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58 pages 1 hour read

Tracy Sierra

Nightwatching

Tracy SierraFiction | Novel | Adult | Published in 2024

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Important Quotes

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“The old house let the wind hiss through and crack its ribs. The sounds of it bracing against the storm, its staggered breathing, were familiar.”


(Chapter 1, Page 1)

This passage establishes the importance of the old house as a key setting, and the descriptions personify it, rendering it a character as well as a place. Old homes make many sounds, such as creaking floors, squeaking doors, and outside air leaking through drafty joints. The use of personification in the passage makes the house come alive, as if it is bracing itself against the physical storm raging outside and the metaphorical one that is about to begin inside its walls.

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“She saw fingers wrap the banister like white spider legs.”


(Chapter 1, Page 3)

The intruder is depicted as menacing from the very first moment, and the motif of animals is invoked from the first moment that the mother sees him. Comparing his fingers to spider legs increases his sinister appearance and his creeping qualities. Spiders trap their victims before killing them, and by entering the home, the intruder has trapped the mother and children with no hope of escape.

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“The surging panic in her frozen body turned her into a live wire stripped bare but unable to release a charge.”


(Chapter 2, Page 8)

Humans are hard-wired to respond to fear in order to ensure self-preservation, and the author actively invokes visceral descriptions of the mother’s trauma responses in order to heighten the realism and tension of the narrative. The mother's knee-jerk response is to freeze, and this instinctive reaction leads her to think that her wiring is somehow damaged or broken. However, freezing saves her, keeping her invisible to the intruder.

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“The face of the open passage was purest black. So black that even in that midnight room, she saw it as a darker pit. A dead mouth with a throat deeper than flint.”


(Chapter 3, Page 19)

The description produces a strong visual image of impenetrable darkness, and the intensity of the blackness emphasizes the mother's worry and apprehension. The passage's description of the hallway as a "dead mouth with a throat deeper than flint" likens the hiding location to a lifeless, consuming entity, increasing the tension and emphasizing the danger of the situation. There is also a predatory element to the darkness, which is even darker than the already black room.

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“Don’t you know the whole point of little piggies is to be delicious?”


(Chapter 6, Page 49)

The Corner speaks to the hidden family with a malicious yet child-like tone, quoting from classic nursery rhymes and children's stories. Here, he cites the story of the three little pigs, in which a wrathful wolf waits outside to devour them. Later, he threatens to destroy the house as the wolf destroyed the pigs’ homes. The use of nursery rhymes intensifies the sadistic nature of the intruder and underscores the vulnerability of the mother and children as they are trapped in their home just like the three little pigs.

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“His words branched inside her in an endless fractal root system, nearly impossible to pull out once planted.”


(Chapter 8, Page 68)

Fractals are endlessly complex geometric patterns that repeat at varying sizes. The metaphor expresses the emotional impact created by the intruder's statements. His threats become deeply etched in the mother's being, making them difficult to eradicate. This moment becomes another traumatic event that is forever a part of her.

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“When he held the guitar, it reminded her of the way he’d cradled their children in his arms as babies.”


(Chapter 13, Page 108)

When the mother and children hear the Corner playing the guitar, this moment sparks a fond memory of her husband. The tenderness of the memory characterizes her husband and marks a contrast between him and the murderous intruder who is currently plundering their personal belongings.

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“There was a live-wire force moving her that she recognized as the will to live.”


(Chapter 15, Page 129)

In contrast to the previous moment when the mother thought her wiring was faulty, she now feels a decisive shift inside her body. This passage highlights the mother’s inner struggle with listening to her body, and the scene also marks the moment in which she embraces her own fighting instincts and commits to a course of action that will preserve her family’s safety.

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“There was a needle dragging a thread through her chest, sewing a bloody message that said, You hurt them. You hurt them.”


(Chapter 15, Page 135)

Faced with an impossible situation, the mother leaves the children to search for help. Just as her survival instincts compel her to go, the children’s instincts drive them to cling to her in fear. The visceral imagery conveys the moment's emotional impact on the mother as she pushes them away and fears that she has irreparably harmed them.

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“She registered a chest-constricting irregularity in her heartbeat. The heart of a prey animal under the animal skin of the coat.”


