Anna Blair’s Visitors (Chapters 19-21)


Charleigh Wallace

____________________________

 

 

 

Anna Blair’s

Visitors

 

 

 

Based on a true story.

Copyright © 2011

All rights reserved.

…continued

Nineteen

In her next session with Dr. A, he asked if anyone new had come to visit Anna, but she said it was frankly none of his god damn business. But when Anna saw Dr. A’s face, she knew she had hurt him, so she added that except for Grandma Blair and Cezar and that man in the gray suit, no one had come by. Anna said she expected someone anytime now, though. She spoke of her lovely time together with her grandmother and the gray-suited man, but that was all she said.

On the cab drive home, Anna blurted out, “Sometimes I like to think of bigger words like symposium. I have a degree. It is silly not to make use of it.” Craig stared at her from the rear-view mirror, watching her look out the window at nothing.

            What in fucking hell is wrong with this beautiful woman and what is she talking about? She talked to me, though!

He watched her until she glared back.

When Dr. A wrote his notes later that day, he believed her only cure was to be surrounded by her four children, and the love they seemed to show her every day.

He also wrote how he hoped her children would heal as well. He was set to see them all at the same time tomorrow at 4:00 pm.

When Anna got home, for the next hour and a half, she sat in front of her bedroom mirror, trying to see if anyone was looking back at her. At 11:37 she got the mail okay, but had a traumatic moment when Ed came out of his house just as she was coming back from the mailbox.

Anna, apparently for no reason, directed more anger at her journal.

            Dear Damn  Diary

            I saw lust in Ed’s eyes today, so I yelled out, “Stop looking at my boobs!” I ran into the house, locked the door, and stood shaking in the living room for exactly fourteen minutes. Just thought you’d like to know, Dr. A.

Anna still had time to get ready for her visitor, but had lost valuable time with the fourteen minutes of shaking. She hurried to her room, changed into a purple sweatshirt and jeans, and Grandma Blair’s mink coat. No socks, no shoes. She brushed her shoulder-length hair, and put on her makeup.

The doorbell rang at 12:14. It was Clark Gable. Anna flushed a bright rose color, noticing his still angular features, jet-black hair, thin mustache, haunting gray eyes, and topcoat and hat. She was glad to have picked out her grandmother’s fur coat. Mr. Gable, however, said he frankly didn’t give a damn about the fur, but really just wanted some Peppermint tea and Lorna Dunes. Anna hurried ahead of him to pull out his chair, but he led her to her chair first, pulling it out for her. Anna was quite flustered, telling him how much he reminded her of the UPS man.

At 2:35  the children came up the walkway, Mr. Gable fading into the walls of the kitchen.

Tomorrow was the children’s appointment with Dr. A, and Friday, the last day of school before Christmas break. Anna loved the breaks, when she could hear her children talk and fight and laugh all day long. She knew the visitors would cease until the New Year, and she was frankly ready for the break.

Dear Stupid Diary

            Clark Gable has a beautiful smile, with brilliantly white teeth. He stared a lot into my green eyes, and said I looked much prettier than the actresses he worked with and slept with. I wondered if he’d ask to sleep with me, but he never did. I can only assume it was because of the purple sweatshirt and fur coat combination. Apparently a big taboo in Hollywood. Next time, I’ll be ready in evening wear.

…wait…I feel another instantaneous poem comin’ on…

 

Licorice

Black

Fran and I eating it

On our ecology walk in SF

The acronym for San Francisco

I know what you’re thinking

You thought it stood for stupid fudge

20 miles long

My feet are blistered

Fran and I are laughing

I hate black licorice

 

Twenty

The next morning the concert was set for 8:30. The front of the stage was lined with large bouquets of yellow and red, long-stemmed roses.         People from all over Hollywood had come to hear Anna sing. She peered through the huge, heavy tapestry curtains at the audience below, seated in rows of red velvet, and above where the grand balconies were filling with chattering, famous voices. The audience anxiously awaited her performance. The orchestra warmed up.

Anna looked out the curtain again and giggled as Clark Gable blew a kiss from the front row. Seated next to him was the indescribably beautiful Brad Pitt, giving her a thumbs up. Up in one of the balconies on her left was Robert DeNiro, with his strong eyes, and wavy gray hair, another of her personal friends. He waved often in her performances.

She ran back to her room, slipped into her old wedding dress she had made herself, unable to zip up around her larger frame. The dress with the faded bloodstain still on the left breast where Cezar had bit down too hard.

She brushed her hair, put on brown eye shadow and pink blush where her cheeks puffed out when she smiled. She put on her grandmother’s bright red lipstick, and grabbed the portable record player that belonged to her when she was a teenager.

She was announced, and the crowd roared. She stepped up to the curtain as it parted, and the music began. The crowd marveled at her beauty, her thin, perfect body, Tom Cruise whistling from the third row, his wife slapping his arm.

Her first selection was The Monkee’s “I’m A Believer.” The crowd loved her, clapping a full two minutes after she had finished moving her mouth to the lyrics. Mr. DeNiro waved. The next selection was Nancy Sinatra’s “These Boots Are Made for Walkin’.” That one had the whole crowd on their feet, amazed at how beautiful she sang, and how well she danced.

Tom Hanks danced in the aisles. Will Smith came running up to the stage, yelling, “Hey, beautiful!” The guards had to come and take him out of the auditorium. Anna didn’t mind, though. His comment, however gauche, made her smile.

Throughout the concert, she sang from Tony Bennett to Barry Manilow, Paul Revere and the Raiders to Carly Simon. Whatever record she coveted from her childhood she played, moving her mouth to the singer’s voices.

At 11:37 the applause stopped and the curtains closed. Dark, red velvet chairs turned into the brown, living room sofa; the tapestry curtains became liquid, absorbed into the tan rug.

Anna sadly left the living room, walked down the hallway, and back to her room. She gently took off her wedding dress, folded it, and placed it back in the plastic blue container. She vigorously wiped off the makeup, put on her old jeans and purple sweater, and went to get the mail.

After Anna was safely back inside, she prepared the tea and cookies for today’s visitor.

The doorbell rang twenty one times before she had finished setting the table. She walked to the door, unlocked and opened it.

“Grandpa!” Anna leaped into his arms.

He was wearing the same 6-foot-tall overalls and big warm smile that she had remembered as a child. He brought with him his leather tool belt, a saw, and some wood. Each visit from him would beget a small wooden item they would build together, whether a box, a frame, or a shelf. Grandpa let her help often, but never with the sawing. He didn’t want her to get hurt.

After seating him, giving him the usual tea and cookies, they began their first of many wooden projects. After the project was completed, Grandpa smiled at Anna in approval. The children walked up the walkway, sending Grandpa on his way.

Grandpa’s smile stayed in front of her mind for several hours.

The children asked about the new little ornate wooden box that was on the living room coffee table. Anna just smiled and swept up the sawdust.

Other visits produced a doll chair placed as a gift next to Fia’s bed, and some odd things like the plain wooden box with a hinged lid, the letters “Flies” etched into the pine.

Dear Obtuse  Diary

            Grandpa helped me make a box today. It was so nice to smell that old cigar smell again, hear his breathy laugh, and see him smile. I thought I’d never see him again. Oh yeah, I also started using my dishwasher today for the first time, so I’m pretty psyched about that. I’ve lived here for several years. I never saw it before today.

At 3:30 Craig pulled up outside Anna’s house ready to take her four children to Dr. A’s.

They were not looking forward to being “dissected by a shrink.” Feelings were not something that wanted to come out.

The three younger ones climbed into the back seat while Rhona sat in front. Craig said “hi” and they said “hi” back. He could tell how nervous they were.

He could see Anna was too as she chewed on her living room curtains as they drove off.

“So,” he began, while pulling away from the curb, “how are you all doing?”

“Okay” was the mediocre answer. And that was the extent of their conversation.

“I’ll be here in an hour to get you guys, okay?” Craig said out his open window after letting them out in front of the office.

They walked the steps to the old house, and went inside.

“I want to push the button,” Gregor said as they got in the elevator.

“Should we pick numbers?” Rhona asked as they stood in the closed, small space. “Between 1 and 30.” So they all turned their heads toward the off-white ceiling and thought hard.

“Got it,” Fia said smiling. Gregor said, “Okay.” Aileana nodded.

“Okay,” Rhona began, “the number closest gets to push the button.”

They didn’t notice that the elevator had begun moving, picking up one person on Dr. Alexandru’s floor, an elderly man with a cane who smelled of cedar and soap. The elevator dropped him off on the first floor, and they breathed a sigh of relief when he exited and no one new came on.

The elevator ascended again.

“You know,” Gregor said with a gleam in his eyes, “we could just ride this until our hour is up.”   They all laughed, considered their options, but shook their heads.

“No,” Rhona said, “we have to do this shitty appointment. So, pick a number.”

“You know, technically speaking,” Fia surmised, getting rolled eyes all around the elevator, “we could not possibly spend an entire hour on the elevator. It has been proven in a double-blind study…”

The elevator stopped at floor #2, letting on a group of four people: three mentally disabled people and a young woman, obviously their guide. The children were now all squished together in the back corner while the three new people stared at them with blank eyes. It made Rhona sad, and she looked down.

