As you may have deduced by the fact that I have written this chapter, I am alive. It's been a long and painful few years for me, but I finally find myself in a place where I can finish this story and move onto new ones. For those of you who've sent me supportive messages during the interim, thank you. It was always a delight to see fan mail. In addition, I've recently learned that many of the answers I sent oat using the feedback system were not received, so I apologize for that.
For those of you new to this story, it won't make a lick of sense unless you read the previous parts. Also for those of you new to the story, the unusual format is a very deliberate creative choice; if you like it, awesome, and if you don't...well,not much I can do about that. Not all my stories will be this way, so please check back when I get others up on the site.
Folie à Deux
Episode 5: Pressure
*
The screen is dark as we hear the voice of a young woman whom we recognize as Olivia Larsen. "In a documentary or something, I remember I heard an Abraham Lincoln quote."
We see in closeup the face of a beautiful young woman, or at least a young woman who would be beautiful except for the yellowed pouches beneath each eye that speak of a healing trauma -- her slightly-crooked nose gives a clue to the nature of that trauma. She has a lovely, expressive mouth, soaring Classical cheekbones, and wavy, bright red hair pulled back from her face.
"I can't remember the context," Olivia goes on, "but he said dealing with something was like holding a wolf by the ears -- you didn't like it, but you didn't dare let it go. And I always remembered that quote because, you know, it's a vivid image and you get what he means right away. But when I heard it, I was like, 'Why the fuck would you grab a wolf by the ears? The fix you're in is your own fault.' I always thought that it was kind of stupid because of that." She sighs. "And then I went and grabbed a wolf by the ears."
We now see a title card in white letters against a black background:
Folie à Deux
Episode 5: Pressure
After a few moments, the title card is replaced by one reading:
August 5
Back to Olivia. "I'd spent so much time and energy on this, on wondering if it was really happening and how to get concrete proof, that I never stopped to consider what would happen if I actually, you know,
got
the proof. And then I got the video of Mike and mom going at it and...well..." She holds up her hands, fists clenched around imaginary wolf ears.
"What did you want to do?" comes from offscreen. The voice is that of the female interviewer from the first and third episodes.
Olivia gave a short, mirthless laugh. "I kind of wanted to go back in time to stop myself from getting that video."
"After all the effort you'd put into it," the interviewer asks, "why would you wish that?"
"Because...look, I'd spent a month being pretty convinced my mom was having sex with my brother, and that was weird and uncomfortable and it made it awkward to be with them. But I didn't actually
know
anything. I could tell myself I was wrong. I could hope I was wrong. But then I got the video..."
Olivia is replaced onscreen by the video we saw before: a cellphone video of Mike atop his mom, both naked, Mike's hips rising and falling in rhythm to Emily's pleas to fuck her and fill her with his cum. The clip lasts about 10 seconds.
"And once I had it, I had no idea what to do with it," Olivia said. "I mean, seriously, no idea at all. It made me sick just to think of it."
"Because of what your mother and brother did?"
"No. Well, kind of that too, but mostly because now I knew what they were doing and I had to decide what I was going to do about it. And all of my options were lousy." She pauses to scratch her nose gingerly. "The first thing I thought was that I had to tell dad right away. That was the...'right' thing to do. But then I realized that if I did that, I'd be destroying the family and maybe sending mom and Mike to prison. Incest is illegal in Minnesota. What they were doing was wrong but I didn't want to see them in jail because of it. But even if dad didn't go to the cops, he'd still get a divorce and probably never want to see Mike or mom again. And he'd be shattered, and it would be because
I
told him."
She pauses as if considering something, then reluctantly adds, "And just from a point of view of pure self-interest, if word ever got out that mom mom and brother were having sex, I would never be able to show my face in school again. I had another year of high school and I cared an awful lot what other people thought of me. If people knew...well, I'd have dropped out of school. I couldn't have faced anybody who knew. Funny how that kind of thing gets less important when you get out on your own."
