The Weight of Zero (33 page)

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Authors: Karen Fortunati

BOOK: The Weight of Zero
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I stand on the sidewalk. I have no one to call for a ride besides Mom and Aunt D. No one. And this fact suddenly staggers me as much as Kristal's words. I almost had Kristal, and I almost had Michael, but now I have no one.

I turn off my phone to prevent Mom from tracking me. I decide to walk home in the cold black air. To my empty house.

As I step off the curb, that old pickup truck that almost hit Kristal speeds into the parking lot. It slams on the brakes as if the driver recognizes me. I take a step backward, toward the entrance, and the truck slowly pulls into the same spot it was parked in last week. The passenger's-side door opens. Something tells me to go back inside, to the safety of the foyer. It's empty, the door to Room Three wide open, with bits of conversation floating out. I catch a glimpse of movement in the parking lot, so I rush to the women's restroom. I wait a good five minutes until all is quiet and then swing open the bathroom door.

I am in the hallway when our eyes meet. My body registers the surprise before my brain does. He sits on one of the plastic chairs in the foyer, wearing the Paoletti's Landscaping jacket that I borrowed on Halloween. My brain finally permits the identification.
Anthony Pitoscia. Anthony Pitoscia. Anthony Pitoscia.
He stands and gives an awkward nod. “Hey, Cath.”

I can barely hear him over the roar of white noise in my head. He is saying something about starting therapy. Today at five-thirty. Court ordered. Something about alcohol and drinking. It's hard to focus on what he's saying, because there are facts and meanings connecting inside my head, sliding the Michael puzzle pieces into place. I understand now.

Anthony
was in the truck that almost plowed into Kristal last Wednesday. Anthony, who doesn't have his license, was sitting in the passenger seat and got a good look at me that night. It was Anthony who told Michael about seeing me here, at the St. Anne's psychiatric outpatient facility. Learning how fucked up I am must've sealed the deal, because Michael had already started pulling away. And that is why Michael could not bear to touch me last Saturday. That is why, despite the wealth of opportunities, he politely declined, passing on exploiting the sick girl's mind and body. He wouldn't go
there
anymore with her, because it's just not the right thing to do.

Anthony touches my arm, his face a mask of concern. “We're cool, right, Cath?”

I nod and my mouth responds, “Sure.” I shuffle past him, desperate to get outside and hemorrhage in private.

I walk fast, like the thoughts ricocheting in my skull. I don't feel the cold. In fact, I'm working up a sweat that drips down the sides of my face, mixing with my tears. I bring my pace to a run, and before long, I'm all the way past the strip mall, finished with the lonely strip of blacktop that connects commercial Cranbury to quaint Cranbury. I run past the high school and down historic Main Street, into downtown Cranbury. I only slow when I hit the Green, which glows festively under the starless sky. Then, finally, I stop and sit on the bench between the town Christmas tree and menorah. There's no one around me. My heart slows.

We were supposed to do this, Michael and I. He wanted to walk the decorated Green one night but really, really late, after all the stores and restaurants had closed and everyone had gone home. He'd done it last year by himself, and he said it was a little surreal, but beautiful. Romantic. He wanted to do it with me this year.

Now, that will never happen. Sorrow for the loss of him engulfs me. Michael. A true connection. Yes, it was prompted by some bogus losing-my-virginity goal. But it pushed me to allow Michael inside at least a portion of my life. And it's over now. Along with the dinners at the warm, garlic-scented Pitoscia home. And Nonny. I swallow a sob. Even if in some unknown universe Michael still wanted me, I can never set foot inside the Pitoscia home and show my lying face.

The truth is that I hurt everyone around me. Mom, who's aging at warp speed and needs therapy to lasso her anxiety. Kristal, who tried to be my friend, my best friend, only to get a trifecta shafting: no support, no confidence, no honest camaraderie. Michael, who wanted that freshman dancer in the red skirt, only to discover
me
hiding in her shell.

