Read Vultures at Twilight Online
Authors: Charles Atkins
âWhat did it say?'
âIt was gibberish, completely insane. She hadn't slept or eaten for days and was having religious fantasies, like she was a saint. I think the pages were some sort of incantation. Anyway, about a month after Wendy's suicide, we got four boxes delivered from the hospital. Three of them were filled with journals, dozens of them. At the time, I wanted Philip to throw them out; he couldn't. So we stuck them in one of the upstairs rooms and that was that.'
âDid he read them?' Ada asked
âNot then. But a few months back we decided to work on the upstairs of the main house, and he found the boxes. Suddenly, going through them became some sort of mission. At first, I thought it was healthy, finally give him a chance to put Wendy's ghost to rest. But the more he read, the worse it got. He became obsessed. He'd sit up at night, reading page after page of that nonsense. It changed him.'
While we'd been talking, careful to keep our voices low, Evie's condo had been stripped bare.
âMr Jacobs.' The foreman came over to us. âDo you want these chairs to go?'
âEverything,' he said, getting to his feet. âAda, Lil, thanks.' And he walked back to where the Hassam painting had been tidily crated into a custom plywood box. He examined the joinery and gently rocked it from side to side. âGood, this goes in my car.'
TWENTY-FOUR
H
ow did this happen? I wondered as I approached the two cardboard cartons that had been delivered to my doorstep. What was Ada thinking?
âI can't do it, Lil,' Tolliver had said over the phone after we'd finished Evie's cleanout. Ada and I had been having tea in my kitchen, reminiscing about our friend, and, of course, speculating about the murders. Not to leave her out, I'd put the phone on speaker. âI can't look at them. I know I have to do something with them,' he'd explained. âBut if I gave them to the police without knowing what was in them, it might just be a horrible waste of their time. What am I supposed to tell them? My husband read these and got depressed, and maybe that has something to do with why he was murdered. They'll think I'm nuts. They already think I did it. I keep waiting for them to come and lock me up.' He'd sighed. âI feel trapped. I can't just throw them out. Someone has to go through them.' Before he asked, I could feel it coming. âWould you do it for me?'
And before I could stop her, Ada had agreed. Of course, now she was conveniently out of the house with Aaron on some shopping expedition just as the boxes arrived and I was getting out of the shower. In the spirit of fairness, I threw on a wrap-around dress, and, still in slippers, let myself into her condo and had the delivery guy from Tolliver's shop leave one of the three cartons in her foyer.
The boxes were heavy and crisscrossed with clear packing tape and silver duct tape that had been used and peeled back. I got a serrated knife from the kitchen and sawed through the layers.
âOh my.' So many spiral-bound notebooks, like the ones I'd buy for my daughters each year before the start of school; different sizes and colors, the work of a lifetime. Where to start? It was overwhelming. And not that I believed in ghosts, but there was something eerie about this stack of writings from a girl who had gone insane and committed suicide. The scent of death lingered. I know it was just my imagination, but sitting there, I had a foreboding, that maybe I should have called Mattie or Hank and had them taken away. âYou promised,' I reminded myself. More accurately, Ada had promised. Still . . .
I pulled out two of the books and settled back in my blue-and-white upholstered wing chair. I switched on the lamp and flipped open a red notebook. On the inside cover, she had written her name and what I took to be a room number. The first entry was dated June 15, 1998.
Fresh book, fresh life. Nice . . . sweet. I should be nice and sweet. The road to freedom is nice and sweet. Wendy, a nice and sweet name, pity the girl can't follow. Like follow the leader. Maybe if I let my name lead, and I followed all would be well. In a world without pills, in a world without doctors. Come for your medicine, nice, sweet girl. Take your pills in a world without thrills. Come Wendy Wendy Wendy. Come Wendy Wendy Wendy.
Roar my faithful nurse. âMed time. Med time.' Meet her at the station, it's in my contract. Show more enthusiasm, swallow pills, become sweet and nice, nice and sweet, like good and plenty, I'd be good to eat.
