Present
I live a good life.
Good neighborhood.
Good friends.
Good job.
Great family.
Wonderful life.
Last week was my daughter’s thirteenth birthday.
You understand how thirteen-year-olds are: all focused on fitting in.
Her friend gave her a beautiful doll.
Emerald green eyes and porcelain skin framed by braided brown hair and a dark red gown.
It must’ve been expensive, but she was mortified.
After the party, it disappeared.
I found it in her trash can with a crack over her left eye, otherwise undamaged.
I tidied her up and stashed her in our attic, propped up on a rusty music stand.
Last night I heard a scream that could pierce the fabric of reality.
It was about 2 am and my daughter had friends over.
I peered through the attic door and saw her rocking back and forth madly.
“Ms., I don’t know what happened. She saw the doll and now she’s just... delirious,” stated a friend that noticed me.
The doll lay on the floor, calmly.
“It’s fine; she’s tired.”
And I ushered them downstairs, calming my daughter, but my mind couldn’t help its curiousity as to how the doll came to sit on the other side of the room.