Extrication - CC - [COMPLETE]
Posted: Tue May 18, 2004 2:03 am
Title: Extrication
Disclaimer: I own nothing. Except Anne. And Tyler. They're kinda cool.
Rating: MATURE, for language
Summary: Post-Grad. Just a spiral of events post-graduation. Different points of views and paths taken.
Author's Note: This is a four part fic that's already been completed. (I'm just waiting on for the thumbs up from my wonderful beta, Lisa, for the next three parts.) I began writing this fic as a one shot, but it just kept going and going. Enjoy.
Chapter One: “… swallowed up in the sound of my screaming…”
Liz’s POV
I once saw this television special about the Chinese and their traditions. I found it endearing how much they appreciated their loved ones after death. They believed that dying was never the end of life, but merely a continuation – or rather, a cycle – that recurred after each generation. To honour the deceased they would burn paper money to ensure a wealthy and comfortable afterlife.
Watching that special has always stayed with me, especially as specific events began to overtake my life. Since Max’s death, I can’t help but wonder if there even is an afterlife. And if there is, is it for you exclusively or do members of your first life join you when their time comes? Was Michael laughing it up with Max in the next world, mocking the mess I’ve made of my life?
Not that he wouldn’t have every right to. It was true. I was and still am a complete mess of a person.
I’m partial to entertaining fantasies of what could have been - what should have been - if fate had played on my team. As I pack cartons of milk and containers of yogurt into crinkly plastic grocery bags, I tend to contemplate the modest life that I had once believed possible. I was no longer looking for the white picket fence – any life must transcend the hell I’m going through.
At a barely ripe age of forty-three, I truly have nothing to show for my ungodly life. A job as a grocery bagger, a suspended driver’s license, a criminal record, and the deaths of my loved ones stained on my hands. This is what my life has boiled down to – and yet here I am returning to work each day, punctual with enthusiasm.
Some mornings I believe I have a duty to reimburse those lying six feet under by trying to suffer through each day and attempt to attain the dreams we had shared years before. Although by the time I’m packing my sixty-seventh bag of groceries, I’ve thrown these thoughts out the window and down eighty floors.
There is no justice in grocery bagging, I can tell you that with certainty. I smile to customers and obey orders given to me. I hoist wholesale packs of Coca Cola into customer’s vehicles. I never take a minute past the end of my break time. I’m the perfect employee. But at the end of the day, it’s still the same. I’m still the same.
My apartment is all I have left to call home. Every night at precisely forty minutes past six, I open the door with trepidation – as if Kal will be waiting for me, reprimanding me for this pitiful existence. Or maybe Max will be sitting on my cheap plastic furniture, with cold, concentrated disappointment. The person I most fear waiting for me is Michael though – his eyes crimson with a blend of hurt and rage, condemning me to an even lengthier sentence of this guilt and self-loathing.
Yet every night when I swing my apartment door open, no one is waiting for me. And perhaps that is a far worse fate.
Guilt is a funny thing, you see. It’s invisible, much like happiness or sadness. You can’t touch it, you can’t see it, and you can’t taste it. But you can feel it – you can feel it all through your bones. It’s like instant stimulation to each nerve, jumping with anxiety. Sometimes I can distract myself long enough to take a deep breath, but it returns to me all the same.
There are nights when I wake up – or even nights when I don’t sleep at all – and I reach for my telephone. The first few times I dialed the number, I would hang up after the recorded message began. Eventually my nights became so loud with silence that I would dial her cellular number over and over again, just to listen to another voice over the receiver.
After a week I had listened to the message so many times that I could recite the entire recording in the same pitch.
“I’m sorry but the number you’ve dialed is no longer in service…”
There were days when I never even knew a life like this existed. Days when I thought my biggest enemies were outer galactic forces coming to tear Max and I apart. It’s taken many long, lonely nights to realize that the only enemy that exists is myself. No one quite knows you like you know yourself. So I theorized that no one could quite destroy yourself as ultimately as you could.
The funny thing about all this is that every time I had dialed the same number, I still expected Maria to pick up on the other end. Even after witnessing her death with my very own eyes, I anticipate hearing her voice answer my phone call.
