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"I Have No Place to Live"

And I can't be homeless, either.

By Lana V LynxPublished about a year ago 3 min read
The site of the apparent murder-suicide

I have no place to live. I have no place to live. I can't believe I am in this mess in my 70s, but here I am: I have no place to live.

Ever since my husband died 20 years ago and my grownup kids left the state for other places, I lived on my own. Grief wouldn't let me go and after I retired from my job I had trouble paying my mortgage. But I'm not an alcoholic, never was, never will be. I know my limits.

Last week, my house was foreclosed on and the bank evicted me. I have no place to live now.

But she does. She lives with our 98-year-old father now, pretending to be be his caretaker. With the care she provides, she'd soon become an undertaker.

Growing up, we were joined at the hip. Irish twins, we were inseparable. We even went to school the same year, as our mom decided that it would be better for both of us.

But then I grew up and got married first, and she never did. Never even had a steady boyfriend for longer than a couple of months, so picky she was.

When my kids came along, she helped out a lot. Kinda inserted herself into my family. It is only now that I understand she was jealous of me and my husband and how happy we were. But at the time I didn't mind.

As an older sister, she was their favorite. I mean mom and dad's. They always thought she was more responsible and serious than I am. Well, the joke's on them as she never settled down and was globe-trotting on her American Red Cross assignments. Never had a house of her own, either.

When mom died about 15 years ago, she just moved in with our father. He seemed to be happy, but he just didn't want to be alone, I'm sure.

Last week, when I was kicked out of my house, I begged them to let me live with them. I must admit I was a little tipsy when I came to visit. They both said NO. I can't have that. I can't stay on the streets much longer, that kind of life is not for me. Not at my age.

So, tonight this all will be resolved. If I can't live with them, I won't live. Period.

I enter the house through the backyard carefully, not to make noise. She is sitting on the couch, watching TV. Father must be upstairs already, it's way past his bedtime.

I knock something off the counter as I move through the kitchen. Loud. I'm not as agile as used to be. She hears the noise and turns around, following me with her eyes, "What are you doing here?" Loud.

I stand in front of TV and ask her for the last time, keeping my hands behind my back, "May I please live in our childhood home?"

"No! No! NO! We don't want you here!" As she yells, father rolls out of the bedroom in his wheelchair. Well, let him watch, she is his favorite after all.

I point the gun at her and shoot her in the chest. Oh that priceless look of horror on her face as she slumps on the couch!

The last thing I see are my father's wide-open eyes and trembling lips. I can't hear what he mumbles. "Don't worry, old man, I'll leave you to live with this," I think as I put the gun to my temple and pull the trigger. He goes dark...

Author's note: Inspired by a true murder-suicide story in Georgia.

fact or fictionfictionguiltyinnocence

About the Creator

Lana V Lynx

Avid reader and occasional writer of satire and short fiction. For my own sanity and security, I write under a pen name. My books: Moscow Calling - 2017 and President & Psychiatrist

@lanalynx.bsky.social

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Outstanding

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Comments (12)

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  • Shirley Belkabout a year ago

    Mental illness and unhealed hearts plus addictions are so rampant in our society. Your story highlights the tragedy and shame of it all. Well done!

  • So tragic… well written😵‍💫🥺.

  • Cindy Calderabout a year ago

    Oh wow....just wow. I'm in Georgia, but I don't recall that murder-suicide. I did, however, see a lot in the Charleston courtroom back in the 80's - some case details I will never be able to forget. It's truly perplexing as to what drives some people to the edge of such horrendous acts. While these individuals are definitely mentally unstable, I don't believe they are necessarily raving lunatics or insane.

  • Michelle Liew Tsui-Linabout a year ago

    Whoa, now that was sibling rivalry at its height. The fact that it was based on true events makes it scarier.

  • L.C. Schäferabout a year ago

    😱😱😱😱😱😱

  • Whoaaaa, the fact that this was based on true events made it even more heartbreaking.

  • Jay Kantorabout a year ago

    Dear Lana - This may have taken mere minutes for you to write, but my story 'Victims-Too' took years: Truth can be harder to face than fiction. - You are a marvelous storyteller - j.in.l.a.

  • Kodahabout a year ago

    Woahh the ending was shocking and tragic. Incredibly written! 💌

  • Michelle Liew Tsui-Linabout a year ago

    A tragic tale, both the literal and figurative, Lana. Sad that families must come to a Fear Thy Neighbour type of situation. :-(

  • Jeez! Sometimes real life is so dark - it makes you wonder which is worse, the horrors we tell, or the horrors that are lived. Well written, Lana!

  • JBazabout a year ago

    Creepy, you just can't beat real life. You did a great job in telling this story.

  • Rachel Deemingabout a year ago

    Oh my goodness! That was a brutal tale but very well evoked, Lana.

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