by Sosie Frost
First, I had to find my family.
Then I had to find myself.
3
At least I had one doctor whose examination didn’t require stirrups. But, somehow, a psychologist seemed even more invasive than the OGBYN.
Doctor Clark was a beautiful, kind-hearted, darling lady with skin the color of cocoa and the naivety of a Disney princess.
But that didn’t mean the she-witch couldn’t see everything inside my head, swirl it around, and analyze the secrets I couldn’t remember. She came highly recommended, but unless she planned to crack my skull with her degree, we weren’t making progress with the memories locked so tightly away.
“You’re frustrated,” Doctor Clark said. She tapped a pencil against her notepad. “It’s understandable. This is a difficult situation, Evie.”
“Look, I don’t know much about my former life…but this doesn’t feel like it’ll help.”
“Why?”
I gestured over the room, with the art on the walls and soft music. “Because I don’t think I’m much of a talker. I’d rather take some action. Search for answers. Find my family myself.”
“But you’re here instead.”
“The hospital insisted,” I said.
“Why would they do that?”
She knew damn well why. “Because the concussion has healed, but the memories are still MIA.”
“Then what’s the harm in talking?”
What was there to talk about? “It’s been two weeks since the accident.”
“Yes. Two weeks.”
I gently rocked Clue’s stroller back and forth with my foot. Clue liked the motion, but my ankle was about to snap. Worth it for a happy baby.
“Isn’t there anything you can do to trigger the memories to return?” I asked.
“These things can’t be rushed. There’s a lot to heal.”
“I am healed.” At least, I felt partially healed. Sitting was still a trick and a half.
I stood and tugged on the stroller. Clue had kicked out of her swaddle. Again. She waved her arms in a quick demand.
Diaper—Milk—Nap. Take me home.
“There has to be something I can do to get rid of the amnesia,” I said. “Anything.”
“Have you tried my suggestions?”
“Meditating?” I laughed. “She’s a two-week old baby. I can’t meditate without falling asleep, and I can’t sleep for more than two hours without her waking me up.”
Doctor Clark nodded. “Well, try to sleep as much as you can. A proper sleep cycle is responsible for the formation of long-term memories. Rest and REM sleep might be the key to unlock the memories you’ve lost.”
The baby books said Clue wouldn’t sleep through the night for another six weeks—at least.
Six weeks or six years, it was still too long. There had to be a way.
“How is the baby?” Doctor Clark tucked her pencil behind her ear—losing it within tresses of perfectly straightened hair.
I was too tired for this. “Clue knows something’s wrong. She’s just too polite to say anything.”
“Do you think something’s wrong?”
“You wake up one morning lactating and tell me your world-view hasn’t been dramatically altered.”
“Fair enough.” She paused. “Evie, I know you want answers immediately.”
“I just want to know who I am.”
“But you do know who you are. That hasn’t changed. What you’re looking for are the labels. A name. A place. A life.”
“A family.” I slowed the stroller’s rocking as Clue fell asleep. “Somewhere out there, a man is looking for his daughter. It’s been two weeks. I can’t imagine how…terrified they are.”
“Or how scared you are.”
“I’m not scared.”
“You aren’t?”
“I have a roof over my head. I have food. Clothes. Doctors.” I hesitated. “It feels like this is more than I’ve ever had.”
“What makes you say that?”
I was getting tired of the guessing game. “Because I keep thinking how lucky the baby is to have these things.”
Doctor Clark glanced at her notepad. She circled something, making a note. “You care about the baby?”
What kind of question was that? “Of course. It’s not her fault this happened.”
“It’s not yours either.”
I retucked Clue’s swaddle as best I could. I thought I’d deflected the statement, but nothing got by Doctor Clark.
I changed the subject instead. “Just give me something we can do. Exercises. Activities. Clinical studies. I can’t talk and hope to find answers.”
“This will give us answers.”
“How?”
“We’re getting to know who you are. The more you learn about yourself, the more likely you are to remember bits and pieces of what makes you you.”
“Do you really believe that?”
“You said someone’s out there, looking for you. They’re probably terrified because you’ve given birth, and they weren’t there to help.” Doctor Clark motioned for me to sit once more. Her eyebrows furrowed, cute and fuzzy, but I wasn’t falling for the cuteness. “Who do you think is looking for you?”
“The baby’s father.”
“Why would you say that?”
“It’s fair to say I’m anything but holy. And Clue’s sweet, but she’s not divine. Someone helped to make her.”
“So you assume her father is looking for you.”
He had to be.
The fast food bag plunked onto the picnic table. I wasn’t in the mood to eat, but stuffing the cheeseburger in my face would keep me from spilling all my secrets.
“You okay?” He dipped his fries in sweet and sour sauce. Always. “Finals?”
“Kicked my ass, but I studied enough. Not worried about them.”
“Did you get my study package?”
I smirked. “Coffee, chocolate, and slippers. We spend too much time together.”
“Just trying to help.”
“You did.”
He reached for my hand. Stopped before he got too close. “How is she?”
I sighed. “The doctors said it was her heart.”
“I’m sorry.”