I never meant to hurt her. It’s been said time and time before, that the intention was never there but I suppose the ending is still the same. I had ruined Maria and Anne’s lives – her death could be blamed on no one else but myself.
I had taken to the drink quite heavily for years after Max and Michael’s deaths. I’d wake to a nice glass of scotch each morning, settle into the afternoon with a mix of rum and coke, then curl into bed with a few shots of straight vodka. For the first few months, I spent most of the in-between time next to the porcelain goddess but you’d be surprised how quickly you adjust.
Maria never needed the bottle like I did. She pulled herself from her grief when she realized that inside her womb was Michael’s child. Unfortunately, Max never left such a gift for me. And I suppose it’s better that way.
She watched my deterioration from the first day, and to be quite frank, I’m surprised Maria didn’t attempt to simply slap me out of my misery. No, she constantly coddled me, taking care of me every time I was fired until there were no more employers to be found. She calmed me when rage would possess my entire body, when all I could feel was frustration with my life. Though we never discussed anything more than my trek from toilet to bed, I suspect her reasoning was guilt – guilt that my husband had chosen Michael’s over mine.
Despite Anne’s birth nearly six weeks after Michael’s death, Maria continued to indulge me as if I were her own up until the day she passed away. Nights when my drunken screaming overlapped Anne’s cries, Maria would tend to me first.
On Anne’s seventh birthday, I had been having a particularly awful day. After being fired from yet another job and having my last three dollars stolen, I went tumbling off the bandwagon for the twenty-sixth time.
“C’mon, Liz, lets get you home.”
I stumbled, letting out a roaring laugh. “Home? I have no home! My home is buried six feet underground.” Keeping a sturdy grip on my bottle of Smirnoff, I shrugged my shoulders. “Then again, maybe I have no home at all. Because, lets admit it, my so-called home of a husband chose Michael over me.” I laughed outrageously. “And look where that landed him!”
Rain fell off her shoulders as Maria shook her head, sighing. “Liz, you are so drunk that you don’t even know what you’re talking about. Just give me the keys, and we’ll go back to the apartment.” She lunged for them, but in my drunken haze, I pushed her away as we collided. Maria reeled back, falling on her rear.
“No! I want to talk.” Gaining my baby voice, I whimpered. “Lets talk, Maria, like we used to.” I grinned foolishly. “We used to talk about boys and school. I miss that.”
Taking a deep breath, Maria stood up and brushed herself off. “Fine,” she replied with irritation, “we can talk. But only if we go home.”
“I used to be so smart!” Ignoring her demand, I twirled in the middle of the empty lot. My eyes twinkled and I gazed at her. “Do you remember when I used to be so smart?”
“Liz, you still are.” Maria approached me slowly. “Now prove to me that you’re still smart and give me the keys. We’re standing in the middle of an empty parking lot outside a bar. This is no way to spend our night. Anne’s waiting for us.” She gave me her motherly smile. “Doesn’t a warm cup of milk and a cozy blanket sound nice? This rain is doing nothing for us. C’mon, lets go.”
“No way,” I slurred. “Not that easy!” I pranced delightfully to the music in my head. My voice gaining volume, I pondered out loud, “I wonder why Max chose Michael. Maybe the sex wasn’t good enough.” I stopped, beginning to pout. “I miss sex.”
“Liz!” Maria’s voice was losing its patience. “Give me the damn keys.” When I refused, she continued, “It wasn’t the sex, Liz. I don’t know why, you don’t know why, no one knows why. The only thing we can do now is go home and move on.”
“I stood right there, Maria,” I said to her. “The agents had a gun pointed at both Michael and I. Max looked at both of us… and…” I started to cry, my tears melting with the rain. “He just – he just threw up his shield in front of Michael. Max knew they were going to kill him regardless. And that they were willing to kill the rest of us.” I shook my head.
“Liz, things were happening so fast, nothing could have been -”
“No! That’s not true! Something could have been done! Maybe if he had tried to save me, Michael could have fired at the agent. Or something! Anything!” I threw my hands above me, splashing vodka on my cheeks. “Max tried to save Michael’s life. And not mine.”
