"Critical Conditions" - читать интересную книгу автора (White Stephen)EightI left Sam at the police station, drove home, and checked my voice mail. John Trent had left a “returning your call” message at my office number. Given the difficulty I’d had reaching Merritt’s stepfather, I’d toyed with the idea of leaving him a message and extending the professional courtesy of providing him my home phone number, but decided that such an offer was premature. In the meantime, our telephone tag continued. I replayed the message he’d left, listening for nuance. “Dr. Gregory, John Trent returning your call. I’ll be in Denver tonight and most of tomorrow. Call anytime until, say, midnight or after seven tomorrow. Thanks. I should be at the same number you used the last time.” John’s tone on the recording was calm and level. I wondered whether, despite my clinical training and experience, I could muster such an even tone in the face of the multiple stresses that John Trent was suffering. But before I returned the call, I knew that Emily required some attention and some exercise. We headed outside and I threw a tennis ball as far down the lane as I could. Emily sprang after it, tracked it well, and pounced on it. She swooped it up, shook it a couple of times to be certain it was dead, dropped it exactly where she was, and ran back to me. With Bouviers, there was no telling if she planned to stop her galloping advance before she plowed into my knees, so I had to jump out of her way to avoid a collision that could easily sever both my ACLs. I threw a second tennis ball. She repeated the chase-it-and-kill-it-and-leave-it-where-it-dies scenario. I knew from frustrating experience that this game was the Bouvier des Flandres version of fetch. It was reasonable fun for the dog, I supposed, but required an unusually healthy supply of tennis balls. After repeating the scheme with half a dozen more balls, Emily was panting, I was bored, and I had only a few minutes left to reach John Trent before midnight. I’d collect the tennis balls sometime tomorrow. I grabbed a bottle of raspberry lemonade from the kitchen and took the portable phone with me into the living room. I hit the shuffle button on the CD player and wondered what disc would come up. I was guessing that I was going to get some Basia that Lauren liked, but the music that filled the room was a Jimmy Buffet album that I didn’t remember loading into the changer. Must have been Lauren’s, too. It made me smile. John Trent answered on the first ring and said hello absently, as though he were picking up the phone at home. There was an accent there, something I couldn’t quite place, something that had been tempered by time, certainly, and effort, maybe. “Hello. May I speak with John Trent, please.” “Speaking.” “This is Alan Gregory.” “Dr. Gregory-finally-thanks for calling back. I’m sorry I’ve been so difficult to reach.” It wasn’t often that a fellow psychologist called me “Doctor,” and I was puzzled by the formality. “It happens, we’re both busy.” Over the years, I’d struggled to find ways to use small talk to grease my entrance into people’s misery. It never worked. Better to move directly to the meat. I said, “As I’m sure you know, I was called in to evaluate your older daughter after her ingestion, and-” “Stepdaughter, for the record. I’m prouder than proud to call her my daughter, but technically, I’m just Merritt’s stepfather. She’s a great kid, isn’t she? God, I feel so bad about this.” “I’ve hardly had a chance to get to know her, but that’s what everyone says, that she’s a special young woman. May I call you John?” “Please, of course. My hands have been really full with Chaney since the weekend. She’s had to have a couple of difficult imaging procedures. Her doctors are quite concerned about her blood gases and her lung function. I feel terrible that I haven’t even made it back to Boulder for Merritt. Brenda and I thought that, well, since Brenda’s her mom, she should be the one to see Merritt first. One of us stays in Denver with Chaney all the time.” I had anticipated some defensiveness from John about the impossible decisions he had to make to juggle his concern for his two daughters. I wasn’t disappointed. “My sympathy goes to you and your whole family about Chaney. I can’t imagine the stress you’re under. You don’t have any easy choices now, do you?” “No, Dr. Gregory, I don’t. The only thing more painful than being with Chaney right now is not being able to be with Merritt.” John’s voice remained level, but it took on a hollow ring, as though he had cupped the microphone close to his mouth with an open hand. I wasn’t sure how far to carry my compassion about the family’s complicated circumstances. I reminded myself that my focus, and my patient, was Merritt. “Merritt’s ingestion was almost fatal, John. I’m sure you can understand that I’m very worried about her state of mind, especially about any continued suicidal ideation, and I would be grateful for any insight you might have about her mood prior to the weekend, or for her motivation for taking all those drugs.” “You know I’m a psychologist too, don’t you?” “Yes, my partner, Diane Estevez, has mentioned your name, and Brenda reminded me as well when she and I met.” “Psychologists’ kids aren’t supposed to do this sort of thing, right? That’s what you’re thinking?” He paused and processed his own words. “Whatever, that’s what I’m thinking.” I wondered whether I was hearing guilt or a prelude to something else. “I don’t think we’re immune, if that’s what you mean.” “I’m talking about what I missed. I didn’t see it coming. I’ve gone over the past few weeks in my mind, every last detail of every last second I spent with Merritt or talked with her over the past month and, darn it, I didn’t see it coming. Not a hint. I’m not pretending I’m in perfect touch with her lately-I’m here with Chaney almost all the time I’m not working. My practice isn’t that busy and it’s more flexible than Brenda’s