Authors: Gillian Roberts
But Mackenzie’s are either dead or in hiding. Mine are right in my face.
“He smells, for starters,” I said. “Remember? I told you. I think he’s stopped washing. Permanently. A few months back. Always wears black—black everything, including a long scarf no matter the weather—so the dirt doesn’t show, but he is fragrant. His hair’s greasy, and it’s sometimes hard to be close to him.” I hated how superficial, unsympathetic, and narrow-minded I sounded, and I knew all the counterarguments. A seventeen-year-old boy is bound to assert himself, and annoying the hell out of his elders is a prime method. If cleanliness was valued at home, then keeping dirty would work. If nobody objected to either long or short or completely shaved-off hair, then how about stringy-greasy-smelly? I knew all that, but the sense of wrongness persisted. “He behaves … inappropriately. I can’t define it.”
“Bad?”
“Not really. Not what you mean by that.”
“Disruptive?”
“Sometimes. But more like off-kilter.”
“Did you ever think that maybe … well, this is difficult to suggest, but maybe this kid, for whatever reason, annoys the hell out of you, pushes buttons you aren’t aware of, and maybe you overreact to what wouldn’t bother you about somebody else? Did you ever consider that you might be … oh, what’s the technical word for the process …” He looked ceilingward, as if searching for inspiration. “Ah, yes,
picking on
him?”
How dare he? To suggest that I—a seasoned, semi-idealistic, underpaid, overworked teacher, champion of the underdog— was not playing fair? That I, despite all I knew and had learned and believed in, was nonetheless prejudiced against one of my own students?
Of
course I
was. But it was still rude of him to suggest it. “I read an article about the boy who killed those people at the clinic. He was an undiagnosed schizophrenic, and the way he acted for a long while before then—it sounded like Adam Evans. Isolated, withdrawn, unkempt …”
“Hey,” Mackenzie said softly, finally turning his back to
the painting and sitting down at the oak table, across from me and the stack of essays. “That describes half the world’s population, including supermodels and kids on TV. The thing is, you’re not equipped to diagnose—”
“I know that. I keep saying that. That’s why I want somebody else to evaluate him. Somebody who does know how.”
“Do his other teachers feel the same way?”
He had a blue-fire stare that reflected all the way to eternity, and at the moment I did not enjoy being the subject of it. “Are you interrogating me?” I snapped. He looked surprised, confused, and worried, all in one blue blink. As well he might. I sounded less mentally stable than Adam Evans ever had. “Okay, I’m sorry. He’s been cutting a lot of classes, and yes, he’s considered a problem.”
“What kind of problem? Academic, or as potentially dangerous a one as you …” He searched for a noninflammatory word. I had made him uncomfortable, and now we were talking as if through a translator, to avoid further conflict. I felt ashamed, yet determined not to yield an inch. “As you … fear?”
Good choice. “I don’t know. I only know what I’m seeing. I’ve talked to the counselor, but nobody else yet. I’m sure they’re all worried—how could we not be? All those news stories about kids going nuts at school.”
“Does he talk about causing harm, doing something stupid, killing people, the way those kids are said to have?”
I shook my head.
“Singing hair follicles aren’t the scariest image I can think of.” Mackenzie’s expression was kind, sympathetic, and … pitying?
I knew what he was seeing—a biddy, a schoolmarm straight out of mean-spirited cartoons and the classrooms of his youth. The teacher who’d decided he was trash and treated him like an interloper because the Mackenzie family was large and forced to make do and he wore patched hand-me-downs.
I’d become an evil stereotype. Somewhere between winter break and early spring, under the pressure and trivia of the daily teaching load plus the additional reams of college recommendation letters I’d agreed to write for students who didn’t deserve admission to those schools—somewhere in there I’d lost my elasticity, my ability to empathize with the
thousand variations on the theme of teen weirdness, my perspective. And the headlines about killer teens hadn’t helped.
“Singing follicles would be like wiring implanted under your scalp,” he said. “Great audio.”
I checked to see if he was joking, but he meant it. Given his line of work, you’d think Mackenzie would be the one to despair of humanity, but he’s found a balance I sorely lack.
“If Adam turns out to be an eccentric genius, he’d better come up with a discovery or piece of art worth the stench.” Even his handwriting annoyed me, running off the lines, changing direction, turning corners, and managing to make even ballpoint ink splot. “I’ve spoken with Rachel Leary—”
He looked confused. He never, ever truly listened. “The school counselor,” I reminded him. “She’s also meeting with Adam’s parents.”
