He stands over the bed with the pillow in his hands. His knuckles are white with tension, the fabric compressed under the pressure. It would be simple. No mess, no blood, no questions. A palliative patient who simply stops breathing in his sleep. It happens every day.
But simple is not the same as right. Simple was too easy, too fast.
Jonas lowers the pillow and carefully puts it back in place.
The man in the bed has been reduced to a skeleton draped in parchment skin. The same man who used to be able to suck the air out of a room with a single look.
The smell in the room is a mixture of disinfectant, stale urine, and something sweet that should not be sweet. Approaching decay has a signature of its own. He has grown used to it, or he has convinced himself that he has.
He remains standing beside the bed without doing anything. His shoulders raised, his back slightly hunched. A physical echo of thirty years of accepting, absorbing, avoiding.
He rubs the thin white scars on his forearms. Old memories that do not disappear, only fade.
He feels no blind hatred. For that, he is too emotionally exhausted. Not brute revenge, but a subtle correction of reality. A cold need for a very specific kind of balance.
He wanted his father to feel what he’d done to him. Fully.
He thinks about everything that needs to be done. Washing. Emptying. Changing. Turning. Checking. Recording. Caring for a body he knows better than he wants to.
Him, of all people. As always, it fell to him.
His stomach turns at the thought.
The next morning he smells it already in the hallway. The door does not even have to open; the stench pushes through the cracks.
“Well, old man,” he says as he walks in. “I didn’t change you last night. Forgot.”
His father lies half out of bed, helpless, one arm limp at his side. The sheets are soaked.
“Trying to get away?” Jonas mutters as he pulls on gloves. “Not much chance.”
He works methodically. No hurry, no anger. He washes, changes, turns the body with practiced movements. His face remains expressionless, but his breathing is shallow; he holds it whenever he can.
His father follows him with his eyes. The light in them is almost gone, but not quite. There is still something there Jonas recognizes, something that does not die with the body.
The man points to his lips, dry and cracked, and then to the tap.
Jonas looks at him. Pretends he does not understand.
“Lip balm? Don’t have any.”
The man shakes his head, more desperately now, and points again.
Jonas fills a glass with water and places it on the bedside table. Just out of reach. Exactly far enough. For a second, he almost moves the glass closer.
He stays where he is and watches the arm stretch toward it, tremble, try again. The fingers almost touch the glass, miss it, slide over the surface without grip. The body shifts with it, too far, too fast.
The glass falls.
Breaks.
Water, shards, silence.
Something moves through Jonas that he cannot immediately name. No satisfaction. No regret. Something in between.
He returns with a plastic cup and a straw. Hands it to him without saying a word. His face feels warm.
A correction, he tells himself.
Nothing more than that.
But the corrections keep coming.
More subtle.
More frequent.
When he sees the diaper is saturated, he first looks at the clock. He knows exactly what time it is. He also knows he can leave it. That nothing will happen if he waits.
He thinks of nights when he himself lay still. Did not dare move. Did not dare breathe.
He waits.
Not long.
Long enough.
The morphine pump ticks softly beside the bed. A reassuring sound, according to the doctor. Pain relief, comfort, dignity.
Jonas knows the settings. He knows what he is doing when he lowers the dosage. Not off. Not drastic. Just enough to keep someone conscious.
Present.
He wants his father to be present.
The doctor comes once a week. On that day everything is different. The room is clean, the bed tight, the body cared for. Sometimes there are flowers. Sometimes soft music. Jonas moves through the space like a model son.
“It’s moving fast now,” the doctor says. “Days, not weeks. We can increase the morphine.”
Jonas nods. Thoughtful. Involved.
His father tries to say something as soon as the doctor leaves.
“Mo… mor…”
The man tries to sit up, straining in a body that no longer allows it. The sounds get stuck, fray, fall apart before they form meaning.
Jonas remains where he is.
“I don’t understand you,” he says, without coming closer.
