counseling from the therapists, ate lunch, played during recess, and met as a
group twice— at the start of the day to set goals, and at the end of the day to
talk about whether they'd achieved them. Then they boarded the van for their
return trip home.
It was just a four-and-a-half-hour day for the children, but all of them
suffered from short attention spans, and keeping them in class any longer had
always proved self-defeating.
On a typical day, one or two of them would whirl out of control and have to be
restrained. Celia disliked doing this because it meant that the various peaceful
means of working with the child had failed and the Center was resorting to
muscle to operate in a timely manner.
The staff rarely hurt a child during a restraint, and when they did it was
usually a minor bruise and was always— to Celia's knowledge— an accident. More
often it was the adults who were were injured during these confrontations. They
had to take hold of a rampaging child, carry him or her downstairs to
containment— a small room with padded walls, floors, ceiling, and one-way glass—
and wrap their arms and legs around the boy or girl to immobilize what was most
often a thrashing body. That's when it could get really tough on Celia and her
co-workers: lips were split, genitals were kicked or squeezed, muscles wrenched,
and eyes blackened, as one of hers had once been. In general, when an angry
child had to be restrained, the therapists could undergo a wide range of
physical abuse.
Celia prided herself on holding her own during these rough-and-tumble sessions.
Although short, she was strong, with clearly defined arm muscles, and legs that
had been firmed up from all the hiking she enjoyed up on the ridge. Only the
children who had used their teeth to attack had made her hesitate; but never for
long, and never enough to get in the way of her work. Now another biter was on
board, though Davy's behavior so far had been much better than she'd expected.
She found his cooperation encouraging, and in sharp contrast to the boy who
initially had refused even to shake her hand.
When he finished he pushed the paper to the side and looked at her.
Ordinarily, she asked children about their art: What's going on here? Can you
tell me a story about this picture? But she had to admit that Tony was right
when he said that she wouldn't get any help from Davy. There would be none of
the verbal give-and-take that characterized her sessions with other clients.
She picked up his drawing and thanked him. They had about forty-five minutes
before his stepfather was due to return, so she decided to give Davy his tour of
the Center. He might also be hungry, so she would offer him a snack when they
reached the kitchen. It pleased her when he walked along without hesitation, and
she soon forgot that he was the ferocious little biter depicted in the file.
16
Chet watched the waitress fill his cup. Ugly old bitch. Just looking at her made
him sick, and he had plenty to be sick about without her.
PICTURES! He was still shaking his head over that one. You get a kid that
doesn't talk, hell, that's as good as it gets, and then she turns around and
says she's going to have him draw some pictures so he can communicate. Her and
her smooth words.
I'm sorry, Mr. Boyce, but Davy and me need this time for us.
Or whatever the hell she said.
Chet felt his mood grow as dark as his coffee. He stirred in three packets of
sugar and took a sip. Tasted like syrup. Good. He drank some more, then picked
up his fork and played with his cinnamon roll, what was left of it. Not much
more than a piece of crust. He couldn't finish it. A raisin had lost its sticky
grip and fallen off. That spoiled everything. It lay on his plate like a ball of
fucking rat shit. Goddamn, he hated rats. He wanted to take that raisin and mash
it, smear it across his plate, stab it with his fucking fork.
But there were people around, so he just played with the fucker. He rolled it
back and forth. It couldn't do shit. He was waiting for the right moment. It
would come. It always did. He'd know it too, just when to stab it. Back and
forth, back and forth, looking at how black it was, and wrinkled like that old
bitch, like it would just as soon be dead. Be better off dead, wouldn't she?
Well, wouldn't she?
He angled his fork carefully. An outer tine rested on the raisin. This was it.
He started pressing down real slowly. He saw the way the skin sagged, but
there's a point— it's a fact, like the sun going down— when it just can't sag
anymore and has to give. He watched the skin break and the tine cut right in.
The raisin's belly juices oozed up along the metal, and that's when the fucker
died, when he had it on the tip of his fork, stuck there like some shriveled-up
old thing. Like her with the coffeepot. He wanted to dump it on her. Scald her
good!
She smiled and topped off his coffee.
"Can I get you anything else?"
He shook his head.
"Well, you have yourself a nice day, you hear?"
She put the check down.
Chet watched her walk away. He saw the fork sticking out from the side of her
neck. He blinked, and it was gone. But the blood, he could still see the blood.
Red holes running.
17
Celia quickly gathered up several file folders and checked her watch. She didn't
want to be late for Dr. Punctual. Tony had asked to see her at three to find out
what she'd learned, "if anything," about Davy.
"Plenty," she'd replied impulsively during their brief hallway conversation. But
now she wished she'd been more reserved because Davy's artwork was actually
quite puzzling.
As she walked upstairs she noticed how quiet the Center had become since the van
departed with the children half an hour ago.
Mr. Boyce had picked up Davy promptly at noon. She had spoken to him just long
enough to let him know that his stepson had cooperated with the first phase of
the evaluation, but that it was still likely to take at least a week. She'd
wanted to explain that you just couldn't rush these things, but had refrained
because he'd seemed so withdrawn, maybe even sullen. She'd found that surprising
after the energy and enthusiasm he'd displayed that morning. Quite the mood
swing. Perhaps he was just tired or having a bad day.
She tapped on Tony's door, and he waved her in without looking up from the note
he was writing.
He'd arranged his office with the kind of precision that she could only admire.
Unlike her home, Celia's work space always ended up a complete mishmash. Captain
Chaos, that's what Jack called her. Like he should talk. But Tony had placed
everything— pens, files, books, journals, staff assignments, reports— neatly in
place; and nothing appeared the least bit ruffled from use, which Celia also
regarded as amazing. In her own office every pad, book, and folder seemed to
sprout dog-ears after a few days of occupancy, and coffee stains sprang up like
mushrooms overnight.
