House of Leaves (79 page)

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Authors: Mark Z. Danielewski

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__________________

 

 

 

November 1, 1988

Dearest Johnny

What a terrible sleep and dream I’ve been roused from. There are so many pieces to make sense of, the doctors all warn me to just put aside the last two years. It’s a shambles. Seems I’m better off consigning the whole lot to psychosis, locking
it
up, throwing away the keys.

They tell me I should be grateful that that presents itself as an option. I suppose they’re right. Cast no backward glances, eh?

The doctors also inform me that you visited several times but apparently I was completely unresponsive. As for all the letters I said I had written you, chock full of paranoia and all, I hardly wrote a thing. Five reams of paper and postage were nothing more than figments of my imagination.

I tend to believe all this because I have come to realize, as you probably realized when you came here, that the New Director is in fact none other than the Old Director, the patient one, the decent one, the honest one, the kind one who has been taking care of your mother far well over ten years.

I have now my own biochemical cycles and a couple of new drugs to thank for these days of clarity. The Director has already warned me that my lucidity may not last forever. In fact it’s unlikely.

I shall be fine as long as I know the one on whose tender sensibilities I imposed such hogwash will forgive me. How could I misplace your visits? Lose your letters? Not even recognize you? I love you so, so very much.

Will you ever forgive me?

As always,

all my love,

Mommy

 

 

 

November 3, 1988

Dearest Johnny,

As I seem to have been granted temporary clemency from rabid thoughts, reflections pour out of me at an alarming rate. I think of all the heartache I subjected your beautiful father to. I think of everything I have put you through.

It is completely within reason for you to turn your back on me forever. It might even be the wisest decision. Saint Elizabeth was right to warn us from the rooms of Bedlam.

I am hopelessly unreliable, and though my love for you bums so brightly all would seem thrown into darkness were the sun to eclipse
it,
such feelings can still never excuse my condition.

The Director has patiently explained to me, probably for the thousandth time, that my varied dispositions are the result of faulty wiring. For the most part I have come to accept his evaluation. (He quotes Emily Dickinson, saying I cover the abyss with a trance so my memories can manage a way around it—this “pain so utter.”)

Sometimes, however, I wonder if my problems originate elsewhere. In my own childhood, for example.

These days I like to believe—which is a shade different from belief itself—all I really needed to survive was the voice my own mother never gave me. The one we all need but one I never heard.

Once, a long while ago, I watched a little black girl fall off a street curb and skin both her knees. When she got up, wailing like a siren, I could see that her shins and the palms of her hands were flecked with hurt.

The mother had no gauze or antiseptic or even running water handy but she still managed to care for her daughter. She whisked her up in her arms and murmured over and over the perfect murmurs, powerful enough to fully envelop her child in the spell and comfort of only a few words: “It’ll be okay. It’ll be alright.”

To me, my mother only said ‘That won’t do.” She was right. It didn’t do at all.

Love,

Mom

 

 

 

November 27, 1988

Dear, dear Johnny,

So convinced such happiness has to be a dream—especially these days—I have repeatedly asked the Director whether or not you were really here yesterday.

One lifetime ago I was crouched in shadow and in the next I am with you. How profound the differance.

Victoria Lucas once said there’s nothing ‘so black… as the inferno of the human mind.” She didn’t know you. You shimmered almost to the point where I had to squint for fear you’d burn away another chance for me to ever see you again.

I was even confused at first. You detected that, I saw. You’re so keen. Keener than Anaxagoras. But it’s true. A vagrant thought had momentarily convinced me that I was dead and your father had been restored to me. Fortunately my better faculties righted my first impression: this figure was taller and broader and in all respects stronger than my love.

Here was my
son,
come at long last and at a time
when at last I could recognize him.

If my tears upset you, you should understand they were not spilled out of grief or bitterness but out of pure bliss for having you here with me, able to lift my
spirits
so effortlessly, carry this old heap of bones, all of me, safe and warm in my dear child’s arms.

For a few hours, every yesteryear repealed its hold. I felt free and silly. A school girl once again giggling out the day and in the presence of such a fine young man.

Your adventures in Europe caught me between heartbreak and laughter. You tell
your stories so well, all that tramping over the continent for four months with only a backpack, a Pelican pen and a few hundred dollars. I’m glad to see you gained back most of the weight you lost.

Of course, only now as I write you this letter do I realize how careful you were to keep me from your greater troubles and mutilations. How can I not appreciate your protective instincts? Nevertheless, I assure you that I am fine and would love nothing more than to rally at your side, urge you through the hard times, and where the obstacles seem

insurmountable, opponents invulnerable, play the part of the witch again and cast dreadful spells.

Open yourself to me. I will not harm your secrets. Do not think your mother cannot read in her own child the trauma he still endures every day and evening.

