Online Read Free Novel
  • Home
  • Romance & Love
  • Fantasy
  • Science Fiction
  • Mystery & Detective
  • Thrillers & Crime
  • Actions & Adventure
  • History & Fiction
  • Horror
  • Western
  • Humor

    Impulse

    Page 3
    Prev Next


      the main person you want

      to strangle is the annoying

      dude who keeps poking his

      head through your door.

      How ya doing? Okay?

      So by the time you finally

      get to see your shrink,

      you’re irritated to begin

      with. And she asks you

      to tell her how you feel

      and all you can think

      to answer is “pissed.”

      Then she wants to know

      just whom you’re angry with

      and you decide maybe you

      shouldn’t tell her the friggin’

      nurse’s aide, in case they worry

      you might try to strangle

      him. So you try to think

      of someone else you’re

      mad at, and the unavoidable

      answer pops into your

      warped little brain: everyone.

      They Kept Me

      Locked up in isolation

      for almost two weeks.

      See, you have to make

      Level One to go to school

      and eat with everyone else.

      You arrive here at Level Zero.

      Nothing. That’s exactly what

      you are until you can

      prove to them that you

      won’t save up your meds

      and OD or lynch yourself

      with strips of your sheets.

      So you hang out in your room,

      maybe reading a book

      (approved literature) or

      journaling with a felt pen.

      No pencils (no leads).

      No pens (no points).

      Maybe I could think up a way

      to kill yourself with a felt pen.

      Maybe I could sell the idea

      to the dozen or so freaks

      in here determined to do

      themselves in. Maybe I’ll use

      it myself. Am I saying that

      I’m a freak? Effing A!

      I quit worrying about it

      a long time ago. Better

      a freak than a total loser.

      Better a freak than a liar.

      So far, everyone I’ve

      ever met has been a liar.

      Everyone but Phillip,

      my only true friend, my

      savior. Never hurt me, never

      coerced me. Never lied to me.

      The Worst Liars

      Are the ones everyone thinks

      would never, ever tell a lie.

      The teachers who act like

      they care about you, then

      turn you in for smoking a cig

      or kissing someone in the hall.

      Or the plain Jane, churchgoing

      soccer moms who plaster on

      some anonymous face, then

      sneak out once a week or so,

      pretending they’re off with

      girlfriends when they’re really

      looking for ways to get laid.

      No, my ma wasn’t one of

      those. She made no bones

      about getting laid, something

      she did plenty of. Laid by no-

      good, nasty losers, single,

      married, it didn’t matter,

      long as they had a few bucks

      and the necessary attachments,

      in good working order. Beat

      up. Knocked up. Messed up.

      She got all of those things,

      didn’t care. Worse, she

      didn’t give two cents

      about what her “lifestyle”

      did to me. Her son.

      Her only son, because

      after one particularly

      ugly abortion, her body

      decided it had had enough

      of Ma’s mistreatment and

      formed scar tissue around

      her ovaries. The odds of my

      having a sibling shrank

      to nil.

      Vanessa

      I Heard My Brother’s Scream

      Through the cloud

      that had veiled my brain,

      coloring everything crimson.

      It seemed to last forever,

      that scream. Poor Bryan.

      He’s only eight,

      too little to understand

      that dying isn’t something

      to fear. It’s a comfort.

      I felt comfortable, dying

      that afternoon, and would

      have, except Grandma

      happens to be a nurse—

      a good nurse, hard,

      wise, through and through.

      And she happened to be home.

      She calmly dialed 911,

      wrapped my arm

      in a soft yellow towel

      which looked ochre through

      the scarlet mist.

      Stay with me, Vanessa,

      she repeated over and over.

      I remember that,

      and I remember one EMT,

      with blondish hair and a killer mouth

      that refused to say a word,

      except to his partner.

      I remember his eyes the most—

      brilliant blue, and filled

      with disgust.

      Grandma rode in the ambulance

      with me, and the last thing

      I remember is telling her I was sorry

      for staining her new bathtub.

      Screw the tub, Vanessa,

      there’s help for that.

      And there’s help for you.

      Which Is How I Wound Up Here

      Left hand stitched neatly

      back in place.

      They tell me it will

      be good as new, but my fingers

      feel like they belong

      to someone else and don’t

      want to be attached to me.

      Nothing does.

