Welcome to the Dark Side: Chapter 2
Welcome to the Dark Side: A Forbidden Romance (The Fallen Men Book 2)
2008-2009 Zeus is 26 and Louise is 7.
Dear Mr. Guardian Monster, I hope you feel better now. Daddy told me you went away to a place where bad people go. Does that mean you are in hell? Can I visit you there?
I am worried that if you are away no one will look after me. Mum and Daddy are too busy because they are super important people. Nanny doesnât speak English real good. My little sister Bea is okay but she cries a lot because she is still a baby.
I am still really sick. I had a Christmas play last week and I threw up all over the Baby Jesus. Mrs. Peachtree tried to pick me up, but I threw up on her too. I had to go to the hospital again and I hate the hospital. Nanny told me the doctors told her that there is something really wrong with me. When Mummy came to visit, she cried.
Do you think I am going to die? If I do, can I come stay with you in hell?
xoxo, Louise Margaret Lafayette Lou, Not gonna die, kid. Anyone ever tell you, you got a dark imagination? Little kids get sick all the time and then they get better, yeah? Wasnât gonna write back but I had to tell you to cut that shit negative stuff out. Now, donât be sad or anythinâ, but we canât write to each other. You donât get it now but Iâm a grown man and itâs fuckinâ feckinâ weird to write a seven-year-old little girl from prison. Thatâs where I am, prison. And yeah, Lou, itâs a lot like hell, only worse âcause I figure thereâs women in hell and a whole lotta sinning. Only thing I do here is read and do prison labor on a feckinâ farm.
Youâll get it when youâre older, but this is goodbye. Have a good life, kid, and keep outta trouble, you hear? I may not be there to look over ya, but Iâll be able to tell if you stay good.
Z.
Dear Mr. Guardian Monster, I know you said that I couldnât write to you anymore but I thought I should tell you that I am not going to get better so I will probably see you in prison in a little bit. See, I got cancer. Nanny told me itâs in my blood so they canât even do an operation or anything. Daddy got really mad and he said heâs gonna get me a doctor like Super Man to help me get better. Betsy told me that lots of kids get cancer but she looked scared. I wouldnât tell anyone but you, because you are my guardian monster, but Iâm scared too.
I hope you write me back but if not, maybe see you soon.
xoxo, Louise Margaret Lafayette P.S. Do you believe in God? I do but I donât know why he made me sick. I promise, I pray every day.
Lou, Jesus Christ, Fuck me, God fucking dammit.
No, Lou, I donât believe in God. How can a man believe in an all-powerful nice guy who lives the high life behind pearly gates while the rest of us suffer down here on earth? How can a man believe that a little girl sweeter than sugar freakinâ pie deserves to get cancer?
You are goinâ to get better, kid. I know it. You know how I feckinâ know it? âCause you are a little warrior. You didnât cry in the face of a huge biker with a gun pointed at your heart and you ainât gonna cry âcause of this, you hear me? You are strong and you are gonna fight this.
Itâs still a feckinâ stupid idea for me to write to you, but Jesus, how can a guardian monster abandon his girl when she needs him?
Here still. Tell Betsy to write me a letter with more detail about the cancer, yeah?
Z.
Dear Mr. Guardian Monster, Betsy wrote you a letter about the cancer. I tried to read it, but I donât understand any of the words. Betsy told me to tell you what I feel like because I donât know the doctor words for it. I have to stay in the hospital most of the time now, for medicine that makes my head really hurt and my heart skip rope in my chest. My bones really hurt, kinda like if dogs are chewing on them. I drew a picture of hellhounds biting on my legs, but it made my little sister cry and my mummyâs voice got really high and tight when she called me disgusting. Mummy threw it out but Betsy saved it and I gave it to her to send to you. Do you like it? Thatâs you, the big man in the clouds with your thunderbolts so you can save me.
Are you going to come and save me? Or is prison too far away to get here before I die?
xoxo, Louise M. Lafayette P.S. I am worried about you in prison. Do they at least have lollipops there? I love lollipops, especially the cherry kind.
Little Loulou, Yeah, kid, I got the letter from Bets. You have Hodgkinâs Lymphoma. I looked it up in the prison library. The bad news is, itâs gonna suck to fight this and youâre gonna get real tired doing it. Good news? Those docs really know how to treat this shit. There are stages to cancer, kid, four of âem and you are stage 2. This is really good, yeah? The odds of a kid beatinâ this thing are high and the odds of you beatinâ it? Even higher.
Really like the drawing, Lou. I got a few from my kids in my cell and now I got yours here too. Makes the place a little brighter. And I donât got any lollipops, but gotta say, I donât have a hankerinâ for them and straight up, kid? Those things will rot your teeth right out.
Z.
Yeah, before I forget again, cut it out with the Mr. Guardian Monster, yeah? Just call me Zeus.
Dear Mr. Zeus, My hair is falling out. Betsy told me it was going to happen and a bunch of other kids in the cancer ward donât have hair but Iâm really sad. My hair was really pretty. Do you remember it? I think there was blood in it last time you saw me but mostly itâs gold and thick and long. Nanny used to brush it for me before bed and it felt really nice. Nanny shaved the little bit I had left off so Iâm bald. Now, my head is super cold. It doesnât matter really, I got to stay in the hospital right now and itâs always warm in here. Iâm fighting, Mr. Zeus, really I am, but Iâm super duper tired and even though you told me I was too strong to cry, I cried last night.
I havenât seen my parents in three days and Nanny only brings Bea sometimes because sheâs too little to see me all sick. Iâm really lonely and I know you are in prison but if you could get maybe a Christmas break or something, could you come visit me? Itâs really sad in the hospital but I think you could make me smile, maybe.
xoxo, Little Loulou M. Lafayette P.S. Iâm happy you donât like lollipops so now I donât have to share. Betsy told me that in prison you donât get a lot of stuff. What do you miss most? Maybe I can send it to you!
Little Loulou, Listen to me now. You donât need your parents. They ainât there, good feckinâ riddance, yeah? Theyâre too busy to sit with a girl like you, sweet and kind even sick as a dog? Gotta say it, Lou, they donât sound like good parents. Now, on top of everythinâ else you got goinâ, that straight up sucks. Good news is, you got Nanny, Bea, and Betsy over there in your corner. You need to cry, you go to one of them and you tell âem to get you a damn cherry lollipop or you get âem to give you a hug. And I might be stuck in prison, little warrior, but you still got me, your guardian monster, keepinâ an eye on you from hell on earth. You feel sad, you write me one of your letters or make me a pretty picture, yeah?
Donât miss nothinâ so much as I miss my kids. I told you before, I got a son whoâs just two years older than you and a daughter round about your age. King and Harleigh Rose. Theyâre stayinâ with their mum and you know how your parents suck? King and H.R.âs mum sucks even worse. Sheâs not a nice lady and sheâs a feckinâ crap parent so I get worried about them. Worried about them, worried about you⦠a guardian monster can only do so much from prison.
Stay strong, little warrior.
Z.
Betcha look pretty even without all that golden hair. Youâre too young to get this, maybe, but sometimes a personâs got a soul so pretty it makes âem glow prettier than anythinâ else. You got that kid, trust me. About the cold head, I asked Betsy to get you one of those knit cap things from my garage. Wear it inside out, yeah? Donât need your dad crawlinâ up my butt about writinâ you.