Part 34 (1/2)
811'>
Ms. Mosley nodded and seemed to be forcing herself to look away from me.
I admired Ms. Mosley for her honesty and her influence on me to want to be honest not only with her, but with myself as well. I was scared, but I began to feel something change within myself each time she and I were together. She didn't make these moments awkward, because I felt that she really did care each time she helped me.
”Do you think that Janine is okay?” I asked her.
Ms. Mosley looked back up at me as if she was not expecting me to say anything else.
She smiled at me and she said, ”I'm sure Janine is going to be fine. She's getting the help that she needs.”
”What if she's like Rocky? What if she dies?”
”She didn't do enough damage. Thank G.o.d for that,” she told me.
She was right. Ms. Mosley wouldn't have said that just to make me feel comfortable.
With my mind still aching and worried inside, I held back what I really wanted to ask her. However, Ms. Mosley wasn't the type of counselor to let something like that go. She used her gift of deep perception, and she saw right through me.
”If there is something bothering you, I'm here to listen,” Ms. Mosley a.s.sured me.
”Sometimes I wonder if...” I hesitated. I took a deep breath and continued. ”I wonder if, I mean, when I get out of here, will I do it again?”
”Do what again?”
”Will I hurt myself?”
She gave me a look of deep concern, and the words she spoke were earnest.
”It is true that there are people who leave the hospital, and they do fall back into deep depression, self-injuring, and some try and even succeed in committing suicide. Some people leave the hospital still feeling a little weak. If the doctors notice that these people are not better, they have to be placed in a long-term facility so that they can take more time to heal. But some people come here because they had suffered a moment of weakness, as you did. As they begin to heal here at Bent Creek, they begin to grow stronger, and then they build up enough strength to be able to survive outside of the hospital. You, Kristen, I believe, will be a survivor.”
”How do you know? Maybe I'm like Rocky. Or I'll be like Janine, and have to go to a long-term hospital.”
”Don't you dare do that to yourself,” Ms. Mosley said. ”I know that you're not going to be weak when you leave here, because I can already see you healing. You're a fast healer, Kristen. You're strong. You don't see it, but you are. You ask these questions, not because you're scared, though you think you are. You're not scared of what the answer's going to be, because you already know that what I'm going to tell you is the truth. You'll take that truth to heart and you'll remember it. Then you'll use it. That's how you learn to heal. That's how you will learn to survive.”
I was scared because I wasn't completely sure. I knew that she wouldn't lie to me, but how could she be certain that I was strong enough to be a survivor once I left Bent Creek? She seemed positive of what she spoke, but I was unsure and confused. I didn't want to talk about it anymore.
”Thank you,” I said to her with a forced smile.
Ms. Mosley nodded at me. I could tell that she did not want to drop the conversation by the way she stared at me intensely, but she did close the subject anyway.
”You'll understand when the time comes,” she said. ”I'll let you finish getting dressed.”
She left me alone in the bathroom.
After I was completely dressed, I went back into the bedroom. Mena was fast asleep in her own bed. I tiptoed quietly to my bed so that I wouldn't wake her.
At eight o'clock Ms. Mosley came into the room to wake us up. ”Vitals! Come on! Get up, girls! You need to come get your vitals checked! Let's start the day!”
Mena growled with her head under her pillow. ”I hate you!” she complained as Ms. Mosley continued her way down the hallway towards the other girls' rooms.
”I hate it when she does that!” she kept on.
I ignored her as I slid my shoes onto my feet. Mena kept the pillow over her head and snuggled up under the thin, white blanket. I folded Janine's blanket and laid it neatly on top of mine. I walked past Mena to get out of the door. As I walked out, I pa.s.sed Ms. Mosley. She was coming back into our room to make sure we were up. As I got down to the double doors that led to the main unit, I could hear Ms. Mosley nagging at Mena to get out of the bed. I could picture Mena's angry face all scrunched up and her evil eyes rolling as she tensed up under Ms. Mosley's stern morning breath and intimidating motherly scold.
I smiled at the thought.
