Sing

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Sing Page 13

by CD Reiss


  I waved away anyone who looked concerned. I just needed a moment to collect myself. Breathe. That was the scariest thing I had ever done.

  “Ma’am?”

  Two police officers, the woman and man I’d seen outside Patalano’s hall.

  “Yes?” I answered.

  “Can you come with us?” the lady cop asked.” My heart sank. They’d come for me, despite the unkinking of the catheter, I’d tried it. Attempted murder. Someone had seen me and pointed me out. When they unraveled everything, they’d see my prints all over the place. The video. My seemingly meaningless appearance in the hall the previous night. Of course.

  I was finished.

  CHAPTER 43.

  JONATHAN

  I heard a fire alarm, but apparently, it was on a lower floor. Nothing to panic about. My family laughed with relief, even my father, who I believed didn’t actually understand levity. I stayed still and silent because I didn’t have the wherewithal to do anything else. A room crowded with people who loved me, and I never felt so alone. I wanted Monica to come back. I felt childish wanting her so badly, but I felt scraped down to a nub, without habit or discipline, no expectations or social cues. Just the core wants and revulsions, unfiltered by a personality built up by half a lifetime’s worth of experiences.

  I was scared to die.

  My body was uncomfortable.

  I wanted Monica.

  Past those three overwhelming sensations, I had only sensory inputs and petty feelings. Even the slight excitement that followed the end of the faraway fire drill didn’t move me. Some happy news amongst my family, like an unlikely Dodger win or an upcoming wedding. People scurried in sage green and pink, shouting orders. My mother came to me, smiling and kissed my cheek, stroking it until Dr. Emerson, the silver-haired one who came in and out of my room seventeen times a day, pulled her away. Her face was replaced with his.

  “We have a heart. It’s a match. We’re prepping you for surgery.”

  They handled my body like a jacket they were mending, and I felt humiliated and shut down, but hopeful.

  “Monica.” I choked the word out to a nurse I didn’t recognize. She looked up and past me, to someone I couldn’t see. There was a conversation I couldn’t make out, then she said to me in a voice designed for clarity.

  “We’ll let her know.”

  “Where is she?”

  “We don’t know. Just keep still now.”

  She lifted my head and strung something around my neck. This was happening too fast. I’d already let Monica walk out of the room. I’d let it happen because I was weak and now I’d lost control of the situation entirely. That couldn’t happen. They couldn’t wheel me away and cut me open again without me seeing her. They’d done it last time, and look what happened (yes, make him believe she is his good luck charm)

  “No!” I swung my arm, and it must have been truly pathetic, because they just strapped it down, easily, as if I was made of bone and rag.

  I said her name to myself, over and over, but she didn’t appear.

  CHAPTER 44.

  MONICA

  I tried not to fidget, even after they took my phone.

  I was raised to think cops believed fidgeting meant lying. I wasn’t lying, much. I wasn’t with the mob or associated with any kind of underground business, which is what they kept implying. I didn’t know anyone they asked about. I was just me. One of the thousands of tall, skinny, struggling artists in this intestinal tract of a city.

  “I wanted to look at him,” I said. The guy cop tip-tapped into a laptop, and the lady cop leaned her elbows on the table. The break room stank of stale coffee, non-dairy creamer and sugar glaze.

  “Why?” she asked.

  “Because my husband’s up on four waiting for a heart transplant, and this guy’s brain dead, with this nice heart, and I just wanted to say a prayer that he died. I know that makes me a bad person.”

  I left it there. That was about as much lying as I thought I could get away with. I could have told the truth, but to what end? They weren’t looking for someone who’d screwed with his catheter, their questions told me they were looking for a true assassin.

  “That your ring?”

  I held my hand out. “The diamond is his sister’s.”

  “The other one’s unusual.”

  “Quickie marriage to a dying man who I’d really like to see.”

