Next Stop: Paradise
Written by Rita Tapia Oregui
September 22, 2017
It was
an icy-cold winter night. Silence reigned. Only the wind could be heard.
She
turned her eyes to the sky. Clouds had rolled up and hidden the moon, which
certainly didn’t bode well.
Suddenly,
her heart started racing. He was back. She could tell it was him, despite the
darkness, because of his nauseating smell.
He
threw a bucket of cold water over one of the girls knowing her screaming would
wake up the rest. He then went to grab one of the younger girls, but she
scooted away from him, running to hide behind her mother. She, in turn, started
pleading with him to have mercy on his own daughter, but that only seemed to
enrage him. Without even bothering to try and verbalize his anger, he swung his
rifle and smashed first the mother’s and then the daughter’s head with its
butt.
The rest of the women started bellowing hysterically when they saw the
blood gushing out of their friends’ heads, but he didn’t even flinch. Instead,
he grabbed another one of the girls by the arm and left the room with her.
It
wasn’t until he was out of sight that Life could breathe again. She then
started looking for her sister, but couldn’t find her anywhere. That’s when she
realized it was her he had taken.
Her sister
returned to the room about an hour later. Her nightgown was torn and
blood-stained. She had her head down and was quivering badly. Every step she
took seemed to hurt her. She looked as if she were about to faint. Life helped
her sit down on her mattress and checked her temperature. She was burning hot
and reeked of him, of evil incarnate.
Seeing her sister so weak and morally
crushed made Life wonder whether she would ever be able to recover. And to
think that those monsters were supposedly striving to make the world a better
place, ruled by a fairer and more principled system…
The
next night, she stayed awake, and when he returned, she made herself available
to him. They went together to his tent and, the second he turned his gaze away
from her, she took his gun, aimed it at him and pulled the trigger, all without
a moment’s hesitation. She knew that the shot, with which she had tried to get
some justice for the women who had been suffering the unspeakable day in and
day out, couldn’t have gone unnoticed, and since she couldn’t risk being caught
alive by his friends, she turned the weapon on herself, pressed its muzzle
firmly against her chest, smiled—for revenge tasted sweet and she was positive
she would wake up in Paradise the next morning, where she sure as hell had
earned her place—and fired.