The Boy
in the Speakers
Once,
not very long ago, a man and woman loved each other. This isn’t unusual, but
their love was. High school sweethearts, everyone said that they would get sick
of each other, but they never did. They spent years together in mutual bliss,
eventually getting married.
The day
came when they wished to have a child. For years and years they tried, but
without any success. Eventually, they scraped enough money together for
fertility treatments, and the woman soon discovered that she was pregnant.
Before she told the happy news to her husband, she sat beneath the mimosa tree
behind their house, looking up into the branches. A bird was perched in the
tree above her, singing sweetly as the sun began to sink below the horizon. She
whispered to herself, “May my child sing as beautifully as that bird does. May
they be as free as its wings upon the wind.”
Her
husband was overjoyed to hear that they had finally conceived a child, but
their happiness was not to last for long. When the woman went into labor, she
began to lose a lot of blood. The doctors did everything to save her, but she
was dying, and dying fast. As she faded, she held her husband’s hand and said,
“If I die, bury me beneath the mimosa tree.”
The
doctors saved the child, named Jacob, and the man was allowed by the county to
bury his wife beneath the mimosa tree. He held his son in the shade of the
branches, and called his wife’s old number over and over just to hear her
voice. Eventually, he stopped paying the bill, and he slowly forgot the sweet
sounds of his wife’s voice.
He
joined a dating site, and soon married again in the kind of whirlwind romance
that the internet age has made us so familiar with. Soon, he and his new wife
had a daughter, Marlene. The daughter and son were no more than two years apart,
and they were attached at the hip. They grew up together, and Jacob would
always sing Marlene to sleep at night. Jacob was Marlene’s protector and
closest confidant. When Marlene got bullied at school, Jacob would scare the
kids off, when Marlene was sick, Jacob would put his CDs on for her, when
Marlene needed anything, Jacob was there to be her protector.
The
stepmother was jealous of Marlene’s love for her brother, but as he got older,
she became jealous of his singing talent. See, the stepmother was a failed
artist, and she spent hours on the internet, wallowing in self-pity and
obsessing over her passed days without making any effort to lift herself from
her position in life. Her husband worked long hours, and often wouldn’t be seen
around the house because he went out and got drunk after work with his old
college buddies. It was no secret in the household that the stepmother took out
her rage out upon Jacob. From the moment she moved in, she punished Jacob at
every turn. When he was young, she would spank, pinch, and send him to time out
for inordinate amounts of time for even the smallest infractions. She tried to
control him by taking away his electronics, his CDs, grounding him, denying him
dinner—and treating Marlene like a princess. Jacob’s good heart never resented
his sister for the treatment he endured from his stepmother. Instead, he
funneled all of his sadness and hatred into his music. He played whenever and
wherever he could, his beautiful voice capturing all emotion perfectly. Jacob had begun posting videos of himself
singing with his guitar. He had gained a local following, and one of his videos
had gone viral. Jacob was excited—his stepmother could only see her failure and
jealousy. Every time Jacob had a success, she would punish him, but she could
never stop his tenacity for his music.
Jacob
was called to play a gig at a local venue, and he was going to be late coming
home. Marlene begged her mother to let her go, but her mother angrily ordered
her to go to bed. Marlene cried and cried in her room, and her mother screamed
at her door while Jacob could not protect her, “You ungrateful child! I gave
birth to you! He isn’t even your blood!”
Jacob
got home around ten. He crept in the door, being careful not to wake anyone in
the house, but he was surprised to see his mother sitting in the front room,
staring at the front door where he stood.
“You’re
up late,” his voice came out in barely a whisper. He was afraid, but he
couldn’t say of what.
“It’s
the perfect time to take care of things—get those pesky chores done that you
just can’t get to during the day,” she walked over to where Jacob stood.
At this
moment, Marlene was walking down the stairs to get a drink of water, careful to
be quiet, as she didn’t want to incite the wrath of her mother. She saw her
mother and Jacob from the bottom of the stairs, and she was frozen. They were
just standing there; staring at one another like all hell was going to break
loose. She didn’t know why, but she pulled her phone out of her pocket, turning
the camera on, and started to record.
“What
do you want…mom?” Jacob asked, “I was just going to head to bed.”
“I just
wanted to tell you that I’m proud of you, son,” the stepmother reached her arms
out, moving to embrace Jacob. A smile spread across his face, he was overjoyed
to finally be appreciated and loved—even for a moment—by the stepmother that
had rejected him for so long. This happiness, however, was short-lived.
His
stepmother whipped a boxcutter out from the sleeve of her robe, and angrily cut
across Jacob’s throat. Marlene screamed from the stairs, dropping her phone,
and the mother turned around, eyes blazing with hellfire.
“If you
tell a soul, I’ll do worse than kill you, you ungrateful child.”
Marlene
shook and sobbed as she watched her mother walk into the kitchen. Jacob’s blood
was spreading across the linoleum floor of the entryway, and Marlene wished
that he would stand up—that he would be okay. Her mother returned, her bloody
hands gripping the electric turkey knife.
“No! No
mom, please!”
Jacob
was dismembered over an excruciatingly long expanse of time. Marlene’s mother
took pieces of his body and neatly cut them, placing them in plastic bags in
the freezer. She wrapped his head, some of his organs, and his bones in a trash
bag and shoved the heap into Marlene’s quivering arms.
