Wednesday, March 26, 2014

Sobibor Stories: Aunt Auschi

Sobibor and Kazito walk outside the house into the rain, and begin forward on their half mile walk to this Aunt's home. Along the way they exchange all they know, starting with Kazito. "Her name is Auschi, and I know little about her. She loves my father more than anyone I have met, including my own mother, and she hated my mom more than anything. She always had mixed feeling about me, it really just depended on who I was with when she saw me. Sometimes she saw me as my father's son, and other times as my mother's offspring. She was always cold to come visit, and I only saw her three times before my mother died. She comes by constantly now, well..., she is a very kind lady. She was always cold toward men except me and my father, and I don't think she liked many people in general. She fought with my mom several times, often trying to make up some theory on her cheating or being an improper wife. My mom put up with it but since she died I can't say my Aunt was anything but pleased with the situation. She is actually set to move in with us next month, but my father is not sure how it will go once he... begins looking for love once more."

Sobibor takes it all in like a sponge absorbing water in a desert, {Little help to the case, but big help to a motive}. Sobibor looks over and begins speaking, "One week before Akari's murder, the two fought, and Auschi was quoted saying 'If I could kill you, I would make sure to cook you like the pig you are'. If anything that hurts the case as much as it helps it considering how close to that statement the murder was performed. None the less, it is still, if anything, a link between the murder and Auschi, but what's more, what you just told me proves my theory for a motive. Your Aunt is in love with your father, and is willing to go to far lengths to keep him to herself, the question is, if murder is within that field."

Kazito looked at her as if the thought had never crossed his mind, hell, it probably never had. Sobibor looked for the words to apologize but could tell there was no need, he was glad to hear it, glad to know why his Aunt had so much hatred for his mother and, at times, him. The two walked up to the door and knocked. They waited four minutes and knocked again, this time the door creaked open, and a trail of blood led to Auschi's burnt corpse hanging from the ceiling. Kazito dropped to his knees, and Sobibor put a hand on his shoulder and the other on the phone to inform the police, looks like this case just got heated up.

2 comments:

  1. Interesting post. The white on black font is a little hard to read, but otherwise this was good.

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