“Mo… mor…”
The fingers move toward the IV, trembling, pointing, repeating the gesture that needs no explanation.
Jonas follows it with his eyes. He understands immediately. Of course he understands.
“Yes,” he says eventually. “I’ll be here tomorrow. That’s what you mean, right? Tomorrow.”
He lingers a moment longer, hoping something else will come. Another word. Another gesture. Something not about pain, but about recognition. Of guilt. Of remorse.
Nothing comes.
When he later adjusts the pump, he does so without hesitation. Not drastic, not obvious—just enough to keep the body from slipping into oblivion. His father had to feel that physical pain.
“Quid pro quo,” he mutters before closing the door behind him.
The days blur together, become one long sequence of actions without variation. His father suffers visibly, but keeps following Jonas with his eyes. Always those eyes, searching for something Jonas refuses to give.
Sometimes his name surfaces, half-formed. Even that takes too much effort.
“J… Jo…”
One afternoon, when the light falls flat and colorless into the room—that moment—Jonas gives in to something he does not fully understand. He takes a step forward. Another. Leans in slightly.
Too close.
The movement is so fast he does not even register it at first. Only when the fingers close around his wrist—hard, unexpectedly firm—does he realize what is happening.
The grip is not that of a dying man.
It is the old grip.
His body reacts faster than his thoughts. In a flash, the memories return.
Wrong. Hard. Too much. Blue. Belt. Broken. The endless repetition.
Everything tightens, his breath catches, and for a moment—just a fraction—there is no difference between then and now.
The room disappears. The bed disappears. Only that hand remains.
He tears himself free with a force he does not recognize and stumbles back, his heartbeat loud and uneven in his ears. The imprint of the fingers burns on his skin.
When he looks up, the strength is gone.
What remains is the body. For a moment, Jonas thinks he sees a crooked, self-satisfied smirk on his father’s face even now.
That is the moment Jonas understands nothing else is coming.
No words that will hold. No recognition that won’t be taken back. No ending that resolves itself.
He turns away, walks to the chair where his coat lies, and takes out the recorder. He has been carrying it for days. Maybe longer.
He looks at his hand, as if it does not belong to him.
Without hurry, he places the device on the bedside table, where the sound cannot be avoided.
He presses play.
His own voice fills the room.
Not loud. Not shouting. But inescapable.
Sentences that begin and do not stop. Memories that are not softened. Details that were never meant to exist out loud.
His father tries to push the device away, but his arm drops halfway back. There is no strength left to change anything.
Only to listen.
There is no escape. The voice continues, uninterrupted, as if detached from the one who once recorded it.
Jonas stands by the door.
He looks.
He waits.
The crying starts slowly, almost inaudible. No flowing tears, just a sound forced outward from somewhere deep inside.
“Forgive me… Jonas…”
The words land heavily in the room.
But they do not stay.
“My father… his father… it’s in us… the blood… the DNA… I couldn’t help it…”
Jonas closes his eyes for a moment.
There it is.
Not recognition.
Escape.
Even now.
He places his hand on the handle and feels the cold metal under his fingers.
“It stops here,” he says.
Softly. Without emphasis. As if he is saying it mostly to himself.
He opens the door.
The voice of the recorder continues behind him, unchanged, uninterrupted.
This was the final correction. Mental exhaustion.
He does not look back.
The door closes.
He steps into the cold air outside, with feelings colder than the freezing air.
The satisfaction of his small corrections does not come.
His corrections had been quieter, more controlled. But did that make him a better man?
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Hey — thanks for sharing this with me.
There’s a lot here that works, especially the control of tone and the way the story escalates through small, deliberate actions. The “corrections” idea is strong and gives the piece a clear spine.
The recorder scene stood out as the peak for me — turning language into something inescapable was a really strong, clean idea.
A few thoughts as I read:
The physical details are good, but in places they feel just a step short of fully landing. For example, “parchment skin” is a strong image — you might push it further into something more tangible (how it lays, how it looks in light, almost semi-transparent).
