by JA Huss
“You absolutely do, Chella. You walked out of the house once. Twice, actually, but I stopped you the first time before you got out the door. The second time you got all the way down the street. You were dressed. You had a coat. You had your purse. You were going somewhere. Where were you going?”
I start to cry again.
“I didn’t tell Bric. I should’ve. We could’ve seen this coming. But I didn’t want to think—I didn’t want him to tell me—that I might be the problem. I liked you too much to even consider giving you up.”
“Is that why you stayed away from me that one weekend?”
“Yeah.” He sighs. “I thought it was me until we had that night with Bric. You were so sweet that night, Chella. So sweet to sleep with. Not the fucking. I don’t care about the fucking. You cuddled up to me and wrapped your arms around me.” He sighs again. “And I realized it probably wasn’t me. It was a relief and—eye-opening, too. I guess. Because up until that moment, I swear to God, Marcella Walcott, I thought the world revolved around me.”
I smile, even though I feel so fucking ashamed of myself right now.
“And I know that most kids learn pretty early that they are not the center of the universe, but I always was. I had so many contradicting opinions thrown at me as a kid. Sometimes I was important because I was a billionaire’s heir. Sometimes I was important because I was so defective. And it was so contradictory, you know.”
I turn in his arms so I can lay my head on his chest and see his face. It’s too dark to see anything in his eyes but a little glimmer of light from outside.
“I was everyone’s whole world, good or bad. Love me or hate me. I was the problem. I was the center of all things happening in my life. Until I met you.”
I close my eyes and let it happen. Let the darkness take me. Just give in.
“It wasn’t a peek, was it, Chella?”
I shake my head and begin to cry.
“Shh,” he says, smoothing my hair down. “It wasn’t a peek for you at all. It was a part of you.”
“I’m sorry, Smith. I’m sorry I didn’t tell you how fucked up I am.”
“It’s all right. I’m not mad. Not even close. But I do want to know what happened. Because… Chella, you are the center of my world now. I’m sorry too. I’m sorry you’re stuck with me. But you are. I’m kind of a dick when I don’t get my way. And I like to be in control and call the shots. And there’s no changing my mind once I’ve made it up. So you’re stuck with me.”
I don’t know what to say. “I know you want an answer, but I’m not there yet. I have no answers. That’s why I’m here. I’m doing my best to figure out what the fuck is wrong with me.”
“Why us?” he says. “How could we possibly be your answer? We are three very fucked-up men who share a girl like she’s candy. We play with her emotions and pull her in every direction we can think of, until she goes crazy and leaves. I just…” He stops for a moment. “I just really didn’t think we were doing that with you. But I guess I was wrong. I’m the one who’s sorry, Chella. I think we’re the ones who fucked you up.”
Chapter Thirty-Eight - Smith
“You’re not,” she says.
“Then tell me what happened. You blacked out, Chella. You were talking crazy. Screaming not to stop. Yelling and making promises to be good. What the fuck was that all about?”
She’s quiet. For a long time. I am just about to give in to sleep when she finally says something.
“My life was a secret like yours.”
“Where did you go? And don’t tell me some bullshit answer about church.”
She’s quiet again. But then she takes in a deep breath and says, “I’ve been seeing a doctor for seven years.”
“Why?” I ask, sitting up in bed so she has to sit up too. I need to see her face for this. I can’t miss a moment of it.
“I’m…” She shakes her head. “I’m… sick.”
I grab her face and hold it tight. “How? How are you sick?”
“I’m broken. In the head, that’s all, Smith.”
She tries to get up, but I grab her hand. More roughly than I intend, but I’m not letting her walk out now. “You don’t get to say that and leave, Chella. Fuck that. You’re not leaving until you tell me what’s happening to you.”
“I’m sick,” she says, loudly. “OK? I’m sorry, but I don’t owe you an explanation.”
“The fuck you don’t,” I say. “I love you, dammit. And if you’re sick and need help, then I’m gonna make sure you get it and get better.”
“You can’t fix me,” she yells. “No one can fix me but me.” She yanks her hand away and this time I let her go.
“Tell me why you came here,” I say as I watch her go into the closet and start getting dressed.
“To fuck you, Smith,” she says. Trying her best to be mean. “I came to fuck you. And your friends, OK?” She pulls a pair of jeans on and then stops to look at me. “Does that make it all better? Because that’s the truth. I knew who you were. I knew what you guys did with Rochelle. She and I planned it.”
“What?” Quin asks from the bedroom door.
I had no idea they were still here, but they are. Bric is standing behind Quin, shaking his head at me. Let her go, he mouths. Don’t do this. Not now.
I’m going to listen to him. I have every intention of listening to him. But Quin…
“What the fuck did you and Rochelle plan, Chella? I think you owe me an answer.”
Chella is pulling on a sweater now. “Why don’t you ask Bric why she left? Remember when you told me you thought Smith paid her off? To get her to leave?”
“What?” It’s my turn to be confused now. “I never did that.”
“I know,” Chella says, slipping her feet into some shearling boots. I’m suddenly having a flashback to the first night we found her. “Bric did.”
Quin spins around. “Is that true?”
