
Hours passed, and Mom finally said, โOkay, time to go.โ
โBut itโs not morning.โ I sat up on the soft couch where Iโd been trying to sleep. William slept in a recliner by the window.
โLeslie.โ Mom stared at me. Her heavy voice seemed to come up through her from the ground.
William jolted awake.
โCanโt you for once, just stop going against every single thing and do what I say?โ Mom lit a cigarette.
I thought back to the time she beat me when Iโd done nothing wrong. It was William whoโd kicked my top bunk from the underside, making it lift off the frame and fall on the diagonal. Mom should’ve known I wouldn’t scream without a good reason. But she didn’t care. When her mind told her to do something, she did it, no matter how strange, dangerous, or terrifying.
I didnโt want to get hit, so I shut up.
Mostly, Mom didn’t hurt us, but the possibility of it hung over me always, like a rain cloud, heavy and ready to burst.
Mom glared at me, puffed on her cigarette, and crossed her arms. She cocked her wrist to hold the cigarette away from herself a bit.ย ย
William and I followed Mom out of the house where Mom slid the key under the doormat.
The sky was dark blue-grey and held a wet chill. A dog barked in the distance. The three of us climbed into the car and drove.
โAre we going to Grammaโs?โ William asked. A glimmer of hope trailed out of his voice.
โWe’ll be there soon,โ Mom said. โWe have to keep driving for now, so they don’t find us.โ
โWho?โ William asked. I knew her answer before she spoke. I suspected William did, too, but maybe he thought there was a chance sheโd surprise us.
โThe government.โ Momโs head bobbed and shook slightly as she spoke. โWeโve been over this before. See all those bright headlights approaching? They never stop. Those are the semi-trucks. Big-rigs. Thatโs the message from the government that theyโre after us, so we better keep running.โย
โTheyโre just trucks, Mom.โ I couldnโt help it. I was annoyed. I had to make her understand. โThatโs what they do, drive. And itโs dark now, so they have their headlights on. Duh.โ Why did she have to make everything so complicated?
โDonโt be a brat. Leslie.โ Mom smashed her cigarette in the metal tray below the radio. โThey are just trucks, but with communists behind the wheel. And you can’t tell a communist just by looking.” She was rambling now like she sometimes did when she had ideas rolling around in her head too important to keep inside. “Thatโs why it works. It has to be something easy to fool people withโthe general public. Weโre smarter than that. They hide behind all these machines and medical procedures and political agendas. And the trucks are their way of telling us theyโre going to ram into us to immobilize us before they rape us and hang us by our feet. William knows, donโt you, my sweet boy?โ
Mom faced him briefly, the whites of her teeth flashing as she smiled.
โUh-huh,โ William said in a slow, low voice. Mom patted his left leg with her right hand and then punched the lighter knob in the dash. A ring of orange glowed, and when it popped, she removed it and brought it to the cigarette she had just placed in her mouth. A singeing sound came from her mouth as she set the cigaretteโs tip on fire. New smoke filled the car, and my lungs burned.
Stomach growling and eyelids drooping, I moaned, โI’m hungry. When are we going to eat?โ
โYou just had a sandwich,โ Mom said.
โBut that was forever ago.โ I threw my back against my seat, again and again, at first in protest but then because I found comfort in the rhythm.ย
***
We pulled into a Stater Bros. grocery store parking lot. We went to the back of the store to use the restroom. Then, in the aisles, I grabbed a bag of Oreos. William asked Mom to get Motherโs Animal Circus from the top shelf. I wandered off on my own without realizing it and spotted a miniature baby doll in a sky-blue polyester dress. She had a beanie body and plastic arms, legs, and head, with a wisp of painted-on hair. I picked her up. She fit in the palm of my hand. A helpless little baby with the power to comfort me instantly.
โPut her back.โ Mom pointed at the aisle behind me.
I ignored her and carried the baby around while Mom pulled a six-pack of Pepsi off the shelf before pondering the produce section.
At checkout, I laid my baby on the conveyor belt.
โI told you to put that back.โ Momโs eyes settled on the cashier. “Kids,” she said and shook her head.
