CARMEN
“Who are you?! What are you doing?!” I screamed, making my way towards the man as I pushed him away from my father.
“Geez,” the man cursed, stumbling out of the way.
“Dad! Dad!” I called out to my father, tears rolling down my cheeks as I looked at the man who had his arms up in surrender.
“I’m calling the police!”
By the time I fished for my phone, my father had stopped struggling for air. I felt his frail arms brush against my hand as he called, “Carmen.”
“Dad!” I grabbed his hand in mine, keeping an eye out for the man in the corner. “What did he do to you? What happened?”
“He saved me, Carmen. That’s Dr. Adrian. He’s a very good friend of mine,” Dad assured, giving my hand a reassuring squeeze.
I looked at Dr. Adrian, an apologetic look on my face as he started to make his way forward now that he was sure I wouldn’t attack him.
“I’m really sorry,” I stated.
“It’s no problem, honestly. I understand. You did well, trying to defend your father.”
Dr Adrian gave me an encouraging nod.
“I could have died,” Dad spoke up.
“I was starting to lose my breath. I tried to call you and your mother, but there was no response.
You know, I had no idea just how lucky I was until now. I found Adrian on social media just days ago.
We knew each other in high school, so I decided to reach out. Tonight, I reached out to him and now, look at me.”
With a sigh, I sat beside Dad on the bed with a tired smile.
“I’m sorry I couldn’t respond in time. I had an asthma attack.” I left out the part where I was attacked by the man from the bar.
The last thing I wanted was my father worrying about something like that in his condition.
I especially did not want to tell him about Mom being at the hospital over an accident.
“I’m fine now,” I assured before he could ask me.
Dr. Adrian explained to me that he wanted to be of help to my father for old times’ sake.
I escorted him down the stairs as he took his leave, telling me that he would do anything within his power to keep my father from dying too early.
I thanked him as he instructed me to get his phone number from my dad in case of an emergency, and then he left.
I fell asleep on the couch in the living room for the night, only waking up when the door opened and Mom walked in the next morning.
Her wounds had been cleaned, and she had a bandage tied around her head.
“How are you feeling?” I questioned, standing up and following her into the kitchen.
“I’m fine,” she replied coldly.
“What happened to you, Mom?” I questioned.
“I was attacked,” she simply said, causing me to frown.
“Attacked how? What—”
“What are you going to do about it, Carmen? Are you going to find my attackers and beat them up?
What difference does it make? Don’t pester me. Busy yourself.” She dismissed me with a wave of her hand as she started to make some coffee.
I sighed, not surprised at her attitude towards me. Mom had slowly lost herself after Dad’s business crashed and his sickness set in.
She had lost the zeal to care after the series of unfortunate events that struck our family.
I walked up the stairs and sat on my bed, dialling the one number I never thought I would.
“Carmen,” Dave’s sleepy voice came through the other side of the phone, giving me a small sense of relief that there was someone out there that I could talk to, even just a little bit.
“I called to say thank you. You could have chosen to ignore what was happening, but you didn’t, and you saved me. Thank you.”
“You don’t have to thank me. It was the proper thing to do.”
“Okay.” I nodded as if he could see me. Before the call could turn awkward, I hung up and lay in bed for most of the day.
**********
“Max?” I frowned as I walked into the kitchen that evening. “Is something wrong?”
Max, the family chef, had his back turned to me as he seemed to be breathing heavily. I could hear him seething, even.
Max was one of the very few people who stood with us through thick and thin. He was our chef when Dad’s business was doing great, but he never left after the disaster.
He agreed to come over to our house three times a week to make us meals, and we only had to pay for the groceries.
“Max, look at me. What’s going on?” I took careful steps towards him.
He finally turned around. His face was covered in sweat, and he stalked towards me with a cautious look on his face. “Carmen…”
The closer he got, the more alarmed I became. His breaths were loud and fast as if he was struggling for air. I didn’t like the way he looked at me.
“What are… what are you doing?” I stuttered, stepping back until I was trapped between his body and a counter.
“Carmen,” he said my name again, taking my hand and placing it against his crotch.
In frozen shock, I looked down at his pants to find a bulge underneath. He was rock-hard, and he wanted me to do something about it.
“Oh, my God!” I tried to pull my hand out of his grip, but his grip was firm.
“Carmen, please. I’m not going to hurt you. I just… I’ve never felt like this before. Just help me out here,” he pleaded.