“And look where it fucking got them!” Maria screeched at me. “They’re both fucking dead! The FBI agents shot Max clear in the head, Michael took a shot to save us, and they both ended up dead. It doesn’t make a goddamn difference. They’re both dead, Liz! THEY’RE DEAD.” Grabbing me by the shoulders, she began to shake me. “Get over it, Liz! You need to get over it! Stop wasting your life.” Tears splashed down her face. “Keep a job for once. Stop drinking. Just move on and live your fucking life. You’re alive and they’re not. Move on.”
Shocked at her language, I started screaming with rage for the world. No words, just long vowels of anger at my seemingly cruel fate. I ran for the car door and slipped in before she could catch me. Locking the doors, I slammed the keys into the ignition and began driving around the parking lot. Gaining drunken courage, I accelerated quickly and started to drive in circles around Maria.
“Liz, stop!” She screamed through the rain. “Stop the fucking car!”
And those were her last words.
Deciding to slam on the brakes, the wheels continued to spin and slid towards Maria’s direction. Before I recognized the crushing sound of Maria’s body hitting the hood of the car, I stumbled out the door.
“Maria, no!”
Cradling Maria’s body in my arms, I screamed obscenities into the dark night. Her blood soaked through my jacket, diluted by the rain. I had never meant for this to happen. I never wanted to lose Maria too. I couldn’t. But the way her neck was resting terrified me, and I had a horrible suspicion that only one of us was leaving alive.
How I wish it hadn’t been me.
Rocking back and forth, I heard footsteps approaching behind me.
There stood Kal Langley. I stared at him with lost eyes, clutching Maria closer to my body. Kal stood before me with a disapproving glare. “What the hell have you done now?” he yelled. “Getting yourself into more shit than you can handle, that’s for sure.” Shaking his head, he waved me away. “Get out of here. You’re useless to me now.”
I stared at him with dumbfounded shock. There was no denying who he was with his condescending tone. A man I had heard stories of but never met, and here he was, either saving or destroying me. “I don’t understand,” I whimpered to him. “I didn’t mean -”
“I don’t care,” Kal replied. “I thought you’d kill yourself long before now – long before killing Michael’s girl. I’ve been keeping an eye on you and now you’ve gone and made a mess. I’m doing you a favour. Consider this my last and only one. Don’t fuck up again.” Pushing me aside, he placed one hand on Maria’s body. Suddenly the molecules of her body split, and exploded before my eyes – like a firework erupting into tiny fragments.
“Get out of here,” he tossed over his shoulder. Before I could blink my eyes, he had gone back to where he had come from – oblivion.
After realizing that Maria was really gone, I stumbled back into the vehicle and drove home. Still impaired, I was stopped by police and detained. I found it oddly humorous that I was apprehended on the basis of dangerous driving under the influence of alcohol – after already murdering my best friend. If only they knew.
Neighbours found Anne the next morning. At five o’clock in the morning, she allegedly ran outside and began screaming Maria’s name. Although I’m not completely certain, I suspect that she felt the loss of her mother. An alien connection, I suppose.
Anne was taken in by child services.
For weeks after Maria’s “disappearance”, I was questioned repeatedly. Where was Maria? Why did I have her car that evening? Was Maria with me that night? Where had she been earlier that day?
Have you ever noticed that once you spout your first lie, the rest flows naturally from your lips? I hadn’t seen her that night or any night since. I didn’t know where she was. I had her car that evening because I was a drunken slob needing a way to the bar. As far as I knew, she had been working earlier that day. I even suggested that there was a gentleman at her workplace with whom she was having sexual relations with. I sounded as pathetic as they thought I was, and it worked.
Without a trace of solid evidence, I was allowed to walk away from the entire situation. I was told not to see or talk to Anne again by children’s services. I wasn’t surprised nor was I distressed. What good could I bring her? And besides, what would I say to her?
“Hey, I’m sorry about killing your mom. Don’t tell anyone, okay?”
