The comedown is brutal.
Iâm not going to pretend Iâm handling any of it well. Not when the Vicodin and Xanax wear off, or the haze over the memory of what I did when Lev babysat me.
Who, by the way, is undoubtedly a very bad babysitter.
The memories flooding my brain make me want to crawl under a rock and hibernate until everyone in my life dies.
I canât believe my best friend shoved his finger up my butt. Upon request. That I tried to seduce him. And failed. That Lev, who normally looks at me like I hold the answers to all of the worldâs mysteries in the palm of my hand, finished the night washing me off in the shower with pain and pity in his eyes.
Which is why I refuse to see him, despite our friendly exchange. He visits me every day, leaving my favorite Froyo outside the studio door in the basement and small boxes full ofâ¦nothing.
I donât know what the point behind the boxes is, but I keep them. It feels wrong to get rid of something Lev gave me. Even if itâs technicallyâ¦well, nothing.
âBailey, open the fuck up.â He bangs on the door, and it rattles like the thing inside my chest.
âBusy,â I moan.
âBusy being full of shit?â
âThat too.â
âDove.â I hear him plaster his forehead over my basement door, groaning in pain. âPlease.â
âIâm not your problem.â
âYouâre right. Youâre my solution. My salvation. So open up.â
I never let him in. Canât look him in the eye after Anusgate, also known as the Buttmageddon.
Even if I wanted to look him in the eye, I couldnât on account of my pupils are currently the size of a poke bowl. Iâm popping Xanax like theyâre Mentos.
The only reason my parents are missing the signs is that Iâm on house arrest with the drugs hidden, so technically, they think thereâs nothing here to get high on and arenât lookingâ¦at all.
Thereâs no point in denying what is starkly obvious at this pointâI am an addict.
Iâm dependent on painkillers, and I let my reliance run the show.
But that doesnât change the fact that I still need to train if I want to remain at Juilliard.
I just need to prove to my professors that I can do this.
Once I ensure my spot is secure for next year, I can lay off the pills and really start taking care of myself. Iâll detox. Drink plenty of water. Meditate. Push through in more sustainable ways.
Since I donât accept any visitors, I have plenty of time to work out. I stretch, dance, rehearse, and stay on top of my academic schedule.
For all intents and purposes, Iâm still a Juilliard student. Itâs not like they officially kicked me out.
Mom is the definition of worried sick.
Sheâs literally been coughing and sneezing nonstop. Psychosomatic, my dad tells her when he thinks Iâm not listening. She throws judgy looks my way when I go to the basement every day, pushing plates of food to my chest, begging me to stop.
âI donât understand why youâre pushing yourself even harder when youâre on a break.â This, from the woman who had me training in the studio five days a week since the age of six.
âFirst of all, itâs for my mental health.â I pull my hair into a bun and storm down the stairs, Mom at my heels, holding a vegan power bowl with extra passionfruit. âSecond, if Iâm a so-called painkiller addict, exercising is actually one of the best ways to detox. Flush the hydrocodone and acetaminophen out of my system.â
âYou know whatâs better than exercising? Going to meetings every day.â Mom shoulders the door open when I try to slam it in her face. Weâre in the studio now, standing in front of each other like in a duel. Her weapon is an organic breakfast and mine is a wrathful glare.
âThree times a week is plenty.â I roll my eyes.
âThree times a week is nothing when you overdosed less than a month ago. Now eat.â She thrusts the bowl to my chest.
âI have to start working.â I fold my arms, taking a step back. The pills are killing my appetite. I live on handfuls of nuts or high-calorie energy drinks throughout the day.
âOn what?â My mother treads deeper into the studio, and is it just me or is she hogging all the oxygen in the room? âAll you do is harm yourself even more. Donât think I wasnât listening when they told you in the hospital about your tibia and spine injuries.â
âOf course you were listening.â I shake my head. âItâs not like you have a life of your own to focus on.â
Iâm being super mean right now.
Mom dedicated her entire life to Daria and me. Turning this against her is disgusting, but the Vicodin is running the show right now.
Iâm so raw, I feel the shallowest paper cut could make me bleed out. Iâm exposed. A lie told and detected. A fraud. A nobody who deserves to be alone, so I am pushing her away.
âTheyâre probably not even going to take you back!â she snaps.
This lands like an iron fist straight in my gut. I keel over at her words, and Mom slaps a hand over her mouth, letting go of the fruit bowl with a gasp. It shatters between us, just like our trust. I can feel the shards in my mouth. All the unspoken words that sat between us for weeks and months and years.
Bailey is different.
Bailey is so talented.
She has what it takes.
âI didnât mean it that way.â Mom shakes her head, tears rimming the edges of her pale eyes. âBails. Iâ¦Iâ¦â
âYou what?â My voice is unrecognizable to me.
Cold as the goose bumps blossoming along my gray skin.
âI just want my daughter back.â Now the tears are all over her face, her neck, running down the collar of her tennis dress.
