the chair, then darts his eyes back to the window. “I’ve gotta go. I shouldn’t have come over. I just . . .”
“You needed to get out of the house,” I finish. “I understand. But is it safe to go back?”
To my surprise, he laughs, short and spiky. “He talks big. That’s all. I’m not afraid of him.”
“But your mom is.”
He says nothing.
As far as I can see, Ethan doesn’t display any of the more obvious hallmarks of child abuse: His face and forearms are unmarked, his demeanor bright and outgoing (although he has cried twice, let’s not forget that), his hygiene satisfactory. But this is just an impression, just a glance. And he is, after all, standing here in my kitchen, slinging nervous looks at his home across the park.
I push the chair back into place. “I want you to have my cell number,” I tell him.
He nods—grudgingly, I think, but it’ll do. “Could you write it down for me?” he asks.
“You don’t have a phone?”
A shake of the head. “He—my dad won’t let me.” He sniffles. “I don’t have email, either.”
Not surprising. I fetch an old receipt from a kitchen drawer, scribble on it. Four digits in, I realize I’m writing out my old work number, the emergency line I reserved for my patients. “1-800-ANNA-NOW,” Ed used to joke.
“Sorry. Wrong number.” I slash a line through it, then jot down the correct one. When I look up again, he’s standing by the kitchen door, looking across the park at his house.
“You don’t have to go back there,” I say.
He turns. Hesitates. Shakes his head. “I’ve gotta head home.”
I nod, offer him the paper. He pockets it.
“You can call me anytime,” I say. “And share that number with your mom too, please.”
“Okay.” He’s moving toward the door, shoulders back, back straight. Bracing for battle, I think.
“Ethan?”
He turns, one hand on the doorknob.
“I mean it. Anytime.”
He nods. Then he opens the door and walks out.
I return to the window, watch him walk past the park, climb the steps, push his key into the lock. He pauses, draws a breath. Then he disappears inside.
26
Two hours later, I sluice the last of the wine down my throat, stand the bottle on the coffee table. I prop myself up, slowly, then tip to the other side, like the second hand of a clock.
No. Haul yourself to your bedroom. To your bathroom.
With the shower gushing, the last few days flood my brain, filling the fissures there, welling up in the hollows: Ethan, crying on the couch; Dr. Fielding and his high-voltage glasses; Bina, her leg braced against my spine; that whirlpool of a night when Jane visited. Ed’s voice in my ear. David with the knife. Alistair—a good man, a good father. Those screams.
I squeeze a slug of shampoo into one hand, smear it absently into my hair. The tide rises at my feet.
And the pills—God, the pills. “These are powerful psychotropics, Anna,” Dr. Fielding advised me at the very beginning, back when I was woolly on painkillers. “Use them responsibly.”
I press my palms against the wall, hang my head beneath the faucet, my face lurking within a dark cave of hair. Something’s happening to me, through me, something dangerous and new. It’s taken root, a poison tree; it’s grown, fanning out, vines winding round my gut, my lungs, my heart. “The pills,” I say, my voice soft and low amid the roar, like I’m speaking underwater.
My hand sketches hieroglyphs on the glass. I clear my eyes and read them. Over and over, across the door, I’ve written Jane Russell’s name.
Thursday, November 4
27
He lies on his back. I run a finger along the fence of dark hair that partitions his torso from navel to chest. “I like your body,” I tell him.
He sighs and smiles. “Don’t,” he says; and then, with my hand idling in the shallows of his neck, he catalogues his every flaw: the dry skin that makes terrazzo of his back; the single mole between his shoulder blades, like an Eskimo marooned on an expanse of flaggy ice; his warped thumbnail; his knobbed wrists; the tiny white scar that hyphenates his nostrils.
I finger the wound. My pinkie dips into his nose; he snorts. “How did it happen?” I ask.
He twists my hair around his thumb. “My cousin.”
“I didn’t know you had a cousin.”
“Two. This was my cousin Robin. He held a razor against my nose and said he’d slit my nostrils so that I only had one. And when I shook