Read Stand Alone Online

Authors: P.D. Workman

Stand Alone (30 page)

Justine had been staring at a dark spot on the carpet, wondering whether it was a burn or a piece of dark lint. She looked up at him.

“Why’d the school call?” she questioned.

“Something about you pretending to be someone else again today.”

“Oh,” Justine shrugged, unconcerned. She was more interested in talking about her trip to the hospital.

“Who were you trying to be at school today? Katie again?”

Justine shook her head.

“No.”

“Who, then?”

Justine shrugged.

“No one. Just having some fun,” she brushed it off.

“I’d like to hear about it anyway.”

Justine couldn’t see the window from this chair, so no pigeons. Dr. Morton sat there smiling at her and waiting patiently. Justine tipped her chair back and stared at the ceiling. She sucked on the straw of the juice box, making a slurping sound.

“Tell me who you’re being today,” Morton urged.

Justine stared at the ceiling.

“Monica,” she said finally.

“And what’s special about Monica?”

“Nothing. It’s just a name I picked.”

“I see. No special meaning to you?” Morton persisted.

“No.”

“What was it like being Monica at school today? What made her different?”

“She’s a lot younger than anyone else,” Justine finally offered up.

Morton nodded, examining his fingernails closely. Justine was irritated by his distraction.

“She was younger, and she was lost. People were supposed to help her, but no one did. Maybe I should go to a new school.”

“Where they don’t already know your antics?” Morton said, with a knowing smile.

Justine scowled at him.

“Just
  


they always just ignore me, or call you, or whatever. They don’t
  
…”

“They don’t give you the attention that you want.”

“But it’s not just
  
…” Justine trailed off, trying to put it into words. She shook her head. “I don’t just want attention. I want
  
…”

Dr. Morton waited, watching her face. He was good at reading her, and Justine wondered if he’d be able to see her thoughts even though she couldn’t put them into words.

“You want
  
…” Dr. Morton appeared to be fishing for words himself, “You want to feel like you belong. But you’re not comfortable in your own skin. You want to be free to explore yourself, but they’ve already got you pigeon-holed.”

Justine quirked her mouth and wrinkled her nose, considering.

“Yeah, sort of.”

“You want people to react to you, so you know how it feels to be different. If they won’t react, you don’t know what to do.”

“I don’t know,” Justine said, frustrated. “That all sounds good, but it doesn’t fit right.”

“Okay,” Dr. Morton shrugged and nodded. “So my theory doesn’t quite work. Do you have another?”

Justine struggled to sort out her feelings.

“No.”

“How do you wish that people had reacted to Monica? They just ignore you, and call me or your mom. But you wish that they had
  


?”

“I want them to help Monica,” Justine burst out, angry about how she had been ignored. “Monica needs help!”

“Because she’s younger?”

Justine shrugged and nodded, looking down at the carpet. She sucked on the straw of her juice box, even though it was empty and just made a loud staccato spitting sound.

“She’s just little, and everybody just ignored her! You can’t just ignore her. You can’t just ignore someone who needs help like that!”

“What kind of help did she need?”

Justine rubbed her temples, confused and uncomfortable. She was feeling all restless, jumpy. She wanted to blow up at Dr. Morton, but he was the only one who was listening to her. She closed her eyes concentrating. She didn’t understand all of the feelings that surfaced as they talked. She felt angry, frustrated, and helpless. She wanted to help Monica and she wanted to punch someone out. She didn’t know why Monica, an imaginary being, should mean so much to her. And why was it that someone she had made up still seemed so remote, so hard to understand. If Monica was just someone that Justine had made up, someone that just reflected Justine’s own psyche, then shouldn’t Justine be able to understand her perfectly?

She knew Monica needed help, but she didn’t know what. She didn’t know what she wanted from Dr. Morton. Justine was restless. Her whole body was one mass of itch. She shifted in her seat again.

“You can get up,” Dr. Morton suggested. “Move around.”

Justine got up, all of her muscles knotted. She moved around the room, trying to work them out. She remembered her nightmare at the hospital; crawling across the floor, so tired and small. She still felt the same way emotionally. Like she was just inching forward, slogging through wet concrete, unable to break free, exhausted after all of the years of therapy.

