Read The Devil's Monologue Online
Authors: Kimberly Fuller
Tags: #hell, #bully, #devil, #afterlife, #3 years later, #h a carter
To my dearest
Jackson,
I miss you. I miss how you
always took care of me. I never told you that it mattered, but it
did. I wish I could tell you how important you were. Maybe I will
be able to soon? My doctor gave me this notebook to write to you.
He said it would help. This is the first time I've actually written
in it since your father left me alone. I can't be alone. You know
that. I wish I could care that he left, but I don't. I hope he and
Trina are happy. At least one of us might be. I can't do this
anymore, JJ. I want to be with my son. Wherever you are, I want to
be there and away from this emptiness. All I ever knew to be was a
mom. Without you, I am nothing. I hope you can forgive me for this.
I love you.
To the moon and
back,
Mom
Ma set her pencil down. I
felt sick as I watched the words I had feared so intently form in
front of my eyes as I peered at her in my darkness. I tried to
reach out, but I could not touch her. I was only here to
observe.
She stroked the Old Man's “office” gun with
deep sadness and longing. It was all too familiar longing. I knew
that damn gun was loaded, just how I had left it. The room around
her looked bare as I realized my father's things were gone. He
really had left her.
Tears rolled like silver beads down her pale
cheeks. Ma made no attempt to brush them aside, instead she cried
harder and sobbed out loud. Her hands were shaky as she picked up
the heavy gun. I doubted she had ever touched a weapon much less
used one. The safety was off, just as I had left it. All it would
take would be the flick of her bony finger.
I started to scream as she held the gun to
her temple, “Put it down, Ma! Put it down! Please, Ma, just put it
down!” I knew she couldn't hear me, but I had to try. I had to stop
this craziness before another person was hurt.
“Ma! Please, Ma! Don't do this. Please don't
do this for me. I'm not worth dying for,” I began to cry along with
her, tears pouring down my face with invisible fury. I couldn't
believe this was happening, and that I was being made to watch.
The gun to her head, pain in her watery
eyes, and heaviness in both of our hearts, she pulled the
trigger.
Bang!
It was quick, like a bandaid, and over
before I had a chance to let out another pleading scream. The echo
of gunfire rang through the half empty room with a haunting melody
of loneliness. A mess of life was scattered across the pale yellow
flowers on the walls and the desk she had been sitting at. Staring
down at my muddy boots, while I stood in the dark depths of Hell, I
prayed for my mother's soul.