I barely make it to the toilet before I throw up.
Beads of sweat trickle down my forehead.
Thereâs too much. Too much and itâs too hard and Iâm too sick now to keep reading.
I somehow pull myself off the floor and make it to the sink. I wash my hands. I cup them under the stream of water and bring my hands to my mouth, swishing the water around. I do this several times, washing the taste of bile out of my mouth.
I look in the mirror at the scars that run from my cheek to my neck. I pull my shirt off and look at the scars on my arm, my breast, my waist. I run the fingers of my right hand up my arm and neck, over my cheek, and back down again. I run them over my breast and down my waist.
I lean forward until Iâm flush against the counter . . . as close to the mirror as I can get. And I really look at them. I look at them with more concentration than Iâve ever looked at them before, because what Iâm feeling is confusing me.
Itâs the first time Iâve ever looked at them without at least a trace of anger following close behind.
Until I read Benâs words, I never knew how much I blamed my father for what happened to me. For so long, Iâve hated him. I made it difficult for him to grieve with me over what happened. I found fault in everything he said. Every conversation we had turned into a fight.
Iâm not excusing that he can be an insensitive jerk. Heâs been an insensitive jerk. But heâs also always loved me, and now that I have a clearer picture of what happened that night, I shouldnât blame him for forgetting about me anymore.
I only stayed at his house once a week, and he had just found out someone he loved had died. His mind must have been wrecked. And then for me to expect him to react with perfect precision when he sees his house is on fire is way more than I should expect of him. In a matter of minutes, he was grieving and then angry and then panicking because of the fire. To expect him to immediately remember that I had texted him twelve hours earlier to let him know I was sleeping at his house that night is completely unrealistic. I didnât live there. It wasnât like living at home with my mom and me being the first thing she would think about in a panic. My fatherâs situation was completely different, and I should treat it as such. And even though weâve kept in touch over the past few years, our relationship isnât what it used to be. I take half the blame for that. We donât get to choose our parents, and parents donât get to choose their children. But we do get to choose how hard weâre willing to work in order to make the best of what weâre given.
I pull my cell phone out of my pocket and open a text to my father.
.
After I hit send, I pull my shirt back on and walk back into the living room. I stare down at the manuscript, wondering how much more Iâll be able to endure. Itâs so hard to read, I canât imagine Ben and his brothers having to live through this.
I say a quick prayer for the Kessler boys, as if what Iâm reading is happening now and Kyle is even still around to be prayed for.
And then I pick up right where I left off.
You know whatâs worse than the day your mother kills herself?
The day your mother kills herself.
When a person is in a lot of physical painâsay they accidentally slice off their handâthe human body produces endorphins. These endorphins act similarly to drugs such as morphine or codeine. So itâs normal not to feel very much pain right after an accident.
Emotional pain must work in a similar way, because today hurts so much worse than yesterday did. Yesterday I was in some kind of dreamlike state, as if my conscience wouldnât fully allow me to believe she was actually gone. In my mind, I was holding on to that thin thread of hope that somehow, the entire day wasnât really happening.
That thread isnât there anymore, no matter how hard I try to grasp it.
Sheâs dead.
And if I had money and connections, Iâd numb this pain with whatever drugs I could find.
I refused to get out of bed this morning. Ian and Kyle both tried to fight me into going to the funeral home with them, but I won. Iâve been winning all day, actually.
Kyle said at lunch.
I didnât eat. I won.
, Ian said around two oâclock this afternoon.
But theyâre gone now and Iâm still in bed, so I won.
, Kyle said when he stuck his head in my bedroom around six oâclock.
But I chose to stay in bed and not touch those sympathetic casseroles, making me the winner yet again.
, Ian said.
Iâd like to say I won this round, but heâs still sitting on my bed, refusing to leave.
I pull the covers over my head. He pulls them back down. âBen. If you donât get out of bed Iâll start overreacting. You donât want to force me to call a psychiatrist, do you?â
Jesus Christ!
I sit up in bed and punch the pillow. âJust let me fucking , Ian!