job. I usually sleep here and I have the cafeteria menu memorized. That’s not an excuse-it’s a choice Brenda and I made-but Merritt’s been left out in the cold ever since Chaney became so ill. There’s no need to sugarcoat it. We’ve done what we can do, but she’s been the forgotten kid.” “There was no one you could call on to help with her? With Merritt?” I was fishing now for some admission about Sam and Sherry, but hoped only the lure I was using, and not the line, was apparent. “We’re new in town.” “No family?” He paused before he said, “Unfortunately, none close enough to help with this.” If I didn’t already know about Sherry and Sam, I would have been left to believe that John Trent’s use of the word “close” was a geographical reference, not an emotional one. I noted the obfuscation. I said, “That’s too bad.” “Believe me, I’m not callous to Merritt’s needs. Far from it, I’ve been worried about her and I’ve tried to pay attention to what’s going on with her and I’ve tried to stay in touch with her but these last few weeks have been…can you hold just a second?” The line was quiet for a moment. John came back on and said, “This will take a minute or two. Please wait. I’m very sorry.” I could hear a distant beeping and a female voice entering into a conversation with John. Finally he said, “Good, that’s great, thanks, Terry.” He came back on the phone. “Chaney had a kink in her IV line. We took care of it. Where were we?” “Merritt’s isolation.” “That’s it. But she wasn’t isolated, not in a depressed sense. I was watching for it. She was doing okay with all this. I mean, she was desperately worried about her sister, and she missed our family time together, but she was handling it. I thought she was, anyway. She was staying in touch with her friends, her schoolwork was getting done, she called her father whenever he was available, which isn’t often. He’s in the Persian Gulf somewhere on an oil platform. “No matter how bad things have been, we’ve made a point of having at least one dinner together a week. Brenda and Merritt and I, away from the hospital somewhere. She likes the chicken dinner on Sunday nights at this place close by called the Aubergine Cafe. It’s right by Channel 7. We’ve gone there a few times. And Merritt has been appropriate, in terms of mood and affect. I thought she had been, anyway. I don’t know, maybe I’m just trying to rationalize the fact that I missed it, how depressed she really was, is. But she hasn’t been withdrawn, she hasn’t changed the way she relates to me. Her appetite seemed fine. She eats, sometimes a lot, sometimes not. Her schoolwork had slipped a little, but she was getting it done. And she was still playing basketball whenever she could. “You should see her play. God, is she graceful. She has this fallaway jump shot that you can’t stop. She kills me with it. We play a lot of one-on-one.” “I’d love to see her play.” I’d love to see her do anything but be in the hospital. “What’s remarkable about her game is her patience. She doesn’t take bad shots, doesn’t make bad passes. When she gets a little stronger underneath, a little more comfortable with her size, watch out. One game this year against Fairview she was up against this big girl, I mean big. The girl was manhandling Merritt on defense and Merritt wouldn’t take bad shots. She just moved the ball around and found her open teammates. She ended up with eleven assists from the forward position. Twelve points and eleven assists, a double-double. Her game is all patience and good judgment. “Do you know that Ceal Barry, the CU women’s coach, has come by to see her play twice already? Merritt’s that good; she’s really good.” “It sounds like it.” I was hoping my platitude would bring him back. It did. “I can twist it every which way, I can put it under any microscope I can find, but I just didn’t see it. I love that girl, Dr. Gregory, and I didn’t see it coming. That’s the bottom line.” I wanted to keep him focused on Merritt. “You didn’t mention much about her friends, John. Just that she stayed in touch.” “No,” he said. He seemed distracted. “Any changes there?” It was at least ten seconds before he spoke again. “Chaney is so restless on these drugs they’re giving her. She doesn’t really sleep.” “Do you need to attend to her?” “No, no, I think that I’ve taken care of it for now. Umm, Merritt and her friends? That’s where we were?” “Yes.” “She has one close girlfriend, Madison, the one who found her after the overdose. They hang out other places mostly, not at our house. I don’t know Madison well, but she’s not like the kids that Merritt usually gravitates to. Madison’s boy crazy and nonathletic and she smokes and has a tattoo. You know. But I don’t know her well. I’m sure Brenda has her phone number, though, and who knows, maybe Madison knows something. You know what it’s like with teenage girls and best friends.” I thought, Only in theory. “Nothing else?” “I wish. I can’t think of anything.” “Do you mind providing me some general history, John? Whatever you can tell me about Merritt since you became involved with the family.” John knew precisely what I wanted from him and after absorbing my empathy and my dispensation over whatever were his sins of omission with his stepdaughter, he settled in to providing me with a history of his involvement with Brenda and Merritt, the birth of Chaney, the family move to Colorado, and their adjustment to a new home. He related their history with the dispassionate accuracy of a mental health professional who had heard it done a few hundred times before. He did, however, leave out any mention of Sherry and Sam Purdy. He offered nothing that piqued my interest in regard to the genesis of the suicide attempt. No red flags. No yellow flags. Nothing. Either this sincere guy had totally missed whatever it was that had been troubling Merritt, or this family was hiding something from me. I didn’t know which was true. |
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