Yeah, right.
I tried to stay sober after that. I really did. But after so many years of using alcohol to escape my reality, it felt too difficult to give up the drink. I wanted it – I needed it. I needed that extra push in the morning, and like a bedtime story for a child, I couldn’t sleep without a drink.
So my drinking continued until I was caught once again with impaired drinking. This time I was slapped with a larger fine, my driver’s license was suspended for two years, and I had to attend mandatory Alcoholic Anonymous meetings. I quite literally had nothing in my life left. I was being evicted from the apartment Maria, Anne, and I had lived in. I had no job to speak of. And I had just been caught drinking and driving again.
By court order and whatever will power I had left, I quit drinking and acquired a job. Of course, with my record and lack of education, the only available job was grocery bagging. So that is where I am now. I suppose my self pity should be unheard of – I’m the only one to blame for how my life turned out. I’m the one who got myself here.
Sometimes I wonder where it all went wrong: Max and Michael’s death? Anne’s birth? Departing Roswell after graduation? Maybe when Max healed me? Or perhaps, the problem was being born at all.
When I was younger, I would have never imagined my life turning out this way. I was a perfectionist and it gained me the respect of friends, teachers, and adults alike. I was intelligent yet fun. I was creative yet logical. I was well balanced. People even told me so, praising me for all of my accomplishments.
Where did I go wrong?
Then again, the world is a completely different place outside of high school. For a perfectionist like I used to be, the one thing that always pushed me to go higher was that people expected me to. But outside of high school – well, no one cares. No one cares if you can write an amazing essay on Shakespeare’s Hamlet. No one cares if you can reiterate the periodic table without pausing. No one cares if you were the prettiest or most intelligent girl in high school.
Perhaps without that force pushing me forward, I stood still while the world happened around me.
Regardless, I’m here on this planet for as long as it takes my body to break down, which I suspect won’t be too long. After years of self inflicted abuse, my mind and my body are exhausted. So until oblivion swallows me whole, I’ll find a new way to push myself forward. Not praise from others or alcohol from a bottle.
Maybe just faith in mankind will guide me home.
Disclaimer: I own nothing. Except Anne. And Tyler. They're kinda cool.
Rating: MATURE, for language
Summary: Post-Grad. Just a spiral of events post-graduation. Different points of views and paths taken.
Author's Note: This is a four part fic that's already been completed. (I'm just waiting on for the thumbs up from my wonderful beta, Lisa, for the next three parts.) I began writing this fic as a one shot, but it just kept going and going. Enjoy.
Chapter One: “… swallowed up in the sound of my screaming…”
Liz’s POV
I once saw this television special about the Chinese and their traditions. I found it endearing how much they appreciated their loved ones after death. They believed that dying was never the end of life, but merely a continuation – or rather, a cycle – that recurred after each generation. To honour the deceased they would burn paper money to ensure a wealthy and comfortable afterlife.
Watching that special has always stayed with me, especially as specific events began to overtake my life. Since Max’s death, I can’t help but wonder if there even is an afterlife. And if there is, is it for you exclusively or do members of your first life join you when their time comes? Was Michael laughing it up with Max in the next world, mocking the mess I’ve made of my life?
Not that he wouldn’t have every right to. It was true. I was and still am a complete mess of a person.
I’m partial to entertaining fantasies of what could have been - what should have been - if fate had played on my team. As I pack cartons of milk and containers of yogurt into crinkly plastic grocery bags, I tend to contemplate the modest life that I had once believed possible. I was no longer looking for the white picket fence – any life must transcend the hell I’m going through.
At a barely ripe age of forty-three, I truly have nothing to show for my ungodly life. A job as a grocery bagger, a suspended driver’s license, a criminal record, and the deaths of my loved ones stained on my hands. This is what my life has boiled down to – and yet here I am returning to work each day, punctual with enthusiasm.
Some mornings I believe I have a duty to reimburse those lying six feet under by trying to suffer through each day and attempt to attain the dreams we had shared years before. Although by the time I’m packing my sixty-seventh bag of groceries, I’ve thrown these thoughts out the window and down eighty floors.
