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Authors: Clare B. Dunkle

Hope and Other Luxuries (73 page)

BOOK: Hope and Other Luxuries
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  • WORSE THAN BEFORE!

And in January, they said she was weeks away from dying!

I stared out the window at the bright, beautiful day. My writer's mind—I needed my writer's mind for this. I needed my imagination.

Where are we?
I asked it, just as I had asked it thousands of times before.
Where are we? What is my character doing?

The answer came back:

My character is coming to the end
.

When I had first offered to help Elena write her memoir, what I was really trying to offer was a happy ending. That's what I offer my characters, after all. I don't like sad endings. In the back of my mind, I had had the silly idea that if Elena were in a story of mine, Elena would find her happy ending, too.

And maybe even Elena thought that.

Characters have story arcs. They do stupid things, but they learn, and they grow—at least, that's what's supposed to happen. But no author can force a character to do anything if that character doesn't want to do it.

I consider it my most sacred duty to be true to my characters. I want to see them do well. But sometimes, the only thing a writer can do is be with a character while that character fails. We're our characters' only witness—the only one who really understands. We have to be honest and fair right through to the very last minute. We have to watch. We have to watch right to the end.

When it came to my daughter, the mother in me wanted to make excuses. She wanted to see hope and fresh starts wherever she could. The mother in me saw every request for fast food as a step toward recovery. She saw every request for a ride to school as a chance to get out and meet new people—a chance to gain a new interest in life.

But the writer in me—she knew what was going on.

I stared at that piece of paper, and I didn't cry. I didn't wring my hands or have hysterics. I found my cell phone, and I called Joe.

“Let's meet for lunch,” I said.

We left my car in the parking lot, and Joe drove us to a restaurant near his work. At first, neither one of us spoke. Joe knew better than to ask for updates. The most innocent question—“How's your day going?”—could lead to painful surprises.

Finally, when we were parked next to the restaurant, I said what I had come to say:

“Elena isn't going to make it.”

That sentence hung in the air, and I heard it echoing in my mind. But I didn't feel anything at all. Years and years of titanic struggle had
brought me to this moment. I had hoped—how I had hoped! I had seen hope everywhere I could.

Now I could see only the reality:

The end.

Joe burst into tears. “Do you think I don't
know
that?” he said. “That's why . . . that's why I don't like to be the one to wake her up for dinner. Because I know . . . I know that one day soon, I'll walk into her room, and she'll be
dead
 . . .”

And he sobbed out loud and ran his hand over his face while I went hunting through my purse for a tissue.

“. . . She'll be dead,” he went on when he'd gotten a little calmer, “lying right there on her bed. I can see it like it's already happened! Every time I stand outside her door, I see it.”

And he broke into sobs again.

I put my arm around Joe's shoulders.
So I'm not the only one
, I thought sadly,
who lives with a mental image of the death of my daughter
. Joe's image was different from mine, but I couldn't say that it was wrong. It was right, in fact. It was exactly right.

Joe drew in a breath. “I don't
want
her to die! I don't want my daughter to
die
!” And that's when I said the other thing I had come to say.

I said, “I have a plan.”

Inside the restaurant, we talked it over. I had realized that Elena might be detaching from life, but she was still attached to her comforts. She might not eat, but she still gave me a list of shampoos and scrubs to buy at the store.

“She doesn't like risk,” I pointed out. “The routine of the house makes her feel secure. It's giving her the security she needs to set up everything so that she can die in peace.”

Joe nodded. “She's using us to help kill herself.”

“So my plan is this,” I said. “We take it away. Each week she fails to improve or gets worse, we take away something else. We don't let her just close her eyes and go to sleep and lose it all. We make her feel that loss step by step. Phone, car, computer, hot water, everything we're providing for her. We take it all, if that's the way she chooses to go.”

Joe's brows creased together. “Until when?” he asked.

“Until she has to die under an overpass bridge.”

I said it—the most horrible thing a mother could possibly say. I said it, and I felt nothing at all. Pain, panic, and fear were nothing but the flip side of hope, and Elena had learned how to use that hope against me. She played on my hope just as she had played on Bea's protectiveness. It was a luxury I could no longer afford.

“Under a bridge,” I repeated firmly, “with nothing but the clothes on her back. No home to hide in, no car to crash, no shower, no safety, no nothing.”

As I said it, my imagination showed me the whole horrible scene: my daughter, skeletal, dehydrated, curled up high in the little space between the bridge beams and the slope of the embankment, alone and unattended, taking her last rattling breaths.

I made myself stay with it. I didn't look away.

This plan was the last, best hope we had. So far as I could tell, it was our only hope. But if we let ourselves feel that hope, we wouldn't be able to bear the cruelty of it. We wouldn't follow through. And if Elena didn't believe that we would follow through, she would go right ahead and ignore us—and die.

So it was her death against our death now: death at home or death under that bridge. We had to see our goal just as clearly as she saw hers. We had to work toward that goal, that death—that awful, uncomfortable death. Only then did we have a chance that she might back down.

No hope:
that
was our only hope.

The line between Joe's brows remained. “Under a
bridge
?” he echoed, and I heard the pain and bewilderment in his voice.

Maybe Joe could have a little hope, then. He probably needed it.


If
that's what she chooses,” I said. “She can turn this around at any time. We'll set it up so that she can earn her privileges back as soon as she starts putting on weight.”

Joe thought about this for a few minutes.

“It's the only chance we have,” he said. “We can't help her die. That's what we're doing now.” He picked up his fork but put it down again.
This conversation wasn't exactly helping our appetites. “But she's falsifying her weight,” he pointed out.

“I thought of that,” I said. “She's bound to hit a limit in the ways she can add weight to herself during weigh-ins. She can't exactly stick her feet in cement.”

