Stepping Into Sunlight (21 page)

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Authors: Sharon Hinck

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BOOK: Stepping Into Sunlight
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“Sorry,” he growled. Dad was comfortable chatting about fishing lures, woodworking equipment, or the Green Bay Packers. He became gruff and awkward when he tried to express affection—although to give him credit, he kept making the effort. But today the strain in his voice hinted at something beyond shyness. “Your mom is finally sleeping. I didn’t want to wake her.”

“Dad? What’s wrong?”

“It’s Alex.”

I braced myself. Part of me had expected this call one day. All throughout my high school years, Alex had wavered in a dark melancholy with occasional frantic suicidal plunges that threw our family into months of chaos. Doctors tried on different diagnoses like fashion styles. Depression, schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, borderline personality disorder. Each time we’d ride a current of hope toward shore for a short distance before a riptide pulled us back out to the deep, treacherous waves of uncertainty.

When life became an unending series of crises, I learned to numb my reaction. So when Dad said my brother’s name, perhaps I can be forgiven for sighing and thinking,
Oh, this again.

“I thought insurance was going to let him stay long term at the hospital this time?”

“Penelope, it’s not . . .” He coughed. At least it sounded like a cough, or maybe a stifled sob.

I sank onto the edge of my dorm-room bed, my stomach going hollow. Dad never used my full name. I’d always been his little Penny-pie.

“Did he . . . ?” I couldn’t finish the question.

“No. At least we hope not. But he left.”

“Left?” Where could he go? Alex barely functioned with the diligent care of his parents and a team of doctors. “What do you mean?”

“Gone. He wasn’t in a locked ward. He walked away. Left a note.”

“Did he say where he was going? When he was coming back?”

“He . . . he only said he couldn’t stand psych units anymore and not to worry.”

Not worry? What was Alex thinking? Ever since his first suicide attempt, worry dictated every action, every word, every decision our family made. For five years I watched it gnaw away my parents’ strength, destroy our home, tear apart our family. How many meals had ended with Alex sulking away, Dad turning stony, and Mom and Cindy on the verge of tears?

Sure, Alex’s inner pain left him no reserves, nothing from which to offer basic thoughtfulness to others. A part of me understood that. But to disappear and tell us not to worry? Didn’t he realize his flight would once again throw our family into chaos?

Outside on the commons, a few co-eds shrieked in the middle of a game of Frisbee. Dust motes glided down a ray of afternoon sunlight toward my education textbooks on the desk. My fingers tightened around the phone and my other fist clenched in my lap. “I’ll take the bus home. I should be able to get there by tomorrow—”

“No.” Dad cleared away the gravel in his voice, his voice firmer. “Absolutely not. Your classes are important. You have to keep living your life. I’ll call you as soon as we find him.”

We argued for several minutes, but Dad won out. I had three major papers due the next week and a test coming up, and besides, I was tired. Tired of my life hitting freeze-frame each time Alex was worse.

“Promise you’ll call me as soon as you hear from him?”

“Yes, of course. He’ll be all right. I’m sure he’ll show up here at home anytime now.”

But he didn’t. Not that week, not the next month, not the following year. He had completely disappeared.

The social worker who had managed his case for years met with our family that spring. “It’s more common than you might think. Men and women with mental illness don’t want to be a burden on their families. Or they don’t like pressure to take medication that has side effects. Or paranoia drives them to escape.”

“But what can we do?” My mom twisted her charm bracelet, the one with three little silver figures—a boy and two girls. Alex, me, Cindy. “What will happen to him?”

The social worker closed the file. “Some live on the streets. Some find a place to stay with friends. Sometimes they find their way home when they’re ready for help.”

Impotent rage burned in my chest in the face of her matter- of-fact pronouncement, even though I knew my anger was unfair. She was being honest and trying to help us understand that there were limits to what love could solve—even love as zealous as ours.

My parents spent their fund for a twenty-fifth anniversary trip to hire a private detective, but he came up empty. We didn’t grieve, because we refused to believe Alex was dead. Mom bought him a Christmas present each year and tucked it away in the attic after the New Year came and the holidays passed without word from him.

