyes are open wide, staring into space, the hose is still taped to his mouth, but the hose part is broken away from the rest of the hookah.
The Caterpillar flails and convulses and shudders, rolls to his right side on top of the hookah and then he is still.
Alice approaches him to see his face. His eyes are still open wide in terror, but the life seems to have left them. She places her hand over the open end of the hose so that he won’t be able to take any more breaths of fresh air, and watches for several minutes.
The Caterpillar doesn’t take any breaths, his eyes remain open the whole time.
Finally, she says to him, “Watch out for the spice. That stuff’ll kill you.”
She searches around a few minutes. The Caterpillar never kept any other possessions than his hookah, and he didn’t wear clothes, so he has no pockets to search. Her heart is not here. So she supposes she’ll go see the Hatter next.
CHAPTER NINE
What Alice Sees
Alice feels as if someone is toying with her as she stumbles about—it’s as if someone is shifting the ground beneath her feet.
She blinks as she looks at the mushroom. “That can’t be right,” she mumbles, as she stares at it in alarm, for it now seems to be floating in the air upside down. She remembers that often when you invert things, it causes them to become evil. “So is that an evil mushroom?”
She glances at the Caterpillar, then does a double-take, because where the Caterpillar once was, there is now a cocoon. The hookah hose is slithering away like a snake, pulling part of the hookah with it.
She notes that there’s much too much bright blue and red in the things she sees, and everything seems to blur and shift.
“Why, this must be a…a…uh…hallucination! Well, time for me to return to my regular size.”
She grabs a piece of the right side of the mushroom, taking a guess, because she doesn’t know if it being upside down causes its left to become right, and vice versa.
She begins nibbling. She feels her head begin to expand first.
The cocoon is wriggling. It cracks open while Alice is growing. A black butterfly unfurls its wings then flutters off.
“Finally! He seemed to have been stuck in perpetual adolescence! But he grew up way too fast.” She giggles. “As am I!” She stops nibbling because she is normal size now.
She stares wide-eyed, because standing in front of her is Humpty Dumpty, but he looks cracked all over like a boiled egg that’s been tapped all about by a spoon. She notices he’s wonkily-shaped now, not very round, almost cubicle.
Alice says, “Weren’t you just a round—”
He scowls. “I’ve been around, yes, no thanks to you! You stay away from me! The king and his men put me together again, and I’m starting all over again. I’m building a brand new wall I am, in an entirely different spot I am, away from you!”
“But I’m right here! You really couldn’t have chosen a worse spot.”
“Technicalities. Don’t bother me with them.” He produces a brick in one hand. “I shall build my wall brick by brick.” He sets the brick on the ground then stands on top of it, which proves quite difficult as demonstrated by his teetering and waving and whirling of his arms.
“Whoooa…I’m…whoa…I’m Humpty dum…whoa…Dumpty here on my wall… Ack!…I’m Humpty…whoa…Dumpty and I cannot fall!”
“Why that’s not a proper wall. That’s just a brick.” She suddenly notices that the brick is set on a railroad track. Why hadn’t she noticed that before?
“I shall…whoa…build…ack…the wall…higher later.”
“And wider too, I should think. By the way, did you know you are standing on railroad tracks? That really is quite a bad location for your wall. What if a train comes?”
“Hush. I’m balancing!”
Suddenly she notices that some distance away, behind Humpty Dumpty, the March Hare and the White Rabbit stand several yards away from each other, facing each other—each is holding a large carrot in their arms.
The White Rabbit shouts at the hare, “I’ve had enough of you! There’s only room for one rabbit in Wonderland!”
The Hare shouts back, “I’m not a rabbit, I’m a hare, you scoundrel!”
They begin hopping toward each other, holding the carrots out like javelins. Both carrots strike true, impaling them both.
Alice cheers, shouts, “Eat your veggies!”
The rabbit and hare, still impaled and bleeding, are shaking hands and bowing after their respectable duel.
Humpty Dumpty says, “What’s all that ruckus? Please…whoa…be quiet. I’m trying to balance here.”
Alice looks at Humpty Dumpty just in time to see the black butterfly land on the tip of Humpty’s nose and rest there.
