I think about the day I flushed my Lithium down the toilet. March 15. I think about March 15, 2007, and I’m sure.
She nods. “Okay. Just try to relax. I’ll be back soon.”
I lie back on the bed and close my eyes. I see a golden casket. I feel the cool leather of the squad car seat behind my back. My memory thrusts me back in time, several hours earlier, that day, and I remember breaking the arms of another man in a white coat.
“I’m gonna f**king kill you, you motherfucking murderer!”
I remember, hours before that, the phone call from Marissa. Telling me what had happened. Telling me what she’d done. Sobbing.
“You told me to! You told me to do it Marchant!”
I squeeze my eyes more tightly shut, and I try to remember the words I said that changed the course of both our lives. But I never can. Because I was manic. Because I was possessed.
I’m tired of being manic.
I’m tired of being me.
I’m tired.
When the nurse returns, she’s got a couple of other nurses, and two doctors, with her. The doctor in charge hands me the paperwork, and I skim over the risks and side-effects.
Memory loss. I pray for that. I pray for that as I sign consent and they begin to prep me.
“You’ll do several treatments. We’ll decide on an exact number based on how you respond to this first one.”
I nod.
One of the nurses grabs my arm, and I have to struggle to keep breathing regularly.
“I’ll make the injection fast, okay?”
I nod again. Then I shut my eyes, relax my arm. Force myself to look straight ahead, rather than into the nurse’s face.
The needle sinks into my arm, and darkness claims me. The last thing I imagine before the curtain falls on everything is Suri Dalton.
*
“You should have told me sooner.”
I nod. I want to say, “I know,” but I can’t get my mouth to work. I guess this is how it is, getting back on my meds. I’m also taking something new they gave me at the hospital.
I lie down on my bed and stare at the ceiling. Somewhere far away, I’m aware that Rachelle has walked into the kitchen. I’m alone in my room, for the first time since I ran from my garden house toward the fire.
I still kind of want to die, but it’s not as bad anymore.
Probably because I just don’t have the energy.
Sometime later, I hear Rachelle say something to me and I turn my head toward her. She’s standing by my bed, holding a tray bearing a bowl of soup and a sleeve of Ritz crackers. I blink a few times at her. Make enough circuits fire to say, “Thank you.”
I’m hoping she will go now, but she doesn’t. She lies on the bed beside me and shares my pillow. I can smell her perfume: Stella. Her head nudges my shoulder, and I feel her eyes on me. “You okay, M? Really?”
I nod.
“I’ve got your pills, okay? Libby will be back in two days. She told me in the meantime, we can cut way back on Diazepam. You seem pretty out of it.”
I nod. It’s for the best that I’m sedated.
“I’m going to fourth it tonight, okay? You’ll be left with just your Lithium. I think you’ll be fine. There’s nothing in this house that should bother you. I took care of it.”
She means the knives and guns. And tempt me, not bother me. “I’m sorry, Rachelle.” My voice sounds thick. Not like mine.
Good. I don’t want to be me anymore.
“This isn’t your fault, Marchant. None of it is. Maria has OCD, remember? I understand how these things work.” Maria is Rachelle’s partner.
I nod again.
“Do you remember what happened with Jesus Cientos?”
I shake my head. I know I shot him, but I don’t really remember it.
“You did a lot of people a service.”
I blink a few times. I don’t have the energy to think of that.
“Good,” I say. And then, “I want to start rebuilding.”
Rachelle, who’s lying on her side now with her head propped on her palm, is frowning at me. “You already found a contractor. Before you left the hospital. You offered to pay them double if they finished fast.”
I nod. I don’t remember, and I wish I hadn’t promised double the money, but, “Good. I want the same floor plan. But I think I want to change up everything else.”
“We need to hire someone for the aesthetics, obviously.”
I stare up at my ceiling and say the name that’s always on my lips these days. “Suri Dalton.”
Rachelle hesitates only a second—I don’t look at her, but I know she’s giving me a look. “You want me to set up a consult?”
“No.” I’m not going to ask her.
“Okay. Just keep me posted.” Rachelle gets up. I think she says some other stuff, but it’s hard to make myself listen. So much easier to just lie here.
Eventually she says, “Should I show myself out?”
“Sure.”
She groans. “Come on now, March. Sit up and eat your soup.” I sit up slowly, and under her watchful eye shove a spoonful into my mouth.
She waves her cell phone. “Call me if you need me.”
I nod. “Thanks.”
Sometime later, I blink down at my uneaten soup and swing off the bed. I should lock the door behind her.
I’m walking back to my bed when I get the text: Hope the insurance money comes in soon.
It’s from an unknown number, but I know who it is. Hawkins.
Maybe the fire wasn’t for Missy King after all.
*
SURI
When Cross, Lizzy, and I were in high school, we climbed a barbed wire fence around a few hundred acres of valley vineyard belonging to a former Hollywood stuntman named Bonnie McFarland. Word was, Bonnie had suffered one too many concussions and had gone a little crazy. We knew for sure that he had a pack of Dobermans. But Cross had made a bet with a guy in the grade above us about who could steal the flag Bonnie flew above his wine cellar first—so over the fence we went.
Lizzy had a trash bag full of meat and eggs to distract the Dobermans, and I had a can of mace, but the moment my feet hit the ground on the McFarland side of the fence, I heard the Dobermans snarl and I seriously thought I might stroke out.
That’s how I feel right now, as I park my rented silver Jeep Grand Cherokee beside the charred ruins of what was the largest of the Love Inc. buildings.
I’m doing something risky—something that scares me. I’m here to look for Marchant Radcliffe. Because I want to have sex with him again. Scratch that. I want to f**k him again. Because that’s what we did. We f**ked. It was dirty. It was rough. And…I liked it. A lot.