Opening the Door
The hallway smelled of fresh roses and a faint citrus cleaner that the venue staff liked to spray after each wedding. My hands trembled as I brushed a stray lock of hair from my face, the silk of my dress catching on the marble banister. The guests had just filed out, their chatter a low hum behind me, and the echo of the organ’s final chord still lingered in the vaulted ceiling.
I turned the knob and stepped into the small side room where the cake stood, untouched, a single candle flickering against the darkening sky outside. The light from the stained‑glass windows painted the walls in muted blues and reds, and I could hear the faint rustle of the wind against the cracked glass of the old building.
There was a sudden, sharp gasp from the far corner. I spun around and saw Karl’s hand clutching the edge of a table, his face pale as the porcelain plates that surrounded him. He was breathing shallowly, his eyes wide and unfocused. The world tilted; I felt the floor slip beneath my shoes.
“Karl?” I whispered, my voice cracking like thin ice.
He didn’t answer. His shoulders slumped, and the candle’s flame guttered, as if the light itself were trying to warn me.
The paramedics arrived with the urgency of a storm. Their uniforms were a stark, clinical white against the warm gold of the hall. One of them, a tall man with a clipped beard, knelt beside Karl, checking his pulse with practiced fingers.
“Looks like a myocardial infarction,” he said, his tone flat, almost rehearsed. “We need to move him quickly.”
The words struck me like a physical blow. My mind tried to catalog the scene—people moving, the metallic clink of the stretcher, the distant hum of the church’s old air‑conditioning—but the image of Karl’s limp body was all that remained.
I stood there, my wedding dress suddenly heavy, the veil dragging across the polished floor, feeling the tears that had already begun to soak the satin. The hallway that had just moments before been a passage to celebration now felt like a corridor to an abyss.