Vanessa? Dr. Boston’s
   voice swims down through
   the blue, disturbs me enough
   to set my feet in motion.
   The eyes follow me as I sit
   beside the guy with the most
   startling eyes of all—
   round, dark eyes, with
   gold flecks. Eyes that look
   like they’ve glimpsed
   behind the gates of hell.
   So Why Are His Eyes
   The only ones mine want to meet?
   I can feel the girls, taking
   measure, and part of me
   wants to turn and offer my own
   assessment. The bigger
   part is consumed by blue.
   Hey, Vanessa, I’m Tony,
   says the guy with hellfire
   eyes. I would have expected
   a deeper voice from someone
   who has shaken hands
   with the devil.
   And why do I think that?
   He seems friendly enough. In fact,
   he’s the only one in the room
   who bothers with introductions.
   The others sit, staring,
   in impassioned silence.
   Tony glances around the room.
   What’s up, people?
   Usually you won’t shut up.
   Now you’ve got nothing to say
   just because a pretty girl
   walks through the door?
   Well, that woke them up!
   Everyone looks simply
   stunned, including Dr. Boston.
   Is it because I’m anything
   but pretty? Or a less likely reason?
   The guy with dishrag
   hair finally opens
   his mouth. I thought you
   only thought dudes were
   pretty, Ceccarelli.
   The room explodes
   with laughter. I guess
   the session has officially begun.
   Forty-five Minutes Later
   I know a lot more about most
   of the people in C-3.
   Tony is pretty cool, for a gay
   guy who tried to commit suicide.
   He didn’t really talk about why,
   only said that it’s not easy
   being queer and living on the street.
   “Queer.” His word. To me
   it means strange, but he doesn’t
   seem near as strange as Justin,
   who expects Armageddon any second,
   or Todd, who lost a few too
   many brain cells to crystal meth,
   or Stanley, who’s a total lunatic.
   I mean, he spoke at length
   about torturing insects—
   I tattered their wings and tore
   off their legs, joint by joint,
   watched them crawl
   in circles, like little lost
   infants, until they decided to die.
   Somehow, I doubt bugs
   were his only victims.
   Dahlia hasn’t said one word,
   just sits there with her nose
   in the air. Every once in awhile,
   she licks her lips, like a lioness
   lording it over prey.
   Finally, Lori begins to talk
   about the pain that forces
   her down into a figurative
   grave—deep, damp, just her size.
   It’s hard to climb out sometimes.
   I try to look inside her
   head, see if the color in
   there is navy blue, like
   the space I’m treading
   now.
   Conner
   Brain Poked and Prodded
   But still holding secrets,
   I glance over at Dr. Starr,
   who’s locked in a computer
   screen trance, typing words—
   my thoughts, her analysis—
   at a steady thirty-per-
   minute pace. I tingle,
   heady with a synthesis
   of emotions. I feel
   satisfied, that I didn’t break
   down, didn’t confess major
   sin, open my mouth too wide.
   I feel lonely, displaced, yet
   secure within the silence
   curtaining each cubicle.
   This is a detour, that’s all.
   I feel relieved to have to
   admit a little of what’s
   inside my head. Sometimes
   I think it might split wide,
   cracked by the upheaval
   bubbling beneath my skull.
   But most people think there’s
   nothing troubling me at all.
   At least they didn’t used to.
   Who knows what they think
   of me now, which way the wind
   of small-town gossip blows.
   Finally Dr. Starr looks up.
   We’ve got a lot of work to do.
   Conner. A lot of work, indeed.
   But not today. You may go.
   Dismissed by the Bulldog
   Stephanie guides my way
   along the blue line. She
   could pass for a Stephan, tall,
   broad, and strong, but her eyes
   tell a different story.
   I discern a softness there,
   compassion I want to wade
   into. We turn a corner
   and the blue line merges
   with a thread of yellow,
   another of white. I wonder
   where all the crazies have fled,
   and just then I hear voices,
   leaking out of the rec room.
   Two are shouting, one merely
   speaking, trying to keep
   a handle on the unfolding
   situation—from what I
   can tell, the probable
   annihilation of one
   of the dueling duo. Stephanie
   shifts into takedown mode.