“Thank god,” Rhona breathed when they got off on floor #3. Then they began a descent to floor #1.

“…that people in a small enclosure such as this…,” Fia continued.

“Ten,” Gregor said with a heavy sigh.

“Um…twenty…five!” Aileana said with excitement.

“Thirteen!” Fia shouted.

“It was eleven, so now we have a tie, god damn it!” Rhona held her hands stiffly on her hips.

“Yay,” Fia said, clapping her hands.

“Okay, wait until I get a new number.” They all stood in silence, stopping at floor 3, floor 2, down to 1, up to 3 again, letting on and off children, old men, young women.

“Where are all the good looking guys?” Fia asked with disgust.

“What? You want to pick up guys at a building for psychos?” Rhona asked angrily.

Aileana said defensively, “Hey, Mom goes here!”

“Okay. Sorry,” Rhona said apologetically. Then she thought a little more.

“Got it. Okay, go ahead. This time, between one and a hundred.”

“…as I was saying, do not do well psychologically speaking.” Fia looked around at stone cold faces.

“Why?” Gregor asked complaining. “Why so many god damn numbers?”

Rhona yelled, “Just pick one! Jesus!”

Fia raised her small hand as if in school.

“You aren’t going to go on and on again about being in little places are you?” Rhona asked.

“I pick fifty,” Fia said, insulted. She looked to Gregor, challenging him.

With another sigh, he said, “fifty one I guess.”

“Bastard,” Fia snarled.

“What? Because I know how to play this damn game I am a bastard?”

“Shut up, will you?” Aileana said, tired of watching the indicator light go on, sending them up and down in the elevator until she felt sick.

“It’s forty eight, so Fia gets it.” Rhona impatiently motioned for her to push the number, which she did happily. Gregor sulked, and they watched as floor #3 came up and stopped.

“Well, here goes nothing,” Rhona said with disgust.

They exited the elevator and looked at the names on the board, placed on the wall directly in front of them. They took another few minutes of stalling to laugh at the names on the board.

Gregor was first. “Look at this. Who’d want to go to a doctor named Smelthon?”

Fia laughed so hard she had tears in her eyes, reading the next name: “VanderHooten!” They finally composed themselves, drying wet eyes, catching breaths.

“Okay.” Fia read as she skimmed through more funny names to find Alexandru. “Room 8.”

They found their way down the hall, and stopped in front of the correct door. They had wasted all the time they could, so Rhona opened the door and they followed in after her.

Fia immediately noticed the handsome Romanian man sitting behind his desk.

Gregor spoke up as Dr. A looked up from his writing.

“We’re Anna Blair’s kids.”

“Yes, please come in,” he said, rising from his desk.

And he’s tall, Fia noticed. She smiled, and blushed. Rhona elbowed her in the side, and whispered, “Will you stop being so fucking obvious?”

There was a couch that seated two comfortably, and two cushioned chairs, in addition to Dr. A’s upholstered chair.

Gregor and Aileana sat on the couch as far from each other as possible, while Rhona sat in one of the cushy chairs. Fia went right for the Elizabethan-looking upholstered chair closest to Dr. A’s chair. Rhona rolled her eyes. Fia blushed, then slapped Rhona on the arm.

Dr. A watched with humor the interaction between the children, the glares, stares, and the way each one chose where to sit, as far from him as possible, except for the second oldest with the extremely long dark hair. He smiled at each of them. They were all so beautiful, just like Anna. So many times there is at least one in a family that isn’t as attractive as the others, but in this case, well, that was clearly not the case. He could definitely see how much they must mean to Anna. They were all so articulate, so intelligent. It was amazing how well they had survived everything so far.

Clearing his throat, he said, “I am Dr. Alexandru, but if you like, you can just call me Dr. A as  your mother currently does.”

Fia whispered to Rhona, “Did you hear his accent?” And she blushed again.

Rhona just groaned. It was obvious to the doctor that Rhona would not call him anything, or at least not anything nice.

He began. “Look, I know you don’t want to be here. I know I have my work cut out for me. But all things start at the beginning, and beginnings are always a little bit choppy, a little bit uncomfortable, until one day you look back and realize time in its magical way has moved you forward so subtly you barely felt the wind. And you find yourself past that part of difficulty, and that’s when the real work can begin, and the healing with it.

“So, let’s start with names.”

He nodded to Fia first.

“I’m Fia,” she said, blushing again. Dr. A smiled, and looked to Rhona.

“Rhona.” And she crossed her arms over her chest, and stuck out her chin, an eyebrow raised.

He looked to Gregor next.

“Gregor.” He wasn’t as angry as Rhona, Dr. A noted, but still could hold his own in a fight.

“I’m Aileana.” Even though she smiled, Dr. A could still see the anger and disappointment.

“Okay, good,” said Dr. A. “So, let’s have each one of you tell me why you think you are here.”

Rhona rolled her eyes.

Fia grew quiet, and began. “Our mom.”

“Good. Okay, anyone else?” Dr. A asked, but no one offered to respond.

“I can tell you are angry. You are angry because you are here, having a stranger ask you about your personal feelings. You are angry because your mom is not well. Do I have that about right so far?”

They nodded.

“I personally don’t know why I have to be here,” Rhona said. “This doesn’t really concern me.”

“Yes it does, Rhona,” Fia blurted out. “You cut your arms.”

Rhona looked like she was going to hit her.   “That is none of your fucking business, Fia!”

“Yes it is!” And Fia started crying.

Gregor and Aileana stared at the floor. Rhona glared out the window.

“I know how difficult this must be,” Dr. A consoled.

“No you don’t!” Rhona said, staring at him with angry eyes.

“So tell me how difficult it is.”

And so she began her long list. “Well, from having to change diapers and make sandwiches no one wanted while in Nashville when my mom couldn’t even get out of the bathtub to shit during her panic attacks and IBS episodes, to this!” The tears came but she wiped them away roughly.

Dr. A agreed with her that these things should not have been put on a child so young, but asked her how things could have been done differently. There was no answer. There was no way anything could have been different. They were only given one lousy road to follow, and looking back, the road was cut off just beyond their last steps. They couldn’t go back, and couldn’t veer from it to the right or left, because they would just fall off a cliff. They had no choice but to move forward.

Then Gregor spoke up. “When will she be okay again?”

“I think that depends on a number of things, Gregor, but you four being around her is helping her.” Dr. A watched as Gregor rolled his tearing eyes.

“Look, I know you don’t want your mom sick, so we need to figure out what we can do to help her. Agreed?” With that they all seemed to perk up just a bit.

Fia spoke first. “Okay, what do we need to do?” And then she melted when Dr. A looked directly into her eyes, causing her to blush and look down.

“That’s a great attitude, Fia,” Dr. A encouraged. So they talked about a plan. He didn’t know if the children knew about Anna’s visitors, so he didn’t want to worry them more than they already were.

“I want you to try to encourage your mother to do things outside her home.” Dr. A suggested.

“Like what? She doesn’t go anywhere!” Gregor slapped his hand on his knee, the anger flaring in his young eyes.

“I know, but we need to try. How about encouraging her to get the mail on Saturdays? Give her praise for the little things she does accomplish. It’s like she is starting over. Like a child.”

“I guess,” Rhona leaned forward, holding her face in her hands.

“Keep joy inside you, keep your sense of humor alive, talk to her about your dreams and goals for the future. Make her face your futures.”

Fia spoke up. “I do that now. I tell her about my castles and show her my fashion designs.”

“And what is her reaction, Fia?” Dr. A asked.

“She loves them. She notices the colors in the gowns, and the details in my castle drawings. She wants to come live there with me.” And she smiled.

“That is great, Fia. That’s what we want. Her looking forward, not stuck in the past the way she is now. Do you think you can all work on that?”

They nodded. “Each one of you think of one thing you can do to direct her mind toward the future, and praise even the smallest accomplishments, okay?” And he saw them nod. “Okay.” He smiled his white smile.

Craig was waiting outside when they came down the steps. They seemed a little more relaxed.

“Everyone okay?” he asked. He wanted so much to feel a part of this family, for the kids to accept him, for Anna to accept him.

Gregor answered, “Yep.” And they rode the rest of the way home whispering back and forth about what each one could do to help their mom.

Anna greeted them at the door when they came up the walkway, missing them as if they’d been gone for a year. She hugged them all, slammed the door against the world, and locked it securely.

Craig sat in his cab, just watching the house, becoming more and more frustrated, imagining the house as a high castle with a shark-filled mote.   “There’s no way I’m ever going to get into that castle, is there?” And he looked up. “Is there?” He punched the accelerator, and sped off down the street, angry that he allowed himself to feel anything at all, about anyone.

 

Twenty-one

On Saturday, the first official day of the children’s Christmas vacation, Anna slept luxuriously until 11:30. She jumped out of bed, threw on her robe, and ran to the living room. Still enough time to watch for the mail. Anna had felt a sense of peace on Saturdays because Fia went to get the mail, but today Fia came up to her mom and asked, “Mom, will you do something for me?”