(Chapter 16, Page 141)

As she dons the fur coat and runs through the woods, the mother becomes animal-like in her quest to protect her children, and this effect is further heightened by her fear that the Corner is pursuing her. The mother’s irregular heartbeat feels primal, instinctual, and vulnerable, akin to a hunted animal’s fear. Still, it is also what reminds her that she is alive and that she isn’t dreaming.

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“And her mother was a dot on a chart. Her mother was absence. She could feel that nothingness. There was an infinite, empty place her mother’s love used to fill.”


(Chapter 17, Page 152)

The loss of her own mother at such a young age deeply affected the mother and has become a core part of her identity. The home invasion therefore reignites the mother’s trauma surrounding her own mother’s death as she considers what could happen to her children in her absence. Knowing that she must stay alive to protect them compels her to fight for survival.

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“The relief was a euphoric drug so intense she thought she would fall asleep right there, forever happy.”


(Chapter 20, Page 181)

The relief of seeing her children safe is so powerful that, like a mind-altering substance, it suspends reality. The irony of the moment is that no one is safe because the Corner is still at large, and now the police suspect the mother of locking her own children inside the crawlspace with the intent to harm them. In the hospital, the mother is separated from her children, and nurses force her to take sedatives, which give her the same benumbed feelings even as they increase her anxiety and fear.

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“[E]ach time he criticized her behavior, desperate for his father’s approval, love, vindication, she felt a chisel lightly hammering, tap-tap-tap, hairline factures invisibly weakening the keystone of respect that held up all they built.”


(Chapter 21, Page 185)

This paragraph employs metaphor, imagery, and onomatopoeia to depict the slow erosion of respect and validation in the mother's marriage and the emotional toll of criticism over time. The paragraph compares the husband's disapproval to a chisel pounding away at a keystone, implying that his actions are gradually eroding the foundation of respect that supports their marriage. The picture of a chisel rather than a wrecking ball implies gradual harm, and the regular "tap-tap-tap" underlines the criticism's repetitive and relentless nature. The erosion of respect eventually weakens her self-worth and belonging, leading her to question herself.

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“She’d treated coming back to herself like a jigsaw puzzle, flipping and turning the pieces on the table, analyzing them, until she was able to arrange each memory.”


(Chapter 24, Page 214)

The mother reviews key memories to help her better understand her present situation. Like a jigsaw puzzle, she must examine the pieces of her identity and memories and arrange them to form a coherent picture. Her systematic and deliberate approach, wherein each memory is analyzed and understood before being integrated into the whole, reflects the mother’s personality and her desire to be heard, understood, and believed. Ultimately, she must work to overcome society’s misperceptions and prove that she is a competent mother who is trying to protect her family.

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“It was as though grief were a thing she’d swallowed, a parasitic worm that didn’t allow room for food, for proper functioning, for anything but itself.”


(Chapter 26, Page 241)

This passage highlights the all-consuming nature of grief and personifies it as a vampiric entity that sucks life from its host. After her husband’s death, the mother cannot sleep and loses her appetite. Though she is holding herself together as best she can, her body shows the physical signs of neglect. Eventually, her lack of sleep and proper nutrition will erode her mental capacity.

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“The usual exhaustion rolled over her at the sensation of being a specimen sliced and pressed between glass.”


(Chapter 28, Page 259)

The vitiligo has always made the mother self-conscious about how others view her. As she compares herself to a creature under a microscope, her thoughts highlight her experience of being viewed as different because people are ignorant of her condition. After the home invasion, her face is marked differently, and as people stare at her injuries, wondering what happened to her, their scrutiny reawakens her trauma around the experience of being stared at.

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“There was something knocked loose in her skull. She resisted the urge to scratch a finger into her ear canal to try to pull it out.”


(Chapter 29, Page 273)

The sensory language emphasizes her psychological distress as the police list the inconsistencies in her story. The passage conveys the mother's discomfort and inner turmoil, for her injuries combine with the lingering effects of the pain meds and cause disorientation and confusion. The character's urge to scratch her ear canal to pull out the sensation adds a physical dimension to her discomfort. Like an itch that can’t be scratched, she finds it impossible to cope with her distressing thoughts and the sergeant’s refusal to believe her.

