From
. . . NEVER
A watch with the insides showing. Naked in front of him.
Even
so, one dark snowy afternoon, hidden in our blue-and-gray refuge from the rest
of the ward, using our time slot in the tiny room like a prostitute and her
customer would, I feel an unexpected sense of closeness to him. Drawn to this thin
blond-faced doctor. This man who controls how much longer I have to be a psychiatric patient
here.
From
. . . SUMMER OF THE SPIDER
It
hung suspended like a trapeze artist on a wire fence next to the Baptist
Church. A big black spider covered with yellow
splotches. Fine orange fuzz sprouted on
its long legs. What made it unique was
the white gluey substance that spun from its spinneret in up and down strokes
that looked like writing. Reverend Aiken
said, "The
spider has written War. A message from God that the war will go on."
From
. . . CROSSROADS
"I
tried to kill myself last Christmas."
John Connelly, the group leader, threw out that laconic sentence, its
seven words exploding like grenades, one after the other.
Lorenzo's
white cane clattered onto the tile floor, its impact resounding like still
another bomb. He barely heard Dr.
Schroeder murmur:
"What
stopped you?"
"Nothing
stopped me! I didn't take enough fucking
pills! I slept a day and a half, woke up
alive and Christmas was over."
From
. . . TRIANGLE
I'm
bending over the bathtub, giving it a decent scrub with a new Teflon sponge I
found in the kitchen drawer. The Comet
Cleanser I've sprinkled into the tub smells like bleach. My eyes smart as I inhale the green powder,
that's now mixing with the thin layer of water in the tub. Scrubbing away in the corners, up around the
rim, I sense Richard at the door. Maybe
it's his aftershave, the pad of his bare feet.
Something.
He
comes up behind me. I'm only wearing a
long tee--and it's riding up over my butt.
I know what's next and brace myself.
From
. . . TROPHIES
Frank
raised the fish and slammed it onto the sharp spikes. You could hear the sound of tearing flesh.
Madeline
began to hit Frank. "You
bastard," she cried. "Are you
satisfied now?"
"You crazy woman.
Leave me alone." At that,
Frank began to walk toward the bar.
"I need a drink."
Madeline
fell to the foot of the display board.
She was crying bitterly now. The
blood was running down the fish's body and onto the ground. Little by little it began to lose its
brilliant colors, finally turning a dull, metallic grey.
From
. . . SWEETS
I
was awakened by the shuddering crash of the front door slamming.
"You
will not call a cab, bitch. I'll take
your stupid mother home!"
I
snapped fully awake and realized with astonishment that it was Paul's voice I
heard.
"Please
keep your voice down, Paul. You'll wake
the baby."
"The
baby, the baby," Paul simpered, mimicking Liz. "Always the good
little mother. Can't
stay up late anymore. Have to get
up early to get to work to make out with the boss!"
"Paul,
for God's sake, Mom will hear you--"