I changed some significant things in the story edited a little and added to it some. I am just going to post the whole thing again because some of the changes are near the beginning I think with work, it could end up okay.
She and Adam.
She and Adam.
She didn’t know what she was doing. How do
you write about someone like him? How do you tell the world about the
injustices he suffered, and tell them how loved he was? How do you describe how
horrific and fantastic it was to be a part of his life? Her undergrad degree in
creative writing, that the dean of the University of Massachusetts had handed
her six and a half years earlier, hadn’t
prepared her for the emotional ride an author takes when writing words that
tear at their heart. She had never wanted to write about what happened. She
never wanted to think about it again, and she wouldn’t have either, but her dad
had asked her to try to tell Adam’s story, and her dad had never asked her for
anything. So she opened up a word document with her brother’s name in the
header, and did what her favorite professor always told her to do. She started
at the beginning.
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Adam Joseph Miller was born on July
12, 1987, exactly three months after I turned six. The sister between us,
Bailey, was three and much less enthused than I about the arrival of our new
sibling. She had always been very attached to mom, and often became
inconsolable after ten minutes of her unexplained absence. It had been ten
hours. I remember Aunt Diane attempting
to calm with sleep in her eyes, “Go to bed now, and next time you see your
mama, she’ll be holding the baby!” “You’ll be a big sister now, too!” I said,
trying to help, nothing worked. It’s
surprising to me now that Bailey is the most well adjusted person in our
family. When Adam’s life began to unravel, we all worried the most about her.
She had a ringside seat, and a habit of blaming herself for things she couldn’t
control.
After making sure Bailey was
asleep, My aunt, who always went out of
her way to make me feel like I was her favorite, told me I could sleep in her
bed, in case news of the baby’s birth came in the middle of night. It did. True to character, Adam entered the
world at 2:35 AM. Aunt Diane took us to
the hospital right after breakfast. I was so excited to meet him that I
demanded it. I ran straight to my dad because I knew Bailey would make a
bee-line for mom and I didn’t want to get caught the cross-fire. “The biggest
sister!” he half-whispered enthusiastically as he picked me up, “Mom had a
little boy; you have a brother.” He laid
me next to my mom who kissed me softly on the forehead three times, like
always, and I saw him. My brother! His arms
already had rings of fat around them, and his eyes were wide open. Bailey had
curled up into mom’s other shoulder, she asked to hold him first. Apparently,
all the “I don’t want a new baby”, feelings from the night before had
disappeared. She sang “You are my Sunshine”,
to him and then it was my turn. I kissed
`and kissed and kissed his cheeks! Both
my sister and I were both as in love with him as we’d ever been with anybody or
anything. For a year, almost every
interaction I had with Bailey was fighting over him. We fought over who sat
closest to him at the dinner table, which one of us got to hold him while mom
vacuumed the house; we even wanted to help change his diapers.
It wasn’t just us—as Adam grew up,
it was obvious that all of our neighbors and family-friends thought he was the
most adorable. His sandy hair, perfect olive skin and aqua blue eyes, were an irresistible
combination. They were nothing compared to his smile though, and his laugh. Both
things can only be described as completely infectious and captivating. Between the ages of four and seven, Adam would
trot from door to door in the subdivision in which we lived, and tell the
cheesiest knock-knock jokes know to man. Everybody would listen though, just to
hear him crack himself at the end.
If you had told me then that,
eighteen years after we met that precious baby boy, Bailey would be helplessly
begging me to take Adam off her hands; I would have thought you were insane.
Just writing about his birth took her three
hours, and the anecdote about his joke telling another forty-five minutes. She
kept pausing to wipe away tears. She was
dreading the moment when she would have to stop writing about the little
brother she loved and start writing about the stranger he’d become. It seemed
impossible. She shut her laptop and
walked the kitchen. She didn’t really need coffee; she was probably too awake.
Her husband and daughter were asleep though, and she needed a break, something to
do that required no thought—so she filled the coffee pot with water and emptied
it into the machine. She poured coffee granules into the filter and pushed the
red button. She didn’t however stop thinking. She was suddenly livid. The
brother she knew had left her a long time ago, and she wondered if his ghost
deserved this. Dad refused to admit it, but Adam had shamed the family—wrecked
their name. He had devastated lives, he had ended one. He broke her heart,
Bailey’s heart. Marcus wasn’t a good guy, but he was some mother’s son. No mother deserves the pain of burying their
baby and no matter how much he hurt her sister, Marcus didn’t deserve to die.
She smacked the counter in anger, and then she sat down. For
the first time all night she was not consumed with Adam, she was thinking about
Maria. Her four year old daughter had never met Adam and of course, she
wouldn’t. This idea made her quietly sob for a while, but then, oddly, it
motivated her. Maria would undoubtedly
read about what happened one day, and if she only read the words of writers who
didn’t know her uncle, it would be very easy for her to believe that she was
related to a monster. That couldn’t happen. She tippy-toed down the hallway
into her baby’s room and kissed her on the forehead three times. “For you, little girl, for you and for dad.”
She accidently whispered. She was sad, frightened and nauseated , but she
didn’t need a third reason to tell Adam’s story.
