Blood was always difficult to clean off. She
grabbed a sponge from the bathroom and put it under the water with some soap.
She then grabbed the sponge and started cleaning her boots, as they were
covered in red. The sponge, that used to be yellow, got heavily tainted and it
was almost impossibly to clean it after having removed almost every trace of
blood from her boots. As she walked the bathroom, she grabbed the sponge and
walked with her footwear on the other hand.
Her name was Linda, which means “beautiful” or
“cute” in Spanish. But that had nothing to do with her. First, because her
parents had no idea of another language and they would have never bothered to
learn anything about a world outside theirs. Second, because although she had a
nice body and all the curves men would like to stare at, she didn’t found
herself all that cute.
She put on the boots in the living room and
then went to the kitchen to throw away the sponge. She grabbed a yogurt, cheese
and an apple from the refrigerator and ate them all practically at the same
time. She hadn’t had a decent meal in a while and she had to take that moment
to eat something recharge batteries. As she gulped down the yogurt, she realized
her hands had lots of little cuts and she had blood under her nails. When Linda finished eating, she tried to clean it off but failed.
It was time to go. Linda took out a cellphone
and checked her messages. She had told Marlon to only text her and never to
call her. Apparently he had gotten the idea because she had not received any
calls, only one text when he asked if she was ok. She answered by only writing “yes”.
When she walked out the house through the
back, a gust of very cold wind hit her directly in the face. Maybe rain or some
kind of snow front was coming. But that wasn’t important right now. She just
closed her jacket the best she could and walked towards the car that was parked
just on one side of the garden. It was one of those houses where everything looks
perfect. But what was inside was not perfect, unless you were a homicidal
maniac with a thing for order.
Linda dismissed the thought of it all and got
in the car. She had found the keys in an ashtray inside, as if the person that
drove the car was always very careful about them. Linda drove faster than the
previous owner, getting to the highway in no time. She tried not to speed in
order not to attract any attention but it was hard. Her only wish was to be
very far away from there, and that had to be done fast or they would link
everything that had happened the last few days to her. And she couldn’t face
that.
Night came fast and also a thin rain, which
was more annoying than anything else. She kept driving, remembering the faces
she had seen recently and putting tags on the ones that she would never see
again. Many people had died violently because of her lately and it was
something that, although not honestly shocking, she did want it to be left
behind. She wanted to be free from those awful memories and sights; she wanted
to be left alone.
However, as the “gas” sign on the car’s
dashboard started beeping, she knew that wasn’t going to be possible. Right
now, many cops, many people in general, were thinking that it was all her
fault, it was all because of her and it was her who had done it all. And they
were right, at least partially. Because she did have blood under her nails,
because her body did ache because of the struggle and because she had seen what
no one else had seen that week.
Seven hours after departing the house, Linda
pulled over a gas station. It was self-service, so she used the cash she had
found on the house to fill the tank and hope no one would catch up with her
there. She entered the store to pay and realized a table had been set up inside
and, before she could walk back, the family having dinner there noticed her and
smiled. Somehow, they were happy to see her, even if she had no idea who they
were or what they were doing. Suddenly, people got up and smiled and she saw
food on the table and remembered.
It was Thanksgiving Day. She had forgotten all
about it as she had been too busy dodging life. She walked closer and asked to
pay for her gas but the family invited her to a plate. She insisted on paying
but the mother replied they had all decided to celebrate the day there because the
station was family property and they couldn’t close it down so the best way to
celebrate was to do it in the store and give any costumers a plate to share the
joy of the holiday.
Linda insisted many more times, looking out at
the car, but every single one of them kept insisting. They then put a plate on
her hands and she had to do something she had almost forgotten how to do: act.
She forced a smile on her face and went around the table putting various types
of salads and vegetables and turkey on her plastic plate. She then thanked them
all and told them she would prefer to eat it in her car, as she didn’t want to
interrupt.
Then, Linda heard it again. She froze right
where she stood as the voice, which was not feminine or masculine, invaded her
head. She didn’t understood how it had found her again. It had to be close. She
asked for it not to do anything to her or to the people there but, when she
realized it, she had dropped her plate of food and was now holding the knife
they were using to cut the turkey. Her arm moved and she was inside of her
body, unable to control anything. But as she was about to slash one of the
attendants, a bullet entered her leg and she lost balance, collapsing to the
floor. She lost consciousness right there.
The woman had some awful dream, were voices in
different tones told her what to do. One wanted her to poke her eyes out,
another one advised to grab a knife and cut her legs off. Another, deeper voice,
ask her to just drop dead. And then they all stopped talking and she heard a
beautiful female voice. It was someone she knew or at least she seemed to be
very familiar to her. But that didn’t matter. The voice told her, in words that
felt like a medicine, that she had to fight back, not letting them in.
Linda woke up, panting and sweating in a hospital
bed. She had wanted to move but two things stopped her: she was tied to the
bed, as they did with mental patients, and her leg was hurting too much, so she
could barely move properly. She tried to fight her restraints but it was useless
and she tried to scream too but her throat was dry and she would only hurt herself.
Linda couldn’t cry either, as much as she had wanted to do so many times
before. Somehow, she couldn’t.
Two men then entered the room, a policeman and
a doctor. The agent started talking about how she was going to be incarcerated
due to her having murdered over twenty people the past few days and her
attempted murder of a family that had been seating about to have dinner. Linda
just shook her head, unable to speak. The men ignored this. The doctor then
spoke, telling her that she apparently suffered from a condition in which
illusions and voices were very present so he had recommended the police not to
put her in jail but in a psychiatric ward.
Again, Linda tried to scream, but couldn’t.
She was transferred to a psychiatric
hospital two days after they had extracted the bullet. There, she wouldn’t be
isolated but she would remain for life. They had deemed her “incurable”, so she
was just left alone with her thoughts.
As much as she tried, for several years after
her demise, she never regained the ability to speak. However, people understood her
all the same. She had no idea why and she had no need for an explanation. The
voices, both the crazy ones and the beautiful one, disappeared from her life.
So she was just a regular girl living in a place filled with the most
criminally insane people in the world. And all because of what some voices had
told her to do, controlling her mind and body.
As she got older, the clinic used her as the patient
that welcomed any new additions to the madhouse. It was then when she realized how it was
possible that people understood her. And it was amazing no one had said
anything, as if it was the most normal thing in the world. Maybe she was
manipulating them too but realized that was too far fetched. Linda could only be
in their heads, that was it.