“Why did Paul call tonight?”
Deacon answered after uncleaving his tongue from the roof of his mouth. “He asked when I was coming home.”
“Yes, he did,” the thing croaked. “But there is more.” Somewhere down on the street, a car alarm began wailing. “What did he say about your mother?”
Deacon lifted the bottle from the sill and poured another drink. “He said she wasn’t doing well—that he was having a hard time taking care of her. He said nobody blamed me, but he always says that.”
“Do you believe him, your little brother?”
Deacon took a deep breath. His head swirled from the whiskey. “No.”
“You lied to him tonight.”
Deacon said nothing. He pressed his index finger against the cold window, and watched a foggy corona slowly blossom around his fingertip.
“You lied to yourself tonight,” the thing began again. “And you are lying now.”
Deacon raised his chin, dropping his finger from the window. The hazy halo faded. “You don’t understand the things I see.” He paused, his words echoing uncomfortably. “The things I see about people.” He gestured toward the window, out at the city. “These goddamn people treat each other like animals.”
“The best definition of man,” the thing said, “is a being that goes on two legs and is ungrateful. Would you agree with that?”
Deacon hesitated, frowning slightly. “Yes.”
“Does it sound familiar?”
“No.”
“Those are the words of one of your beloved writers—from Dostoevsky: one of the many authors you often quote but to whom you rarely devote study. You murmur their phrases, from time to time, when they suit your mood. But do you know exactly the context with which you’re employing these convenient little epigrams?” Silence hung for several seconds. “Deacon: you have been misusing your mother’s money and you were wrong convincing her to allow you to come here. Your brother is correct: you have no business at the university. You have no business here in this city.”
To hell with this fucking thing
. Deacon bit his lip, began to turn and froze.
The thing calmly rested its hand on Deacon’s shoulder. “You still answer questions like a child.” Deacon angled his gaze to the pale hand, which was covered with some sort of black streaks. The fingers were out of proportion, several inches too long. Its nails were filthy and appeared to have been crudely chewed. “Let’s put on some Christmas music.”
“No,” Deacon whispered.
“We’re almost there, Deacon. But you need to gather your faculty. Let’s think about the day we first made each other’s acquaintance, yes?”
Deacon said nothing, closed his eyes and shivered.
2
Deacon Stilwell raised his fingers, bending down the brittle mini-blinds, and stared out a window overlooking a pothole-eaten parking lot. It was an early Saturday morning in late August. It would be humid and overcast; but the sun, still hunched along the horizon, sent pastel scarves—peach and mauvy—against gray, low-lying clouds. He panned down to the dusty window sill, where bluebottle flies lay dried-up and dead, their eyelash-thin legs turned upward, as if appealing something in the throes of their tiny death.
Withdrawing his fingers from between the blinds, Deacon dug into his pocket, retrieved a pack of cigarettes and his lighter. And just as he inserted a cigarette between his lips, he was startled by a voice.
“We only allow smoking outside on the veranda,” a woman said, not unpleasantly. She was carrying a Styrofoam cup in one hand, a clipboard and a thick stack of almond-colored file folders in the other. “Besides we’re going to get started here in a few minutes.” She wore brilliantly white tennis shoes, which exaggerated each dutiful step as she buzzed around the small meeting room.
Deacon immediately poked the cigarette back into the pack, and the pack back into his pocket.
The white-sneaker woman—who Deacon recognized from his previous visits as the program coordinator—was now arranging folding chairs into a large circle. He thought the fluorescently-ill light and muted colors made the room feel more institutional, more nauseating.
People get sicker here, it occurred to him suddenly. The haphazard botanical pattern on the carpet looked like a garden designed by a disturbed person.
Feeling useless, Deacon asked, “Do you need some help?”
“Yes,” the woman smiled but continued unhindered, “that’d be nice.”
Deacon pulled a couple of beige chairs from the wall. The two worked quietly. When the circle was complete the woman exhaled and glanced around, as if in approval.