Anna kissed her cheek. “Anything.”

“Please get the mail all the time?” She watched Anna’s face grow more tense and afraid. “It’s just that you do it so well, and I would like to see how you do it, you know, for the future, when I’ll have my own place and have to do it myself.” She smiled her empathetic smile.

“Well, I guess I could if it will help you.” So she ran to her room to get ready, while Fia clapped silently to herself.

Once dressed, Anna came out to the living room. Anna and Fia looked out the window, just in case Ed was out wanting to know when someone was going to pick up the goddamn fucking pile of leaves in the yard.

Anna was always prepared, like a good girl scout, to run across her lawn and gouge Ed’s eyes out at a moment’s notice. She knew where that ice pick was, just in case, under the brown couch cushion. But today went well. No altercations, no attempts to heckle from Ed, no attempts at gouging. Anna ran back inside as Fia watched, breathing heavily.

She locked the door and together, she and Fia sat on the couch, Fia opening the mail carefully with her intricately carved pewter letter opener.

Anna’s mind wandered. Her favorite holiday was Christmas. She would make her grandmother’s family recipe: Boiled Raisin Cake. She’d also make homemade honeycomb candy, too…her mother’s favorite. And she’d spend hours making five little gingerbread houses, one for each of the children and for herself. It was by all rights a ritual.

The children each had a “decorating detail” job. Rhona was in charge of the M & M’s, Fia, the Hershey’s chocolate kisses, Gregor, the gumdrops, and Aileana, the little candy canes. The icing was thick, like cement. It held the four walls and roof of each house like strong iron nails hold a wooden house.

After Fia finished telling Anna what she got in the mail, Anna jumped up, deciding that today was a good day to run out in the backyard for five minutes, and gather as many pecans as she could.

The day was brisk and clear, the snow a light dusting.

Fia huddled at the back door, closing her black hooded sweater tight across her small frame, watching Anna run from one end of the backyard to the other, in the snow, shoving dead and buried pecans in her bra.

Anna was always ready to yell “fuck you” to Ed if he asked what the hell she was doing out there exposing her breasts in the wintertime.

But Ed didn’t come out that day. Either he was too slow, or she was too fast. Either way, it worked out well for her and Fia, who was both embarrassed and sad watching her mom. Fia ran to her mom’s bathroom to get a soft, warm towel, and when Anna came back inside, she cradled her mother in it until she was warm again.

Anna whispered, “My Fia” in her daughter’s ear, and it made Fia cry. “You have a true, kind heart.” Anna kissed her daughter’s wet cheeks, and went off to her room to change into dry clothes.

Fia silently set the table for lunch.

Dear Magnanimous Diary

            I’m pretty tired. Went pecan hunting. My breasts are sure sore. I wonder what I can order from another catalog so I can kiss the UPS man again? Maybe another set of six super hero glasses.

           

            Oh wait. I have another IP:

 

            Cheers

            Here’s to that thing

            That went by so fast

            What were we celebrating

            What did I eat

            What did I wear

            Who was there

            Was it raining

            Or snowing

            Or was that the day of the tornado

            I don’t think so

            Why would we be cheering on the day

            The tornado ripped up trees

            I’ve been sitting too long

            I can’t feel my feet

            Or my breasts.

To be continued…

Anna Blair’s Visitors (Chapters 16-18)


Charleigh Wallace

____________________________

 

 

 

Anna Blair’s

Visitors

 

 

 

Based on a true story.

Copyright © 2011

All rights reserved.

…continued

Sixteen

Even though Anna again stated clearly that she could at any time refuse to bring the damn journal, she decided it was best if she brought it today, her next appointment with Dr. Romania Man. Anna didn’t think he liked his new name.

It did take her some time to relinquish it, but finally she did.

While Anna sat anxiously, hating the silence, he read of the kissing of Russell Crowe.

He cleared his throat. “Do you feel that Russell Crowe was really there with you…kissing you?”

She could tell he was really worried, but not as much as he would be if he knew Russell Crowe had kissed her back.

Anna smiled, turning a light shade of pink. “Sometimes.”

He read on, and suddenly became alarmed. “Did Cezar really rape you?! Did you call the police?”

Anna was alarmed by his reaction. “No, I didn’t call the god damn police! Jesus!”

“You need to get to the hospital right now! You need to be examined.” He stared at her angry face. “Well, will you go?”

“Okay, okay!”

“Your cab driver! I’ll call and tell him to take you to the hospital, okay?”

“Yeah, yes, okay!”

He did wonder if Cezar had really been there, but this was the only way to be sure.

“Okay.” He breathed in and out heavily. It only took a few minutes to place the call to Lawton Cab. While they waited, he continued to read, glancing up at her on occasion. “And this woman in your dreams. Is she your mother?”

“It wasn’t a dream.” Anna glared at him, her left eye twitching slightly. “My eyes were open!” Anna held them wide open with her fingertips for emphasis. “And yes, it was her.”

Dr. Romania Man studied Anna for a long moment. Then he read another entry:

Dear Diary,

            My memories of my childhood are as evasive as the past ten years, since I divorced Cezar. My life is more a collection of torn photographs that whip through my mind at            strange times: going to the bathroom, vomiting up dinner, shaving my legs. Pictures I can maybe make sense of if in a photo album, with little white labels describing the scenes, giving the dates. But scattered around my mind the way they are, it is impossible for me to gather them, to make much sense of them. All I know at this point is that I have lived a life; I’m just not really sure who’s.

            Hey, Romania Man, isn’t the icy rain neat?

            He smiled.

“I like the weather here, too. It snows just enough to make it seem festive, don’t you agree?”

“Whatever.” Anna rolled her eyes.

His eyes jumped to the section of the journal about the UPS man.

“Anna, you kissed a total stranger? The UPS man?”

“So!” She stuck out her tongue at him.          When the cab arrived, Dr. Romania Man walked with Anna downstairs, Craig wondering what had happened to end the session early.

The doctor leaned in the front of the cab as Anna got in the back seat. “Please take her to the hospital right away, emergency room. I’ll call ahead.”

Craig whipped around to look at Anna, wondering if she was all right. Then he nodded quickly at the doctor, started the engine, and pulled out into traffic, maneuvering like a NASCAR driver.

“Jesus! What’s the urgency?” Anna yelled to the front seat.

“He said it was an emergency so I’m getting you there fast.”

“Oh, it’s probably nothing. I was raped the other day and …”

The cab came to a screeching halt at the side of the road, Craig whipping around in the front seat.

“What the fuck!”

Wow, Anna thought, he really is upset about this. And his eyes, Lord, his eyes; they are on fire.      She straightened out her coat across her lap.

“I said he thinks I was raped.”

“Well, it’s either something you are or aren’t.” Craig was going to lose his mind if he didn’t first find out who the son of a bitch was who did this to her, and then kill him.

When he saw her fidget and look outside on the street turning dark with storm clouds, he knew he’d said too much.

“Okay, listen, let me get you to the hospital, okay? They can help you.” And in the meantime, I’m going hunting, he thought.

So he pulled out onto the street and got her to the hospital in five minutes flat, a new record for him.

He jumped out and opened her door. “Do you need me to come in, ‘cause I will.”

Anna shook her head ‘no’ and went through the sliding glass doors into the busy emergency room, leaving him standing by the open car door.

“Ah hell, I’m going in no matter what she says. I ain’t leaving her alone.” So Craig parked the cab in a “no parking” zone, and ran inside. Anna was sitting in a padded peach-colored chair while a nurse with high gray hair and a turned up nose took her vital statistics. A thermometer was in her mouth that he noticed she was biting down on hard, the nurse’s fat fingers trying to pull it from gritting teeth.

“Please, ma’am. It’s procedure.” As the nurse struggled, Craig came over.

“Anna, give the nurse the thermometer.” Anna turned her head slowly, like the damn exorcist girl, Craig thought, sending a shiver down his back.       “Please?” Craig pleaded.

Anna let go. “What are you doing here? You only belong in the cab.”

“I’m not leaving you alone.”

The nurse’s razor thin lips pursed together.    “Ma’am, is this man bothering you because I can have him thrown out if you like.”

Craig looked at Anna pleadingly and scowled at the nurse.

“I guess you can stay.” To the nurse, Anna replied, “He’s my ride home anyway.”

“Okay, well, if you’re sure,” the nurse said, focusing her softening shit-brown eyes on Craig’s crotch. Craig, with hands on his lean hips, glared back.

Anna was pushed by wheel chair to an available bed while Craig was kept in the waiting room. He paced like a man ready to become a father.

Anna was examined by Dr. Kyle Montgomery, a tall thin man with tall thin hair. He asked her a few times, “You say you were raped, ma’am?” But Anna lay there, silent, her legs in stir ups, feeling undignified, and humiliated.

“How long ago?” he asked gently.

“Sixteen years ago.” And Anna started crying. A young nurse in a cartoon shirt-and-pants-set uniform moved up next to her, rubbing her shoulder, being as much comfort as Anna would allow.

