I wanted a
pretty name for the death. But I wanted a simple, easy, common name. I didn't
want to call her Miss Death. Death, The Hour, Ankou, Sedna, Aita as in
different mythologies. I really wanted a very Brazilian name, those like Josefa
Silva, that made me feel sympathy for her, and not fear. Neither fear nor
respect, because I didn't want to respect something that would take me from
here to a magical world I didn't believe in, and therefore I didn't know
anything about. I wanted a human name. A prosaic name: Seraphine. And Seraphine
should be colorful too: no black veils wrapped around her thin body, bony hands
gripping a tall scythe to pull me by the neck at departure as if I were a
runaway chicken. Seraphine would be fat, chubby hands, red cheeks (from
laughing), round brown eyes and a pointy caramel nose. Seraphine would wear a
purple top hat, a long flame orange dress, moss green suede shoes. I would see
her far away when she came to get me. There, I didn't have to fear a real,
colorful person named Seraphine, who would come to meet me one day and take me
out of here. I'd recognize her in a heartbeat, and I wouldn't have time to try
to change her mind: Seraphine would be too charming for me not to want to go
with her. The lively laugh, the warm colors, the seductive brown eyes. Seraphine
would make me feel good.
I spent years
waiting for Seraphine. At every corner, at every street crossed, at every sip
of coffee sipped more willingly. With each orange cloth that passed before my
eyes, a chill crept up my spine. I pressed my gaze for the other elements that
would make Seraphine evident, but she was never there. Every loud, naked laugh,
every fat hand full of creases, every green shoe. Seraphine has become the
prince charming I've been waiting for every day. I couldn't work anymore, I
couldn't live the joys of my days anymore. I didn't want to cross the streets
anymore. I didn't want to sip my coffee anymore. Why didn't Seraphine want me?
I shaped her, I created her, and she didn't want me. Every day she came to get
someone; someone who happened to see her and hear her laugh, someone who felt
the delicacy of her orange dress. But not me. Seraphine didn't want me. Tired
of waiting for Seraphine, I went down to the main street. I waited to cross. As
soon as I saw the bus around the corner, I crossed over so it couldn't stop. He
didn't stop. I left. And still Seraphine didn't come to see me.
