Mind to Bend: Chapter 6
Mind to Bend (Stolen Obsessions Book 1)
Tim doesnât come home, and Iâm left distressed and relieved by his absence. The fight took a lot out of me, and Iâm emotionally exhausted. Being stuck inside the house is unpleasant, but Iâm miserable with all of Timâs things around to remind me of his absence and our failing marriage. For the millionth time, I wish I had a job.
How many times have I wanted to volunteer, and how many excuses has Tim made for me not to? I replay them as I work my aggravation out on the grouting of our kitchen floor. Each of his lines grows thinner than the last until Iâm sweating and fuming, unable to understand why I listen to him.
Iâm using Timâs toothbrush to scrub the grooves spotless, and while I like to think Iâm getting some vindictive satisfaction, thatâs not true. I donât have the guts to leave it where he could use or discover it. When I finish, I will throw the used-up plastic away, and replace it with one of the spares in the cabinet. Heâll never notice.
Scouring the rest of the house into spotlessness takes less than a day. Of course it was already clean, but Iâve gone the extra mile on every front, including making some baking soda lemon concoction for the oven.
Iâm finishing the oven and snapping off the oversized yellow gloves as the doorbell rings. For a second, Iâm nervous itâs Tim, but even if he forgot his key, he wouldnât ring the bell since we have a secret key hidden in the back.
Before I greet my visitor, I rinse my hands quickly and dry them on my pants. They shake as I slide open the latch on the peephole. Iâm surprised and relieved to see a familiar brunette woman from around the neighborhood. Pulling the door back, I put on my best smile.
She looks me up and down with only the slightest haughty tilt to her lips. Up close, I can tell the womanâs a few years older than me, thirty tops. Her hair hangs over her shoulder in a braid, revealing the round diamond stud in one ear. The same bright stones wink at me from her engagement-ring-wedding-band combo.
âHi?â I mean to be polite and welcoming, but I donât do a lot of social interaction, and Iâve never spoken to her before. My overalls are too big and hang off me, making me feel even more like a little girl. The scent of cleaning products wafts off me, and Iâm sure my appearance doesnât sing my praises.
âHi, Mrs. Baker?â
She reaches out a hand, and I take it a second too late, shaking a little limply.
âYeah, Sera,â I correct, pushing a stray lock of hair out of my face.
âMy name is Kimberly Shaw, and Iâm the head of the neighborhood watch.â
Sheâs staring at me like that should mean something. I blink a few times before I manage to say, âOh? Uh, can I help you?â
âDo you mind if I come in a minute?â sheâs speaking a little slow, and I give her a tight grin as irritation floods me.
âOh, of course!â I step aside, and she walks right in, confident in her ability to speak to someone new and enter a strangerâs home.
I wave toward the living room. âWould you like to sit?â
âOh no, thatâs okay, but Mrs. Baker, I did have some concerning things I wanted to discuss with you. Are you aware of the community bulletin?â At my confused look, she continues, âItâs our website.â She appears embarrassed for the first time as she continues. âWhy donât I just show you?â
She pulls her phone out of her pocket and shows me the screen as she opens an app. Iâm loosely following what sheâs doing. I donât have a modern smartphone, and Iâm too nervous about her being here to pay attention to why sheâs here until she pulls up a series of images and camera footage.
âTake a minute to look through them.â
My hand closes around her phone, and all I can hear is my heartbeat pounding in my ears as I look at the still photos, which clearly show a dark figure lurking in my backyard. Chills run up my spine as I play the video, and I see the figure skulking back and forth like heâs thinking about coming in.
âPolice havenât been called yet. We wanted to bring it to you first, butââ
âThank you, but itâs unnecessary.â My voice shrills, and I try to tamp it down. âThank you for bringing it to my attention.â
Sheâs taken aback, but not enough to leave it alone.
âUh, of course. Itâs my responsibility, but I strongly advise you reconââ
âThatâs my husband, not some prowler.â I interrupt, unable to remember to be polite when I want her to stop speaking.
Kimberlyâs mouth pops open, and her eyes narrow into squints. She must have been a popular girl in high school because no one else has this audacity with a stranger.
âAre you telling me the man lurking in your backyard but not coming inside is your husband?â
âHe is. His name is Timothy Baker, and he can come inside whenever he likes.â
âHeâs been seen on multiple nightsââ
âIf thatâs all, I have an appointment.â Iâm ruder than she is, but I donât care. Iâm about to start crying.
Am I that miserable to come home to?
âOh, of course.â Kimberlyâs eyes shift to me with an offended slant. She must not be used to being asked to leave. She hands me the flyer, slapping it into my palm and flashing her manicure. âWe can always use more members.â
âIâll consider it.â
I walk her out and thank her before returning to my task, which was already completed.
A few hours later, Iâm sitting alone, watching TV and thinking about Tim when todayâs emotions catch up on meâIâm furious. Does he believe he has the right to leave and not come back, wander our backyard, and convince the neighbors heâs a freaking night stalker? Iâm so embarrassed that Iâm hot around the neck when I hear a sound from outside.