!â
He doesnât react to the fact that Iâm yelling. He just stares at me complacently. âI been letting you sleep. For almost twenty-four hours now. You need to get out of bed and brush your teeth or shower or eat or .â
I lie back down. Ian pushes off the bed and groans. âBenton, look at me!â
Ian never yells at me, which is the only reason I pull the covers from over my head and look up at him. âYou arenât the only one hurting, Ben! We have shit to figure out! Youâre sixteen years old and you canât live here alone and if you donât come downstairs and prove to me and Kyle that this didnât completely fuck you up, then weâre probably going to make the wrong decision for you!â
His jaw is twitching, heâs so mad.
I think about this for a second. About how neither of them lives here. Ian is in flight school. Ben just started college. My mother is dead.
One of them is going to have to move back home because Iâm a minor.
âDo you think mom thought of that?â I ask, sitting up on the bed again.
Ian shakes his head in frustration. His hands drop to his hips. âThought about ?â
âThat her decision to kill herself would force one of you to give up your dream? That youâd have to move back home to take care of your brother?â
Ian shakes his head, confused. âOf she thought about that.â
I laugh. âNo, she didnât. Sheâs a selfish fucking bitch.â
His jaw hardens. âStop.â
âI hate her, Ian. Iâm sheâs dead. And Iâm glad I was the one who found her, because now Iâll always have the visual of how the black hole in her face matched the black hole in her heart.â
He closes the gap between us and grabs the collar of my shirt, shoving me back down on the bed. He brings his face close to mine and talks through tightly gritted teeth. âYou shut your fucking mouth, Ben. She loved you. She was a good mother to us and youâll respect her, do you hear me? I donât care if she can see you right now or not, youâll respect her in this house until the day you die.â
My eyes rim with tears and Iâm suffocating with hatred. How could he defend her?
I guess itâs easy when his memory of her isnât tarnished by the visual I got when I walked into her room.
A tear falls from Ianâs eye and lands on my cheek.
His grip loosens from around my neck and he turns around and buries his head in his hands. âIâm sorry,â he says, his voice tearful. âIâm sorry, Ben.â
He turns around and looks at me, not even attempting to hide his tears. âI just . . . how can you say that? Knowing what she was going through . . .â
I chuckle under my breath. âShe broke up with her boyfriend, Ian. That hardly constitutes misery.â
He turns until heâs facing me on the bed. He tilts his head. âBen . . . did you not read it?â
I shrug. âRead what?â
He sighs heavily, and then stands. âHer note. Did you not read the letter she left before the police took it?â
I swallow hard. I knew thatâs where he went yesterday. I knew it.
He runs his hands through his hair. âOh, my God. I thought you read it.â He walks out of my bedroom. âIâll be back in half an hour.â
Heâs not lying. Itâs exactly thirty-three minutes when he walks back through my bedroom door. I spent the entire time wondering what could be in that letter that would make the difference between me hating her and Ian feeling sorry for her.
He pulls a piece of paper out of his pocket. âThey canât release the actual letter yet. They took a photo and printed it out, but you can still read it.â He hands me the piece of paper.
He walks out of my bedroom and closes my door.
I sit back on my bed and read the last words my mother will ever say to me.
I can barely read my motherâs signature through my tears. Ian walks back into the room several minutes later and sits beside me.
I want to thank him for making me read it, but Iâm so mad I canât even speak. If I had just read the letter before the police took it, I would have known everything right then. The last two days would have turned out so different. I may not have been in such a state of shock had I been able to read the letter then. I also wouldnât have misconstrued everything and assumed a man had to do with her decision.
And I would have actually stayed home last night, rather than make the choice to get in her car, drive to a strangerâs house, and start a fire that went out of control.
When I double over from the sobs, Ian puts his arm around me and pulls me in for a hug. I know he thinks Iâm crying because of everything I just read, and heâs partly right. He also probably assumes Iâm crying for saying such hateful things about my mother, and heâs partly right about that, too.
But what he doesnât know is that most of these tears arenât tears of grief.
Theyâre tears of guilt for being responsible for ruining the life of an innocent girl.