The same with the smell — the “sweet that shouldn’t be sweet” is great, but anchoring it to something familiar (like overripe fruit) could make it more immediate and visceral.
The scars are interesting, but a bit general. You could make them more specific — variation in width, pattern, even a sense of how long they took to heal — so they carry more history on the body.
The line “a subtle correction of reality” didn’t fully land for me. I wasn’t sure if that’s meant to reflect Jonas’s own framing or the narrator’s — if it’s his language, the imprecision works differently and might be doing something intentional.
In the care scenes, I really liked the restraint and methodical tone — that’s a strong lane.
One small thing: the “I forgot” moment didn’t feel fully believable to me given the character. It might land stronger if the intent is clearer or expressed more through action than dialogue.
The water glass moment is effective and uncomfortable (in a good way). I think it could carry even more weight if a bit less is explained around it and the action is allowed to speak on its own.
Overall, I think the piece has a solid structure and some really strong core ideas — it just feels like a few of the best moments could be pushed one step further into the physical and specific to really hit as hard as they can.
I appreciate you asking me to take a look — I enjoyed reading it.
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Hey — thanks for taking the time to read so closely.
Glad the structure and the “corrections” thread came through — that’s the spine of the piece, and the recorder scene was meant to be the point of no return.
The restraint in physical detail is intentional. I tend to leave space rather than fully anchor everything, but I understand your point about pushing certain elements further.
“A subtle correction of reality” is Jonas’s internal framing — not neutral language — though I see how that could read as less defined on the page.
On the “I forgot”: that’s deliberate, not accidental.
Appreciate the specificity of your notes — always good to see where things land differently for a reader.
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Yes every reader will bring their own understanding of the piece. And even reading the story again can change how you feel about it. It’s a great story, and you see that by the number of people moved enough to comment on it. Great work, looking forward to your next story.
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Thanks Mark, I really appreciate it!
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Appreciate the ambiguity of the piece, I always love when a writer allows the reader to sit in the disconfort of the POV a morally compromised character without offering any easy moralizing answers at the end as to why and how they were "wrong". Nice job.
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Thank you — I’m glad that came through. I wanted the reader to stay with that discomfort rather than resolve it too neatly.
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Oh wow! Everything about this had me hooked.
I wonder if Jonas does ever find his way out of the cycle of abuse, he does seem more aware of his cruelties - but awareness doesn't absolve you from being cruel obviously, but I hope he finds his way out.
I love that Jonas was not a 'perfect victim' as well.
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Thank you — really glad it held your attention. And yes, awareness without change is exactly where I wanted him to sit.
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This is creepy, gets under your skin in the best psychological manner.
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Tnx John, always appreciate you reading my stories.
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This was quietly chilling and incredibly painful but so spellbinding I couldn’t look away. What is it they say? “Revenge is a dish best served cold,” I think. It leaves both people mired in misery. This is as subtle and horrifying as the Stephen King novel, as someone mentioned.
I’m reminded of my father’s last night, when I sat by his bedside and gazed into his empty eyes. Where had he gone? Death doesn’t seem final after all, and you captured that brilliantly.
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Thank you — that means a lot. And I’m very sorry about your father. That moment you describe… I recognize that sense of absence, even before someone is truly gone. I’m glad the story could resonate with that, even in such a difficult way.
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Once again you've hit a psychological chord. There is an ambiguity of what the issue is between father and son that needn't be revealed and is in the blood. I also liked the line, But simple is not the same as right. Simple was too easy, too fast.
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Thanks Antonino—your comment means a lot.
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So creepy but in the best way! Shades of Stephen King's Misery of someone trapped in a bed and another trapped in their own head. The son, having a final opportunity to have his father suffer as opposed to the unspoken years of torture, he himself must have experienced. And the father's tracking eyes - so real! I love how you chose the subtle abuse of the father - nothing so horrific but enough to send a message, and I thought the tape recording in the end was brilliant. Your writing is impeccable as always. Another great submission. Kudos!
