I was a little apprehensive about putting this story on here, mainly due to the fact it made an overly sensitive teacher at my old school have nightmares so bad she had to call her sister up to help calm herself down. Not sure how it will come across but I'd love to read your opinions in the comments below.
I got the idea for the story after a man with a blue umbrella came up to my mum's friend and told her her dogs wanted him to kill her, he later appeared in her road, after following her home, shouting for her to come out of one of the houses.
I got the idea for the story after a man with a blue umbrella came up to my mum's friend and told her her dogs wanted him to kill her, he later appeared in her road, after following her home, shouting for her to come out of one of the houses.
I am a mother now; I have led a very fruitful, long life. I
have married and have had three beautiful children, who themselves have grown
into very special, individual young adults. My husband and I have lived in our
house for ten years, leaving the city after our youngest child left and we are
very happy here. As I look out the window whilst I write this I can see the old
ladies walking to the post office which sits on the corner of our road. I smile
as they doddle on their way and let my mind drift back to that day. I have
never revealed what happened all those years ago, when I was only a girl of fourteen
but the time has come for me to tell the tale. It has been such an important factor
of my life and of my parenting that I feel I need to share it. As my children
and husband will undoubtedly know by the time they read this, I fear that I do
not have long to live, so now is the time to get it off my chest and hopefully
come to terms with the trauma after all these years.
Every morning I had to walk our black Labrador, Missy to get
my weekly pocket money. I would normally take a quick walk around the park
which we lived opposite, let her go on a run for about ten minutes, call her
back then go home again and leave for school.
On that day however I hadn’t slept most of the night; my
first serious boyfriend had cheated on me and despite how I felt about him, I
dumped him. Utterly heart-broken, I’d cried my eyes out all night. We had only
been together for three months but for my fourteen- year-old self, my love life
over as quickly as it began.
I had woken up an hour earlier than I usually would and
despite my puffy eyes and aching muscles I decided to get out of the house and
try and clear my head. I knew I would be seeing him that day during lunch break
and wanted to, if necessary, have something witty and heartless to say to him,
to pretend that I wasn’t hurt at all.
I tied my hair up, pulled on some jogging bottoms, trainers,
an old t-shirt and one of my mums old jumpers which had old paint splatters on
it. I was glad that no one I knew would see me like this. I didn’t even bother
to brush my teeth or put on a pair of knickers. I left my room and crept down
the stairs.
The bottom step creaked as I placed my foot on it and Missy
was straight up out of her bed in the kitchen and ran over to me, tail wagging,
loudly banging against the wall. I stroked her head whilst I puckered my lips
at her and made kissing noises. She licked my lips and I giggled pushing her
away.
“Com’on Missy...” I whispered to her. “Walkies!” She bounded to the back door and I
followed her smiling.
I unlocked the door and before it was fully open, Missy
squeezed her head through the gap, overly eager to get out into the cool crisp
morning. With her excitement she forgot to that her body was larger than her
head and got stuck half way. Another giggle from me and she was out of the
door. I grabbed her lead and a plastic bag and followed her to the back gate.
I turned to go left then stopped suddenly in my tracks. Left
was bad. Left was the ex and a bit of bad luck would have him up and about at
the same time as me, seeing me in the state I was now. I felt it best that the
first time he saw me after our break up would be me looking my best. So at that
moment, right was the better way to go.
I walked along the pavement, past the last few houses of our
street, staring blankly at the closed curtains that protected the sleeping
families inside. Missy kept pulling on the lead to run ahead then stopping
promptly to either smell some rubbish or eat some grass.
I was becoming
impatient with her and decided that I’d cut through the woods that were coming
up on my left to let her have a bit of a run, then cut back round a little
further along and head home whilst still avoiding the ex. As I trekked on the
house abruptly stopped and woodland and country side replaced them.