“Look—”
“Answer me, asshole,” Quin yells. “Did you tell her leave? Did you pay her off?”
“He didn’t pay her off,” Chella says. “He gave her an ultimatum.”
“What ultimatum?” Quin pushes Bric back with two hands to his chest. “What did you fucking tell her?”
“He told her to get an abortion,” Chella says, grabbing her purse. “That’s what he told her.”
And then she pushes both of them out of the doorway and walks off.
I jump out of bed and follow her down the hall.
Bric follows me, silent. But Quin follows both of us, asking about… fuck, I can’t even process it. I only care about where the fuck Chella is going.
“How do you know this?” He’s screaming by the time we all get out onto the hallway. “How, Chella? You said you didn’t know.”
“I didn’t.” She whirls around, her long hair flying out in all directions. “Until yesterday. We saw the same sex therapist, Quin. And I went in for an appointment to tell her about our plans for last night and she gave me an update on Rochelle because we were in therapy together and she felt I needed to know before I…” Chella stops talking, looking conflicted. “Before I took this final step with you guys. So she told me why she left.” She points at Bric. “And he’s why. She got pregnant, Quin. And she went to Bric for advice because she didn’t know whose baby it was. Yours or his. And he told her to get an abortion. So there. You’ve got your answer. Now you have no excuse not to go find her.”
She punches the call button for the elevator and it’s just our luck that the fucking thing opens, waiting patiently. Like it was in on her escape plan.
I follow her in. Hell, all three of us follow her in. She’s busy texting someone. “Chella,” I say, grabbing her by the shoulders. “You’re saying this because you don’t want to tell me about yourself. This isn’t about Rochelle.”
She punches the button for the first floor and the doors begin to close. “I don’t owe you an explanation,” she says. “Game over, Smith. Game. Over.”
&
nbsp; I look at Bric, who is frowning so hard, I have a stab of pain in my chest for him. Did he really tell Rochelle to get an abortion?
That pain turns to sickness in my stomach.
Quin is silent now. Standing still. Saying nothing. Dead look on his face as he considers what this means. As he comes to terms with the truth.
Rochelle was pregnant. She had an abortion and she left because of… not him, he realizes.
We both look at Bric at the same time.
The elevator doors open and Chella bolts.
We follow her out, all three of us talking at once.
“Chella,” Bric says, “Please. Stop. Let’s just talk—”
“Chella,” Quin tries at the same time. “Who is your therapist? Chella!”
“Chella,” I say, “Stop. Talk to me. Tell me what’s happening.”
“Fuck you,” she says, lashing out at all of us as she makes the stairs and starts hopping down them as fast as she can. “Game over!” She yells it so loud it echoes off the lobby ceiling. There is only a doorman and a valet here right now. It’s almost dawn, the day just beginning.
We follow her down the stairs. All three of us trying to chase her down, breaking that final rule we never thought we’d have to break.
The valet has to step aside so Chella doesn’t plow him over as she enters the revolving door and pushes.
I get there just in time to slip in with her. “Chella,” I say, grabbing her shoulder.
She turns on me, mouth an angry line. “Don’t touch me!”
We get outside and she stops, confused for a moment. Maybe wondering if she’s got her car here.
She doesn’t. I know this. “Let me take you home,” I say.
But then Quin and Bric are outside with us. We are all half-dressed in tuxedos. I don’t even have shoes on and everyone on the street is looking at us like we are a some kind of massive trainwreck.
Chella notices the attention the same time I do and stops to take a deep breath. She turns to me, smiling. “I do not want to be part of a public scene,” she says sweetly. “Never again. Give me this one last consideration, at least.”
Quin and Bric stop next to me. We are nothing but questions and guilt.
“Marcella,” a deep, stern voice calls from across the street.
“Oh, that’s just fucking great,” Chella says, throwing up her arms. “Have you been following me again? Just what the fuck?”
“Who the hell—” Quin starts.
But we all recognize him before Quin can finish his sentence.
Her father.
Chapter Thirty-Nine - Bric
“Shit,” I mutter under my breath. “Let’s go back inside.” I grab Chella by the shoulder, but she turns on me. Turns on me.
“Don’t,” she seethes. “This is over, Bric. I’m not going back inside. I’m not talking to any of you ever again. And I’m not—”
“Marcella,” Senator Walcott says, grabbing her by the arm and spinning her around.
“Why are you following me again?” she asks, her voice high and loud. “You got what you wanted, right? You got your brand-spanking new family. Shiny new baby on the way. Wife younger than me. I hate you,” she screams. “I hate you so much!”
And then she starts sobbing uncontrollably.
I look at Smith and he’s dying right now. Right before my eyes.
I look at Quin and he’s already dead.
“He didn’t stop her,” Chella says, pulling on my suit coat. “Do you hear me, Bric? He never stopped her.”
“Marcella,” the senator says. “Get in the car.” We all look at the long black car across the street. “We can discuss this in private.”
But Chella is still tugging on my coat, looking up at me with her big blue eyes, begging me to listen. “He let her take me all over the world, Bric. All over to these awful places.”
“Why, Chella?” I ask. “What happened?”