โNo.” I expected her to look me right in the eye, but she avoided me, laughed unevenly, and handed the cashier some money. And I got my baby doll.
In the car, I ate Oreos and caressed my hairless doll. I looked more closely at her face every time another car passed, letting flashes of light in. She seemed so sweet, her face frozen in mute happiness. I couldn’t get over how small she was. And how perfect. And how mine.
The next thing I knew, Mom called my name.
โLeslie, wake up.โ Her fuzzy voice reverberated in my head.
โAre we there?โ I felt dizzy. My nose tingled with chill. I rubbed my hands on my thighs and then sat on them for warmth.
โNot yet. Here, sit up.โ
I realized the car wasn’t moving. At some point, while I slept, sheโd pulled off the road and parked us in an empty lot in the middle of nowhere. Evenly-spaced halogen lights glowed hazy yellow. Lines marked where cars should be parked, but ours was the only one. And it was just like Mom to ignore the rules and park sideways across two spots.
She faced forward and spoke to the windshield as much as to us. โThis is important. Listen very carefully, both of you.โ
I rubbed my eyes.
โWhat?โ I said. Then panic struck. My babyโwhere was she? I felt all over the seat and in the cracks. Then I put my hand as far under Momโs seat as I could reach.
โTake this.โ Mom had turned sideways in her seat so she could give me something.
โWhat is it?โ I held out my hand.
โNothing.โ She dropped two white pills into my hand. โItโs just something to help you stay awake.โ She popped the tab on a can of Pepsi, and it made a crisp hiss.
โNo.โ I shook my head. โI donโt want to. I donโt want to take any pills.โ
โLeslie.โ Her voice had a mean, firm growl in it. โDo what I say. I am your mother. Itโs my job to protect you, so itโs crucial that you listen to me and do what I say.โ
โNo, please,โ I said, blubbering. I didnโt trust her. If I took pills from her, I might fall asleep and never wake up.
โLeslie, take them, dammit.โ
โDid William take them? William, did you take them?โ Were they teaming up to kill me?
โYeah,โ he said. โI took the same thing, and Iโm fine, see?โ
I believed him, and I trusted him, but I still was notgoing to take any pills. I pretended to put them in my mouth and then took a gulp of Pepsi. I lowered my hand and dropped the pills onto the floor of the back seat, hoping they would make it all the way under Williamโs seat so Mom wouldnโt find out Iโd lied.
โGood girl.โ She clapped once and held her palms together. โNow open your mouth and show me. And lift your tongue.โ
I showed her my empty mouth.
โOkay, good. Hereโs whatโs going to happen.โ She sounded the most serious and clear she had all day. Her eyes shone like gems in the rearview mirror. โWe are going to stay here in this parking lot.โ
Where were we? Would anyone hear me if I screamed?
โAnd Iโm going to get out of the car,โ she said. โAnd lie down with my head in front of one of the tires.โ
I held my breath.
โAnd one of you is going to drive. Youโre going to drive the car right over my head. Okay. Which one of you wants to do it?โ Mom looked at William and then at me and back at William.
โWhat?โ I couldnโt believe it. โNo. No way. Neither one of us are going to do it. Thatโs crazy. What are you talking about? We donโt even know howto drive.โ
โItโs easy,โ she said. โIโll lie down right in front of the tire, and all you have to do is step on the gas. Itโll be over real fast.โ
Silence took over for a moment, and the windows fogged up. And so much heavy stuff swelled in my heart it was about to rip apart at the seams.
โIโll do it,โ William said.
โWhat? No!โ My heart pounded super-fast, now, even faster than it did when I jumped on the trampoline. โNo, just stop it. Stop saying it. Stop agreeing with everything she says.โ
I cried hard, wishing I knew where my baby doll was, wishing she could protect me. But she couldnโt. She was just a stupid little doll with a stupid plastic face and a stupid beanie body in a stupid blue dress. She was no comfort to me now.
