Chapter 15 - The Abused
The Abused is a psychological thriller about nine addicts who go to rehab only to have one of them start murdering the others. The novel is set to release in Fall 2016.
Reader discretion is advised. Some of this content maybe profane and not appropriate for readers under the age if 18.
15
After
coming out of detox, Kevin was shaken. He had detoxed on his own many weeks
before arriving at rehab. He wasn’t really gay. He just liked sex and gender
didn’t matter to him. He thought of himself as more sophisticated than the
average guy. He had never had
enough money to go to school, but he had been good with engines and machines
and managed all right.
When he met his former wife he should have felt lucky to have this
educated, beautiful woman wanted him, but he was arrogant. He thought she was lucky. He bragged to his buddies
how this poor desperate chick wanted him. He had always been good with women,
acting like their best friends and listening to boring drama-queen shit about
friends and boyfriends. Merry though was always quiet and reserved. She never
whined about stuff. He liked that about her. At the same time her coldness was
hard to deal with, too. She could be nice and all, but she had this layer of
iciness about her.
He wondered about her every now and then. Jude had quit talking to him
after their drug bust. She had so expeditiously divorced him and never contact
him again. He wasn’t surprised. She could be decisive and quick when she felt
burned. Once her sister lied about their mom’s Christmas present, a food
processor, costing $200 to get an extra $100 out of Merry, and when Merry
caught on she never spoke to Carrie again. Of course Kevin knew they had a long
contentious history. She had shared some of her tortured childhood with him,
but judging by her ability to detach and cold people out, he figured the abuse
went pretty deep.
He received her alimony checks each month right on time without
question. It made him feel almost bad in a way. He knew it was court-ordered,
but the way the checks so faithfully arrived made him think somewhere in that
ice-cold heart of hers she still felt something … maybe. He honestly couldn’t
say. Yet the checks arrived on time each month. With two grand in his account
it allowed him freedom to work at his leisure. But truthfully it had given him
too much freedom, which is how he wound up getting deeper into drugs.
The addiction had become at first a welcome friend to ease his mind from
daily burdens. Drugs and booze made him feel good. It made him forget the
ever-growing coldness in his marriage. It made him able to tune out Merry when
she asked him to help around the house or at least put his shit away after
using it. His drug-fueled binges left his memory foggy, but he did recall taking
a Bic razor to her throat once and then laughing like a hyena at the
ridiculousness of a cheap plastic razor being able to do any real damage. Merry
though was shockingly distant and unaffected. She just stared coldly at him
while he cackled on and on. He thought she would make a great dictator or
something. Nothing ever seemed to bother “her-coldness”.
And then he had started up with Jude, a man. Most women got confused by
the whole homosexual thing. It’s hard to compete with genitalia that is unlike
your own. Merry though – she had no fight in her when she caught him with Jude.
He saw the light in her eyes dim even more. Jude was callous but also insecure.
He had worried that Kevin’s meal ticket would leave them high and dry, and that
Kevin would go back after her. Jude had fantasies of a gay life with his lover
at his side. And really Jude wasn’t such a bad guy. He was handsome and caring
when he wanted to be. On Valentine’s day he bought Kevin those “tickets” where
you pick one and have to do that to your guy. The first one was “suck his cock”
and Kevin obliged even though it made him gag sometimes. He refused to swallow
as that was so “gay” to which Jude cracked up.
“What you’re not gay?” he had chuckled.
“No, I’m pansexual,” Kevin had flatly replied.
Jude’s response was continued laughter. He thought pansexual sounded
like an airplane ride straight to “Gay-ville” as he referred to places like The
Castro or Guerneville in the redwoods. Kevin remembered a particularly
perverse and fun weekend spent in the redwoods running naked along this stream
bed that was empty (it was late summer), but absolutely beautiful with ferns
and plant life lined along the edge of it. He remembered the banana slug and
even the snake hidden in a tree trunk all coiled up.
His memories of Jude were also corrupted by drug-fueled homosexual
orgies with Jude’s various buddies. By this time his marriage to Merry had
transformed into a farce. They quit having sex even though mechanically
speaking it was pretty good sex. But when Kevin tried to connect with Merry on
an emotional level, she was vacant. He would stare into her dead eyes and hope
for something more than physical relief to show her feelings and pleasures. All
she did was moan and close her eyes to her husband. She could blame him all she
wanted, but she had checked out of the relationship long before Jude came
along.
