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Stay (ARC)

Page 26

by Catherine Ryan Hyde


  plan is for me to stay around and try to do some good.

  “So all I want to say, and then I’ll pass it along …

  I just want to say it’s a hell of a lot easier to hold on to your seat in this room than it is to give it up and think

  you can get it back again. If we do get back to the rooms,

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  the wear and tear on our bodies and souls is considerable.

  And then there are the ones who don’t make it. And I was

  almost one of them. So take my advice. There’s nothing

  for you out there.”

  A pause. No one filled it. No one spoke while a person

  was sharing, and everybody waited to be sure they were

  really done. Until the sharer passed the torch, so to speak.

  Zoe opened her mouth again. “I want to hear from…”

  She pointed directly at my brother. I could see the

  alarm on his face.

  “I forget your name, son.”

  “Roy,” he said.

  “I want to hear from Roy.”

  A long silence. Like, really uncomfortably long. But no

  one filled it. It was Roy’s turn to share and that was that.

  He could say he chose to pass, or he could start talking.

  But the meeting was not going to go on until he decided.

  “My name is Roy,” he said.

  My body and brain tingled, waiting to see if he would

  say it.

  “And I’m … well, I have no idea what I am. No, I do.

  That’s not really true. I think I know I’m an addict, but

  I just don’t want to say it out loud, because then it will

  be the truth about me and I can never unsay it. And it’ll

  never stop being true. But I guess I pretty much just said

  it anyway, didn’t I?”

  He paused. Sighed.

  “I just got back from overseas.” His eyes came up to

  where Joe was sitting at the far corner of the table. “Like

  that guy, only my story just about couldn’t be more differ-

  ent from his. No disrespect to him. Just the opposite. He’s

  the one who deserves the respect. My story is a disaster.

  There is nothing about me to respect.”

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  He paused again. Long enough that I wondered if

  he’d ever restart himself. Long enough that I found it

  hard not to shift in my seat. Everybody else seemed to

  manage to hold still and wait. Then again, they weren’t

  his kid brother.

  “I can’t believe I’m about to do this,” Roy said. “I

  really don’t want to do this.”

  But then he did.

  “I didn’t enlist like this other guy,” he said. “You

  could’ve held a gun to my head and I wouldn’t have gone

  over there. If I hadn’t been drafted, I mean. And I didn’t

  get hooked on the drugs the army gave us, either. I hated

  speed. I wouldn’t even take it. I didn’t tell anybody I wasn’t taking it. I’d just hide it in my cheek and spit it out later.

  It made me all jangly and nervous, like the top of my head

  was about to come off. Like I couldn’t make my stomach

  hold still. Hell, I felt that way anyway over there, all the time. I didn’t need something to make it worse.

  “It was all street drugs for me. Except the word ‘street’

  is an exaggeration. Most of the places they had us stationed didn’t even have streets. But you could always get scag,

  and it was strong and it was cheap. And it was heaven.

  You could be right in the middle of hell and smoke that

  stuff and feel like everything was just fine. And I was right in the middle of hell, so that was handy.”

  He stalled again. Everybody waited.

  My stomach knots were twisting into stomach double

  knots.

  “I hate to say all this in front of my brother. I think

  he sort of looks up to me. And believe me, he never will

  again. Not after he hears about this mess. But I guess

  sooner or later I was going to owe it to him to tell him

  how it all went down.

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  “Okay. Here goes. Man, I hate this.

  “I was smoking all the time. Not just to wind down

  at night like most of the guys. All the time. Even when I

  knew there might be enemy fire. I just couldn’t face it any

  other way. I knew I was a sitting duck, loaded like that.

  Sometimes I could barely raise my arms, so I wouldn’t

  have been any too quick to fire back in my own defense.

  I guess I just got to the point where I didn’t even care

  anymore. Like I couldn’t even care. I just didn’t have it in me to care. I was scared out of my skin, and I just wanted

  to go home.

  “What I finally ended up doing, I’d almost done

  it a dozen times before. Just so I could go home. I just

  wanted a quick ticket out of there. But I didn’t do it. I

  mean, until the day I did. Because of the guys. The other

  guys. I figured I owed it to them to stay. Anything less

  just seemed so selfish.”

  I got that all-over tingle again. Waiting to hear what

  “it” was.

  “But then I got this letter from my kid brother, saying

  he loved me and wanted me to come home safe. He’d

  never talked to me like that before. I guess war pulls all

  kinds of stuff out of you that you didn’t even know was

  in there. Even if you’re not actually over there fighting

  it. It just takes a toll on everybody.”

