filling my head. But then I remembered: my father was not home.
âThere are times when people of confused faith misinterpret a psychological or medical disorder and carry out barbaric methods to rescue the sufferer. There are many such stories, but this evening Iâd like to talk about a girl named Lydia Flores from a village in Mexico. When Lydia was fifteen, her motherâa widowerânoticed a change in her daughter. Where she had once been affable, outgoing, she became sullen, withdrawn. Simply leaving the house became an act she resisted. According to reports, the girlâs appetite vanished; her weight loss was drastic. Nights, she spent awake in her room, thrashing in bed. Days, she slept with such stillness it disturbed her mother. As things worsened, her behavior became violent toward others and herself. She spoke of voices and the horrible things they told her to do. Now any of us might contact a psychiatrist. But Lydiaâs mother lived all her life in that village, where people held antiquated beliefs about what was to be done in such a situation. Unfortunately for Lydia, her mother sought out a village priest with the same beliefs. This priest devised a plan for her treatment.â
When I opened my eyes again, morning sun shone through my window. My nightlight was still out, clock too. I lay there, surrounded by my fatherâs words, wondering how they had come to me. Before I could think too long, though, I remembered: Dot . I got out of bed and crossed the hall. My parentsâ door was shut and locked. I slipped back into my room a moment. My mother and I had a tradition: whenever they were about to leave on their trips, she helped me pick out the clothes Iâd wear to school while they were gone. I found the soft blue spring dress and simple white flats she had chosen for that day and put them on without bothering to shower.
Downstairs, the antique clock ticked in the living room. I was running twenty minutes late, long enough that the bus was likely blowing past the end of the lane at that very moment. Inside the kitchen, I found Rose hunting down a fork, the toasty smell of something heating in the gas oven filling the room. âWhere is she?â I asked.
âWho?â
âRose, you know who I mean.â
âOh. Her. Where do you think?â
âAfter what you put her through, Iâm hoping sheâs in momâs or dadâs bed catching up on sleep.â
Rose pulled open the oven door, reached inside. Out came two waffles, which she tossed on a paper towel before blowing on her fingers. âDonât you mean what we put her through? After all, you were the first one to scare the crap out of her.â As she spoke, I watched her slather butter on those waffles and dump on so much syrup that it drooled through the paper towel onto the counter.
âYouâre making a mess,â I told her. âJust put them on a plate.â
âWonât fit under the door if theyâre on a plate.â
âWhat door?â
âThe bathroom door.â
âSheâs still in there?â
âGo to school, Sylvie. Iâm taking the day off myself. Too much to do here.â
âRose, you have to let her out. Itâs been almost twelve hours.â
âEleven, actually. And of course Iâm going to let her out. I even told her I would last night, but thatâs when Miss Mary Snatch said she planned to call the police as soon as she was free. So no can do just yet. The womanâs not getting out until we broker a deal. I guess you could say weâve got a hostage situation going on up there.â
For a long moment, I stood watching as she flattened each waffle with a fork so theyâd slide more easily beneath the door. Finally, Rose looked up at me. âSylvie, you donât want to be a part of this. I promise sheâll be out by the time you get home. Now go on. Donât you have to turn in your paper so you can
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