âHow have you been since the shooting?â
I shrug and glance away. âFine.â
My therapist slips off his glasses and sets them on his clipboard. âWatching a teenage boy die isnât something you can easily forget. Have you had any trouble sleeping?â
âI always have trouble sleeping.â
âI can prescribe something to help with that.â
âNo.â I stare out the window just over his shoulder. âThe boy shouldnât have died that night. I shouldâve diffused the situation.â
âDidnât you try to?â
âYes, but I shouldâve tried something different. Said something different.â
âOr, could it be that the boyâs choice to bring a gun to the skate park, and his choice to pull the trigger are the reasons for what happened that night? Could it be that you had nothing to do with the outcome?â
âIt was a series of unfortunate events, but I couldâve done something to stop it.â
âHmm.â He scribbles something into his notepad. âHow has life been outside of work? Your brother is back home, sober, you said. How has that been?â
My knee bounces. âItâs been nice having him back. But I donât know how long this will last.â
Dr. Parker tilts his head. âItâs difficult when it comes to addiction. But that doesnât mean you canât enjoy the present while itâs here. Thereâs no way to tell what the future will bring.â
I let out a humorless laugh. âYouâre not kidding.â
His eyes narrow. âWhatâs going on with you? Youâre more closed off than usual today.â
I scrub my hands over my face. âLong story short, I met a girl, but it turns out that she has depression and tried to kill herself two years ago.â
âShe shared that with you?â
I nod. âI told her about what happened to my mother, and then she told me that she almost succeeded in doing the same thing.â
âThat was brave of her. And how did you react to that?â
âLike a jackass.â
Dr. Parker smirks. âMeaning?â
âMeaning, I told her that I couldnât be with someone like her because I didnât want to lose her the same way I lost my mother.â
âAh. I imagine that was scary to hear.â He writes in the notepad again. âWhat has her life been like since the incident?â
âHer family disowned her, and now sheâs living on her own right next door to me. She said she goes to therapy, and sheâs on medication.â
âFamily is tough when it comes to suicide.â
I let out a sigh. âBut she doesnât seem depressed. Not like my mom did. I wouldnât have known she was on medication if she didnât tell me.â
âThatâs the point of medication. It helps people feel , for lack of a better word.â He pauses. âIf sheâs in therapy and taking medication, that shows she is in control of her sickness, and that sheâs taking all the necessary steps to maintain her mental health.â
I wipe my palms on my jeans. âShe does seem in control of it.â
âSo, why the poor reaction to this news? I mean, I can understand that you were shocked. No one wants to hear that the person you care about tried to harm herself, especially when the subject hits so close to home for you. But⦠why cut her off because of it?â
âHow can I trust that she wonât try to do it again?â
âHow can you trust that she wonât cheat on you? Or that she wonât want to break up with you one day? Or that a bus wonât hit her on the way to work? You canât know whatâs going to happen, and you canât stop it. You just have to have faith that youâll make the best decisions for yourself, and what will be, will be. Much like the night of the shooting, and your motherâs deathâyou canât control everything, James.â
âWhy does everyone keep telling me that?â
Dr. Parker laughs. âBecause itâs true. Listen, you have every right to be cautious when entering a relationship with someone who has a history of mental health issues. Being open and honest with each other is important, which she has done by telling you about her past. Sheâs taking all the necessary steps to lead a healthy life, and she hasnât given you any reasons to doubt that. James, I donât think your problem is with her, or with depression. I think your problem stems from the abandonment you felt when your mom died. You havenât dealt with that or let go of it. In fact, youâve let it spider out into every facet of your life. Work, family, now love. When will you stop carrying around your motherâs death like itâs your cross to bear?â
I rub the back of my neck. âI donât know how.â
âI can help you if youâre ready.â
I think about Phoenix and the way my heart blazes for her. I think about the kind of life Iâve had after my mother died, the dull, mundane life Iâve cocooned myself into. I think about my father, the lonely man who has no one to share his time with.
âIâm ready.â
Phoenix It has been said that the best love songs are written about heartbreak.
The same can be said about books. People love those soul-crushing, gut-wrenching, oh-my-god-this-is-the-most-painful-thing-Iâve-ever-read-and-I-might-fling-my-Kindle-out-a-window-if-they-donât-end-up-happy books as weâre sobbing into a package of Oreos at two oâclock in the morning on a twelve-hour reading bender.
