The soft organ music floated through the church like a drifting
memory, weightless and solemn. Candles flickered from brass holders
on the walls, casting halos of gold across the aged stone interior.
The bride, radiant in lace and tulle, stood across from her groom
beneath an arch of white roses. Every eye in the room was on
them—except for Joanna’s.
Joanna sat in the third pew, near the center aisle, her smile
polite but distant. Her dress was a muted wine red, modest but
elegant, and it hugged her curves just right. One hand rested on her
lap, but the other stayed hidden in the folds of her dress pocket,
fingers gently rolling a glass vial between thumb and knuckle.
The vial was warm now from her touch, the contents sloshing ever
so slightly. Inside, a tiny, terrified figure pressed against the
glass—a man no taller than a pinky nail, limbs trembling, his mouth
moving in a silent scream. His name had been Ethan. Once, he’d cut
her off in traffic and laughed as he did it. That had been enough.
Joanna didn’t look at the vial. She didn’t have to. She could
feel the weight of it, the power of it. Her secret pulsed there in
her pocket like a second heartbeat. No one around her knew what she
truly was—what she could do.
As Mark began to recite his vows to Hannah, Joanna's gaze finally
lifted, her eyes locking briefly with the bride’s. There was warmth
there, sincerity. But behind Joanna’s smile was something colder.
More calculating.
She leaned slightly in her seat, angling the vial just enough to
feel the tiny body slide within. The sensation sent a tingle up her
spine.
One day, she thought, I’ll decide what to do with you.
The church was filled with love and promises. But in the middle of
it all, in one quiet pocket of darkness, Joanna nurtured something
far more dangerous.
And she was just getting started.
The ceremony continued, the officiant’s voice calm and steady as
he guided Mark and Hannah through the sacred steps. Vows were
exchanged, and the couple held each other’s hands tightly,
trembling just slightly with the enormity of it all. A few sniffles
echoed from the pews—mothers dabbing at their eyes, old friends
smiling through the emotion.
Joanna tilted her head slightly, watching the exchange with the
expression of someone witnessing a beautiful painting they felt
nothing for.
“To have and to hold, in sickness and in health…”
Her fingers still circled the vial in her pocket, her painted
nails lightly tapping the glass. She imagined the man inside tumbling
again, clinging to the smooth walls like a bug in a bottle. She
didn’t need to look—she could feel his movement. He was learning
the same lesson they all did eventually: that Joanna’s mercy was as
fragile as the world at five millimeters tall.
Mark said “I do,” his voice cracking with joy. Hannah beamed,
cheeks flushed, tears in her eyes.
Joanna leaned back in her seat, crossing her legs slowly and
smoothing the hem of her dress. Her eyes drifted to the altar, but
her mind was somewhere else—far from the roses and vows and golden
light.
Her thoughts flicked to the rehearsal dinner the night before,
where Hannah had laughed a little too hard when someone joked about
Joanna always being single. “Some girls are just better off
alone,” someone had said.
A careless comment. A harmless joke.
Was it? Joanna mused.
Applause erupted as the officiant declared them husband and wife.
Mark kissed Hannah, and the crowd rose to their feet in a storm of
clapping and cheers. Joanna stood with them, smiling on cue, clapping
softly.
But her other hand stayed in her pocket.
She gave the vial one last spin, then curled her fingers around it
like she was holding a coin. She could end his suffering right now,
crush the vial in her fist—or keep him, like the others, part of
her growing little collection.
As the newlyweds walked back down the aisle, beaming and
hand-in-hand, Joanna stepped aside to let them pass. Hannah's perfume
followed them like a cloud—honeysuckle and something faintly
citrus.
Joanna watched them go, her smile widening slightly.
“Congratulations,” she whispered, though they didn’t
hear.
Then she turned toward the exit, already planning which face in
the crowd could be the next to disappear.
The reception hall shimmered with warmth—string lights hanging
like fireflies from the rafters, centerpieces of white lilies and
pale roses glowing under golden candlelight. Laughter rippled through
the room, and the soft clink of silverware and glasses created a
background rhythm to the celebration.
Joanna stood near the dessert table, her glass of champagne
untouched in her hand. Her eyes were fixed on the centerpiece of it
all—a towering, four-tiered wedding cake, frosted in pale ivory
with delicate, edible petals curling along its edges. It looked like
it had been carved from clouds.
She didn’t need to eat it. She had another idea in mind.
A quick glance—no one was watching her. Everyone was gathered
around the newlyweds at the far end of the hall, raising their
glasses and toasting their love.
Joanna moved with quiet elegance, almost like she was dancing to
music no one else could hear. From her pocket, she slipped the vial
out and cradled it in her palm. Inside, the man inside
screamed—though of course, no one could hear it. His face was red,
and he banged tiny fists against the glass in panic.
Joanna quietly popped the cork off the vial.
“You’re lucky,” she whispered, voice soft and dripping with
irony. “You get to be part of something beautiful.”
She tipped the vial just slightly over a pristine slice of cake
that had been plated early and set beside the main structure. The man
tumbled out, landing with a muffled thump onto the soft
frosting. He struggled to stand, slipping on the sugary surface.
Joanna pressed her finger to him gently, like pushing a bead into
warm wax. He squirmed, but her finger was too big, too heavy, too
deliberate. She didn’t crush him—just sank him in up to his
chest, surrounded by thick ridges of sweet white. Helpless. Present.
Waiting.
She adjusted the frosting around him with the tip of a spoon to
disguise the disruption.
Then she walked away.
