Kevin’s Funerals
I tried to get over Kevin, my ex-boyfriend, by pretending he was dead. Not
the kind of dead where you sip an iced frappuccino on a cloud, but the kind
where you’re stuffed into a wooden box and buried under dirt during a
rainstorm. I did this on the advice of my therapist, Dr. Marta Pearce.
She said it would help. She said, if I really concentrated, I might be able
to experience closure and as a result, move on. So, every night before bed
I shut my eyes and pictured Kevin’s funerals. I did this for eight consecutive
days, even though Dr. Pearce thought once should be enough. But I like the
number eight and frankly, I like picturing Kevin dead. I even went to bed early,
just so I could spend extra time on his funerals before my medication kicked
in. I would cook up all kinds of scenarios, but the basic story went like this:
I am the last to arrive at Barclay’s Funeral Home, and by last, I mean
that I make an entrance. You know the kind where everyone turns and stares,
not because I’m late, but because I’m mysterious and beautiful
and wearing a slinky black dress and leather espadrilles.
The crowd whispers excitedly, “How did Kevin get her?”
And, “Isn’t she that famous model?”
Kevin’s mother, a pink cushion of a woman who always wore too much perfume
even after she found out she was allergic, which leads me to believe she did
it on purpose, rushes over to embrace me. I don’t hug her back because
she never did this when Kevin and I were dating, and besides, I don’t
like to be touched.
“You’ve lost weight, Sharon,” she says, and I can tell she’s
jealous. “You look amazing.”
It’s true. I have lost weight, or at least I’m going to. Soon.
And I’m taller than I was when Kevin and I were together, by at least
an inch.
She also says, “Kevin’s last words were, ‘Breaking up with
Sharon was the biggest mistake I ever made.’”
And, “‘Sharon was the love of my life.’”
And sometimes, “‘My life sucks without Sharon.’”
I shrug, as if these revelations mean nothing to me, and wait for her to admit
she was wrong about me.
“You were perfect for him,” she says finally, dabbing her eyes with the
lace hankies I sent her the Christmas after Kevin and I broke up. “I
realize that now.”
I can’t help myself; I smile. I was perfect for him. I still am.
She bites her lip and walks away, a pink cushion of regret.
Kevin’s sisters stare daggers at me, but I am used to this. In real life,
Alana and
Courtney exchanged secret looks whenever Kevin brought me home. Dr. Pearce
said it was because they were uncomfortable around me, but I know it’s
because they were jealous. In all eight versions of the funeral Kevin’s
father orders them to move down a seat so I can sit up front. Then he marches
over, gives me his arm, and personally escorts me to the casket.
“My son was a damn fool,” he says, loud enough for everyone to hear. “He
never should’ve let you get away.”
Kevin’s father always liked me. After the break-up, I would sit on Kevin’s
front steps all night long, waiting for him to change his mind. The next morning,
Kevin’s father would drive me home. Sometimes, he was late for work because
of me.
“I can’t keep doing this, Sharon,” he’d say.
But, he did. Because he liked me.
“This is wrong, Sharon. It has to stop.”
It went on for a year.
“Can you forgive him?” Kevin’s father asks when we reach the casket. “Can
you move on with your life?”
Of course I can forgive Kevin, now that he’s dead. Of course I can move
on, now. And to prove it, I lean over and kiss his dead lips. A collective
sigh rises from the crowd like fresh pastry.
Kevin is beautiful. What I mean is, he has a handsome face. The rest of him
has been horribly mangled in a freak accident involving a deer and a Toyota
Camry and lots of bleeding, inside and out. In one funeral, he’s lost
both of his legs, and the casket is only three feet long. In another, he has
a pair of antlers sticking out of his chest. Kevin is horribly deformed, except
for his face. I kiss him again.
“I’m sorry,” Kevin’s father says.
That’s what he always said after we did it. When I told Dr. Pearce about
the car rides, she said I had transferred my sexual feelings for Kevin to his
father. That wasn’t it at all, but I didn’t argue because sexual
transference looks a lot better on my chart than exchanging blow jobs for news
about Kevin.
Everyone smiles at me now, even Courtney, Kevin’s older sister. I feel
sorry for her because she takes after her mother, which means she wears clothes
that try to fool you into thinking her thighs are not as big around as tree
trunks. But they are. I’ve seen her in a bathing suit. Alana, Kevin’s
other sister, has a Bikini Body, but it doesn’t matter because she’s
a bitch. No matter how hard I try, I can’t imagine her smiling at me.
In two versions of the funeral, she’s in the car with Kevin when he hits
the deer.
I wrote all of this in a journal and gave it to Dr. Pearce. She seemed surprised
I’d filled 88 pages and was impressed with my attention to detail.
“I hope this is an effective coping skill,” she said, and I watched
her write those exact words on my chart. “But perhaps we should look at
a different exercise. What do you think, Sharon?”
