Driving With Dead People (26 page)

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Authors: Monica Holloway

BOOK: Driving With Dead People
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It was the perfect moment to say,
JoAnn would have come, but since the memories of your molesting her came up, she hasn’t been hungry.

“There’s ice on the roads tonight,” I told him instead. “Do you think they’ll salt them before I head back?” I forced chunks of roast beef and potatoes down my tight throat and wondered why I was such a coward.

“Doubt it. It’s pretty late and the trucks don’t usually go out on a holiday unless it’s really bad. Drive slowly and don’t use the brake too much. If you need the brake, tap it. Don’t lock it up, or you’ll slide.”

“Okay.”

“It’s supposed to stop snowing tonight. I bet it ends up melting tomorrow,” he said, concentrating on his plate.

After we ate, we moved to the rust-colored sectional to open presents. I handed Dad my last offerings: a red plastic box containing hundreds of different flavors of Jelly Bellies, a Pendleton wool blue-and-white-plaid shirt, and a crappy cookie dough ornament with “Dad” scribbled on top in red food coloring. I’d made it last week before JoAnn’s revelation had turned that word into “pedophile.”

“I like those lights you made out there,” I said, interrupting the silence.

“Would you like one?” he asked.

In my overanxious, exaggerated state, I’d forgotten what we were talking about. “What?” I asked.

“Do you want a plastic bell?”

I looked out the window at all of them blowing sideways in the wind. They were goofy, but I’d never wanted anything more than I wanted one of Dad’s ridiculous homemade Clorox bottle bells. “No, thanks,” I said. “They’re pretty, though.”

In previous years Dad had given gifts from his hardware store, something he considered handy. This year was no exception. The last Christmas I would ever receive anything from my dad, I got a set of yellow jumper cables and a hundred-dollar bill wrapped in Christmas paper.

“Thanks, Dad. I could really use this,” I said. He was fiddling with the TV remote.

“You’re welcome,” he said. “You never know when your car might need to be jumped. You don’t want to be stuck somewhere without cables.”

“That’s right,” I said.

I was trying to find the words for JoAnn, but they wouldn’t come. I watched him flip through channels, looking for a Johnny Carson rerun. The wool shirt I’d gotten him was pulled on over his sweater. He must have liked it.

Maybe I didn’t have to say it tonight. Maybe we could have this one last Christmas before everything erupted. I settled onto the sectional couch and stared at the TV. Dad usually fell asleep after Johnny’s monologue. I should probably go soon.

Despite my immense sorrow for Dad and his own horrendous childhood and despite my rage that he had repeated his history on us, I would let him go without words. Somehow I knew this would be the last time I’d see him and he wouldn’t even know it was happening.

I hugged him good-bye, the yellow jumper cables dangling from my hand, and walked out into the snowy night.

I was relieved to be out the door. The problem was the next hour, the next day, the next year, the next years. As screwy as it was, I did not know who I was without him.

It was death without the body.

The Clorox bottle bells illuminated the icy deck as I drove away from Dad, his good arm waving in the frosty air.

Chapter Twenty

When I returned from Christmas, I kept in close touch with JoAnn, calling her once a week. She was doing well, working with her therapist and handling her job with the same aplomb as before. It was good she didn’t need me to come down, because I was busy.

After calling off the wedding, I’d accepted a full-time job with a management consultant firm in the Flatiron Building in New York City. They were called The Strategist Group and consisted of three strategic management consultants who needed office support. They routinely hired actors when the workload was heavy because they liked “creative people,” and actors usually needed temp jobs to get by. It was the most fun I’d had at work.

When Elliott, the owner of the company, asked me to stay permanently, he said, “How about twenty-five thousand dollars a year?”

“Are you sure? Oh my God!” Financial stability for the first time in my life.

“I’m sure.”

“Elliott, thank you so much.” I smiled. “I can’t believe it.” I pictured myself buying a home or jetting off on Hawaiian vacations. It sounded like a huge amount of money.

Two hours later he came back to my cubicle. “How about twenty-eight thousand?”

“Why are you raising it?” I wondered.

“Because twenty-five thousand is really low, and I felt like a jerk, especially seeing how excited you were.”

“Don’t you think this is a mistake? I’m an actress. I don’t know anything about office work.”