But I realize all of that isn't even the worst part. It is this: that maybe I've been blaming everything on Zero and my diagnosis. Maybe the truth is that I'm just a selfish asshole who happens to have bipolar disorder.

I am aware of that darkness hovering, sniffing blood in the water, ready to strike. I stand suddenly. I need to move.

I am afraid.

I can't bear the black weight of Zero again. Infiltrating my world and sucking all energy and light and emotion from it. He will always be with me, waiting in the wings, ready to pounce when my foundation cracks. I don't know if I have the strength to fight him for the rest of my life.

I walk past the cupcake shop and shoe store and pharmacy. It's not just fear. I am bone-tired of the shame. And buckled by the knowledge that I will be a perpetual child, never completely independent because of my unstable mind; I will have to moor myself to others to keep safe.

But who do I have? Michael and now most likely Kristal will be joining the exodus from my life. I will be alone again. Just like September of sophomore year. But a low tide of something good runs through me. Because I am realizing now that that profound sense of loneliness is missing. That cored-out sensation is absent. Is it because I no longer feel guilty about my disorder? That I no longer believe I am unworthy?

Zero is not here.

My feet stop, and I'm filled with an unexpected sense of elation. The worst has happened, yet my world is not crashing in on itself. I am Zero-less. And I do not want to die.

I want to live.

Even with this disease, my bipolar life can be good. Isn't that what my D-Day List proves? That great times and experiences are still possible? More than possible—I've been fucking doing it! I've been
living,
with meaning, purpose and joy.

Maybe Kristal didn't leave because I'm bipolar. Maybe she was just pissed I never confided in her. It might be the same with Michael. I knew what he was asking for when he drove me to school. He was
begging
me to confide in him. I keep blaming the illness for constraining me, but maybe I'm the one who's been limiting myself. Out of fear.

This sudden clarity hits me like a lightning bolt, and I wonder, is it the Lamictal holding the line? Or God? Or Grandma? Maybe it's Jane. Is she here with me? If this were a movie, I'd see her reflection in a storefront window, catch a fleeting glimpse of a uniformed young woman gazing at me with a look of determination, that steely strength inside her somehow touching me, saving me.

But there's no one else in the reflection of Rodrick's on the Green's picture window. Except someone is looking at me. From inside. It's Rodrick. Waving at me. Dear God, is he my guardian angel? Are you freaking kidding me? Impeccably groomed in black leather pants and silky black shirt and slinking to the front door with the grace of a panther?

Rodrick opens the door. “What was I? A one-night stand?” he asks teasingly. “Where have you been? And who is doing your hair?”

This is beyond bizarre. “I…I do it myself. My mom does the back,” I say, self-consciously running a hand over my head.

“Not bad, but why don't you come back next Saturday? I'm training somebody and we could use your head. No charge.”

My response rises up, honest and true. “I want to let it grow out,” I say. I no longer need to wear my hair this way as penance.

Rodrick nods, his eyes studying me intently. “Yes. But I'm seeing a layered bob, grazing your jaw. Nothing longer. We need to show off that gorgeous neck.” He winks at me. “So come in and we'll clean it up so it grows in right. How's nine-thirty? It's Catherine, right?”

“How do you remember me? I was here, like, six months ago.” I can only imagine manic me, chattering incessantly and vibrating in his chair.

“Because I was having one of the worst days ever and you basically saved it,” Rodrick says, and runs a hand over his smooth, clean-shaven head. “Coming in like that, demanding the Hepburn cut and completely crushing it.” He smiles. “I needed that. So, see you next Saturday?”

I nod, and I actually feel calmer. For now, maybe this is what I will have to survive on: small acts of kindness that I never fully savored before, like Sabita's thoughtfulness, Alexis's compassion, John's concern, Aunt D's perpetual support. Even Olivia with her tiny olive-branch smiles. And Dr. McCallum. My prying, probing ally who has probably saved my life. Alongside my mother.