“Marcella,” her father roars. “I said—”
“You shut the fuck up,” Smith interjects. “Right now! Just shut the fuck up!”
“You don’t even know her,” the senator barks back at Smith. “You have no idea who she really is.”
“Well, I’ve only known her a month,” Smith spits through his teeth. “What’s your fucking excuse?”
“Do you know how it ended?” Chella asks me, pulling me back to her. She is tugging on my suit coat so hard, I have to bend down.
But then she whirls and looks at her father. “They came for me,” she sobs. “She brought them to me. They had a knife and they held me down. They said—”
“Chella,” I say, taking her in my arms. “What’s going on? What happened to you?”
“They were gonna cut me, Bric. Cut me here,” she sobs, pointing between her legs. “We were in Sudan for a mission with the church and I got a boyfriend when I was seventeen. But I had already lived through hell. My mother used to tie my hands to my bed when I was a kid so I couldn’t touch myself. She called me a whore when I was nine. When I was ten she started taking me on missions. All over the world. To try to control me. She told me I was dirty. And if she caught me doing anything even remotely sexual—like climbing a fucking tree!” She screams this at her father—“she’d tie me up.”
“Jesus fucking Christ,” Smith says, rubbing her arm. Even Quin is back, holding onto Chella’s shoulder.
“When I was just a little girl she used to put splints on my arms so I couldn’t reach between my legs. And that day… that day in Sudan… she gathered up all the old women and they came for me. She begged them, Bric! She told them I needed to be saved and only they could do it. They held me down, Bric! They were going to mutilate me!”
She whirls around to face her father again. “And do you want to know how I escaped that fate?” She spits on him. Right in his face. “That boyfriend went and got his father and uncles and they had to threaten them. They told those old women I was the president’s daughter and if they touched me the whole village would be bombed in retaliation.”
She turns back to me, sobbing so hard I can barely understand her words. “They took me to the US Embassy and I got sent home. And then I ran away—”
But she can’t take it anymore. She crumples, Smith catching her in his arms as she buckles over.
I swallow hard and look at her father. “You need to leave. Right now.”
“I hope you die,” Chella mumbles. She pushes Smith off her and stand to look at her father. “I want you to feel the way I feel. I want you to be held down and—”
A horn honks as a silver BMW pulls up alongside us.
“Get in, Chella,” a woman says. The passenger side window is down. Chella looks at the car, then starts crying again as she runs for the curb, throws the door open, and gets in.
We watch in silence as she is driven away.
And then we turn back to deal with the senator, but he’s already making for his car. Maybe to follow her? Maybe to escape the truth he was just handed by his very broken daughter?
No one cares.
“Why the fuck,” Smith says, “did Lucinda Chatwell just drive up and take Chella away?”
“Because Lucinda is Chella’s sex therapist.” I sigh, just now putting all the pieces together. “She and Rochelle were seeing the same therapist. That’s how all this happened.”
“You knew about this,” Quin says, his anger back. “Just like you knew why Rochelle left.”
“I didn’t,” I say, pinching the bridge of my nose as I walk back towards the Club. “I didn’t know any of that. And I didn’t know that she got an abortion, Quin. I was just giving her options.”
“Options,” Quin seethes. “And you decided I didn’t get to know about it? That was one of the options?”
“I didn’t know,” I say.
But I should’ve.
Chapter Forty - Chella
“How are you feeling now, Chella?” Dr. Chatwell asks me.
I’m lying on her couch in her office. The lights a
re dim and the curtains are closed to keep the sunlight out. She gave me a light sedative. To help me cope, she explained.
“Very stupid,” I answer honestly.
“Why?”
“Because you warned me.” She did too. She told me it would be a very messy exit. And I don’t think they come any messier than that. “And I refused to believe you. I thought I could handle it.”
“Did something bad happen last night?” she asks in her calm voice.
“Not at first. At first it was…” I sigh, thinking about it. “Wonderful. Just how I thought it would be.”
“Just like the fantasy you imagined?”
“Yes.”
“And where did things start to go wrong?”
“I blacked out, I think. Near the end.”
“Why?”
“It felt good.”
“That’s it?” she asks.
“It was perfect and wonderful. And it just felt… it felt…”
“It made you feel something?” she offers.
“Yes.”
“What did it make you feel, Chella?”
“Happy,” I say, trying not to cry.
“And why do you think that you blacked out at that point?”
“Because feeling good about sex is wrong.”
“But we know that’s not true, right?”
I nod, drawing in a deep breath. “It’s the shame. The shame my mother made me feel about it all growing up. It’s natural. And if consenting adults agree, it’s normal, no matter how they like it.”
She’s silent, but I know her well enough to understand she’s nodding her head at me.
After seven years of being on her couch, trying to work all this shame out of my fucked-up mind, I know her just as well as she knows me. And we’ve been over this a million times.
I am consumed with shame. My mother put it in my head for over a decade. She subjected me to relentless ostracizing and punishments. My father refused to stop her. And yes, it’s all their fault… but I’m the only one who can make it go away.
“I don’t think Smith, or Quin, or Bric are the problem here. Do you?”