The Curse of 1977 (Book 2)

Chapter 44



The warm, spewing rain persisted all the way to Lynnette's neighborhood. The woman's slothful stride had remained the same
ever since clearing Hollis Estates over two hours earlier.
The brightness of the day that had unexpectedly come back seemingly after hours of inactivity was once again progressively
making its descent back into darkness the natural way. But Lynnette knew the way home by the various communities that she
had passed along the way.The street lamps all began flickering on simultaneously causing a glossy glare to shine upon the slick
sidewalk upon which she treaded and splashed.
Her entire face was soaking wet. Isaiah was snoring away in her arms and that was exactly the way she wanted it. Lynnette
couldn't bear to see her son's face, not after all that they had endured over the course of the past few hours, or even the past few
months for that matter. She was no longer skittish of Isaiah, but that didn't mean she had happened upon the courage to face the
boy. There would always and forever be a dark, looming cloud hanging above them both for as long as they dared to breathe,
and sooner or much later, Lynnette knew that she would have to answer for the storm.
The young lady kept on a few more paces before turning into a yard via the saturated lawn and stomping up onto the porch. She
didn't reach into her pockets for her key, instead, she simply pushed open the surprisingly already unlocked front door and let
herself inside.
Before she could even shut the door behind her Lynnette stood and exhaled as deep as she could. Once she was through she
pulled a soaking wet Isaiah away from her chest just as her mother, dressed in her bathrobe, came rushing into the living room
from the kitchen.
With the most stunned look on her face, the woman squealed out, "Where the fuck have you been?"
Lynnette was dripping rain from just about every portion of her body. The floor beneath her sneakers was a soppy mess. Just
staring on at her fuming mother's red face caused Lynnette to realize that whatever spell the woman had possibly been under for
the past few days had all but worn off. She was no longer afraid of her mother; she went back to being weary and agitated of the
woman.
"I've been calling the police ever since last night!" Her mother raged on. "And every time I call them and tell them that Isaiah is
missing they hang up on me! And here you show up, out of nowhere, looking like a wet possum!"
Still, Lynnette had nothing to say. She could speak, but words had no meaning at that juncture. All she wanted to do was stand
and drip.

"I asked you a question, dammit! Where have you been?" Her mother advanced towards her.
Lynnette stood her ground until her mother attempted to grab her by the shoulder; that was when Lynnette yanked herself away
screaming, "Don't you touch me!"
Her mother stood back but only for a brief moment before trying to take hold of her daughter all over again.
"Where have you been with that baby?" She yelled.
But Lynnette only wrestled both herself and Isaiah away from her mother before grabbing her mother's right wrist and restraining
it.
"I said don't touch me!" She tossed the woman's hand back down.
Her mother stood there in the middle of the living room looking completely thunderstruck. She, much like Lynnette was breathing
in and out heavily.
"We're here now!" Lynnette hollered. "That's all you and daddy need to know! My boy and I are here!"
Shaking her head in utter disbelief, her mother pulled a rag from out of her robe pocket and pressed it against her forehead
before sighing, "I don't know what's been going on since—
"Mama, you don't have to know." Lynnette adamantly remarked. "Like I said, we're here."
Pacing the partially lit living room, her mother kept pointing her finger at Lynnette saying, "You're just like your damn sisters. You
and them are always doing what you want to do."
"I am not like them!" Lynnette angrily struggled to scream. "Not one of those bitches is worth a damn! Not one of them! You,
daddy and my sisters don't have a clue as to what...I'm done."
She relented. For what seemed like countless minutes, both women stood in the living room while the rain outside sounded as if
it were becoming increasingly louder and irate along with the beleaguered mother and daughter. It actually possessed its own
rhythm and tone.
Lynnette soon found the strength to turn and walk towards the stairs only to have her mother attempt to follow her.
"I just wish someone would tell me just what in the hell has been going on around here these past few days!" She desperately
yelled. "I just wish you would let me inside!"