Humpty’s face takes on a comical look of alarm. “Shoo! You!” He is looking down, cross-eyed at the butterfly, which isn’t moving.
Alice hears the sound of the train’s horn.
She turns to see it in the distance, but it is rapidly approaching, much faster than seems possible.
The March Hare and the White Rabbit are hugging awkwardly, despite the huge carrots stuck in their bodies.
I must knock Humpty Dumpty from the wall so he doesn’t get hit by the train! Because I want to be the one who breaks him…again!
The train has almost arrived. The butterfly finally flits off.
Humpty doesn’t appear to see the train in his side vision, because of how he has to stand on the brick. “What is that racket? Distracting. I must concentrate on my…whoa…balance!”
“I will break you!” With a howl, Alice runs, jumps up with both feet in front of her, sailing through the air like she is sitting in a chair, knocking Humpty from the wall. He explodes into shimmering swirling confetti sparkles.
She turns her head in midair to see the train slamming right into her.
All of a sudden, she’s lying on the ground on her back as if none of that happened. She looks around. She sees the little mushroom, right side up, and the little dead caterpillar next to his hookah.
She stands, dusts herself off, then staggers toward the Mad Hatter’s table.
CHAPTER TEN
A Tea Party
So, Alice makes her way to the tree, where the March Hare, the Hatter and the Dormouse spend much of their time Tea-Partying.
When she is almost there, she yelps in pain from a stinging pain on her arm. She looks down to see several scratch marks along her right arm. They look like the claw marks from some sort of animal.
In panic she crouches, looks all around, but sees nothing. Now she realizes something must have scratched Malice. Alice watches her wounds begin to ooze blood.
She brings a handkerchief out from her pocket and does her best to attend to her wounds. At least they’re shallow.
She can think of nothing other to do than to continue on her way.
After about half an hour, she can see it. There is a table set out under a tree in front of a house, and the Hatter is having tea at it. The Dormouse is sitting next to him. The Dormouse is as usual, fast asleep, but Alice doesn’t see the March Hare, who usually sits to the the other side of the Dormouse.
The Hatter seems to be steadying himself with one hand resting on the Dormouse while he holds a cup of tea in the other. He is blinking rapidly and bugging his eyes out in a most peculiar way.
Alice, still feeling the effects of the spice, giggles at him.
The Hatter says, “Oh, no! Not again. It is quite rude to attend a Tea Party twice
! Rude to all the other attendants, you see! Perhaps come back some time when we have some seats available?”
Alice looks around mockingly at the long table which has quite a number of empty chairs. She sees two custard pies just like the ones the Hatter had brought to the party resting on the table amongst all the fine china. She also notices that one of the chairs has been overturned, some of the cups knocked over, the table cloth seems crinkled and ruffled.
Malice must have been here!
Alice takes a seat across from the Hatter, knowing that it might be rude, but she is having a hard time balancing and focusing her eyes on the Hatter at the same time. He always looks mad, but he now appears madder than usual, and he has a long bleeding slash on his forehead.
The Hatter proclaims, “I gave the heart to you like you wanted. It’s rude to only pretend to leave, don’t you think?” He turns to where the March Hare usually sits. “Oh, yes, that’s right,” he mutters.
“What’s right?”
“He ran off after you tussled with him, of course.”
“I’m sorry, but that wasn’t me. You see, my reflection got separated from me, and well, she looks just like me, only my left side is on her right side, and vice versa. You know what I mean?”
“Like the Tweedles? Great. Just what we need. More twins!”
“Yes, so you gave her the heart?”
“Yes, but she said she doesn’t know how to put it back in, whatever that means.”
Because she doesn’t have the card.
He sets down his tea cup. “Excuse me.” He slaps his face. “Get yourself together, man!” He’s talking to himself. “Have you gone mad?”
Alice laughs. “I daresay you seem madder than usual.”
“Well, of course, you—I mean she made me eat my hat! I have a question.”
“Yes?”
“Are you sure you weren’t just here? Maybe it’s some sort of double vision I’m having. Why, I see two of you right now. So if I saw you before is that quadruple vision? Or triple?”