Well, fresh book, new book, sweet book. I must take my meds. Good meds sweet meds, sugar-coated pills, yummy yummy yummy. Screaming in my tummy.
I calculated her age in 1998, somewhere in her mid twenties. Within two years she would be dead. I wondered if there was significance to this being on the top. Was this one that Philip had read? I turned the pages.
June 30, 1998
They gave me privileges in my prison without crime. When can I leave, Dr Kluft, Dr Kluft? He smiles; I'm doing better, better every day. Now that I take my pills, I have privileges and wander grounds, beneath watchful eyes. I feel their eyes, heavy through my back as I sit and write. Eyes that search me out and strip me naked. I face the shallow pond, with its fake waterfall that fools the frogs. How deep is the pond, enough for Ophelia to float away? I think not. My privileges do not extend that far. The eyes would pull me back and tie me down. Strap me to the bed. Tie me down, tie me down.
My tongue like dust. It's the pills. It's the pills. Haven't shit in four days. It's the pills. It's the pills. I squint to see the frogs. It's the pills. It's the pills. But without them, they won't let me feel the grass or see the frogs, or, dare I hope, leave.
Come Philip, sweet brother. I will be good this time. I will be good. I promise. I will sit in my room, that overlooks the Nillewaug. I will not move. I will not worry you or Tolliver. I will do as I am told, I will take my pills and never shit again. I will squint at the frogs and do as I am told. I will not be sweet Ophelia Plath floating in the pond; it's probably too shallow anyway.
I wondered if anyone had read these while she was alive. Had they been part of some therapy? Had she read them to her doctor? In the end, she did drown, perhaps at the very pond she'd sat beside.
I turned pages, focusing on the small careful writing that even in its symmetry betrayed a fine drug-induced tremor, like someone with Parkinson's. She wrote daily, many of the entries an accounting of the groups and the therapies that she had attended. Some like poems and many spoke of death; her death. Occasionally, she dropped little hints of what had happened in her family, but vague and off-center.
July 22, 1998
I find a tree and I sit down.
I follow ants as they merry round.
I speak to the man with gray threaded beard
I call to brother, bent and weird.
I call to mother with tears in her voice
I touch father who left no choice.
I sit with ants as they merry round
I dream of Freedom dug deep in the ground.
I wonder if dirt will tickle my toes, stick in my hair?
Clog my nose?
Will it take the pills that swirl in my blood?
Will it fly me to heaven when the doctor is done?
The phone rang, and I was startled. I checked the caller ID, and picked up.
âAda?'
âLil? I've found something. At least I think I have.' Her voice was tentative.
âYou're looking at the journals?' I asked.
âYes.'
âI didn't hear you come home.'
âWe got back an hour ago. The poor girl.'
âI know,' I agreed. âI just started. What did you find?'
âCome over, or better yet, why don't I bring it there.'
âI'll put on water.'
âLovely. And, Lil . . .'
âYes.'
âBrace yourself.'
TWENTY-FIVE
I
stared at the torn and dirt-spattered page. It felt as if someone had punched me; the room swam and my heart pounded. I couldn't breathe.
âLil, I'm sorry.' Ada's voice sounded disconnected. She stood behind me and tried to give some perspective. âWe shouldn't take it literally. The girl wasn't in her right mind. It was some fantasy or wish she had.'
Her words made sense, but they were no antidote for the venom that had leapt off the page. How could someone say these things? They couldn't be true. I forced myself to focus on the crumpled paper. The notebook it had come from was mangled and dirt smeared. It stood out from the rest that were all carefully arranged and stacked.
âIt was on the top,' she had said.
Like the mushrooms in
Alice In Wonderland
it had demanded attention â
read me read me
. And, like the mushrooms, it changed everything.
