Tonight, the man with blond hair and blue eyes is unhappy. He is
staring at my folder instead of looking at me, and this is normal. He
doesn't like to look at me, not for any length of time. Instead he
finds constant reasons to shift around the contents of my file, glance
at the guard behind the double pane of glass, or clean his glasses.
Surly, this can't be normal shrink behavior. I've never been to a
therapist before, though in the back of my mind something long ago
learned reminds me that this is a psychiatrist, not a therapist. Or
maybe he's both? Surely the county women's penitentiary doesn't have
the budget for both. They don't even have the budget for proper shoes.
He
clears his throat, I wonder what he is getting out of these sessions-my
sparse answers. Is he learning to read my unstated thoughts? He must
be analyzing something, because he keeps coming back for more.
"Anna. Your friend, Megan, spoke to me yesterday." Megan? My friend? I suppose.
"Yes?" He clears his throat again, there must not be any phlegm left at the end of his sessions with me.
"She
said that about two weeks ago, she heard a fight. You called her
after, didn't you Anna? Your neighbors heard a lot of shouting and
banging. They heard something hit the wall. Do you want to talk about
that Anna?"
For the first time, he has managed to surprise me. I
dig the bitten shards of my nails into my palms. Emotion is pointless,
life is now simply one breath to the next. Breath. In. Out. Reply.
"No.
No, I don't want to talk about it." This was the wrong answer. He
seems at last to have struck on something that forces his eyes to my
direct gaze. I stare back, stubbornly denying emotion.
"Anna.
This is going to help you. I want to help you. Did you and John argue
often?" If I didn't know better, I would think he is genuinely
concerned. Damn shirk school must have taught him how to lie with his
face.
"No. We didn't. He was mad because I forgot to put
dinner on. He likes it ready when he gets home. I was tired and I
forgot and we fought."
"Did John hit you, Anna?" This seems to
be the point he has been dancing around today, maybe even for the last
two weeks. He is staring into my eyes and seemingly without realizing
it resting his body against the table.
"No. John would never
hit me. He loved me. The neighbors must have heard when I threw the
pasta pot at the wall. John was a lot of things, but he was never
abusive." The shrink, what was his actual name?- deflates and leans
back, eyes dancing back onto the file.
"All right, I think that's enough for today. We can talk about it more next week, if you're ready."
After
the guard takes me from the room, I run the inside of my right thumb
along the faint scar on my left wrist. A grease burn, has left the echo
of my other life in a small depressed circle.
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