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Thank you—that’s a wonderful comparison. And I’m really glad the restraint and those details came through the way they did. Means a lot.”
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I wasn't sure how else to connect with you, but again, I have to say thank you. I bit the bullet and entered the literary prize contest.
All because of you.
Thank you for always being so supportive. I hope you will see that I listened and that I am trying to learn.
You made me brave.
It's on my profile with a note for you there as well.
B
email me if you would like
bryansanders0726@gmail.com
would love to connect
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Hi B,
Your message truly made my day—thank you for that. And you entered the Literature Prize… I love it.
But let’s be clear about one thing: you did this. I may have said a few things along the way, but you’re the one who took the step. That’s what matters.
Trust your voice. There’s always room to grow, of course, but don’t let rules box you in. Learn from others, sure—but write in a way that feels true to you.
For some reason I can’t open your story—would you mind sending it to marjoleingreebe@gmail.com?
Looking forward to reading it.
We’ll stay in touch.
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Oh, absolutely, email on the way. It may not open to read until after it closes. I am not sure... and yes, you helped me be brave, and I am really clarifying the show now.
Thank you
B
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Sent my dear... I wonder why it doesn't show. I see it on my profile, but it may not be accessible until the contest closes.
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This was a very well-written psychological look at how abuse can perpetuate itself, both across generations and within individuals. The idea that both characters still seem to justify their actions in the end is especially tragic. The way Jonas knows just how far to go—enough to avoid calling it "cruel" in his own mind—is very deeply unsettling in the best way. I also thought the ambiguity at the end was very effective. Will Jonas choose to break the cycle and move on? Will he leave his father in someone else’s care? Or will he continue his "justified" corrections? That uncertainty really reinforces the story’s exploration of what it means to be human when pushed to the brink.
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Thank you—this is a very thoughtful reading. I appreciate how you engaged with the ambiguity.
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Majolein- the psychological element to this is one that cannot be missed, and will not be missed. I recognized the title as I just read a book using it variously, and you perfectly captured what that means. I do wonder if Jonas wasn't completely off the edge, completely insane, because he would make the smaller corrections, like offering his father the water even though he did not want to. That makes me wonder - what is happening to Jonas? Is there a reason for this pain and suffering he is causing? The bit with the recorder was nice, and that did allow me to infer more about the story.
When the doctor comes in and everything changes, Jonas looks just like a 'model son', that really got to me. The irony is there, and this story made me feel something. Anger, because this happens to so many who do not have voices to speak it. The morphine detail was chilling. Jonas wants his father to feel the pain, which is disgusting.
Jonas' father wants to apologize, and he even goes to try to explain this pain, but he is met with ignorance, even. If I may offer one very, teeny nitpick, I would trust some of the imagery in the beginning, because everything else has landed, and trusting the sheet/diaper imagery even a tiny bit more would really make this story perfect.
That end question really stuck with me. He made more subtle corrections, but he's still allowing the pain and agony to be felt by his father. Does that make him a better man? That's such a raw way to end this piece, and it was a great choice. The voice, emotion, and imagery is there, and I would love to read more of this piece, I could really see it expanded into something more. Great job & excellent work as always here, Marjolein. I really enjoyed this one!
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Thank you Hazel—this is such a thoughtful read.
I really like your question about whether Jonas is “off the edge” or still choosing—because for me, he’s somewhere in between. That’s what makes it uncomfortable: he’s controlled enough to be deliberate, but damaged enough to justify it to himself.
Glad the “model son” moment and the recorder landed—that contrast was important. And your note on trusting the early imagery is a good one; I see what you mean there.
That final question—whether he’s actually better—was exactly what I wanted to leave unresolved. I’m really happy it stayed with you.
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Somewhere in between - that's perfect! I'm glad that I helped. 😊
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