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Carousel Court

Joe McGinniss




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  FOR MY FATHER, WHO I MISS

  AND JEANINE, JULIEN, AND V, ALWAYS.

  I felt very still and very empty, the way the eye of a tornado must feel, moving dully along in the middle of the hullabaloo

  —SYLVIA PLATH

  Slither up just like a snake upon a spiral staircase

  —KURT VILE

  Dream Extreme. Those words welcomed them to Serenos months ago, in June, before the heat. It’s August now and they don’t see the white sign anymore, don’t pay attention to it. If they did notice it as they race along the Corona Freeway heading home, what they’d see instead would be the red graffiti tags defacing it. Nick and Phoebe Maguire make a sharp turn and pull their dirty white ­Subaru Forester in to Carousel Court. Jackson sucks a blue pacifier. Nick pulls his Mets cap lower, shields his eyes from the wind. Everything is bathed in this orange hue, like a vintage photograph. Looking around: abandoned new construction homes, kids playing outside on a yellow lawn despite rumors of mountain lions and bobcats, pit vipers, and Latino gangs trolling for new turf. The flap of an orange tent pitched in front of a house flutters wildly in the relentless wind that roars down mountain passes and through the valley on a straight trajectory toward them. A bullet train. A single spark these days—the dry ­season—will burn the whole place to the ground. And there’s the house. Bigger than it should be. It’s not on fire, though Nick wishes briefly it were, because what it is, is worse. It’s underwater, sinking fast, has the three of them by the ankles, and isn’t letting go.

  1

  Phoebe opens her eyes before the alarm. She does this lately, since they arrived. On low-dosage days the ground beneath her hardens, common sounds are shrill: Jackson’s cries more urgent, Nick’s words more hollow. Above her, the blades of the ceiling fan rotate too fast, send chilled air across Jackson’s exposed arms. He sleeps fitfully next to her and she pulls his small blanket over his shoulders. Last night he was inconsolable or she was. She could remove the pacifier from his mouth and wake him, but watches him instead. There are fourteen bones in the human skull; eight surround the brain. She brushes his forehead where the bruise yellowed then finally faded.

  It’s almost seven and Nick still isn’t home. Knowing how exhausted he’ll be, she scrambles eggs and slices ripe mango for him and leaves them on a plate in the microwave and sends him a text telling him they’re there in case he feels like skipping the morning rush at Starbucks on the way home. When she leaves the house it’s already hot and Phoebe holds Jackson to her chest with one arm while her free hand pulls the heavy red front door closed behind her as the ADT chimes. Her day will be spent driving. Always driving.

  At day care, she kisses Jackson’s warm forehead. She says “Duck, duck” and he says “Goose!” and laughs. She looks back once, as she does each time she leaves her son in this strip mall three miles from Carousel Court, and blows him kisses. She pushes against the glass door, out into the heat and glare of another day. She should be home with him. She hates herself.

  Just after ten in the morning she’s alone on a freeway that connects her to the other side of the city and all the ugly retail strips and offices, and despite the heat and harsh sunlight and the cool air-­conditioned car and the helicopter buzzing overhead, this middle part of each morning is a gentle breeze: the zenith of Klonopin highway happens an hour after she swallows the last of four pills. She sends Nick a rambling message, coasts and descends into the valley, and laughs at the woman in the silver Jaguar leaning on her horn because Phoebe won’t leave the left lane and let her pass. You need to be on this, Phoebe thinks, and continues in the left lane doing seventy and considering another caramel macchiato. With whipped cream this time.

  Soon it’s one and the sun is a beast and directly overhead and she needs to eat something but she’s buzzed, shaky, from two caramel macchiatos and the anticipation of her afternoon appointment. Her ten milligrams of Klonopin from this morning have worn off completely. The Effexor is losing its effect as well. The tingling in her fingertips, which feel cold in the morning, is a sign. So is her appetite: She has none. She feels empty but the thought of food makes her queasy. The front seat is littered with parking receipts, MAC lip liners, her badge, a suitcase full of pharmaceutical samples and glossy brochures, her ­iPhone, and a stuffed Elmo doll. Normally on the floor of the passenger side would be the goodies. Mocha frappuccinos with whipped cream for the office staff, a dozen doughnuts from Krispy Kreme. Bribing the gatekeepers is the way the game is played, access to the doctors is everything, the only way to push product, improve her numbers. Show up, perform, and close.

  Performing and closing: What happens in the office stays in the office unless he wants to text about it later and send crude photos after midnight. That’s where she’s struggling. The energy is gone. The playfulness and flirtation are labored if not missing entirely. Except today. Today, she will meet a young physician with a new practice and she is energized, sharper than she can remember. She also has a new strategy.

  Phoebe breezes into a crowded, cool office and feels the eyes of tired mothers and frail seniors and men moving over her strong, tanned calves and smooth thighs, the thin fabric of her form-fitting lavender skirt. This used to be the most entertaining part of her job. A physician back east once propositioned her in his office, offered to leave his wife and kids for her. Another put a thousand dollars in cash on his desk and asked for her panties. The female office manager of another practice accused her of stealing samples from their closet and had her banned. Phoebe knew the real reason: She was too distracting.

