Chapter 2
T
he sting of the soap on my cracked fingers made me pause. My clothes were folded and put away. The refrigerator was sanitized. Even the crusty chrome on the bathroom faucet sparkled. I had lost track of how long I had been standing at the sink, scrubbing away something that wasn't there. Biting my lip, I stuck my hands under the scalding water and watched the suds run down the drain. Then, with monumental effort, I stepped back.
Stop.
Hadn't I been standing right here when I first realized there was something was wrong with me?
I must have been twelve or thirteen. I had just endured an unusually difficult phone call from my mother. Something about my progress in my final grades in school and my sister, Alexa, who had made the newspaper again for an award of some sort. At the end of the call she informed me that she had fired our beloved housekeeper. After I hung up, I had stood at this same sink, unaware that I was washing my hands over and over. I had been so mesmerized by the sound of the running water that I hadn't even heard Grandma come up behind me.
“Elizabeth?” My foggy brain barely registered the sound of her voice. “Honey, you have to stop. You've been standing there forever. Didn't you hear me calling you?”
But I wasn't finished and I shook my head. At least, I think I did. I don't know how much time passed, to be honest. When I finally looked up I was startled to see Grandma crying. I had never seen her do that. But she stood next to me with tears running down the wrinkled ruts of her cheeks. It scared me. Then, Grandma lifted up both of my dripping hands until they were in front of my face.
“What isn't clean about this?” Her voice shook with emotion. “Oh darlin', lookâyou've scrubbed so hard you're bleeding.” She walked me into the bedroom and laid me down on her bed, talking softly while she smoothed the hair along my forehead until, somehow, I fell asleep.
Several years of therapy taught me that there were certain triggers that made me worse. A lecture from my mother. A bad grade in school. Or a confrontation with my family . . . thus, the cracked skin on my fingers.
My therapist always warned me about relapses. Over the years, I learned to catch myself before my behavior spiraled out of control. I was a little late this time. But at least I caught myself.
Taking a deep breath, I grasped the faucet with both hands and turned it off. I grabbed a towel from the perfectly folded stack I had placed above the sink and patted both hands dry, careful not to abrade my chafed skin any further. It stung, and the pain actually felt good.
That was bad.
When pain felt good, I was in trouble.
I reached for my purse and took out my therapy journal and a pen. There were things I had already marked today. I had pumped gas and bought groceries at the gas station and had not washed my hands right away. And I was wearing a frayed sweatshirt and jeans with a hole at the knee.
Everyone with OCD had different issues. For me, there were three main things I needed to do every day:
Avoid washing my hands excessively, expose myself to foods that triggered my contamination fears, and the biggieâallow myself to be imperfect.
Besides practicing relaxation techniques, forcing myself to break obsessive habits was an effective treatment for the “little” OCD problem that had plagued me for the past thirteen years. I had promised my therapist I would keep up my homework by journaling daily steps I was taking to overcome my obsessions.
Grandma's old radio was propped up on the ledge that separated the tiny dining area and the kitchen. I turned the low-tech knob until I heard the beat of a pop radio station I would never have played at home.
Reaching into the grocery bag, I pulled out a couple of impulse purchases I'd made at the gas station mini-mart that morning. I was ready to add a few unofficial items to my journal.
Cigarettes and cheap wine.
For months, I had stayed silent as the Ohio media had skewered my reputation. A picture someone took on their cell phone of me handcuffed had made a great front-page newspaper photo. The articles that went with the picture were even worse. I was a spoiled party girl. My job had been handed to me on a silver platter. I didn't respect the average taxpayer. As a congressman's daughter, I was supposed to be an example.
When I had told my therapist I was moving to my grandmother's house this summer, she thought it might be good for me. She said it was possible I was experiencing a late-phase teenage rebellion I had been repressing for years. I joked with her that if that was the case, I should sleep with a few lumberjacks while I was at it. She raised her eyebrows and said it wasn't a bad idea. Too bad the logging industry in Michigan was dead.
I pulled the wrapper off the cigarettes. My recently turned
ex
-boyfriend, Colin, hated cigarettes. Everyone thought it was just his reaction to the fact that they caused cancer and smelled bad. But it was more than that. Colin actually hated
people
who smoked. He once fired an employee just for smoking on the sidewalk outside his office building. He didn't even know the employee's name.
I turned the wine bottle around and examined the price sticker. $3.99
.
It would have horrified Colin. He boasted that he could taste the difference between a grand cru and a premier cru without even looking at the label.
What had he said to me the night of my arrest? “I don't want to be tainted by your actions.”
“Screw Colin!” I said out loud. Ha! Well, evidently my little sister already had. Not for the first time, I wondered if she had enjoyed it any more than I had. But that was a worry for another day.
I wasn't the kind of girl who swore.
Or the kind of girl who smoked and drank.
In fact, my life could be taken straight from the pages of Emily Post. I knew which fork to use for shellfish, how to address heads of state, and often wrote thank-you notes for thank-you notes. I straightened my unruly hair each morning, applied only the most subtle pink lip gloss, and my idea of casual was a pair of perfectly creased dark jeans.
But that was going to change. Tonight called for a massive gesture.
Feeling brave and impulsive, I reached for my pen and added one more unofficial thing to the to-do list at the back of my journal.
Take a big risk
. I didn't know what that would be, but I was looking forward to finding out.
I pushed the journal away and unscrewed the bottle cap. What was the routine my father and Colin always went through when they opened a bottle of fine wine at dinner parties? Swirl. Sniff. And sip.
I turned the bottle in a circular motion, ignoring the amber fluid that spilled over the top.
Then I held it to my nose and took a whiff. It smelled like hand sanitizer.