“What kind of help does Monica need?” Dr. Morton prompted again, making a short note on his file.

“I don’t know. She’s lost.”

“Could
I
help Monica, do you think? Where does she need to go?”

“She needs someone to take care of her. She needs
  


a home. She needs everyone to stop ignoring her!”

“I’m not ignoring her,” Morton reassured, leaning forward in his seat, his eyes tracking Justine as she paced restlessly back and forth. “Maybe Monica could tell me what she needs.”

“She doesn’t talk,” Justine told him. “I talk for her.”

“What kind of a home does she need? She doesn’t feel like she’s being taken care of properly?”

“Nobody pays any attention to her. She needs
  


I don’t know. Everything.”

“Your mother takes good care of you, Justine,” Morton said. “Do you feel like there’s something she’s not giving you that you need?”

“No,” Justine said, making a brushing-away movement. “No, it’s not about me. It’s not about Em.”

“Monica starts with a letter em,” Dr. Morton noted. “Any connection, do you think?”

Justine shook her head.

“I had Monica since before I could spell. It’s nothing about Em.”

“How do you think Monica would feel if she lived where you do? If Em was her mother?”

Justine hugged her arms tightly around herself, trying to keep herself together, trying to comfort herself, to comfort Monica.

“Would Em take care of her?” Justine questioned uncertainly.

“What do you think?” Dr. Morton countered.

Justine was confused. Em had fed Justine, housed her, clothed her. Justine didn’t trust Em, yet Em
had
looked after her physically for years. If Monica lived with Em, would Em take care of her? Feed her, clothe her, not just walk off and forget about her? Justine had never trusted Em not to just disappear one day. She had never trusted that Em would continue to feed her every day. She always felt the need to stash food, to make sure that she had a supply, in case the flow from Em should just dry up, and one day there would be no food, and no mother.

“Em couldn’t take care of two girls,” she said finally. “Maybe she’s been able to feed me so far
  


but she couldn’t take care of two.”

Dr. Morton nodded.

“Do you worry about Em having another baby? About her attention being split between two children? Is that why you test out other personas? To see if she can handle another?”

Justine shook her head and stopped pacing for a moment. She had never considered Em having another child before.

“Em doesn’t date,” she said. “She doesn’t see any men anymore.”

“So she wouldn’t have another baby?”

“Yeah.”

“You haven’t wanted her to date any men, have you?” he probed.

“No. But that’s not why. I never thought about her having another baby before.”

“Maybe subconsciously you did.”

Justine shook her head.

“What about the hospital?” she questioned abruptly, changing the subject. “You said you wanted to talk about that.”

“Yes. I do. Are you sure we’re done with Monica? I don’t want to neglect her.”

Justine rolled her eyes.

“She’s not real.”

“But it hurts you when she is ignored. I don’t want to hurt you. Are you sure you’re ready to talk about other things?”

Justine nodded. She returned to her seat, then changed her mind and switched from the new chair back to the old chair. The old chair where she could look out the window at the pigeons. The one she was most comfortable in. Dr. Morton adjusted his chair again to face her.

“So, you want to talk about the hospital?” he questioned.

“Yes.”

“What happened? How did you hurt yourself?”

“I just tripped and fell, and cut myself.”

“What did you cut yourself on?”

“I don’t remember. Something sharp. The doctors thought it was a knife, but it wasn’t. Just some piece of junk or something.”

“What were you doing when you tripped and fell?”

“Just walking,” Justine shrugged. “That’s not important.”

“You don’t usually do a lot of walking. You weren’t out on your skateboard?”

“No. It wasn’t a skateboard accident. I get lots of those, little spills, they’re not serious.”

“They could be. People can get killed in skateboard accidents.”

Instantly, Justine flashed back to Christian. Being hit by the car, rolling over the hood. His bloody, white face. His cold stillness. Holding him in her arms and trying to wake him up, with his neck broken and his head bashed in. Justine gasped and held her breath, reeling. It seemed like the next moment, Dr. Morton was bending down over her, taking her pulse and watching her face. She lifted her head dizzily. She was still sitting in the chair, Dr. Morton’s other hand supporting her and keeping her from sliding out of it.

