On Friday August 28th Daniel Westburn was
reported missing by his co-workers. According to the police statement, he had
been acting strangely for the last few months; erratic and uncharacteristic.
When he didn’t show up to work that Monday, no one thought anything of it. His
wife left him, his co-workers weren’t worried, his family is gone or moved
away; no one cared.
Two Saturdays ago I knocked on his door with two cups of
coffee in hand; I asked to talk – to clear the air. It took twenty minutes for
him to fall asleep.
When Sandra was six she would have night terrors. I babysat
the kids a lot. When I realized what was happening, her mother’s solution was
drugs. And it worked, for once. All it took was one pill from an over the
counter container. That’s why I knew it would work on Daniel.
He never got around to finishing his basement. Charlotte
once told me that it was their newly wed project and when they both let it go,
she knew it was the beginning of the end – a little too poetic if you ask me
but I get where she’s coming from. Renovations take communication and teamwork
and if it doesn’t last then there’s something wrong.
Without the finished basement there was a lot of exposed
pipe. Perfect for tying a man up with wires and a rope I commandeered from his
shed. I told James to look after Jason and then I moved forward.
I awoke the victim at 6:37am on Sunday morning with scalding
coffee down the front of his button-up shirt. The coffee burned his flesh on
slightly but the pain was enough to shock him awake. After that, a low voltage
shock to his abdomen every twenty minutes kept him screamingly conscious. I
tried to think of something clever to say to him as he pled for his life on
that first day. I couldn’t find the words. I just cried and burnt. I didn’t
speak to him for twelve hours. At the end of it, he had 39 marks on his body,
and it wasn’t enough.
I made him dinner. Nothing fancy but I made rice with chunks
of chicken in it and I fed it to him slowly; mostly because he spit the first
few bites in my face. A few more shocks to his system forced him to eat
properly. Can’t have him dying before I decide he’s ready. Of that entire first
day, dinner was by far the strangest. He didn’t fight me after that. He was
silent. And he took his punishment – 9 more lashes.
I slammed the door as I walked out. I would not let him
enjoy a moment of this.
As I sat at my desk on Monday morning I could focus on
nothing but him. The look in his eyes after I force fed him dinner. So blank, so unfeeling. He didn’t understand
why this was happening.
So that night after work, I grabbed a hammer from the shed
and I smashed his pelvis in. He screamed and the sock shoved down his throat
didn’t help much. I just saw red. So when his fingers reached out to me, the
wire cutting through the skin of his meaty wrists, I didn’t think. I struck the
knuckles of his right hand and it flattened against the wall. His hand became
swollen and purple. I loved the shade so much I did it to his left hand.
He wouldn’t stop crying and thrashing. His hands were so big.
I made them bigger. This time I watched his eyes as I broke his fingers one by
one. He blinked but he never hid. His eyes were so red, so puffy and swollen,
like his hands. His jaw barely moved but that was when the whimpers started. With each crack of bone, his eyes grew sad with fear.
Supper was a combination of mushroom soup (which he ate
without any fuss) and bread – because I couldn’t be bothered to toast it. That
supper was thick and heavy. I had nothing clever to say to him and he remained
silent. Only the whimpers.
I don’t think he slept that night.
When I found him on Tuesday, his whimpers had grown to cries
– moans of what I assume to be agony. He stared at me, pleading. Eyes wide and
unrecognizable. He was…submissive. Whatever had come to him in the night had
changed him, made him weak.
I found a lighter upstairs, some rubbing alcohol in the
bathroom, I pulled a sewing needle from my purse (yes, I carry a travel sewing
kit with me everywhere) and I pulled out the skin beneath his fingernails. One
by one. It didn’t hurt as much as it could have; he’d lost a lot of feeling in
his fingers by then. But the whimpering
didn’t stop. He-he wouldn’t stop.
The middle finger of his left hand: that’s when he stopped
whimpering. He said “please”. He kept
saying “please” over and over again as I pulled pieces of flesh from his body. The
first words I spoke to him were “stop”. But he didn’t. He just kept repeating,
over and over.
Please. Please. Please.
Please.
So I cut his tongue out. He cried out and he whimpered but
he didn’t speak.
I left early that night. Neither of us had supper. I’m
pretty sure his tongue is still tucked behind the boiler. It must reek.
That night, I threw up, I curled up on top of the covers,
James wrapped his arms around me, and I cried myself to sleep. I resolved to
maintain my focus, to make him suffer.
So come Wednesday night, I found myself in a much more
playful mood. I told Daniel to use all of his senses. So I started by cutting
tiny slits in his eyeballs. He almost passed out form the pain but a quick jolt
kept him in the game.
I think Wednesday was the best day of all. He didn’t talk,
he didn’t whimper- he didn’t make a sound. He sat there, his swollen hands
dangling in the air. His eyeballs bleeding onto his shattered lap. I had all
the freedom in the world. I sat and I told him about my day while I carved
shapes into his flesh. I didn’t talk about Sandra or all the things he’d done
to deserve this. Instead I drew hearts into the soles of his feet while I told
him about how insensitive Heather had been yesterday. About the woman who cut
me off on the highway last week and I resisted the urge to kill her. I made
basic shapes on any exposed flesh, crawling over him like the doll he was. Like
I was a child, drawing on an easel. I hadn’t been that relaxed and I probably
won’t be for some time. We ate hamburgers with cheese and tomato. Well, I did.
He sat. My ragdoll.
Thursday was a bit…messy.
My poor rag doll had slumped down too far so I used the rope
to pull him up. Unfortunately I pulled too hard and the pipe it was attached to
collapsed down on us. It was the sewage pipe. It didn’t think that was still a
thing that could happen but parts of the basement flooded with contaminated
water; particularly around our little setup. I left right away and took a nice
hot shower.
I did a lot of thinking that night.
I thought about what had led me here. About the seventeen
year old with her first crush, murdering the football star. About the girl who had
sex with her co-worker and blamed everyone but herself. About the private investigator
who couldn’t let it go.
By Thursday night, Daniel had spent six nights in my care.
He’d pleaded, he’d cried – but not once had he apologized or shown any sign of
remorse for what he did to my family. I may never get it. He was just wasting
my time.
Friday morning before work, I took a bottle of bleach and I
poured it down Daniel’s throat. He vomited on himself so I poured more. Then I
left him there, to die however he chose. By the time I had finished work,
Daniel Westburn had died.
And I felt nothing.
I called James and he brought over garbage bags and a mop.
Jason was home alone but he never left his room. Between the two of us, it took
two days to completely cut up the body and prepare it for transport. Then we
took separate vehicles, drove in different directions and disposed of the
pieces in secret. Parts of Daniel are scattered in the river while others went
through the sewage treatment plant – fitting, I thought.
Daniel is dead.
Sandra is dead.
And right now, I feel…
Free
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