Jude wanted them to do a commitment ceremony, but Kevin wasn’t
interested in the gay lifestyle. He liked Jude, but his preference really was
with women. He did want a family, too. And since had been raised by a
Protestant minister, he felt a slight twinge of disgust at the idea of raising
children with another man. Of course, he never mentioned this feeling to Jude,
but he figured Jude might have sensed it. So when they started doing heavier
and heavier drugs, Kevin felt sure Jude was truly checking further out of their
relationship, too. The drugs enabled them both to avoid reality. And once Merry
was gone, Kevin no longer had any barrier to going as deep into the drugs as he
preferred.
Now here he was in rehab. Jude was gone. Merry was gone before Jude. His
life was vacant, and he was facing forward as a sober man with a shameful past.
But he often smirked, he still had his charm to get by on. He could charm any
woman and even the most devout lesbian out of her panties. He was good looking
and sweet when he wanted to be.
On this day, he was supposed to start individual therapy with Craig. He
liked Craig. He seemed like a down-to-earth guy who understood more about drugs
than most. His frankness in their group therapy made Kevin feel like there was
someone out there who could maybe help him stop. He did want to stop. Drugs
were ruining his life, and he hoped to shape up and find normalcy, whatever
that was for him and no one else.
He found himself knocking on Craig’s office door and being asked to come
in. He walked hesitantly in and sat down on the toupe-colored sofa. He noticed
all these shrinks had sofas and blankets. What were the blankets for? So you
could cuddle your “blankie” while you confessed your sins, he thought to
himself. Craig motioned to him to have a seat, and Kevin plopped down. Craig
walked from behind his desk and took a seat in the chair across from the sofa.
“Hey, you know they put me in detox, man.”
“They put most people in detox.”
“Yeah, well I was straight, dude, and that sucked. These drug heads were
like screaming at the top of their lungs and shit. I was like the only sober
dude in the joint.”
Craig glanced at his file. “Hmm… well our executive director ordered
it.”
“Why? And who the fuck is this person?”
“You don’t get to meet her. In fact, she doesn’t work with patients and
she prefers no close contact to keep her objectivity with you all.”
“And she gets to tell me where to go?”
“Yup.”
“Someone who won’t even look at my face?”
“Yup.”
“Who the fuck makes these stupid rules. What is the dude like Ghandi –
too good for the rest of us addicts?”
“He is a she.”
“Oh…”
“Look, let’s talk about you. How are you doing.”
“I hate this shit.”
“You will for a long time.”
“How long?”
“The rest of your life.”
“Are you fucking serious.”
“As a heartbeat.”
“Fuck…”
“You know they want you to cut the profanity, right? It’s part of
self-respect.”
“How’s that? And who f— … shi— crap, whatever! Cares!”
“We do. We are going to retrain your way of being. We want you to value
yourself. To love yourself enough that you would never think to pollute the
body, the temple God gave you, with drugs. And when we’re through we hope you
will return a reformed man to society. A man who understands what it means to
be a man. And how a man should behave and treat others. We don’t promise for
one minute you will ever stop craving the drug, but what we do promise is it
will get easier over time. And we’ll give you the tools to help.”
Kevin shifted uncomfortably. “Yeah, okay.”
“All right let’s see … you ready to relearn your life skills?” asked
Kevin as he sat forward and clapped and rubbed his hands together.
“F— um, yeah.”
“Good.”
“What?”
“Turn to step one of the 12 Steps. ‘Admit that you, of yourself, are
powerless to overcome your addiction and that you life has become
unmanageable.’”
“Ah, come on doc. Only the cops think that.”
“Oh, so your life was so great that you got busted, thrown in jail, and
wound up here. Is that right?”
“No,” said Kevin sullenly.
“The first step doesn’t mean you’re less of a man, Kevin. It means
you’re actually more of a man by
admitting you’ve got a real problem. Do you?”
“Do I what?”
Craig stared at him.
“Yeah, yeah, fine.”
“You have to mean it for this program to work.”
“F— um, okay … yeah! Yeah, yeah!”
Craig got up and opened the door. Kevin looked at him in confusion.
“I want you to go. Go to the rose garden. Sit in the bastion of nature.
And I want you to think about the first step. And when I see you tomorrow, we
are going to discuss it.”
Kevin stared at him. He reluctantly got up.
“I fu— shi—, huh!” he sighed searching for better words. “I hate roses.”
“Grow to love them. And don’t forget to study the aphids. No go.”
Kevin looked once more at Craig. “Aphids? Are you for real?”
Craig just stared at him. Kevin had a fleeting thought of blowing him to
get out of the rose garden. This thought almost made him chuckle aloud. He
miserably obeyed his new “master,” which is how he would come to think about Craig,
the counselor, the therapist, the guy who told him to sit in a fucking rose
garden to search for answers.
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