Authors: Jennifer Saginor
Paulina’s path, one that once seemed so foreign, seems more
real to me than ever. I can’t help but wonder if I am a few days, a
few months, a few introductions away from becoming her: a lost
young girl searching for escape in a world of scavengers. The way
she was so ruthlessly disposed of will remain with me forever.
Through the window, I watch Paulina’s father get into his car
and drive slowly down the street.
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Dad returns home from Hawaii and everything starts to change.
The summer ends. Everyone has disappointed me. There are not
enough pills to medicate me anymore. The skinny models are
thrown out and Vicki, a nineteen-year-old coke fiend, moves in.
Vicki walks around with a huge attitude, bragging about her ex-
boyfriend, Marco Santiago, an infamous Colombian drug lord, an
invisible Godfather who watches over her.
She left home as a teenager and has been running ever since.
Vicki is a natural brunette with dyed blond hair, bony, shaking
limbs, and a sunken face with a perfect complexion.
She makes my skin crawl. I don’t know what Dad sees in her.
They are suddenly sleeping at the house every night and I never see
him at the Mansion anymore.
On one occasion, not long after Vicki moved in, I go into Dad’s
bathroom to restock my pill supply. In the back drawer, I come
across a vial of coke. I pull it out and stare at it until Carmela
sneaks up on me and yanks it out of my hand.
“Jennifer!” she screeches. “Give me that!”
We each fight for the vial in a tug-of-war.
“What are you doing?”
“This is your father’s!” she hollers in her high-pitched
accent.
“So, why are you taking it?” I yell back, grabbing it.
“Your father says he doesn’t want anything moved from here!”
Carmela grabs the vial forcefully from my hand and I fall back-
ward. My arms flail wildly, accidentally knocking a towel holder
that pops open. An enormous pound-size Baggie filled with white
powder falls to the floor from a secret compartment in the wall.
Carmela and I stare at each other utterly stunned.
“What the hell? What is going on?” I ask.
“I know nothing. Your father no tell me nothing! I just work
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here! He says no touch, I no touch. He tell me no look, I no look,”
she chants like a crazy person.
“You no look! You no look!” I too now chant, sounding equally
insane.
Carmela’s facial muscles are twitching. Our eyes meet and un-
controllable smiles creep over our faces. Next thing you know,
we’re rolling around on the floor laughing hysterically. My stom-
ach muscles ache. We regain our breath and agree not to tell any-
one about the bag.
That night, I lie in bed awake. Things have turned so shady
around here. Three Xanaxes later, I hear voices coming from
downstairs. There’s a lot of commotion and people are walking
in and out. Things seem to be more hectic than usual. I recognize
Eric Jacobs’ and Don Michaels’ voices, and a few others as well.
The clock r
a.m.
eads 3:45
as I pop a Halcyon, pull my pillow over
my head, and try to fall asleep. After what seems like hours of toss-
ing and turning, I hear loud noises coming from my father’s bed-
room. Lots of furniture is moved around. Banging and screaming
echoes down the hallway. Then all is silent. I lie in bed frozen, like
a scared little girl.
I’ve learned not to knock on Dad’s bedroom door until at least
two or three in the afternoon. Up all night, in bed all day, Dad and
Vicki don’t eat and barely leave his room. I’ve stopped asking why
he’s never at work anymore.
One night his door is slightly ajar, so I burst in to load up on
more Xanax but stop because the shades are drawn and I realize
they are home. Everything is dark and there’s the grotesque odor
of syringes dripping with heroin residue. There are two figures
passed out on Dad’s king-size bed. I try to back up quietly, but they
sit up, groggy, eyes completely bloodshot.
“Sorry,” I stutter, unsure of what I see.
“It’s okay,” Dad says, scratching his head, and I immediately
forget why I came in. Dad gets out of bed and slips on his under-
wear. I turn my head, trying not to look at his penis.
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“I need to give her another shot,” he utters in a muffled tone,
walking to his dresser.
Vicki is clearly drugged up on something and I can’t imagine
what else she needs. He rummages through his drawers as Vicki
props her head up, reaching for a compact mirror and vial on the
dresser. Her hair is messy and she has black circles underneath her
heavy eyes.
Dad unwraps a needle in a plastic package and grabs a small
bottle out of the refrigerator in his bathroom as Vicki snorts a
quick line of coke off her compact. I doubt she sees me. Dad opens
the bottle and inserts the needle and the syringe slowly fills with
liquid. I want to somehow disappear, slide underneath the crack of
the door, but fear keeps me still. There is something sinister and
corrupt about watching him prepare her injection.