  “Wait outside, please.” They let me to a row of chairs they’d set up for people they were questioning. A stocky guy with black hair went in next. Fuck, how long could this take? I couldn’t stop fidgeting. After twenty minutes, I looked at the clock.

  Ten minutes to 3am. Did the morning count?

  I waited for ten minutes, hands still, suddenly not feeling fidgety at all. When the second and minute hands hit the twelve, I closed my eyes and put my fingertips to my lips. I don’t know how long I held them there, but they pressed my skin until the lady cop came out and handed me my phone and ID.

  “You can go.”

  I ran like hell.

  CHAPTER 45.

  JONATHAN

  It was bright. The people around me had voices that spoke like robots to each other and in fake kindness to me. They narrated what they were doing, but all I knew was, I was strapped to a gurney, staring at the ceiling, with no way to see what was happening around me.

  “Okay,” said a man somewhere behind me. “I’m Doctor Chen? How are we doing today?”

  “Ask yourself half the answer.”

  “Right. Okay. I’m going to put this mask over your face. You need to just breathe and count backwards from ten.”

  “Wait.”

  He bent over to look at me. Asian guy. Mid thirties. Cap. Hissing gas mask in his gloved hand.

  “What time is it?” I asked.

  “Uhm...” He seemed put-upon by the question. “Three.”

  “Exactly three?”

  “One minute til.” He started to lower the mask again.

  “Wait.”

  I looked around the room as far as my position would let me. Five people stood around me in the light blue uniform of doctors and nurses, hands up with the palms facing toward their shoulders. More scuttled in the background.

  “Unstrap me,” I said. “One hand.” I didn’t think it was loud enough over the ambient noise of the room. Dr. Chen, cleared his throat, and exchanged some silent communication with the other doctors.

  “Mister Drazen—“ he began.

  “Please.”

  “You shouldn’t be moving, now—“

  “Please!” The plea came louder than I thought I was capable of.

  Dead silence followed. The clock ticked, and though I couldn’t hear or see it, I was aware of it in the beating of my fucked up heart. I had, maybe thirty-five seconds.

  “Mister Drazen,” said Dr. Emerson. “You need to calm down.”

  “I’ll calm down. Just do it. Please. Half a minute.”

  I couldn’t see his face past the mask, but his eyes stilled, and he glanced at an instrument before turning back to me. “No flailing.”

  “No. No flailing.”

  He nodded to someone, and I felt movement at my left wrist. I didn’t realize how tense I was until they let it go. Overwhelming gratitude flooded me, and a helix of fear unwound from my torso, though my limbs. When it reached my fingertips I slowly raised my hand.

  “Can you tell me when it’s exactly three?” I asked Dr. Chen.

  He looked at the wall clock, and I noticed the rest of them standing, in silence, all looking in the same direction.

  Chen counted down. “In four, three, two...”

  I put my fingertips to my lips.

  CHAPTER 46.

  MONICA

  I couldn’t sit in that room any more. I was used to dealing with pain and worry by myself. I wasn’t accustomed to group stress. When Dad died, Mom withdrew, aunts and uncles took off and I basically dealt with it myself. Having these sisters, who were mine only by dint of a forced union
, wasn’t the dream come true I’d imagined. They had personalities, and needs I didn’t know how to meet, and I didn’t know how to ask them for what I needed, because what I needed was to be alone.

  So I quietly withdrew. Declan wasn’t in the cafeteria any more, but upstairs with the women, sitting by his wife, not touching her. They spoke sweetly to one another, which all things considered, was an improvement.

  I felt hopeful. They did nine of these a year. That was good. It was a lot, apparently. He was going to walk out of this hospital and we’d figure out what to do. I walked into the back parking lot, just seeking an open space under the sky, with a spring in my step, a little dreamy, hoping he’d want to stay married and move into the same house with me. The heart would last ten years, but maybe we could squeeze in another two, and maybe another one would come and buy us twenty years together. It seemed like forever. I saw Jessica’s Mercedes, then her, lowering the trunk. She saw me and waved, but went for the driver’s side door, the wave was all I was getting. I got to her just as she was pulling out.

