Today Iâm excited to meet with Casper. I want to tell her about Crafts, and what I drew and what drawing means to me. I think that will make her happy. But when I push open the door, sheâs not alone. Dr. Helen is with her.
The turtle is hiding inside the sunken ship.
Dr. Helen turns around when I enter the room and says, âOh, Charlotte, please sit down, here.â And she pats the brown chair I always sit in. I look at Casper, but her smile isnât as nice as it usually is. It looksâ¦smaller.
Dr. Helen is a lot older than Casper, with lines at the edges of her eyes and rouge thatâs too dark for her skin.
âDr. Stinson and I have been reviewing your progress, Charlotte. Iâm happy to see youâve made some strong strides in such a short time.â
I donât know if Iâm supposed to answer her, or smile, or what, so I donât say anything. I kind of start pinching my thighs through the flowery skirt, but Casper notices and frowns, so I stop.
âYouâve been through so much, and at such a young age, I justâ¦â And here, weirdly, she stops, and kind of sets her jaw and says, very sharp, to Casper, âAre you not going to help at all with this, Bethany?â
And Iâm still absorbing Casperâs name, Bethany Bethany Bethany, so it takes a while for me to understand what sheâs telling me.
I say, âWhat?â
Casper repeats, âYouâre being discharged.â
Dr. Helen talks then, about a special sort of psychiatric hold that allowed me to be treated at the hospital, and about my mother having to meet with a judge and sign papers, because âyou were a danger to yourself and others,â and insurance, and my Grammy, who I havenât thought of in a very long time. All the words kind of bang around my brain as my heart squeezes into a tinier and tinier thing and I ask about my mom, but it comes out in a stutter. I bite down on my tongue until I get a faint, metallic taste of blood.
Casper says, âYour motherâs not working right now, so there isnât any possibility of coverage. As I understand it, some of your stay has been covered by your grandmother, but sheâs unable to continue due to her own health and financial care issues.â
âDid something happen to my grandmother?â
âI donât know,â answers Casper.
âYou talked to my mother?â
Casper nods.
âDid sheâ¦did she say anything about me?â
Casper looks at Dr. Helen, who says, âWeâre working as hard as possible to locate resources for you. In fact, Bethany, how are we doing on the bed at the house on Palace?â
When Casper doesnât answer, Dr. Helen flips through the pile of papers on her lap. âThereâs a halfway house that may have room for you, possibly as early as next month. They specialize in substance addiction, but that is one of your subsets. Youâll need to stay with your mother before then, of course, since you canât stay here. No one wants you back in your previous situation, no one.â
Previous situation:Â meaning, homeless. Meaning, Dumpster diving. Meaning, cold and sick and Fucking Frank and the men who fuck girls.
I look at the turtle. His legs twitch, like heâs shrugging at me:Â What do you expect me to do? Iâm a goddamn turtle trapped in a tank.
Outside the window, the sky is turning hard and gray. Fucking Frank. A halfway house. Iâm being sent back outside.
When I say it, I sound like a little baby, and that makes me even madder. âItâs still cold outside.â
Dr. Helen says, âWeâll do everything we can, but is there absolutely no possibility of long-term reconciliation with your mother, even with counseling? Sheâs agreed to house you until a bed opens at the halfway house. That says something to me, that sheâs trying.â
I look at Casper in desperation. I think her eyes are the saddest things Iâve seen in a long, long time.
Very, very slowly, she shakes her head from side to side. âI donât see any other option, Charlotte. Iâm very sorry.â
Once my mother hit my ear so hard I heard the howling of trains for a week. I get up and walk to the door.
Casper says, âWeâre not abandoning you, Charlotte. Weâve investigated every possible option, there just isnâtââ
âNo.â I open the door. âThank you. Iâm going to my room now.â
Casper calls after me, but I donât stop. My ears are a sea of bees. Our rooms are on the fourth floor, Dinnaken Wing. I pass by Louisa and go into the bathroom and stand there for a while. Louisa says my name.
Then I step into our shower and pound my forehead into the wall until the bees die.
When Casper comes running in, she grabs me around the waist and pulls at me to get me to stop. I take her beautiful yellowy baby bird hair in my hands and I yank so hard that she cries out and pushes away. I slide to the floor, warm blood trickling down to my mouth.
I say sorrysorrysorrysorrysorrysorry.
Feathery strands of her hair flutter in my hands. Iâll never be beautiful or normal like Casper, and just like that, just realizing that, out everything comes, all she ever asked of me.
I tell her: After my father died, my mother curled up into something tight and awful and there was no more music in the house, there was no more touching, she was only a ghost that moved and smoked. If I got in her way, if the school called, if I took money from her purse, if I was just me, the yelling started. She yelled for years. When she got tired of yelling, she started hitting.
Casper blots my face with a cloth as I talk. Louisa wrings her hands in the doorway. Girls pile up behind her, pushing, trying to get a look.
I say: Sheâs been hitting me for a long time. I say: I started hitting back.
I say: Please donât make me go back outside. I tell her about the man in the underpass, he broke my tooth and broke me, and it hurts swelling out of me, but I give it to her, all the horrible words in my heartâabout Ellis, about Fucking Frank.
I stop. Her eyes are watery. Iâve given her too much. Two orderlies muscle through the crowd of girls. There are little pinpricks of blood at the roots of Casperâs hair, little blips of red amid the yellow. They help her up and she doesnât say anything to me, just limps away.