Back at her seat, she rejoined the crowd, folding her hands in her
lap as Mark raised his glass and began to thank everyone for being
part of the happiest day of his life.
Joanna smiled politely, nodded in the right places. The speeches
followed one after another—laughs, sentimental stories, old college
memories.
But her gaze kept drifting.
To the cake.
To that part of it.
It sat undisturbed on the edge of the table, glowing under the
soft reception lights, innocent and untouched. She watched it like
one might watch a fuse burning slowly toward a powder keg. At any
moment, the couple might walk up, take it, carve it with a fork and
lift that first sweet bite to their mouths…
But not yet.
Joanna folded one leg over the other, chin resting on her hand,
pretending to listen as Hannah’s father gave a heartfelt speech.
But inside, her heart drummed in quiet anticipation.
Any moment now.
The world was a blur of glass
and motion, a sickening roller coaster he couldn’t escape. The vial
had been his prison for what felt like hours—maybe days. The walls
were slick and smooth, impossible to climb, and every time Joanna
walked, the jarring sway sent him tumbling into the curved walls.
Then came the noise. Rhythmic scraping. The cap was being
unscrewed
Light poured in as the cap was lifted off free. He scrambled,
slipping on the sweat-slicked glass, his voice cracking from
screaming. Joanna’s massive face hovered overhead, her eyes
glittering with something cold and cruel.
“You’re lucky,” she whispered. “You get to be part of
something beautiful.” Her breath was warm. It smelled faintly of
champagne.
He didn’t feel lucky.
Gravity seized him. He fell, screaming, into a soft, white
surface—sweet-smelling and sticky. Frosting. He flailed, trying to
push himself up, but everything was unsteady. The world spun. Then
the shadow returned.
A fingertip.
It pressed against him, impossibly huge. It didn’t crush him.
No, Joanna wasn’t that merciful. She pressed slowly, deliberately,
forcing him down into the frosting until it swallowed him up to his
chest. Cold, thick, suffocating. He couldn't move. He couldn’t even
wipe the icing from his eyes.
Then she was gone.
He screamed for her to come back, to do something.
Anything. But the world stayed still. Giant voices thundered around
him, laughter and music like distant storms. The frosting began to
harden slightly around his legs.
Time passed.
And then, movement.
The cake shifted violently—lifted, tilted. His world spun again.
Plates clinked, a knife screeched against porcelain. He saw her: the
bride. Towering. Radiant. Laughing.
She didn’t see him.
He tried to scream, to wave, but his arms were coated in thick
layers of sugar. The plate jostled. He slid slightly. Then—a
fork. Gleaming metal, fast as lightning. It sliced through the
cake, barely missing him. The wedge disappeared.
He struggled harder. He begged. He prayed.
The fork came again.
This time, it pierced the edge of his world—slid beneath him,
tearing through frosting and sponge. He was lifted. He screamed.
The bride brought the bite to her lips.
A shadow. A cave. The hot breath of a giant.
He was inside.
Darkness. Warmth. Crushing, sticky weight as the cake collapsed
around him. A thunderous chew, like the crack of boulders
splitting. The sound of teeth grinding through sponge. He was flung
to the side, battered by her tongue, buried under layers of sugar and
spit.
Another chew. And another.
Then—it all went tight.
A swallow.
And everything fell.
Darkness, absolute and wet, wrapped around him like a grave.
And Joanna, somewhere far away in the light, was smiling.
The speeches ended in a chorus of clapping and laughter, champagne
glasses raised high as the newlyweds kissed once more, basking in the
joy of their closest friends and family. The lights dimmed slightly,
the music swelled—soft jazz drifting like perfume through the
air—and attention shifted toward the towering wedding cake.
Mark and Hannah stood before it, hand in hand, the silver cake
knife glinting between their fingers. Cameras flashed. Guests
gathered around, smiling, waiting for the classic moment.
Joanna stood at the edge of the crowd, hands folded neatly, face
composed, but her heart now beat faster. Her eyes locked on the
second slice—the one she knew held him.
The man she’d pressed into the frosting.
They made the first cut together, laughing as the blade slid
through the dense sponge and cream. Mark gently lifted the first
slice onto a small white plate, and Hannah handed it to him with a
sweet kiss on the cheek. The room melted into adoration around them.
Then came the second slice.
Hannah, still smiling, wiped her fingers delicately with a napkin
and turned back to the cake. She cut again, slower this time, more
focused. Joanna’s stomach tightened as she saw the frosting smear
slightly on the knife. That was it. That’s the one.
Hannah placed the slice onto a second plate, seemingly unaware of
anything unusual. She turned from the table, swaying gracefully in
her beautiful white wedding dress, and carried the plate back to the
head table where she and Mark would eat.
Joanna followed her with her eyes alone. Everything else—voices,
laughter, music—faded.
She sat across the room, silent and still, as Hannah picked up her
fork and took the first bite.
Joanna’s breath caught—not out of guilt, not fear, but
something darker. A slow, curling satisfaction. Not because she
wanted him dead. No, she wanted him consumed, forgotten. A
meaningless snack at someone else's happy ending.
She watched as Hannah laughed with her new husband, chewing
happily, the fork sliding through the cake again and again. She even
licked a bit of frosting from the corner of her mouth, dainty and
oblivious.
Joanna didn’t blink.
Was it quick? Was he still alive, just before the bite? Did he
scream, unheard beneath the layers of sponge and buttercream?
It didn’t matter now.
He was gone.
And no one—not a soul—knew.
Joanna sipped her champagne, eyes never leaving the bride in
white, and thought to herself:
She really does look beautiful today.