  “Hey!” I tapped on the window.

  She lowered it. “Yes?”

  “Thanks.” That felt ridiculous, thanking her for telling me how to kill someone. “For helping.” Still ridiculous. “I got a call on the way out and I put the tube back the way it was.”

  She just looked at me like I was nuts. “He have a heart or not?”

  “He’s in surgery. Do you want to stay? I mean, not for me, Lord knows. The family? They kinda consider you one of them.”

  “No, but thank you.”

  The window crawled up, and I stepped back as she pulled out.

  I heard the squawk of police radios behind me, shocking me out of my reverie. Close. Coming for me. I turned around and found three uniformed cops running toward me, laden at the waist, fists on holsters.

  I put my hands up.

  A black and white came for me, sirens on. I put my palms on my head and got on my knees. Okay, they knew. I’d tried to kill Paulie Patalano. Fuck. Okay. Okayokayokay. Just submit. Just shut up and let them take you in and call Margie and let her work on it.

  Right.

  The car stopped, and the three cops blew past me, practically knocking me over. I cringed. There was yelling. Get out of the car.

  I wasn’t in a car.

  Obviously.

  I slowly took my hands off my head and opened my eyes.

  One cop had his gun trained on the driver’s seat of Jessica’s Mercedes. Another opened the door. More stood behind car doors. One cop stood over me, the woman who had guarded Paulie Patalano’s hallway.

  “Not today, girlie,” she said.

  “I was just—“

  “Save it. Nothing to see here.” She shooed me.

  I got up and backed away slowly, then quickly, walking fast, head down, navigating a newly-formed crowd when I ran into a man who grabbed my biceps. It was Will Santon.

  “What was that about?” he asked. “You kneeling.”

  I didn’t want to tell him. I wanted what I almost did in that room to disappear forever.

  “I grew up in the ghetto. That’s what you do when the cops run after you.” He seemed to accept this, and released my arms. “But it was Jessica,” I said, shaking my head in disbelief. “What could she have done? My God.” Maybe they thought she’d been the one who twisted the catheter then fixed it. Maybe she was going to take an attempted murder rap for me. It made no sense, and I had to consider for a moment, would I let her?

  “We’ve been working on this for weeks.” He whispered it and smiled. “Once we stopped having to follow you around.”

  “It wasn’t her,” I whispered back.

  “Yes it was,” he said with satisfaction all over his face. “She killed Rachel Demarest.”

  “But...?”

  “Swapped out her antibiotics. Trust me. We’ve been chasing her for weeks.”

  I watched as Jessica had her hands cuffed behind her.

  CHAPTER 47.

  MONICA

  More waiting.

  I felt like I’d spent the past weeks doing nothing but waiting.

  The cafeteria was quiet, for once. I stared at my tea, trying to absorb Jessica’s arrest. That had been Jonathan’s plan. it had been what my curiosity had kept him from executing. It seemed so petty now. I looked at my watch, checked my texts for word from Margie, and took out my notebook.

  I opened it to the last page, the only one left blank. Much of what I had in there wasn’t even suitable to be put to music. I had drawings and staff notes, compositions for multiple instruments with no idea if there was even a possibility of matching words.

  “Monica,” Brad sat down across from me with a prepackaged yogurt cup and toast wrapped in plastic.

  “Brad.” I folded my notebook closed. “Thank you for that text. It was...it saved my life.”

  “I’m sure you’re exaggerating.” He unwrapped his toast. “You’re off the hook for dinner, you know. But I hope we can still be friends?”

  “Of course. And you still need to yell at me for what I did.”

  “I’ll give you an earful.” He bit the toast, wrinkled his nose and went for the yogurt. “What are you doing here?”

  “Margie said she’d text me when he got out.” I looked at my phone, checking to make sure it was on for the hundredth time.

