Topic > Alternate Evil Ending - 1383

He said, "I will save you!" and threw the water at the Witch. Dorothy then trips over a silver nail, on the wooden floor. He falls slightly and passes out. Dorothy gets a concussion and her soul detaches. The flying water lands on the Witch and her soul ends up with Dorothy's soul in limbo. An arena of familiar faces before the pale darkness; they move in the darkness like demons. There's Mom, looking for Turtle Heart; there is Nessarose, authoritative and lifeless as hardened wood. There is dad, lost in his duplicate, looking for himself in the faces of suspicious agnosticism. There is Shell, not yet himself despite his apparent bodily perfection. The amazed spirits become others; they become Tata in his privileged, harsh and domineering aspect; and the spirit was joined by the gifts of Ama Clutch, Ama Vimp, and the other Amas, which now piled together in one confused matter. The apparitions become Boq, sweet, slender and fervent, but undefeated; and Crope and Tibbett in their amusing, senseless eagerness to please; and Avarian in its dominance and masculinity. Furthermore, Glinda with her femininity and her clothes, waits until she is good enough to deserve what she gets. And those whose stories are realized: Manek, Madame Morrible, Doctor Dillamond and above all Fiyero, whose blue diamonds are the blues of water and sulphurous fire both. There are also those whose stories are curiously not complete: Princess Nastoya of the Crow, whose help did not arrive in time; and Liir, the mysterious foundling, who grows from childhood to adulthood. Sarima, who in her warm welcome and her brotherly affection did not forgive, and her sisters and her children and the future and the past...And those who fall... in the middle of paper... as never granted in the Land of Oz. In this world, she experiences a new love, which reminds her of Fiyero which brings out the idea that he probably never died like she always thought, and sees that the Wizard is rightly served for his crimes and injustices. The Wizard hangs himself in despair at knowing that he sent a little girl like Dorothy to kill his only daughter, Elphaba. She is rewarded for her benevolence and excellence because she could not bear any sense of evil nature in her other life in the Land of Oz. She was reborn and more alive than ever in this new and unknown world for her. "And there Elphaba remained for a long time." “And she returned to the Land of Oz?” "Not yet." Works Cited Maguire, Gregory. Wicked: The Life and Times of the Wicked Witch of the West: A Novel. New York: HarperCollins, 2009. Print.