The
bare, white tree trunks created long shadows on the snow glistening
in the winter night. My feet could not carry anymore and I dropped
onto my knees in the frosty and hardened snow. My ten-year-old feeble
body sunk in deep. Above me the blue and green northern lights swayed
in the sky like a slowly flowing river. Through it, the silvery stars
twinkled like pearls on the bottom of the river. Some of us believe
that the souls of the passed live in northern lights. Would I become
one of those lights? I looked down to my hands that were turning
blue. They were stained by red blood. The smell of freezing air and
the stench of blood mixed together and I could not tell whether it
was really cold or burning hot.
Blood
was dripping from my chest and stomach on to the pure white snow. The
surrounding forest was quiet and serene, unmoving. My breath escaped
into the air in a swirling cloud. Then the rising tree trunks around
me started dancing as if they were falling down on me, bowing their
tops towards me. The world spun around and turned black. Somewhere in
the forest the witch started playing her drum again. This was the
first time I could hear it, though, but my dad had insisted that she
was real for many years. Dad had told me that the witch’s playing
had made him go insane. I was blind and fell face forward into the
frozen snow. I was sure, I was going to die like my parents and my
sister had died a while ago.
I
was wrong, though. I woke up in the hospital, wrapped in bandages.
The medicine made my head feel blurry. Beside my bed, there sat a
middle-aged police man with a rough face and a young female officer
next to him.
“I
know you must still be in shock but we need to ask you a few
questions. Do you think, you can answer them?”
I stared at the man unable to speak.
“We
need to know who did this”,
the
woman said and pointed at my injuries with an empathetic look on her
face. I shook my head. I could not speak, I did not know how to speak
anymore.
They
did not give up. They came to see me everyday but I never found my
voice. How could I have told them what had really happened. My whole
family had been butchered. I was the only survivor. And it all could
have been avoided if some outsider
had
known
what was really going on behind the closed doors…
One
week earlier
The porcelain family heirloom
plate made a loud sound as it broke into pieces when it hit the
floor. Mom’s hands were shaking when
she bent
down to pick the pieces scattered on the ragged cotton carpet.
She gathered them inside her beige apron as I stood in the doorway
and held
my breath. We
were both listening to hear if dad had heard the sound. Yes, he had.
Dad rushed into the kitchen
and looked down to mom who sat on the floor with her lap full of
broken pieces of porcelain. I did not know what to expect. Would he
yell and be angry? Maybe he would burst into laughter and break
another plate as if it was a game. Maybe he would start to cry and
complain that mom was mistreating him. That was how dad was.
Unpredictable.
This time dad settled on
spitting on the floor and looking at me with a wide grin on his face
showing all of his teeth, yellowed by excessive tobacco use.
“Look at what a clumsy woman
I married. She’s no good.” Then dad kicked at the door frame and
walked away. I nervously plucked the
lint from my
shirt with my fingers. Tears glistened in mom’s eyes. She had been
scared so bad a sharp piece had slipped in her hand and there was now
a thin line of blood glimmering on the palm of her hand.
Dad beat mom up often and did
not care that me and my three-year-old sister had to watch. I never
could fathom why mom did not even try to defend herself. Dad could
yell profanities, beat her, pull her hair but mom never said a word.
She was pathetic, like a deer petrified from the fear even though the
hunter’s gun was pointed right towards its chest. Mom just sat and
waited in silence. She did everything dad ever asked, catering even
to his weirdest whims without ever questioning them. Sometimes I
asked mom why she put up with all of it. She just kept repeating:
“You’re too young to
understand. I take care of your father. He’s not okay. You see,
he’s sick mentally. The sickness has been passed down in his family
for generations. We need to help him. He can’t control himself, so
we need to forgive and be patient.”
Mom was right that dad was not
okay. It did not take long for anybody to figure out he was not like
others. Dad insisted for years that there was a witch in the forest,
surrounding our house, and the witch was playing a drum and the music
drove dad insane. He could get up in the middle of the night and
venture into the forest in his underwear to “silence the bloody
witch”. I could never hear the sound of any drum. When I asked mom
whether she heard it, she simply shook her head and for a passing
moment I could see fear in her eyes.
Dad had many states of mind.
In one moment he could be a lovely and warm person, funny and
light-hearted. Sometimes he was mean and bad-tongued, sometimes cold
and stern. Then sometimes he was violent and short-tempered.
