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2560

When I wake, I get so angry

“Do you know how long you have been with us?”

The question was unexpected and almost unnecessary. Angie knew that I was very much aware of the fact that I had spent the past six and a half years locked up in their damp basement, that I had spent six and a half years eating the stoggy vegetable soup they prepared, that I had to learn about the outside world through select newspaper cuttings that I was rarely presented with.

“Six and a half years,” I said back to her, trying to keep tears from springing up in my eyes.

I only knew this because of the titles on the front page of the newspapers that I managed to steal occasionally from the living room. My life had ended the day I had been dragged off the streets and there was nothing of the old me left. The only thing that I could share and hold deep within me was my friend loneliness. At first the sadness used to eat away at me like a disease. I fought it off, imagining my sister, Oliver, my parents and my friends. I used to pretend I could talk to them and they would hear me, I would pretend that I was in my own room, and when I shut my eyes and woke up the next day sometimes I expected to wake up in my own bed. But slowly the loneliness worked its way into the pit of my stomach, it manifested itself there and I could feel it with every breath that I took, as the disease spread up into my lungs, making every breath feel like a lighting bolt of pain. Eventually the loneliness reached my heart and everything around me felt cold, from my bones to my dead eyes.

I no longer looked like the girl whose photo was in the newspaper every six months. I no longer had lightly tanned skin and healthy shining blonde hair. I could see my ribs sticking out through my opaque skin. I wondered if I still looked like Cheryl. Of course when we were little we were identical twins, but by now she must have fully embraced being a teenager, even an early adult. Maybe she had dyed her hair a different colour? Or maybe she had gotten tattoos or even a piercing. I doubted it, Cheryl despite being the impulsive one, was slightly more prim and proper than she let on. I wondered what my parents were doing, how they looked now, if mum still used the same Chanel perfume or if Dad still wore a singing tie at Christmas.

I almost forgot what kind people were like. Angie and Mark were anything but kind to me, and yet at the same time they were not cruel either. Only sometimes. A memory would grip them, or I would say something that reminded them too much of the person they kidnapped me for. I once tried to talk to them about it, asked them over and over gain why they took me, why they ruined my life like this. It made Angie so angry.

She had a pair of scissors in her hand because she was cutting the shop labels of a cheap jumper she had bought me. Her face was screwed up as my ceaseless torrent of questions rained down on her; she was trying to keep her breathing calm but I could see her hands shaking as she carried on snipping away.

“Whom do I look like?” I screamed at her.

It happened very quickly. Angie spun around and I could see the tears in her eyes and the big textile scissors flashing in her hands. She lunged at me, screaming a scream that I had never heard before in my life. It was as if all the anguish she had been carrying with her, suddenly released itself from her body with that scream. I thought, and hoped, that she was going to kill me with the scissors. I prayed that she would so it would all be over.

But she slashed my cheek and then without any warning she attacked my hair, blonde strands being chopped of wherever she could get her hands on them. My once beautiful hair rained down off my shoulders and fell down to the floor in sad whispers. She would have cut if all off if Mark hadn’t heard the screaming and ran in to drag the hysterical Angie off me.

I wasn’t allowed a mirror in my little cell. I ran my hands through what was left of my hair and felt that it barely even reached past my ears when it once had been so beautiful and long. The wisps were lying under my feet, another part of my old life that was taken from me and carelessly thrown away. Soon there would be nothing left of whom I was, and then there was no point in living.

It was that day that I knew I had to get away. I had to escape, or I would die in this damp prison.

Oli was lonely. It was drawing to the end of the sixth year that Eva was missing.

For a lot of the six years Oli felt guilty. Guilty because after the police had found Eva’s coat 3 years ago he started believing that maybe she really wasn’t coming back. There was no way that after three more years of investigating, countless newspaper appeals and even more questioning, that they could find Eva alive.

The person who existed six years ago disappeared a long time ago. Oliver never used to be angry or sad person. In fact everything that people said he was now, he used to be. He used to be the party animal with occasional drink problems and drug mishaps. The girls had always flocked around him, whether they liked his tattoos or the jokes he made. The girls still flocked around him now but it wasn’t because of the twinkle in his eyes anymore or the easy and affectionately crude jokes he made. He didn’t joke anymore.

The girls filled a gap, a gap that had been growing with each and every month. They entertained his thoughts for a few hours but soon enough the reality of the situation would come crashing down on him and the world felt black and bottomless again.

The only release for all the pent up emotions came through music. The only thing that kept him reasonably sane was that every Friday evening and Wednesday afternoon he would have band practice. For two hours each night the world was locked out of a small garage in suburban Sheffield and nothing outside mattered. The drums would smash, the bass jitter and Oli screamed everything out of his system. The words didn’t matter because even he couldn’t say how he really felt the majority of the time. But screaming was the safest and kindest way on all of them, for him to let it all out. At times his closest friends, who were all with him in the band, could do nothing but watch Oliver drop into a hole he had dug himself.

“I’m exhausted Lee,” he said to his best friend at the end of December, just a few days shy of the New Year. The seventh year.

“I know you are, I can tell. You’re not the same as you used to be.”

“Everything has changed and it’s never going to get better, even if Eva does come back she isn’t going to be the same person anymore. Who knows what’s happened to her, what people have done to her…”

Lee put a comforting hand on Oliver’s arm.

“I know it’s hard, but try not to think about it. Our Eva is a fighter, you know that, and you know that what you feel is right. She is still out there and she will come back.”

All Oli could do was nod, words could no longer convey his hopes and fears.
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this is my own little baby, I am not particularly bothered by lack of readers or comments, I am writing this for myself, however if you do have something nice to say then feel free. The reason why this has so little subscribers I imagine is because this isn't the kind of 'Oli Sykes' story people want to read. But to those of you reading this I am eternally grateful.

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If you could so recommend this further to other reads I'll love you forever
xxx