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Telling
Stories
By Tammie Byram Fowles, LISW, Ph.D.
© 1998
It was beautiful outside her window. When she
could bring herself to look, she saw lobster boats bobbing on the
ocean, seagulls gracefully moving across the sky, and faces that
after only two weeks had become familiar. It seemed a good place to
finish a life that had become one long and endless ache.
She lit another cigarette and switched on the
black and white TV. "General Hospital" appeared on the
television screen. She leaned back, pulled the pink and white afghan
around herself, and smoked. Her daily routine consisted of
cigarettes, warm beer, and meaningless TV. Within minutes she was
asleep.
The August sun shone down on the coastal
village where she had come to hide. It was a poor town populated
mostly by those who fished, worked in the seafood processing plant,
and those who were too young or old to do either. Villagers lived in
houses that failed to hold paint for more than a season or two. A
place where spring and summer held promise, and fall and winter
called for prayer. Visitors struck by the village’s stark beauty,
romanticized the lives of its' inhabitants. They were right - there
was romance here, but there was also back breaking work, poverty and
despair.
She'd come to Hamden with a savings book
claiming possession of $92,000 dollars, a red Saab, a suitcase
filled to the brim with wrinkled clothing, a journal, 3 novels, 8
cartons of cigarettes, 6 cases of beer, containers of seconal,
codeine, and sleeping pills, and a plan to kill herself.
A dog is barking. She doesn’t want to wake.
She turns over, pulls the cover over her head, and reaches for her
child. She's been grasping empty air for a lifetime it seems. Her
baby girl is gone. She searches for her daughter's image and finds
her tiny face, her beautiful, innocent face. She begins again to
whisper her name over and over, as if it were a chant. "Cara,
Cara, Cara…"
The dog keeps barking. She throws her covers
off and struggles to sit up. Her agony and rage rise up to choke
her. She briefly considers killing the dog, but it would take far
more energy than she has. She wills the tears to come instead, but
they don't. She'd used them all up during the first two years that
she'd grieved for her sweet little girl. She rests her head against
the arm of the couch, feeling desolate and depleted - empty except
for her hatred and pain. "Why wait any longer?" She
wonders. Her pills, tucked safely away, lie waiting.
Her brother's birthday is only a few days
away. She understands the cruelty of killing herself so close to the
day her brother was born, and so she's decided to hold on just a
little longer. She lies perfectly still, barely breathing. The sun
finds it’s way through the darkened room and warms her face.
"Soon," she whispers and closes her eyes again. Her auburn
hair lays soft against her cheek, and her long, slender body is
still. One hand rests on her chest. It's a pale, delicate hand that
hosts a thick gold wedding band.
It’s almost four when she finally stirs. She
slowly slides up and leans against the shapeless cushions. She
reaches for another cigarette, takes a sip of flat and tepid beer
and gazes at the television screen. A woman is yelling at her
boyfriend, while a pretty talk- show host stands by. She shakes her
head in disgust and smokes. It will be dark soon. She curses the
night; it's far too like the darkness in her soul. She begins to
unconsciously brace herself for the torment that will soon swallow
her up. She walks slowly over to the refrigerator, stretches her
aching muscles, reaches for another beer, and stumbles back to the
couch. She hasn’t eaten in days. If only nature would accomplish
the final task for her, allowing her to just fade away...
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