The doctor gently took her feet out of the metal stirrups, covered her naked body with a cool white sheet, patted her knee, and silently walked out.

The nurse got her dressed carefully, slowly, watching Anna’s face stare at the sand-colored curtains with pale pink thin stripes. She was unmoved, staring past curtains at nothing, even with all the commotion of a man being rushed past her room on a gurney, with a bullet in his belly from a gang fight.

The nurse walked Anna slowly out to the waiting room, searching for anyone who knew her. Craig stopped pacing suddenly when he saw Anna. He rushed over. “Is she okay,” he asked the nurse.

“Are you her husband, sir?”

Craig kept his anxious, worried eyes on Anna’s. “No ma’am, just her cab driver.”

“Sorry, sir, I can’t tell you how she is then. She is okay to be taken home, though.”

Craig nodded, took Anna’s unwilling arm and led her out to the waiting cab that now had three tickets on the windshield. “Fuck you,” Craig muttered as he grabbed them off the windshield and thrust them in his pocket. He opened her door, and helped her in. And in silence, he drove her home.

Once she was safely inside, he called Dr. A’s office. Craig told him what had transpired. The doctor said he had already called the emergency room. He thanked Craig for being concerned but again told him there was nothing that could be relayed unless he was family.

“Well, Jesus, what do I have to do? Marry her so I can find out if she’s okay? Christ!”

And at that moment, Dr. A knew this man cared for Anna, and he was glad she trusted him, even if for nothing more than as her driver.

Trust. He thought about it for a moment. Trust is huge. The fact that Anna trusts anyone is huge. Amidst the bad was good.

But the bad was pretty bad. So, she hadn’t been raped, which brought more concerns. Was it just her period that caused the blood? She claimed she had bruises but the doctor reported none. How far will these delusions take her? Far away? Too far?

He sat back in his chair, drank a sip of his now cold coffee, made a face, tossed the cold coffee in his trash can, and tapped his pencil on his metal desk.

His last patient left at 8:00 pm., a woman bent on destruction by way of broken glass. He sat at his computer in the dark, sipping a fresh cup of coffee, thinking of Anna. Would Anna ever commit suicide? He didn’t really feel it was in her make up to do so. She had so much to live for: her children, her new life with new memories. And yet he wondered.

And what about her children? They most assuredly needed help, too. He made a note to schedule them an appointment.

Dear Diary

           

            I heard the hush of wind-swept flowers

            Murmuring my guilt

            I looked abaft, Lamenting

            As all fell that I had built

            I paused to ponder there

            And watched as Scarlet, Jade

            Once fair

            Turned black and bruised

            And perishing

            While entrusted in my care

           

            The April sun turned to bluest ice

            That reassured no more

            The dying dahlias fell hard like me

            Upon this barren, thirsty floor

            The unmoved earth turned from me

            And so I turned from it

            And turned it over six hundred times

            Resigned…unaccompanied…unfit.

 

Seventeen

Anna didn’t know yet and wouldn’t for several years that her children, like herself, had wished for death to come quickly, to end the pain and nightmares.

It was on a sunny Saturday in July, one year ago, that Rhona came home from the abandoned playground with broken, bottle-glass cuts up and down her slender arms.

Rhona loved Danny. He lived across the street from them, and had for several years. He was tall, with dark hair and dark eyes, eyes that didn’t let many in. He asked her to go out with him, which really meant hanging out together, and maybe kissing and holding hands. Not long after he had asked, he began ignoring her, treating her as if she had a contagious disease.

He surprised her one day, asking if she wanted to go with him to the school playground. She happily said yes. He broke up with her at the playground, but didn’t just break up with her. He brought a friend with him, and together they laughed at her and made a joke of her feelings. When she came home, she was crying, her cut up arms behind her back, the broken glass left at the playground.

“Why are your hands behind your back, Rhona?” Anna asked.

Rhona shrugged her shoulders.

“Let me see your arms,” Anna pleaded, her voice breaking.

Rhona yelled ‘No!’ and ran up the stairs, crying. Fia stopped Anna from following.

“No, Mom, let her alone. She doesn’t want you around her right now.”

“But why did she do that?” And the tears came, falling like autumn leaves. Fia, Gregor, and Aileana all looked down.

Anna ran to her room, locked the door behind her, and violently pulled out the underwear drawer from the chest. She carefully unwrapped a midnight blue and silver silk scarf, unfolding the long, carved-handled knife she had purchased at a cutlery shop a few years back, her wrists its intended use. She fell to the floor, angrily grasping the wooden handle, hoping that in her fall she would accidentally do what she purposely intended, but the knife fell to the floor beside her.

“It’s because of me,” she cried softly, shaking her head, and raising her face up to the ceiling. “Why don’t you just do it? Why don’t you?” She looked past her white stucco ceiling, and through the thick clouds, staring down the eyes of god. “I hate you! I hate you!” Then she fell to earth, through her ceiling, and back to where she lay, where she passed out from grief.

At 8:00 pm exactly, Anna awakened and opened up her journal:

Dear Diary

            That doctor said I hadn’t been raped. I guess I have a really good imagination, huh?

           

            Dear Diary

            Rhona cut her arms today. Dear god, where were you?

 

Eighteen

Ms. Lebel was again due for another visit. Oh joy, oh bliss.

Anna asked for her ID and credentials, something Ms. Lebel would become quite used to, because without them, Anna wouldn’t ever let her bony ass in the door. Mrs. Lebel snottily slipped them through the crack in the door, only Anna’s left eye visible to Ms. Lebel’s two, so close together. Anna couldn’t help but laugh out loud.

After much debate and pleading from the freezing cold social worker, Anna did allow her entry, but she did not offer her any tea or cookies, even though Ms. Lebel said she was parched and hungry.

            Tough shit.

Anna kept a close eye on the cat clock; 6:00 pm was all Ms. Lebel got, one hour of their time. This beady-eyed bitch better be gone on the dot.

Ms. Lebel asked how each one was doing. Anna seriously considered the possibility that Ms. Lebel might have been a member of the KGB. Then she just started laughing, until tears were falling down her face. Ms. Lebel smiled, unsure of the joke, which made Anna laugh even harder.

Anna hurried her out the door at 6:03 pm, three goddamn minutes past the time she was supposed to leave.

“Mom, why did you laugh at her?” Aileana asked, embarrassed.

“I thought she was with the KGB.” And Anna laughed again. Then they all laughed, and went about getting dinner, glad they wouldn’t have to see her again for another month.

to be continued…

Anna Blair’s Visitors (Chapters 13-15)


Charleigh Wallace

____________________________

 

 

 

Anna Blair’s

Visitors

 

 

 

Based on a true story.

Copyright © 2011

All rights reserved.

…continued

 

Thirteen

The children weren’t sure if this year they’d be going to the Christmas parade down Gore Boulevard. Every Christmas after moving to Lawton, they had begun and followed their own traditions, and this was one of them.

Their mom would save just enough change so they could go see the parade, and all get a ride in the horse-drawn carriage, taking them up and down Gore Boulevard, where in the center island were decorated, lighted miniature houses, manger scenes, and all the trees with their beautiful, twinkling lights.     There was even a snow queen, dressed in a long, royal blue velvet coat and white fuzzy collar. She stood every year in the center of the gazebo, waving like a beauty queen.

Last year they had gone, but the price of the horse carriage ride had increased. Anna had held on tight to the money crumpled in her hand, knowing she didn’t have enough that year. She had cried all the way home.

The children didn’t expect to be going, even though the inheritance from their grandmother was more than they’d need in twenty years. This year, with their grandma gone, with their mom worse, the children knew their memories of downtown would have to suffice.

Anna looked at the plastic cat clock on the kitchen wall. It was almost time for the mail. She raced to her room, got dressed, and brushed her hair. Then she skipped out to the kitchen and opened the freezer door. She picked up the two-pound box of See’s candy, ruffled through the molasses chips and bridge mix, and picked out thirteen rum nougats, of which she devoured. Then grabbing a bag of sugar, Anna raced out the front door to the mail, and raced back in. She put the sugar bag back in the cabinet, and the mail on the pine table. Sweat was pouring off her smooth skin. She ran cold water from the kitchen sink and like a shower, sprayed herself with it, using her hands. She got herself wet, the floor, the refrigerator, the window, the cabinets, the living room couch.

Suddenly someone banged on the front door. Anna was startled, her breathing rapid.

She stared frantically at the kitchen clock.

“It’s 12:14 pm already? Another time warp. Shit!”

Today’s visitor: her second; an unwanted one. Cezar. The rapist. The father. The husband. The abuser. The christian.

Another loud pounding knock shook the wooden front door.

Her breath became short and quick. She walked slowly to the door, and held her back against it, unable to open it. Whimpering, eyes tightly shut, she wished Grandma Blair was there instead, but it didn’t matter how much she didn’t want to open the door, Anna knew she had to.

There were four things in her life that were now standard: the mail came at 11:37, the visitors at 12:14, she always had to let them in, and always had to offer peppermint tea and Lorna Dunes. It was just the way it was, like the laws of the universe: E=mc².