Some of us are masochists like that.
But the reason people like it is because everyone goes through pain and suffering at one point or another. Itâs relatable. And we want to root for the heroine to make it out alive, because if she does, then so can we.
Iâm going to write a book about my life. Itâs not that I think my story is anything special. But I want to write a book that can help people who are struggling through the same thing Iâve been through. Maybe someone will read this and choose to keep fighting. Maybe itâll be a suicide survivor like me. And just maybe, someone who doesnât have depression will read it and it will change the way they view the disease.
I want to write about the darkest, lowest time in my life, and then show what happens when you survive it.
I crack open my journal and start writing. I donât have a direction, or an outline, or a beginning and an end. My plan is to write about the experiences Iâve had and go from there.
I donât really know what Iâm doing, but the words pour out of me all afternoon and it helps keep my mind off Jamesâeven if the hero Iâm creating in this story seems to be turning out a lot like him. By the time the sun sets and Iâm in bed, Iâm still writing.
Until a text pops up from James.
My chest aches, but I set my phone back down and ignore his text. A minute later, my phone buzzes again.
I switch my phone to silent.
I get up and shut my blinds without looking at him through the window.
My heart urges me to respond. I know he didnât mean the things he said. James isnât a malicious person. I can understand that my suicide attempt was a trigger for him, and I know he needed time to process. Still, I canât pretend that his reaction didnât hurt.
But Iâm already moving down the stairs with Wilbur at my side.
Forgiveness is what sets me apart from my mother. Sheâs cold and closed off, and I refuse to treat others the way she has treated me. She cuts people out of her life as if they never existed. But my heart is open and full of love, even when itâs bruised and broken.
If James wants to apologize, then Iâm going to hear him out because everyone deserves a chance to be heard.
I open the door and try to remember how to breathe. Jamesâs honey-colored eyes are bloodshot, and the skin underneath is a deep purple. His hair is a disheveled mess, and he looks like he hasnât slept in days. Heâs been struggling, and if I didnât matter to him, he wouldnât have lost an ounce of sleep over me.
âPhoenix, Iâm so sorry I hurt you.â
âI know you are.â
âThen let me explain.â
I step back to let him in, and then I lead him into the living room.
James sits at the edge of the couch facing me and braces his elbows on his knees. âWhen you told me about what you did, all I could think of was my mother. Itâs like it brought me right back to the day I found her, and all the anger and pain and resentment came rushing out at once. I guess Iâve been holding on to a lot more than I realized.â He reaches for my hand and holds it between both of his. âBut you didnât deserve to hear any of the things I threw at you, and I need you to know that I didnât mean them. I was surprised, and I wasnât thinking straight. I never want to cause you any pain or sadness, and I hate that I did.â
I nod as my bottom lip trembles. âIt means a lot to me that youâre able to reflect on what you said and take responsibility for it. My mother was furious with me for trying to take my own life. But honestly? I think it was more of an inconvenience for her than anything. She didnât care if I lived or died. She was worried about how it looked to her friends. She doesnât believe that depression is as real as cancer. Do you know what she said to me when I woke up in the hospital? She said, Those were the last words she spoke to me.â
Jamesâs eyes widen. âBut youâre her daughter.â
âBlood doesnât mean shit to some people.â I shrug. âIâve struggled my whole life with feeling less than. I wasnât happy like my brother. I wasnât as social as him. I didnât make my mother proud like he did. My brain just isnât hardwired the same way. So, when you walked out on me the other day, it felt like you were confirming all my worst fears. You confirmed what my mother taught me: That Iâm not good enough for someone to love.â
James shakes his head. âNo. Thatâs not true at all. My reaction was about me, and my issues.â
âIâm not going to hurt myself again, James. I need you to understand that. Iâm not the same person I was two years ago. The depression will never be gone, but Iâm managing it. Iâm in control. And Iâm working on myself to be better every fucking day. Iâm in therapy facing shit I donât want to face, and itâs hard. But Iâm still doing it. I get up and I keep fighting.â I suck in a brave breath and prepare myself to say what I need to say. âI need someone whoâs willing to fight me. I canât be with someone whoâs going to shut down or shut me out when things get real. I need you to talk to me. If something I say makes you mad? Good. Yell at me. Letâs fight it out together. I donât want to hand my heart to someone and have him leave it on my doorstep as he turns his back on me.â
âI shouldnât have left you like that. Like a fucking coward.â He shakes his head. âYou shared a piece of yourself with me, and I donât want you to think that Iâm only interested in the good parts. I want to see all of you. I want the broken, jagged pieces, the ones you think are ugly and ruined, the ones you hide from everyone elseâespecially those. I want to be the one you can trust your heart with.â
A tear slips down my cheek. Thatâs all Iâve ever wanted. For someone to see the darkness in me and accept meâscars and all.