  Something came into my head. Something my brother

  had said to me the first day he was home. After he told

  me he’d gotten the last letter I sent him. The one he was

  telling everybody about now.

  Why do you think it all came down the way it did?

  That’s what he’d said to me. And then he’d gone on to

  avoid telling me how it all came down. I almost thought I

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  about it with Mrs. Dinsmore. But I had not been able to

  bring myself to ask the details of how it all came down.

  I guess I figured I had no right to ask. It was his life. If and when he wanted me to know, he would tell me.

  Now he was about to tell me. Now he was about to

  tell everybody in the meeting.

  I thought, Oh, holy hell, it was all my fault. Whatever

  he’s about to say, it was all my fault.

  “So, we got pinned down and ambushed, and I was

  loaded. Really loaded. I was flying. We were taking fire from what felt like every direction, and I could just as

  easily have passed out as fired back. And then somehow

  my unit got on top of the thing, and whoever was shoot-

  ing at us stopped shooting and retreated, and I was alive,

  and, like … entirely unhit. And I still can’t figure that

  out. I mean, is it true what they say about God looking

  after fools and babies? Or was I keeping my head down

  without even knowing it because I was so loaded? I hon-

  estly have no idea.

  “The details are just really fuzzy, and not because

  a little time’s passed. It was fuzzy while it was happen-

  ing. I just remember I was sitting there on the ground.

  Afterward. And my rifle, my M16, was on the ground

  beside my right leg.
For some reason that part was clear.

  That part is, like, tattooed into my brain. I had my right

  hand on the rifle. And there was a dead guy on either

  side of me. Both of them were guys I knew. Not like my

  best friends or anything, but I knew them. I knew they’d

  been scared, like me, except I think they both handled

  it better. But maybe I only think that because I’d been

  on the inside of myself and on the outside of them. But

  I knew they’d wanted to get home, just like me. And

  they had parents, and brothers who wanted them to get

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  home. Well, the one guy, I think he only had a sister, but

  my point is the same. I thought about how their families

  would get a letter or a call or somebody would come to

  their house, and then I thought about my own brother,

  and then what I wanted to do didn’t seem so selfish any-

  more. I could tell myself I was doing it for him. That

  might have been a story I told myself, though. I mean, it

  was true and it wasn’t true. I was just at a breaking point.

  Even so loaded I could hardly move my arms and legs, I

  just knew I couldn’t take it anymore.”

  He pressed his eyes against the heels of his hands.

  Rubbed them hard.

  I thought I was going to explode waiting to hear.

  Even though most of me already knew.

  “I can’t believe I’m doing this,” he said, dropping his

  hands to the table again. “This is so stupid. I can’t believe I’m about to tell a bunch of people that I did something

  this stupid. But I guess this is the place for it, right? Because it was definitely the drugs that made what I did so extra

  stupid. My life would be so different right now if I hadn’t

  been so loaded in that moment. But I was, and time is

  never backing up again, and I’m never getting my foot

  back, and I just have to live with that.

  “Here’s the part where the scag messed me up. Here’s

  what I thought I was about to do. I thought I could put a

  bullet hole through my foot. You know. Just a hole. And

  in time it would heal. Maybe I’d have to have surgery

  to sew all those muscles and tendons back together. And

  physical therapy to walk normally. But I figured it would

  be enough to get me home. And I’m not saying I thought

  very clearly about all those details right then, but hope-

  fully you know what I mean. I just figured I could hurt

  myself bad enough to get home but not enough to totally

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  change my life forever. But it was a really stupid, really

  loaded set of thoughts. Because here’s what I forgot to

  consider. It was a point-blank shot. I’d seen bullet holes

  made by M16s. More than I could count. If I hadn’t seen

  so many of them, I might not’ve been so desperate to get

  out of there. But I wasn’t considering that those bullet

  holes were shots fired from a long distance. They were

  not point-blank shots. This was a point-blank shot. I was

  too loaded to understand that it was about to shred my

  foot so badly that some amputation would be required.

  “And there’s another thing I messed up on. I didn’t

  take into account that it would be pretty obvious what

  I’d done. Somehow I thought I’d be scooped up with

  the other wounded, and that would be that. We’d all

  be treated as having been injured in the firefight. But I

  guess the army’s not that stupid. And also it’s possible I

  might not’ve been the first guy to go to such lengths to

  get out of there.”

  I sat, listening to an invisible echo of his words around

  the room. I looked at the faces to see if they were judg-

  ing my brother. They weren’t. Not as far as I could tell.

  They were listening. Just listening.

  My brain filled with the image of myself in Connor’s

  bedroom, holding that gun and box of bullets in my

  hands. I remembered that feeling—the one where you’d

  thought you knew, but now that you really knew, it was

  just a whole different game of cards.