Friends at church finally stopped asking if we’d heard anything, which was a relief. At a class reunion some old friends asked what my brother was doing. I stammered that he’d disappeared while I was in college, and we’d never heard from him. The shock on their faces sealed my feeling of shame. My own brother had disappeared into the mists of mental illness, and I hadn’t been able to stop him. He’d never called, never mailed a birthday greeting, never sent a postcard. Even if he had wearied of Dad and Mom’s efforts to help him heal, he could have reached out to me.

The joy of my wedding day was tempered by the knowledge that Alex didn’t even know I was getting married. Alex might not even know who we were anymore, or who he was. He might not be alive. What were his chances of surviving? If he’d stayed in our small farming community, we would have heard. Had he hitchhiked from the regional hospital to Milwaukee or Chicago or St. Louis? Was he sleeping under a bridge somewhere?

A few years later when Bryan was born, enough time had slipped past to soften some of the shadows. Alex’s absence had become a family trait like pointy chins or big ears. It was part of our identity. The pain never left us, but it dulled into something manageable. Sometimes I’d meet someone new and they’d ask if I had siblings. “A brother and a sister,” was easy to answer. If pressed for more information about where they lived or what they did, my tone would flatten slightly when I’d explain, “We don’t know where my brother is right now,” as if he were backpacking through Europe for a few months rather than missing for more than a decade.

Now I was safe on the east coast. Miles and years from all that pain and confusion. And my mother’s voice brought it all back through the crackling recorded message. Still huddled on the kitchen floor, I hugged my knees as waves of fear raced through me. Every atom in my being wished I hadn’t heard her message, but it was too late. Now I had to know. No matter how bad the news might be, I had to know.

I pulled the phone down to my lap and dialed my parents’ number. My mother answered, the sound of clattering dishes in the background.

“Mom, I got your message. What happened?”

“Well, it’s about time you got around to calling. You’d think in this day and age a body could get a hold of their child when something important comes up. With all those cell phones and instant messages and gizmos, does it do any good? No. I’d be better off sending the Pony Express—”

“Mom!” I took a deep breath. “You said you needed to talk to me about Alex?”

She sniffled and let out a strangled sound.

I braced myself, pressing my back against the kitchen cabinet for support.

“It’s a miracle!” she cried. “He’s here. He’s back.”

Whatever I thought I’d prepared myself to hear, that wasn’t it. “What? How? Are you sure?” Ridiculous words broke from my choked throat while the emotional center of my brain waved a hand to say, “Excuse me. I’m confused. What exactly am I supposed to feel now?”

My mom giggled, sounding as young as my sister. “Of course I’m sure. He’s sitting at our table. Here. I’ll give him the phone so you can talk to him yourself.”

“No, wait. Mom—”

“Penny?” The man’s voice was strained, quiet. A stranger. “How’ve you been?”

Every muscle in my body tightened. “Fine.”
I’m married. I have
a son. I’m living in Virginia, and Tom’s at sea. All of which you’d know
if you’d bothered to pick up a phone once in all this time
.

He drew a slow breath, seeming to reach for something to fill the years between us. “Mom showed me some pictures. I can’t believe you’re an old married lady and a mom. Good for you.”

My jaw clenched in an effort not to scream. “Where. Have. You. Been? Why did you . . . Why?” The last word came out as a whimper.

He sighed, the bravado out of his tone. “I’m sorry, Penny. I didn’t mean to shock you.”

The sorrow in his tone finally gave a hint of the familiar. I could almost believe it was melancholy Alex . . . or his ghost. “Why didn’t you . . ? Do you have any idea how . . ?” I pressed my head back against the kitchen cupboard. “What am I supposed to say?”

“Sis, you don’t have to say anything. You don’t have to do anything. I just wanted you to know I’m here. In case . . . well, if you decide you want to . . . you know. Talk sometime?”

“Talk?” A stupid, tiny word that could never hope to explain away a dozen years of silence. I tried to muster some warmth, some joy, but my shock was too overwhelming. Everyone knew the prodigal son’s brother was a stick-in-the-mud. I didn’t want to be painted with that brush. Yet, I didn’t know what to say to him after all this time. “Are you . . . well?”