White-hot anger zips through me. She has to be kidding me. She is why Iâm doing all this. She is why I keep pushing through the pain.
âI am your daughter.â I hit back, spreading my arms wide, putting myself on display.
Every inch of marred skin, battle scars, and hard-earned bruises. Iâm a kaleidoscope of purples and blues, of pain and suffering. âAll I ever wanted was to make you proud. I still do, Mom. Pathetically, all I care about is making you and Dad happy.â
I clutch on to a pointe shoe and hurl it against the wall.
It lands a few inches above her head, but she doesnât even twitch. Itâs like sheâs hypnotized by me.
âIâm your little ballerina, remember?â Tears run down my face. The anxiety is back again, like deep, thick tree roots shackling me in place. âJust talented enough to make it, unlike Daria. All I have to do is work a little harder, stand a little straighter, be a little more like you.â
Momâs jaw drops. âI thought you wanted this. You asked me if I could put you in ballet, and I guessââ
This. This is why I need the pills. So I can control the overwhelming fear of failure.
The pain of not measuring up. Before she can finish the sentence, I grab my other shoe and fling it at her too. This time she dodges.
âOf course, I wanted to do ballet! It runs through your veins, and you run in mine. Just admit it, Melody. You fed me to the wolves. You mourned your short career at Juilliard, your own career-killing injury when you were a student. You never recovered. Not from the broken legâand not from the broken dream. Remember how you told me your parents never supported your dream, which was why you were going to make sure I made it?â I pant like I just ran a marathon.
âWell, your over-supportiveness meant I knew I couldnât fail. At first you thought Daria would fulfill your dreams, but she was as wild as weeds. Unruly and disinterested in being squeezed and shaped into your perfect daughter. Now, me? I was your winning ticket. Obedient and hardworking. I became the prized daughter. The apple of your shrewd eye. You introduced me to this cutthroat world. Willingly inserted me into a life of never-ending auditions, grueling physical work, injuries, heartbreak, sacrifice, and rejection. Now you need to live with the consequences of your own doing. Even if they include a junkie child whose drug of choice is standing onstage, doing pas de deux with an acclaimed ballerino.â
The words hit her so harshly, she bucks and staggers backwards. Her knees lower, her head slumping down. I hit where it hurt. Bullâs eye.
âPlease quit.â Her words come out as a pant. âYouâre right. I pushed too hard. But I changed my mind. Itâs not worth it. The ballet. The school.â
A rusty laugh bubbles out of me. âItâs not about you anymore. This is who I am. Whether I wanted it or not, Iâm hooked for life.â
I turn to storm out of the studio. Itâs only when my foot hovers over the debris of glass beneath me that I remember Mom dropped the bowl.
My mouth falls open even as my foot falls. Momâs killer instincts snap her into action. She pounces forward, pushing me out of the way so I donât step on the glass. The shards beneath her feet make a terrible crunching sound.
We both wince, looking down.
She is barefoot.
Blood spreads beneath her foot, pooling like a never-ending lake.
Oh, fuck. Fuck, fuck, fuck.
âMom!â I rush around the glass and pick her up even though she is about twenty pounds heavier than me. I bolt upstairs, shaking, crying, screaming.
âDad, help! Momâs hurt!â
My body strains to get her up the stairs. She weeps into my neck, boneless and hopeless.
I slip over her blood on the stairs and yelp. My injuries are burning, reminding me how broken I am too.
I hear the thrashing of feet hitting wood as Dad rushes to meet me halfway on the basement stairway. He takes Mom with frightening ease. Red paints our feet like lipstick kisses. It looks like a crime scene.
She saved me, even after all the horrible things I said to her.
âHoly shâwhat happened? Is she okay?â I donât think Iâve ever seen Dad as pale as he is right now. His face is a mask of terror.
âShe has glass in her feet.â I chase after him. âShe needs to go to urgent care. Theyâll suction it out.â
âWhat did you do?â he growls, and Iâve never heard this tone from him before.
âNo! Iâ¦I mean, I fucked up, but she dropped a bowl. It wasâ¦not reallyâ¦â
His deathly glare makes me shut up.
He studies me for a fraction of a second before saying, âStay here. Donât you dare leave this house, Bailey.â
I follow him to the front door. Mom is still crying. I donât know how much of it is the glass and how much of it is us. Weâve never fought before.
The door slams behind Dad. Iâm all alone. Itâs eight thirty in the morning, and my parents have left me alone for the first time since I got back.
a lot of blood to clean up. I need a pick-me-up. I need to stop feeling like a failure, because right now? Breathing is too much of a task.
I go downstairs and tug my drug bag from behind the mirror.
Only one more Xanax. Crap.
I hesitate only for one moment before I pull the mangled note with Sydneyâs number from the bowels of my drawer and make the call.
âSydney? Itâs Bailey. Wanna come over?â
Of course, he says yes.
Thereâs no steadier client than an addict.