Authors: Jennifer Saginor
yard. “People think they’re smarter than me, but they’re not! They
say one thing, but I like to figure out what they really mean. I am
one step ahead of them! People always want something from you.
You can’t trust anyone!” Dad instructs.
He thinks he’s teaching me invaluable lessons on how to sur-
vive in the world, but what he’s really doing is scaring the shit out
of me. Fear pulses through my veins as this unsettling experience
numbs my entire body. Life with him is becoming a constant
merry-go-round of fear and terror—he’s a far cry from the fun-
loving Hollywood scenester I used to know.
Later, we end up in Dad’s bedroom, where I watch him sort
through various types of guns, petrified as he hands me a loaded
revolver and shows me how to use it.
“Keep this by your bed at all times,” he urges. “It’s for your own
protection.”
I nod before walking slowly down the hallway to my room.
I close my bedroom door and head straight into my bathroom,
popping numerous Xanax and Halcyon pills to relax. I pull a large
bong from underneath a cabinet, fill it with pot, and open the win-
dow. When I’m done, I cautiously reenter my bedroom, taking one
step at a time, concerned he may come in. I place the gun carefully
underneath my bed, near the headboard. My entire body and fin-
gers tremble uncontrollably.
I see shadows beneath my bedroom door. My eyes zoom up
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close to the door, where no lock exists. Inexplicable, terrifying im-
ages of someone bursting through my bedroom door to kill me
race through my head. The house used to be so quiet and now
every noise makes me jump. My bedtime tremors for unpre-
dictable behavior make the nights nearly impossible to sleep.
Living my father’s suspicious and distrustful delusions will
haunt me forever. The paranoia will creep up on me when I least
expect it.
Nothing will remove the voices from my head. The slightest
turn of events can turn a peaceful afternoon into a thundercloud
of anger and confusion as the entire world crumbles to despair.
There are no answers. There are no solutions. By this time, I
have learned to run and hide, to isolate, to numb myself, and lash
out at those who get in the way.
Anything to avoid feeling my feelings.
201
O n my way to school one day, not long after the night when
Dad gave me the revolver, I close the front door to Dad’s house
when across the street, I notice three suspicious, shady-looking
men smoking cigarettes against a shiny four-door Mercedes
with dark tinted windows. The men don’t look American; in
fact, I’m not sure what they are, but they have dark complexions
with mustaches and appear to be looking around every few
seconds as if they are waiting for someone. I attempt to brush it
off like it’s no big deal and tell myself I’m being paranoid. I am
not ready to deal with everything that is happening, because I
don’t know what is happening. All I know is that my father con-
tinues to reinforce that I not mention any of this absurdity to
anyone.
J E N N I F E R S A G I N O R
At seventeen, I am sworn to secrecy and told to keep a gun by
my side at all times.
The freedom package has officially crumbled.
For Dad’s fiftieth birthday, Eric Jacobs throws him a birthday
dinner at his exquisite estate in Beverly Hills. It’s the kind of
home you see in magazines: lavish furniture, gallery-style paint-
ings, impeccable decor that seems so perfectly placed. There are
hundreds of sexy young models running around in silky
dresses.
“Where’s Pops?” Eric hugs me hello.
“Late as usual.”
“He can’t be on time even to his own birthday,” Eric
chuckles.
“What do you think of your father’s new girl?” he asks sin-
cerely.
“I’d rather not say,” I smirk and he laughs.
“Listen, kid, if you ever need anyone to talk to, you come see
me, okay?” Eric offers in a creepy tone; I can tell he’s the type to
take advantage.
There’s commotion by the front door as Dad and Vicki arrive.
They’re perspiring, rushed, and scattered as guests dash over to
greet them. I venture around the house, making my way into the
living room before everyone is seated. The place settings are ex-
quisite with extravagant floral arrangements and a bottle of Dom
in the center of each round table. Name cards are perfectly dis-
played, though my father’s seat has no name tag. Instead, an over-
size plastic hypodermic needle is set in front of his place setting.
My eyes rush up close to the needle. I stare at it for a while, unable
to move. I don’t know why I am so surprised to see it out in the
open.
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I thought it was a family secret, the dirty kind people don’t talk
about in public or even to those closest to them.
If others knew what evil lurked behind our doors, how come
no one did anything to help?
Dad comes up from behind me, draping his arms around my
shoulders.
“Need a tranquilizer?” Dad jokes. I jump, noticing glossy sweat
running across his face.
He picks up the large plastic needle and begins poking every-
one near him in the ass.
“Come here, little one; Dr. Feel Good has a little something for
you!” he teases a friend’s wife, who shrieks and runs away.
Everyone laughs as Dad chases her for a moment and then
stops to catch his breath. I suppose in a world of partiers, a plastic
needle as your name tag is commonplace, even funny. But some-
how I am far from laughing. Eric wraps his arm around Dad’s
shoulder.
“We knew it was your birthday and we know you don’t sleep
with hookers, but we ran into a couple old friends who wanted to
come say hello. You might recognize them.” Eric coughs to himself
as four skinny girls with size-D silicone boobs step forward.
“Oh my God,” Dad chuckles cheerfully.
“Doc, I haven’t seen you in so long!” One of the girls plants a
big kiss on him as Vicki enters coked out of her mind.