“You’ll learn. I trust you, kiddo.” He walked out, and I spun around in my chair. With money, I would have a financial floor under me, and the best part was, Elliott believed in me. Acting was on hold. A steady paycheck, and working with people I adored, was much-needed emotional and financial support after Daniel. I had no idea that I’d need that steady income for JoAnn as well.

In March, I sat at my desk putting together binders for a presentation Elliott would deliver the next day. I collated the sections and attached black plastic spines with a binding machine.

 

JoAnn was lying on a gurney in National Hospital’s emergency room, watching clear liquid drip into the tube of her IV. She’d waited too long to get help, and was dehydrated; she’d stopped eating and drinking days before.

 

I finished the binders and ordered sushi for lunch. After taking the elevator down to the first floor, I walked to Sushi Union on Broadway and Twentieth. I picked up a California roll and three pieces of tuna and headed to Madison Square Park to eat.

 

JoAnn rolled up her shirtsleeve and began unwrapping the white gauze that would eventually reveal the cuts running the length of her left forearm. The agony was finally in full view of someone. The doctor was openly disturbed.

This was the first time she’d ever cut herself, and she had no idea why it had felt necessary, and yet it had. She was tired and frightened. She’d always insisted on fighting alone, but this fight was finally beyond her.

 

When the doctor insisted she be admitted, she was both relieved and
horrified. Pulling the white overly bleached sheet up around her shoulders, she wondered what she had started. Maybe she should have kept it a secret, every last aching detail. Maybe she should go home, but then she’d be alone again.

 

It was five thirty p.m. I turned off my computer and walked to Live Bait on West Twenty-third. I met Josh Hunter for drinks, my first date after calling off the wedding. He looked adorable in a black turtleneck and jeans, smelling like expensive cologne and toothpaste. We laughed, ate, and then he walked me to the subway, where we kissed for the first time. I was reeling with happiness and worry, Daniel always in the back of my mind. I unlocked my door, checked messages, and went to bed.

 

JoAnn curled up into a ball and tried to sleep in her single room on Nine West, the code word for the psych ward. Her room was next to the locked doors that led to the rest of the hospital, where people were having babies and routine surgeries.

 

Over the next three weeks I left JoAnn two messages, dated Josh, talked to Daniel, and spent a week in Boston working with The Strategist Group. Life was whipping by. I assumed JoAnn was just as busy. Sometimes we didn’t get back to each other for days at a time.

 

Over the next three weeks JoAnn went to group sessions and sat in the window of her room, watching a construction crew build a new wing of the hospital. She marked time by how far along they were with preparing the foundation; she didn’t call any of us. She felt ashamed and didn’t know what to say.

JoAnn experienced flashbacks, each different from the one before—a body memory in the form of vaginal pain, or a smell of stale beer that came from nowhere. It was confusing, unpredictable, and terrifying. Her
dreams were so frightening that she gave up sleeping, choosing instead to walk down the darkened hallway to a community room where she’d sit quietly with others who were in their own private hells. She wasn’t sure she’d survive what she’d started, but she knew it would shake her life and her family to its core.

 

When I returned from Boston, there was a message from Mom on my machine. JoAnn had called her. I didn’t unpack my clothes. I threw the suitcase back into the car and headed to Washington.

JoAnn had been released from the hospital and was back in her apartment.

“What happened?” I asked when I saw her.

“I stopped pretending, and finally took myself seriously,” she said.

“I don’t understand why you cut your arm,” I said. “Are you suicidal?” If I was going to help her, I couldn’t sugarcoat what was happening.

“If I’d wanted to commit suicide, I wouldn’t be sitting here,” she said, lighting a cigarette. “Look, I’m not really clear myself. It’s embarrassing as hell.”

“Don’t be embarrassed in front of me. You know everything I’ve ever done—especially since I told you about the abortion.”

“Cutting is complicated and I don’t really understand it, but I know that I needed to feel alive and also be in control of something. That’s how numb I felt. It’s crazy.”

“It’s not crazy, it’s horrifying,” I said, but I was worried that she was slipping into something crazy. None of it made sense to me.

“It is horrifying.”

“Did they tell you what you can do to stop cutting yourself?” I asked.

“I met a good doctor, and she gave me medication to relieve some of the anxiety.” She shook her head. “What have I started?”

“It started a long time ago,” I said. “Can they make remembering easier?”

