Preparing Soup – Friday Fictioneers


**** Warning — this story is shocking — unfortunately these things have happened, and is a variant of Stockholm Syndrome ****

Discarded from the lull of lullabies, from lollipops and cotton-candy afternoons, Samantha spent her truant days in haze of glue and bike-shed degradations. Those drops of blood and budding breasts had moved attention and her father’s tender touch, moved it to her little sister. Killed that special trust and secrets from her mother’s prying eyes.
Now preparing — stirring carefully — the chicken broth with caustic soda for her sister’s “flu”. She couldn’t understand her sister’s tears, but had gained her confidence; she would soon be back within that special place of trust she used to share alone with Pa.

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This week it’s a picture that looks like dirty lollipop by Kent Bonham, and I go very dark. Please visit Rochelle‘s page for more info.



September 30, 2014

90 responses to “Preparing Soup – Friday Fictioneers

  1. Oh , Big sister scorned..never ever cross her.

    It was a great write, scary and dark and well written .

  2. Dear Björn,

    This is definitely one of your best. Incredibly dark and believable. A novel in a hundred words. I concur with Sandra. She should’ve given the broth to her diseased father.

    Shalom,

    Rochelle

  3. It’s one of those stories, or articles rather, one can’t press the ‘like’ button to show one has read the story. I’ve just eaten a sandwich and am working hard to not go throw up from the reality of it all. It needs to be told, written, sung, carved into stone, shouted until people realise. I can see from the comments some people just don’t, just can’t get this kind of thing. Don’t blame them. Brave writing. I hope you went and did something good for yourself and yours to perk yourself up after having written. It’s necessary.

  4. If we don’t talk about it, write about it, scream about it, we are leaving them to stand alone in the darkness and fight their own battles. And sometimes it gets too dark and they get lost. I am glad someone dares to venture into the darkness and you did an excellent job with this story.

  5. Hej Björn, very Noren, loving it! You should have the mum hanging from the rafters to really hit them over the head with the Scandi Noir !

  6. Bjorn, I’m sorry, but I am an idiot. I read this story over and over again and I just didn’t get what is going on. Not that I’m naive or anything, I just didn’t get it. Maybe my mind doesn’t get so dark as to delve into more shocking stuff.

    • Samantha has been abused by her father, but after she got into puberty her father shifts attention to her little sister.. Samantha feels abandoned and takes revenge on little sis.. It’s a kind of Stockholm syndrome

  7. You weren’t kidding with the warning – that was a shocking story. Completely sick and downright creepy. You wrote the story well, though, without lurid details but enough to know that what was going on was bad…

  8. Oh no! I read your disclaimer and the comments. I’ll have to come back to read the story 😦 it sounds gross, though.
    Thanks for the disclaimer, Bjorn…I’m easily scared.
    Ellespeth

  9. This is shocking and frightening. I wasn’t familiar with Stockholm Syndrome. That is pretty sick that someone would reach that level of mental instability and then to harm her own sister. Well done, Bjorn.

    • You connect so much to your captors and tormentor so you switch sides.. I still remember the case from the original bank-robbery… back in 1973.. I guess the most famous case would be Patti Hearst though.

  10. I am back, after supper.
    Oh Bjorn! Over the past few years, I’ve read articles about this particular syndrome. You’ve written a gripping scene and insight into this sort of emotional control. As you’ve imagined, I suppose a person will do almost anything to survive.
    Ellespeth

  11. Dear Bjorn, I appreciated the warning, which is very gentlemanly of you! You wrote a scary story that takes place everyday in so many homes. I cannot imagine living through this – God have mercy on the children. However, your writing is superb and every book I’ve ever read or story I’ve listened to on TV is right on with your story. Good job. Nan 🙂

  12. Believable and should be voiced. We were watching a gruesome movie one night and had to stop only to find the news was much worse.- a story of a woman now in her 60s recalling her father sexually abusing her at 9 yrs old and watching him killed a teenage boy who tried to come to her aid. When the boy’s 2 friends came looking for him, the father killed them also and she witnessed that and the burial. Life is dark and unbelievable.

    Lily

  13. Björn, this is dark beyond dark, but yes… it happens all the time. I’ve worked with these kids; I know them. I like that you took this dark picture and went where it took you, regardless of the dark nature. You really nailed this one, despite the ick factor.

  14. Exactly what “petrujviljoen” said above. I’m glad you’re forcing the darkness (that already exists, not of your doing) out into the light of day, Björn. Well done.

  15. Björn, I was stunned by this story. I applaud you for not avoiding the arc where your imagination took you. It is a dark story, darker than the abyss of a space where no stars can reach. Powerful and moving and horrible.

  16. Such a powerful story – all the more so for its poetical rhythm. I agree with Sandra that dad should have the soup, but your words make it clear why Samantha sees her little sister as the one who needs to go.

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