Dr. Pearce always asks what I think. She’s the only person who does,
so I pause before I answer. I think this makes me look intelligent.
“Dr. Pearce [pause], wouldn’t it be better [longer pause] wouldn’t
I be better if Kevin were really dead? Think how much more effectively I’d
cope if I could really go to his funeral. Wouldn’t that be a great way
to get over him once and for all?”
I could see by the look on her face that this was the wrong thing to say. I’ve
always been good at reading people’s faces, a skill I learned from living
with a mother who was an expert in giving Looks. You had to guess what she
was thinking because she wouldn’t say, and most of the time I was right.
This look, the one Dr. Pearce gave me, was a mixture of denial and apprehension.
It wasn’t the first time I’d seen it today. When I was riding the
bus over here, there was a girl sitting across the aisle from me. She was my
age, which is thirty-one, or maybe she was eighteen, I’m not sure. The
point is, she was reading the May Cosmo and crying. Well, I’ve read that
issue several times and there is nothing in there to make you sad, so I knew
it had to be something else, like the death of a puppy or a brain tumor or
maybe a bad break-up. I got up and sat next to her.
“Excuse me? Miss? I have something to tell you.”
She looked at me and there was a crazy hope in her eyes. I chose the break-up.
“Your ex-boyfriend sends his love.”
The look she gave me was identical to the one Dr. Pearce gave me in her office
and similar to the one my mother gives whenever I talk about being a fashion
model. Anyway, the girl got off at the next stop, but not before whispering, “asshole,” which
only confirms that I was right about the boyfriend.
Dr. Pearce didn’t curse and she didn’t leave the room, but I had
to spend the rest of our session trying to convince her that I was only kidding
about Kevin. I even offered to tear up the journal and never write about another
funeral (though I wasn’t sure I could actually do this), but she called
my mother anyway and asked her to pick me up.
“I don’t think you should be alone today, Sharon,” she said,
placing her hand on my shoulder. Dr. Pearce never touches me unless she’s
giving me bad news.
The fact is, and she knows this, I’m not alone at Bridgeway House. There’s
Elaine in the next room, and Katie who shares our bathroom, and the woman who
empties trash cans all day. But I knew what Dr. Pearce meant. She didn’t
want me to lock myself in my room and refuse to come out for two days, like
last time. And she didn’t want me to cut myself because eight months
ago she wrote, “No longer a danger to self or others” on my chart
and she didn’t want to take it back. I know all this because I read my
chart whenever Dr. Pearce leaves the room.
“Sharon? Please look at me. I’m going to call your mother now. I’d
feel better if you stayed with her tonight. What do you think?”
I sat back and let her do the thing that was going to make her feel better,
even though I knew my mother would be pissed.
She’d say, “I’m sick of this bullshit, Marta.”
And, “Goddam it, do you know how busy I am?”
That’s what she always says when Dr. Pearce calls, even if she hasn’t
called in a long time. And, she hasn’t. Not for eight months. So there’s
really no reason for my mother to be mad.
I call her my mother, but actually (and she agrees) I’m not sure we’re
even related. I look nothing like her, just like Alana looks nothing like her
mother and
Courtney. My mother is long-limbed and nasty, like a spider in a children’s
book, and doesn’t have to diet to be skinny, and used to say when I was
little and before I became too much for her to handle that she took the wrong
baby home from the hospital. It was a joke, I know, just not a funny one.
She would also say, “Do you really need that piece of cake?”
And, “You take after your father’s side of the
family.”
And sometimes, “I don’t know what to do with you anymore, Sharon.”
And it is possible I was switched at birth because my mother and I are as different
as two people can be, although there is no mention of a hospital mix-up in
my chart.
So this woman, my mother or maybe not, came dressed in a two-piece tweed suit
and black espadrilles, and had her own session with Dr. Pearce. Even though
I couldn’t hear them, I knew Dr. Pearce was telling on me, which should
bother me but doesn’t. It would be different if she was saying these
things to Kevin, or even Kevin’s father, but my mother doesn’t
expect to hear good things about me. She came out of that session with the
same mad face she had on when she went in.
“Ready to go home, Sharon?” she asked, but she was only being polite
for Dr. Pearce’s sake. When we got outside, she took my hand and dragged
me down the street like a shopping cart with a broken wheel. Her apartment is
four blocks from the office, which gave her plenty of time to say,
“I can’t believe this is still going on.”
And, “Do you know how busy I am?”
And finally, “When’s this going to end, Sharon? Can you tell me
that?”
I didn’t answer because, truthfully, I’m not sure what this is.
I don’t think it’s the therapy, because my mother likes Dr. Pearce.
And it was her idea that I increase my medication, so that’s not it.
Maybe it’s the phone calls. My mother can’t take personal calls
at work. She is a financial advisor at a brokerage house and when she has to
leave early because of my behavior, either “all hell breaks loose” or “the
shit hits the fan.”