“Nothing’s gonna change Granna. You try to tell that lady what she can and can’t eat. She’ll whoop your ass from here to the nearest grocery store, then she’ll beat you with the meatloaf mix and Pepsi all the way to the register. But I’m going to talk to her.” The food turned to cement in my stomach. I pushed it away. “I don’t know what I’ll do if I lose her.”
“You’ll have me.” His voice lowered. “I’m looking out for you.”
“Please. I enable your junk food addiction.”
“Careful, or I won’t bring you a burrito tomorrow.”
“My lips are zipped.”
The memory was one of the first and only to stick in my mind. No faces. No names.
But I felt him.
I felt how much we meant to each other.
“Want to know the truth?” I asked.
“Do you?”
“I have a connection to someone. I don’t know who he is. I can’t see him in my mind. But it’s like…a shadow over my past.”
“Someone you fear?”
I shook my head. “Nothing like that. Shadow isn’t the right word. More like…security blanket. Someone has been there for me. He watched over me. Cared about me. And…”
“Loved you?”
“I sure as hell loved him.”
“And this is the person you want to find?” she asked.
My stomach turned. I busied myself with the baby, ensuring she was tucked in and comfy.
“I don’t think I had many people in my life,” I said. “He’s the only one who will be looking for me.”
“Are you sure?”
“I hope that I’m wrong.”
Doctor Clark lowered her pencil. “Excellent work, Evie. This man must have meant a great deal to yo
u. I think we’ve made some good progress, but our time is up.”
Already? But the memories hadn’t untangled yet. I was even more knotted than before.
“I want you to start journaling,” Doctor Clark said. “Write down the feelings and thoughts you have. Try to organize those emotions.”
I made a face. “And then what?”
“And then we might see more progress.”
“Might?”
“This is only our second session, Evie.”
“And how many more sessions can we keep failing?”
The pad and paper dropped. “Are we failing?” Doctor Clark’s voice changed, less sympathetic and more sassy. “One of us is working hard here. I’ll let you guess who.”
“I’m trying.”
“Want my truth? In my professional opinion, you don’t want to talk about what you’re feeling.”
I straightened Clue’s onesie. She shifted away. Couldn’t get very far, but I took the hint. Let sleeping babies lie.
“My feelings don’t matter,” I said. “Not when I could get my memories back at any moment.”
“And if you don’t?”
“I will.”
“You hope. But what happens if they’re gone?” Doctor Clark armed and loaded the bomb. “Then what? Does that make all your current hopes and dreams and fears worthless?”
“I didn’t say that.”
“You meant it. You’re so focused on regaining those memories that you aren’t considering what they mean to you. Maybe your head is healed. Maybe everything will snap back in place tomorrow morning.” Doctor Clark paused. “Or maybe the cause of this amnesia isn’t the bump on your head.”
“It was an ice cream truck to the head.”
“And your own hesitance is the cherry on top.”
“I don’t understand.”
“Evie, maybe you’re still suffering from the amnesia because you don’t want to remember.”
“That’s ridiculous.”
“Is it?” She read from the notes she had taken. “You’re not used to living a life of luxury—a nice apartment in a good part of town. You believe there’s only one person who might be looking for you. You’ve never felt so safe before.” She stared at me. “You have a reason to forget the past. You don’t want the answers.”
“And maybe I’m just sleep deprived and focusing on the baby?”
Doctor Clark didn’t seem convinced. “We might never know unless you start journaling. Chronicle your thoughts, feelings, and memories into something cohesive.”
I doubted a macaroni and glitter collage would help in this particular situation. I stayed quiet, but Doctor Clark wasn’t deterred.
“Go home. Rest up. We’ve had a successful session.”
Ever the optimist. If nothing else, Doctor Clark helped me understand that I was a more pragmatic person.
“I’ll see you Monday.” She reminded me. “Think about what I said.”
I’d think about it. I would doubt the benefits too, but who was I to ignore any advice at this point?
I saddled Clue in the stroller and tucked her in tight with the blanket. It’d been an hour and a half since her last feeding, and I could practically feel her tummy rumbling. Fortunately, the doctors at the hospital set me up with a psychologist within walking distance of the apartment.
Another kindness I hadn’t expected.
One I wasn’t used to receiving.
The doorman opened the lobby door for me. He was a goddamned miracle now that my life turned into one hardcore stroller derby. While the hand-me-down carriage had a sticky left wheel, it still worked in a Mad Max style, take-no-prisoner approach to baby transportation. I took the turns on three wheels, but I was in the apartment.
And I rounded the corner just as the golden doors of the elevator were squeezing shut.
“Wait, wait, wait!”
I wasn’t the only one squealing. The stroller’s wheel locked and ground out a perfect melody—the So What If You Have To Pee You Haven’t Slept In Forever Now Your Baby Is Crying Sonata. Movement number two, if Clue’s grunt was any indication.
“Damn.” I bumped my forehead against the elevator. “I mean, darn. Don’t repeat that, Clue.”
She didn’t respond. I peeked over the stroller to catch one hell of a scowl.
She licked and pursed her lips.