“And considering how far the weigh-in weight is from reality right now,” Joe said, “she should be hitting that limit pretty soon.”

I pulled out a notepad, and during the rest of the meal, we brainstormed our penalty scale. We set down three weights for Elena: a “green” weight, which was her ideal weight, according to Clove House; a “yellow” weight, which was five pounds under the ideal weight; and a “red” weight, which was anything below that. Losing weight moved Elena down the penalty scale. Gaining weight moved her back up.

This was what it looked like when we were done:

  • GREEN WEIGHT: no penalties apply.
  • YELLOW PENALTIES:

    1st yellow week: grace period (no change in penalty scale).

    1. I lose my debit card and the right to regulate my own smoking. My parents will provide 6 cigarettes a day provided I complete my food plan and food diary.

  • RED PENALTIES:

    1st red week: grace period (no change in penalty scale).

    2. I lose texting features on my phone.

    3. I lose my MP3 player.

    4. I lose movie rental privileges.

    5. I lose Internet capability on my computer.

    6. I lose three cigarettes from my daily ration and drop to 3 cigarettes a day.

    7. I lose smoking privileges (i.e., go cold turkey).

    8. I lose my computer.

    9. I must start paying $50 a week for rent. Failure to do so results in a move down the penalty scale.

    10. I lose my car. I will be given bus fare if I can show the routes I intend to take.

    11. I lose my house key. I must arrange for someone to be home to let me in. Failure to observe this penalty results in a move down the penalty scale.

    12. I may not be home from the time my father leaves in the morning till the time he returns at night (7:00 a.m.–6:00 p.m.). Failure to observe this penalty results in a move down the penalty scale.

    13. I must move out and finance my own life and education. I may take the car, registered in my name, provided I have paid for six months of automobile insurance. My parents will not cosign any leases or loans with me. I will have one month from the date of this penalty to save up money and move out.

When Joe came to the end, he sighed.

“The Clove House people said not to focus on weight or numbers,” he said. “But I don't see what else we're supposed to do.”

“Clove House's advice hasn't gotten anybody in this family very far,” I pointed out. “And they made her sign several contracts with them.”

“She's going to hate this,” he said. “She's really going to hate it.”

“That would be progress,” I said. “Hate is better than what she's doing now. What she's doing now is letting go. But I know she'll fight it. It's the disorder above everything else at this point, and this directly challenges the disorder. She'll say anything. She might even
do
anything. We'll be the enemy—no two ways about it.”

“I hate being the enemy,” Joe said sadly.

“If we back down on this,” I said, “it'll mean she can go right back to sleep. We have to mean this because Elena means it. She knows that she's dying.”

“She has to,” Joe agreed.

“Well, if Elena can accept the reality of dying in her bed, then we have to accept the reality of packing her stuff up and pushing her out the door. It's our reality against her reality, and our reality has to win. She has to know that overpass bridge is waiting for her.”

“I know,” Joe said. “It's the only way.”

And again, I heard the pain in his voice.

This is going to be very hard on Joe
, I thought.
He isn't made for this. He can get angry and yell, but he can't resist tears. He can't be mean on purpose
.

So it would have to be me.

I would have to be mean on purpose.

CHAPTER FORTY-TWO

T
hat evening, Valerie and Joe and I sat down together, and we called Elena out to sign the contract. Valerie was prepared. She had had us wait until Gemma was up. “This is going to get pretty loud,” she predicted.

I went in to wake up Elena. “You need to come out here,” I said.

“What?” the mound of blankets answered. “I'm not hungry.”

“It isn't dinner. You already slept through that. You need to come out here.” I left and sat back down on the couch.

We waited. But Elena didn't show up.

This time, Joe went to fetch her, and this time, she came out. “What?” she said angrily when she saw Valerie and me waiting on the couch.

She already knows
, my writer's mind observed.
She knows what's going on here
.

“Elena, we need you to read this, and we need you to sign it,” Joe said, and he handed her the contract. Elena tossed it aside without a glance.

“What is this?” she demanded. “I'm not reading anything!”

“It's a contract that says that you'll gain weight,” I said. “If you don't gain weight, you'll lose privileges week by week: phone, computer, car.”

Elena glared at me. “I'm not signing anything!”

“Then you can pack up and move out,” I said.

Cue the expected eruption.

“You know I don't have anywhere to go! You know I'm sick! You're blaming me. You're blaming me for being sick!”

“We aren't!” Joe said. “Elena, we just want to help.”

“Like
hell
you want to help!”

I didn't say anything.

Once upon a time, I had lain awake nights, thinking,
How do I say this? How can I make her understand?
Once upon a time, I had spent my
days agonizing and engaging and explaining. For years and years, I had hoped and struggled. I had moved heaven and earth.

Now, there was only the reality—the
single
reality: Elena was going to die. But she was
not
going to do it here.

Meanwhile, the fight was in full swing. “So, you want to know what it's like not to have a daughter? Fine! I'm not your daughter anymore. I can't believe you're doing this! You're
blaming
me! You're
blaming
me for getting raped!”

“Elena, no! That's not true! That isn't the idea here!”

Once upon a time, that would have been my voice raised in entreaty, my voice full of hurt and love. Now, it was Joe's voice. And I was silent.

She'll say anything
, my writer's mind observed.
She'll sacrifice anything to the eating disorder. If she's willing to sacrifice herself, her hopes and dreams, everything she ever wanted, then don't think she's going to spare the rest of her family
.

“You want to get rid of me?” Elena said. “Okay, fine! I'll go back to Clove House. I'll go back into treatment.”

To treatment. But not to recovery
, said my writer's mind.
She doesn't know what recovery is
.

BOOK: Hope and Other Luxuries
12.37Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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