I am here. Ever devoted. Still

surfeit with tenderness, affection

and most of all love,

your mother

 

 

 

Mr. John
XXXXXX

xxxxxxxxxxx

xxxxxxxxxxx

xxxxxxxxxxx

 

January 12, 1989

Dear Mr._______

As you requested in your last visit, I am writing now to
inform
you that your mother’s condition may be on the decline again.

We are doing our best to adjust her medication, and while this relapse could prove temporary, you may want to prepare yourself for the worst.

If there are any questions I can answer, please do not hesitate to contact me at ______________. Also, I wish to remind you that I will be retiring at the end of March. Dr. David J. Draines will be taking my place. He is very capable and well versed in psychiathe care. He will provide your mother with the very best treatment.

Sincerely yours,

______ ________ M.D., Ph. D.

Director

The Three Attic Whalestoe Institute

 

 

 

February 28, 1989

Dear Johnny,

It’s remarkable how much I continue to improve. For the first time ever, the Director has suggested I might even be able to leave. Every day I read, write, exercise, eat well, sleep well and enjoy the occasional movie on the television.

For the first time, I feel normal. I know you are swept up in a tide of your own affairs but would
it
be possible for you to purchase for me a suitcase? I shall need a large one as well as a carry-on. Any color is fine though I prefer something akin to amethyst, heliotrope or maybe lilac.

It’s been so long since I’ve traveled, I’ve forgotten if one checks one’s luggage at the station or do I just carry everything to my compartment on the train? Is there room beneath the sleeper or am I forgetting some other sort of storage place? (That is my thinking behind the smaller carry-on.)

Love,

P.

 

 

 

March 31, 1989

Dear Johnny,

Why have you written me such lovely letters and yet failed to mention my luggage?

If my request is a terrible imposition I wish you would just say so. Your mother’s an able woman. She’ll find another way.

As
it
is I’m fairly annoyed. The Director left today and I was informed that ill had been packed I could have left with him.

Unfortunately, while I am quite adept at folding and arranging my belongings, my inability to place them anywhere impedes my ascent into my new life— drowsy, baked in sun, with you.

1,

P

 

 

 

May 3, 1989

Dear John,

With no luggage to speak of—amethyst, lilac or otherwise—I’ve had nowhere to put my things and so I’ve lost all of
it.
To be honest I don’t know where all of
it
went. Clearly the worker bees have stolen
it.

By the way I was mistaken. The Director didn’t leave. He’s still here. The new one is the same one after all. In other words everything is fine, though the Old Director’s moods have been a little odd lately.

I think I’ve upset him somehow. There’s something malicious in his manner now, very slight, but noticeable just the same, a nasty, twisting wire woven into the fabric of an otherwise perfectly decent man.

No matter. I cannot tire myself on the feelings of the world. I am leaving after all, though
it
is no easy task, especially for this old Sibyl of Cumae.

Climes of any kind are trying. Frankly I’m exhausted by all the planning and the paperwork.

Donnie will pick me up soon, very soon, but you my dear child, you should stay awhile.

Do that for me.

Mmmy

 

 

 

 

Mr. John
XXXXXX

xxxxxxxxxxx

xxxxxxxxxxx

xxxxxxxxxxx

May
5
,
1989

Dear Mr.________

We regret to inform you that on May 4, 1989 at approximately
8:45
P.M. your mother, Pelafina Heather Lièvre, died in her room at The Three Attic Whalestoe Institute.

 

After a detailed examination, both our resident doctor, Thomas Janovinovich M.D., as well as the county coroner, confirmed the cause of death was the result of self-inflicted asphyxiation achieved with bed linen hung from a closet hook. Ms. Lièvre was
59.

 

Please permit us to express our sincere condolences over your terrible loss. Perhaps it will be of some solace to know that despite the severity of her mental affliction, your mother managed to show much humor in her last year and attendants said she often spoke fondly of her only son.

 

While this will be a difficult time, we urge you to contact us as soon as possible to make arrangements for her burial. The conditions of her enrollment here already provide for a standard cremation. However for an additional $3,000, we would happily provide a proper casket and service. For another $1,000, a burial plot may also be secured at the nearby Wain Cemetery.

 

 

Again we wish to extend our sympathies over the death of Ms. Livre. [sic] If we can be of any help during this time of need, whether by answering questions or assisting you with funeral plans, please feel free to contact us directly at _____________

Respectfully yours,

David J. Draines, M.D.

Director

The Three Attic Whalestoe Institute

 

#669-951381-
.6634646-94

#162- 11231-1614161-23

 

 

 

 

This receipt indicates that on September 8, 1989, the following article previously owned by Ms. Pelafina Heather Lièvre was claimed by her son John _________ one jewelry.

 

 

 

 

 

 

F.

 

Various Quotes

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Absence makes the heart grow fonder.

Anonymous

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