All of a sudden, I felt the same way I did just last night with the man from the bar; trapped with nowhere else to go.
“Mom! Dad!” I yelled out, but there was no response.
Max’s hand went over my mouth, causing me to thrash around in an attempt to push him off.
This time, I had an opening to bite his hand and I did. He yelled out, stepping back and giving me the opportunity to open one of the drawers, took out a knife and held it up in my defence.
“I want you to get away from me. It’s not too late. We can always laugh this off, and you can get off the hook,” I offered.
He raised his hands in the air, still approaching me with pleading eyes.
“Carmen, I promise I’m not going to hurt you.”
“What are you even talking about? Come on, Max!” As I spoke, he lunged at me as he tried to take the knife out of my hands.
“No! Get away from me!” I screamed, kicking him in the shin. As he grunted in pain, I raised the knife in my hand and dug it right into his neck.
“Carmen!” I heard someone scream from the doorway.
Everything happened at once, it was hard to keep track of what happened and what didn’t. Blood spurted out of Max’s neck as he collapsed on his knees and finally crumpled to the floor.
My mother had seen it happen, and she was now staring at the scene in absolute shock. Where was she when I had called out for her?
I could feel the spots of blood that had sprayed on my face. I was hyperventilating, and Max’s blood was spreading across the floor.
I turned to my mother, tears filling up my eyes as I said just two words, “Help me.”
**********
“Do you think the coast is clear?” I asked, my voice raspy from crying the whole evening.
“There’s nobody around, as far as I can see. It’s past 2am, I’m sure people are asleep around here,” Mom assured.
We were sitting in her rundown car, right by an alley, Max’s body in the trunk.
“Mom, I’m scared,” I admitted as hot tears started to escape my eyes again.
“You should have thought about that before stabbing him,” she scoffed, getting out of the car.
“What?” I followed her to the back of the car, towards the trunk. “I told you what he was trying to do to me. I stabbed him in self-defence.”
“So you say, Carmen, and I believe you. But if we’re looking at this in a logical sense, you stabbed a man.
There was no witness but your mother, and you claim that he tried to assault you. It’s your word against a dead man’s, so you better not get arrested.”
She handed me a pair of gloves to wear, and I almost choked on my tears as I put them on.
“You have to be quiet and act natural. You don’t want your father asking you questions,” she warned, opening the trunk to reveal Max’s pale body.
We had spent our night cleaning up the kitchen, and Mom had suggested we wash him in the bathtub to avoid his blood staining the trunk.
“On my count, we lift him up,” she ordered.
We hoisted him out of the trunk, tossing his corpse in the dark alley.
Mom made the scene look like a robbery gone wrong, and my stomach churned at how sure she was that it would work and how she had knowledge of that.
We made a beeline for the car when we were done, Mom closing the trunk and zooming off.
“If you keep crying like that, you’ll get caught before the sun even rises. Pull yourself together!” she commanded me.
That night, I didn’t get a wink of sleep. Each time I closed my eyes, an image of Max begging me would pop up in my head.
This time, blood was squirting out of his neck and soaking his white shirt as he kept saying, over and again, “Carmen, please.”
At about 5 a.m., I received a text from Dave asking me where my home address was.
Why? I texted back.
If you ever need help, I could easily find you, he replied.
Without giving it much thought, and because I wanted to act naturally as Mom had asked me to, I texted him my address.
Hours later, I heard Mom calling out for me from the living room. She sounded panicked, so I rushed down the stairs and met her by the door where she stood.
“Mom, why…?” My question remained stuck in my throat as I looked out the door to find Dave standing on our front porch with two police officers.
They all had grim looks on their faces, and that was when I knew it: My mother and I had been caught.
