Chapter IX, Solemn Oath
As our mother dropped to the floor with a sickening thud, my attempts to intervene caused me slide directly into her body like lovers intertwined. The sickening stench of cordite was present throughout the room. A burnt foul reminder, laden and heavy with the fragments of lasting false incriminations, of a final brutal act of hatred that contaminated the radius of the entire chamber. An animosity brought to life as a possessed creature operating out of a sense of betrayal. My senses were shattered as I labored to breathe. The pain in my left shoulder steadily increased in crescendo until I could feel nothing but the throb and stabbing of countless wasps digging at my reason. Slowly, I became aware of our mother's body turned outward from my own. Her once brilliant flowing russet hair lying upon my face intermingled with gore of her final demise. The blood seeping and pooling with a life of its own, it edged outwards in a circle, like a flowing cerise halo around her head. As the pain roared through my body, it forced my thoughts together, to begin to interleave, coalesce, and form into words, phrases, and sentences that spoke to me through the screen of my mind.
With my right arm, I gently disentangled from my mother with great caution and reverence. She was no more our enemy than our father. As he was victim of a careless fate, so was our mother. She died of a broken heart. No amount of chemicals or alcohol could deaden the loss that had tragically overtaken her. Thoughts about Ashley intruded in my mind: Could this be our lot?
I could not look upon her face. I knew that if I did, the nightmares that would pursue me would companion me for the rest of my life. The robe that I had put on prior to the culmination of this horrid event was covered and dripped with mingled blood that continued to ooze with each beat of my heart. I stood up gradually, first to my knees and then to my feet. I was immediately overcome by a violent dizziness and a nauseated response. My guts split and rumbled churning bile into my throat that burned and sliced at my esophagus until I could no longer hold my gorge. I labored into the master bathroom and vomited into the sink. I grabbed a towel, opened the shower door, and turned the water on immersing it in the waterfall of the stall. I brought the drenched cloth to my face to wipe whatever disgust that remained there and after turning off the water; my attentions were quickly focused back on Ashley. Perhaps three or four minutes had passed since this deadly dance waltzed its final step. The compression of time that I felt caused it to feel much longer.
Ashley laid still on her chest, her breasts propping her to the left. Her soft cheek pressed against the floor, blood seeping down the other, streaking her golden mane. Bits of wood and detritus from the leaded projectile were scattered about. She had collapsed completely when she saw the gun brought up against her mother's head. I wrapped my functioning arm around her back bringing her up to my chest while reaching to the door with my fingers of my disabled arm, closed the scene behind us not allowing Ashley to gaze at the wrecked image of her mother. It was enough to understand the happenings that took place that evening, my angel would carry the burden for eternity, but she should not be condemned to witness the finality of it all. The one mercy allowed her at its end. We had lost two parents that loved and were loved in return. Tremendous guilt slugged and tore at my emotions. I had not protected my little sister as I promised I would. I had not prevented another senseless tragedy from gripping our family. The immense failings that I felt squeezed and mocked my worthiness. I was beginning to question my stability as the dark hand of despair reached for my heart.
I managed to drag Ashley back to our room laying down first the weight of her head, back, and waist on the bed. I reached over to swing her legs around and quietly lowered them as well. She looked asleep except for the splintered face, yet her beauty radiated outwards despite the injuries. Holding the towel I had around my shoulder, I dampened another one from the hallway bathroom and brought it back to the room. I placed it ever so gently against her face and reached to the table near our bed, picked up the cellphone, and called emergency 911. The soothing cool liquid revived my angel, drawing her back into the night from the pits of her subconscious. She groaned as she re-entered our space and opened the depths of her eyes; the blue, dusky with sorrow. Seeing the bloodied shoulder of her brother and wincing from her own discomfort, she bolted upright and hugged me gingerly; careful not to squeeze where it might cause additional pain, and held on. We wept silently knowing it was unnecessary to give sound to horror, we understood what had happened. She quietly, almost meekly pronounced, "Big brother, my loving brother, you threw down your life to save mine." I pulled back from her a bit; I had no words to say. I kissed her face and held her tight until the police and emergency crews finally arrived.
Ashley answered the ring at the front entrance with me bringing up the rear. The discomfort in my shoulder had reduced to a dulled reminder of the original pain. The police entered first; there was a firearm incident, while the paramedic crews quickly gained access when they were cleared. The team split up and triaged the two of us together. After analyzing our vitals, I was strapped to a gurney and my little sister was permitted to walk behind. The police cordoned off the area, inside and out, with quiet respect. They would not remove the evidence or our mother's body until we had left. As the ambulance drove away with the two of us, I noticed a black van come towards our home. I never tried to direct Ashley's attention to it but managed to have her attention focused on me rather than the white lettering on its side: Los Angeles County Morgue.