Anna slowly turned around, unlocked the three dead bolts, and opened the door, her knuckles white as she gripped the doorknob. Cezar pushed past her, grabbing her breast, complaining about peppermint tea, Lorna Dunes, and the damn fucking kitchen chair she offered. Anna tried to fix her hair, but he pulled it hard, calling her a bitch. “No,” Anna pleaded as she backed up against the living room wall, “please go away!”

But he didn’t go away, and he didn’t stop when she screamed. He tore at her blouse, cut her bra off with a switchblade, slapped her face twice, pulled down her pants and underwear and ordered her onto the couch. He didn’t stop when it hurt, when she bled, cried, or begged to check on the baby.

Anna screamed, “Rhona! She’s only two months old! She’s crying!”

“Shut the fuck up, bitch!” His breath caught in her hair, the smell of liquor filled her nostrils, his scratchy beard making jagged scratch lines on her face.

Anna continued to scream. “She could be stuck in the crib bars! She could be smothered in her baby blankets! She could die!”

But Cezar ignored her, even grinned at her, and just kept pumping until he emptied into her, and on her. Anna sobbed, trying to cover up her breasts with her hands. Cezar laughed at her.

Anna remembered the ice pick under the couch cushion, for just such an occasion. Moving her one hand off her breast, she slowly moved her hand down the side of the couch, and touched its sharp point lightly with her fingers.

But Cezar grabbed her hands, tied them with his belt, and raped her again until the children came up the walkway from school, their blessedly soft voices sending him away.

She slowly got off the couch, and gathered her clothes. Gingerly holding her crotch, she made her way back to her room. She replaced the torn blouse with a fresh one, and put on a clean pair of underwear with a panti-liner to catch the blood, and a clean pair of dark blue sweatpants. She washed her bruised face in the bathroom sink, holding herself up by leaning against it. She added blush to hide the scratch marks, then laid down on the bed, hoping the children would not need her, would not notice her, would just let her sleep.

She heard them come in the front door, and held her breath.

“Mom?” Gregor called. He went down the hall and saw her door closed. Anna sobbed into her pillow, wanting them so badly but knowing that if they saw her like this, they would be even more worried.

Gregor returned down the hall. “She’s asleep I think.”

“Shit! I wanted to tell her about Bryce,” Fia complained.

“Tell me,” Aileana said eagerly.

Fia was happy to have anyone listen, so she told her younger sister everything. About him trying to hold her hand in class, trying to kiss her during the film, and sitting so close she could feel heat come off of him.

“Uh, Fia?” Rhona asked, with a raised eyebrow.

“What!” She demanded.

“Maybe you shouldn’t tell Aileana your sex stories just yet.”

“Whatever.”

“What do you guys want for dinner tonight?” Rhona asked.

“Pizza!” Gregor’s answer was always pizza. Sometimes with pepperoni, sometimes plain cheese. It didn’t matter.

Since no one else objected, Rhona shrugged and called Pizza Hut and ordered more than they needed. She just didn’t know how to order for a family of this size. They weren’t her kids. How the fuck am I supposed to know all this shit? Why am I raising my sisters and brother?

            “Gregor, get the damn pizza when it gets here,” she ordered as she stomped up the staircase, pronouncing each step to let her mother know she was angry. She stepped into the shower after stripping violently, and let the warm water take her somewhere else.

Anna awakened suddenly in the dark, the house now quiet.

Dear Diary

            It’s 11:00 pm. Today Cezar raped me again. I’m not really sure if he was here or not, but I’m bleeding.

            Dear Diary 2

            11:07 pm. If he wasn’t here, why is my face all bruised?

            Dear Diary C

            11:08 pm. I forgot to let the kids decorate for Christmas! And I promised them. God damn it!

            Dear Diary 4

            11:09 pm. I felt like writing an “instantaneous poem.” It’s a poem I write very quickly and all at once. It’s my idea and my name for it, Dr. A, so don’t try and steal it. So anyway, here it is:

            Crawling through the tunneled space

            There is no light nor gentle face

            Only whispers echoing

            “Where’s your daddy gone?”

            Un-wiped tears collide with Earth

            Babies never given birth

            Melodies unloved, unsung

            While the vulture sings His song

            Emptiness to harmony

            A vast prerequisite

            To those who dare to bridge its gap

            Can find life desolate

            But onward go the songs unsung

            In hopes of one day to embrace

            A lightened heart, there never cease

            To kiss the gentle face.


Fourteen


                        Anna woke up the next morning sore with only a few spots of blood on her pad. She lay in bed for a few minutes, trying to grasp what may or may not have happened yesterday. She felt down below and it was sore, and her breasts ached. Then she went still and remembered the dream.

Dear Diary 9

            Last night I woke up and saw a woman, a figure standing at my dresser, her fragile hand gently hovering over the top, barely touching it. She seemed intent, looking at something there.

            I blinked, thinking I was dreaming. But the figure was still there, a vague, slight form, dressed in flowing gowns of off-white and gray, the fabric blowing softly in a windless room. I closed my eyes, and fell back asleep.

            I woke up just now and remembered, and thought I should write it down in this stupid ass journal you asked me to write in.

            I got up and thought I’d see why she was at my desk. I saw my mother’s little post office bank next to the CPU. That little bank was one of many treasures that my mother had tucked away in storage. Her past lover, Sandy, never wanted any of Mom’s things displayed, just out of spite and jealousy. But now these possessions are out, and Mom has come to see them. I know that now. She has come to see me, too. Sandy: Fucking bitch!

Anna walked around her vacant house and felt so utterly alone, she went upstairs to sit in each child’s bedroom. On Aileana’s floor was a bunched up piece of binder paper. Anna picked it up, sat on the twin bed with a dark blue comforter and several flower-shaped pillows, unwrapped the paper carefully, and read:

I used to be the kind of person

            Who always thought about the FUTURE

            I used to be the kind of person

            Who always thought about going to COLLEGE

            I used to be the kind of person

            Who always thought about a CAREER

            But one day, my actions were far from   thought.

            I always thought that I would be the kind of  person to say “NO.”

            I didn’t think it would be as easy as it was for me to take a drag off

            “The wrong side of the tracks.”

            That one thing put an end to my future, my college, and my dream career

            And now all I can think of is

            I used to Be

            Anna’s tears fell, smearing the ink. She lay down on Aileana’s bed.

“I’m sorry, I’m sorry, I’m so sorry.”

The phone rang at 8:46 am. Anna woke up startled, ran downstairs, and picked up the receiver.

“What!”

“Yes, Mrs. Blair?” A cheery female voice bludgeoned Anna’s eardrums.

“What!”

“Well, I am calling regarding the exciting magazine, Vogue. Have you heard of it?”

“I’m bleeding.”

“Uh huh. Have you heard of the incredible savings right now, at the May Company, up to 50% off most fashion and make up? Well, those coupons are in Vogue Magazine!”

“I’m bleeding.”

“Well, I’m sure you can benefit from a new look, right? I mean, every woman needs to be pampered, right?”

Anna hung up the phone.

Dear Diary

            I have a theory. Telemarketers are not people. They are droids from a far off galaxy, programmed to speak relentlessly, and fast like a time warp, ignoring any “no’s” or “not interested’s.” When the receiver is picked up on your end, it is their cue like Pavlov’s dogs, to continue their onslaught of sales techniques to wear you down…talk, talk, talk…customers will break if I just keep talking…talk, talk, talk…don’t listen, don’t listen, don’t listen.

            I sometimes wish I were T. Furrows in the film, High Strung, making up crazy answers to telemarketing questions. For instance, when they ask who I am, I could say, “God, Ruler of the Universe.” If they ask my occupation, I could say, “I like to cut people up, but I don’t have a license.” But I never think about it in enough time. Oh well.

            P.S. How do I help my children? How do I help them not be sad anymore?

            Ps.Ps. or is it PPSS or PSPS in all caps? Anyway, I have another “instantaneous poem” ™. You do see the “tm” after my term, right, Dr. A? I haven’t trademarked it yet, but I will! Just an fyi. Just a warning.

 

So here goes:

 

Under this murky, frosty green-colored awning

Hanging strong with age over the damaged, wooden,

Creaky front porch steps

I can see from here your convoluted,

Distant, pot-holed path

And with the rain falling

I’m not even damp

But you’re Italian, black-laced hair

And button-down blue jeans

Drip with wrath

 

Pools of pain linger defiantly

In your gray, overcast, ocean eyes

As I easily glance through mine

Resolvedly green, measured yet clear

What is it you now feverishly crave

From my young and tired life

When once you cherished me

Like dry, dying grass covets the

First Fall rain, with brittle hands

Holding on to flesh not yet betrayed

 

When it comes down to simple,

Timeless, antique-yellowed memories

I long ago stopped caring

Whatever timid gifts your opaque, mountain god

Laid in your calloused, belt-wielding hands

Is what we won’t be sharing

 

So brighten my midnight,

And stumbling-on-jagged-rock days

Without lingering long

Only then can my downtrodden lips sing my off-key,

Un-timed

Un-rhymed

Last sweet sorrow song.