  But my brother was still sharing.

  “So that’s my message about drugs if there’s anybody

  in this room who needs one. Probably mostly just me,

  right? I mean, they really make you that stupid.

  “But, you know what? It’s a weird thing to say, but

  I think if I had it to do over again, I’d still do it. Bad

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  discharge and all. Permanent maiming and all. Because I

  got home. I might not’ve gotten home if I hadn’t. I think

  about it sometimes, and I feel bad for the other guys. The

  ones I left behind over there. I feel like I let them down.

  And it’s true, I did. But I made this huge sacrifice to get

  out of there. If they decided it was worth half their foot,

  they could get out, too. Sometimes I think that. Other

  times I think I’m the biggest jerk in the world, and I’m

  not sure which is true. Both, maybe. Maybe both parts

  of the thing are true. But it’s not like I left them under-

  manned over there. They’ll just draft somebody else to

  take my place…”

  He trailed off, and his face looked shocked. Like I was

  watching the blood drain out of it.

  “Oh hell,” he said. “I never thought of that. That’s

  another thing I get to feel terrible about. I’m not trying to justify myself to you. You can think whatever you need

  to think about me. Hell, there’s nothing you can call me

  that’s any worse than what I call myself every day. But I’m

  just going to say this, and it’s not an excuse. It’s just the damn truth. What did they think would happen? Take a

  bunch of guys straight out of high school and send them

  into that hell. Take away everything that was ever fam-

  iliar to them and tell them to kill and die, to watch their

  friends dying in horrible ways all around them. We were

  kids. We thought we were men until we got there, and

  then once we were there, it was so clear that we were just

  kids. I know there are plenty of guys who handled it way

  better than me. But how can you put kids in a situation

  like that and not end up with a total mess in at least a lot of their cases? It just doesn’t make any sense to think so.”

  He pressed his eyes with the heels of his hands again.

  I thought he might be crying and trying to hide it. But

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  when he dropped his hands, his eyes were dry. I wondered

  if he’d cried over there. If the war had used up every tear

  he’d ever had in him. Or if that was the place where he’d

  learned not to cry, no matter how bad things got.

  “The reason I haven’t been raising my hand as a new-

  comer is this,” he said, seeming more settled in his brain.

  As if he’d come home to the US in his head and could

  speak more calmly. “Here’s the thing about that. I’m still

  on a lot of pain meds for the injury. I’m taking them as

  prescribed now, because I really don’t have any choice.

  And I know from hearing
you all share that you can still

  call yourself clean if you’re taking necessary meds the

  way the doctor prescribed them. But I don’t want to do

  it like that. When I’m really clean, I’ll come in here and

  say so, and we can start counting my time from then.”

  He stalled again. Looked around the room. He seemed

  to have just wakened up somehow. He seemed vaguely

  surprised by everything he saw.

  “Of course I’m totally humiliated because I told you

  all that,” he said. “And I’m done talking now. I’ll just sit here and let somebody else share and wonder why I said

  all that. I guess I got tired of knowing it would come out

  sooner or later. I guess I got to the point where maybe it

  was easier just to get it over with. Speaking of which, I

  call on Joe. The guy who served so much more honor-

  ably than I did. Who’s probably over there thinking I’m

  like something disgusting to scrape off the bottom of his

  shoe. Because if he’s thinking that, I want to go ahead and

  hear it now. I’m not good with waiting for terrible things

  to catch up with me. I’d rather just get them over with.”

  He paused, but nobody spoke.

  “I’m done,” he said.

  Everybody in the room said, “Thanks, Roy.”

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  Including Zoe Dinsmore. Who I’d temporarily for-

  gotten was there.

  I looked at her and she looked at me. Her eyes held

  no judgment. Neither did they seem to want to console

  me. There was something very matter of fact in her gaze.

  As if she were telling me, “Yes, this is the world, Lucas.

  I’ve been dealing with it since before you were born.”

  Joe said, “My name is Joe and I’m an addict.”

  Everyone said, “Hi, Joe.”

  He looked right at my brother, who refused to look

  back.

  “Thanks for your share, Roy. In case you don’t know

  it yet, you’re not the only person in this room who’s done

  something stupid behind drugs, and you’re not the only

  person whose fear got the best of them. So far as I know,

  there’s not a person in this room who cares what you did

  when you were out there using. We all mostly care what

  you’re going to do now.”

  Then he went on sharing about his own situation,

  and the meeting just moved along. The focus never fell

  on my brother Roy again.

  It was as if the drama he’d just shared was no better

  and no worse than anybody else’s drama. Or maybe there

 

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