Lynnette, nearly losing her grip on Isaiah, spun around on the first step and said, "Let you in? Mama, how can I let you in when I
myself don't want to be inside? You don't know what me and this little boy have been through these past few months!"
"That's because you won't tell me, Lynn! These past few months you've been in and out of this house like an alley cat! Now look
at you! You look like you were torn apart by something!"
Lynnette wanted to cry all over again, but she reserved herself while staring into her mother's pain-stricken eyes that looked as
though they wanted to break down. It wasn't what she had expected, but that didn't mean she didn't understand her mother.
"I've been hooked on drugs these past few months." Lynnette exhaled all the air out of her lungs in one breath.
Lynnette's mother dropped the rag that she had pressed against her forehead to the floor before paleness took control of her
once blushing face.
"That's what I've been hiding from you all these months. Your daughter is a junkie bitch." She plainly stated.
And with that, Lynnette carried both herself and her son up the stairs, leaving her already lonely mother in an even more
claustrophobic state than she was before.
***
And the rain kept falling:
In the warm bathroom, and on her sore knees, Lynnette washed Isaiah from head to filthy toe in the bathtub. She herself was still
a brazen mess of cuts and bruises, but her well-being was the furthest thing from her mind. All she could do was stare at the
child who appeared completely drained and disoriented more than anything else. With her own grimy fingernails she washed the
boy's hair with soap. With every scrub she laid upon the child the more she began to realize she was actually touching him.
Lynnette had her hands all over Isaiah and she didn't even flinch. It had been months since she had been so tender to him that
the sudden revelation just crashed upon her like a sledgehammer to the head.
Her own bleary eyes every so often would recall the events back at the Estates, from watching Akoni transform to racing like a
scared mouse through a haunted building. Her stomach would drop every time she would hear a vehicles loud engine outside rip
by the house, thinking it was something she had just escaped on her way to come and get her.From time to time her hands
would become limp as she washed Isaiah's hair while her eyes aimlessly drifted from one end of the tile in front of her to the
other.

"Do you miss your daddy?" she asked in a listless fashion.
Isaiah just looked up for a moment and babbled, "Daddy."
"Your daddy," Lynnette's mind wandered. "Do you know that I can't even go back to our old house anymore? I'm too scared to."
Isaiah began splashing in the water but Lynnette gave his frivolity no attention whatsoever. She just kept on babbling to herself
as if she were the only one inside the bathroom.
"Your daddy and I once had a favorite song. 'Maybe Tomorrow.' You know the Jacksons cartoon you love so much?"
"Jacksons!" Isaiah blurted out in subtle excitement. "On TV!"
"Yeah...your daddy and I would listen to that song over and over again until we wore out the record. It was our favorite song."
In her head Lynnette really had no clue as to what she was saying. She was pondering on Isaac, but the words that were coming
out of her mouth were unbeknownst to her.
All of the sudden, the young mother stopped scrubbing her son's hair the second he began to whimper. She removed her
scarred hands from his head and sat back. It was like someone had taken a dark veil away from her eyes at that instant. Her lips
started to quiver as did her hands the longer she stared at the child. On the outside he was absolutely oblivious, but she could
see in his eyes that something was off kilter.
Lynnette's breath was escaping her. She tried to get up from off the floor but no sooner did she attempt such a task that
something caused her to wobble off balance. She leaned her aching back up against the wall for a moment as the entire
bathroom began spinning around and around. The whole jarring experience caused her to open the door and stumble out into
the darkened hallway.
The second she came to the stairs a sudden case of vertigo captured her. Before she could even set one foot onto the first step
she clutched her thumping heart. With the greatest of ease she took one step at a time down the tall stairs until she reached the
living room.
She was being compelled, by what was beyond her, but Lynnette had to keep moving. She kept on towards the front door, onto
the porch and out into the warm, soaking rain.It was by then completely dark outside as she ventured further into the front yard
where she stopped directly in the middle of the lawn and stood. Distant rumbles of thunder rolled by every other minute or so.

The rain beat upon her body so hard that it seemed as though it could knock her over at any second. Then, without any warning
whatsoever Lynnette simply collapsed to her knees on the ground and remained there.
In all truthfulness she hadn't been completely dried off from her initial drenching earlier, so receiving another shower was
inconsequential.
Her own hair began drooping down to where it was blinding her eyes, but there was nothing to see anyways but the street lamps
and a couple of passing cars.
"I'm sorry, Isaac." She whimpered to herself before shutting her eyes.
Behind her she could hear something scratch and move about in the grass. It sounded close, like it was on her back. Soon, it
began to grunt and growl, but rather than clinch her body, Lynnette instead let go.
The growling chorus carried on for at least two whole minutes before the sound ultimately ceased. Lynnette then opened her
eyes and turned around to see nothing behind her. Whether anything was there at all or not didn't concern the woman.
Lynnette's knees started to sink slowly into the muddy ground the longer she remained in the kneeling position.
"Arthur!" She screamed out in anguish. "Oh my God...Arthur," she then pounded her fists on the grass. "I'm so sorry, Isaac." Her
voice weakened more and more.
By then, she couldn't move...


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