 

Anna returned to the kitchen, and took her empty teacup to the sink. She wondered why the visitors always came at the same time of day. Well, at least these first two had. Sometimes it felt like early morning, other times late in the evening; sometimes they stayed for what seemed like a minute, other times hours or days. But the clock always said 12:14 pm.

Anna rarely knew who would be on the other side of the door. She just knew they would  come, and she would serve them their favorite   peppermint tea and Lorna Dunes. Anna didn’t think they’d ever come on Saturdays or Sundays, when the children were home, keeping her mind connected.

Anna placed two clean tea cups and saucers on the white Formica kitchen table. The doorbell rang.

“Coming.”

She ran, sliding down the hall on soft aloe-infused red and white striped socks, slamming in to the wall near her bedroom door. She brushed her hair, put on black stretch pants, and a big navy T-shirt that said, “I love Mom,” a last year’s Christmas gift from Rhona.

She ran/slid back down the hall to the living room, tip-toed to the door and listened. She opened the door a crack. He stood there, the man with kind eyes. She opened the door wider.

“Please, come in.”

“Thank you, Anna. It is good to see you.”

He wore a fancy gray suit complete with tails, top hat, and a solid maple cane with its carved raven wings. He stood tall in the doorway. He had dark eyes, but Anna couldn’t remember now whether they were brown, black, or deep blue.

His hair was as black as the bottom of the sea, his face as pale as the Seychelles sand, his smile calming. Anna thought that if he whispered close to her ear, she might be able to smell the ocean on his breath. She, of course, thanked him for coming, and brought him to his favorite chair in the kitchen. She poured his favorite cup of tea and offered a plate of his favorite cookies. He accepted it all from her, not letting his gaze leave her eyes.

Anna noticed a very distinct ring on his right pinkie finger, white and yellow gold blending into each other, with stones of diamonds, rubies, and emeralds.

“May I try it on?” Anna asked politely.

The stranger shook his head ‘no.’

She replied with some animosity, “Well, all right…I guess.”

Anna quickly recovered when he smiled. She discussed with him all the stresses and worries resting heavy on her heart. She wanted to know why her mom had to die. He listened intently, catching her tears as they fell without ever moving his hand.

She cried about Cezar and the rape while the young man sipped his tea, her voice raising and lowering as she became angry or sad. She looked at her mother’s watch and remembered her. She asked if he had seen her, and when her mom might come to visit. He never answered; he only smiled a gentle smile.

He vanished as the children came up the walkway, their voices excitedly discussing where the Christmas tree would be placed this year, and who’d get the tall Santa statue in their room. Anna dried her tears and cleared away the unfinished cookie and tea.

She whispered to the now empty room, “I’ll miss you.”

Anna went to her room and got out her journal.

Dear Diary

            That man today was so nice. Except for the ring incident. And he did magic, catching tears with no hands, and keeping them in a tiny crystal bottle on the table.

            Anna chewed on her pencil, breaking off the eraser, and spitting it across the room.

Dear Diary

            I saw that dwarf, Ed, again today while getting the mail. I can only surmise that his anger comes from his own unhappy marriage to that loud German woman, and his unbridled passion for my loins.

Here’s another instantaneous poem for your reading pleasure:

 

            Pigeon

            Glaring at me on my windowsill

            What do you want, you stupid bird?

            He looked at me

            Then the street

            Then me

            Then the street

            Then it scared Lottie Betty Juan

            She ran, the pigeon flew,

            And I ate my sandwich.

 

            Oh yeah. One more thing. I had a dream last night I was in a movie with Robert Patrick. He had a long crew cut and scruff. Yum. He was a fireman and wore a hands-free phone thingy on his left ear. He was married with two young children. I was staying with them.

            At first he was abrasive but later he was overtly attracted to me and me to him. His wife told me I was the head on his shoulders, whatever the hell that meant. I think what she was implying was that I was all he thought about. So she asked me to leave and I did so abruptly, which confused him. He asked me for a kiss right in front of his wife. I refused.

            Later, after we were done filming, I found him in a pool near the edge. I bent down, grabbed his face, and slammed him with a heated kiss.

            Somehow later I found myself back in their house. His wife had guests over, christians with bibles, and they were looking at me with disdain. I tried to explain that in the movie I did not kiss him, but refrained from disclosing the passion I felt for him and the kiss that melted me.

            FYI Dr. A, I did feel bad that Robert was married.


 

Fifteen

Anna kept herself busy the next morning by baking chocolate chip cookies with no chocolate chips in them.

Dear Diary

            I don’t feel it’s fair to always put chocolate chips in the damn chocolate chip cookies, so I have substituted with raisins.

            She spent the rest of the morning rescuing burnt cookies, and scraping the old gum off the kitchen floor with a silver fork that had belonged to Grandma Blair. Knives weren’t allowed in the house anymore, a preventative for suicide attempts, she guessed. The children had learned to eat steak quite well with forks and teeth.

Gregor bought extra gum just so he always had some to chew up in moist wads and throw down. Anna knew he must love her, even though she couldn’t keep a dad for him, or give him a brother. She knew he loved her because he kept throwing all that chewed up gum on the kitchen floor for her to scrape up.

Dear Diary

            I don’t know why knives aren’t allowed in my home. If I have the money to purchase such an item, I should be able to do so. Isn’t that some kind of discrimination or something?

            The doorbell rang.

Anna felt upset because she had forgotten to put out the tea set.

“Again? Christ! It can’t be 12:14 already!” Anna looked up at the black cat kitchen wall clock, with the swinging tale. It was 10:35.

Anna wiped tears that had fallen, blurring her mascara. She didn’t know why she was crying, or when it had started.

She put the teapot on to boil. The doorbell rang again.

“Just a god damn minute!”

Anna ran to the bedroom and took two full minutes brushing her lengthening hair twenty eight times, and another three to put the hair clip in that looked like a big red bug, a Christmas gift from Gregor when he was five. It said so on the tiny white label affixed to its bottom.

She had the water whistling in her grandmother’s old chrome teapot when more knocks knocked and more bells rang.

“Coming! Shit!”

Anna went to the door, apprehensive that maybe Cezar had come to visit again.

She listened quietly at the door, then slowly opened it.

It was the UPS man.

“Hello!” Anna agitatedly pulled on the sleeve of his brown work shirt, trying to usher the young man in, insisting he sit down in his favorite chair, drink his favorite peppermint tea, and eat his favorite cookies, but he refused quite nicely, and stood firm in the doorway.

“I just have a package for a Miss Anna Blair, ma’am.”

Anna peered up at him, noticing his nice smile, dark brown eyes, and well-developed thick lips that hid a row of white, straight teeth. The dark brown trimmed mustache caressed his upper lip perfectly. His chest pushed his brown work shirt out, filling it completely. His waist was trim, his legs muscular.

He cleared his throat. He noticed the big red bug hair clip, the tears, the smudged mascara, and the middle-aged woman with deep green eyes, large yet balanced shape, and fair face with soft features. He also noticed her checking out his body, and it made him smile.

She took the small package from his warm, lean hands.

“That’s me.”

“Great. Can you just sign…”

Anna shut the door and walked back to her room, gently touching her tingling lips.

Dear Diary

            I kissed the UPS man today. I leaned up on tiptoes and kissed his lips, and thanked him      for the package. And closed the door. I set the package down on the pine table. That will wait until my children come home so they can tell me what I ordered from a catalog that I    forgot about. He has a scratchy mustache, with soft, sweet lips. Not sure why I did that. Oh well.

Jake, the UPS man, sat in his brown truck for several minutes outside the house of one Anna Blair. He didn’t quite know what to think. She was definitely pretty, but there was obviously something wrong with her. He felt he should go up to the door again and see if she was all right, but didn’t want to risk being kissed again. Hell, she might just rip his clothes off and have sex with him or something. His eyebrows raised, and he punched his right leg for even thinking about it.

“Shit.” He shook his head, pushed his thick, brown hair away from his brown eyes, and drove off, giving the accelerator an extra punch.

Unfortunately, the UPS man was not the only man Anna would kiss in the days and weeks to come. There was the Hoover man, the Mormon, the Jehovah’s Witness, and the running-for-mayor guy.

           

 Dear Diary

 

            Shattered hearts

            Stumbling around

            Bashing and clanging

            Yet making no sound

            Doing to others

            What was done to them

            Without ever feeling

            A touch that could mend

 

            Hacked through and through

            With knife-driven pain

            Unable, unwilling to

            Feel anything

            Shattered hearts

            Unable to see

            That pain lies in each one

            That love holds the key

 

            Wishing and hoping

            For dreams to come true

            Hanging on to anything

            Just to hang on to

            Joy at a distance

            Forcing a smile

            Crawling through

            Just one more trial

 

            Laughter is empty

            When it comes around

            When tears are forced back

            Never hitting the ground

           

            We grin and bear it

            We fight on and on

            Cause people keep saying

            We must remain strong

 

            Shattered hearts fall weak in the knees

            Waiting for weeping

            Till everyone leaves

            Alone, we sit

            In a dark emptiness

            Praying so quietly,

            “Gods, give me rest.”