There is no justice in grocery bagging, I can tell you that with certainty. I smile to customers and obey orders given to me. I hoist wholesale packs of Coca Cola into customer’s vehicles. I never take a minute past the end of my break time. I’m the perfect employee. But at the end of the day, it’s still the same. I’m still the same.
My apartment is all I have left to call home. Every night at precisely forty minutes past six, I open the door with trepidation – as if Kal will be waiting for me, reprimanding me for this pitiful existence. Or maybe Max will be sitting on my cheap plastic furniture, with cold, concentrated disappointment. The person I most fear waiting for me is Michael though – his eyes crimson with a blend of hurt and rage, condemning me to an even lengthier sentence of this guilt and self-loathing.
Yet every night when I swing my apartment door open, no one is waiting for me. And perhaps that is a far worse fate.
Guilt is a funny thing, you see. It’s invisible, much like happiness or sadness. You can’t touch it, you can’t see it, and you can’t taste it. But you can feel it – you can feel it all through your bones. It’s like instant stimulation to each nerve, jumping with anxiety. Sometimes I can distract myself long enough to take a deep breath, but it returns to me all the same.
There are nights when I wake up – or even nights when I don’t sleep at all – and I reach for my telephone. The first few times I dialed the number, I would hang up after the recorded message began. Eventually my nights became so loud with silence that I would dial her cellular number over and over again, just to listen to another voice over the receiver.
After a week I had listened to the message so many times that I could recite the entire recording in the same pitch.
“I’m sorry but the number you’ve dialed is no longer in service…”
There were days when I never even knew a life like this existed. Days when I thought my biggest enemies were outer galactic forces coming to tear Max and I apart. It’s taken many long, lonely nights to realize that the only enemy that exists is myself. No one quite knows you like you know yourself. So I theorized that no one could quite destroy yourself as ultimately as you could.
The funny thing about all this is that every time I had dialed the same number, I still expected Maria to pick up on the other end. Even after witnessing her death with my very own eyes, I anticipate hearing her voice answer my phone call.
I never meant to hurt her. It’s been said time and time before, that the intention was never there but I suppose the ending is still the same. I had ruined Maria and Anne’s lives – her death could be blamed on no one else but myself.
I had taken to the drink quite heavily for years after Max and Michael’s deaths. I’d wake to a nice glass of scotch each morning, settle into the afternoon with a mix of rum and coke, then curl into bed with a few shots of straight vodka. For the first few months, I spent most of the in-between time next to the porcelain goddess but you’d be surprised how quickly you adjust.
Maria never needed the bottle like I did. She pulled herself from her grief when she realized that inside her womb was Michael’s child. Unfortunately, Max never left such a gift for me. And I suppose it’s better that way.
She watched my deterioration from the first day, and to be quite frank, I’m surprised Maria didn’t attempt to simply slap me out of my misery. No, she constantly coddled me, taking care of me every time I was fired until there were no more employers to be found. She calmed me when rage would possess my entire body, when all I could feel was frustration with my life. Though we never discussed anything more than my trek from toilet to bed, I suspect her reasoning was guilt – guilt that my husband had chosen Michael’s over mine.
Despite Anne’s birth nearly six weeks after Michael’s death, Maria continued to indulge me as if I were her own up until the day she passed away. Nights when my drunken screaming overlapped Anne’s cries, Maria would tend to me first.
On Anne’s seventh birthday, I had been having a particularly awful day. After being fired from yet another job and having my last three dollars stolen, I went tumbling off the bandwagon for the twenty-sixth time.
“C’mon, Liz, lets get you home.”
I stumbled, letting out a roaring laugh. “Home? I have no home! My home is buried six feet underground.” Keeping a sturdy grip on my bottle of Smirnoff, I shrugged my shoulders. “Then again, maybe I have no home at all. Because, lets admit it, my so-called home of a husband chose Michael over me.” I laughed outrageously. “And look where that landed him!”
