life turns us into killers
May 7, 2020 22:58:24 GMT -5
Post by cass on May 7, 2020 22:58:24 GMT -5
h e n r y .
Age VI.
"You’ve got to stop doing that, Henry,” his dad gripped his wrists, pulling his arms away from the cat that he had been playing with.
One of its legs was crooked, bent in the wrong direction, the orange thing had stopped moving after the third time he’d hit it with the rock he’d found by the pond. The hold on his wrist was iron tight, sending spikes of pain up until he let out a loud yelp. His father didn’t let go, pulling his six year old son along behind him and towards the barn. “Pa, you’re hurting me, let go,” he grumbled, vainly trying to yank his arm free.
His dad whirled on him, hands moving to his shoulders, pulling Henry until they were face to face. “You can’t do that, remember what I said? When you want to do things like that we come here, we hit the bag, we throw a few kicks, punches, we don’t…”
He looked over Henry’s shoulder, gaze narrowing on the deformed lump behind them. “Your mother- we won’t tell her about this one okay?” His gaze burned into Henry’s, the same brown eyes, whirling with worry, pinned to his until he let out a small nod. The tension seemed to ease from his tired shoulders, and he let go, standing up with a heavy sigh.
”Okay, come on, let’s practice your punches,” he waved Henry ahead of him, watching as his son walked into the barn and over to the punching bag he had made out of hay and cows hide. It was getting worse, he decided, he gnawed on a fingernail, the uncertainty of the situation was making his hair grey. Martha and Simon had spent many a night arguing over what to do, both believing that they had failed their son in some way for him to turn out like this. He was hurting them, killing them, it started with bugs, then animals and next was-
”Pa, what you waiting for?”
Simon shook his head, looking over to Henry who stood by the punching bag, hands covered in a messy attempt at applying his own wraps. No, he wouldn’t let himself believe that his son couldn’t be capable of something like that. He’d fix him, help him go down the right path, protect him from whatever demon told him that it was okay to hurt animals. Henry reached upwards, showing his father his hand work with a proud smile.
“I almost had it right this time.” With a smile his father inspected the handiwork, nodding in approval, “I reckon next time you’ll have it perfect.”
It took only a few minutes for Simon to fix up the mess Henry had made, he straightened up, moving to grab the bag on both sides. “We’ll start with a few straight punches and throw in a hook at the end for a warm up.”
Henry moved to the bag, raising his fists upwards, a small frown creasing his forehead as he concentrated on his foot positioning. He nodded appreciatively, approving of his stance, and Henry couldn’t help but beam, just a simple moment of pure joy that had him dropping his hands as his smile stretched from ear to ear. This was his son, this was the child he had raised, he could fix this.
”Let’s start.”
"You’ve got to stop doing that, Henry,” his dad gripped his wrists, pulling his arms away from the cat that he had been playing with.
One of its legs was crooked, bent in the wrong direction, the orange thing had stopped moving after the third time he’d hit it with the rock he’d found by the pond. The hold on his wrist was iron tight, sending spikes of pain up until he let out a loud yelp. His father didn’t let go, pulling his six year old son along behind him and towards the barn. “Pa, you’re hurting me, let go,” he grumbled, vainly trying to yank his arm free.
His dad whirled on him, hands moving to his shoulders, pulling Henry until they were face to face. “You can’t do that, remember what I said? When you want to do things like that we come here, we hit the bag, we throw a few kicks, punches, we don’t…”
He looked over Henry’s shoulder, gaze narrowing on the deformed lump behind them. “Your mother- we won’t tell her about this one okay?” His gaze burned into Henry’s, the same brown eyes, whirling with worry, pinned to his until he let out a small nod. The tension seemed to ease from his tired shoulders, and he let go, standing up with a heavy sigh.
”Okay, come on, let’s practice your punches,” he waved Henry ahead of him, watching as his son walked into the barn and over to the punching bag he had made out of hay and cows hide. It was getting worse, he decided, he gnawed on a fingernail, the uncertainty of the situation was making his hair grey. Martha and Simon had spent many a night arguing over what to do, both believing that they had failed their son in some way for him to turn out like this. He was hurting them, killing them, it started with bugs, then animals and next was-
”Pa, what you waiting for?”
Simon shook his head, looking over to Henry who stood by the punching bag, hands covered in a messy attempt at applying his own wraps. No, he wouldn’t let himself believe that his son couldn’t be capable of something like that. He’d fix him, help him go down the right path, protect him from whatever demon told him that it was okay to hurt animals. Henry reached upwards, showing his father his hand work with a proud smile.
“I almost had it right this time.” With a smile his father inspected the handiwork, nodding in approval, “I reckon next time you’ll have it perfect.”
It took only a few minutes for Simon to fix up the mess Henry had made, he straightened up, moving to grab the bag on both sides. “We’ll start with a few straight punches and throw in a hook at the end for a warm up.”
Henry moved to the bag, raising his fists upwards, a small frown creasing his forehead as he concentrated on his foot positioning. He nodded appreciatively, approving of his stance, and Henry couldn’t help but beam, just a simple moment of pure joy that had him dropping his hands as his smile stretched from ear to ear. This was his son, this was the child he had raised, he could fix this.
”Let’s start.”