He laughed. “You mean, am I still nuts? Only enough to keep life interesting.” More clatter sounded in the background, and a baby squawked. Cindy and her kids must be having supper at my parents’ house. One big happy family. I felt more alone than ever.

Alex cleared his throat. “I’ve missed you.”

Hurt speared through my veins. “Then why didn’t you—” I cut myself off as tears threatened. I would not go there. I couldn’t afford more emotional chaos in my life right now.

“It’s a long story. Look, I’ve been catching up with Cindy and the folks, but what would you think if I drove out to visit you sometime next week? I’d rather see you in person.”

“I . . . I don’t know.” The background noises changed, and I heard a dull click. Alex must have stepped into the pantry and closed the door behind him, the same way we all did when we were kids trying to snatch a private conversation with a friend. In spite of my emotional vertigo, I smiled.

“Sis, you know how everyone can be here. It’s hard to talk right now. But I’d really like to see you. You were the one person who . . . I thought about you a lot . . .” His voice trailed off.

“It’s not really a good time. I just . . . things have been . . .”

“They told me. The holdup. I’m sorry.” Genuine compassion breathed through the words. More than I’d heard from anyone else in my family in the past few weeks.

Suddenly the ambient sound shifted, and I heard the pantry door crash open. “Honey, the food’s getting cold.” Mom warbled querulously in the background.

“I’m coming,” he said. Then he apparently turned back to the receiver. “It was great hearing your voice, Pen.”

“Alex, I—”

“Mom’s giving me the look. I better go.”

“I made your favorite tuna casserole.” Mom’s voice carried from the kitchen.

Alex sighed. “I never liked tuna.”

In spite of the tension, I snickered.

He chuckled in response. “Let me know if you change your mind. I’d love to visit, but only when you’re ready.”

Past my confusion and shock, a ribbon of warmth curled around my heart. Alex had always been troubled, but he’d been real. When a boyfriend had dumped me in high school, my mom had told me to pretend I didn’t care. Alex had let me bleed the pain all over him until my obsession cleared out of my system like a bad virus. Trapped in his own realm of potent emotions, he never belittled another’s feelings.

“I guess you could come out here. I’m not promising anything.” Emotion clogged my words.

“I understand. Thanks. I’ll call you in a few days.” His volume dropped to a whisper. “Take care of yourself, sis.”

I hung up the phone and shook my head. Alex. After all this time. What had he been doing? Where had he lived? Did he find help for the depression?

And why had I agreed to his coming out here? I was already on overload trying to function. Trying to cope so I wouldn’t become like Alex. Seeing him was such a bad idea. I couldn’t handle more upheaval, could I?

Lord, calm my heart. Thank you that Alex is alive. Give me
strength.

Sleep wasn’t planning to meet me anytime soon, so I made cocoa and settled in front of the computer screen.

Dear Tom,

Something unbelievable happened.

Alex showed up. He’s at my parents’. I know this is supposed to
be good news, and it is. Of course it is. I should be thrilled. My brother’s
alive, and he seems to be doing okay.

But instead of feeling happy, I’m scared. It hurt so much—all his
struggles back when I was in high school and his disappearance when
I was in college.

I don’t know what to say to him, and I’m not sure he can make up
for all the years he abandoned us. I’ve gotta figure out how to handle
this because he’s driving out to Virginia next week.

Yeah, yeah. I know. Penny the pushover. He asked and I didn’t
know how to say no.

Pray for me, okay? And for our whole family.

I’ve been listening to our John Denver collection and dreaming
of you, Rocky-Mountain Boy. I have to skip over “Sunshine on my
Shoulder.” Ugh! That one’s a little too sweet, even for me.

I admit “For Baby (for Bobby)” still makes me cry, like when we
sang that to Bryan when he was little.

I miss you. I can’t imagine what this separation would be like if
we didn’t have e-mail.

Your DVD messages have helped, too. I listened to the third one,
and it meant a lot to me. Made me feel stronger. How did you know
what I needed to hear? How did God know exactly what I would need
at that moment? To be honest, I haven’t been bouncing back from the
shooting very well. The victim center group is helping, but I guess I’ve
got some post-traumatic stress going on. I know you’ve studied all about
it, but whatever your books said, trust me, it’s worse. But I had a good
talk with God about it the other day, and I think it’s getting better.

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