Rain fell off her shoulders as Maria shook her head, sighing. “Liz, you are so drunk that you don’t even know what you’re talking about. Just give me the keys, and we’ll go back to the apartment.” She lunged for them, but in my drunken haze, I pushed her away as we collided. Maria reeled back, falling on her rear.
“No! I want to talk.” Gaining my baby voice, I whimpered. “Lets talk, Maria, like we used to.” I grinned foolishly. “We used to talk about boys and school. I miss that.”
Taking a deep breath, Maria stood up and brushed herself off. “Fine,” she replied with irritation, “we can talk. But only if we go home.”
“I used to be so smart!” Ignoring her demand, I twirled in the middle of the empty lot. My eyes twinkled and I gazed at her. “Do you remember when I used to be so smart?”
“Liz, you still are.” Maria approached me slowly. “Now prove to me that you’re still smart and give me the keys. We’re standing in the middle of an empty parking lot outside a bar. This is no way to spend our night. Anne’s waiting for us.” She gave me her motherly smile. “Doesn’t a warm cup of milk and a cozy blanket sound nice? This rain is doing nothing for us. C’mon, lets go.”
“No way,” I slurred. “Not that easy!” I pranced delightfully to the music in my head. My voice gaining volume, I pondered out loud, “I wonder why Max chose Michael. Maybe the sex wasn’t good enough.” I stopped, beginning to pout. “I miss sex.”
“Liz!” Maria’s voice was losing its patience. “Give me the damn keys.” When I refused, she continued, “It wasn’t the sex, Liz. I don’t know why, you don’t know why, no one knows why. The only thing we can do now is go home and move on.”
“I stood right there, Maria,” I said to her. “The agents had a gun pointed at both Michael and I. Max looked at both of us… and…” I started to cry, my tears melting with the rain. “He just – he just threw up his shield in front of Michael. Max knew they were going to kill him regardless. And that they were willing to kill the rest of us.” I shook my head.
“Liz, things were happening so fast, nothing could have been -”
“No! That’s not true! Something could have been done! Maybe if he had tried to save me, Michael could have fired at the agent. Or something! Anything!” I threw my hands above me, splashing vodka on my cheeks. “Max tried to save Michael’s life. And not mine.”
“And look where it fucking got them!” Maria screeched at me. “They’re both fucking dead! The FBI agents shot Max clear in the head, Michael took a shot to save us, and they both ended up dead. It doesn’t make a goddamn difference. They’re both dead, Liz! THEY’RE DEAD.” Grabbing me by the shoulders, she began to shake me. “Get over it, Liz! You need to get over it! Stop wasting your life.” Tears splashed down her face. “Keep a job for once. Stop drinking. Just move on and live your fucking life. You’re alive and they’re not. Move on.”
Shocked at her language, I started screaming with rage for the world. No words, just long vowels of anger at my seemingly cruel fate. I ran for the car door and slipped in before she could catch me. Locking the doors, I slammed the keys into the ignition and began driving around the parking lot. Gaining drunken courage, I accelerated quickly and started to drive in circles around Maria.
“Liz, stop!” She screamed through the rain. “Stop the fucking car!”
And those were her last words.
Deciding to slam on the brakes, the wheels continued to spin and slid towards Maria’s direction. Before I recognized the crushing sound of Maria’s body hitting the hood of the car, I stumbled out the door.
“Maria, no!”
Cradling Maria’s body in my arms, I screamed obscenities into the dark night. Her blood soaked through my jacket, diluted by the rain. I had never meant for this to happen. I never wanted to lose Maria too. I couldn’t. But the way her neck was resting terrified me, and I had a horrible suspicion that only one of us was leaving alive.
How I wish it hadn’t been me.
Rocking back and forth, I heard footsteps approaching behind me.
There stood Kal Langley. I stared at him with lost eyes, clutching Maria closer to my body. Kal stood before me with a disapproving glare. “What the hell have you done now?” he yelled. “Getting yourself into more shit than you can handle, that’s for sure.” Shaking his head, he waved me away. “Get out of here. You’re useless to me now.”