I hate it, but over the years
Adam and Bailey grew closer to one another than either one of them was to
me. This was partly because of
personality. They were both warmer than
I am. I was driven; I didn’t have time to be warm. They confided in each other
because they knew I’d scoff and tell them to get over it. I constantly
encouraged them to push on, the way I had. When I was eleven, Bailey was badly
bullied by another girl. She kicked Bailey and called her hideous while a
couple of other kids watched. I remember that word, because after school,
Bailey asked me, “Do you think I’m hideous?” I said, “Mom and dad hate when people
fish for compliments. Tomorrow nobody will call you anything.” Adam
told her she was beautiful. He told her that Melanie was jealous of her pretty red
hair. I was telling the truth, Mom and Dad had always preached that being
self-deprecating was self-serving. He
told the more important truth. Bailey was beautiful. At five and eight, Adam
and Bailey already knew something it took me a marriage and a pregnancy to
learn. Most of the time people fish for compliments because they need them, and
sometimes they deserve them. I’ll never understand why some people are just
born with huge amounts of compassion, and why some of us have to work so hard
at it. I’m not a cold person. I guess, I
wasn’t born with the gift of knowing what to say, so I try not to say anything.
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She
highlighted and deleted the sentence, “I write my emotions down, and throw them
away.” Whoever was publishing this
wouldn’t care about the way her mind worked; she didn’t kill anybody.
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My brother and sister became even
closer when Mom was diagnosed with stage -three breast cancer. I was at the
tale-end of my freshmen year of college, and decided after spending four days
at home with my sick mother, that I needed to take summer classes. I couldn’t
face what might happen to our family, so Adam and Bailey faced it together. It
was only in the wake of Marcus’s murder that my dad told me how horribly my
siblings had it. I inherited my refusal to handle heartache from my dad. He
shut down. He restored cars for hours
after working the overtime he’d requested, and then he came inside, sat on the
couch, watched re-runs of ‘60’s sitcoms, and drank a little beer. Adam drove Mom to her chemo treatments and Bailey
held her hair back while vomited the medicine that was supposed to be healing
her. Our Mom fought hard for two years, and then
one night my dad called me and told me to drive home. When I got there Bailey
was feeding her ice-chips and Adam was doing his best to make her laugh.
They saw her through cancer and at
the end, when we all knew mom couldn’t hang on anymore, it was Adam who held
her hand, and gave her our permission to leave us. Bailey hugged him and kissed
her; she thanked our mother. I leaned down let my mom kiss my forehead three
times and made an inadequate excuse to leave the room. Mom died at one twenty-three in the morning
on August 30, 2002. Adam was barely fifteen. He was never okay again. I thought
for a long time, that our entire family would never be okay again. Contrary to
what most people tell you though, a family can be okay without being whole.
Where did she go next, Bailey meeting
Marcus? To the day she realized her brother was capable of evil? Did she want
Maria to hear that story? Too many questions swirled around her; she couldn’t
write anymore tonight. She climbed into
bed and pulled Nick’s arm over her. Normally, she liked to sleep with plenty of
space between her and her husband, but tonight she needed to feel him. His
presence had calmed her down and warmed her up since they met at twenty. She felt so fortunate when he pulled her in a
little tighter. He loved the rare moments when she let him feel needed. At three o’clock that morning she fell asleep
not wondering why mental illness happened to people as wonderful as Adam. Instead she was wondering why some women meet
men like Nick so young, and others , ones as wonderful as her little sister,
have to meet men like Marcus.
When she woke up the next morning she had a
text message from Chrissie asking her what day would be best to meet for lunch.
Chrissie was where she’d go next.
One of my best friends from college
lost her mother in a car accident when she was thirteen. She was in the back
seat of a mini-van when a semi-truck’s force threw her mom through the
windshield, killing her almost instantly. Firemen had to pull Chrissie from the
wreckage. She has two jagged, long, white scars on her tan, shapely legs that
serve permanent reminders of the day her mom passed away. Her father offered to
pay for a treatment that would make them less noticeable, but Chrissie told him
to save his money. She said one night, after three daiquiris that the scars
were the last things she and her mom got together, and that she was afraid that
if they faded, her memory might fade a bit along with them. Of course, after
three drinks, it didn’t come out quite like that.
Chrissie graduated as valedictorian
of UMass nursing school and went on to become a nurse practitioner. She moved
to Manhattan and is engaged to a man who could be an underwear model but chooses
to work as a civil engineer instead. She is by far my most successful friends,
and one of my happiest, too.
Chrissie’s life was much more
traumatic my little brother’s. Don’t get me wrong, I knew it got to her. The
day she graduated, I found her crying in the fetal position in the backseat of
her car. The seemingly endless string of boys she took home until she met her sweet
fiancé had to be filling of some kind of void but Chrissie moved on. After all
that, she persevered.
Adam had time to prepare for mom’s
death. We all had the luxury for which Chrissie spent years longing, a chance
to say “I love you, goodbye.” For years,
I was so angry Adam—and sometimes I still am. It didn’t make sense that our
mother’s losing her battle with cancer could be the beginning of his end while
Chrissie did so well. She had a better reason to be mad at the world.