   Wait right here, she commands.
   It’s a mistake to leave me
   alone, and we both know it.
   I choose not to play the wild
   card she’s dealt me. One day
   I’ll use it to my advantage.
   A woman like that will work
   like clay—soften her up, touch
   her just right, the sculptor
   is guaranteed to have his way.
   Back in My Room
   Walled in by this impossibly
   ugly shade of green, I wait for
   my evening meal, no doubt
   delayed by the incident
   in the rec room. Will I
   ever get used to living
   with paranoid mutants who
   endeavor to win games
   of pool by swallowing
   the chalk? Between that, no
   food, and Dr. S wanting me
   to talk, all in all, it’s been a
   miserable day, almost
   as rotten as those leading
   up to that one, the one
   best left forgotten unless
   I want to drop down again
   into a pit of despair. God
   knows I’ve spent much too
   much time floundering there.
   I suppose I could have
   shared that information
   with dear Dr. Bulldog.
   But no, I spared us both
   a sordid tale of Conner
   the incompetent. Hard
   to believe that perfect me
   underwent such complete
   demolition in the space
   of four short months. First-
   string to benchwarmer, grades
   through the floor, and all because
   of her.
   Tony
   I Keep Watching
   Pretty Vanessa as the group
   tries to freak her out, whether
   that’s spilling spine-chilling
   tales or clamming up altogether.
   Nothing real 
					     					 			ly fazes her,
   except maybe Stanley’s bullshit.
   The longer we sit here,
   the further she withdraws,
   like a turtle holing up
   in its shell, expecting
   a major rollover. I want
   to reach under and yank her
   back out again. “How
   about you, Vanessa?” I ask.
   “What brings you to our
   home away from home?
   Are you really fucked-up or
   just totally misunderstood?”
   Everyone laughs. It’s an
   inside joke, one we’re all
   privy to, except Vanessa,
   whose brown velvet
   eyes stay hitched to the
   tabletop. Not good enough.
   “’Cause personally, I’m both
   fucked-up and misunderstood.
   Can’t somebody get me,
   please?” This time, even
   the Black Widow laughs.
   Finally Vanessa lifts her eyes
   and she gifts us with a smile.
   Then she shows us the arm
   she’s been hiding, the one
   wrapped in white like a
   ball-game hot dog. She smiles.
   I guess this is why I’m here.
   One Cut or More?
   That’s the first thought
   to grab hold of my brain
   and give it a rattle. Was
   this charming little thing
   into self-mutilation, or
   shopping for a coffin?
   Before I can open my
   mouth to ask, Stanley
   slobbers, Hey, cool.
   Tell us about the blood.
   Did it make a big puddle?
   Did it spurt or just dribble?
   Dr. Boston clears her throat.
   I think we’re finished for today.
   Odd. You’d think she’d want
   to jump all over that bit
   of psychology. Then I notice
   her face has drained, white.
   Hmmm. Something about
   blood? Have to file that
   away for another day.
   Good ol’ Stanley has caused
   quite the commotion.
   And now, as he walks out
   the door, he adds, I still want
   to hear about the blood.
   Which makes Todd grin
   and Justin start praying.
   Lori and Dahlia lean their
   heads together and whisper.
   Vanessa falls to the back
   of the pack, and though
   I know I should have no
   contact, I touch her arm.
   “I’m sorry,” I say. And she
   turns. It’s okay. Not your fault.
   The Grim Reapers
   Appear in the hall. Dr.
   Boston must have buzzed
   them, afraid of—of what?
   We’re all behaving
   quite peaceably, though
   a part of me would like
   to rip Stanley to pieces.
   Join the club, he’d tell me.
   Paul and Stephanie divide
   us according to gender
   and herd us up the hall.
   At the far end, the girls
   turn left and we go right,
   with me bringing up
   the rear of the pack.
   Move it, Ceccarelli, urges
   Paul. You walk like an
   old woman…. His unfinished
   thought hangs in the air:
   or maybe a young woman.
