“Hello?”
“Oh God, it is you.”
“Carey.”
“I kept getting switched. There’s another Wang in that hospital.”
I knew who it was—a seedy adolescent who gave me the eye in the cafeteria. Thank God he hadn’t been at the dance tonight.
“Ma told me you’d called.”
“Yeah, well, you know she’s not a very good liar. I got hold of Fran and she told me where you were.” A pause. “So. I guess you went off the deep end.”
I pictured my lanky ex-husband sitting at his desk, pushing his glasses up and rubbing the bridge of his nose, something he did when he was nervous.
“I guess I did.”
“So what happened? You could have called me, you know.”
“I know.”
“Are you okay now?”
“I’m better.”
“Sally. . . listen, I hope it wasn’t because of what happened with us. The divorce, I mean.”
“So that’s the reason you called? Because you feel guilty?”
“I called because I care about you, Sally.”
“Right.”
“Look, do you want a visitor?”
“No,” I said. “I don’t think I do.”
“Well, you can call me anytime you want. For anything, to talk, whatever. I have a new number. That’s why I was trying to reach you in the first place.”
“You moved?”
“Yeah. You have something to write with?”
I exhaled. “No. Wait a sec.”
The door to the nurses’ station was closed for the shift-change meeting. I peeked into the dayroom and Mel was sitting placidly in an armchair reading a paperback. I wondered if they were still giving him Thorazine.
“Do you have a pen?”
“Here.” He handed me a pencil stub and tore out a leaf from his book. I was surprised to see that it was the title page of a poetry anthology.
Carey gave me the number and said: “During the day is the best time to reach me.”
“So you’re living with someone.” I felt very calm and very cold, like I did sometimes when I was painting well.
“Um. Well. Yes.”
“I’m happy for you.”
“Listen, when you get out of there, we should have dinner.”
“All right,” I said. “Thanks for calling.”
“Sally, I still love you.”
“Good-bye, Carey.”
I went back to the dayroom. “Thanks,” I said to Mel, returning the pencil.
“Anytime. Hey, are you all right? You don’t look so good.”
“Ex-husband.”
“Rough.” He picked up a pack of Marlboros and offered me one. I shook my head and watched him light it, and then the way he smoked, snatching the cigarette away from his lips after each drag. I had never noticed before how sexy it was.
“What’re you reading?” I asked.
He picked up the book. “Yeats. Listen to this:
There is a queen in China, or maybe it’s in Spain,
And birthdays and holidays such praises can be heard
Of her unblemished lineaments, a whiteness with no stain,
That she might be that sprightly girl trodden by a bird;
And there’s a score of duchesses, surpassing womankind,
Or who have found a painter to make them so for pay
And smooth out stain and blemish with the elegance of his mind:
I knew a phoenix in my youth, so let them have their day.
“It kind of reminds me of you,” he said.
I felt my face get hot. Not because of the poem but because of the way he was looking at me. It reminded me of someone—not Carey, or the movie-star MH, or Lillith, but someone from much longer ago, at that moment I couldn’t remember who.
6
Dream: I am in a rowboat on a river. I row under a bridge into a very dark glassy lake. Black water. In my hands I have a book, but the print on its pages is indecipherable. I get the idea it’s mirror writing, and hold the open book over the water, looking down to read.
What I see is too dreadful to take in.
I hadn’t seen my mother in three weeks. She refused to come to family therapy. “Too busy” was her excuse. Staff was working on her.
“Your mother loves you,” one of the MHs told me. “She’ll come when she realizes how important it is to your recovery.”
As a reward for talking in group, I was moved up to Status Three, which meant I could go anywhere on the grounds with staff or a Status Four person. Mel was taken off house arrest. The only one who got worse was Lillith.
It turned out she thought she was Joan of Arc. The scratching had become constant: palms, elbows, and finally the underside of her chin, leaving garish pink welts, I asked her if she had a rash, and she turned to me with a cynical expression.
“Can’t you see. Burned at the stake.”
“Who?”
“Who did it? Grindel Grundelwald. The dragon.”
“Dragon?”
Exasperated sigh. “Look, I’m going to take up arms. Despite what that fat-assed genitalic general says. And I don’t speak French! I’m not French, that was all a big lie!”
In group she stretched her stick arms out in front of her and pronounced: “The molecules are singing.”
“That’s not real,” the MH admonished.
“What are the molecules singing?” I asked. The MH gave me a warning look.
Lillith looked around gleefully. “Liar, liar, liar.”
They’d started her on a different drug, but it didn’t work. There was no choice but Status One and suicide watch. She sat kneeling on the carpet in her yellow flannel nightgown, so pale that every single amber freckle stood out in relief. The MH bent to look her in the face. “Do you understand why we’re doing this, Lillith? Do you see that this is not a punishment?”
Her eyes were as blank as marble.
“Lil, you’re going to be all right,” said Mel. At that her head snapped back, and I was afraid she was going to explode, but she didn’t.
