During Victoria’s torture case, the white wall is said to be like a jail. The human traffickers liked the girl’s appearance and used her for sexual satisfactions. The girl was locked together with other girls and done all sought of sexual torture. The author says that these girls were used as a tool for sexual satisfaction. Admittedly, not everything that one did in the past is good to remember (Ancona and George 24). This scene makes Victoria white hate her past. Her past was full of terrible mistreatment and sexual harassment by the human trafficking group though she managed to escape (Duncan and Paul 24).
Upon the realization that her husband, Aaron White was involved in human trafficking, Victoria is consumed by the desire to kill him. She remembers the sexual torment she underwent and the nightmares that make her even bitterer against her husband. Victoria prepares a meal where she drugs her husband and he becomes unconscious so that she could tie him to the chair with tape and ropes. When Aaron, her husband comes to, she tortures him right before castrating him to death. The torture was through words and actions like hitting him hard in his vulnerable state tied to the chair. Victoria liked seeing the fear and the twisted face of the man after she tells him she was killing him. She hates the past and killing Aaron is a good ravage to overcome the nightmares. The place is filled with blood and evidence that Aaron had been tortured and castrated out of bitterness and revenge. Due to Victoria’s anger and thirst for Aaron’s blood, there was evidence that she was responsible for his death until Johnson came and changed the scene.
Works Cited
Ancona, George. The past. New York: Benchmark, 2002. Print.
Duncan, Paul. Noir Fiction. Harpenden: Pocket Essentials, 2000. Print.