      I’ve been here about a week,

      I think, watching it snow

      and listening through the walls

      to other girls, sicker than I am.

      They talk about themselves,

      about the things they’ve done,

      the things they’d like to do.

      Parents. Teachers. Counselors.

      So-called friends.

      They’d all better run when

      those sociopaths find their way

      back outside.

      There are boys here too,

      somewhere. I know because

      sometimes I hear the girls

      call to them down the hall.

      The things they say!

      A truck driver would blush.

      I would never talk that way

      to Trevor. He walks on water.

      I want him to think I do too.

      For a while, he did, or at least

      he pretended to.

      I did things with Trevor

      I wouldn’t dare confess

      to anyone—things I didn’t

      know anyone did.

      But he wanted me to,

      so I did. That’s what you do

      when you love someone,

      right?

      The Door Opens

      Death watch crew, come

      to check up on me.

      They’ve been after me

      all week, first every

      fifteen or twenty minutes,

      then every hour or two,

      making sure I don’t rip

      stitches and let my hand

      drop off after all.

      Hello, Vanessa, says Paul,

      who is fabulously tall

      and almost as wide

      as the door. He hands me

      my morning pill, unwraps

      my bandage, peeks underneath.

      Dr. Boston says if you join us

      for group this afternoon, she’ll

      award you Level One. You

      could start school tomorrow.

      So far I’ve avoided group,

      preferring to semi-vent

      my pent-up insanity in priva
    te

      therapy sessions—Vanessa

      Angela O’Reilly, closed book.

      But I have to admit I’m

      tired of this room, weary

      of these auburn walls.

      Maybe, if I stash my meds,

      I can keep my mouth

      shut and just listen to the sob

      stories, passed around

      the big circle like joints.

      Maybe I’ll find them entertaining.

      So I tuck the Prozac

      under my tongue, nod.

      “Okay.”

      Conner

      Suitcase Emptied

      I walk to the sealed window,

      stare at the glistening world

      outside. Buried in snow.

      Glare threatens my eyes

      but I don’t turn away. I like it.

      Up the hall come deliberate

      footsteps. Suddenly they

      stall and the door creaks open.

      It’s Paul, the rather large

      guy who escorted me here.

      Everything good? It’s almost

      a sigh. All settled in?

      “Uh-huh.” I offer a (not)

      genuine smile. “Unpacked

      and ready to party. When

      does the shindig begin?”

      Paul, who is not amused,

      tosses a pair of gray sweats

      on the bed. Put these on.

      He crosses the room, opens

      drawers, assesses sundries

      and wrinkled clothes as I slip

      into the sweats. You’ll wear

      those except for Sunday services

      or when your parents visit.

      Now Dr. Starr would like

      to chat. Please come with me.

      He draws to the far side

      of the door, allows me by,

      takes his place at my elbow,

      reminding me I no longer

      own the space around me.

      Dr. Starr Isn’t Like Dr. Boston

      No tight navy suit, no

      miniscule skirt. Nothing

      about her hints nymph

      or flirt. She’s a bulldog.

      She motions for me to

      take a chair, studies me

      as I move, as if the very

      way I plant myself there

      can tell her something

      of import. She stays silent

      for several long seconds.

      Finally, as if holding court,

      she lifts her chin, sights

      down her nose, and asks,

      Why are you here, Conner?

      An unsettling energy flows

      through the room, and it

      emanates from the canine

      Dr. Starr. Her patronizing

      tone activates my inner

      mute button. I answer with

      a small shrug, and she gives

      me a grin worthy of Hannibal

      Lecter—evil, overtly smug.

      You don’t know? Don’t you

      think it’s time to find out?

      The “f” elicits a saliva spray.

      The bulldog doesn’t even blink.

      I realize you don’t want to

      be here. But until you give

      me a hint about just what

      you fear, you can’t get better.

      Her voice is almost gentle,

      and part of me wants to

      give her what she wants.

      The smart part says no way.

      Play the Game

      I instruct myself, give her

      a little taste of what

      she wants to hear. After

      all, we don’t want to waste

      a perfectly good shrink

      session. So I settle deep

      into my chair, search for

      some vapid confession.

      Finding none I wish

      to give voice to, I decide Dr.

      Bulldog has given me

      no other choice but to lie.

      “It was really all a huge

      mistake. I was goofing

      around and the gun just

      went off, for God’s sake.