I told Missy to sit, checked the road was clear and then
crossed to walk up a narrow public footpath that opened up into a lightly
wooded area further on. I had to keep her on the lead for the first portion to
make sure she got over the rail-way bridge that cut the wood in half ok.
We climbed the bridge and I let her go when we were on top.
She ran off like a greyhound out of the gates and I was left on my own. I
stared through the metal grate that was in place to stop any jumpers getting on
the tracks. A tear ran down my cheek as I recalled meeting my ex for the first
time at the station which I could see just down the tracks. I quickly wiped it
away and cursed myself for getting emotional about it still.
I turned and headed down the steps after Missy. I whistled
the tune of her name and heard her bounding through the woodland towards me.
When she reached me seconds later she sat at my feet beating her tail side to
side, sending up a small cloud of dust that had settled on the floor.
I held out my hand and she placed her paw in it.
“Gently,” I said as I handed her a treat. Naturally she
nibbled my whole hand in her attempts to get at it. I wiped her slobber onto
her head whilst stroking her and set off walking again, heading for the second
cut through to get home. Missy was slightly ahead of me as we walked, happily
smelling the ground and eating grass. I often thought that she would be better
suited at being a goat sometimes rather than a dog.
I decided to step off the path and onto the woodland floor
so I could crunch through the autumn leaves. They were dead and crisp and the
crunch beneath my feet was a lovely distraction to the night before.
I remember smiling as the rays of sun fell between the
branches of the overhanging trees and showering me with their warmth.
My detour through the leaves had given Missy the chance to
gain a hefty lead so i stepped out of the undergrowth and back onto the dusty
gravel path. Missy also must have released the distance that had stretched out
between us because she had turned and come running back to me.
Just then I realised that Missy wasn’t heading directly
towards me, but more to my right, towards the leaves that I had just trampled
over. Maybe she’d seen a rabbit pop up and had gone to chase it.
However, when I turned around to see what she was looking at
I saw a man. Stood casually against a thick trunked oak he seemed as if his
being there was a perfectly normal thing to be doing alone at this time of
morning. I jumped when I saw him and he must have seen this because he took a
step closer to me as if to check that I was ok.
The man by the oak tree was dressed similarly to me. He wore
black tracksuit bottoms and top, both black along with a black hat pulled down
to his eyebrows and black gloves with the fingers cut off. In his left hand he
held a blue umbrella which he was using like a walking stick.
Although I hadn’t seen him before it seemed as though he had
been following me for a while and the sight of him sent a shiver down my spine.
Missy had bounded over to him and I couldn’t stop her. She
wasn’t to know how I felt about the man and I calmed myself before I shouted
out to her. She went about sniffing his trouser leg, happily wagging her tail
at the stranger. He never took his eyes off of me but bent down and awkwardly
stroked Missy’s back, unsure if he was doing it right.
I tired to smile at him to try and show that I wasn’t afraid
but I’m sure it appeared that I was trying to hold back tears. He seemed to
like that more somehow. He stepped out of the leafy path and onto the main
gravel one, nearly kneeing Missy in her side with every step.
Luckily she lost interest in him and trotted behind me to
have a sniff of undiscovered territory. The man never broke his stare on me. I
couldn’t take it any more, the cold stare from those snake green eyes had
broken me. I had to speak to him.
“Hello,” I said in the most calm many that I could muster,
“Are you ok? Do you need any help?”
The man continued to stare at me. Never flinching and if he
was blinking, I didn’t see it. He seemed to be in a trace, focussed solely on
me, as if nothing else was around or real. Only me and him. Even the wood
seemed to have fallen silent, the waking birds taking time out of their morning
song to watch.
Out of no where the man spoke. Not quite a reply, just a
statement.
“Your dog hates you.” His voice was coarse as if he had been
outside in the cold and wind for a long time.
I was stunned. I had no idea what to say to such an out of
the blue comment. The man smiled revealing no more than four teeth, all of
which were black with rot.