 

            We take in a breath

            And breathe out a sigh

            At all the wasted

            Years that went by

           

            There could have been laughter

            There could have been cheer

            But there was instead, sadness

            Torment and fear

 

            Shattered hearts

            Stumbling around

            Can’t someone catch them

            Before they fall to the ground?

           

            Can’t someone listen

            Won’t someone hold

            A dear shattered heart

            While it is bleeding and cold

 

            But instead comes the noise

            And the wedge just grows deeper

            Where are the strong arms

            And safety to keep her?

           

            Where is the one

            Who will wipe away tears

            She walks away slowly

            Shattered hearts…shattered years

…to be continued.

Anna Blair’s Visitors (Chapters 10-12)


Charleigh Wallace

____________________________

 

 

 

Anna Blair’s

Visitors

 

 

 

Based on a true story.

Copyright © 2011

All rights reserved.

…continued

Ten

Dr. Alexandru greeted Anna warmly at the door to his office, careful not to stand too close or look too long into her eyes. He didn’t want to frighten her.

He wondered if he would ever convince a woman like Anna who had been raped and abused that not every man who looked was a monster, and not every man’s touch meant rape. Dr. Alexandru had no more answers than Anna did.

She found his kind smile comforting, and speculated as to why he didn’t look at her for very long. Was he embarrassed by the things she had said? Did he think she was plain, ugly, fat? What was he anyway? Russian? Italian?

Dr. Alexandru’s deeply accented voice startled her, making her flinch and hold up her hands in fist formation.

“Anna, please have a seat. I thought today we’d just talk if that’s okay with you?”

“Whatever,” she said, shrugging her shoulders.

Anna sat directly on the middle of the not inconsiderable “fluffy, puffy” couch. She sunk uncomfortably into the crease between the cushions. She abruptly stood, pulled down the crack of her pants that were creeping up her bottom, and sat on the cushion at the far end, the farthest she could get from the doctor.

Anna stared with irritation as Dr. Alexandru got up and sat opposite her in a worn, upholstered wingback chair from the early 1700s, Anna guessed. She noted it looked cold, and it certainly did not match his ugly metal desk.

Dr. Alexandru smiled, ignoring her glare. “Can you tell me about your mother?”

“Are you Russian?”

“What?”

“Nothing.”

He smiled. “I’m Romanian.”

“I think she’s dead.”

“What?”

“My mother.”

“Yes, Anna, she passed away over three months ago.”

“Oh.” Anna tied and re-tied her blue suede tennis shoes, completely bent at the waist, her face covered with a short mass of blonde hair.

Dr. Alexandru smiled at the process, the look of those worn tennis shoes on such a beautiful woman, in a white oversized T-shirt and blue jeans. What a playful, young outfit, Dr. Alexandru surmised, on such a complicated woman.

”Anna, how did she die?”

The memory came back, bolting her upright like a Nazi soldier.

“Cancer. Multiple Myeloma.”

“Go on, please.”

“She got sick, and threw up blood clots, and was saying she wasn’t going to die to the nurses in the hospital, but they didn’t believe her. Then she said she saw my grandmother and grandfather in the hospital room, and then I knew.”

“Knew?”

“She was going away. They were coming for her. But she wasn’t afraid anymore.”

“Were you with her when she died?”

“No. I never got to say good-bye.”

“How did you react when you found out she had died?”

“I cried for a long time.”

“Do you miss her?”

“Sometimes I still don’t think she’s gone. Sometimes it’s hard to remember that she died.”

“Those things are hard for us to comprehend. Sometimes it takes a long time to not feel as much pain when we think about them. Death seems so final.”

“Well, thanks for that, Doctor. I feel better now. Implausibly better, actually.” She stared at Dr. Alexandru until he looked down.

“Sorry, Anna.”

Anna detected the sigh that came from Dr. Alexandru, the weary look on his face. She decided to forgive his stupid comment, but held back. She wanted to ask if he had lost someone, too, but didn’t. She looked away quickly, and then suddenly, her stomach clenched, her bowels began to spasm. Then came a hot flash, and that all too familiar feeling of needing to crawl into a corner, or scream, or peel her skin off because it was too confining. She was heading for a panic attack.

Anna jumped up. “I want to go home now! I’m getting nervous being out this long!”

“Okay…okay, Anna. Are you alright? Do you need some water?”

Anna ran out the door without answering. The doctor quickly picked up the phone and called Lawton Cab.

He watched out his window as the cab quickly pulled up, taking her back home.

“Jesus, what does he do? Sit there and wait the whole hour?” Nevertheless, Dr. Alexandru was thankful the cab was right there when she needed it.

On the ride home, Anna gripped the side door handle, praying she wouldn’t have a full blown attack. Not here, not now. She started crying in the back seat.

“Hey, are you okay?” Craig asked, looking in his rear-view mirror. Her face…she’s so afraid; her eyes look terrified. God damn it, I wish I could hold her! He slammed his hands on the steering wheel, making her jump.

“Just drive!” She screamed. Craig stepped on the gas.

The cab halted at the curb. Anna threw her money at the vicinity of the front seat, and leaped from the cab. She scrambled for her keys while Craig stood helplessly outside his cab door. Rushing in, she locked and bolted the door, and ran to the bathroom where she spent an agonizing hour of panic, vomiting, diarrhea, and chills, before the medicine finally kicked in with wonderful bliss. Then she gingerly climbed into bed, under fluffy, soft sheets, exclaiming, “Fuck the mail,” and fell off to sleep.

Craig had ignored all his calls for a good hour, sitting in his cab outside her house, standing by the mailbox, resting up against the side of the car, waiting, not knowing how to help. Finally, he got in and drove off.

Anna awakened only once to hear her children come in the door from school. They were home now, and the panic was gone. Peace was back and she held on tight.

 

 

Eleven

Anna found herself again in Dr. Alexandru’s office. She just wished sometimes she could remember the ride to and from, but she did remember Craig’s blue eyes looking at her in the rearview mirror, and his scent.

“Anna, tell me about kindergarten.”

“What do you want to know? Kindergarten is pretty self-explanatory.” Anna loved being snide with Dr. Alex, what she now called him.

“What happened when you walked home from school that one day,” he asked, ignoring her sneer.

“I don’t remember much.”

“Tell me what you do remember.”

“Are you yelling at me?” She rose from the couch.

“Of course not, Anna. I am asking you to tell me what you remember.”

She sat back down again. Overreacting was not exactly her best feature, she thought to herself.

“Okay,” she said calmly, placing her hands on her pants, near the knee caps, fingers splayed.

“I remember my dad said boys will be boys. Whatever the hell that means.”

“Anna, whatever happened to you was not acceptable behavior in boys, or men. Ever.”

As Anna conveyed what she could recollect, Dr. Alex took his notes, thinking a few times he’d like to get a baseball bat and hit those boys upside their heads, the ones who had hurt her.

Anna left soon after. Dr. Alex rubbed his tired eyes, pushing up his glasses on his head rather than setting them on his desk. He concentrated on the taped recording. He typed his notes:

From the medical records on Anna Blair, she was seen by the family doctor after the incident in kindergarten, but he claimed she had not been raped. Her parents took her to a       psychiatrist, who noted that she did not want to talk, but climbed all over his desk, playing with his pencils, etc. From what her older sister, Fran, said, Anna’s mother apparently walked her to and from school for the remainder of that school year, but then assumed Anna was better, and did not walk her to school when 1st grade began.

Fran was interviewed last week. There were more instances when Anna was too frightened to walk down the same side of the street where boys were. This went on for many years. Anna could not walk outside the school building while waiting for her mother to pick her up…this would be fourth grade…if boys were present on the playground. Four years after the incident.

Apparently, Anna did not know why this was happening to her. She completely blocked out the incident, which caused a snowball effect on future memories. They all seemed to have been erased. And it seemed after this first incident, she started binge eating, a whole pack of cookies at a time.

On their next visit, Anna shared with him a dream from a few years ago.

“You want to tell me about a dream you had?”

“Yes.”

“Please, go on.”

Anna relayed the dream as if she’d dreamt it yesterday. Funny how she remembered it with such clarity, but couldn’t remember what mail she had received just yesterday.

“I resided in a substantial, glass house. The whole thing was windows, and it was dark outside. All the lights were on inside the house. Whoever was out there could see me, but I couldn’t see them.

“Then somehow Cezar got in the front door even though it was locked very securely. I fled into the kitchen, got a generous knife, with serrated edges, and repeatedly stabbed him in the chest. There was blood everywhere. Then I went out of the room to wash off the blood from my shaking hands, but when I returned, the body was gone, the blood was gone, and I knew I would have to kill him again and again and again.”

She shrugged. “So, that’s it.”

The dream’s meaning was obvious. The fear was still very real and alive inside Anna.

Dr. Alex wanted to help her; he watched her face during every session, and the expressions that crept in as her memory fought to come back, little by little.

Her problems did not start when her mother died. They had just escalated. She had repressed memories from the incident in kindergarten, allowing her to see only snapshots of her life. She was married for eight long abusive years, and divorced the children’s father ten years ago.

