Asense of gratitude washes over me as Oliver and I carry Violet back inside of the Wellard Asylum. It should have been difficult to get the hand and ankle cuffs on her, but post-orgasm, I choked her into unconsciousness, and the bitch had no choice but to welcome the restraints. Afterward, Oliver helped pull her out of the grave, and by the time she woke up, she was in the back of our van.
Now, barely able to take more than a half step in front of her without tripping from the restraints, she wriggles like a worm, eager to show her complete rejection of me and the asylum, to cling to the lie that she doesn’t belong here.
Her murder attempts delight me. She seems determined to kill me, though I’m sure it’s becoming harder to find the motivation to follow through with it. She likes having her father too much.
With our new brain chip, she’ll become a doll, but I guarantee the fire will still be visible in her small, dark eyes.
I’m proud of my discipline, allowing her the space to grow independently while fostering her obsessions fromafar. An article here. An old birth certificate there. A rumor whispered nearby. A dash of pink paint across a headstone, and suddenly, she can’t think of anything else besides me.
“Fuck you!” she hisses.
A patient gawks, while another hunches their shoulders, stealing glances in our direction. A guard nods at me, then resumes his focus on the other two patients. No one truly listens to the young woman’s cries.
She shouts: “You can’t do this! You can’t?—”
“Why do you insist on pretending like you didn’t orchestrate this entire process so you could find your precious mother?” I ask. I jerk the handcuffs; she stumbles. I use the chain to pull her up to her feet. “You wanted to find out if she truly was a freak. Now, you get to experience it for yourself.”
A blood-curdling scream erupts from her chest, and I chuckle, exchanging a knowing look with Oliver and the other staff members in the area. Violet’s reaction is confirmation I’m correct; the best part is sheknowsI am.
We take Violet to a doorless room with special restraining equipment. Though Violet isn’t truly a danger to herself or others, the fact is she tried to murder me twice; she could become volatile at any moment. Shemustbe completely restrained.
Furthermore, it pleases me to keep her separated from the other patients. Alone. Desperate for attention.Myattention.
A window frames the back of the narrow room, thick bars striking across it. Moonlight shines during certain times of the year; during the daylight hours, the window remains in shadow, which will numb Violet’s bleakexistence. Some may think it’s unusual to give a patient the freedom to view the outside world, but I had this room designed for situations where I want the patient to be aware of the passage of time.
Surveillance cameras are placed in each corner of the room, and the video feeds are linked to my office and home computers; I can see her whenever I’d like.
As I grip Violet between my arms, Oliver props open the bed cage. This particular bed—which is not much of a bed at all, though it will be where she sleeps—is a large metal contraption, propped up at mattress height. Formally, it’s called a Utica crib: a metal cage barred with crib-like sidings for every surface, including the top. It’s no deeper or wider than a coffin. I had this particular one customized with wrist and ankle restraints for especially unruly patients. It’s meant to keep them from harming themselves; I find it especially helpful when it comes to intellectual training.
I have so much to teach my sweet one.
Once the crib cage is ready and I’ve unlocked Violet’s cuffs, I wrestle her down to the metal, yank off her tattered clothes, then strap her into the restraints. Oliver waits at the door with a cattle prod, ready to assist me if she runs, but he knows not to touch her. If he does, I’ll kill him.
She pulls at her restraints, then whimpers. Hopelessness is slack on her face, her brows pinched.
It makes me smile.
I slam the cage shut, then pick up her clothes from the floor. A hard item protrudes in the pocket.
I smirk. I wonder what it is. Did my daughter find another way to try to hurt me?
The satisfying click of the cage’s lock mixes with herscreams, and the melody heats my groin. She’ll never be able to get out. Not unless I’m here.
“Is this where you locked her up?” Violet cries. “While she was pregnant?”
I’m sure I have a record of her mother’s whereabouts while she was here, but decades have passed, and as I’ve lost interest in her, I’ve forgotten those details.
Violet doesn’t need to know that though.
“Of course it is.” I give her a playful wink. “Try to get used to it faster than she did. You need your sleep. We’ll start your training soon.”
Oliver and I exit her room while she continues to scream profanities. Neither of us acknowledges her.
I assign Oliver to work on his regular individual duties. Then I call the cemetery’s groundskeeper and give him a short command before I hang up: “You may return to fill the grave.”
For an hour, Violet’s cries reverberate through the hallways. But her mournful reactions will only last so long.
Typically, I’d return home for the night to work on my personal projects or my partnership with the Pure Companion Company, but the thought of being away from Violet at such a crucial time in her development doesn’t sit well with me.