Puzzling Pieces by Louise Dragon
“You killed him!” Dr. Lewis proclaimed.
“I had to defend myself,” I pointed out. “He would have surely hurt me.”
“You can’t know that,” the doctor said warily. “Why then did you dismember the entire body? Why did you line the pieces up so neatly across the bathroom vanity? What was the point of that?”
Some went down the toilet. My mind wandered briefly. Flushing . . . flushing . . . I can see those parts and those fingers scrabbling . . . try to get back up . . . trying to hurt me . . .
“You’re the doctor.” I breathed deeply -- trying to keep the sarcasm at bay while shaking off remembered images of terror. “Haven’t you told me time after time that I have some sort of compulsive disorder? That I can’t help lining things up in neat little rows? Desk drawers, book shelves, all neat and orderly . . . no extra pieces . . .” My voice trailed off.
“Obsessive compulsive disorder would not cause you to kill.” The doctor said. “Paranoid schizophrenia, may be a harsh diagnosis but after seeing those bloody power tools . . .” It was the doctor’s turn to trail off. He rolled his eyes back slightly and shuddered.
“Because of your age, you will be kept here in the state hospital,” Dr. Lewis told me. “No visitors, allowed -- although I believe that by now you’ve managed to kill off your entire family one by one.”
I looked at the green lizards capering across the faded yellow wallpaper and said nothing.
The lizards made nice orderly rows across the walls. Some of them had heads missing, or tails. Sometimes only half a lizard was visible and my mind wondered about the missing pieces of lizard . . .
NO EXTRA PIECES! Did I say that out loud? No, the doctor still droned on.
After he left I managed to remove all of the lizards with missing pieces, scrapping them off the walls until my fingers were raw and bloody. Once the room was tidy, I could relax.
~~~
In my dream the world is orderly. Everything is arranged in neat little rows. No dangling wires to trip you up. My brother’s fingers are cool and welcoming, not hot, and grabbing. In the dream there are no extra pieces hurting and taking. In the dream my family stands in neat rows across yellow fields of wallpaper and they are complete again – like a puzzle with no missing pieces.
~~~
Across the room in the stainless steel toilet where I flushed the incomplete lizards I hear them slithering up the sides of the bowl -- fumbling and scrabbling up the wet sides of the steel bowl. They should have washed away into the dark currents of the sewers below the city by now – all the extra pieces should be gone. I fear they wait inside the building’s old plumbing.
Could they wait inside the plumbing of all the buildings in the city?
Curled into a tight little ball at the foot of my iron cot I bite down hard on my lip to make sure I’m awake when I first hear the rustling under my sheets.
End
Five Major Pieces to the Life Puzzle
How Does My Garden Grow
-
I have two things that help keep me sane during this Covid-19 pandemic: my
garden and my writing. I take great solace in both. So I’ve decided to put
the t...
4 years ago
8 comments:
Very creepy indeed! Excellent story!
Weezel, well done!! For me what makes this scary is that it could be very real. That's the scariest stuff of all. Great story!!
Quite the chilling look at such a frightening disorder that is not only in the realms of fantasy!
The creepy thing about this is the focus on the need to have no missing pieces, for things to be complete. Well wikkid.
Adam B @revhappiness
Wonderfully chilling piece of work here Louise. What makes it so scary is the fact that it's real for so many. Great work!
Creepy and sad. Mental illness is terrifying both to the one suffering from it and those around them. You leveraged that fear well to build this story. Nice work.
Is it all in her head -- or not? Chilling in it's realism, excellent protrayal of psychosis. Peace...
That gave me the chills. Nice peek into a disturbed mind. :)
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