Destroy

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Destroy Page 10

by Jason Myers


  Part of me thinks that this is one of the most beautiful things I’ve ever read. The other part of me thinks it’s the most pathetic thing I’ve ever read.

  Either way, no one can ever see this letter. This was an accident. That’s all. She just partied too much. I’ll never let anyone find out she tried to kill herself, because if they do, they’ll take me away from her, and I won’t let that happen.

  I rip the note into pieces, then run into the bathroom and flush them down the toilet.

  After that, I sit down next to my mother. The first wave of baby blue crashes over me as I take out my iPhone and play New Order, which is my mother’s favorite band of all time, while we wait for the ambulance to show up.

  14.

  MY MOTHER DOESN’T DIE. HER stomach gets pumped. She wakes up. She gets questioned. She gets sedated. Now she’s resting peacefully in a room that I’m not allowed to enter.

  So I sit in the waiting room and read Rimbaud’s A Season in Hell (I grabbed it from my room while the paramedics were putting my mother on the stretcher) and listen to The Year of Hibernation on my headphones.

  This album continues to help me and give me comfort.

  And I’ve always felt this almost, like, spiritual connection to Rimbaud since the first time I read him.

  I’ve read A Season in Hell at least eight times. The first time was when my mother was sleeping with this twenty-one-year-old girl named Simone.

  Simone was majoring in English at the University of Saint Francis. The two of them, they’d do cocaine a lot. They smoked lots of pot, too. And drank tons of wine while they listened to records in the living room. My mother has always slept with women here as far back as I can remember, but I’ve never seen her as happy as she was with Simone.

  I walked in on them once.

  That was the last time I’d seen my mother in that same ballet dress.

  Simone had my mother bent over the grand piano in our music study at our house. My mother’s dress was hiked up to her waist while Simone fucked her.

  They never saw me that day. My dick got hard. I hid behind the couch in the living room and slid my hand down my jeans.

  Less than five seconds later, I came.

  Guilt and embarrassment and shame immediately followed.

  I ran out of the house and washed my hands off with a hose in our neighbor’s yard. After that, I climbed a tree in a nearby park and sat there till it got dark. I don’t remember what I thought about while I was up there, I just remember how calm and quiet it was there.

  When I finally did go home, my mother was smoking a joint in her bathrobe and listening to the Magnetic Fields on vinyl. She didn’t say much to me, but I knew she was happy.

  I made a sandwich and ate it in my room.

  Later that night, while my mother was asleep, I went downstairs and played two Sonic Youth records, Daydream Nation and Washing Machine, to practice guitar.

  This is when I saw the book. It was sitting on the piano. The cover sucked me in. A black-and-white figure had its arms raised in the air, as if it was asking to be saved.

  I opened it and began reading. I fell in love on the spot. And for the next two days, Rimbaud saved me from everything normal and boring I had to live through.

  15.

  SO HERE’S THE DEAL, AND it’s a terrible one, it’s absolute bullshit. The doctor who takes care of my mother in the ER tells me I won’t be able to talk to my mother or see her at all tonight.

  There’s also a child welfare service representative and a cop standing on each side of him.

  He says she’s under way too much duress. And that she’s confused and scared. And that she’s too emotionally unstable right now, and that seeing me might push her back over the edge.

  “You really think you pulled her back from it?” I ask.

  “She’s more stable now,” the doctor answers.

  “What does that really mean?” I snap.

  “She’s still alive,” he says.

  “But that’s all,” I say. “Ya know. That’s all.”

  He stares awkwardly at me for a few seconds. And then moves on with the plan that all these other people, these adults who have never met me before today, came up with.

  It turns out my mother won’t be coming home anytime soon. After tomorrow, they’re going to put her in the psychiatric ward for an eight-day evaluation.

  Me and my mother, we don’t have any living blood relatives in Joliet or the entire state of Illinois. My mother was an only child. Her parents died in a car accident when I was three, and me and her lived in Chicago at the time. She got everything in the will (they were really well off), so we moved into the house she grew up in about a month after their funerals.

  She always wanted to be back in Joliet, but she couldn’t handle the embarrassment and the stress of the ridicule she would’ve gotten from her mother if we’d moved back.

  “She hated me for having you.” My mother told me this one morning when I was, like, four and woke up to find her watching a recording of her first lead performance in a ballet right after she moved to New York.

  Right before she met my father and fell madly, insanely in love with him.

  “The night I told her I was pregnant with you, she walked out of the restaurant where we were dining. Then she called me an idiot. She told me I’d never dance again.”

  My mother paused. She looked over at me. Her eyes were filled with tears. And then she shook her head and looked at the floor. “She was right,” she whispered. “She was right about everything.”

  Back to the waiting room now.

  The doctor says, “Your father is coming here, Jaime. He’ll be here in the morning to take you back to San Francisco while your mother is being evaluated.”

  I’m pretty sure I’m fucking speechless for the first time ever in my life. My head gets all fuzzy. It feels like Mike Tyson just slammed a fist into my head.

  I’m dizzy.

  My chest tightens and my hands shake.

  The child services rep steps in now.

  And she says, “We know about that night in New York, Jaime. We know your father struck your mother across the face and pushed her down. And we know about the restraining order against him. But she never pressed any charges. Instead, your father agreed to fast-track the divorce and pay the amount of child support she wanted. It’s been thirteen years, and without any other guardian, your father has legal rights to step in, given your mother’s current state.”

  “Jaime,” the doctor says. “Do you understand this?”

  My mouth is dry. It feels like chalk.

  “Jaime,” the doctor presses.

  “No,” I say.

  “No what?” he asks.

  “No,” I say again. “I don’t understand any of this. You’re sending me to stay with the man who betrayed my mother. He ruined her fucking life and made her crazy for all these years, and I have to go live with him now.”

  “Just until the evaluation is over,” the doctor says.

  “What happens if she doesn’t get better?”

  The doctor looks back at the child services rep.

  “Don’t look at her,” I snap. “I asked you a question. Look at me, dude.”

  He sighs. “We’ll cross the bridge if we come to it.”

  “Great,” I snort. “That’s real, fucking great. And what about school? Final exams are next week.”

  “You’ll be allowed to take them after this gets resolved,” the woman says. “You don’t have anyone else to care for you here. You don’t have any other family besides your father.”

  A scowl cuts across my face. “He’s not my family,” I rip. “That bastard is the reason why my mother is here right now. So let’s just be clear about that. He’s not my family.”

  “Well, there’s nobody else,” she says. “You don’t have anyone else.”

  “I know,” I snap. “I know I’m alone. So please just stop saying it. I understand that.”

  JASON MYERS was born in Iow
a and raised outside of the small town of Dysart. In 2007 his first book, exit here., was released and has since become a cult classic. He is also the author of The Mission, Dead End, and Run the Game. He currently lives and works in San Francisco.

  SIMON PULSE • Simon & Schuster, New York

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  ALSO BY JASON MYERS

  exit here.

  The Mission

  Dead End

  Run the Game

  Blazed

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  This book is a work of fiction. Any references to historical events, real people, or real places are used fictitiously. Other names, characters, places, and events are products of the author’s imagination, and any resemblance to actual events or places or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

  SIMON PULSE

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  First Simon Pulse eBook edition July 2014

  Text copyright © 2014 by Jason Myers

  Cover photograph copyright © 2014 by Gallery Stock/Frank Bohbot; Bar sign copyright © 2014 by Thinkstock.

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  ISBN 978-1-4814-3498-0 (eBook)

 

 

 


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