  “How long has it been?”

  “Six hours, give or take.”

  He stirred his yogurt slowly. “That’s long.”

  I took a second to absorb what he said, then snapped up my phone and texted Margie.

  —any word?—

  “If she forgot to text me I’m going to beat her senseless,” I said more to myself than Brad.

  A text shot back immediately.

  —Dr came out an hour ago. Issues with the aortic valve. Bad—

  “Fuck.”

  I didn’t say good-bye to Brad.

  CHAPTER 48.

  MONICA

  That fucking waiting room, same as every other I’d seen when they wheeled him from unit to unit. As I exited the elevator I realized what a home they had become, with their greyed colors and worn seats. And I knew that no matter what happened, it would likely be the last day I spent in a waiting room, worrying about Jonathan.

  They were all there, like a red-haired baseball team. Even Fiona had stopped blowing by long enough to hold her mother’s hand. They looked at me, eyes shaded from green to blue and back, and I stood by Margie’s seat.

  “Sorry I didn’t text you,” she said. “I have other things.”

  “Don’t worry about it. Did you hear about Jessica?”

  “Yeah.” She waved it away as if she couldn’t care less. Her mouth was tight and she looked drawn and panicked. I never thought I’d see Margie this flustered.

  Next to her, Deirdre stood.

  They all stood, and looked at a set of swinging doors. Through the window, I saw an older doctor with silver hair take his cap off and pull his mask down. He turned to another doctor, a woman, and opened the swinging doors.

  Another followed. An Asian man, snapping his gloves off.

  Three of them. One. Two. Three.

  They came to us, and the older doctor put his hand on the woman’s shoulder in a gesture of what? Condolences? Professional commiseration? And when the Asian guy cleared his throat? What was that? Gathering strength?

  Hope dropped out of me an flowed down an emotional drain, leaving a black despair in its wake.

  Shit.

  Three doctors. If one took a blow, the other held the family member, one sister, down, and the third called security.

  Wasn’t that how it was?

  I glanced at Declan, and he must have seen the panic on my face, because he smiled. And then I became that sister.

  CHAPTER 49.

  CHAPTER 50.

  ---TWO YEARS LATER---

  CHAPTER 51.

  MONICA

  The crowd wasn’t for me tonight. There was a relief in th
at. No pressure. I fluffed my dress and tucked my hair into place, fixing the web of pins and curls. The lights on either side of the mirror washed my face out, but I noticed it was rounder, healthier, happier than even that morning.

  The dressing room at the Wiltern Theater wasn’t the cleanest I’d been in the previous months, hardly the most glamorous. The table was new, but had the same half-eaten fast food crap that I’d known musicians to eat my whole life. The couch was worn but not ripped, the mirror was clean, the counter had been wiped and replaced some time in the last decade, but I wasn’t there for a dressing room.

  Darren blew in, sweating and panting.

  “What the fuck?” I shouted. “You’re in the middle of a show!”

  “We’re between sets. I had to make sure you were here.” He grabbed a fingertip pinch’s worth of French fries and stuffed them in his mouth.

  “I’m here. I’ll be out to do your encore with you then I’m outtie.”

  “Is that what you’re wearing?” He pointed to my wedding dress, a sleeveless silk/satin that hugged me on top, and went wild on the bottom, folding in on itself in twenty yards of lace and shine.

  “It’s dramatic. Everyone knows I got married today. When I get up on that stage—”

  “They’ll think you’re nuts for doing a song between your reception and your honeymoon.”

  “I am. And I love you. It’ll be a show that lives in infamy. Get out.”

  “You’re husband’s roaming around the halls looking for you.”

  “Get out!”

  He grabbed his burger and kissed my cheek before slipping out. The door didn’t click closed completely, and I rolled my eyes. Boys, even the sweet, bisexual ones were careless.

  I took a deep breath and closed my eyes.

 

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