At times she was still normal: admiring Jane Pauley’s outfit, or we’d split a giant chocolate chip cookie I brought back from dinner. But I was afraid to look her in the eye. I understood that no matter how alone I had ever felt in my life, it would have been nothing compared to the isolation I would have seen there.
I knew so little about psychosis. I’d thought lunatics had fits, or outbursts, like Mel, and were confined to padded rooms until their minds wore themselves out. In the hospital I began to see that it wasn’t so simple. The brain could fasten itself on a character from history, some kind of metaphor for the soul’s illness. Jesus, who dies for everyone’s sins; Galileo, who wants to see heaven. Why had Lillith chosen Joan of Arc? If I’d been her I would have picked my own namesake, Lillith, the real first woman, pre-Eve. The one who was fashioned out of a lump of clay, like Adam, and thus Adam’s equal. Who escaped Paradise and had lots of interesting demon lovers.
Lillith’s uncle came and went one afternoon while we were at rec therapy. The word was that he was giving her one more week. One more week, and if she didn’t snap out of it, he was putting her into State.
I came back to the room just before lights out and Rachel was lying on her bed sobbing her head off. “What’s the matter?”
“I can’t find my teddy bear. Someone took him.”
“Who would have taken him? Come on, I’ll help you look.” Together we combed the room. I opened the closets and looked first in hers, then in mine. Nothing. At the back of the shelf in her closet there was a stuffed Peter Rabbit, complete with jacket and trousers, that her parents had given her for Easter. I took it out and handed it to her. She slammed it back at me as if it were a hot potato.
“What are you two doing?” It was the MH, coming around for bed checks.
“Rachel can’t find her bear.”
The MH put her arm around Rachel and said, “Honey, we’ll search for it in the morning, okay?”
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“Someone stole him.”
“No one stole him. If we can’t find it, you can ask your parents to get you another, okay?”
When the MH left, I picked the rabbit up from the floor and took its clothes off, remembering that the teddy bear had been nude. I set the stuffed animal on the foot of Rachel’s bed and she ignored it, but at least she didn’t throw it back on the floor. In the night when she reached out at least she would find something to hold, something soft and familiar, that could soak up tears.
It had been two weeks since Douglas had tried to do away with himself in that spectacularly horrible way, and I still couldn’t bring myself to use the downstairs bathroom. People were leaving our group, new patients were coming in, people who had never met Douglas.
In dance therapy we did backbends. Mel and I were partners, spotting each other. He was much better than me. I watched him go over easy, with a slow twist of torso, his faded black T-shirt slipping to show faint ribs. His hair hung down over the gym mat like a drowned person’s and his face filled with blood—I could see it in the wall of mirrors behind us.
The therapist applauded. “It’s unusual for a man to be so limber.”
I did mine the sissy way, starting from a lying-down position.
“Good,” the therapist said. She went over to the other side of the room to help some older woman who was griping about her arthritis.
“Come on,” Mel said to me. “Stand up.”
He cupped his hand at the small of my back, as if we were going to dance. “Okay, fall.”
“I can’t.”
“Just trust me.”
“Why should I?” I said, but I closed my eyes and as slowly as possible let myself arch back over the still point that was Mel’s tensed palm. I could see the blood behind my shut eyelids as it reversed its flow. Crimson, violet, and finally chartreuse. My head was a boulder, my spine ready to snap. A million miles away, I felt my fingertips touch the cool dank plastic of the mat.
“See? You can do it.”
His blue-jeaned crotch rose above me. I closed my eyes. “Not by myself.”
“Stop putting yourself down, Sally,” he said, and his voice was sharp. I opened my eyes and there was that look again, that I couldn’t place.
“I’m dizzy,” I said truthfully.
“Now straighten up.”
I straightened up, which was a lot harder, and even when I was standing it took several minutes for the light-headedness to disperse.
I was sitting in the alcove next to the kitchen before breakfast sketching the profile of an MH through the glass window of the nurses’ station. Lillith came trailing down the hall, fresh from her six A.M. shower. At least now they’d make sure she took a shower every day. The twin wet hanks of hair stained the shoulders of her blouse, which was about four sizes too large for her. For the first time in days her eyes looked almost lucid.
“Can I talk to you?”
“Sure.”
She lowered herself down beside me on the love seat, so light I could barely feel the springs give, and pulled her legs up so that they were in the same position as mine, tucked under. Instead of talking she just watched me. I could feel her breath fluttering the edges of my hair.
“It’s hard to concentrate with someone staring at you like that.”
“Sorry.”
“That’s all right.”
“It’s just that you look so normal. You even looked normal in Admissions. You’re the most normal person here, you know. I want it to osmose to me.”
That was the kind of talk we weren’t supposed to encourage. But I knew what she meant. Also, that it worked sometimes. Moral strength, lightheartedness, ease with your body—all these things were contagious.
“You really ought to eat,” I said.
She gave me a sharp look.
“What do you care? You’re going to Florida to visit your relatives. I’m going to hell.”
“That’s a stupid way to think.”
“At least I call a spade a spade. I don’t cover things up.”