I stared at him with dumbfounded shock. There was no denying who he was with his condescending tone. A man I had heard stories of but never met, and here he was, either saving or destroying me. “I don’t understand,” I whimpered to him. “I didn’t mean -”
“I don’t care,” Kal replied. “I thought you’d kill yourself long before now – long before killing Michael’s girl. I’ve been keeping an eye on you and now you’ve gone and made a mess. I’m doing you a favour. Consider this my last and only one. Don’t fuck up again.” Pushing me aside, he placed one hand on Maria’s body. Suddenly the molecules of her body split, and exploded before my eyes – like a firework erupting into tiny fragments.
“Get out of here,” he tossed over his shoulder. Before I could blink my eyes, he had gone back to where he had come from – oblivion.
After realizing that Maria was really gone, I stumbled back into the vehicle and drove home. Still impaired, I was stopped by police and detained. I found it oddly humorous that I was apprehended on the basis of dangerous driving under the influence of alcohol – after already murdering my best friend. If only they knew.
Neighbours found Anne the next morning. At five o’clock in the morning, she allegedly ran outside and began screaming Maria’s name. Although I’m not completely certain, I suspect that she felt the loss of her mother. An alien connection, I suppose.
Anne was taken in by child services.
For weeks after Maria’s “disappearance”, I was questioned repeatedly. Where was Maria? Why did I have her car that evening? Was Maria with me that night? Where had she been earlier that day?
Have you ever noticed that once you spout your first lie, the rest flows naturally from your lips? I hadn’t seen her that night or any night since. I didn’t know where she was. I had her car that evening because I was a drunken slob needing a way to the bar. As far as I knew, she had been working earlier that day. I even suggested that there was a gentleman at her workplace with whom she was having sexual relations with. I sounded as pathetic as they thought I was, and it worked.
Without a trace of solid evidence, I was allowed to walk away from the entire situation. I was told not to see or talk to Anne again by children’s services. I wasn’t surprised nor was I distressed. What good could I bring her? And besides, what would I say to her?
“Hey, I’m sorry about killing your mom. Don’t tell anyone, okay?”
Yeah, right.
I tried to stay sober after that. I really did. But after so many years of using alcohol to escape my reality, it felt too difficult to give up the drink. I wanted it – I needed it. I needed that extra push in the morning, and like a bedtime story for a child, I couldn’t sleep without a drink.
So my drinking continued until I was caught once again with impaired drinking. This time I was slapped with a larger fine, my driver’s license was suspended for two years, and I had to attend mandatory Alcoholic Anonymous meetings. I quite literally had nothing in my life left. I was being evicted from the apartment Maria, Anne, and I had lived in. I had no job to speak of. And I had just been caught drinking and driving again.
By court order and whatever will power I had left, I quit drinking and acquired a job. Of course, with my record and lack of education, the only available job was grocery bagging. So that is where I am now. I suppose my self pity should be unheard of – I’m the only one to blame for how my life turned out. I’m the one who got myself here.
Sometimes I wonder where it all went wrong: Max and Michael’s death? Anne’s birth? Departing Roswell after graduation? Maybe when Max healed me? Or perhaps, the problem was being born at all.
When I was younger, I would have never imagined my life turning out this way. I was a perfectionist and it gained me the respect of friends, teachers, and adults alike. I was intelligent yet fun. I was creative yet logical. I was well balanced. People even told me so, praising me for all of my accomplishments.
Where did I go wrong?
Then again, the world is a completely different place outside of high school. For a perfectionist like I used to be, the one thing that always pushed me to go higher was that people expected me to. But outside of high school – well, no one cares. No one cares if you can write an amazing essay on Shakespeare’s Hamlet. No one cares if you can reiterate the periodic table without pausing. No one cares if you were the prettiest or most intelligent girl in high school.
Perhaps without that force pushing me forward, I stood still while the world happened around me.
Regardless, I’m here on this planet for as long as it takes my body to break down, which I suspect won’t be too long. After years of self inflicted abuse, my mind and my body are exhausted. So until oblivion swallows me whole, I’ll find a new way to push myself forward. Not praise from others or alcohol from a bottle.
Maybe just faith in mankind will guide me home.