“Then she agrees with you?”
“She doesn’t have him in class. She knows his grades are down, that he’s cutting. She knows that kind of thing.”
“But you said he did well on his SATs.”
“Way better than I would have thought. He’s smart. I know that—I never knew why he was at Philly Prep. But lately something’s gone wrong. He can’t concentrate lots of the time.”
“For your sake, let Rachel bring up the topic of mental illness, with a professional reason backing up what she says.”
“They live with him, they have to have noticed….” I saw it in my beloved’s eyes. I was a zealot, a lunatic insisting on saving a world that had not put in an SOS.
“The painting’s crooked,” I said. “It lists to the left.” On that issue, Mackenzie took me seriously. As soon as his blue-ice eyes were refocused on the landscape, I locked on my teacherly mask and returned to Adam’s essay. But a shudder raced over my skin, a skittering creature terrified by where it was and where it was heading.
I
HAVE NEVER SEEN A WOMAN SIT AS STRAIGHT AS
D
OROTHY
Evans. If I didn’t know better and hadn’t seen her enter the room, I would have sworn she was suspended by a thread set into the center of her skull.
She was a diminutive woman, but her posture turned her into a spear, and made her height quite enough. She seated herself at the far end of the small couch in Rachel Leary’s office and folded her hands on her lap. She might have been made of poured concrete.
If I’d met her rigid self earlier on, I might not have pressed for this conference. In fact, everything in me increasingly wanted out, but having set things in motion, I was stuck in a crowded counselor’s office, with two hostile people on a love seat across from me.
Actually,
love seat
seemed an inappropriate term for the duo’s perch. Mr. Evans sat as far away as possible from his wife, nearly on the armrest. I knew from looking at Adam’s records that the senior Evans’ first name was Parke, but he didn’t care to share that with us.
From the moment the Evanses reluctantly, belligerently entered Rachel Leary’s rumpled and comforting counseling office, I knew nothing good would come of this. I wanted to bolt, shouting apologies, admitting that this was a major mistake. Our meeting became a confrontation before a single word was spoken.
Speaking didn’t improve a thing. Not even when done in the gentlest of ways. Rachel has the ability to project sympathetic
vibrations without necessarily feeling much. As a point of fact, I knew that all she currently cared about were her internal organs and their new tenant. Rachel was in the early stages of her first pregnancy and surprised, she said, to be behaving like Scarlett O’Hara. “I thought I was peasant stock who’d breeze through this and have the baby in a field between appointments. I thought women didn’t do this anymore.” Nonetheless, she had morning sickness—and afternoon and evening sickness—and this Wednesday morning she was in a state of quiet terror, fearing that she was about to experience conferencing-with-the-Evanses sickness. “It would probably seem unprofessional to throw up on his polished shoes,” she’d said to me a few moments before they arrived. “Even though I don’t like the guy. He’s hell-bent on having his son achieve some undefined triumph that will blaze both their names across the sky. I will never lay that on you,” she promised her queasy midriff.
“Why’d they send Adam here? Was he always a problem?”
“I don’t think so.” Rachel shrugged. “My theory? Parke Evans decided that Adam had the best chance of shining in these dim halls of learning. Here he could have been valedictorian, best in his class. I know that sounds cynical, but Mr. Evans provokes such thoughts. He’s completely competitive, and you’d better not best him. I wouldn’t put it past him to pick—forgive me—a loser school so his son would have better odds of being a winner.”
“Adam’s mother?”
Rachel shrugged. “She barely spoke. Just vibrated. Tense creature.”
The truth was, the old Adam could have done well anywhere, and would have definitely taken whatever honors Philly Prep distributed. His father’s Machiavellian school selection would have proven accurate, if only Adam hadn’t swerved off into a parallel universe.
Now Rachel leaned toward the couple and in a silky, sympathetic voice that held no trace of her dislike said, “I know you’re busy people, and it’s lovely of you to have responded so quickly.”
To underscore her observation, busy Mr. Evans checked his watch.
Rachel cut to the chase. “We’re concerned about Adam.”
“What does that mean?” Mr. Evans demanded. “I came here because I am concerned about
your
concern about my son. What right do you have to be concerned?”
He made concern sound like a weapon that only he was licensed to use. Rachel and I were usurpers, concern thieves. And I made sad note that Mr. Concern himself wasn’t speaking about a boy named Adam but about a possession— and one he had sole title to. “
My
son”—only his, as if Dorothy Evans was a passerby, a curious onlooker.