“It thinks you’re evil. It hates you.” He was happy with his
comments, he could see they hurt me.
Not knowing what else to say, I feebly smiled. “Sorry about
that, better get her home then.” I turned to call Missy and heard him run into
the bushes. I was afraid. I could feel my heart in my throat and felt as though
I would be sick at any moment. I called Missy over but saw that she was down
the path, eating something that might have been rabbit, fox or horse poo. I ran
over to her and grabbed her collar. However when I turned back around to head
to the bridge I’d crossed over he was standing in the path way again, staring
at me, his teeth poking through the folds of his lips.
The other way back into the village was a good twenty
minutes walk behind me and I didn’t feel like heading in that direction as I
would only be stuck deeper in the woods with a strange man who was evidently
mad. So I put on a brave face and pulled Missy forward by her lead which I had
now attached.
He stood there with the blue umbrella propped in his right
side, leaning on it as casually as he had when he was by the tree. I tried to
take a wide birth around him but he seemed to force me into the trees and leafy
path again just by staring at me. It was almost as if he knew how to manipulate
me perfectly. Before I knew it I was a good two hundred yards away from the
bridge and had lost sight of him.
He stood silently. Missy was the same, perhaps she had
sensed my fear. The woods were still and silent with us.
The rustling started from behind me but by the time I had
turned around it was behind me again. Then I spotted him and fear hit me on a
new level.
He had opened the blue umbrella up and held it as far out as
his arm would stretch as he ran a slowly constricting circle around me. His
broken smile taunting me in a nausea inducing spin. I made a move to run back
towards the bridge across the rail-way tracks but he was quicker than I
expected. He cut me off and forced me further back, away from him into thicker
woods.
I lost sight of him again. Somewhere between me and the
thick trees I was amongst and the bridge
that would lead me to safety was a crazed man, with what intent? He hadn’t made
a move to hurt me at that moment, that must have been a good sign? But something
about that smile warned me to get out. I stopped again and calmed myself as
best I could.
I turned and headed back to the direction I had come from
when I saw him again. Just in front of me. I was trapped, the bush was too
thick either side of me and the same was apparent to my rear, the only way was
forward.
I nudged Missy in front of me and then set off on a ran
towards him, hoping to find a way past without him touching me with those
gloved hands. He must have realised what I had planned because he quickly
started pulling branches causing them to fall in my path, slowing my progress
and cutting my arms with the sharp thorns which many of them bore. I had slowed
to barely a brisk walk when I made it past the last of the thick sharp
undergrowth and back into the less condensed area. And he had gone again. I
couldn’t believe how easily it had been to lose sight of him in the matter of
seconds it must have taken me to clear my path of the last holly bush branch
that he had blocked me off with. Me and Missy were alone again.
I had cuts all over my palms, my jumper and bottoms were
ripped in many places and I could feel a sting above my eye as sweat dripped
into the cut. At that time all my thoughts were on getting back to the bridge.
I ran as fast as I could, pulling Missy along behind me who
was struggling to keep up with her old legs. Low hanging branches whipped past
my face, the leafless branches smacking my cold cheeks and ears. I could barely
feel the pain though as I tunnelled in on the bridge. I was approaching the
bottom step when I skidded abrubtly to a halt, Missy sliding into my legs and
knocking me off of them. At the top of the bridge the man stood proud and
defensive. To describe the likeness of him at the moment to the troll from ‘The
Billy Goats Gruff’ would not be misconceiving.
His eyes stared at me once more. This time though he was not
happy like he had been when I was holding back tears. This time he was angry
and I knew that I was in trouble then if I hadn’t been before. Missy lay down next
to me, too exhausted to move. I too struggled to make any attempt to run away,
fear frozen to the spot. The man took heavy footed steps down to my level. With
each foot placement the step echoed a deep ominous sound, almost highlighting
my fear.