CARMEN“Are you sure about this? Maybe you heard him wrong the first time. Besides, I just got out of prison. I highly doubt that he’ll want to get to see me just yet,” I said to Dave as we slowly walked towards the front door of his father’s house.“You just have to relax for me, Carmen,” Dave said, placing a hand on my lower back. “I didn’t hear him wrong. He clearly said it after his divorce with your mom that he would feel better about giving us his blessing now that he’s not married to her.”We got into the living room, where Steve sat with his legs crossed as he took note of something from a piece of paper.“Dad, look who’s here,” Dave called for his attention, making him look up at us and stand up to give me a good look. I almost laughed at his reaction, but I was too consumed by nervousness to make a sound.“Carmen, what… Come here, my sweet child,” he said, walking towards me and meeting me halfway with a hug.“What happened to you?!” he asked as he pulled away from the hug a
CARMEN“How may I help you?” the woman who stood at the doorway asked me, and I had half a mind to apologize and tell her I had the wrong house before walking away, but I decided to stay instead.“Is Dave home?” I asked.“Mr. Wilmer is home, but he didn’t tell me he was expecting anyone,” she answered, looking down at my hands which held the small box where the wristwatch was. “You can tell me your name, so I can go tell him—”“You really don’t have to,” I said, stopping her from walking back in. “Just let me in, please. I have something important to talk to him about.”“I understand that you probably know him, but I don’t want to get into any trouble. It’s my first day at work, and I don’t want to mess this up.”“You won’t,” I assured her. “You just have to trust me.”It took a moment of hesitation before she finally sighed and stepped aside for me to walk in.I glanced at the little girl she had in her hand with a smile on my face as I got to see just how much she looked like Kate.
CARMEN“Did you tell anyone? I told you not to tell anyone. Did you tell anyone?” I blurted to Evan as I found him standing and waiting for me on the day of my release.“Relax, Carmen,” he laughed. “I only told them that I was coming to check up on you. Why don’t you want them to know that you’re being released, anyway? Are you planning to live as far away as possible without them knowing?”“No,” I answered. “I just… I didn’t want them standing out here and waiting for me to come out. I still need to prepare myself for everything. It’s been a long three years, and I don’t know how they’re going to react.”“I’m sure all this is not what they’re thinking about right now. Trust me when I say that those people will wait for ten years if they have to,” he informed me.As much as it was assurance enough to hear those words from Evan, it didn’t make my heart beat any slower than the speed at which it was going.“Thank you for going through the stress of picking me up, by the way,” I told him
CARMEN“Cartier!”I flinched when I heard my last name being called by the prison guard as she stopped in front of the cell I shared with two other women – Reese and Naomi.She chewed her gum aggressively, using her baton to hit the cell bars, as she watched me so intently that I almost started to dig a hole to hide myself in.“You have been here for a while now, Carmen. It’s time you took the bull by the horns. Don’t let people like her intimidate you,” Naomi said, giving me an encouraging pat on the back to approach the prison guard and ask her what her deal was and why she was calling me.“What…what’s the matter?” I questioned, looking down at my feet to avoid making eye contact with the woman.“Are you ready for your board hearing today?” she asked me, leaning against the bars with folded arms.“I think so,” I said with a nod.“Well, then.” She sighed and took out the key to the bars, opening it for me to step out.“Good luck, Carmen! I’ve had two board hearings so far that have n
CARMENEvan was now standing in front of me with a silent reminder for me to keep my chin up and that I would be fine after the trial, but it was getting harder to do so.After the prosecutor finished asking me questions, I started to feel as if every answer that I had given had dug me into a hole that I would not be able to come out of.“When the victim was making those moves towards you, you called out for your mother, didn’t you?” he asked.“I did.”“Well, to demonstrate just how far her voice must have reached when she called out to her mother, we tested it. I called out to different sound experts to the house, and I was asked to stay in the farthest room from the kitchen. At 70 decibels, I could hear someone calling out to me from that room.”“From the footages gotten from the security cameras around the house, Mrs. Wilmer was not even in the farthest room to the kitchen. In fact, at the same time that Ms. Cartier is seen shouting for her mother’s help in the kitchen, we can see
CARMENMy mother stared at Evan with a shocked expression on her face as he submitted a flash drive to the judge as evidence.“The house where you left after you got married to Mr. Wilmer had a lot of security cameras, which Mrs. Wilmer here may have forgotten about when she slipped into the kitchen and put about ten pills of aphrodisiac into the victim’s drink,” Evan explained as the video on the drive was played for the whole courtroom to see.I had not thought that Evan would work that hard and go that far to get evidence, but he did. Was that why he had been working with my father the whole time? Even I didn’t know about that.“If we watch further, we can see that there was no complete and direct contact between my client and the victim that they were involved in any sexual discussions with each other. To further prove that an aphrodisiac was used in this footage, we have receipts from the pharmacy that she bought them from that week.”“Do the prosecutors have anything to add to t