Tony finished his note and folded it crisply before inserting it into a file,
which he placed in the cabinet beside his desk.
Only after swiveling back around did he offer Celia his attention, and then only
with a "Well?"
Well what? she wanted to reply, which is how she thought Ethan would have
handled it; but Celia stifled this response because she wanted to establish a
positive mood with Tony. She had an unusual request for a man as rigid as he
appeared to be, and she wanted him to be as receptive as possible.
"Well, we got off to a good-enough start." She handed him the drawing, which he
looked at for no more than two seconds.
"Okay, so it looks like he drew a picture of a woman. At least I can see what it
is. Most of these kids, you can't tell what they're drawing."
"Sure you can," Celia said with as much encouragement as she could muster, "you
just have to look closely. Now this one"— she pointed to Davy's drawing—"I find
interesting. Ninety-nine kids out of a hundred, you ask them to draw a picture
of a person, they draw themselves."
"Really?" Tony glanced back at the picture. "So what does an art therapist make
of this?"
"I'm not sure exactly, except that in and of itself it's...well... peculiar."
Tony picked up the picture and studied it. "Maybe the boy misses his mother.
During my talk with Mr. Boyce he mentioned that business about the boy no longer
talking after she passed away."
"I know, he's told all of us about that, the school too. But I think Davy wants
to talk."
Tony pushed away from his desk, leaned back in his chair, and smiled.
"That's putting a positive spin on it. The young man has been in school for over
a week and hasn't said word one to anybody."
"But when I gave him a pencil and asked him to draw, he did give us this, even
if it is a little...perplexing."
"I thought you said that he'd given you 'plenty.' "
"In a lot of ways he did," Celia insisted gamely. She walked around his desk so
she could point out details in Davy's work. "Look at the nose."
Tony rolled back up and studied the drawing again.
"What nose?"
"Exactly," she said softly. "Davy didn't even bother with one. Just like those
Japanese children who come from perfectly controlled families that never show
emotion, those kids never draw noses either. Here"— she reached for the files
she'd brought with her—"I want you to take a look at some other pictures so you
can see what I mean."
She spread out five drawings.
"Look at these and find me a single American kid who draws a picture without a
nose, and these aren't unusual, not a bit. And you know why? American families
show emotion. Look at this one." She pointed to an oversized drawing of a woman.
"She's snorting like a bull, breathing hard just like people really do when
they're angry and emotional. And let's face it, the kids who drew these pictures
are not the products of the healthest homes— they're our clients. But with Davy
it's like he doesn't want to let go of any emotion at all."
Celia ran her fingers over the neck of the woman Davy had drawn.
"See how the lines don't even connect. There's a definite separation between the
mind and body."
"You're sure you're not stretching this a bit?" Tony covered his mouth as he
yawned.
"No, not at all. You say it could be his mom, right?"
"That seems likely enough to me."
"But a child who's lost a parent generally draws them with little feet, or no
feet at all, and that's because they've taken flight. This woman has huge feet,
exactly what a person draws when they feel tied down and can't escape."
Celia tapped the mouth of the woman. "And look at that, a single line, sealed up
like a bank vault."
"That is interesting, given his mutism. I'll grant you that much."
"It makes me wonder if this is a self-portrait, and if it is, what are those
clues saying—"
"Clues?" Tony interrupted. "Are you the Inspector Clouseau of the
paint-and-crayon set?" He smiled when he said this and she wasn't sure if he was
being pleasant and playful, or sarcastic. Celia decided that he'd made a weak
stab at humor and let it pass.
"The question"— she began to pace—"is why would he see himself as a woman? None
of it adds up."
She stopped to peer out the window at the empty play area. "Davy seems to have a
good-enough stepfather. Mr. Boyce is a breath of fresh air compared to some of
the parents we get in here. At least he's interested. He sure asks a lot of
questions."
"But I didn't find him terribly open"— Tony pulled on his lower lip—"other than
saying that Davy's mom died, which he'd already told the school."
"But that's not all that unusual, is it?" Celia turned away from the window. "I
mean, it was the first time you talked to him, and you weren't with him that
long. How open could he be?"
"No, that's true."
Celia quickly straddled a chair with the back facing forward.
"I don't exactly have Davy talking either, and I never will working with him
just twice a week." She paused, wondering how to make her plea, then decided to
just go for it: "How about if I get him for an hour a day? It's not like you or
anyone else around here can spend time interviewing him."
"No, but I've already got him scheduled for other types of therapy, and—"
"An hour, Tony! Please, just an hour a day with him. This is a kid who doesn't
even talk. It'll be his best chance every day to say something, maybe something
important."
Tony frowned at the drawings spread out in front of him. Celia couldn't tell if
he was irritated over her request or the fact that his desk now resembled her
own. But when he looked up he agreed.
"All right, you can have an hour a day. I'll rework the schedule, but I want to
remind you that I see this as a real acid test of your technique. You're not
going to get any shortcuts with this kid. He's not going to be able to tell you
about his drawings. It's just going to be you, the kid, and the crayons."
"I know," Celia said as she stuffed the pictures back in the folders, "you said
something like that earlier."
"Yes, and you shook your head when I said it."
He looked at her intently, though she wasn't sure if it was with anger or
understanding.
"Sorry, it's just that—"
"Forget about it," he said abruptly, "just think about wearing long sleeves when
you work with him. The thicker, the better."
18
Jack waved good-bye to Ruth and locked the front door behind her. It was five
o'clock, and he was glad to see her go. She often joked that she'd been "born