Anyway, that’s what she says. But, I don’t call her anymore because
there aren’t any 8’s in her work number and I don’t like
the way her voice sounds when she answers and furthermore, today was not my
idea. I hope Dr. Pearce told her that.
I suspect it’s my career plans. She wasn’t happy when I dropped
out of college after two months, but, as I told her at the time, a fashion
model has no need for higher education. I know, at five foot two inches, I’m
not tall enough for the runway, but I have my sights set on print ads and there
is no height requirement for that, according to Women’s Wear Daily or
W, as it’s now called. And, if I put my mind to it, I can lose the ten
pounds that the camera adds. I can lose more than that, if I want to.
My mother hates when I talk about this, but that’s because she’s
someone who has no problem crushing every dream I ever had. When I wanted to
be a secretary, she said, “You can barely handle clerical work, Sharon,” and
to prove it, gave me a job at her company. The people there weren’t friendly;
at least the women weren’t. They were jealous because Mr. Abbott, the
supervisor, favored me over all the other file clerks. He’d call me into
his office and say,
“You’re doing an excellent job, Sharon.”
And, “You’re an important asset to the company.”
And then, “I pass Bridgeway House every morning –why don’t
I pick you up?”
When we were late for work he’d tell me not to worry and sign me in at
the regular time. He said no one would know the difference because we weren’t
that late, and on the mornings he took too long, I’d just finish him
off in the car.
How was I supposed to know that dating your supervisor was against company
policy? Models don’t have to worry about things like that. They are free
spirits who make their own rules. That’s what I told Mrs. Olmstead from
Personnel when she called me into her office for a private chat. Only, it wasn’t
private because my mother was there and kept screaming things like,
“That goddam bastard!”
And, “I should have him arrested!”
This was her way of showing she was on my side, but all it did was upset me
so much that I called her a cunt and threatened to be a danger to myself and
others. After I was escorted out of the building by my mother and two security
guards, I left a message on Mr. Abbott’s phone (his number had three
eights) asking if he still wanted to date, but his number was changed and I
couldn’t figure out the new one, even after spending an entire afternoon
trying different combinations. That’s when Dr. Pearce changed my medication.
And even though my mother wonders out loud what the hell I do all day, she
doesn’t hesitate to bring up “that fucking disaster” at Blackwell
Brothers when I talk about getting a job. So I don’t talk about it anymore,
at least not to her. So that isn’t what she wants to end.
This bothers me. I can’t stop thinking about it. Even after Jay Leno
is over and I’ve cut up every one of my mother’s fashion magazines,
I can’t stop.
When I wake my mother to ask about it, she tells me to go back to sleep. But
she of all people knows I can’t do that. I have to know. Now.
“Sharon, please. We’ll talk about it in the morning.”
I know we won’t.
“I can’t deal with this again, Sharon.”
It’s not just her Look this time, but her voice, dripping with something
that is not poison, but worse. Separation. The splitting of an atom.
“You should go to sleep.”
I’m afraid to go to sleep and I tell her this.
“Should we call Dr.
Pearce?”
I threw the phones in the bathtub an hour ago.
“Jesus, Sharon.”
Resignation, maybe.
Maybe not.
Revelation.
My heart beats quickly. I remember what it is now. It’s Kevin.
She wants Kevin to end, or rather my feelings for him. She wants to get inside
my head and stop me from thinking about him. That’s what Dr. Pearce wants,
too. Everybody wants this. Everyone but me.
“Do you think it will end,” I ask her, “when Kevin is dead?”
My mother is finally silent. That gives me hope. But then, she looks at me
and screams, “Are you out of your fucking mind?”
How does a rational person answer a question like that? There is no answer.
(This is in fact what I say to her.)
“Please tell me you’re joking, Sharon.”
I have never told a joke in my life. She knows that.
And suddenly she’s shaking me, as if she can empty out everything that
makes me different from her. And she’s repeating herself.
“Twelve years. Twelve years. Twelve years.”
She says this as if my heart is attached to a clock.
“He has a wife, Sharon. Children.”
Families break up. Fathers leave. My own father left when I was five.
“Kevin doesn’t love you anymore.”
That is just plain mean.
“He’s moved on.”
Her words are hooks that make holes in my skin and let in all of her spider
poison. When she’s completely drained, she gives me a look that I mistakenly
read as defeat. But, I’m wrong this time. She has a little poison left.
“It was so long ago, baby.”
And I don’t have anything to say except, not to me. I want to scream
this in her face and tell her I hate her and have always hated her and then
I want to ask her why? Why are we nothing alike? Why aren’t I tall and
beautiful and have a job where the shit hits the fan if I’m not there?
Why do I have to think about Kevin every day, and why won’t I have a
Bikini Body by June 1 like it promised on the cover of the May Cosmo? Why can’t
I be like everyone else? When is this going to end? But I don’t ask any
of these things because my mother, the spider, is crying.
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