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“A sense of loss washed over her as she recalled the way she, the way her daughter, had hoped that the strange sights after her husband’s death were little indications of his still-hovering presence.”


(Chapter 30, Page 281)

Most people don’t want ghosts in their homes, but the mother is willing to welcome the ghost of her late husband. Learning that the uncanny events happening at her home are, in fact, due to the presence of the Corner and not a ghostly presence causes the mother to relive her husband's loss. Ironically, the perceived apparition is not there to comfort them; instead, it is a real man who is there to harm them.

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“Her shoulders hunched around the growing fear in her chest, her inability to make herself heard, understood, believed.”


(Chapter 31, Page 290)

The sergeant’s dismissal of her story makes the mother feel small, insignificant, and incompetent. Though she is physically small, she has always been told to make herself smaller in the face of danger. Her posture therefore reflects her feelings of defeat, and the sergeant’s lack of belief causes her to disbelieve her own recollections and understanding of the truth.

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“The fact that the Corner was in the world and her mother, her grandmother, her mother-in-law, her husband were all gone was a rock in her heart, a furious understanding of unfairness and responsibility.”


(Chapter 32, Page 300)

This passage expresses the protagonist's existential awareness of the arbitrary nature of loss and survival. The metaphorical "rock in her heart" represents the tremendous burden of loss, which is substantial, immovable, and deeply engraved in her being. She is burdened by the injustice of living without these influential individuals while the Corner continues to exist. Thus, she is not only grieving the loss of these people, but she is also struggling with the isolation of dealing with her current predicament alone.

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“Her capability, the confidence of the lines she drew, the clear architectural lettering, all spoke to her in a way that said, You are not crazy. It was all real. You can get them back. You will get better. You can protect them.”


(Chapter 32, Page 304)

The mother maps a plan of action to get her children back and to convince the police to believe her. Actively creating a plan makes her feel competent and in control, and she regains her confidence in her ability to handle the situation. Although she has been beaten down physically and emotionally, she self-corrects in the absence of any external help, and this moment highlights the mother’s determination and resilience in the face of immense external conflict.

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“It was as though a nightmare that should play only in her head had been filmed.”


(Chapter 33, Page 316)

Watching the game camera footage is a disquieting experience for the mother as she views the Corner stalking their home. She has spent considerable mental energy convincing herself that the shadowy figure in her nightmare is not real, and even when she first sees him in the house, she thinks that she might be dreaming. Now, as she views the nightmare on the screen, she must accept the existence of the intruder as a reality. However, her horror is tempered by a sense of vindication because the police must also do the same.

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“An ancient part of her brain flooded with the understanding that the Corner was mortal, that prey could escape, that though everything was all at once wrong, it wasn’t over.”


(Chapter 34, Page 328)

Having felt like a vulnerable animal for most of her life, the mother changes her mindset when she realizes that she can also be a predator. By seeing the Corner as a man, not an immortal monster, she empowers herself with the realization that she can defeat him. This crucial internal shift changes the tone of the narrative from dread to cautious optimism as the mother refuses to be a helpless victim.

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“His shadow dragged the pain he’d inflicted, the power he’d wielded, behind him like a cape. She watched him wrapping himself in it, fabric threaded with ghosts he’d made.”


(Chapter 34, Page 332)

Seeing the Corner up close, the mother perceives the depths of his evil nature. The passage contrasts his pleasure in making others suffer with wearing a badge of honor or a superhero cape, twisting the imagery of heroism into something corrupt and monstrous. Because he is proud of his malice, his attitude implies that he is an inherently murderous person who repeatedly engages in such acts of brutality.

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“[S]uffering and misfortune fall as wide and uniformly as snow, melting out of visibility but leaving their pain behind.”


(Chapter 35, Page 339)

The novel ends on a hopeful note as the mother is reunited with her children. However, the tone remains somber and contemplative as she reflects on the inevitable and enduring nature of the family’s suffering. Her experiences leave her resigned to life's hardships, and she accepts the bitter truth that no one is immune to tragedy. As the snow falls “wide and uniformly,” the image suggests that suffering and misfortune affect everyone indiscriminately. The image of the melting snow also indicates that while the visible signs of suffering may fade over time, the emotional impact remains.

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