JOEY
“JOSEPH,ย you lost your mother in the most tragic of circumstances, and it’s okay to grieve for her.”
No shit, Sherlock.
“It’s okay to miss your mother.”
Keeping my back poker straight, I stared back at the doctor, or therapist, or counselor, or whatever the fuck she was, and waited for her to be done.
All I needed from this woman was to test my piss and stick a needle in my arm. To take all the samples she needed from my body but leave my head the hell alone.
“Joseph.” A heavy sigh escaped her parted lips. “Part of your treatment plan is participating in therapy.”
“Iโm here, arenโt I?” came my sharp reply, knowing what I had regrettably signed up for.
“Are you?” she countered, adjusting her glasses. “Are you here?”
“I donโt know.” Shrugging, I raised my hands and gestured to myself. “You tell me, doc.”
โSeems to me like your mind is elsewhere. Back in Ballylaggin, perhaps? According to your file, your long-term girlfriendโฆโ she paused to read over her notes before struggling to sound out her name, โA-oi-eefโฆโ
“Aoife,” I corrected, knees bopping anxiously now. โItโs pronounced E- fa.โ Shrugging, I added, โItโs basically Eva in Irish.โ
โThank you,โ she replied with a rueful smile. โIโm from South Dakota, and while I find Gaelic names beautiful, they can be extremely hard to interpret on paper.โ
I shrugged. โIt makes sense to me.โ
“According to your file, you andย Aoifeย are expecting your first child โโ “Can we not?” I muttered, hardly able to sit still now, as a tsunami of guilt
and self-loathing flooded my body. “I donโtโฆ I can’tโฆ I’m not talking about
her.โ
“Why not, Joseph?”
“Because she hasย nothingย to do with this.” I gestured angrily to the room I had been holed up in for the past god knows how long, heart bucking wildly in my chest. “Aoife is nothing like me.”
“Nothing like you?” “She’s not a fuck up.”
“So, you consider yourself to be a fuck up?”
“Shit, I donโt know, doctor.” I narrowed my eyes, tone dripping with sarcasm. “What else would you call someone like me?”
“Traumatized?” she offered kindly. “A victim of extreme violence.” “I amย notย a victim.”
“You’re not?”
“No. I’m not.” I glowered at her. “I’m the one who got expelled from school before I could do my leaving cert, Iโm the one with fuck all in the line of qualifications.ย Heย didnโt do that to me.ย Iย did that to me.” Blowing out a ragged breath, I hissed, “And Iโm the one who’s taken the only person whoโs ever genuinely loved me down with me. Yeah, Aoife’s pregnant, and not only does she have to deal with that alone, while I’m holed up here like the pathetic fuck-up I am, but she also has to do it with the label that comes with havingย myย baby.”
“You sound angry with her.”
“I’m angry with myself,” I spat, legs shaking restlessly, hands balled into fists on my thighs. “I’m pissed that I took her down with meโฆ” Words breaking off, I exhaled another shaky breath and glared at her. “I see what you did just there โ bringing her up like that.”
“Yes.” The doctor smirked. “She certainly got you talking, didnโt she?”
โWhen she told me that she was pregnant, I wasn’t present,โ I heard myself admit. โI’d been gone a long time before the pregnancy. All the appointments and scans, I’d only been there in the flesh. She was scared and alone, depending on me to help her, and all I did was make it worse for her.โ
โBut she didnโt leave,โ the doctor surmised. โShe didnโt give up on you.โ โNo,โ I replied. โShe didnโt.โ
โWhy do you think that is, Joseph?โ
โBecause sheโs the most stubborn person youโll ever meet,โ I muttered, rubbing my jaw. โBecause Molloy doesnโt quit on anything, even when itโs not good for her.โ
โYou include yourself in that statement?โ โLook at me,โ I deadpanned.
โI am,โ the doctor replied calmly. โIโm looking at a young man, who,
despite all of the trauma and horror heโs had to endure, has continued to focus solely on recovering and returning to her.โ She smiled. โIโd say that makes this Aoife Molloy an excellent judge of character.โ
โHm.โ
โMaybe she needs you?โ
โShe needs to run a mile in the opposite direction of me.โ
โBut thatโs not an option, is it?โ she probed. โYour child deserves a father, and you of all people, know how influential that role can be in a childโs life.โ
You’re just like me, boy.
You’ll do more harm than good.
โHeโs in your head again, isnโt he?โ the doctor noted. โYour father?โ Fuck, she was intuitive.
โI donโt know if I can break the cycle, but I want to.โ Needing to move, I stood up and paced the small confines of my room. โI want to so fucking badly that it keeps me up at night. It’s why I went back that night. Why I let Lizzie talk me off the edge. Why I didnโt throw myself off that bridge. Why I’m here right now.โ Frustrated and anxious, I cracked my knuckles and walked to the window. โI know I’m not good enough, but Iย wantย to be.โ
“How are the withdrawals?” she changed the subject by asking. The withdrawals were the worst.
For days, I felt numb, angry and lacking in energy.
I didnโt want to speak to anyone, didnโt want to lift a finger.
โBetter,โ I told her, eyes locked on a group planting flowers in the gardens outside. โManageable.โ
โThat must be a relief for you.โ โWill the memories fade?โ
โDoubtful. But theyย willย become manageable. Bearable. You’ll find a middle ground on which to rebuild your foundations. You’ll learn to cope. Thatโs why youโre here. To rebuild.โ
โI can still smell her.โ I released a shuddering breath. โI can still smell him.โ
Deciding it was too painful to breathe, I kept poker stiff, nostrils and airways on lockdown, waiting for the wave of sorrow to pass.
Praying it would do so quickly. Finally, it did.
โWhen can I call her?โ Turning back to face the doctor, I leaned against
the windowsill at my back and asked, โI need to talk to her.โ โNot yet.โ
โIโve never not spoken to her in this long,โ I admitted, feeling pissed off, but knowing that this woman was relentless. She wouldnโt bend. God knows, Iโd tried enough times. โPlease, doc. Sheโs my best friend.โ





