Authors: Nova Ren Suma
Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Social Issues, #Runaways, #Horror & Ghost Stories, #Visionary & Metaphysical
told him you were here.”
My real mom would have called
Jamie. That’s something she actually
would
do. This is her, isn’t it? This
is
my mother, and this crazy girl is me.
“He picked up your van from that
party for you. He said he found your
keys.”
“Please tell him thanks for me,” I say.
“He might visit. I hope that’s okay.”
I don’t want Jamie to see me like this;
it’s bad enough he knows, and I don’t
know how much my mom told him, so I
can’t be sure how much he knows. It
could be all; it could be every awful
thing. He’s probably so relieved right
now that we broke up; he’s probably
eternally grateful to be able to stay out of
this. Away from me.
— — —
Soon it’s time for good-byes. There’s
the hug, never-ending so I feel like I
can’t
breathe,
and
there’s
the
remembered scent of my mother’s hair,
which brings me back to childhood, and
I’m thinking randomly about the wasp
sting and the frozen peas, and I feel
worse again for doubting her. I don’t
know what’s happened to me. To my
head.
I let her go without standing up, as my
legs weigh twice as much as they did
just minutes before and my left arm feels
too weak to lift. Only my right arm can
be made to move, and I wave that at her
until she disappears down the hall.
It isn’t until she’s gone that I think to
raise my right hand to my throat. I feel
the exposed skin at my collarbone,
tracing my fingers around the base of my
neck like I’m aiming a guillotine. I let
my hand go lower, feeling for it. The
pendant isn’t there.
I don’t remember seeing it here, in the
hospital. I don’t remember feeling it,
against my skin, all those days I spent in
bed. Was it on me when they brought me
in? It should have been around my neck,
but what if something happened when
they carried me out on the stretcher?
What if it fell off? What if it got caught
on something and it broke? I have to go
after my mom and get her to look for it at
home.
I stand up.
I try to remember which direction my
mom went down the hall.
It takes me a moment and then I see
the exit—of course, that’s the only
direction she could have gone; that’s the
one exit. There isn’t another one on this
whole ward.
I walk toward it, but the walking is a
difficult thing to manage. I feel sure I’m
being faster than I am, except the tiles
under my feet are changing too slowly
and the window in the wall is the same
window that was there before.
It takes me a long time to make it even
a quarter of the way down, and it’s here
that I come upon the sounds of them
talking. There’s an open, unguarded door
and two voices thrown out into the
hallway. The first voice, the one I
recognize, belongs to my mom, and the
other voice, the voice that sounds only
barely familiar, must be one of the
doctors. They’re talking about something
that confounds me at first: They’re
talking about my dad. The last time I saw
the guy, I was three years old, which for
all intents and purposes means I have no
memory of ever seeing him at all. And
yet here’s my mom telling some random
doctor all about him.
“And he wouldn’t come to the phone,”
she says. “And I’ve called around, but I
haven’t been able to find where he’s
staying since. I mean, I have no idea. He
could be out on the streets again. He
could be sleeping under a bridge. He
probably is. I don’t know. It’s not like
anyone would tell me.”
“So was there ever any diagnosis?
Did he tell you?”
“He didn’t.” She sighs and stays silent
for a long while.
I’m hovering just outside the door and
I wonder if she can sense I’m here. Then
she starts talking again, starts saying
these things she never bothered to tell
me. Her own daughter. About my own
dad.
“He never said anything to me about
it. But there was the medication he was
taking when I knew him. He left an old
prescription bottle in the house when he
took off, and I found it after. I remember
seeing the label. Thinking,
What are
these for?
So I looked them up.
Antipsychotics. I mean, schizophrenia,
could that have been it? How could he
not tell me? I know it can be hereditary.
Doctor, with Lauren, I mean she’s too
young yet, but do you think—”
I lose track of the rest of it when an
orderly takes my elbow and says, “Are
you confused? Do you need to go sit
down?”
The orderly spoke loudly enough to
bring my mom to the door, and the
doctor, and there’s a nurse, and there’s a
shuffling patient coming this way, and
some other hospital person in hospital
clothes, and they all see me and they all
know I heard.
My mom looks stricken.
“Lauren, do you need something?” the
doctor says. I don’t know her name, but
she knows mine.
“Mom, I was going to ask . . .” I settle
my eyes on my mom. Apparently she
thinks my absent, supposedly homeless
dad is a certified lunatic and she’s been
keeping this little detail from me for my
whole life. “My necklace. My gray one.
Could you bring that for me from home,
too?”
She glances at the doctor. The doctor
nods. So she turns back to me and she
says sure, she’ll look for it at home and
bring it with everything else tomorrow.
“Lauren, did you—” my mom starts to
say, but the doctor there beside her is
shaking her head. “I’ll see you
tomorrow, Lauren, honey,” my mom says
instead.
I nod and make my way slowly back
down the hallway to stare at the wall
while sitting in an uncomfortable,
antisocial vinyl chair.