My mother.

I take my time walking past the shops, my body and mind drained. I am still sad about Kristal and Michael, yet strangely hopeful in a way and also a little scared. Because if I didn't have to walk, if I didn't have that cushion of time and physical exertion to absorb the grief and hurt, what would I have done if I had gone straight home? In the heat of anguish, would I have pulled out my shoe box and washed down the troops with a few cold gulps?

I don't know, but I don't
think
so.

But it doesn't matter now. I am dumping that box. I am fucking dumping the entire thing, with its pills and nasty notes and harsh reminders of what the last two years have cost. Tonight. As soon as I get home. Because that box makes it too easy and I am too erratic. It's no different from a loaded gun.

I pick up the pace and turn on my phone. There are seven voice mails: four from Michael, two from Dominic's and one from Aunt D. She's supposed to be in Boston. Why would she be calling me? I listen to her voice mail: “Catherine, it's Aunt Darlene. Hon, I'm sorry to bother you, but I'm…I can't reach your mom. Dominic called me tonight. He said she never showed up at work and isn't answering her phone. Can you just call me and let me know what happened? Thanks, honey. And call whenever you can. It doesn't matter what time.” I click on the most recent message from Dominic's. It should be Mom, explaining the mix-up. Instead, a husky, masculine voice says, “Uh…hello…hello, Catherine. It's Dominic. I'm looking for your mom. She was supposed to help out tonight with a private party at five. But she never showed up, and your mom never misses without calling. I'm a little concerned. Can you have her call me when she gets a chance?”

It's almost seven now. With icy fingers, I click on Mom's number. It rings and then goes to voice mail. Just as I am certain that I am standing on Main Street in downtown Cranbury, I know something is very wrong with my mother. The sidewalk tilts under my feet as I begin to sprint the last mile home.

The Accord is still in the driveway, but the house is dark. With trembling fingers, I unlock the front door. “Mom?” I call out, panting. No answer. From the foot of the stairs, I can see up into the darkened second-floor hallway. The bathroom door is open, and light streams into the dark hallway. “Mom!” I yell, pounding my way up the steps. My heart beats triple time. Please, God, make her be all right. Please let her not have had a stroke. Please let me not find her, a fallen redwood, on the pink chenille rug.

The bathroom is empty. I race into her bedroom. She's not here. The black skirt and white blouse, her Dominic's uniform, lie posed on the bed, imitating her. Scaring me.

My legs feel uncoordinated as I stumble downstairs. There's that stillness. The silence that screams. I walk through the living room and stop at the entrance to the dark kitchen. Grandma's door is open a crack and her bedroom light is on. I have a sick sense of déjà vu, but it's inverted, reversed somehow.

Because this is what my mother would have felt. Had I killed myself.

I slowly enter the kitchen. “Mom?” I call out.

Is she dead?

No answer.

Please, God. Please, God. Don't let her be dead. Not now. Not yet. Not this way.

I'm afraid of what I'll find in Grandma's room.

I enter. Mom is here, seated on Grandma's bed, wearing only a bath towel wrapped around her. Her shoulders are slumped, her head hangs. The plaid suitcase lies open on the floor. On Mom's lap, cradled in her hands, is my shoe box.

No. No. No. Not that. Not now. Not this way.

I freeze. “Mom?”

She doesn't move. She doesn't acknowledge me.

Dear God, is this a stroke? Did the discovery blow an artery in her brain?

Don't go. I need you. I need you. I need you.

Finally, she blinks and tilts her head, and I rush toward her. She takes my hands, kissing each one and then squeezing them both in her cold, worn fingers. I look into her eyes. She is here, but stunned by a grief too big to comprehend. Its depth staggers me.

In a ragged whisper, she asks, “Are you leaving me, Catherine?”

And another truth breaks on me. One that I feel in my bones. It is incontrovertible, immutable and, now, so very fucking clear.

If I had killed myself, I would have killed her too.

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