“You
bury these under the mimosa tree so he can be with his stinking slut mother
where he belongs! If you try to run, you’ll end up in the freezer too.”
Marlene
dragged the bag outside, her mother watching her from the kitchen window. She
grabbed the shovel from the shed and dug a hole in the soft dirt under the
mimosa tree. The hole took a long time to dig, but she managed to get it deep
enough to accommodate the garbage bag. She gently placed what was left of her brother
in the hole and filled it with dirt, trying to put the sod back on in the least
suspicious-looking manner possible. No one ever really went in the backyard
except for her and Jacob, so it didn’t really matter, but she wanted it to look
good enough that she could pretend that none of it happened until the morning.
Marlene plucked some of the mimosa flowers off of the tree just as the sun
began to rise, and placed them on the soil where the pieces of her brother lay.
Marlene
walked back in to find the house spotless and smelling of bleach, the sun
streaming in through the front windows and illuminating the entryway that had
been stained with her brother’s blood only several hours before. She smelled
cooking meat, and her mother leaned out of the kitchen.
“Clean
yourself up. Your father is coming to have breakfast with us, it’s his day off
and I’m trying to do something nice for him.”
Later,
Marlene sat across from her father as he ate what he seemed to think was “ham
and eggs”. Marlene couldn’t even take a bite.
“Why
aren’t you eating this delicious breakfast that your mother made, Marlene?” her
father asked through a mouthful of food.
“I…”
her mother grabbed her knee and dug her nails in, “I’m not feeling that well, I
think I may have gotten the flu at school. Sorry, mom,” The grip on her knee
relaxed.
“Where’s
Jake?” her father seemed to have just only noticed
“He
never came home last night. Stupid kid is probably out partying.”
Marlene
passed the next month in a stupor. She did poorly in school. Her mother had put
out a missing person report for her brother, but at each candlelight vigil,
each search party, her mind was heavy with what really happened to Jacob. Every
night, she went to talk to Jacob beneath the mimosa tree. She asked him to make
it right, to expose their mother, to be her protector and her voice one last
time.
Suddenly,
one night under the tree, her phone lit up with a video of her brother singing,
but it was a song she did not recognize. He sang,
“My
mother, she slew me,
My
father, he ate me,
And my
sister, Marlene buried me,
With my
mother under the mimosa tree.”
Marlene
stared at the phone, and she knew, her brother was back to save her.
Her
mother began getting phone calls. Marlene heard the same song wafting from the
receiver, and each time her mother screamed for
the caller to “stop pranking her”. Jacob didn’t stop there. The lyrics
to the macabre song began arriving in messages on the mother’s Facebook. They
came out of the mouths of the newscasters on TV. They whispered from the car
radio. They typed themselves in word documents on the mother’s laptop. It was
driving her mad.
Marlene
would go under the tree, and call her brother’s old number every night, and he
would sing the song to her over and over again. One night, her mother came
running out of the house into the backyard. Marlene could hear her brother’s
voice from the laptop in the house.
“He’s
taken everything from me! Everything!” her mother screamed, “I can’t even
distract myself anymore. I’m digging him up! I’m digging that little shit up!
I’m going to burn that fucking tree to the ground!”
Marlene’s
mother began running toward the tree. Her father appeared in the door.
“What’s
going on?” he asked, somewhat detached and not seeming to notice the
disembodied voice of his song growing louder and louder through the Marlene’s
phone.
Despite
all of the commotion, and her mother marching toward the mimosa tree with
revenge in her eyes, Marlene felt strangely calm. Her brother’s voice no longer
seemed to be coming from her phone, but from below where she was sitting. The
ground started to shake.
All of
a sudden, the ground burst open, and there stood Jacob and his mother in all
their glory. Marlene’s mother kept rushing headlong towards the mimosa,
screaming. Jacob’s mother rushed forward and in a clap of light, reached into
the wicked women’s chest and began pulling her into the ground by her heart.
Jacob pulled Marlene away from the tree, and the ground swallowed up both of
their mothers without a trace.
Marlene
was overjoyed to see her brother in the flesh, and she buried her face into his
chest. She lifted her head to express her joy to her father, but he was too
busy searching the ground below the mimosa to realize his son was there.
“I
don’t have long here, sis. Tell the cops what happened to me. Live your life.
I’ll always be there in spirit to sing to you,” and with that, he faded into
the ground.
Marlene
wept, but she did as her brother asked. She showed the police the video that
she had taken with her phone. She told them that she had been threatened with
death by her mother and that’s why she had never come forward. When the police
asked where her mother was, she told them that she had run off.
Marlene
and her father had a rocky relationship at best after that. He dove even
farther into drink after he realized that he had eaten his son, and that he had
been too absorbed in his job and social life to even take notice of what had
happened. Despite all of this, Marlene was still happy, for she sat under the
mimosa tree every night, and though what was left of her brother had been taken
for evidence long ago, she spread his ashes beneath the tree. He kept his
promise, and sang to her through her phone. Wherever there was a speaker, Jacob
could be heard singing,
“My
mother, she slew me,
My
father, he ate me,
And my
sister, Marlene saved me
Marlene
saved my soul.”
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