: Chapter 7
Satan’s Affair
It took eight days, sixteen hours, twenty-four minutes and thirteen seconds for Mommy to come back.
She walked into our shared bedroom, looking no worse for wear. Her brown hair hangs limp around her shoulders, stringy and threadbare. Her dull brown eyes as lifeless as theyâve always been. Mommy was always been skinny, but as the years pass by, her body grows frailer and her bones curve, like sheâs retreating in on herself.
Sometimes I wonder if she ever looked at me with love in her eyes when I was born. Before Daddy sucked her lifeforce away. What did she look like before him? Was she vibrant and full of life and love? Did she do everything with passion and ferocity?
I want to know who she was before she let someone destroy her so deeply.
âMommy!â I gasp, rushing to her and embracing her in a loose hold.
I learned long ago not to hold her too tightly. It hurts her.
Relief washes through me so strongly, it takes all I have not to collapse from the force of it.
âIâm okay, sweetie,â she says tonelessly, patting my back before stepping away. She ambles past me, her slippers sliding against the floor as she walks.
Did she pick up her feet when she walked before Daddy?
âWhat happened to you?â I ask, following after her like a lost puppy.
She glances at me, but her eyes shift constantly, never staying in one place for more than a second. Never looking directly at me. Another thing thatâs shifting throughout the yearsâit seems to get harder and harder for her to meet my eyes.
âI was in one of the other houses,â she replies.
Daddy created a small compound for the Church to live in. He came from a long line of old money, so he bought a hundred acres of land and built ten large houses, all set up in a square. He assigns a couple of the trusted Church goers to go outside the compound and get whatever supplies we need once a month.
Otherwise, none of us are allowed outside the premise. Especially without his permission. We go to school every day with one teacher, and then do work around the house to keep us busy.
When a man has eighteen kids, with five more on the way, itâs important to implement some type of law and order around the compound. Daddy does his best to stay at the houses evenly, but even a single day spent in my house is too often.
Iâve never been outside of the premises. Never even seen what the rest of the world looks like. One day I will convince Mommy to leave this place with me, but the first and last time I brought it up, she smacked me in the mouth and told me to never say those words again.
I listened, but only because the terror in her eyes scared me into silence.
But Iâm even more scared that if I wait any longer, Mommy wonât be around long enough to get away from Daddy.
âWhy?â I ask on a whisper.
âSibby, honey, donât get sensitive about it. Leonard wanted me to assist with some things in one of the houses, so I did. You were fine here, werenât you?â
She sits down on a twin bed, directly across from mine. There are over sixty people that attend our Church, so weâre all forced to share rooms. I got lucky enough to share a room with Mommy. Though, I know Daddy holds that over my head. Itâs something he constantly threatens to take away, but never seems to follow through with.
Maybe itâs because he knows Mommy is the only one in this Church that has any type of control over me. And Daddy has all the control over her. Like a house of cards, if I failâso will she.
And I fail a lot.
I think Iâm killing my mother.
âI guess so,â I whisper. âDaddy didnât hurt you?â
She sighs, weary and tired. âDonât ask questions like that, Sibby. Leonard isnât a bad man, he just is doing the best he can for us. He has a lot of responsibility on his shoulders.â
She lies. She doesnât even believe the words coming out of her own mouth.
Before I can stop it, I curl my lip in revulsion. The only thing heâs doing the best he can with is getting people to ride his cock and making my life miserable.
Clearly, heâs making her life miserable, too.
Mommy brushes her hair back, thoughtlessly, just to get it out of her eyes. But the small motion turned my life upside down.
Around her neck are deep handprint bruises. Sheâs wearing a turtleneck sweater, which isnât out of the normal for her, especially during winters in Ohio. But her mangy sweater is sagging and exposing the lies Mommy told me.
He did hurt her.
Those bruises are not just blue, theyâre nearly black. How long and hard do you have to squeeze a womanâs throat to turn it that shade?
My eyes round and a gasp slips from my lips. Her brown eyes snap to mine and they widen ever so slightly. Quickly, she brushes her hair forward again to cover the bruise. But she knew there was no covering up what I had already seen.
Her face falls, and her eyes shift some more.
Mountains of emotions rise to the surfaceâso many, I fear Iâll never be able to climb out of them. Rage. So much rage. Pure, utter heartbreak. Guilt, revenge, sadness. Every emotion a human has ever been plagued by is thrashing in my chest and bleeding into my heart.
I lost some of the red out of my heart in that moment, replaced by a deep, bottomless black. I feel so, so black.
âWhy did you lie?â I plead, my lip trembling. A sob climbs up my throat, and thereâs no stopping the tears. Iâve never felt like tears were a weakness in front of Mommy. Not when thatâs all sheâs ever given me, too.
Itâs an unspoken understanding. That itâs okay to cry in front of one another. But never anyone else.
âBabyâ¦â she trails off, at a loss for words. âItâs not your fault, Sibel. You know itâs not.â
âThen why did he do it?â I snap, enraged by her abuse. By my abuse. By this whole fucking communityâs abuse. Weâre all being subjected to it in one form or another, all by the same goddamn manâno. The devil. Fucking Satan himself.