“None of this is going to be easy. It’s different for each person, but it looks like the memories are so jumbled up that it may take a long time.”

JoAnn was right; it wasn’t going to get better. It got sufficiently worse.

I reluctantly put my clothes into my suitcase and headed toward Brooklyn. I needed to be at work on Monday. Each mile farther from JoAnn felt like a betrayal and a relief. I shouldn’t have left her, but I was so overwhelmed, I needed time to process what had just happened.

I visited as often as I could. She seemed to be getting along okay—not great, but okay.

 

JoAnn resigned from her job in social services in June. She was worried she’d miss something and one of the disabled adults who relied on her would not get what they needed. She needed to be present and alert at work. She couldn’t risk jeopardizing someone else, even if it meant putting her own life in jeopardy by giving up the money she needed to live on.

 

I called Mom.

“JoAnn quit her job,” I told her. “How’s she going to get by?”

“Good question.”

“We’re going to have to help her,” I said.

“Maybe this will give her the time she needs to get better,” Mom suggested. It was the first time since all of this had started that Mom said something real and true.

“I hope so. Have you seen Dad around town?” I asked. “He hasn’t called me since Christmas. It’s like he knows something’s up.”

“More likely, he’s in his own selfish world. Does he usually call?” she asked.

“No, but I usually call him. You’d think he’d wonder if I was all right,” I said.

“That’s hoping for a lot,” Mom said.

Still, it bothered me. I was glad I didn’t have to answer any questions from Dad, but I was hurt that if I didn’t call him, we’d never speak. There was no way he could know about JoAnn. I still hadn’t confronted him.

I was waiting for something absolutely damning, a memory I could point to and say, “JoAnn knows you did
this
to her on
this
day when she was
this
old.” But her memories were still in vague pieces. She knew it was Dad, she knew it was in our house, but she couldn’t be specific about exactly what he had done.

 

In July, JoAnn gave notice on her apartment without telling me. She had no intention of being alive by the end of the month. She couldn’t trust herself to work, and now she couldn’t afford rent or food. After our childhood, where asking for lunch money in elementary school brought shame for needing to eat, she was not going to put herself through asking anyone again. But now a timeline was established.

Pulling out a blue plastic crate filled with journals she’d written since high school, she began the heartrending task of tearing out pages she wouldn’t want anyone to read. After tearing several sheets together into lengthwise shreds, she placed handful after handful of paper into three black lawn bags. She stopped ripping when she saw Stacy’s name, her first lover, who had made her feel more alive and happy than she’d ever felt in her life. The passages about depression and dread were ripped into tiny squares. Once she started, she didn’t stop, even for the happy parts, until she was surrounded by the white confetti of her past. One more step.

 

I’d still heard nothing from Dad, and vice versa. Every summer I’d visit the lake house and we’d tool around on his pontoon boat and fish for bass. What did he think had happened?

I felt guilty for missing him, after what he’d done. But it was painful to think he’d just let me float away. I had thought I was the one who’d let go.

I called JoAnn from my Brooklyn apartment, not knowing that she had chosen that night to end her life.

“How are you?” I was eating Chinese food from a cheap restaurant down the street in Park Slope. Everything was excruciatingly ordinary.

“Okay,” she said.

“Do you want to come up and visit? We can go into New York?” I asked, taking a bite.

“No. I’m good.”

“Are you eating?” I asked. “Because I can’t stop eating. I’m eating right now.”

“I eat,” she said.

“What have you been doing?” I asked.

“I’m going to a concert this weekend. It’s on the Mall, down by the monuments.”

“Sounds fun,” I said. “Is anybody going with you?”

“I don’t know yet.”

“Well, have fun and call me next week.”

“Be careful,” she said.

“Why?”

“The city is crazy, and I just want you to be careful,” she said.

“Okay, I’ll be careful.”

We hung up.

I opened my new Andy Warhol book and finished my orange chicken. Later, I brushed my teeth, talked to Daniel on the phone, and went to bed.

 

That night, JoAnn didn’t want to leave, but she knew she had to go. She understood, in that quiet hour, things that only people who’ve walked to
the edge know. Dying seemed almost compassionate—a way to escape the living hell.

She’d been stockpiling prescription drugs for a few months. She methodically filled all of them whether she planned to take them or not. She pulled out the shoe box hidden in the linen closet behind a stack of towels and looked inside. The supply was ludicrous.

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