In this very room, they held hands and spun in circles. When they were both as dizzy as could be, they stopped. They froze in place like statues.
“The statue game, she called it,” this woman tells me, because they held still like statues until one of them finally toppled over.
I try to imagine what she’s telling me. I picture this child spinning in circles with this woman, except the child alter—if I’m to believe her—is not a child. It’s me.
It makes me blush to think of it. Me, a thirty-nine-year-old woman, holding hands and spinning around this room with another grown woman, freezing in place like statues.
The idea is absurd. I can’t stand to entertain it.
Not until Tate’s words come rushing back to me: Statue game, statue game! and it strikes a nerve.
Mommy is a liar! You do know what it is, you liar.
“On average, those with DID have around ten alters living within them,” she tells me. “Sometimes more, sometimes less. Sometimes as many as one hundred.”
“How many do I supposedly have?” I ask. Because I don’t believe her. Because this is just some elaborate scam to besmirch my name, my character, making it easier for me to take the fall for Morgan’s murder.
“So far I’ve met two,” she says.
“So far?”
“There may be more.” She goes on to say, “Dissociative identity disorder often begins with a history of abuse at a young age. The alternate personalities form as a coping mechanism. They serve different purposes, like protecting the host. Standing up, speaking up for the host. Harboring the painful memories.”
As she says it, I think of myself, harboring parasites. I think of the oxpecker bird, who eats bugs off the backs of hippos. A symbiotic relationship, once thought, until scientists realized the oxpeckers were actually vampire birds, digging holes to drink the blood of the hippopotamuses.
Not so symbiotic after all.
She says, “Tell me about your childhood, Dr. Foust.”
I tell her I can’t remember much of my childhood, nearly nothing, in fact, until I was around eleven years old.
She just looks at me, saying nothing, waiting for me to put it together.
Are you prone to periods of blackouts, Dr. Foust?
But blackouts are temporary losses of time, caused by things like alcohol consumption, epileptic seizures, low blood sugar.
I didn’t black out for the extent of my young childhood. I just don’t remember.
“That’s typical in cases of DID,” she tells me after a while. “The dissociation is a way to disconnect from a traumatic experience. A coping mechanism,” she says again, as if she didn’t just say that moments ago.
“Tell me about this woman,” I say. I’m trying to catch her in a lie. Certainly sooner or later she’ll contradict herself. “This Camille woman.”
She tells me there are different types of alters. Persecutor alters, protector alters, more. She has yet to ascertain which this young woman is. Because sometimes she stands up for me, but more often her portrayals of me are hate-filled. She’s huffy, ticked off. Angry and aggressive. It’s a love-hate relationship. She hates me. She also wants to be me.
The little girl doesn’t know I exist.
“Officer Berg took the liberty of doing some research,” she says. “Your mother died in childbirth, no?” she asks, and I say that yes, she did. Preeclampsia. My father never spoke of it, but by the way his eyes got glossy whenever her name came up, I knew it had been horrific for him. Losing her, raising me alone.
“When you were six, your father remarried,” she says, but I object to this.
“No, he didn’t,” I say. “It was just my father and me.”
“You said you don’t remember your childhood, Doctor,” she reminds me, but I tell her what I do remember: being eleven years old, my father and me living in the city, him taking the train to work, coming home fifteen, sixteen hours later, drunk.
“I remember,” I say, though I don’t remember what came before this, but I’d like to believe it was always the same.
She pulls paperwork from her briefcase, telling me that the year I was six years old, my father married a woman by the name of Charlotte Schneider. We lived in Hobart, Indiana, and my father worked as a sales rep for a small company. Three years later, when I was nine, my father and Charlotte divorced. Irreconcilable differences.
“What can you tell me about your stepmother?” she asks, and I tell her, “Nothing. You’re mistaken. Officer Berg is mistaken. There was no stepmother. It was only my father and