“Maybe this is about his college admission process?” Mr. Evans said. “He hasn’t heard from everywhere yet. Hasn’t responded to the one that accepted him. Is that what’s bothering you?”
“
Concerning
us,” Rachel repeated. “Don’t worry about the schools. There’s time.” She swallowed hard and looked as if she’d ingested a green-gray dye.
“Adam’s behavior concerns me,” I said.
“You!” Parke Evans looked ready to explode. There was so much fury in his voice that I actually turned to check whether Satan had just blown through the door.
I had wanted Rachel to present the problem in suitably professional terms. Perhaps to show a graph or bar chart of what’s normal and what is not. But she looked as if she were going down for the count, so I plugged on. “He’s changed dramatically and isn’t the boy I taught a short course to when he was in ninth grade. He was so attentive and involved then. Now he’s—”
“Ninth grade! The equivalent of a lifetime ago to him! He’s a senior in high school now, a whole different stripe of animal. Why would you expect him to be the same?”
Parke Evans was like a relentlessly yapping dog. I compensated by making my voice even softer. “I remember how outstanding his work and attitude were, I remember his personality, and now—”
“This is appalling. This confirms everything I thought— you know
nothing
about teenagers,” Mr. Evans said. “But it’s supposedly your business, isn’t it? Both of you?” He looked from me to Rachel. “That’s your expertise? That’s why this fancy high-priced school has you on its faculty?”
Neither of us chose to reply. Rachel was busily taking deep breaths while I was wondering whom I could call to have a
conference about Mr. Evans’ behavior. One of the items on the mounting list of things I did not love about my job was parents who considered me hired help. I had never thought about dealing with parents when I’d thought about teaching. Goes to show what I knew then.
Mrs. Evans stared straight ahead, the tight line of her lips crossing the one her spine made. She was all T squares and right angles.
“I sell appliances,” Mr. Evans said. “Have for … yap, yap, yap … that’s
my
expertise. I wouldn’t drag you in for a conference because ovens get hot and refrigerators are cold. They are what they are. Teenage boys are what they are. I also have expertise there. Expertise as Adam’s father. Seventeen years of observation.” He sat back. Case closed.
“Excuse me!” Rachel bolted for the door.
The Evanses looked in the direction of where she’d been, then looked to me for an explanation. I didn’t feel like giving them one.
“I am indeed familiar with teenage behavior,” I said. “That’s why I’m so alarmed about Adam’s.”
“Drugs? Is that what you’re saying?” Parke Evans demanded.
“I don’t honestly know. It could be.” My gut feeling was that while drugs were possibly, maybe even probably, part of the problem, there was something else, too—that
x
factor, that wrongness. But even if it were “only” drugs, shouldn’t the Evanses be more concerned? “He’s withdrawn, his hygiene, his work habits, his grades are suffering—”
“He’s a kid,” Parke Evans said. “Why make an issue of it? It’s the end of his senior year. Why bust a gut? Basically, all he needs to do is pass, so what is this fuss about?”
“I’m aware of that, believe me.” I was the one who had to keep my students from slipping into comas that last semester. “That’s not what I’m talking about.”
“He is not on drugs,” his father said. “I read the literature, looked for the warning signs. He comes right home, doesn’t have suspicious friends, doesn’t go out on strange errands.” He shook his head. “No drugs.”
The boy went to school in center city and didn’t have to sneak out to bad neighborhoods to make a buy. He didn’t have disreputable friends because he didn’t have any friends.
But why waste my breath? “He’s withdrawn,” I repeated. “Doesn’t socialize with—”
“This is a difficult time for him.” Dorothy Evans sat even straighter, although I would have thought that impossible. She darted a look brimful of malice toward her husband and waited.
He said nothing.
“Difficult how?” I prompted.
She tightened her features and faced me with barely seeing eyes, a woman applying maximum force to pressures that otherwise were likely to explode out of her.
“If you don’t want to talk about it, let’s not,” I said. “We still have this problem at school.”
“
You
have a problem, Miss Pepper,” Mr. Evans barked. “We don’t.”
“His father and I are divorcing,” Dorothy Evans blurted out, still not meeting my eyes. “It’s not … it’s been …” She looked up at the ceiling, her hands still tightly folded. “A stressful time. That’s what I meant.”
“However,” her husband said, “that has nothing to do with what we’re talking about. Next you’ll blame the hole in the ozone on me! Besides, Adam doesn’t have a problem. He’s a
teenager.
