Callie gives me a little sideways hug.
“Knew you wouldn’t want to start bawling in front of Damien, honey-love.”
I laugh through my tears and just nod, taking the tissue she gives me, and letting her strength lead me in my moment of weakness.
7
W E’RE SITTING INSIDE a Subway sandwich store, and I’m watching in fascination as Callie fills her apparently hollow leg with a footlong meatball sandwich. I’ve always wondered how she does it. She can pack away more food than a linebacker, and yet she never gains a pound. I smile, thinking maybe it’s those five-mile jogs she does, every morning, seven days a week. She licks her fingers loudly, smacking her lips with such enthusiasm that two older ladies shoot us a look of disapproval. Satisfied, she sighs and settles back, sipping on her Mountain Dew through a straw. It strikes me that this, right here, is the essence of Callie. She does not just watch life go by, she devours it. She gulps it down without chewing, and always goes back for more. I smile to myself, and she frowns, shaking a finger at me.
“You know, I brought you to lunch because I wanted to tell you how pissed off I am at you, honey-love. No returning my calls, not even an e-mail. Not acceptable, Smoky. I don’t care how fucked up you are.”
“I know, Callie. And I’m sorry. I mean it—I’m really, truly sorry.”
She stares at me for a moment, an intense stare. I’ve seen her give it to a criminal or two, and I feel I deserve it. It passes and she smiles one of those radiant smiles, waving her hand. “Apology accepted. Now for the real question: How are you? I mean, really. And don’t lie to me.”
I stare off for a moment, stare at my sandwich. Look at her. “Until S H A D O W M A N
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today? Bad. Real bad. I have nightmares, every night. I’ve been depressed, and it’s only been getting worse, not better.”
“Been thinking about killing yourself, haven’t you?”
I feel the same jolt, at a lower frequency, that I felt in Dr. Hillstead’s office. Here, I somehow feel more ashamed. Callie and I have always been close, and whether spoken or expressed, there is a love there. But it’s been a love based on strength, not weeping on each other’s shoulders. I am afraid that this love would lessen or disappear if Callie had to pity me. But I answer.
“I thought about it, yes.”
She nods and then is silent, looking off to something or somewhere I can’t see. I feel a prick of déjà vu; she looks as Dr. Hillstead looked, trying to decide which fork in the road to take. “Smoky, there’s nothing weak about that, honey-love. Weakness would be actually pulling the trigger. Crying, having nightmares, being depressed, thinking about killing yourself, those things don’t make you weak. They just mean you hurt. And anyone can hurt, even Superman.”
I stare at her and am at a loss for words. One hundred percent lost, I can’t think of a thing to say. This is just not what Callie does, and it has caught me by surprise. She gives me a soft smile.
“You know, you have to beat it, Smoky. Not just for you. For me.” She sips her drink. “You and I, we’re alike. We’ve always been golden. Things have always gone our way. We’re good at what we do—hell, we’ve always been able to be good at anything we put our minds to, you know?”
I nod, still speechless.
“I’m going to tell you something, honey-love, something philosophical. Note it on your calendar, because I’m not one to get deep in public.” She puts down her drink. “A lot of people paint that same, tired old picture: We start out innocent and bright-eyed, and then we become jaded. Nothing’s ever quite as good again, blah, blah, blah. I’ve always thought that was a pile of poop. Not all lives start out innocent and Norman Rockwell, now, do they? Ask any child in Watts. I’ve always thought it’s not so much that we learn that life is shit. It’s that we learn that life can hurt. Does that make
Benjamin Blech, Roy Doliner