      I mean, you’d think my

      dad would have left

      the safety on.” I almost

      feel bad for blaming him.

      But her eyes tell me she’s

      heard the line before. With

      quiet ferocity, she says,

      Not another word, Conner.

      You believe this is a game,

      and you may be right.

      But if you think you can

      play it better than me, think

      again.

      Tony

      I’m Glad I’m an Only Child

      Ma didn’t deserve kids.

      I mean, if it had been up

      to her—impossible, all

      things considered—I’d be

      back on the streets right now.

      Or maybe I’d have already

      finished myself off. No, it

      wasn’t dear old Ma who

      paid my way to Aspen

      Springs. According to Dr. B,

      it was, in fact, dear old dad.

      Dad, who dumped Ma and me

      when I was still shitting

      green. ’Course, looking

      back, I guess he had every

      reason to leave Ma in

      his dust. But did he ever

      once think about me?

      Anthony Ceccarelli III.

      Medium height. Medium

      build. Medium brown

      hair. A medium chip off

      the ol’ block. Where was

      medium Dad all that time?

      Dr. B says he lives at Tahoe,

      has his own insurance office,

      makes decent dough. Ma

      never left Reno, except

      when she was working out

      at “the ranch” near Dayton.

      Ranching hookers. They

      do that in parts of Nevada.

      Funny, if it wasn’t so sick.

      Did Dad know? And what

      made him decide he gives

      a damn about me now?

      The Clock Reminds Me

      It’s time for group. I open

      my door, nudge my hand into

      the hall. A faceless voice

      shouts, What’s up, Ceccarelli?

      “May I go to group, sir?”

      Stay polite. Earn ten points.

      You may. Don’t get lost

      along the way, though.

      Old joke, not funny.

      Still, I chortle and say,

      “I’ll do my best, sir.

      You know how confusing

      these halls can be, though.”

      Yeah. Follow the yellow

      line to the classrooms,

      white to the dining hall.

      The blue one leads to

      the conference rooms.

      Mommy Long Legs waits,

      black widow-style, in

      room C-3. Most guys

      would call her a fox,

      I guess. But to me she’s

      all spider, poison stashed

      in hidden fangs. Yes, Dr.

      Boston’s questions sink

      clear through flesh, into

      bone. She’s after marrow,

      but she hasn’t managed

      to get much of mine yet.

      Funny thing. No one but

      me seems to recognize

      how her Barbie-doll act

      covers up a real lack

      of charm. She’s a user.

      Same as everyone here.

      We Gather

      In room C (for Conference)-3,

      six crazies, looking to

      unload. Or thinking of ways

      to avoid it. There’s Schizo

      Stanley, three hundred pounds

      of loaded gun, who tried to off

      his little brother. Yeah,

      he denies it, but hmm …

      wonder how Daddy’s Xanax


      got mixed into Junior’s milk.

      On the far side of the table

      sits Lowball Lori, princess

      of depression. I bet at

      home she wore nothing

      but black—clothes,

      makeup, mood. Next to her

      is Do-Me Dahlia, who

      uses sex like most people

      use money. I heard she

      tried to put the moves

      on Dr. Starr, even. Yech!

      What an ugly picture!

      Jesus-save-me Justin

      lurks in one corner,

      greasy hair hanging in

      his eyes, while Toot-it-

      all Todd rocks back

      and forth, as if his past

      pursuits haven’t quite

      deserted his system.

      Just as Dr. Boston says

      it’s time to start, the door

      opens. Someone new steps

      inside. She’s pretty (did I think

      that?), with copper hair and

      startling eyes, and her name’s

      Vanessa.

      Vanessa

      Seven Pairs of Eyes

      Pierce me as I walk into the room.

      I already know I can’t

      measure up to Dr. Boston’s

      expectations—she’ll want

      me to open my head and let

      this crowd of eyes peer

      into my psyche.

      I want to turn and run.

      Please sit down, Vanessa,

      urges Dr. Boston.

      We’re ready to start.

      If I can’t run, I want to

      scream. I want to scream,

      but I can’t find my voice,

      hidden somewhere

      in the indigo sea that has

      swamped my brain.

      Blue. Blue. Deep, dark blue.

      The blue that fills me with desire,

      the desire to find a small,

      sharp blade and watch

      blood run, red.

     


    Prev Next
Online Read Free Novel Copyright 2016 - 2026