  Today a plain-looking office manager working reception hands Phoebe a clipboard and asks her to fill out both sides of each form for new patients.

  • •

  “I don’t have a ton of time,” she says and waits for the doctor’s eyes to drop to her legs. When they finally do, she scratches her knee, slowly uncrosses and recrosses her legs. “So,” she says as she feels her skirt slide up—clumsily, though, too high—until the yellow lace edge of her panties is showing. She starts to adjust it, then stops. He stares. She’s off her game; the mood isn’t right, the room is too bright, her thoughts bounce from one unrelated topic to the next. Does she have anything left in her checking account? Did the lock click when she pressed the button on the handle? His eyes are too blue. She should stand, go check the door, but her skirt is still too high and he’s still staring. Then she realizes she doesn’t care what he sees or who walks in or what she does because all that matters right now is getting what she came for.

  “I need you to write me a prescription.” She interlaces her fingers on her lap. She’s trying too hard to look calm.

  “For what?”

  “Klonopin. You know, Clonazepam.” She closes her eyes. “The good stuff.”

  “Are you anxious?”

  She laughs and wipes her nose for some reason. “It’s the driving. It’s bad out here. I’m not used to it.”

  The doctor is forty, his brown hair flecked with gray, clean-shaven. His wedding band is silver and thick. He wears an expensive-looking pale blue button-down shirt and black slacks and shoes. He sucks on a mint. He takes no notes as he listens to her explain her medical history.

  “I know I scheduled a physical but actually I just need the ’script.”

  “Where is it coming from?” he says, meaning
her anxiety.

  She sighs. “You know, the usual tribulations. Can you write me something?”

  “What other medications are you taking?”

  “Effexor.”

  On her way here, stuck in traffic, Phoebe had watched a skinny, wrinkled woman with bleached-blond hair in a floral bikini and Coke-bottle shades push a stroller with two big kids in it along the side of a six-lane thoroughfare. Those kids, she thought, had to be at least seven years old. The woman looked fifty. The exhaust and heat and sun beat down, and Phoebe had wondered how far she herself was from that, how much debt and desperation until she would be reduced to walking through the vapors.

  “Where are you from?” the doctor asks.

  “Boston. Delaware before that.” She exhales and crosses her legs again, and the doctor’s not looking. “We were moving to New Orleans.”

  “And?”

  “At one point. Now we’re not.”

  “You don’t sound too happy about that.”

  “We had other plans.”

  He stares at her with a sympathetic smile. “What brought you out here?”

  The question makes her femur throb, and she feels a flash of pain from the fourth and fifth vertebrae to the top of her skull. “See this?” She pulls up her top, touches a long thin scar along the right side of her torso.

  “Ouch.”

  “A UPS truck I didn’t see.”

  “What does your husband do?”

  A long pause. “A PR firm. He’s a filmmaker,” she says, referring to Nick’s position that prompted the move here. “Produces films for corporate clients, mostly.”

  “Get undressed.” He hands her a white paper gown and walks toward the door.

  Phoebe watches him go, sees the exam table on the other side of the large office. Before she can say anything, the door closes and he’s gone.

  • •

  Hung on the wall: a framed spread from the Los Angeles Magazine Best Doctors issue. As she undresses, Phoebe studies the picture of the physician and his wife, casually seated together in an oversize white Adirondack chair. Wrapped around them are two beaming blond children, a pair of Chesapeake Bay retrievers at their feet. She loses herself in the lush green lawn and the sprawling estate. She’s pretty sure they’re not staring down a readjusting ARM. Their smiles are so easy and infectious that she feels the corners of her mouth begin to rise as the physician knocks on the door and pushes it open in one motion.

  With Phoebe on her back, the physician slides the paper gown to her hips, leaving her upper body exposed. He presses his fingertips too firmly into her midsection, checking for organ swelling, unusual masses. “What is that?” he asks, breathes in through his nose. “Like cotton candy.”

  “Like a teenager?”

  He laughs. “Is that the goal?”

  “Some days.”

  “You have how many children?”

  “A son. Two and a half.”

  His hands hover over her abdomen. She feels warm and sleepy. Her throat is dry.

  “I can’t stand in line at Whole Foods without getting dizzy and my heart racing,” she says.

  “Are you sleeping?”

  “I keep dreaming about water. About my son drowning. Is that normal?”

  His finger traces a thin scar. “Cesarean?”

  Phoebe nods. She shifts on the table.

  He rests both hands on her forearm. “Recovered nicely. My wife struggled after.”

  “She looks well-rested. What does she do for a living?”

  “Bikram yoga,” he says flatly. “Spinning. Swimming.”

  “I hate her.”

  “She gets bored.”

  “With which part?”

  “All of it.”

  “Let me guess: his-and-her vanities.”

  “Of course.”

  “Hot nanny.”

  “Check.” He laughs.

  “You’re a cliché. Did she have work done, too?”

  “Right here.” His hands press softly against the area just below Phoebe’s navel, where they stay. “Some excess here. Not on you, though.”