"So If not telling your father, then what?"
"I gave it a huge, endless, horrible amount of thought," Olvia sighs. "I mean I got no sleep that night, I just spent the whole time staring at my ceiling in the dark. I could only come up with two other reasonable courses of action, and they both sucked."
"What were they?"
"Well, the first was I could just do...nothing. You know, let it ride and hope it just faded away before dad or anyone else found out."
"Did that seem realistic?"
Olivia frowns. "No. I mean, I
wanted
it to be realistic because that would be the easiest thing for me personally. Like, by far the least agonizing. All I'd have to do is be quiet until they stopped and I would never, ever have to think of it again."
"But?"
"But they weren't going to stop. I mean, I was a kid and I knew they weren't gonna stop. They were..." She trails off in a sigh. The interviewer waits as the moment stretches out uncomfortably long, and then Olivia finally says, "Mike was going to be living at home for his first year in college because he was going to a college in the Twin Cities and there had been some kind of fuckup with his scholarship, like the room-and-board part of it. They didn't have a dorm room for him and we didn't have the money to get him his own apartment. If he had been planning to go to, like, USC or something, then maybe. It would have been another few weeks and then he'd split and there would be a mandatory cooling-off period between them. But with him still living under the same roof, it wasn't going to change." Another pause, then, "They were in love."
"You knew it was love and not just sex?"
"Well...I mean, you can't ever really know if two other people are in love, can you?" she shrugs. "But it looked that way to me. It looked really obvious, the way they were giving each other goo-goo eyes and finding excuses to be around each other when before Mike would have, like, gone to his bedroom to be on his phone and mom would have found a book to read. My mom giggled at his stupid jokes. She
giggled.
You know my mom; does she seem like a giggler to you? They weren't just after each other's bodies. I've never seen two people more in love."
"And if you had left it alone and it had come out?"
"Then it would be even worse than telling dad."
"So what did that leave?"
"I had to talk to them," Olivia says simply. "Or...well, no way I was talking to Mike about it. I had to talk to Mom. And if I was gonna rip off that particular bandaid, I needed to do it soon or never."
Next we see a white woman somewhere in the vicinity of 40 years of age who bears definite familial resemblance to Olivia. She has striking features: a square jaw, a pointed and cleft chin, high cheekbones, and large, expressive, deep brown eyes. Her mouth is generously wide and her lips are gorgeous, with lipliner a shade darker than her lipstick to accentuate their ideal shape. Her nose is perhaps the only thing about her face that isn't perfectly proportioned -- it is a bit too big and a bit too prominent. Her face is framed by a mane of unruly blonde locks that tumble just past her shoulders, and it is obvious that she seldom has good hair days. She is wearing a dark green blouse with a faint pattern on it that is obviously present but difficult for the camera to discern.
Below her face appears the legend
Emily Larsen.
"Do you recall August 5th?" the interviewer asks.
"It is burned on my memory," Emily says dryly in a lovely, rich alto.
"What happened that day?"
"I went out shopping to replace Lou," she says, and we see a photograph of her looking perhaps 10 years younger standing next to the open door of a minivan. It was obviously chilly when the photo was taken, based on her jeans, jacket, and gloves, and the trees in the background are holding onto only a handful of dreary brown leaves. The photo has the legend,
Emily's Chevrolet Lumina minivan, "Lou," was destroyed in an accident.
"I wanted to get a jump on things to narrow down my choices before I took Bob shopping to help with the final decision."
Now we see a photo of a happy-looking, handsome man with dark brown hair and icy blue eyes, labeled
Bob Larsen.
"Your husband didn't want to accompany you car shopping?"
Emily smiles fondly. "It's a long story and not particularly interesting. Suffice it to say that was how we had always done things."
"And after the car shopping?"
"I came home," Emily says."I had dropped Bob off in the morning so I had the car for the day. I walked into the kitchen and found my daughter sitting at the table with her hands clasped before her and a very...stern look on her face."