“Okay,” she said, retrieving her Styrofoam cup. “There’s coffee and refreshments across the hall. Help yourself before the meeting.” She didn’t wait for Deacon to respond as she walked out of the room. He sat down in a folding chair and fiddled with his lighter.
Nearly every chair in the circle was occupied.
Nearly every rehab program, at one point or another, utilizes a similar therapy exercise where group members in outpatient therapy—whether drug addicts, alcoholics, or both; whether here voluntarily or by court sentence—spend hours dwelling on and describing the circumstances for bringing them here. Very little time is devoted to exploring what will happen next.
The stories were, of course, varied—
diverse,
one counselor said brightly—but each tale was similar in that they contained pain, usually at the expense of others, and were narrated by unreliable speakers. Deacon recognized some of the members from previous sessions, but most were new. He sat upright, arms folded, and listened to the stories of the people forming this sad wreath. He was easily the youngest person here.
He listened to Tom, a high school swimming coach. “My son,” the big gray man said, “told me if I didn’t quit drinking that he’d move in with his mother.” Tom’s wife, apparently, had left him several months before. She now lived in a different state with a different man.
He listened to Kenny, whose nickname was
Fancy,
discuss crack. Kenny was HIV-positive and at the clinic because a judge said so. He spoke frankly and eloquently about his affection for the drug, and delineated ratios and reactions between cocaine and baking soda with the precision of a chemist.
He listened to a booze-weepy widow named Gloria, who dabbed incessantly at her heavily mascara-lined eyes. She cried about everyone else’s story as much as she did her own.
These stories—these people, Deacon thought, couldn’t be more different from me. The rotation eventually made its way around to the young man.
“Please,” the program coordinator said. “It’s your turn to share.”
Deacon told his story—a vague patchwork of half-truths intended to evoke sympathy. He talked a little about his parents’ divorce, about his younger brother Paul moving away to pursue medical school. “I got into trouble a while ago,” he said when he sensed the people around him were growing uninterested in his bullshit. “There was an accident. My family suggested I come here, that I complete this program.”
“Do you think you need to be here, Deacon?” asked the woman with the white sneakers.
Deacon frowned, refolded his arms and scanned the room. “Drinking, for me, is . . . recreational. I admit, it’s bad to medicate yourself; but I think if I had my own place—”
Why don’t you talk about your mother?
Deacon’s eyes widened and his upper body stiffened. “What?” He began to scowl after no one responded. “Who said that?”
I did
. Deacon saw, sitting directly opposite him, an ill-looking young man who presented a small mocking smile when Deacon leveled his gaze at him.
Your mother is nearly a cripple, now. Why is she that way?
Deacon blinked a few times and leaned forward, trying to rein in focus, preparing to mentally square-off with this asshole.
After the sickly ashen young man lowered his hand he sat perfectly still. He had slick black hair, parted on one side. Bangs clung together in clumpy strands and hung over his brow. His skull was shaped funny. His skin was pale—white like a cadaver, Deacon thought, readying himself for some sort of hateful exchange. The guy was wearing a baby-blue flannel, an ink pen stuck out of the breast pocket of his shirt; his long thin fingers clutched his knobby kneecaps. Deacon inhaled, as if to say something, but was cut off.
Why does your mother spend most of her time in a wheel chair, Deacon?
Deacon’s heart wound up, but his anger was slowly replaced with fear. He realized that the person speaking to him was growing perceptibly paler, second by second. And that he was not a young man at all, nor a teenager; and he was not older. He was, somehow, no age.
Tell us a story, Deacon. Be honest with us.
Deacon’s chest rose and fell rapidly with his breathing. “This . . .” he managed, “is a fucking waste of time.”
Some people in the circle glared or frowned. A few slid forward in their chairs.
The pale person, the sick thing, across from Deacon gave up a chuckle that quickly turned into a harsh, muddy sounding cough. Deacon watched him, it, regain some composure before smiling again—a botched incision framing two rows of uneven teeth, which, to Deacon, resembled jagged shards of tea-stained porcelain.
I assumed you’d do this. So allow me to tell a little story, yes?
Shifting in his chair, Deacon remained silent.