Dr. Alex read in her file:

She is tormented with panic attacks, irritable bowel syndrome, and was diagnosed with MS in 1993, but so far, has had no ill effects except for a loss of sensation, of touch. She has a Bachelor’s degree.

Dr. Alex looked out his window at the traffic traveling up and down Gore Boulevard, the lighted trees, angels, and little snow village houses being set up for another season. The horse-drawn carriages would soon begin their walk up and down the street. Snow was starting to fall. It was quite pretty, even with the vast Army base in the distance, with its drab, dark brown barracks and light tan quarters laid out on flat, dead, frozen dirt and grass.

She’s pretty. She is quite heavy, but under the circumstances, I understand why. It’s her armor. When she’s heavy, no men are knocking down her door. Her physical appearance now is only the end result of years of suffering.

            Dr. Alex’s eyebrows furrowed in a combination of anger and loss for Anna’s life. He sighed, put on his dark blue Sears parka and black leather gloves, and walked down the stairs, out into the cold night.

Anna was at home, staring at the toilet, trying to focus on Craig’s smell and his strong hands gripping the steering wheel. She flushed the toilet. Craig’s eyes were kind. But then again, in the beginning so were Cezar’s.

She walked into her room and sat in a corner, facing the wall. She closed her eyes. It was Burbank. Rhona was small, and Fia had recently been born.

“Cezar, it’s 2:00 am! I am so tired.”

“I don’t care!”

“But I can’t stay awake. I’m so tired.”

Finally she agreed, because he said she couldn’t go to sleep until she did.

“Okay. We can have sex, just so I can get to sleep.”

He grinned. “No, I don’t want sex. I want a blow job.”

“But I agreed to have sex. Isn’t that enough?”

“No!” He bellowed.

He always wanted oral sex, and he always wanted to finish in her mouth, holding her head in place so she couldn’t move, or breathe. And no matter how many times she said no, he always tried, releasing a small amount of semen into her mouth. She would push away, spit all over him, and go brush her teeth, cry, or sometimes vomit.

Anna gripped her stomach, remembering another time.

“I feel so sick.”

“So!”

“I can’t give you a blow job, Cezar, when I feel like I’m going to throw up.”

“Fuck you!” Then he grabbed her head, bringing her face to his groin. Tears streamed down her face with him in her mouth. When he finished, she went into the bathroom and vomited.

Anna held her mouth, crying but making no noise.

She remembered Burbank, and all the many excuses Cezar gave for needing blow jobs. He was sad, he was happy, he had a headache, he was constipated. He told her that oral stimulation was the only thing that would stop hideous migraines. He wouldn’t take his blood pressure medicine, the real cause for his headaches. He’d just say he forgot. So she’d forget how hard she was biting.

After school Anna, Rhona and Fia all rode in the cab to Harry’s Market. Thanksgiving was coming soon. Rhona and Fia did the shopping, running into the store from the waiting cab while Anna clung to the door handle. Craig tried to make small talk while he and Anna waited, but there was no response.

Soon the girls came out, bags in each hand. On Thanksgiving they enjoyed a safe, quiet meal with Jerry Lewis entertaining them in Cinderfella.

 

Twelve

“My mom and dad were in the San Francisco Opera Company before I was born.”

“Really?” Dr. Alex was impressed.

“Yeah. They gave it up to raise Fran and me.”

“Oh, that is too bad,” Dr. Alex said, but quickly looked away when greeted with a hostile glare.

Anna continued. “Then,” she pronounced with anger, “they joined this concert society group. I sat bored to death while listening to endless agonizing hours of choir rehearsals. It was some big deal, but I hated the music.”

“Why?”

“Because! They sang those little stupid ‘staccato-ed,’ exactly-measured notes, precisely as written: c d c c e f c c, like fucking note robots!” Anna was now on her feet, using hand gestures and angry expressions. Dr. Alex just smiled. Then she turned toward him and took the top of one hand, and while hitting it into the palm of her other she exclaimed, “Notes, Dr. Alex, are written to dance on a page. They are not to be sitting up to their asses in cement!”

Then she sat back down. Dr. Alex got up and went to his desk. He rummaged around, lifting papers, opening drawers, until he uncovered a black, leather-bound book, a journal. Anna looked at it, and then at him with impatient irritation.

“What the hell is that?”

Dr. Alex put the journal on the mahogany-stained pine coffee table that sat between them. “This,” he explained, “is the beginning of your life now.” He handed her a black pen.

“What!” She demanded with angry suspicion.

Dr. Alex smiled as furrowed brows and a scowl greeted him. “I want you to open the journal and write down what I tell you to write.”

Anna wiggled on the couch, clearly annoyed.

“Please?” Dr. Alex sensed her hesitation, but Anna grudgingly grabbed the pen from his waiting hand, slammed open the journal to the first page, and sighed.

“I want you to write…’This is my…'”

As he dictated, Anna glared at him. He urged, “’This is my…journal. My new book of memories to replace the old ones I no longer have.’”

It was very clear to Dr. Alex that even though Anna remembered some specific times in her life, her overall life was a blank, and he wasn’t willing to allow her to live like that anymore, to leave behind memories. It was time to take with her what she could remember, and make new memories.

He pleaded. “Write, Anna, please?” He continued. “’I will write in it each day…’”

Before Anna could argue, her mouth poised for an angry comment, he continued to dictate.

“’I will write in it each day,’” he stated with more emphasis, “’to remember from now on. And I will bring it with me each week to see Dr. Alex.’”

He smiled. She smoldered. Could he not tell how clearly annoyed she was? She stood, frowned, and angrily thanked him for the damn journal, leaving in a huff.

Anna knew deep down this was a relief. Now she wouldn’t have to try so hard to remember. She was tired of hearing her father ask her if she remembered this vacation or that vacation. Did she remember bringing him lemonade as he struggled to get their small trailer ready for a trip? She remembered none of it, and he would get mad at her for it. He’d snap at her, yell, and make her wonder why he was so angry.

It broke her heart the most when Rhona reminded her of the birthday not too many years ago, when Rhona had saved up her money so she could take her mom out shopping. Whatever Anna liked or wanted, Rhona bought it for her. Rhona reminded her of all the great things Anna had purchased that day, how much fun they had had, but Anna couldn’t recall any of it.

It was as if some other person had cheated her out of her life;  a human shell who got to enjoy all of those times, Anna left with only the agony of not remembering the activity, the feeling she had, or who she had shared the precious moments with.

Her face would light up when a memory came back, a photograph whisking in and out of her mind, stopping long enough to say hello.

Like the time she was not allowed to see The Exorcist because she wasn’t seventeen yet. She had called Grandma Blair who came to the theatre willingly. Anna thought she was coming to take her home. But Grandma Blair came in the theatre with her and watched the whole movie straight-faced. Fran and Anna would laugh at the memory, and also because Anna remembered anything at all.

Anna remembered her first kiss at a high school Sadie Hawkins dance, where Anthony Biscoe pushed his tongue down her throat, and all she could do was stand there scared to death. And how she shouldn’t have gone with Anthony but with Adrian, the Greek drummer she broke her date with, the one she even now thought of, even now sometimes loved.

Anna remembered her dear grandmother’s funeral, not recognizing the painted face that lay in the coffin, and knowing that she would never again hear that deep, exhilarating laugh.

Anna’s memories were shattered, but as she continued to go to Dr. A, a shortened version, bits and pieces were coming back. She remembered having to ask Cezar permission to go to the grocery store, and how she’d better not be gone longer than a god damn hour. She remembered having to ask permission to practice her singing or take a bath, because he didn’t want to be out in the living room, watching the damn kids. And he didn’t want to hear anymore about her singing until it brought in the big bucks.

Dr. A sat down at his desk, pleased with his accomplishment, the first wrecking ball pounding against Anna’s stone wall. He tapped his pencil on the brain-gray metal desk, staring out the window at the icy rain falling.

Craig dropped Anna off a little after 10:30 am. She threw her money at him, said “sorry,” as she slammed the door, and walked angrily up the walkway. She dropped her keys twice, slammed the black journal down on the step once, then picked them both up, and opened the door.

Craig smiled as he sat in the car watching her. “She said ‘sorry.’ Fucking A, she said ‘sorry!’” He cranked Rascal Flatts and sped off down Atom.

Once inside, Anna walked to her bedroom, her footsteps hard enough to shake the lamps in each room as she passed. She threw herself on her bed, opened the stupid journal, and began to write:

Dear Diary

            I just got home. Big fucking deal. I think the cab driver likes me.

           

            And then she stopped, got off her bed, and spent the next fifteen minutes kissing the mirror in her bedroom, imagining a combination of Craig’s eyes, and Russell Crowe’s lips. She picked up the journal again:

Dear Diary

            Russell Crowe kissed me today.

            And so her journaling began.

After taking a quick shower, Anna dressed in her tie-dyed, once-piece, 90/10 cotton blend union suit, and made her breakfast of Cap’n Crunch Cereal soaked in Coca Cola.

…to be continued.