“What are you doing? You’re cheating on me! I knew it! You
motherfucker!”
Vicki picks up a china plate, throws it at the skinny girl, and
runs after her. A catfight ensues. Vicki throws a punch at the
hooker but misses, hitting Dad in the eye. He flinches and reacts
by throwing an arm in the air and accidentally knocks Vicki in the
nose. Blood pours out. The girls stop fighting. Someone grabs a
napkin and hands it to Vicki. She pinches her nose with it, but the
bleeding is so intense that the napkin is quickly drenched. Another
girl brings her a towel.
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“Don’t worry, honey, you needed your nose reset anyway,” Dad
assures her and the guys laugh, a deafening tone that resonates
through the room.
My mind wanders, preoccupied with thoughts of Kendall, my
mother, safety. I need an escape. A phone will work. The den has a
warm feel to it with mahogany wood and lots of reds, greens, and
browns. Books line the shelves. I pick up the receiver on the desk
and dial while staring out at the spectacular landscape hoping
Kendall answers.
“Hello?” Kendall says softly. My body heat rises.
“Hey.”
“Hey . . .” She lingers and I can feel my stomach turn, craving
her affection more than ever. The urge to see her day or night re-
gardless of the consequences beats inside to such an extreme that I
would risk anything to be with her, to hold her in my arms. My de-
sire for her has turned into something much deeper, much more
uncivilized.
“I miss you. I need to see you.” My heart pounds, wishing she
could reach through the phone and comfort me.
“I can’t,” she whispers.
“Why?”
“Oh, Jennifer, what am I going to do with you?”
“Anything you want,” I try to flirt, but it comes out sounding
more like a plea for help.
“I’ll figure something out, okay?” she says quietly.
“When?”
“Soon,” she assures me. “I gotta go.” She hangs up.
The phone goes dead.
I rejoin the party, where a group of coke whores are playing
Twister.
Blood drips from their noses onto the mat.
The scene is horrifying. My tolerance for this deranged be-
havior has peaked. I leave abruptly and drive to the Mansion,
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searching for some kind of normalcy. Thank God Tobey is there.
We end up ordering milk shakes and watching reruns of Dallas in
one of the upstairs bedrooms. My entire childhood was a perfect
cliché. Tobey falls asleep and I stare out the window lost in the
hours that go by.
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Most days after school Kendall and I meet at the park across
from the Beverly Hills Hotel. Our passion is rekindled whenever
we haven’t seen each other for a while. Usually we meet at the last
minute. We are in the bathroom kissing, hungry to be touched.
Our desire for each other is so intense it startles us both. The feel-
ings I have for Kendall are different from anything I’ve ever felt
before. There is no reasonable explanation; it is simply a connec-
tion we both seem incapable of stopping.
We lean against the wall, our bodies pressed close as she plays
with my hair softly and then pulls on it harder. I sigh, wanting her
to hurt me. She moves her hand slowly in between my legs, mak-
ing me beg for more. Once I’m aroused and totally helpless in her
arms, she smiles alluringly, knowing she has me. When we are
J E N N I F E R S A G I N O R
done, we separate. Kendall slips into the limo while I cross the
street and walk two blocks to my father’s house on the corner.
At home, I look in my desk drawer for my journals and notice
that they are missing. I bump into Vicki, who looks thin and hag-
gard, which makes her appear twice her age. Our relationship has
turned openly hostile. She wipes blood from her nose as her nose-
bleeds are common these days. She avoids eye contact.
“Are you okay?” I ask, feeling momentarily sorry for her.
“Mind your own business. I’m warning you, stay out of my
shit,” she threatens with gangster attitude.
“What shit would that be, Vicki?” My voice overflows with
sarcasm.
I move in closer as she uses her sleeve to put pressure on her
nose, and we both pretend there’s not blood oozing out of her nos-
trils. “You took my journals, didn’t you?”
“Listen, you little punk. You shouldn’t talk to me like that. I’m
watching you and if you’re not nice to me, I can put you and your
father in serious danger.”
Her words are meant to be threatening, but she looks so pitiful
that I try hard not to laugh. Vicki moves in close and points her
bloody finger in my face.
“I can have you and your father killed—do you hear me?”
My stomach tightens, all urge for laughter is gone as adrena-
line rushes inside me like a volcano ready to explode. Rage rips
through my skin and starts to pulsate. However, I stand there in si-
lence because a part of me knows that she is linked to the Mob and
really could have us killed.
I leave abruptly and drive around aimlessly until I find myself
parked in front of Hayden’s condo. I rush in without warning and
find him alone, doing blow on his living room table. He barely
looks up when I enter.
“Hayden?”
“Yeah?” he answers, distracted, inhaling.
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“I need to talk to you.”
“Oh, now you want to talk to me?” He finishes an enormous
line, stands, and pulls up his Levi’s, showing off his tan muscular
stomach and white Calvin Klein boxers.
“I’m sorry, but a lot of shit has been going on at my father’s
house since he met Vicki. Her ex-boyfriend is a huge Colombian
drug lord, and Carmela and I found kilos of coke in his bathroom,
and Dad’s walking around the house with an Uzi.”
“Sounds like a bad TV movie.”
“Minus the commercials.”
“What else have you not kept me in the loop about?” he asks, a
look of distrust emanates and I become immediately fearful that