This is the story of Boy X. Boy X grew up in a small town not far from here. He grew up with his mother and father and little brother. Family X was happy for many years—there were vacations, snow days with snowmen, birthday parties, and Santa arrived each Christmas—but something happened when Boy X was a teenager. The father wanted to live with a stranger, another woman. Does any of this sound familiar? The mother and father, after months of Pyrrhic fighting, separated. On the day their father was packing suitcases, Boy X watched his little brother, crying, rush down the hall and grab hold of his father. ‘Why do you have to leave us?’ the little boy asked, again, and again. The father had said that he loved his sons, that he would always love his boys, but he had to make a hard decision that was impossible to explain.
A divorce followed shortly after. Boy X, unable to cope with the deterioration of his family, of what he’d come to know as normality, began drinking as anesthetization. Should I stop there?
Deacon wanted to say something ugly. But just then he caught sight of the pen sticking out of the thing’s breast pocket. The pen started bleeding, pooling along the pockets stitching. Black ink bloomed and spread down his shirt like tendrils of black ivy.
Boy X’s alcohol consumption grew increasingly excessive. Boy X’s little brother tried to warn him—tried to, as much as one can as a little boy, help his big brother.
But here’s what everyone really needs to know: One Saturday night in June—shortly after his high school graduation—Boy X acquired a bottle of whiskey, got into his car, and tore off into the country. Boy X lost control, ripping through a fence and slamming sideways into a tree. When police and paramedics arrived they found a barely lucid teenager behind the wheel, covered in broken glass, and an empty bottle on the floorboard.
Because Boy X was so young—and because he’d spent the entire weekend in the county jail—the judge ruled that the young man receive five years probation, a suspended license, and that he stay on, as he said it, the straight and narrow. Vowing to keep Boy X on that straight and narrow path, his mother, whom he still lived with, was resolute in keeping her son in school; she enrolled him in a local college, but because his license was suspended, she’d personally see to it that he go to class.
The ink was still spreading. Deacon was no longer listening, just watching the black liquid spill across the flannel material. Its skin continued to grow paler and was now nearly translucent—dark purple veins were visible under its diaphanous flesh. Deacon’s gaze panned up, to the thing’s livid face. Its nose began to bleed.
Boy X continued to drink, discovering that it wasn’t difficult to conceal from his mother. She was, in her way, doing the best she could. She made a sincere effort in making sure that Boy X successfully complete a semester of school. One morning in early December, Boy X’s mother came into his bedroom to wake him for class. He’d been out drinking the night before; he smelled of smoke and the acrid odor of alcohol. His mother, clearly hurt by her son’s irresponsibility, dragged him out of bed, began tossing clothes at him and demanded he gather his books and get into the car. Boy X stumbled into the driveway, into his mother’s automobile. She drove toward the city. Boy X, still vaguely intoxicated, said outrageously malicious things to her. She wept, begging to know where she’d gone so wrong. Christmas music was playing faintly on the radio as Boy X continued to raise his voice, excoriating his mother, blaming her.
It was the dump truck’s fault, of course; and his mother hadn’t even seen it coming. The truck slammed into the car, on the driver’s side. Both Boy X and his mother were taken to the hospital. And while Boy X would be treated for a concussion and superficial wounds, his mother would never be quite the same. The nerve roots of her spine had been severely damaged—she would suffer, indefinitely, from Cauda Equina syndrome, the doctors said; and if she weren’t completely crippled she would regain limited use of her legs slowly, painfully. She’d need assistance and therapy for the rest of her life. And the only thing she’d asked for after leaving the hospital—after the surgeries, after the beginnings of her comfortless recovery—was that Boy X get some help. But let’s not forget what’s important: that Boy X got his point across on that bleak December morning on the way to school. Do you like my tidy little story? Am I forgetting anything?
Frozen, choking back tears, Deacon stared at the thing—its upper lip was covered with blood, which continued to trickle from its nose, drip down its chin, and soak into the front of its shirt—and took a deep breath. Deacon watched its smile contort into an insane rictus grin.