I can hear the radio playing softly. I strain to hear what it is β some political programme on radio 4, I think. I can't be sure. I can vaguely make out a foreign accent β Arabic sounding. An interview, a sound-bite. Someone important has died, another country in crisis; but it is too faint for me to make sense of it.
I lay in the darkness, on the grey, coarse, slightly damp blanket, and close my eyes tight to try and concentrate on the radio. To try and block out the memories that are whirling around my head, dancing before my eyes, in this inky blackness.
Whilst someone important was dying in a foreign land; you were waiting for me. Waiting for me to pass you in the twilight. Waiting to reach out and grab me roughly around the throat and drag me into the scrubby woodland in the quietest part of the village where you knew I walked each night on my way home from work.
Whilst news reports of the death of someone important were starting to trickle in through newswires; you were on top of me, one hand over my mouth, the other tearing at my clothing, ripping my blouse; pushing me roughly into the cold, wet, earth. Quietly, harshly, hissing to me all my wrongs.
As foreign correspondents hurriedly mobilised to head to the area where someone important had died; you defiled me with glass. As I struggled to breathe beneath the weight of your hand on my throat, as I squirmed and fought against both you and the brambles ripping into my now bare legs, you fucked me with the glass dildo.
You couldn't fuck me. You wouldn't fuck me. Not after what I had done. I didn't deserve the feel of you inside me, your body pressed against mine, the smell and taste of you I yearned for. I deserved the icy, unyielding hardness of the glass battering inside me, bruising me, reminding me of my crime.
As foreign correspondents began their live reports on the death of someone important, you dragged my limp, bleeding body into your arms. I reached out to you, to hold you, to grab your coat, to nestle into the warmth and the familiar smells I loved; you pushed me away and forced me onto my feet. There would be no protection, no healing warmth. It was not yet over.
As news of the death of someone important began changing the World, you threw my naked body into the boot of the car; onto the grey, scratchy blanket, cuffing my hands behind my back.
Our eyes met for a second or two. What did you see in mine?
In yours, I saw impenetrable coldness.
Hate.
I want to move enough so I can kick out, so you'll hear me, but I can't; it's too small, too cramped in here. I can feel blood trickling down my legs, where the blood hits another scratch, it stings. I want to talk to you, I want this to stop.