We Switched Places With My Bruised Twin Sister And Made Her Husband’s Life A Living Hell
The Plan to Swap Lives
That was enough. Everything inside me crumbled. Done with normalcy, patience, and submission.
I leaped up. Lisa looked at me, terrified. She asked. “Nia, what are you going to do?”
I walked over to the single metal mirror in the room. I looked at myself.
My face was pale but my eyes were burning. I looked at Lisa.
We were identical. The same face, the same build.
The only difference was that she was dying inside and I had just been reborn. I turned around, my voice frighteningly calm. I said. “Sister, you didn’t come here today for a visit. You came to swap your life.”
Lisa froze, staring at me, her eyes widened with terror. She asked. “Nia, what are you saying? Swap our lives?”
I looked directly into her eyes, firmly and without the slightest hesitation. I said. “You stay here and I go out.”
Lisa shook her head frantically and grabbed my hand. She cried. “No, no! Nia, don’t you understand? That place is hell. Those people are animals. You’ve been locked up in here for ten years; you won’t survive out there. And what about the paperwork? How are you going to get out?”
I smiled coldly. I said. “You’re wrong, sister. Precisely because I’ve been here for ten years, I can survive those animals. Look, I’ve lived with animals here too. The only difference is the ones here are locked up and the ones out there are running free.”
I released her hand and grabbed her by the shoulders. I said. “Listen to me carefully. You are not crazy, which is why you can’t beat them. I am crazy. Only a crazy person like me can handle that trash.”
I gave a slight smile. I asked. “Do you think I’m going to escape? No, I’m walking out the main door with all the honors.”
I led her to the metal mirror. I said. “Look, we are one. Who is going to tell the difference between Lisa and Nia?”
Lisa looked at our reflection in the mirror, trembling. We were identical down to the last hair.
Visiting time was almost over. I said quickly. “This is the plan. Take off your clothes. I’ll take off my hospital uniform.”
Lisa started. “Nia, but—”
I cut her off. I said. “No ‘buts.’ Do you want Sky to live her whole life getting beaten? Do you want to rot in that corner? Trust me, I haven’t rotted in here for ten years in vain. I’ve been waiting for this day.”
I explained the plan. I said. “From now on, you are Nia. You are safe in this room. Nobody will hit you or bother you. The doctors and nurses here are good people; they just don’t understand me.”
I continued. “You just stay calm. If anyone asks you anything, you don’t have to answer. Just nod or shake your head. They are used to me doing that. They’ll say, ‘Nia is so quiet today.’ You just eat, sleep, and read. See all the books I’ve read? Read those. Relax.”
I looked deep into her eyes, conveying my calm. I said. “You don’t have to do anything. Just wait for me. I will clean up that dumpster. I will make them pay for what they did. I will get Sky out of there. I promise you.”
Lisa’s desperate look slowly shifted to a faint ray of hope. Though weak, she was cornered; she had nothing to lose.
She nodded her head. She said. “Be careful.”
I said. “I know.”
We quickly changed clothes. I put on her old threadbare clothes.
They smelled of mildew, fear, and a faint trace of blood. The rage boiled inside me again.
I slipped Lisa’s state ID and the old house keys into my pocket. In the baggy patient uniform, Lisa suddenly looked very small.
I gave her a fierce hug. I said. “Don’t move from here. Wait for me.”
The bell announcing the end of the visit rang. I took a deep breath and headed for the door.
The duty nurse saw me and nodded. She said. “Mrs. Rakes, you’re leaving now.”
I nodded, forcing a trembling smile identical to my sister’s. The iron door of the patient ward slammed shut behind me.
A dry metallic sound echoed. I walked out the main entrance of the hospital.
The blinding summer sunlight hit my face. Ten years.
I breathed free air after ten years. It was filled with car exhaust, dust, and the noisy roar of the street.
But to me, it was the smell of war. And I was a demon freshly freed from her chains.
