Robert woke up almost three hours later in a cold sweat and his heart pounding. He sat up and put his head in his hands. He dreamed about his mother, about her death. He remembered every gruesome detail, from the blood pooling around his feet and how he could barely recognize. He couldn't do anything but think about that night:
The night was shockingly still; it was summer and Robert didn't have school. The air was cool and not humid though Robert had started to shiver from the cool air on the sweat that now covered nearly his entire body. His mother kept yelling at him to either run or hide, often switching between the two words. When they ran, they ran fast, and when they hid, they were behind anything they could find that would cover their entire beings as the red pick-up truck would drive by, searching for them. It would stop everyone once in a while and the driver would get out and call out for them in a slurred, mocking tone. But always to no avail and would climb back in the car and drive away to come back by them minutes later. They were almost to the police station which is where Robert's mother was taking them. "We've got to get there," she kept saying, "I've got to make sure you're safe." They kept running for an hour but to 6 year-old Robert, it seemed like it lasted all night. Then finally, he saw it. The station was in sight and they picked up their pace, him running just as fast as his short legs could take him with his mother hobbling on just behind him. Then Robert noticed the shadow in front of him. The long shadow from the headlights not far behind him. He watched his mother's face turn from hope to hopelessness in a matter of seconds. He stopped in his place as his mother continued to limp over to him.
"Run," she said, "Get to the police station, stay safe!"
"Janet!" said the driver of the car in a slurred, obviously drunken rage, "Where ya' goin' Janet?"
"We're getting away from you Rob."
"You're not going anywhere!" He shouted, outraged by the words his wife said to him. Rob stabbed her in the stomach with the bowie knife he kept under the seat of his truck. "You're not going anywhere but straight to hell, ya stupid bitch." And he turned toward's Robert, closing the gap between him and his namesake.
"Robert! Run! Go get help!" His mother shouted. "Run!"
But Robert couldn't move.
"It wasn't my fault Robert" his father said as he placed a kiss on his forehead. Then he got back in the truck and drove off, and Robert never heard from him again.
Robert ran over to his dying mother and stood above her. She reached her hand up to his and they held each others hands until she let go. Not because she wanted to, but because she didn't have the strength to hold her hand up any longer. "I love you Robert, and you're nothing like you're father; you're not Rob."
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