Itâs a faint shuffling of feet, but I know what I heard. I hop up and out of bed in an instant, throwing back the sliding door of the master bedroom.
âTim! Come inside. This is ridiculous!â Iâm trying not to shout. I donât want to give the neighbors more to complain about, but this is beyond the pale. Whisper shouting, I continue, âYouâre an adult!â
He doesnât say anything, but Iâm sure heâs there. That inescapable feeling you get in the presence of another soul creeps along every inch of my being. Iâm shivering cold, and I consider leaving him here.
âTim, please! Please come inside.â Iâm quiet now, whining rather than demanding, worthy of pity.
But the silence is too much. Itâs too eerie, and goosebumps break out along my skin. An intense urge to run sweeps over me, like when I was a little girl, and I believed ghosts were watching me. My certainty that it was Tim standing in my yard feels foolish now.
Tim doesnât care enough to lurk out here for you.
âTim,â I try, one more time, to assuage my fears more than anything else.
When no one answers, I slam the door shut and lock it behind me. My hands shake, sweating despite the cold. I race toward the bed and throw the covers over myself like being invisible will make me safer. Admittedly, Iâm still cold from standing there calling into the darkness like an idiot, but what has me vibrating is the way I stood there begging for trouble.
Why didnât I close the blinds? So stupid, but Iâm not brave enough to do it now. Tim isnât here. Heâs not in the yard, and heâs not here for me. These truths cleave my throbbing heart. The things my father taught me about masculinity and femininity were most often wrong. But part of me strongly feels that a man who loves you should strive to protect you.
Am I wrong for wanting that? Or am I wrong for thinking all men should be like that? Maybe my mistake was choosing someone who wasnât that way and then expecting him to be someone else. I must admit that knowing Tim would leave me here like this changes my perspective on our relationship. What is he doing anyway?
In this more exposed state, I sink into that older, traumatized version of myself. How often did I hide in my bed as a little girl, covers over my face, hoping my daddy wouldnât find me? Too often.
Iâm disgusted with myself for how much of that little girl still lives inside me and how needy she is. Jensen Shultz may not affect the adult woman Iâve become, but my fatherâs voice talks directly to that little girl whenever sheâll listen.
People who call to demons attract demons.
His phantom hands strike my skin as if they were real. The old pain ripples along my skin, whitened scarred lines from belts and whips searing me deep and shallow. Metaphysical and impossible to relieve, it burns along my soul, and Iâm so wrapped up in that old place and terrified of whoever is standing in my yard, that I canât breathe.
That monster becomes my father.
It doesnât matter if it was Tim, a neighbor, a dog, or maybe a squirrel, as far as Iâm concerned, whatever moved in my yard was my father, and heâs here to finish what he started.
He wants me dead.
How many times did he tell me he brought me into this world and he could take me out? For some parents, thatâs a joke. For him, it was a fundamental truth. My father believes he owns me, and Iâm horrified of the day he comes to collect on that debt.
I get out of bed, ignoring the curtains, and run to the bathroom. I lock myself inside, panting as I lean against the door. Itâs sturdy; the entire house is constructed well. Moreover, every door is locked, so I should be safe. And if anything, Iâd know someone was coming for me before they reached the bathroom door.
When my mind calms, I head to the faucet and run myself a bath. I allow myself very few luxuries, but this is one of them. Soaking in hot water will warm me much more effectively than the blankets in my oversized room. Iâm still shaking as I drop in a scoop of Epsom salt and a drop of lavender-scented oil. I turn on my stereo, loud enough to keep me from jumping if the furnace kicks on, but not so loud as to block out an invader.
It doesnât take me long before Iâm thoroughly warmed, but the relaxation I hoped for is not there. Iâm forced to wrap myself up and dry off when I turn into a prune. I climb out of the tub, wrap myself in a robe, and b-line to the sliding doors. Closing the curtains, Iâm sure I see nothing but my room reflected at me. I try to let that comfort me, but I know itâs meaningless.
Turning back to the room, I take a few deep breaths. The house is quiet, and there was no good reason to think someone was there, to begin with. On the other hand, all the countless times I have been alone in this very house, I was never aware of any danger, and itâs getting to my head.
God, Tim is an asshole.
The thought surprises me, but not the sentiment. I really cannot believe he left me in this position. Iâm digging through my drawer, looking for my favorite pair of panties, and for some reason, I canât find them. First, I check every one of my drawers, then Timâs, then our closets.
Iâm sure about the last day I wore them, the day we started therapy. I know I dropped them on the floor, and I was sure I put them in the laundry, but there isnât a speck of dust left in this house, let alone dirty or unfolded laundry.
So where the hell are my panties?
I chalk it up to the dryer eating them and God being against me as I put on a less comfortable pair and climb into bed. I turn on the TV, hoping the sound will keep the terror and nightmares away.
It doesnât, and Iâm once again left wondering why Iâm not enough for the man I married.