โYouโll die.โ The words wobbled through a bubble of snot at the back of my tongue. โThen whatโll happen to us if youโre dead?โ
โIt will be easier this way,โ Mom said. โAnd then maybe they will go easier on you.โ
โOkay,โ William said once more. He sighed. โIf itโs what you want. Come on, Leslie. Just do what Mommy says.โ
โNo.โ I shook my head hard. Could my brain be loose in there? It was all stuffy and achy. โWilliam, stop it.โ The words hooked in my throat. โMom, nobody is going to drive over anybodyโs head.โ
โOkay,โ Mom said. It was that simpleโas if I had only just told her there were no more Oreos left in the bag.
โI have another idea,โ Mom blurted. โI could just strangle you two, and that way you won’t have to suffer any torture. And then I’ll find a way to kill myself afterward without you trying to argue me out of it. Who wants to go first?โ
โMom, stop it. Youโre scaring me,โ I said. โYou canโt strangle me.โ I knew she could if she wanted to. Sheโd tried it before.
I remembered the night she tied my red knee-high sock around my neck. Iโd awakened while she pulled tighter and tighter, and she must have seen something in my eyes that made her stop.
Tonight, with all the darkness, she probably wouldnโt be able to see anything more than a flicker in my eyes. If sheโd decided to kill me, once and for all, I couldnโt stop her.
โIโll go.โ Williamโs voice lilted.
โThatโs my good boy.โ Mom gave Williamโs knee a hand-hug.
โShut up,โ I yelled. โGod, why do you always have to agree and go along with everything she says? Stop it. Nobody is going to get strangled. Everybody, just shut up.โ Tears rushed out, and sickness filled my stomach. I was going to throw up, or explode, or die from trying to make everybody stop saying crazy things.
โWell.โ Mom tapped a rhythm on the steering wheel. โIf you wonโt cooperate, thereโs only one thing left to do.โ
โWhatโs that?โ William asked. How could he be so calm? Maybe he had been brainwashed to do scary, permanent damage.
โDrive us into a tree.โ Mom said it so matter-of-factly as if asking us to kill her were the most common and natural thing in the world.
โMom?โ I grabbed the sides of her seat and shook it as hard as I could. โThen let us out.โ
She laughed and turned the key in the ignition.
Where wasmy baby doll? I panicked. I knew she couldn’t help me, not in a situation like this, but I still needed to find her. And I felt sorry for thinking she was stupid. What had she ever done to me? She was just a sweet, innocent baby doll.
I checked between the seams again, to see if she’d gotten stuck, and again, I put my hand between the doors and the seats, to see if she slid there. I ran my fingers over the floor mats, blind in the darkness. She was nowhere.
I felt under Momโs seat again, to see if I had missed her. Then I remembered I hadnโt checked under Williamโs seat.
Relieved to feel her polyester body, I clutched her tightly. My heart relaxed as I wiped her on my pant leg and held her to my cheek.
She smelled like cigarette ashes and dirty car stuff, but I kissed her tiny plastic face anyway. I could have fit her whole head in my mouth if I really wanted to.
interesting . can you check my work
LikeLiked by 1 person
Your site it interesting and very compelling. I love the poetry and pictures/artโthey complement each other in tone and subject to create a cohesiveness and a somber mood!
LikeLiked by 1 person
Thanks a bunch โบ๏ธ
LikeLike
Wow! Truth is stranger than fiction! You’re story is incredible and your story telling is amazing! I want the next chapter!!!!
LikeLiked by 1 person
My book will be out soooon! Thanks for your support!
LikeLike
I knew you were a very talented writer and a beautiful person inside and out but I just read road trip 1 & 2 and my heart weeps. Your memories and the way your words describe them, made me feel like I was sitting right next to you and your brother. It makes me feel so lucky that my you and my brother have found each other and that you are my sister now too! You are truly a gift and should be very proud of who you have become after all you have endured. I love you little sister and Iโm so happy you are part of my life. โค๏ธ
LikeLike
Thank you for your heartfelt comment, sister, and for reading my stuff! I love and appreciate you so much!
LikeLike
Jesus Christ, Leslie. I really *felt* that. Such an ugly moment, so beautifully written… I’m so sorry that happened to you, but as you said last week: it conspired with all the other events of your life to make you who you are today. I love your writing, and I think you’re great. Thank you for sharing with us.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Wow! Thank you, my friend!
LikeLike