He reached the gravel floor with a crunch of the stones and
a slight plume of dust rising above his ankles. I went to stand but my ankle
collapsed straight away. I had twisted it when Missy had crashed into me. I was
now helpless. Tears uncontrollably streamed down my face and the man smiled,
happy with my pain.
He was no more than two steps away from us now and there was
nowhere else to go. Missy lay slumped on her side, panting heavily and I sat on
my bum, crying my eyes out. I couldn’t bare it any longer.
“Please...” I sobbed. “Please don’t hurt me. Let me go,
please.” My eyes were blurry and my bottom lip quivered as I cried. The man sad
nothing, only stood watching me cry. Almost unaware that I had said anything.
He was in control and that’s all that mattered to him. Before I knew what he
was doing he lashed out a vicious kick in my direction. I flinched and clenched
my eyes shut, expecting to feel a powerful blow land in my stomach but no such
pain came. Instead something much more painful happened.
A yelp broke my selfish concern with myself. Missy had cried
out as the man kicked her in her stomach which was the easiest target for him.
She made an attempt to struggle to her feet but could manage no more than I
could. He kicked her again. And again. A barrage of pain ploughed straight into
my poor old dog. Completely defenceless she lay there, the yelps getting less
frequent and much, much quieter. I was powerless to stop him, I begged and
pleaded but that only seemed to fuel his viciousness more. I threw my hands and
arms in front of poor Missy’s body but he kicked her head instead. All the
while tears streamed down my face.
Finally he stopped and placed a blood spattered boot on top
of my dogs body the way a hunter may pose for a photo after a particularly
impressive kill. “It’s ok. She hated you anyway.” He said in a tone that
suggested he meant well by his actions. “Now we can be alone.” I was crying.
He stepped closer towards me and kicked me hard on my left
side spinning me over, face in the dust. I yelled out in pain like Missy had
done. The man placed a bony knee into the small of my back and kept me pinned
there. No matter how much I struggled I couldn’t shake him off. He pulled my
left leg backwards to have my foot in the air and I tried to kick out at him
with the free foot, forgetting that I had sprained it. The kick was hopelessly
weak and he held tight to both feet with ease. He pulled my shoes off and
discarded them next to the body of Missy.
I was crying more and more, struggling with all my might to
break free, a small puddle of tears forming under my face in the dust. I knew
what was coming before anything else happened.
He pulled my jogging bottoms down to my ankles. Trapping my
legs together, making escape even more impossible.
He gripped my bottom hard and I could feel blood trickle
past his long dirt ridden fingernails. He flipped my back over to face him.
Half naked and trapped underneath the grubby man I felt my life would be over
very soon.
He held my arms at my sides and shuffled round to position
himself at my feet. He then pulled down his own trousers and moved closer. In a
fluid motion he whipped my bottoms off and pulled my knees up, ready to have
his fun.
“Stay quite and don’t resist and this will all be over.” As
he separated my legs I attempted one final escape. I brought my knees up
violently crashing them into his chin and nose. I heard a crack, a scream. But
nothing more. He held me firm.
He edged closer and leant forward, his foul breath and black
teeth consuming my senses. “Ready,” he said. And for me the world turned black.
I remember grunts, a sickening warmth and then coldness.
I was found by the
first dog walkers, Mrs. Lions about half an hour later. Half naked, tear
drenched, blood splattered, cut, bruised and with a dead dog she feared the
worst.
I remember her cradling me in her arms, crying gently with
me, her coat covering my private parts. I remember my mother, crying, my father
screaming. I remember the questions from the police, the school, friends, and enemies.
I remember the nightmares, the jumping at every male voice, the look I got from
every boy at school. No one wanted bad meat. I remember the shame, the guilt,
and the loneliness.
Memory is a fleeting thing. Treasure the moments that we are
lucky to forget.
My dearest children, I hope you understand why I was
protective of my babies. My darling husband, I hope you can accept why I never
told you.
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