Tears of the Silenced. Misty Griffin

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the clothes. I smiled at her, though, and told her I loved traveling away when I read. Mamma frowned at me, but I did not care what she thought.

      “Well, that is great,” the neighbor lady smiled at me. “I have a lot of National Geographic magazines and history books.”

      Brian walked up in time to hear the conversation. He got upset that I was talking to a neighbor and told me to get back to work. As I walked away, I could hear him telling her that he did not want us exposed to outside culture through her books and magazines. I turned around in time to see an angry look on her face.

      After that, the neighbor would occasionally leave a box of books and magazines at the end of the drive for Samantha and me. Whenever Brian would see it, he would yell at us to burn them, but most of the time we were able to hide them under the house. We would read them any time we were sure Mamma and Brian were gone, or in the moonlight when we were supposed to be sleeping. Afterwards, we burned them in the trash barrel or buried them on the mountainside so Brian would not find them.

       Tortured

      As a child I felt myself to be alone, and I am still, because I know things and must hint at things which others apparently know nothing of, and for the most part do not want to know.

      —C.G. Jung, Memories, Dreams, Reflections

      My fifteenth summer was a turning point for Samantha and me. One morning, Mamma announced that she had a half-sister we didn’t know about. As her story unfolded, it sounded strangely familiar. Our grandmother had had a child at the age of fifteen and the child was taken away from her to be raised by the child’s paternal grandmother. The father lived out the rest of his days in a psychiatric facility in Mississippi. Mamma said she had always known about her older sister, but they had only met once when she was a teenager.

      The only memory she had of Aunt Fanny was that she was short with a sort of smashed-looking face, and that she did not say a word the entire day they were together. She went on to say that she had been contacted by a government agency in Prescott, Arizona, informing her that Aunt Fanny was at a facility that housed people with special needs. Aunt Fanny was in Prescott at that time because her grandmother had died, and she had been brought to Arizona to live with our grandmother, Fanny’s biological mother.

      Because of Fanny’s severe mental impairment, our grandmother had been unable to care for her. Doctors had diagnosed Aunt Fanny with schizophrenia, partially caused by the rape she suffered at age nine.

      Aunt Fanny constantly walked along the road, believing it would take her home to Mississippi and to her grandmother. The facility where she was currently living had decided they could no longer care for her. She was always trying to escape.

      Samantha and I did not know what schizophrenia was, and neither did Mamma and Brian. When Mamma told us that our forty-year-old Aunt Fanny was coming to live with us, Samantha and I were so excited. We imagined that Mamma and Brian would have to watch their behavior with someone else in the house. This was the best news we had had in many years.

      Mamma told us that she would have to fly to Arizona in two weeks to pick up our aunt. I wondered at the time why Mamma cared about her sister’s living arrangements when she was constantly cracking jokes about how dumb her sister had seemed when she had met her. I learned the truth when I heard Mamma and Brian discussing how to spend the extra $550 a month they would receive for her care.

      Two weeks later, Samantha and I ran out in the dark to greet the truck when it arrived from the airport. When Aunt Fanny got out, I went to her and she hugged me, but her face was vacant and she was silent. I remember my surprise at her appearance. She seemed innocent and looked like a large five-year-old child. She was about four-foot-nine and weighed approximately 210 pounds. She had blue eyes and porcelain white skin. Her face drooped a little but was chubby and sweet. She had short brown hair and was wearing a flowing green summer dress. As she stared vacantly into the empty night sky, I could tell she was confused.

      Mamma and Brian were arguing again, and Aunt Fanny grabbed my hand. Samantha took her other hand, and we walked into the house. Before her arrival, Samantha and I had fixed another bed next to ours and we had made a divider enclosing our sleeping area. We had been told that she often tried to escape at night. I had taken two cowbells from the shed and tied them on the makeshift doors so she could not leave without our hearing her.

      We took her upstairs and showed her the bed. Aunt Fanny stared vacantly at the room while squeezing my hand tightly. Looking back, I realize the kind of world she was accustomed to. I can imagine her shock on arriving at a farm in the middle of nowhere with a bunch of strangely dressed people. There was no electricity, bathroom, television, or couch for her to sit on. She must have been terrified.

      While upstairs, we heard Mamma scream at us to come down. We all ran down together, and Mamma yanked Aunt Fanny’s hand out of mine.

      “She is not a baby, you know,” she said disgustedly.

      Mamma pushed Fanny into a chair and told her to stay put, and ordered me to make sandwiches. I made bologna sandwiches and put them on the table. I sat next to Aunt Fanny and pushed a sandwich at her, but she continued to stare into space. Mamma looked angry, and Brian shook his head.

      “I cannot believe how retarded she is,” Mamma scoffed. “She has been like this since we got on the plane; she hasn’t said one word to me since I met her.”

      Samantha met my eyes across the table. I gave a smirk as she rolled her eyes and mouthed, “I wonder why?”

      “Well,” Brian said authoritatively. “Tomorrow, I want her in Amish clothes. Misty, that is your job. I do not want her out of this house until she is properly clothed.”

      After the sandwiches, Brian ordered everyone to bed. I showed Aunt Fanny the outhouse and told her that if she needed to use it I would go with her. After we all climbed into our sleeping quarters, Samantha secured the doors while I tried to get Aunt Fanny to change her clothes and lie down; she vehemently refused. Mamma yelled up to see if Fanny was in bed yet. Samantha yelled back that we were all in bed, and I blew out the candle. Aunt Fanny sat on the bed in the chilly room, still wearing her green summer dress, staring off into space.

      I awoke in the middle of the night to the ringing of cowbells and a crashing sound, followed by a loud thud. I lit the candle, and saw Brian catching Aunt Fanny by the back of the dress as she was starting down the stairs. The makeshift doors, made out of thin plywood, were crushed. It looked like Aunt Fanny had pushed on them, and when they did not move, she fell over on them. I gasped as I saw Mamma reach for the metal fly swatter next to her bed, and I jumped over the broken doors to stand by Fanny who had lost her blank stare and now looked terrified. I sank to my knees and covered my ears as Aunt Fanny screamed in terror and pain. When Mamma had finished beating her, she dragged her by the ear and slammed her down onto her mattress.

      “Now don’t you move from here or you will get more of this,” Mamma said as she waved the swatter in Fanny’s face.

      Everyone went back to bed, and Samantha and I piled the plywood in the middle of the room. I was crying on the inside for Aunt Fanny. I did not understand what was wrong with her, but it was apparent that she was unable to comprehend what was happening.

      The next morning after breakfast, I measured Fanny for her clothes. This would be difficult because of her wide girth and small shoulders. While measuring her, I started to notice some very strange behavior from her. At first, I thought she was speaking to me; I happily asked what she had said since she

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