Geoffrey smiled at me. I realized I was on the unit and unintentionally looking his way. He was checking vital signs on the patients. He must have thought that I was smiling at him. But he didn't greet me as he normally did. He shooed the other kid who was sitting in the chair away when he was finished, and I took the empty seat. Geoffrey began checking my blood pressure. I stayed silent, but I kept the smile on my face.
When Geoffrey was finished checking my vital signs, I went over and sat down at an empty table. Other patients started filling the room. Mena walked in, sleepy-eyed. She got in line to get her vitals checked.
For some reason I couldn't take my eyes off her. There was something different about her. She didn't have the same evil look that she seemed to have had permanently engraved on her face. She seemed calm and almost humbled. When she was finished with her vitals, she looked over at me. She started heading my way, as if she was going to sit at the table with me, but Tai cut her off, sitting down at the table with me instead. Mena walked the opposite way and sat down in a chair near the corner of the room by herself.
Tai smiled at me wearily. ”Morning, suns.h.i.+ne,” she said in a flat tone.
”Good morning,” I said with just as much excitement.
”Are you ready for another day in h.e.l.l?”
I shook my head and leaned back in the chair.
”Did you hear about Rocky?” Tai leaned back too. Then she rolled up a piece of paper and stuck it in her mouth. She sucked on it as if it was a cigarette.
I looked at her strangely. ”What are you doing?”
”Hey! Give me a break,” she pleaded. ”I asked you a question. Did you hear about Rocky?”
I shook my head. My body felt numb all of a sudden. I couldn't move until she told me and relieved my mind. I was expecting what was coming next, but I was sure I was wrong. I had to be wrong.
”He's dead,” she a.s.sured me. She spit the piece of paper out of her mouth onto the table. Then she lay her head down on her arms as they lay folded across the table.
My head felt stuffy. The numbness seeped in.
”How do you know?” I asked.
”Please,” Tai scoffed. ”I hear these people talk in here all the time. The only thing is, Dr. Pelchat doesn't know. He doesn't know because no one wants to call him and tell him. They probably won't tell him until he comes in to work. I wonder if we'll get another group speech, or if he and Ms. Mosley will get into a real boxing match.” She seemed a little too excited at the thought.
I tried to move my fingers. I tried to move my head. Nothing wanted to work. Nothing felt real on my body. Everyone seemed too normal for this to be true. When Ms. Mosley came in to help me clean up, she seemed like everything was fine. She didn't behave as though a former patient had just died. Geoffrey was smiling. He seemed all right.
I scanned the room with my eyes. This time I tried to look closer. Geoffrey was smiling, but he wasn't talking to anyone. Usually he made jokes or tried to make conversation while checking vitals. Ms. Mosley seemed like her usual self, but she wasn't saying much, either. Except when Ms. Mosley and I had been alone in the bathroom, when I had asked her those questions, she had seemed to be more concerned. She'd pressed me so hard to talk to her and to tell her what was wrong. When I had told her, she'd seemed determined to get me to understand how I needed to be a survivor.
”Oh, that's cool!” Tai exclaimed. ”You got your bandages off! Oh, yeah! You really cut yourself!” She was too amused.
I hid my arms under the table. I ignored her. ”Does anyone else know about Rocky besides the counselors?” I asked.
She shrugged. ”I overheard Ms. Mosley talking to Geoffrey a few hours ago when I was going to the water fountain to get a drink. They were the only ones I heard talking about it. You're the only one I've told besides Jesse, over there. Jesse told me that he didn't like Rocky anyway. I didn't either, but still, he shouldn't have died. That sucks.”
”Time for Group!” Dr. Finch came through the main unit doors that led to freedom. ”Let's just go ahead and circle up in the living room there. Come on, everyone!” Dr. Finch seemed like his normal self.
As everyone began to gather around the circle, I noticed that there seemed to be more people here than before Daniel had left. I sat down when I got to the circle. When everyone was settled, Dr. Finch began as he normally did in Morning Group. He noticed that there were new faces, and said that we'd introduce ourselves and go over goals. I was hoping he wouldn't call on me first. I was still trying to figure out if what Tai had said about Rocky was true. It couldn't have been. My mind was completely consumed with it.
”Kristen?” Dr. Finch called out to me.