Each night it comes for her body, her soul, her perfect youth. Each night the pillow gathers her tears, her screams, her pain; hides the knife she’s too afraid to use.
Each day its face is kind. A good father, they all say. Good man.
Can’t they see the broken soul in her eyes?
Then comes a night marked by absence. By the murmur of voices in her younger sister’s room. A muffled scream.
She vomits relief and self-disgust to the cold floor. She hangs her head.
The captured rage of years erupts.
Knife in hand, she stalks next door.