My father, a man obsessed with order and the paving over of all things green, died suddenly, leaving behind a half-finished cement garden and a silence that settled heavily upon our house. Not long after, Mother began to fade. Her illness, a slow withdrawal from the world, tightened the invisible bonds around us four children: Julie, my elder sister, always composed; Sue, quiet, with her books and her secrets; little Tom, still lost in a world of his own making; and myself, Jack, observing it all with a peculiar detachment. As Mother's breath grew shallower, a quiet desperation took root. She made Julie and me promise, in hushed tones, that we would tell no one of her passing, lest we be scattered to the winds of orphanages and strangers.
The day she finally left us, her body seemed impossibly small beneath the sheet. Julie tried to cover her, but Mother's feet kept poking out, a detail that struck us with a strange, almost hysterical humor. We knew what we had to do. The bags of cement, ordered by Father for his ill-fated garden, lay waiting in the basement. It was a macabre, desperate solution, born of fear and a fierce, misguided loyalty to our crumbling home and our fragile unit. We mixed the cement, our hands growing raw, and encased her, carefully, within a trunk in the cellar. The silence that followed was deeper, heavier, now holding a terrible secret.
With the parents gone, the house became our island, isolated and decaying. The bins overflowed, attracting flies, and the garden, once a symbol of Father's sterile control, withered. Our routines, once dictated by adult presence, dissolved into a fluid, strange existence. Julie, at seventeen, naturally assumed the mantle of mother, her authority both resented and relied upon. I, at fourteen, found myself stepping into a distorted version of Father's role, a position that stirred unsettling feelings within me, particularly towards Julie.
Little Tom, only six, regressed, shedding his clothes for Sue's old dresses, crawling beneath the kitchen table, and demanding a bottle, his innocent confusion a stark contrast to our grim reality. Sue, ever the observer, retreated further into her own world of reading and writing, her journals a silent testament to her burgeoning inner life. Meanwhile, Julie, in her attempt to maintain some semblance of normalcy, began seeing an older man named Derek. His presence, an unwelcome intrusion from the outside, ignited a fierce jealousy in me, a tangled knot of possessiveness and a desire for Julie's attention that felt both wrong and undeniable.
The days blurred into weeks, marked by our increasing self-sufficiency and our deepening isolation. We learned to cook, to manage money, to exist within our self-made prison. Yet, the unspoken truth in the basement permeated every corner of our lives, shaping our interactions, twisting our perceptions. My own hygiene suffered, a reflection of the internal disarray, and my thoughts, often fixated on Julie, grew more intense, more transgressive. The line between brother and father, sister and mother, began to blur, then dissolve entirely.
One sweltering afternoon, the heat seemed to press down on the house, stifling and heavy with unspoken desires. Julie, in a moment of unsettling role-play, dressed herself in Mother's clothes, her movements and gestures an eerie echo of the woman buried beneath us. We were playing a dangerous game, enacting a grotesque parody of the family we had lost. It was then, in the oppressive stillness, that the final, terrible boundary crumbled between us.
The outside world, however, was not so easily kept at bay. Derek, Julie's boyfriend, grew increasingly curious about the sealed-off basement, his questions probing at the fragile edifice of our secret. His presence became a palpable threat, a looming shadow that promised the shattering of our carefully constructed reality. We had built our own world, cemented by fear and a desperate love, but the walls were thin, and the outside was pressing in.