I squeezed the bunch of keys in my pocket. I said. “Darius, Mrs. B, Trina, Julian, here I come.”
Entering the House of Filth
I grabbed a bus and walked almost another mile, remembering Lisa’s directions. Their house was deep in a dark winding alley in the East Side neighborhood.
The houses were jammed together, damp, with electrical wires tangled like cobwebs. The smell of sewage and old food hit my nose.
I stopped in front of a dilapidated one-story house. The iron gate was rusty.
Lisa lived here. My sister, who had always been so neat and tidy, had to bury her life in a place worse than my cell.
My hands trembled as I put the key in the lock. The door opened with a screech.
The first thing I saw was chaos: clothes thrown carelessly over a chair, plates with leftover food on the table from lunch attracting flies. The floor was sticky and a sour, nauseating smell of laziness and filth permeated everything.
And then I saw my niece, Sky. She was sitting in the darkest corner of the house next to the leg of an old cabinet.
She was skin and bones with pale skin. She wore an old dress that was too small with a large tear in one shoulder.
She held a doll, a headless doll. Hearing the noise of the door, she started.
She looked up. Seeing her mother, she didn’t run towards me.
She shrank back and hugged the doll tightly with both hands. Her eyes were full of fear.
The child was afraid of her own mother. I felt like my heart was breaking into a thousand pieces.
Damn animals. What had they done to a little girl?
They had turned a three-year-old into a frightened creature who feared even her own mother. I tried to soften my expression.
I crouched down and forced myself to use a gentle, almost forgotten voice. I said. “Sky, Mommy… Mommy is here now.”
The girl just trembled and stared at me. I said. “Come to Mommy.”
I held out my hand. The girl hesitated, looked at me, and then looked behind me as if waiting for someone else.
And that someone spoke. A sour, malicious voice came from inside. “That whore has crawled back already.”
Lisa’s mother-in-law, Mrs. B, shuffled out. She was short and heavy with ashen-colored skin.
She wore loud floral pajamas and held a hand fan. She said. “Where have you been all day, dragging yourself back now? Did you go see your crazy sister?”
She spit on the floor right beside me. She asked. “Did you bring anything back to this house, or are you just coming back again with that pathetic face to sponge off our food?”
I slowly stood up, shielding Sky behind my back. I looked at her.
I didn’t say a word; I just stared. I drilled my eyes into her turbid, evil ones.
I remembered this face. The old woman seemed to notice something was different.
The daughter-in-law who usually lowered her head and trembled when insulted was standing tall today and daring to look her in the face. She asked. “What… what are you looking at?”
She raised the fan and pointed at my face. She asked. “What bug bit you today? You want me to poke your eyes out?”
I gave a very slight, slow smile. I said. “Excuse me, mother-in-law, I didn’t hear you clearly.”
My smile seemed to chill her blood. She started. “I… I—”
Before she could finish, another shrill voice interrupted her. She said. “Oh, Mom, why bother talking to her? Tell her to make dinner; I’m starving.”
My sister-in-law Trina came out of the main room. She was just as heavy as her mother, with a face full of acne and messy, artificially blonde hair.
Behind her, a chubby five-year-old boy followed with an arrogant air. He was his mother’s spitting image.
Julian, seeing Sky, he ran toward her. He said. “Hey, you’re playing with a doll? Give it to me!”
He abruptly snatched the headless doll from her hands. Sky, frightened, burst into tears.
She cried. “Give it back! Give it back, cousin! It’s mine!”
He said. “I won’t give it back. Your toys are mine.”
Julian raised the doll and threw it against the wall. He asked. “Who plays with this garbage?”
He turned to Sky and shoved her hard. He said. “Why are you crying? Shut up! If you cry again, I’m going to really hit you.”
Sky fell onto the dirty floor. She was so scared that she stopped crying instantly; only a choked sob escaped her throat.
