Missing

Missing by Karin Alvtegen Page A

Book: Missing by Karin Alvtegen Read Free Book Online
Authors: Karin Alvtegen
Tags: General Fiction
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had been abused.
    â€˜I don’t want to go.’
    Her mother didn’t answer. She just went into the dressing-room to find a suitable frock for her daughter’s evening out.
    â€˜Don’t be silly, darling. Of course you’ll join us.’
    Sibylla was sitting on her bed, watching her mother pick and choose in the wardrobe.
    â€˜I’ll come if I’m allowed to sit with the other young people.’
    Beatrice was stunned by this unheard-of ultimatum.
    â€˜Now, what’s the reason for this, may I ask?’
    â€˜They’re my age, that’s why.’
    Her mother turned round with an odd expression on her face. Subjected to her mother’s gaze, Sibylla’s heart started pounding. She had made up her mind, telling herself that she wasn’t alone any more and could always run to Mick. In seven months’ time, she would be eighteen years old and free to do what she liked. Until then she was going to fight for every inch. Her voice was quite steady.
    â€˜If I can’t sit with the others I’ll just stay here.’
    Her mother could not believe her ears. This was, of course, an incredible statement. It worried Sibylla that she couldn’t interpret the look on her mother’s face. A sense of unease began tingling under her skin. She felt just the tiniest whiff of fear.
    â€˜You know perfectly well that this is the most important evening of the year for your father and me. Now you want to ruin it. Don’t you ever consider anyone except yourself?’
    The pendulum was swinging her mother’s way. Beatrice was ready to trigger a major explosion and there was no doubt at all about who would suffer the consequences. Suddenly, real fear gripped her. It must have shown, because her mother changed her tone.
    â€˜There now, we’ll talk about this when we get back home.’
    Beatrice sailed out of the room, having successfully crushed her daughter’s will.
    Â Â Â Â 
    The Sales Manager sat to her left. Mr Forsenström, the CE, was enthroned in the central seat.
    Sitting at the high table in her party frock, Sibylla felt strange. The whole room was humming, somehow. The noise from the hall came in waves and even her neighbours’ talk reached her only intermittently. She had not touched her food yet, but the others had finished. Her mother was smiling and proposing toasts round the table, but every time her eyes met Sibylla’s the corners of her mouth turned downwards, as if pulled by gravity. The anger radiating from Beatrice was transmitted in Sibylla’s direction in such forceful pulses that she thought the glasses in the way might shatter.
    But it was exactly at this moment, as Sibylla was waiting for whatever elaborate punishment was in store for her, that she felt strongly that enough was enough. Her anger welled up with unexpected violence. That woman had turned her existence into a never-ending imprisonment. In Sibylla’s eyes her mother was transformed into an absurd monster.
    Yes, she had been born out of that body. So what? It hadn’t been her choice. It was amystery why God should have allowed this woman to bear a child at all. All her mother had wanted was living proof of the Forsenström family’s general excellence. A child confirmed that everything proceeded according to plan.
    In fact, nothing worked properly. Sibylla suddenly saw how much her mother enjoyed every step in the obedience-chastisement-punishment routine that had become established in their home. Beatrice manipulated her daughter’s fear, relishing her ownership of the child.
    â€˜How are you getting on at school then, Sibylla?’
    The Sales Manager was asking his annual question. He was about as interested in her answer as in some muck on his shoe.
    â€˜So kind of you to ask,’ she said loudly. ‘Mostly we just hang out, boozing and fucking.’
    He nodded benignly. A second later, his tiny mind registered her answer and he

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