“She’s been like this all day. It’s some kind of bad flu,” he insists,
heading back over to the bed. I can tell he is lying to me.
I freak out because I’ve never seen needles around the house.
His shadow towers over her. Vicki makes groggy noises as he
flips her over with one swoop and pumps the needle into her ass.
Within seconds, Vicki is more looped than ever. She gazes over in
my direction, mumbles something, and lays her head back down.
My father laughs, a weakening sound that penetrates my bones.
His eyes, which were once warm and friendly, now emit a look
of distrust. He is haggard and withdrawn. I barely recognize him.
It’s around ten on a school night as Grampy and I sit at his dining
room table working on my term paper. My eyelids are heavy from
lack of sleep.
Though I am not interested in school, classes, or homework, I
gravitate toward my grandfather more these days because I love
him and he is the closest thing I have to a parent. He reminds me
that I am only a teenager by frequently asking questions about
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schoolwork and my friends. I can tell he is concerned about my
state of high anxiety, but his deep devotion to his son keeps him
silent. Instead, he tells me to focus on reality and my future. He
forces me to use my mind. Though I may not be ready to hear him
or change, I know he is the only person who can lead me in the
right direction.
I never want to disappoint him and therefore never admit to
not attending classes. I turn my ear the other way when he talks
about how to make a living or survive on my own because my fa-
ther always tells me that I will never have to worry about money or
anything as long as he is in my life. Therefore, I couldn’t give two
shits about my studies, college, or anything outside of my own se-
cluded world.
“I don’t understand why we need to know about all these
World Wars,” I complain while flipping through my American his-
tory book.
“If we don’t learn from our past, ignorance repeats itself in the
future,” he informs me.
“Is that why people get so out of control? They don’t resolve
problems from their past and their past shapes their future?” I ask.
“It is how we interpret experiences from the past that tells us
how to act in the future,” he explains.
“Maybe we’re all just running from times we don’t want to
remember?”
“Yes, but make no mistake. The past is the past. You are re-
sponsible for today,” he clarifies, lowering his glasses so I can see
his eyes.
At home, my father’s house has turned ugly. I never know when I’ll
find my father and Vicki passed out on his bed. His mind is filled
with scrambled, irrational thoughts, leaving him overly suspicious
of everyone.
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“They’re after me, but I can outsmart them!” Dad repeats
wildly over the next few months.
His paranoia scares me. He and Vicki become more out of con-
trol and I become more perplexed and terrified. I detach from my
sister and everyone else who is close to me. I isolate more at school
as things at home become strange and unpredictable. Things are
unraveling.
It’s late in the evening when I open my bedroom door and
quietly peer down the hallway to see if anyone is coming. I ap-
proach the staircase and head downstairs to the kitchen. I open
the refrigerator door, pull out a wine cooler, and jump, startled to
find my father standing behind me in his underwear clutching an
Uzi. I have developed such a high tolerance for his inappropriate
behavior that I actually stand there and don’t even think twice
about it.
“What are you doing?” I ask, opening the wine cooler.
“Get down!” he screams, pointing the gun out the window.
I duck, losing my breath as anxiety takes hold. I hide under -
neath the counter as he aims the Uzi toward the backyard.
“Games!” he screams out loud as beads of sweat form on his
forehead. “I’ll give them games!”
“Who?” I ask, trembling.
“The men out there.”
“What men?”
“The men who are after me!” Dad screams, lost in his delusions.
He must be mixing. Life has become one big emergency as I
stand witness to my father’s paranoid hallucinations.
“Follow me! Stay low!” he orders.
We walk low to the ground as I follow him past the window
above the kitchen counter. I am scared to death.
“Who’s after you?” I ask again.
“The Mafia!”
“Why would the . . .”
“Shush! The house is bugged!”
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His stare alone is an implied threat, an inner hardness that
didn’t used to be there.
“What do they want?” I say, shaking.
“I’m a doctor. What do you think they want? Drugs!”
I find myself on my knees following my father in utter dismay.
I wonder whether or not there really are men with guns outside.
Dad checks out the back door and slowly opens it, instructing
me to follow him along the side of the house.
“Stay low and behind me!” he commands, whispering as we
walk with arched backs down a side pathway through the back-