Uh-oh. I knew that sign. After two weeks together, I finally uncovered the great mystery that was when to give the boob. Unfortunately, it was always half-past the time she first demanded it.
“Okay, we’re almost home. Just give me one second…”
I knelt to fix the stroller’s wheel. Groaned.
Not good.
Most of me still rocked the post-partum party. I hissed and gently stood. Sure, my head was fine, but the other parts? I had new definitions of the word sting.
The elevator opened again. I attempted to push the stroller inside.
No go.
The busted wheel rolled but only into the gap between the elevator and its doors. I jiggled the stroller. Nothing. I tried to lift it. Nada.
Visions of the doors slamming shut and making mince-meat out of the kid weren’t helping.
“Clue, you wanna get out and push?” I asked.
She, in fact, did not. The delay was intolerable to her. She began to cry.
“Okay, baby. I’m not a pizza joint, but I can get you milk in thirty minutes or less.”
I kicked at the wheel. That only imbedded it more. The elevator doors attempted to close. I threw myself against them, Indiana Jones and the giant boulder style. My frenzied cry echoed over the lobby.
“No!”
Completely unnecessary.
Also thoroughly embarrassing.
The doors motion detected an object in the path and bounced back open.
Enough was enough. As soon as I got back, I was ripping the wheels off this damn thing. It could sit on cement blocks for all I cared. No more bumped toes. No more innocent old ladies accidentally run down on the sidewalk. No more traffic jams when the stroller stopped rolling in the middle of the street.
My plight had attracted an audience.
Neighbors to be precise.
“Need some help?” Rory pushed her own baby carriage—one fully operational and not jerked at a forty-five-degree angle stuck in the elevator components. “Jude…can you?”
I forced a smile and plucked the child from the stroller as Rory’s husband—a ridiculously handsome man who’d spent most of his life on a professional football field—gripped the wheel and tugged. He tucked his long hair behind his ears and gave a nod.
“All good.”
Hardly. The stroller had the mobility of a rusted shopping cart, but I jerked it inside the elevator and made room for the perfect couple.
“Baby’s day out?” Rory asked.
Clue gave one warning screech that cried havoc. The next one would set loose the dogs of war.
“Doctor’s appointment,” I said. “Doctor Clark.”
“Oh, she’s very good.” Rory elbowed her husband. “Jude, this is my patient…”
He already extended his hand. I fumbled with the baby, but he let me off with a polite nod instead.
“I’m sorry.” Jude ruffled his hand through his hair. “I should remember your name.”
“So should I.”
Rory snuck at peek at Clue. “This is Evie…and this is her baby. I think we’re still calling her Clue.” She gave the kid a pat to her back and asked the question in a playful voice. “And how is Momma doing, Clue?”
I shrugged. “Slip her a twenty and she might talk. Otherwise she’s playing hardball about who I am and where we came from.”
“It’ll come. Are you feeling okay?”
“Well, I wish the ice cream truck would try for round two. I could use a pint of shaved ice.”
“Still?”
Jude politely attended his baby, ducking out of the conversation to play with his daughter.
“I�
��m managing,” I said.
“Are you using the witch hazel?”
That was a new one. I frowned. “The what?”
“The witch hazel pads. They’re a miracle treatment.”
“Witch hazel?”
“I’m surprised none of the nurses mentioned it to you.”
I squirmed.
No. Freaking. Wonder.
“Oh my God…” I pinched my eyes shut. “I thought they said basil.”
Rory covered her mouth. “Oh, no.”
That explained it. I wasn’t just uncomfortable—I was three tomatoes and a slice of buffalo mozzarella away from goddamned caprese salad.
The doors opened to my floor. Jude gave my stroller a firm kick, spinning the wheel to its rightful position. “I will add the…hazel to my shopping list tomorrow.”
Rory did her best to hide her smile. “I’m sure it will help.”
“If not, there’s a whole spice aisle I can try.” The amnesia could re-flare at any time. I wished I could have forgotten the margarita pizza in my pants. “Thanks, doc.”
“Anytime, Evie.”
New plan.
Was it possible to feed a baby while in a bathtub?
We were going to find out!
If I couldn’t get eight hours of uninterrupted sleep, I could dip a toe—and a bunch of other places—into a bubble bath to ease some of my aches, if not my humiliation.
I managed to unlock the door with the baby in my arms, and I launched the stroller inside. It crashed into the wall, but at least it was moving now. I stumbled, dropped the purse and diaper bag, and immediately shed my clothes and pitched them into the laundry.
No wonder I’d smelled like an Italian Bistro all day.
“Clue…me and you have a date with Mr. Bubbles.”
And the baby was ecstatic. Or pooping. Sometimes it was hard to tell with her. She settled in her crib as I made a mad dash to fill the tub.
I didn’t make it.
The knocking rattled through the apartment.
Great. No way was I tossing on my basil-infused bloomers now. I tucked myself into a robe, tightened the belt, and grabbed the baby.
Yep. She needed a diaper change. And her lunch. And a nap.
Big plans for someone so tiny.
The knocking displeased a suddenly cranky Clue. She wailed a throaty tantrum as I opened the door.