James tilts my chin and holds my gaze. âI told you Iâve got your six, and that means no matter what. Iâm sorry that I made you feel otherwise. I am going to work on my issues with my therapist.â
âYou see a therapist?â
âIâve been seeing one since my mom died. Nobody knows.â
âYou mean your dad and brother donât know?â
He shakes his head. âNot even my partner knows. Thereâs a stigma attached to therapy when it comes to cops. We see the worst of the worst, yet weâre expected to be strong enough to handle it all on our own.â
âWell, Iâm glad youâre talking to someone. It really helps.â
His eyes hold mine. âDo you forgive me?â
James mightâve hurt my feelings, but heâs here trying to make things right. He opened up to me, and he cares enough to try.
âI do. I appreciate your apology and your honesty.â I wring my hands in my lap. âBut I need you to be sure that you want to be with me. If you canât because of everything you went through with your mom, then tell me. I get it. We can just be friends, if thatâs what you want. Iâll understand.â
âHonestly, Iâm scared shitless. Iâm scared of whatâll happen to me if I let you all the way in. Iâm scared to lose you. Iâm scared that I wonât be enough to make you want to live. Iâm scared Iâll find you the way I found my mother.â
His Adamâs apple bobs as he swallows. âBut youâre worth that fear, because I donât want to go back to living my life without you in it. These past few days without you have been hell. Not a moment goes by that Iâm not consumed by thoughts of you. And no, Phoenix. I donât want to be friends with you. Thatâs the last fucking thing I want. I canât imagine a worse torture than being with the woman who haunts my dreams every night.â
He pulls me onto his lap, and I straddle him with my legs on either side of his hips. âI for you. My fingers itch to reach out and touch you. My tongue craves your taste. I want you on me, your hair surrounding me, your scent filling my lungs.â He pulls me close, and his lips speak against mine as he says, âI ache for you . It takes all of my willpower not to devour you whenever weâre together.â
My heart thrashes against my chest like a wild, caged beast.
I slip my fingers into his hair. âWhat if I told you I want to be devoured by you? What if I told you I felt the same?â
âThen Iâd tell you that Iâm all in.â His fingers dig into my hips, and his eyes tighten. âJust promise me that if you ever feel your control slipping, if you ever reach a point where you feel like youâre losing yourself again, I want you to tell me. Because Iâll be here to bring you back from the darkness.â
Another tear falls as I nod. âI can promise you that.â
âThereâs a lot I donât understand about depression, but Iâm open to learning. I want to know. I want to know .â
I press my forehead to his and close my eyes. âYour mother is missing out on you, James. You are a wonderful man. Sheâd be so proud of you if she were here.â
âI think weâve been focusing on all the things weâve lost for too long. I think itâs time we start enjoying what we do have.â
I smile. âI think so too.â
We remain on the couch for the rest of the night, talking, asking questions, and listening to one anotherâs stories. And for the first time, someone shows me what it feels like to be heardâsomeone without depression, someone not in my therapy group, someone not being paid to listen to me. James doesnât make me feel judged, or weird, or ashamed. He sees me, and all my scars.
And itâs because I stood up for myself and told my truth. Itâs more than mattering to someone elseâitâs the fact that I showed that I matter.
And why shouldnât I?
My family gave up on me, but that doesnât mean I have to give up on myself too.
I can find people who accept me as I am, like Leo.
I can find people who will change their perspective for me, like James.
I can find friends who know what itâs like to be different, like Drew.
And I can find it within myself to love my brokenness.
Itâs now that I realize Iâm the one person I needed to have my back all along.