Mrs. B and Trina watched and laughed as if it were highly amusing. Trina said, lifting her chin. “That’s my boy. Men have to be strong like that, not like that little brat.”
My rage, yes, there it was, roaring in my chest. Ten years of repression—it was over.
The smile disappeared from my face. Julian, seeing that Sky wasn’t crying, became even bolder.
He walked over and raised his foot to kick her. He said. “I told you to shut up!”
The First Retaliation
A hand grabbed his ankle midair. Julian lost his balance and fell backward, but his ankle was still firmly held.
It was my hand. Suddenly, the house fell into a deathly silence.
Julian’s eyes were wide. He was used to abusing his cousin, used to his grandmother and mother always taking his side.
Never had Sky’s mother laid a finger on him. He yelled. “Let go of me! Let go, you crazy witch! How dare you touch my leg?”
He squirmed. Without a word, I squeezed a little.
Julian started shrieking. “Ow! It hurts! It hurts! Mom! Grandma! This aunt is breaking my leg!”
Trina finally reacted. She cried. “My God, Lisa, what are you doing? Let go of my son right now!”
She ran toward me, ready to scratch my face with her red-painted nails. Still holding Julian’s leg, I raised my other hand and blocked Trina’s arm.
I grabbed her wrist. Trina struggled. “Let go! Let go!”
My hand was like a steel clamp. I said with an expressionless voice. “Sister-in-law, you should raise your son better. He is a child, yes, but he cannot be a spoiled brat. If he touches Sky again…”
I squeezed my hand. Both Julian and Trina let out a cry of pain.
I said. “The next time, I won’t settle for just breaking one leg.”
Trina screamed, terrified, calling her mother. “Mom! Mom, help me!”
Mrs. B finally snapped out of it. She trembled with rage.
Her daughter-in-law, the one she hit and insulted daily, dared to rebel today. She dared to touch her daughter and her golden grandson.
She said. “You… you are crazy!”
Mrs. B grabbed a feather duster that was nearby. She said. “You’ve gotten too big for your britches today. I’m going to beat you to death!”
She swung the duster and started hitting my back non-stop. I didn’t flinch; my back was used to worse pain at the hospital.
I slowly released Julian and Trina. Mother and son quickly backed away.
Mrs. B, seeing that I wasn’t reacting, became even bolder. She said. “I’m going to give you such a beating to knock that insolence out of you so you know your place.”
I slowly straightened up and turned to face her. The duster continued hitting my shoulders and chest.
I raised my hand and grabbed the duster handle. Mrs. B, surprised, tried to pull it away, but it didn’t move an inch.
I looked at her. She looked at me.
In her eyes, there was anger; in mine, only cold emptiness. I pulled hard.
Mrs. B stumbled forward. I snapped the duster handle in two.
I threw the pieces at her feet. I said. “Starting today, this house is going to have rules.”
I looked at the panting old woman, the sister-in-law massaging her wrist with a trembling hand, and the damn nephew who was whimpering. I asked. “It’s time for dinner. What do we have tonight, mother-in-law?”
Mrs. B, caught between fear and fury, stammered. She said. “The… the dinner… the rotten tilapia you brought from the market yesterday. Make a stew with it, very salty and dry, so we don’t waste the money I feed your family with!”
There it was, the star dish Lisa had told me about: the salty fish stew she was forced to prepare and eat every time. I said. “Yes, mother-in-law, I will.”
Leaving three pairs of stunned eyes behind, I walked into the kitchen. I saw the fish that gave off a rotten smell in a basin.
With perfect calm, I cleaned it and put it to stew. I poured half a package of salt into the pot.
I left it to cook until the liquid completely evaporated and the fish burned black. The smell of salt and burning was unbearable.
I set the table: a bowl of yesterday’s cold rice, a dish of yellowish boiled vegetables, and my masterpiece, the tilapia stew. I called. “Mother-in-law, sister-in-law, nephew, dinner!”