  She stares overhead, connecting the dots in a single ceiling panel. “I try.”

  He stands back, arms folded. “You know what I think?” he says.

  Phoebe grips the edge of the exam table with both hands.

  “I think you need to give yourself a break.”

  “Funny, I was just thinking I’ve been too easy on myself.”

  He turns away. Phoebe clears her throat. He pulls on a pair of white latex gloves and says, “Would you prefer that a nurse be present?”

  Phoebe shakes her head.

  “The anxiety,” he says as he slides his fingers inside of her, “is something worth keeping an eye on.”

  Phoebe considers the physician and his firm fingertips. She could lie here for just a bit longer, his fingers inside her, gently being encouraged to give herself a break.

  She flinches. Her eyes open. “What are your thoughts about Advair?” she asks.

  His fingers slide out. He removes his gloves. “Do you have asthma?”

  She sits up, light-headed, the paper gown still at her hips. “The black-box warning from the FDA: Has that impacted your thoughts about prescribing?” She pulls the gown up.

  He’s laughing. “This is a first,” he says. “You’re working me?”

  “Because it’s really just a product of the stricter FDA guidelines. There’s no new science or interactions that you need to worry about.”

  He’s shaking his head with a tight-lipped smile, almost disbelieving, then suddenly with a stern expression, “You’re clearly not playing for the set of steak knives. This is a Cadillac-worthy effort.”

  She dresses. He makes no effort to avert his gaze.

  “Your practice is about to triple in size.”

  “It is?”

  She nods.

  “What if it is?”

  “Any concerns or questions you have about Advair, I’m happy to discuss now or any time. Allergy season is around the corner, we have the number one med, it’s in my portfolio, and”—she exhales—“have I not earned it?”

  He laughs. “I do love you guys,” he says. “But this—you’ve set a new standard.”

  She mentions the Dodgers and luxury boxes and dinner and other perks, anything he’d like, as she jots her cell on the back of her GSK Pharmaceuticals card.

  He takes it and nods. Then he says, “Do you want a name, Phoebe?”

  She tilts her head, plays dumb.

  “To talk to. To help with these episodes, the anxiety.”

  She pauses. “I just need a refill,” she says. “And one that won’t force me to come back every other month for more.”

  “I can’t just write you ’scripts without giving you someone’s name.”

  “You can do whatever you want.” She’s pressing now.

  He’s standing with his arms crossed, leaning against his desk, not buying it.

  “It doesn’t stop,” she says. “I go a little nuts. I put a thousand miles on the car in the past two weeks. And no, I don’t sleep. The more tired I am, the more impossible it is to sleep.” She’s lying to him. She won’t admit to the Klonopin blackouts, the inability to drag herself up the stairs, to lay her son down in his crib with a dry diaper and his pacifier and a night-light. She won’t tell the physician that her son falls asleep instantly on the living room sectional, sitting up, then tipping over, falling to the plush carpeting, knocked out from his own marathon days. “It never, ever, ever stops.” She exhales. “This was amusing, though. This was—” She almost says “nice.”

  “Get a nanny,” he says, and hands Phoebe a single slip of white paper.

  Their hug is tight.

  “It’s generous,” he adds. “But you
have to watch these. Driving as much as you do.”

  “Strong, too,” she says, finally letting go of the physician. “Nice shoulders. Nice life.”

  “See you in three months,” he says and smiles. “Rest assured: You’re a very healthy young woman.”

  She unmutes and checks her iPhone. There are texts and a missed call from Nick.

  “Tell me again,” she says.

  “Tell you what?” the doctor asks.

  “To give myself a break.”

  “Do you really need one?”

  She laughs. “Someone’s going to get hurt.”

  “Are you a danger to people? To yourself?”

  “You sound like my husband.”

  “You’re a stellar rep, Phoebe. Best I’ve seen today.”

  “We do it right at GSK.” She winks at him.

  “They give you those lines?” he asks, laughing.

  “Drilled in. The Blue Army. We’ve always got your back.”

  As she passes through the doorway, for no reason that makes any sense to Phoebe, the doctor says in a clinical voice that is so unsettling to her that she freezes: “Be careful out there.”

  Phoebe keeps her back to him, slowly pulls the door closed behind her, walks to the elevator, and presses the button. Then presses it again.

  She steps onto the elevator. The doors close. She presses a clean, raised circular steel button: double L. Your Life Starts Now. That’s the headline of an osteoarthritis prescription-drug advertisement on the wall. A grinning silver-haired couple cut through a sun-drenched landscape on matching red bicycles. The elevator drops. We won’t grow old together. She can’t picture it. She can’t see Nick losing his hair, gaining weight, swallowing more pills, medication she’ll remind him to take, that he’ll always ask her about: as though these past four miserable years spent peddling GSK pharmaceuticals make her an authority on his physiology. They already sleep in separate beds. Nick ends up on the red IKEA couch in Jackson’s room. He says it’s because of their different schedules; he doesn’t want to disturb her sleep. They’ve stopped having sex. They avoid the topic altogether. She knows this about Nick: He carries the burden of this failure, this home that is crushing them, and will until he’s stooped and broken.