—
52
—
A
new day, but I haven’t been staring at
the wall. I’ve been staring at the girl.
She hasn’t noticed because she notices
nothing. She hasn’t moved since the
nurse led her in and sat her down, not
just not moving from this chair to another
chair, but at all. Not even to fidget or
scratch an itch. Not to blink her eyes or
adjust the piece of fire-red hair that’s
fallen in front of her nose.
Maybe she is sitting very, very still in
the hopes that I notice her. There are
other patients who are louder, and flail
more, and in the midst of all that she
stands out. Or there could be another
reason. She must think we’re being
watched here—she must know for sure if
she’s keeping herself that still.
Her voice won’t reach me through the
drugged confines of my head, so she’s
come here in the flesh. It’s the only way.
“Fiona?” I prompt her.
She doesn’t stir.
I try her name again, louder. “Fiona. I
see
you, okay? I see you there.”
Her body betrays no movement. She’s
catatonic, if you can be in that state with
your eyes still open. There she sits, as if
formed into the vinyl chair by a mold of
wax.
I move chairs so I’m right beside her.
Then I reach out and shake her knee, but
it’s like playing with the CPR dummy in
health class. Deadweight.
“Can’t you talk?”
I whisper.
“It’s
me.”
Her eyes are still open, and I wedge
my face in front of them, so she
has
to
look at me. Even then, the brown irises
seem to cast straight through me, as if my
body has lost all its skin and bones and
bloody, bubbling organs so the blank
wall behind me holds more space in this
world than I do.
“Blink if you can hear me,” I say.
She blinks.
Then I get an idea.
“Write it down if you can’t talk,” I tell
her. I pass her my gray notebook, which
is the only thing besides the socks that
made it through to me on the inside. The
nurses’ station acts like the TSA at an
airport. Everything must be checked, and
since they have no scanners, that means
by hand. They’ve only given me two
things from the bags my mom brought me
for now, and say they have to go through
checking the toiletries and all the rest.
I place the open notebook on her
knees. She doesn’t flinch. The lock of
hair in front of her nose doesn’t shift, so
I’m not positive she’s even breathing.
But she blinked. I did see that.
I take the pencil in my hand and place
it into hers. The nurses wouldn’t let me
have a pen, but they let me use one of
their own dull-sharpened pencils. It
barely writes, but I tighten her fingers
around it so it doesn’t fall. I position the
hand holding the pencil on the paper.
Then I step away and wait to see what
she’ll do with it.
Which is nothing. The pencil drops
and rolls across the floor.
The screams that come next aren’t
from her mouth, or mine. A wailing can
be made out down the hall, and it’s
getting closer. When the new patient—
some girl I don’t recognize—is walked
through, struggling with two male nurses
as she’s led past the common room, I
cover my ears and watch her go. She
flails and lets her hair fly. I uncover one
ear for a second to see if she’s stopped
and quickly plug it closed again; it
sounds like she’s yodeling.
That’s
someone with problems.
When I look back to Fiona, I see she’s
moved. She isn’t catatonic, as she wants
everyone to believe; she’s lightning-
quick and on alert. She’s the girl I
remember from the house next door, who
pitched her bags down the stairs and
locked me in the closet. She’s the girl
who always thought of running, one eye
on the road. Even now, escape plans
hatch in her mind, but I’m not sure
they’re for her to follow—I think this
time they’re meant for me.
Somehow she’s gotten herself to the
wall behind the nurses’ station. She’s
pulled the fire alarm. And she’s returned
to her statue pose on the vinyl seat, her
mouth slightly open now so a nice,
telltale line of drool can emerge. Her
eyes focus on nothing but the dust motes
floating around her face in beautiful
snowflake patterns, mimicking what’s
coming down outside. All within an
instant, before the nurses react to the
alarm and come to line us up and check
with the fire marshal to see if we need to
evacuate. That’s how fast Fiona Burke
moved.
—
53
—
I
don’t run.
I can picture what Fiona wants from
me: a daring escape while the hospital
staff is distracted. She longs for the sight
of me leaping over the half door that
divides the patients from the so-called
healthy people on the other side, making
it out to the elevator, and riding it down
to freedom. But she’s forgotten how
slow I am.
There is the moment in which I could
make my escape.
And then that moment passes.
I do make it downstairs, and outside,
but only with the nurses and the
orderlies and the other patients. A group
of us takes the back stairs, the emergency
exit I didn’t even know was so close to
the common room, and we are made to
do so without getting our coats, though
it’s still only January.
It had been snowing before, I think,
but now the bleached-out sky spits up
only a few damp flurries. So we stand
there shivering in our cotton shirts, with
a lucky few in sweatshirts. We watch the
parking lot in a daze.
Fiona is at the end of the row we’ve
formed against the hospital’s back brick
wall, near the shadows and out of reach
of the sun. No one’s guarding her, and
someone should be. Her spine is