You Can't Break Her

By TSTurcotte

15.9K 1.8K 3.5K

They say it's hard to find yourself after a traumatic experience. What if for the first six years of your lif... More

Authors note
Life
One| Once burned, twice shy
She trusted you
Two| Scared awake
Three| This isn't a game
Four| She was my best friend
Five| Luggage with limbs
Six| Unknown consequences
Broken plate
Seven| Is it a girl?
Eight| My property
Nine| Misguided happiness
Ten| Inhale!
Eleven| Grown-up things
Not even a care
Twelve| Three by four-foot
Thirteen| Lock-fixer
Forteen| Acting crazy
Fifteen| Avoid strangers
Sixteen| No explanation
Seventeen| My fault
Traumatized
Eighteen| Enchanting and blinding
Nineteen| Macy
Twenty| Rabid animal & Twenty-one| Closed doors
Twenty-two| Tabasco sauce
Twenty-three| Supervised visit
Twenty-four| Picture perfect
Twenty-six| Best interest
I've never known magic
Chapter seven: part one | January
Chapter seven: part two | January
Chapter seven: part three | February
Chapter seven: part four | March
Power
Chapter eight | June
Disassociation
Chapter nine | June
Fear
Chapter ten | June
Wicked
Chapter eleven | September
Burned
Chapter twelve: part one | May
Chapter twelve: part two | May
Chapter twelve: part three | June
Chapter twelve: part four | June
Chapter twelve: part five | June
Chapter twelve: part six | July
Chapter twelve: part seven | August
Chapter twelve: part eight | September
I'm not who I am because of me/But because of all that I relive
Chapter thirteen: part one | June
Chapter thirteen: part two | June
Chapter thirteen: part three | July
Chapter thirteen: part four | July
Chapter thirteen: part five | August
Chapter thirteen: part six | August
Chapter thirteen: part seven | September
Chaoter thirteen: part eight | November
I've never hated someone/More than I hate you
Chapter fourteen: part one | March
Chapter fourteen: part two | April
Chapter fourteen: part three | May
Chapter fourteen: part four | December
Anger
Chapter fifteen: part one | March
Chapter fifteen: part two | March
Chapter fifteen: part three | March
Chapter fifteen: part four | March
Chapter fifteen: part five | March
Chapter fifteen: part six | March
Chapter Fifteen | April-to be continued
Chapter fifteen: part seven | April
Chapter fifteen: part eight | May
Chapter fifteen: part nine | May
Chapter fifteen: part ten | June
Chapter fifteen: part eleven | June
Chapter fifteen: part twelve | July
Chapter fifteen: part thirteen | August
Chapter fifteen: part fourteen | September
Chapter fifteen: part fifteen | September
Chapter fifteen: part sixteen | October
An ill timed/distraction
Chapter sixteen: part one | January
Chapter sixteen: part two | January
Chapter sixteen: part three | January
Chapter sixteen: part four | February
Chapter sixteen: part five | February
Chapter sixteen: part six | March
Chapter sixteen: part seven | May
Chapter sixteen: part eight | May
Chapter sixteen: part nine | May
Chapher sixteen: part ten | May
Chapter sixteen: part eleven | October
Chapter sixteen: part twelve | October
Chapter sixteen: part thirteen | October
Chapter sixteen: part fourteen | November
Chapter sixteen: part fifteen | November
Chapter sixteen: part sixteen | November
Chapter sixteen: part seventeen | November
Chapter sixteen: part eighteen | December
Chapter sixteen: part nineteen | December
Just depression
Chapter seventeen: part one | January
Chapter seventeen: part two | February
Chapter seventeen: part three | March
Chapter seventeen: part four | April
Chapter seventeen: part five | May
Chapter seventeen: part six | May
Chapter seventeen: part seven | June
Chapter seventeen: part eight | July
Chapter seventeen: part nine | August
Chapter seventeen: part ten | September
Chapter seventeen: part eleven | October
Chapter seventeen: part twelve | November
Chapter seventeen: part thirteen | December
She's not looking for a solution, simply her happiness
Chapter eighteen : part one | January
Chapter eighteen : part two | January
Chapter eighteen : part three | February
Chapter eighteen : part four | March
Chapter eighteen : part five | March
Chapter eighteen : part six | April
Chapter eighteen : part seven | May
Chapter eighteen : part eight | May
Chapter eighteen : part nine | June
Chapter eighteen : part ten | June
Chapter eighteen : part eleven | July
Chapter eighteen : part twelve | August
Chapter eighteen : part thirteen | September
Chapter eighteen : part fourteen | September
Chapter eighteen : part fifteen | October
Chapter eighteen : part sixteen | November
Chapter eighteen : part seventeen | December
Chapter eighteen : part eighteen | November - December
This is all mine
Chapter nineteen: part one | January - June
Chapter nineteen: part two | June

