The door opens to an abyss.
Thereâs no color, no light, no promise of anything but horror on the other side. No words. No direction. Just an open door that means the same thing every time.
Cellmate has questions.
âWhat the hell?â He looks from me to the illusion of escape. âTheyâre letting us out?â
âItâs time to shower.â
âShower?â His voice loses inflection but itâs still threaded with curiosity.
âWe donât have much time,â I tell him. âWe have to hurry.â
âWait, what?â He reaches for my arm but I pull away. âBut thereâs no lightâwe canât even see where weâre goingââ
âQuickly.â I focus my eyes on the floor. âTake the hem of my shirt.â
âWhat are you talking aboutââ
An alarm sounds in the distance. A buzzing hums closer by the second. Soon the entire cell is vibrating with the warning and the door is slipping back into place. I grab his shirt and pull him into the blackness beside me. âDonât. Say. Anything.â
âBuââ
âNothing,â I hiss. I tug on his shirt and command him to follow me as I feel my way through the maze of the mental institution.
. Itâs a prison. They feed us nothing and our eyes never see each other except in the rare bursts of light that steal their way through cracks of glass they pretend are windows. Nights are punctured by screams and heaving sobs, wails and tortured cries, the sounds of flesh and bone breaking by force or choice Iâll never know. I spent the first 3 months in the company of my own stench. No one ever told me where the bathrooms and showers were located. No one ever told me how the system worked. No one speaks to you unless theyâre delivering bad news. No one touches you ever at all. Boys and girls never find each other.
Never but yesterday.
It canât be coincidence.
My eyes begin to readjust in the artificial cloak of night. My fingers feel their way through the rough corridors, and Cellmate doesnât say a word. Iâm almost proud of him. Heâs nearly a foot taller than me, his body hard and solid with the muscle and strength of someone close to my age. The world has not yet broken him. Such freedom in ignorance.
âWhaââ
I tug on his shirt a little harder to keep him from speaking. Weâve not yet cleared the corridors. I feel oddly protective of him, this person who could probably break me with 2 fingers. He doesnât realize how his ignorance makes him vulnerable. He doesnât realize that they might kill him for no reason at all.
Iâve decided not to be afraid of him. Iâve decided his actions are more immature than genuinely threatening.
. I once knew a boy with the same blue eyes and my memories wonât let me hate him.
Perhaps Iâd like a friend.
6 more feet until the wall goes from rough to smooth and then we make a right. 2 feet of empty space before we reach a wooden door with a broken handle and a handful of splinters. 3 heartbeats to make certain weâre alone. 1 foot forward to edge the door inward. 1 soft creak and the crack widens to reveal nothing but what I imagine this space to look like. âThis way,â I whisper.
I tug him toward the row of showers and scavenge the floor for any bits of soap lodged in the drain. I find 2 pieces, one twice as big as the other. âOpen your hand,â I tell the darkness. âItâs slimy. But donât drop it. There isnât much soap and we got lucky today.â
He says nothing for a few seconds and I begin to worry.
âAre you still there?â I wonder if this was the trap. If this was the plan. If perhaps he was sent to kill me under the cover of darkness in this small space. I never really knew what they were going to do to me in the asylum, I never knew if they thought locking me up would be good enough but I always thought they might kill me. It always seemed like a viable option.
I canât say I wouldnât deserve it.
But Iâm in here for something I never meant to do and no one seems to care that it was an accident.
I hear no showers running and my heart stops in place. This particular room is rarely full, but there are usually others, if only 1 or 2. Iâve come to realize that the asylumâs residents are either legitimately insane and canât find their way to the showers, or they simply donât care.
I swallow hard.
âWhatâs your name?â His voice splits the air and my stream of consciousness in one movement. I can feel him breathing much closer than he was before. My heart is racing and I donât know why but I canât control it. âWhy wonât you tell me your name?â
âIs your hand open?â I ask, my mouth dry, my voice hoarse.
He inches forward and Iâm almost scared to breathe. His fingers graze the starchy fabric of the only outfit Iâll ever own and I manage to exhale. As long as heâs not touching my skin. As long as heâs not touching my skin. As long as heâs not touching my skin. This seems to be the secret.
My thin T-shirt has been washed in the harsh water of this building so many times it feels like a burlap sack against my skin. I drop the bigger piece of soap into his hand and tiptoe backward. âIâm going to turn the shower on for you,â I explain, anxious not to raise my voice lest others should hear me.
âWhat do I do with my clothes?â His body is still too close to mine.
I blink 1,000 times in the blackness. âYou have to take them off.â
He laughs something that sounds like an amused breath. âNo, I know. I meant what do I do with them while I shower?â
âTry not to get them wet.â
He takes a deep breath. âHow much time do we have?â
âTwo minutes.â
âJesus, why didnât you say somethiââ
I turn on his shower at the same time I turn on my own and his complaints drown under the broken bullets of the barely functioning spigots.
My movements are mechanical. Iâve done this so many times Iâve already memorized the most efficient methods of scrubbing, rinsing, and rationing soap for my body as well as my hair. There are no towels, so the trick is trying not to soak any part of your body with too much water. If you do youâll never dry properly and youâll spend the next week nearly dying of pneumonia. I would know.
In exactly 90 seconds Iâve wrung my hair and Iâm slipping back into my tattered outfit. My tennis shoes are the only things I own that are still in fairly good condition. We donât do much walking around here.
Cellmate follows suit almost immediately. Iâm pleased that he learns quickly.
âTake the hem of my shirt,â I instruct him. âWe have to hurry.â
His fingers skim the small of my back for a slow moment and I have to bite my lip to stifle the intensity. I nearly stop in place. No one ever puts their hands anywhere near my body.
I have to hurry forward so his fingers will fall back. He stumbles to catch up.
When weâre finally trapped in the familiar 4 walls of claustrophobia, Cellmate wonât stop staring at me.
I curl into myself in the corner. He still has my bed, my blanket, my pillow. I forgive him his ignorance, but perhaps itâs too soon to be friends. Perhaps I was too hasty in helping him. Perhaps he really is only here to make me miserable. But if I donât stay warm I will get sick. My hair is too wet and the blanket I usually wrap it in is still on his side of the room. Maybe Iâm still afraid of him.
I breathe in too sharply, look up too quickly in the dull light of the day. Cellmate has draped 2 blankets over my shoulders.
1 mine.
1 his.
âIâm sorry Iâm such an asshole,â he whispers to the wall. He doesnât touch me and Iâm happy he doesnât.
. He shouldnât. No one should ever touch me.
âIâm Adam,â he says slowly. He backs away from me until heâs cleared the room. He uses one hand to push my bed frame back to my side of the space.
Adam.
Such a nice name. Cellmate has a nice name.
Itâs a name Iâve always liked but I canât remember why.
I waste no time climbing onto the barely concealed springs of my mattress and Iâm so exhausted I can hardly feel the metal coils threatening to puncture my skin. I havenât slept in more than 24 hours. Adam is a nice name is the only thing I can think of before exhaustion cripples my body.