She looks down at her lap, tremors wracking through her nimble fingers. Those same fingers that wiped so many tears away, brushed the hair off my face, helped me up after I had fallen. She was only a child herself when she had meânowhere close to the maturity she shouldâve been when mothering a child.
Sheâs not perfect, but sheâs the best mother I couldâve asked for, given the fragility of her sanity. Her mind is breaking into pieces before my eyes. It has been for eighteen long years, and sheâs so close to giving up. I can feel it in my bones, and the knowledge sends a fresh dose of panic into my bloodstream. It constricts my lungs like a python, slowly but surely sending me to an early grave.
âWhy does he do anything around here?â she whispers under her breath. The words werenât meant for me to hear, but I heard them anyway.
âLetâs leave,â I say quietly, pleadingly. âPlease Mommy. You know heâs evil. You know it. We can run away together and start new lives far away from him. Somewhere heâll never find us.â
A tear tracks down her cheek. Quickly, she wipes it away like it was never there in the first place.
âI canât,â she says, her voice cracking. A sob bursts from her mouth. She slaps a hand over her mouth immediately, quieting the sound.
But you canât silence heartbreak. Itâs loud and painful. Even after you grieve and heal, it lingers in the background, sliding back into your life just when you think youâve overcome it.
Mommy is well-versed in heartbreak; sheâs been feeling it since the moment she lost her life. Now sheâs just a shell of a woman, and her soul is ready to find something better.
More tears track down my cheeks. Desperation rises to the surface. Because I donât want Mommy to leave me. I want us to leave here.
I want her to find that something better with me. Together.
Getting up, I rush over to her and sit next to her. The second I cradle her in my arms, she completely loses it. Shattering into tiny pieces in my hands. I want to pick up the pieces, but theyâre like sand, and slipping through my fingers.
So, I do the only thing Iâm capable of right now. Holding her. Comforting her. Loving her.
She lets loose almost two decades worth of trauma, abuse and sadness. She cries so hard, sometimes it takes a full minute for her to regain her breath again. Over and over, until thereâs nothing left of her to give.
I cry with her, tightening my hold. Feeling her skin on mine. Warm, and soft. Iâm desperate to feel her skin, so I hold her hand in my own, while she uses the other to quiet her pain.
Slowly, she regains her composure. Scrambling for her pieces and shoving them back inside her. Still broken, but at least theyâre not lying at her feet anymore.
Wiping away her tears and then cleaning the snot from her nose with a tissue lying on her nightstand, she straightens back up and clears her throat.
âYou shouldnât have had to see that,â she says, her voice even but exhausted.
âYou shouldnât have gotten punished for my mistakes,â I argue.
She shakes her head. âIâm here because of my own mistakes. Youâre here because of my mistakes, Sibel.â
I shake my head, opening my mouth to argue, but she holds up a hand to stop me. A hand that looks like it belongs to an eighty-year old woman, not a twenty-nine-year-old.
âEverything will be okay soon, Sibby. Youâre stronger than I am. Thatâs why youâre the only one that can stand up to Leonard. You have fire in you that I simply do not possess.â She pauses and takes a deep breath, as if sheâs gathering strength for what sheâs going to say next.
âWhich is why youâre the only one who can stop him.â
My eyes widen as I stare at her with incredulity. She canât be saying what I think sheâs saying. She gathers herself and leans down into her nightstand. She pulls out a beautiful knife. The handle is a beautiful pink, the wood hand carved and ornate.
Itâs so⦠pretty.
I donât know where it came from, or how long sheâs had it, but it no longer matters. Sheâs giving it to me now. And Iâm not sure how to feel about it.
She hands me the knife. When I go take it from her, she resists and looks me deeply in the eyes. âDo you understand what Iâm saying?â she asks, placing her other hand on my thigh and squeezing.
Choppily, I nod my head.
âGood girl,â she says, patting my thigh and releasing the blade into my hand. âLetâs get to bed now.â
A strange, overwhelming sensation tugs at me. Without thinking, I wrap Mommy in a hug and hold her tight. In this moment, I know that if I donât, sheâll slip through my fingers. She hugs me back just as fiercely, not a single complaint spoken.
âI love you, Mommy,â I whisper in her ear.
It takes several swallows before she manages to utter out a, âI love you too, sweet girl. Youâre going to do great things in life, I just know it.â
I leave her alone after that, but I donât take my eyes off her. I lay awake all night, staring at her still form, clutching my new pretty knife in my hand. Hardly blinking, refusing to take my eyes off of her for even a second. She doesnât move from her spot. And thatâs when she finally slips through.
Early in the morning, when I force my eyes away from her, I look at her alarm and watch it ring out, blaring loud. But she doesnât stir. She doesnât move from her spot at all.
What I didnât know is that before she came to our room, she poisoned herself. I found Ricin left on the bathroom counter after I realized she was deadâshe never even tried to hide what she did. The only people who couldâve gotten that for her are the trusted people who go out every month. When Daddy found out someone betrayed him, he didnât even try to figure out which one got her the poison.
He killed them all.
And I was glad for it. None of those people were pure. And one of them allowed Mommy to leave me here alone. And I hate them for it.
Iâll never know the exact moment she took her last breath. Iâll never know why she chose to kill herself rather than running away with me.
Or why death was more appealing than a life with me.
But what hurt most is knowing that I spent the entire night staring at my motherâs dead body and never even realized it.