Twenty-five| Cafe

138 16 18
By TSTurcotte

October 1996

Patty's husband, Paul, was an uninvolved foster parent. He worked long hours at a plant, and sometimes we drove him to work for six am. I never spoke to him directly; it was a forced parenting situation from my point of view.

He had come home from work an hour ago. Now, he was standing on the other side of the dining room, close to the front door. Patty paced the kitchen. "So, what? You're just leaving?"

I was lying on my stomach before the yelling started. At the sound of a raised voice, I got up, sitting cross-legged. I was facing her with my back to a wall, but I wasn't watching her, I was watching the doorway, his only access point to my location. I didn't move or think or speak, I may have even held my breath the whole time. I was petrified.

"I have to. I can't handle all of this along with your incessant nagging!" Paul screamed.

"It's not just this. Is it?" Crossing her arms, she tapped her foot.

"No, it's not!"

"Who is she, Paul?"

He slammed the door shut a few seconds later, without answering.

She ran out of the kitchen and then I heard her bedroom door shut.

I watched from the picture window in the living room as he entered his car, leaving fast enough for his wheels to spit rocks into the air. Sitting on the couch in a deja vu-type fog, I went over my necessities. He was not one of them. Patty was the cook, so she took priority over him.

I had seen them argue before, but this time it felt different. There was more finality in this engagement. I sensed a change was coming.

Sobbing coming from her room drew my attention. I moved closer to her door. "Are you okay?" I knocked once.

Her door flew open. Exiting her room, she sniffled. She was wiping her handkerchief over her eyes, squeezing her nosy with it.

Following her into the kitchen, I sat upon a barstool at the counter.

"What's wrong?" I asked, expecting her husband to barrel through the door any minute.

Praying that it wouldn't happen was all I could do, but that didn't take away my anxiety. Having seen so many fights turned to spar matches, I couldn't separate my past from my present. The abuse was the only thing I ever saw - it was all I could ever anticipate.

"Nothing is wrong. We are going to the cafe for supper." She grabbed her purse. "Hurry and put on your shoes." She slid hers on while I tied my laces.

We drove a few minutes in silence.

She parked the car in front of the truck stop and cafe, also known as the only restaurant in town.

She took a deep breath, sniffling between words. "Paul is leaving me. He found someone else. He's just pissing all over twenty years of marriage." She took a breath. "That bastard. I know who the other woman is, or I have a pretty good idea, anyway," she continued, slamming her open palms against the steering wheel. "Her name is Sandy. She lives across the street from here," she added, speaking as if I wasn't six years old and unaware of the magnitude of the situation.

"He's not coming back?" I asked, hoping to squelch the anxiety that thought brought me.

Shaking her head, she undid her seatbelt. "No, he's not coming back."

The cafe was a truck stop that had two seating choices, and when we walked in, we sat in a booth on the dining side.

"Here, sit on this side." She motioned to the bench facing the window.

"Do you see his car?" she whispered when she sat down across from me.

I glanced over the row of vehicles. There it was, Patty's husbands' blue sedan, parked crooked in front of the pale grey apartment complex.

"Yes."

"I knew it!" she shouted, returning her eyes to the menu in her hands to avoid the eyes of her neighbours.

"Tell me if you see him leaving," she said, lowering herself a bit in her seat.

The waitress took our orders. We were there for two hours, but there wasn't any movement across the street. Not a single trace of evidence that he was there, except his vehicle.

We did this for a week, but she wouldn't speak to him, and he refused to reach out to her. Patty and Paul seemed well aware of the situation, but it could have been handled better.

I always complained to Lana and my mother that I didn't feel safe with Patty. With her marriage on the rocks, the last thing she was equipped to deal with was a traumatized child.

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Started- May 07 2020 Completed- July 26 2020 Highest Rankings #1 in lekki (4/08/2020) #1 naija stars (5/08/2020) #5 in secondary school(17/07/2020) #...