The page was dated May 14, 2000. Very close to her death. The writing was wild and angular, much different from the careful printing in the book I'd looked at earlier. I forced myself to reread the hateful prose.
Take me to my lover, mother
Drive me in your car.
Curl my hair, shine my shoes
Twinkle twinkle little star.
He'll touch and probe
Explore my wonders
As above the heaven thunders.
No, you mustn't
Don't touch me there
Your nurse will wonder
Is she your wife?
She'll see my blush
My virgin's blood.
She'll know you've touched
I've come undone.
Take me to my lover, mother
In the Main Street manse just down the road.
A pretty girl in a big white house.
My bicycle won't carry
I shouldn't go that far.
He'll touch me in my privates
His tongue will search me out
He'll poke and prod
My wonders, lady
Then hide away the dribble bits
With cotton from his cubby
He'll sponge me gently.
Then send me to my Mummy.
When he's done.
He's had enough.
He's taken all.
I've come undone.
There had been more to her verse, but the page was torn, as though she had reread her poem and found it too offensive . . . or someone else had.
I couldn't move. I couldn't think. I felt Ada beside me. I knew what she must be thinking; how could she not?
âIt wasn't Bradley,' I said. âIt's completely ridiculous.' She was insane after all; this was some sort of delusion. Didn't her mother go into the examination room with him? I tried to remember; it was typical for parents to go in with their children. But wasn't Wendy Conroy older when she came to visit? When the problems had started, she had been a teenager. With teens, he usually left the parents outside in the waiting room. Outside with me, his nurse . . .
or is she his wife?
What was it Bradley had said? I pictured his face, his pale blue eyes that crinkled with his smile. â
When they get to a certain age, they won't tell me what the problem is if their mother's in the room. Usually around eleven or twelve, I ask Mom to stay outside. You'd be amazed at what some of the kids ask me, but it's perfectly normal. They all want to know about sex.
'
We had laughed about that, how fifty percent of what he did was closer to being a psychiatrist than a general practitioner. People were forever stopping him in the street, asking for advice. It didn't seem to matter if it was related to their belly pain or their in-law problems. It had always filled me with a quiet pride that my husband, my Bradley, was someone that people came to with their problems.
And now this, from the mind of a tortured young woman came obscene accusations. I wanted to burn it.
âCould she have been talking about someone else?' Ada asked.
âI don't know. Bradley was her doctor for years. He was everyone's doctor. No one has ever said something like this, or hinted. This is outrageous. And he can't defend himself.'
âLil.' She sat beside me. âWe can't jump to conclusions. Wendy Conroy was psychotic. There's no way of knowing the truth. They're poems; maybe it's a metaphor? She saw a lot of doctors; maybe it had nothing to do with Bradley. She could have been talking about one of her psychiatrists, or some other kind of doctor.'
I tried to listen, my mind raced; she was talking about Bradley. The white house, me filling out appointment slips in the waiting room, âcotton from the cubby'. I pictured his tidy office, with the glass-fronted cabinets stocked with everything needed, whether to handle an emergency delivery or to set a fracture. Maybe he had given her a gynecologic exam and it had become twisted into one of her delusions. That could happen, couldn't it? A young girl on the brink of madness, what would she think of the stirrups and the speculum? Although, he always had me or Gladys, his nurse, assist him with gynecologic exams. He never did them without a chaperone in the room . . . but is that true?
I couldn't even entertain that what she alleged had actually occurred. Bradley was not a pedophile.
âIt was right on top,' Ada had said. âIt may have been her last journal, I've been flipping through the others, and they're all older. Some from when she was a teenager.'
âWhy would she write that?' I put the book down, resisting an impulse to tear it up, to burn it.
âTolliver said she was very sick. It's probably a delusion. I'm sure it has nothing to do with Bradley.'
I felt numb. âHe was the only doctor in town, certainly the only one on Main Street. He was the only one she ever saw. At least until her problems started. Then there were a lot of doctors. A lot of psychiatrists, neurologists . . .'