Now, I understand something that
makes me angry with myself. When Adam lost mom, he lost the only person who recognized
that he felt differently than most… the only person who saw that he was ill. He
hid it from the rest of flawlessly and he wanted to be discovered.
She took out her phone told Chrissie Tuesday
worked, and added an uncharacteristic “I’m so excited to see you!! XXOO” to the
text. She was always glad to get
together with Chrissie, but today she felt like Chrissie just might need to
know it. Maybe, she thought, there is a tiny
piece of every kid who had to grow up to fast—happy or not, that wants to be
discovered.
My family went to several doctors
in the months after what my father will probably always refer to as “that day.”
We wanted to understand Adam. The problem was that Adam didn’t fit into any
boxes. He was “overly cautious” but not quite paranoid. He had signs of mania,
but they would not call him manic. He
lied a lot but they weren’t sure if it was pathological or deliberate. He had
psychotic episodes—“moments when he lost with touch with reality” but seemed
“generally aware of his surroundings of his actions.” According to the experts,
Adam had a personality disorder, NDS: Not
Otherwise Diagnosed. How the hell were we supposed to handle that? It’s not
shocking that Adam couldn’t understand himself. We did not work hard enough to
help him understand himself. My sister was the only of us even who tried.
Bailey
noticed soon after mom’s passing that Adam was “very delicate”, that what she
said to me a few days after the funereal. I could kill myself now, for brushing it off
the way I did. All the supportive souls who had surrounded us in the days immediately
following our mother’s death had left us, and we were expected to keep
living. It felt to me like we were all
far beyond delicate. I may have even gotten angry with my sister for expressing
her concern, but I couldn’t say now. I have blocked so much of that time period
out of my brain.
I remember
one day though better than most in my life it was six months after mom died,
Bailey had just started her second semester, at the community college and she
had been dating Marcus for three weeks.
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When Bailey graduated high school, she tried
to convince her to go to UMass like she had. Bailey hated school, but never had
to study to earn A’s and she considered college her saving grace. Bailey wouldn’t
leave their dying mother though; she had a difficult time leaving her mom when
she was healthy. So, She gave up and let
her brilliant little sister stay home to watch their mother die and take responsibility for a
brother who would soon be out of control. She had never said it to anyone , not
even Nick but, she wondered if she had pushed harder for Bailey to leave the
house , if the events she was going to write about , would have even occurred.
She wondered that every day.
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I had just gotten home from my six
o’clock writing workshop when my phone vibrated and I saw Adam’s named on the
screen.
“Hello.”
“He slapped her. The asshole
fucking hit her!” I had never heard him so enraged, I’m sure, but I didn’t
notice it then. My thoughts were with our sister. I was enraged, too. I thought I was angrier
than he was.
I put down the phone and childishly
counted to ten, hoping that would help somehow. In the weeks leading up to this,
Adam had complained a lot about Marcus. He said he wasn’t good enough for
Bailey, which I ignored, because he wasn’t. Nobody was. He said Marcus was smoked crack. Bailey denied
this, and like a lot of things Adam had said over the last couple of months it
was proven to be untrue. Three weeks before this phone call, I drove home
because Adam told me he had swallowed a bottle of my dad’s sleeping pills. I
arrived to find him in the yard tossing a Frisbee to the neighbor’s dog. A
wonderful thought ran through my head—this could be a lie.
“Let me talk to Bailey.” I said
calmly.
When he passed the phone to her immediately,
I knew she had really been hurt.
“Please come home.” Bailey whined quietly.
It wasn’t her words, but the tone her voice that compelled me to run to my car
in freezing weather, coatless. Bailey had never said anything that meekly.
I burst into the house, exhausted
but filled with adrenalin, finally ready to comfort my broken siblings. They
were sitting on the couch, laughing, engrossed in whatever was on TV. They had found a way to get through this
without me… again…..
“Marcus
is out of my life.” Bailey reassured me when I kissed her cheek, three
times. If only that had been true.
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Nick
snuck up behind her unaware of the tears collecting in her eyes, and nibbled gently
on her neck.”Maria’s watching ‘The Little Mermaid’,” he whispered in her ear. Their daughter was so entranced by that movie
that she almost never looked away from the screen while it played. She had
become so inquisitive and conversational in the two months since her fourth
birthday that the time she spent watching it and the time
that she spent sleeping were their only real opportunity they had to have sex
without fear of her interrupting, and she had never napped for very long.
“Please…
wife?” Nick teased her. He had been so good to her over the past couple of
weeks. So sympathetic about the hell this writing was dragging her through, and
accepting of how withdrawn she had been. So, even though she was drained and the idea
of being touched did not appeal her in the slightest, she pretended the his
second kiss and the sensation of his thumb running from behind left ear to her
shoulder, turned her on as it would have under typical circumstances, and they made
love.
Later
when she was giving Maria a bath, Nick came into the bathroom kneeled next her
and said matter-of-factly “You do not have to finish that story. Your dad will
totally get it, babe. He’s just like you.”
That’s exactly why she had to do it.”I do
have to, Nick. You know always finish what I start.”
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