”
“Adam and I are close,” Dorothy Evans said. “He’s worried on my behalf. About the future. About what will become of me. About whether there will be money for his education. About whether his father and his father’s girlfriend, who is four years older than Adam, will have time for him at all. About—”
“Enough, Dorothy! Please, let us behave like adults and stick to the topic.”
“The topic is Adam!” Dorothy cried. “The topic is the stress that boy is under!”
Mr. Evans looked at me as if his wife’s words were so much dust clouding the atmosphere and would I please wave it away? And then his expression soured as he remembered that I was part of the problem. “Adam’s a gifted boy with his whole future ahead, and if his home isn’t as calm as it could be, well, these things happen, and he’ll develop the grit to get through it.”
“Couldn’t wait, could you?” Veins protruded on Mrs. Evans’
thin neck. “Not a few lousy months until he graduated. Couldn’t wait and see him through. Now look what you’ve done.”
“Please,” I said, “could we—I asked you to come today because I think Adam might benefit by seeing somebody.”
“Dating?”
Mrs. Evans looked horrified. “Why? You’re like his father, thinking a girl can solve anything.”
“Not that kind of seeing someone. Seeing a counselor.”
“Well, Mrs. Leary doesn’t seem to want to be seen.” Mr. Evans gestured toward the empty chair.
“If he’s on drugs,” Dorothy Evans said, “if that’s what … a treatment center, you mean?”
“We don’t know that. That’s just it: We don’t know why he’s behaving—”
“We? Speak for yourself. He’s my son, and I know precisely why he’s behaving as he does.”
“Is he bad?” Mrs. Evans asked.
“I couldn’t call it bad because it doesn’t feel deliberate. It feels as if … as if messages aren’t getting through. As if … well, I have his latest essay with me, and maybe that’ll make what I’m getting at clearer.”
“What do you mean, messages not getting through?” Mr. Evans demanded. “You make it sound like Adam’s crazy!” He half rose from his perch on the arm of the chair.
If only Philadelphia had volcanoes and had one now, with lava pouring toward us. We’d race away—separately. If only a gigantic hole would swallow the school and me with it. If only I’d heeded Mackenzie’s warnings, and my sister’s and her husband’s and Rachel’s, and had given Adam a lower grade and moved on.
But here I was without hope of natural disaster, and I didn’t think it would work for me to say “never mind,” get up and leave. I understood now how all those kids who marched around announcing their demented and destructive plans were ignored until they actually killed somebody or themselves. I saw how tempting it was to become the next adult who stayed uninvolved. “I would never use a word like
crazy
,” I said softly. “Or think it. Or mean it. But it feels important to have Adam tested or evaluated.”
“You think he’s disturbed?” Dorothy Evans said. “I’m a bad mother, is that what you mean? That’s what they say, isn’t it? It’s always something the mother’s done.”
“Not at all. There are illnesses that typically start at this age. There are medications, really helpful treatments …”
They stared blankly, severely, an urban, tailored version of
American Gothic
. In lieu of a pitchfork, a briefcase and a designer handbag. I waited for Rachel to return and say something clinical and illuminating, but she remained in absentia, wresting with her own child-related problems. “I’m fearful for him,” I said softly. “I want to make sure he doesn’t harm himself.”
Or anybody else, I
silently added.
They stared at me with unreadable expressions. Finally the mister spoke, his voice dripping icy stalactites. “I think something is seriously wrong with
you
, Miss Pepper. I think, in fact, that you are out of your mind. What do you have against me or my son? What possessed you to make such a suggestion?”
“Honest concern.” I could barely force the words out. A typhoon would do, I thought. A tornado. Aimed right at this room. Nobody hurt—just blown away, never to see each other again.
“You are a single woman, aren’t you.” Not a question.
I nodded anyway.
“Childless,” Dorothy Evans said. “You’ve never been a mother, have you?”
I shook my head.
“I knew it. Women like you … you’re frustrated, jealous—”
“No,” Parke Evans said. “I know why you brought this up. Very clever, you think, but it won’t work, so forget about your smoke screen. Trying to get us before we get you.”
“Excuse me?”
“The assault! The battery! Don’t think I don’t know that you molested my son!” He half stood, his face an angry mauve.
“I never—”
“You hit him! Grabbed him and assaulted him, and we are not about to let that pass. Very clever to create this diversion, but it won’t work.”
I hit him? I hit a student? That was the most ridiculous— “You can’t mean—” They couldn’t mean. It was too insane. “The other day I had to restrain your son, stop him from—”
“Restrain, hah!” He’d gone from yaps to a bark.
“He was about to hit another student. I put my hand on his arm to stop him. That’s all.”