Sometimes dad slept for days. The surrounding forest felt thicker and
thicker everyday as if swallowing our family inside until the world
around us did not exist anymore. Mom home-schooled me and so I never
left the house. I stared out the window at the black and thin trees
that slowly turned into slender and feeble old men in the snowy
night. They were like eternal soldiers guarding our red, wooden
house. It was as if the winter was everlasting. The temperature would
never rise and the snow never melted away.
It was my tenth birthday. No
one remembered my birthday. No one congratulated me, I got no
breakfast in the bed, no cake, no presents. Outside the howling wind
tore trees down by the roots.
Windows
rattled and the rooftop creaked. There was an ominous smell
of a snow
storm coming down the chimney and mixing with the ash in the
fireplace. Dad got really mad at mom when he found
out that mom
had gone to the city by herself. Mom claimed that she had only bought
a sack of potatoes and some bread but dad kept counting the coins and
saying that a lot more money was missing. He beat mom real good.
By
the nightfall, the storm cleared. Big, calm, pale white moon rose in
the sky. I was just falling to sleep when mom came into my room.
“Here,
I brought you this, darling”, she whispered as she raised a little
present in her hands. Her one eye had swollen almost shut and turned
painfully-looking upside down in her head. I felt afraid staring at
the glistening and bulging white ball. The present was wrapped in
beautiful pink wrapping paper and tied with a red bow. Mom sat on my
bed and offered the present to me again.
“Don’t
be afraid, darling. Mommy’s alright. Now go on and open your
present.”
I
reached and grabbed the present, tore it open. In it I found a
pretty, yellow dress with ruffles. I suddenly felt like words got
stuck in my throat. This was why mom was now half-blind.
She wanted to give me a gift. She had not forgotten my
birthday, after all. Dad had probably forbidden her to get me a
birthday present and that was why she kept the dress a secret. She
had spent all that missing money on this. Tears burned in my eyes.
The
next morning it was as if the sky itself was dying. The horizon was
red as if blood was pouring down to earth. It was the day my family
died.
The
disgusting hospital stench left me with no appetite. I had fought for
my life for eight days. Medicine took away the pain but it could not
banish the horrifying memories that haunted me. I could not get the
image of my mom lying on the floor in a pool of blood, that kept
growing, out of my head. I could see how she reached her hand towards
me but I had to turn my back to her and run. I saw my dad lying in a
bed upstairs, his body pierced by dozens and dozens of cuts left by
the knife. And my sister… She had looked as if she was just
sleeping in her little bed. She had been stabbed only once, that had
been enough. The chubby cheeks had turned pale and she reminded a
porcelain doll.
At
first, the police stationed a guard outside my hospital room, in case
the murderer would come after me to finish what was started. The
police did not have a clue what had happened. Only when a week had
passed and it was clear that I would survive, they came to me and
said:
“Your
wounds. There’s no defensive wounds on your body. As a matter of
fact, the doctors tell us that it seems your cuts were most likely
self-inflicted...”
The
doctors were not wrong. My mom had not been wrong either. My dad was
sick and it was hereditary. I simply could not stand and watch my mom
being beaten anymore. I could not
bear
that my sister would grow up in the hellish nightmare I had
grown up in. I had survived ten long years. The only way out of
insanity was death. That is why a laced my
parents’ evening tea with sleeping pills. Dad had drank a
lot and slept tight. He was unable to as much as raise his hand when
I stabbed him over and over. His fat belly stuck out under the shirt.
It juggled up and down and turned more and more red when the knife
sank into his flesh.
I
had lost control completely with dad. But when I looked
at my sister, I could not do the same to her. She was crying
in her little bed, staring at me with huge eyes filled with terror.
She did not fight back when I slowly pushed the knife into her chest.
Mom
was still standing but she did not fight back either. She did not
beg. She just reached her hand in an effort to touch me but I turned
around and left her bleed to death. I had broken two knives already.
I grabbed another one, smaller one with a sawed edge and hit myself
in the chest but my hand refused to push the knife deep. I slashed my
chest and stomach unable to make myself inflict fatal wounds. I gave
up and started making my way deep into the forest. Then I heard it,
finally I could hear it! The witch was playing her drum. It drove me
insane.
Around
me the trees created shadows on to the snow and above me flowed
northern lights like a bright river. The stars were shining like
pearls on the bottom of the river. They were like forgotten souls
screaming in the vacuum of space. It was as if three new stars were
born right before my eyes. They were only pearls flowing in the sky
now.
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