She was right, Douglas was right, my sister was right. I was a fake. I did things from my head, not from my heart. For all my sincerity I was the least honest person I knew.
On the way to breakfast I walked by myself, noticing that beyond the lake the willow strands hung light green and delicate shivering with wind. Mel came up beside me and linked his arm through mine. We continued on, not speaking, not missing a beat, and I noticed, among other things, that he was exactly my height.
That week Valerie wanted to talk about sex.
“Sally, what’s your experience when you make love with a man? What do you feel?”
Incest survivors will tell you they focus on something outside themselves during sex in order to escape. In my case, it was ceilings. At college, Carey’s off-campus apartment had a yellow ceiling with tiny bumps like chicken skin. There was a hairline fault running down one edge, which sometimes would seem to have gotten wider, although in reality I’m sure it stayed the same. The window shades in his bedroom were translucent, and at night the watery red reflections of taillights would glide above us like the planaria I’d watched slipping to the edge of a microscope slide in high school biology.
Once, I can’t remember why now, we spent a night in a fancy hotel in Boston. The ceiling gleamed metallic, matching the rest of the room, which was high-tech and spacious, with a thrilling view of the Charles River. The lights from the outside were reflected in the ceiling in a muddled way, like movies at camp.
On our honeymoon in Japan, the inn ceiling was low, ominously so, a pale Zen green. I had the feeling as we lay there innocently in our sleeping rolls that it might slowly lower until we were crushed to death, like the room in the Edgar Allan Poe story.
The ceiling of our first apartment in New York was made up of little decorated squares-tin painted over white. Carey liked the light on while we made love, and I could sometimes see the tips of our shadows slipping up along the molding where the ceiling and wall met. This would make me so uneasy I would have to close my eyes.
“What about his body? Could you feel him? His penis?”
I shook my head.
“Sally, concentrate. Could you feel Carey?”
Mel leaning over me in rec therapy. His breath so sweet it was almost narcotic.
“Sally. Could you feel him?”
My sister in the room on Coram Drive. Her face in the morning, eyes wide open, hair flying up with static over the collar of her nightgown, coming over to my bed to wake me up, although I’m already awake.
Sa-sa. Sa-sa.
Another ceiling. Moonlight defining twin parallelograms. It is Indian summer, the windows are open, and the white lace curtains have been drawn back, out of the way, to let all of any breeze into the room. There is the noise of the shades flapping up, making the pattern on the ceiling shift in an unpredictable way, with no rhythm.
I am no longer on the bed. I have shrunk to the size of a mosquito and float up to the ceiling, where the life-preserver shape of a shade pull dangles. I grab on to the O of it and swing, as if it were the tire in the school playground. Hold my breath. The play of light inside my closed eyes is dazzling.
My wrists pinned to the sheet. Carey lets go, his chest collapsing on mine.
“Sal.”
“What?”
“You still don’t like it, do you?”
“Of course I do. I told you I did.”
“You don’t stay with me. At first I can feel you, you know, that you’re getting hot, and then you kind of disappear.”
“It’s getting better, Care, I swear.”
“If we got married, would you feel more comfortable? Is that it?”
I think of my sister, fucking man after man.
For pleasure.
Tou-fa, tou-fa, tou-fa.
Over and over again, in a whisper, like a spell.
I know this means hair. But we didn’t learn it in Chinese school.
“Sally,
you have a visitor.”
Since I’d been at Willowridge I hadn’t had any visitors at all except for my mother that one time for family therapy. I dragged myself up from the bed and glanced in the bureau mirror. “In the dayroom,” the MH said as I followed her downstairs.
But she wasn’t. She was standing in the foyer, head down, reading the sign-out book, maybe looking for my name. Her hair had been cut very short, like a boy’s, and I could see the shape of her shoulder blades through the suede jacket, which was the color of butterscotch, one I had never seen before. At the sound of our steps, she turned and looked up.
“Sa.” She was wearing lipstick—in her tanned face her mouth looked like a little flame.
I couldn’t say a word, there was so much heart inside me. I tried very hard simply to continue breathing while I walked the last several steps that would bring me to my sister.
7
“You look better than I thought you would,” she said. We were sitting on the window seat in the dayroom.
“You cut your hair,” I said. She took my breath away, I couldn’t stop staring. I’d forgotten how small she was.
“Yeah, my agent’s going to kill me.” She pulled out a pack of Gauloises from her purse and shook two out. The backs of her hands were as tanned as her face, and she was wearing a pink cameo ring that looked vaguely familiar. There was a faint, rangy aroma about her. I couldn’t remember the last time I’d worn perfume.
She lit our cigarettes and took a deep drag. I coughed on mine.
“Camel shit, honey, but it does the trick.”
“When did you get back?”
“Last Thursday.” She’d been back for an entire week and hadn’t bothered to get in touch. “So when are they cutting you loose from here?”
“My shrink says soon. A couple of weeks at the most.”
“You coming home?”
“No,” I said. “I’m going down to visit Aunty Mabel and Uncle Richard.” I had already called a travel agency asking them to find me the cheapest ticket to St. Pete.
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