   I wonder if I’m his
   kind of woman…. Never
   know about these big
   mooks. “Gym-dandies,”
   I call ’em. Before he got
   sick, Phillip was a big
   guy, at least that’s what
   he told me. And I believed
   him. Phillip was the one
   person who never lied to me.
   I glance back over my
   shoulder at Vanessa’s
   retreating behind. Damn,
   she’s something special.
   But why do I think so?
   Why would I care in
   the least?
   Vanessa
   Brain Swimming
   In swirls of blue, I follow
   the other girls up the corridor.
   I feel eyes on my back
   and turn to find Tony,
   staring at me. He waves
   and I half-wave back, unsure
   of his motivation.
   Can’t be lust. Friendship?
   Daddy would die
   if he thought
   I’d made friends
   with a gay guy.
   Once he told me,
   God had a plan,
   and it didn’t include
   wangs in bung holes.
   Gross, I know, but it’s
   how they talk in the military,
   just another way of cutting
   themselves off from the truth
   of what they do.
   Not that I’m complaining.
   It’s tough, being
   a hostile presence
   in a more hostile land,
   he said one time.
   You do what ya gotta
   do to stay alive. And
   you trust your instinct.
   Aspen Springs is a hostile
   land, the people here crazier
   than most soldiers
   I know. And at the moment,
   my instincts are shouting
   to do what I gotta do
   just to get by.
   Drowning in Blue
   Pulled deeper and deeper
   into the void,
   I dig down
   into my pocket,
   find the capsule I stashed,
   first beneath a flap of tongue,
   then in a cave of fleece.
   I hold it like a jewel,
   the key to some magic
   kingdom where only good
   feelings are allowed.
   Funny, but sometimes all I feel
   is good. More than good.
   Great. Invincible.
   When Mama felt like that,
   Daddy called her manic.
   But why is mania bad,
   if it means you’re on top
   of the world, where
   everything is white? Bright.
   I wish I were up there now,
   instead of treading water
   in this damn blue hole.
   This magic pill won’t fly
   me there. It will only take
   me halfway, to what others
   call normal and I call gray—
   toeing a straight gray line
   is all medication is good for.
   Bad genes have doomed me
   to seesaw, white to blue
   and back again,
   for the rest of my pitiful life.
   And the thought of that
   makes me want
   to open a vein,
   experience pain,
   know I’m alive, despite
   this living death.
   I Swallow the Capsule
   Wait for the flood of silver
   to gush through my bloodstream,
   settle in my brain.
   Outside, darkness comes
   to rest upon the snow, shadows
   the ordinary world.
   Why can’t I live, ordinary?
   Which brings me back to my mother,
   who gifted me with this odd
   disorder—up, down, right, left,
   never a straight line, until
   I got here, to this house of control,
   where they believe they can
   tell you how to think,
   how to manage the feelings
   that never quite go away.
   The funny thing is, they still
   haven’t diagnosed
   my manic-depressive playground.
 
					     					 			   Oh yes, I know all about
   the disorder. It’s everywhere
   on the Internet—clinical
   studies, message boards,
   bipolar chat rooms.
   Yet these so-called health-
   care professionals can’t
   see past the cutting,
   to the highs and lows
   that invite such release.
   I guess I’m supposed
   to tell them—isn’t that
   what therapy’s all about?
   But it’s a lot more fun
   watching them flounder
   about, halfway trying
   to earn their annual
   60K.
   Conner
   I Haven’t Let Myself
   Think about her since this
   whole stinking mess began.
   Emily. The name suggests
   she has a soul, but where
   she hides it is a complete
   mystery. I can’t believe
   I fell so hard for someone
   with a heart of lead. Emily.
   Her smile is like summer
   moonlight—beautiful
   and magical, with a fire
   that could melt the night.
   I flop on the bed, close my
   eyes, try to conjure her
   beside me—the scent of her
   skin, the silk of her thighs,
   the breathless melody
   of her voice. I would be
   with her now, if she had
   allowed me that choice.
   But no, she had to worry,
   not about right or wrong,
   but about how people
   might talk. What would they say,
   she asked, more than once, if
   they knew? I wasn’t sure
   exactly who “they” were,
   but it was certainly true
   that nasty tongues would gossip.