“Take it slow,” Dr. Morton said. “Don’t try to move. Just be still, get your bearings back.”

Justine took a few deep breaths.

“You feeling okay today?” he questioned her. “Were you feeling sick or faint before you came in?”

“No. Fine.”

“Did you remember how you hurt yourself? Did something scare you?”

Justine swallowed.

“Just
  


something else. I wasn’t on my board when I got cut,” Justine told him strongly. “It wasn’t like that.”

“Okay. So what were you doing when you cut yourself?”

“Just walking.”

“How far were you from the hospital? The doctor’s report said you were bleeding pretty badly. No one saw where you came from. They didn’t think you could have been very far away when it happened. You couldn’t have gotten very far on your own, and it didn’t seem like anyone had dropped you off.”

“I wasn’t far away.”

“Maybe you went to the hospital before you cut yourself. Maybe you cut yourself in the alley or parking lot next to the hospital.”

Justine raised one eyebrow and didn’t comment. Dr. Morton let go of her and made sure that she was steady enough to stay put, walking slowly back around the desk to sit down.

“It can be very dangerous to self-injure, Justine. Your condition when you arrived in the emergency room was very serious. Some kids get addicted to self-injuring.”

“I know girls at school who cut themselves,” Justine contributed. “But not like this,” she indicated her heavily bandaged arm.

“No. That was pretty extreme, and I hope you realize how serious is was. If that happens again, you might not make it next time.”

Justine looked down at her bandaged arm, and nodded.

“It was an accident,” she asserted. “I didn’t mean to.”

“Be careful, then. We don’t want to lose you. Take care of yourself. Okay? Talk to me if you are thinking about hurting yourself.”

Justine nodded.

“Yeah, okay,” she agreed, staring out the window.

Dr. Morton had Justine go out to the waiting room, and invited Em in to talk to him at the end of the session.

“Her behavior seems to be degrading again,” Dr. Morton suggested tentatively. “She’s destabilizing.”

Em put her head back against the padded headrest of the chair, sighing.

“Yes,” she agreed. “Things were improving for a while there, I thought. She was maturing, seemed to be pretty stable, even if she was still having problems. But then
  
…”

Dr. Morton nodded agreement.

“She’s started to go downhill a lot faster the last few months. But even before that
  


a little over a year ago now?”

“Yes,” Em thought about it. “I wish I could figure out what happened
  


what made everything change again. I mean, things weren’t perfect by any means. But now
  


it was like overnight she regressed five years. Suddenly I’m dealing with a screaming, stealing, tantruming child again.”

“What do you remember from around that then?” Dr. Morton questioned. “What stands out from that time period?”

“I don’t know,” Em considered, reviewing it in her mind. Life with Justine was not easy. It was full of confrontations, suspensions, dealing with doctors and professionals. There was so much to consider. Even the good times were filled with emergencies and unexpected stressors.

“Any traumas or illnesses?” Dr. Morton prompted, his voice soothing and encouraging; that special tone of voice he used when guiding a patient through self-hypnosis or relaxation. Em let her mind wander. Justine sick? Justine hurt? She had accidents regularly. Particular problems with the police or school? Something that Em had suspected was going on but hadn’t been able to figure out? When had Justine started hoarding food again? What was it that had made her change, made her regress so far?

“She was hurt,” Em suggested, her voice quiet, distant from herself. “She’d had a bad accident on her skateboard. Concussion. Bumps and bruises, but nothing broken. She cried a lot. Not while I was around, but I could tell. Her eyes were bloodshot. She didn’t want me to take her to the hospital, so I didn’t. Do you think that was the wrong choice?”

Other books

Rivals by Felicia Jedlicka
Mala hostia by Luis Gutiérrez Maluenda
Carolina Moon by Nora Roberts
Repossessed by Shawntelle Madison
A Kind of Magic by Shanna Swendson
Lulu in Honolulu by Elisabeth Wolf
Blood Alone by James R. Benn
Duplicity (Spellbound #2) by Jefford, Nikki