I closed my eyes, blocking out the sight of the grimy bottle and raised it to my lips. Forcing the liquid past my tongue, I took an unladylike gulp.
The tannins and sugars attacked my palette and went up my nostrils, making me gasp.
Then the aftertaste . . . vinegar with a hint of Kool-Aid.
I belched unexpectedly. The sound filled the room and echoed off the walls. Almost as loud as one of Elliot's burps. A feeling of pride made me smile.
I took another sip. And another.
The last few weeks had been a living hell. But now I was in the middle of nowhere. Not a single soul could bother me. Wiping the wine dribble from my lower lip, I moved into the living room. My insides were warming up and I let my hips sway. I reached for the knob on the radio and turned up the volume. Taking my bottle with me, I went in search of matches.
I lost track of time. A happy glow was spreading upwards through my chest. I caught the beat of the music and twirled around and around, dancing from the kitchen to the living room.
Before I knew it, the bottle was almost empty and the butts of two cigarettes rested in a piece of foil I had turned into an ashtray. Everything was spinning and the room around me was bathed in a fuzzy radiance. A rap song played on the radio, and even though I had absolutely no idea what the words were, I danced to the beat with a passion that Colin, my
ex
, would say I had never been able to exhibit in bed.
I held my cigarette up, ready to attempt my first twerk, when I heard a loud pounding at the window. I froze with my bottom sticking straight out.
A beam of light distorted an image on the other side of the pane, making it look like a monster. Suddenly, the fact that I was alone in the middle of the woods wasn't such a great thing.
I opened my mouth to scream. But it was like a bad horror movie. Nothing came out. A hand pounded on the window again, almost shattering it.
I lowered everythingâthe bottle, the cigarette, and the ridiculous pose I had been attemptingâand finally found my vocal cords. My bloodcurdling scream cut through the bass of the music and gave me the energy to move. I set down the bottle and smashed the butt of the cigarette into the foil wrapper. I tried to remember where my phone was.
Bumping into the ledge of the table, I almost lost my footing. My cell phone was on the counter where I had left it earlier. I grabbed it, praying that there was some sort of cellular service up here.
The pounding increased. Making a split-second decision and hoping I wasn't being rash, I dialed 911, and reached for the volume on the radio. I heard the bored-sounding voice of a woman on the other end. I didn't even let her finish her introductory message. “I think someone is trying to break in!”
There was a pause. “Can you tell me the address?”
What was the address? I didn't even know that. I knew how to get here. Where to turn at the fork in the road where the
Fire Danger
sign stood. But I had little else.
“It's my grandmother's house. Doris Blodget. She used to live here. Crooked Road.” From the other room I heard the footsteps on the back porch. No one knew I was here. The house had been empty for years.
“Hurry.”
“Ma'am, you need to stay calm.”
Were these the fatal last words that every murder victim was forced to hear?
“Easy for you to say.” I cradled the phone in my neck and started to open drawers, looking for a weapon.
I could hear a man shouting from outside.
The lady raised her voice. “There is an officer on the way, ma'am.”
I grabbed the only weapon I could find, a soup ladle, and peered around the corner of the kitchen.
The pounding had moved to the front door. A deep voice shouted, “Harrison County Sheriff's Department!”
I dropped the phone and tiptoed to the door.
“Lady! Can you hear me? Sheriff's Department,” came the muffled voice through the door.
I reached for the doorknob. The sweat on my palms made it difficult to turn the handle. I pulled the door open just enough to be able to see who was on the other side.
The shadows and a red glare behind him obscured his face and all I could see was a vaporized cloud of breath disappearing in the cool night air between us.
“Yes?” I croaked.
“Sheriff's Department.”
A badge appeared and there was a moment of silence. “The badge isn't part of a Halloween costume, in case you were wondering . . .”
A strange moment of clarity hit me and my fear turned into something equally painful. I looked over the dark outline at an SUV with blinking red lights.
“Can I come in?” he asked.
Since my arrest in March I had learned a few things about my rights. Things I should have remembered from my high-school civics class. I didn't have to let law enforcement search my vehicle or my house. “Why?” I asked.
“I just want to checkâ”
“Do you have a warrant?”
I heard him shift restlessly “Look, lady, you've gotâ”
“I know my rights and you can't come in without a warrant.”
“Butâ”
“You might look scary and tough, but I won't be bullied.” I attempted to close the door, but a hand snaked out and grabbed my own.
“I don't think you understandâ”
Something tickled at my nose, but I was too busy trying to smash his hand with the soup ladle to consider it. He was way out of line trying to barge in like this.
Boom!
The door burst open, trapping me against the wall in the process. “Hey!”
This was definitely in violation of my rights.
I moved the door out of my way and felt a surge of anger. The man stomped up and down in the middle of the living room. His actions were so strange that I stopped protesting and watched him in confusion. A tiny spark disappeared under his boots and smoke rose from the floor. He put down his flashlight, reached for my bottle of wine, and poured the remaining contents on the carpet. A billowing fog of steam rose up.
“I was drinking that!”
He turned around and our eyes locked. “I'll make sure to mention that in my report,” he said.
I looked at a spot in the rug that now sported a nice-sized black hole that was almost the same color as his eyes. It dawned on me that the cigarette must have landed on the rug.
“Well, I didn't realizeâ” I bit my lip. What an idiot I was. “All you had to do was explain.”
“I tried. In between showing you my badge and using your precious bottle as a fire hose. . . .” He brought it to his nose. “What is this stuff? Cough syrup?”
“That is good wine.”
He looked at the price sticker and raised his eyebrow. “Obviously.”
He set down the bottle. “I've seen too many fires caused by a single spark from a cigarette. That makes the fact that I entered this house to ensure your safety perfectly legal. Look it up.”