EVE
IT WAS Jay who hit Nate on the head with a rock and knocked him out. I wanted to do it, but logically, it made more sense for Jay to do it. He is taller than Nate and likely stronger. If I did it, I might not have knocked him out. I couldnโt risk that. Not after the things I did to ensure he would end up
in this very spot.
Jay and I have spent the last two days tormenting my husband. It was risky but worth it. I knew after he saw that raven in the kitchen, he would be convinced I was still alive and end up right here. Nobody else but me would torment him that way.
โThe Ravenโโhis favorite poem of all time. I know it all too well.
Nate is unconscious on the ground, his handsome features slack. I want to take the rock from Jay and hit him again, but I need him to be able to wake up because we are far from done. Heโll regain consciousness soon, so we have to act quickly. Jay reaches into the pocket of his coat and pulls out a roll of duct tape. He holds it out to me.
โWant to do the honors?โ he asks.
I certainly do. I bind my husbandโs wrists together in front of him, and then I bind his ankles as well. As I finish tying his ankles together, he groans on the muddy ground. His eyes slowly crack open.
โHeโs waking up,โ I tell Jay. โThrow him in the hole.โ
If Nate wasnโt awake before, dropping him into that shallow pool of freezing cold water does the trick. His eyelids flutter open, and he stares up at me, blinking against the droplets of rain. Jay stays carefully out of sight.
โEve?โ Nate croaks.
I donโt say anything. I allow him a moment to take stock of his situation. The fact that he is lying in a shallow grave, in a pool of muddy water, and his wrists and ankles are bound together. I watch the panic dawning on his face.
โEve,โ he gasps. โWhat are you doing? Whatโs going on?โ
I stare down at my husband. When I stood before him in front of a judge on our wedding dayโthe happiest day of my lifeโI never imagined that I
could hate him as much as I do at this moment. โYou tried to kill me. You buried me in this hole.โ
โIโฆโ Nate shifts, struggling to keep his face above the muddy water in the grave. โIโm so sorry I did that, Eve. I made a terrible mistake. Thatโs why I came back.โ
โThatโs not why you came back. You came back to make sure I was really dead.โ
His Adamโs apple bobs. โOkay, fine. Youโre right. I did a terrible thing. Iโm a terrible person.โ He blinks water out of his eyes again. โBut youโre not. This isnโt you. Iย knowย you.โ
โYou donโt know me.โ I bark out a laugh. โYou havenโt known me in years. And you definitely donโt love me.โ
โI admit, weโve had our problemsโฆโ I laugh again. โHave we now?โ
Nate is struggling to sit up, trying to keep his head above the shallow pool that has formed at the bottom of the grave. โPlease, Eve. This isnโt you. You donโt want to do this. It wonโt solve your problems.โ
โYes, you know all about my problems, donโt you? Considering you are the cause of all of them.โ
โFine, thatโs fair.โ When he speaks, some of the muddy water gets into his mouth, and he grimaces and spits it out. โJust get me out of here, and we can talk about this. Iโll do whatever you want me to do.โ
โNo,โ I say quietly. โThatโs not going to happen.โ
โEve!โ The panic in his face has intensified. He starts struggling against his restraints. โYou realize Iโm going to drown in here, right? Please stop messing around! Whatever you want, Iโll give it to you. Iโll quit teaching, leave town. Whatever you want, okay?โ
โDonโt worry,โ I tell him. โIโm not going to let you drown.โ
For a moment, his shoulders relax and he stops his struggle with the duct tape. โGood. Thank you. I know you wouldnโt.โ
I pick up the shovel lying on the ground beside me. โIโm going to bury you first.โ
With those words, I scoop up a shovelful of dirt, and I throw it on top of him.
โEve!โ he screams. โJesus Christ, what is wrong with you? Have you lost your mind?โ
I scoop up more dirt and throw it into the hole.
โEve!โ His face is bright red. โEve, sweetheart, Iโm so sorry for everything! I love you! You have to know that! You canโt do this to me!โ
And another scoop of dirt goes into the hole.
โEve!โ he gasps. โDonโt do this to me! Eve!ย Eve!โ
Nate is thrashing now in the grave, trying to get free. But he isnโt going to. I tied him up much too tightly. Iโm about to scoop in more dirt when Jay grabs my arm. He tugs me away, out of the earshot of my husband.
โEve,โ he says. โYouโre going to kill him.โ I lift my chin. โI know.โ
Jay glances over at the grave, where my husband is screaming his lungs out, even though nobody can hear him but us. โHeโs right. It wonโt solve your problems to kill him.โ
โYouโd be surprised.โ
His brows bunch together. โAre you sure you want to do this?โ โIโve never been so sure of anything in my life.โ
Jay stares at me for a moment, then he picks up his own shovel. He walks back with me to the grave. And when I scoop up some dirt and throw it in the hole, he does the same.
โEve!โ Nate screams. โFor the love of God, Eve, donโt do this! You canโt do this!โ
I can and I will. Two more scoops of dirt go into the hole.
โYouโll go to jail. You know that, right? Youโre going to spend the rest of your life rotting in jail, you crazy bitch!โ
Two more scoops of dirt. One of them hits him in the face, and he starts to sob.
โPlease, Eve.โ His left eye is obscured by mud as he stares up at me. โPlease donโt do this, Evie. Iโm begging you. Pleaseโฆโ
Nate once said to me that he thinks death is like being on the precipice of an abyss, or some pretentious garbage like that. He was terrified of death, more than anything else in the world. I donโt know if I believe in an afterlife, but if I do, I am certain that my husband will spend the rest of it burning in hell.
He alternates between begging us to stop and screaming threats until the mud completely covers his face. Shortly after that, he goes blessedly silent. We keep shoveling in dirt until the hole is completely filled. And as I put the finishing touches on my husbandโs grave in the woods, I recite to myself the poem he once wrote for me many years ago, back when I was fifteen
years old and he was my English teacher fresh out of college who swore to me I was his soulmate:
Life nearly passed me by Then she
Young and alive With smooth hands And pink cheeks Showed me myself
Took away my breath With cherry-red lips
Gave me life once again