You've Got Mail

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You've Got Mail
by Edeyn Hannah Blackeney


Have you ever noticed, that when things get really scary, they slow down? Or that things that move slowly are scarier?

Zombies.

Mummies.

Michael Myers (the one from Halloween, not the funny guy).

And... for girls like me... the worst and most frightening and soul-shredding of the slow-moving terrors... the one that shakes us to our very core and turns us into gibbering crying piles of emotive waste...

Puberty.

The years of absolute despair and horror as my body inexorably changes, into what I know I am not. I should have been one of the lucky ones. I told my mother. I wanted to be me, I begged to be me.

And I had to watch as I changed so slowly into who I was not.

Everyone always told me that I was the "very image" of my father. He's tall, rugged, square-jawed... like a nice and well-heeled version of Gaston from Beauty and the Beast. I have watched as I became a copy of that sort of being.

I wasn't even screaming on the inside, I was numb. My mother knew about me. My mother knew and let it happen anyway, and took every opportunity to compliment my masculinity and how easily I would find a wife and be a good father and how I was a perfect specimen of manhood. She knew it was the worst torture for me, but because of HER values and expectations, she wouldn't let the rest of the family know. If ever I tried to tell anyone, she'd talk over me, and give me a dark look.

You always hear about how in letters like these, people like me talk about how wonderful their parents were, but they just didn't understand. Bollocks. My mother understood. My mother is a clinical psychologist with a reputation for being the shrink that all the TG folks in the area want to be under the care of. She's won humanitarian awards for it. Not that she ever mentioned this to me, I found it on the internet. I went searching on my own for help and kept being recommended back to my own mother as the "best" choice.

So, I'm not going to say that my parents did right by me, that it's just me. No, frankly, the way you'll find me is all her fault. She did rather the opposite of right by me. I do hope my father refuses to forgive her.

Well, I'm ready to go. I just need to press send and the whole of my mail contacts will get my message. No need to hurry, you won't get here before the deed is done. I've left the door unlocked though, so that my roommate won't lose deposit for a destroyed door from would-be rescuers.

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Comments

absolute horror

laika's picture

Just when I think you've created the ultimate monster (the scheming psycho adults from Eulogy) you outdo yourself, Edeyn. This mom was (I hope!) the last word in evil, because she should have been the very sort of person to understand what your narrator had been going through. And in fact she did know. Knew exactly what she was doing. Was motivated by an unfathomable bottomless malice. This was pure unrelenting terror; which is what this contest asked for specifically. Now excuse me while I tear my eyes from their sockets-

Wait, better not. Courtney's Diary might be reappearing some day. I wouldn't want to miss that!
~~~hugs, Laika

Too much like real life...

Andrea Lena's picture

I know it's a contest and it's fiction, but when I think about her and real-life girls, it makes me cry. Excellent and painfully sad at the same time. Thank you!

She was born for all the wrong reasons but grew up for all the right ones.
Tutto il mio apprezzamento, cari, Andrea

  

To be alive is to be vulnerable. Madeleine L'Engle
Love, Andrea Lena

Ditto for me

It's a little too close to real life for many of us. So I'm not just horrified, I'm more than a bit disturbed by it. For stories like this, perhaps we should invent a new rating, like D[1-9]?

Excellent writing!

Hugs
Carla Ann

Disturbing

I find this story more then a little bit disturbing. Which makes it a successfull horror story I guess.

Hugs,

Kimby

Hugs,

Kimby

Sometimes I think...

...that if our own kin were any kinder...mostof us would be dead. My puberty was almost non-existant but 'for the kindness of strangers'.

I hope you choose to bless us with more of this kind of writing. It's purity of emotion is so very theraputic for those among us like myself.

May Your Words Never Cease...

Lil' Kelly

OMG!!!

This is a HORROR STORY! How could a Psychologist worthy of the name and degree treat her own like that! I surely hope and pray that this sort of thing does not happen in real life. One of my psychologists was a mother of young teens... I wonder now how she treated them? Oh well, it is the season for horror. I hope it's just the orange and black crepe paper sort of horror, though!

Diane.

Defintiely a horror story,

Defintiely a horror story, as it brought back some memories of many, many years ago that I have tried to forget.
Janice Lynn

Another readthrough

Hi Edeyn,

This short popped up in the random solos box for me this morning, so I re-read it.

I have to say that I was just as horrified and disturbed by it today as I was the first time I read it. To be betrayed like this would be my ultimate horror.

What talent you have!

Hugs,
Carla Ann

MOTHER KNOWS BEST?

WebDeb's picture

This story sends a shiver down my spine. With hindsight i know she knew my "secret",but she never encouraged me to explain my true self.

total .... horror

words don't do justice to how horrible this mother treated her child.

Dorothycolleen

DogSig.png

Yeah... what a sicko. A

Yeah... what a sicko. A monster in human disguise. As long as it happens to others it is ok, but her son had to be perfect. "He" had to continue the family line - or something.
But those are only excuses... I guess she just wanted to be cruel. I hope she's not real.

Thank you for writing,
Beyogi