DIOMEDES WAS WRONG ABOUT IT SNOWING. It didnโt snow; instead it started raining heavily that afternoon. A storm with angry drumbeats of thunder and lightning flashes.
I waited for Alicia in the therapy room, watching the rain batter the window.
I felt weary and depressed. The whole thing had been a waste of time. I had lost Alicia before I could help her; now I never would.
A knock at the door. Yuri escorted Alicia into the therapy room. She looked worse than I expected. She was pale, ashen, ghostlike. She moved clumsily, and her right leg trembled nonstop. Fucking Christian, I thoughtโ she was drugged out of her mind.
There was a long pause after Yuri left. Alicia didnโt look at me.
Eventually I spoke. Loudly and clearly, to make sure she understood. โAlicia. Iโm sorry you were put in seclusion. Iโm sorry you had to go
through that.โ No reaction.
I hesitated. โIโm afraid that because of what you did to Elif, our therapy has been terminated. This wasnโt my decisionโfar from itโbut thereโs nothing I can do about it. Iโd like to offer you this opportunity to talk about what happened, to explain your attack on Elif. And express the remorse Iโm sure youโre feeling.โ
Alicia said nothing. I wasnโt sure my words were penetrating her medicated haze.
โIโll tell you how I feel. I feel angry, to be honest. I feel angry that our work is ending before weโve even properly begunโand I feel angry that you didnโt try harder.โ
Aliciaโs head moved. Her eyes stared into mine.
โYouโre afraid, I know that. Iโve been trying to help youโbut you wonโt let me. And now I donโt know what to do.โ
I fell silent, defeated.
Then Alicia did something I will never forget.
She held out her trembling hand toward me. She was clutching somethingโa small leatherbound notebook.
โWhatโs that?โ
No reply. She kept holding it out.
I peered at it, curious. โDo you want me to take it?โ
No response. I hesitated and gently took the notebook from her fluttering fingers. I opened it and thumbed through the pages. It was a handwritten diary, a journal.
Aliciaโs journal.
Judging by the handwriting, it was written in a chaotic state of mind, particularly the last pages, where the writing was barely legibleโarrows connecting different paragraphs written in different angles across the page, doodles and drawings taking over some pages, flowers growing into vines, covering what had been written and making it almost indecipherable.
I looked at Alicia, burning with curiosity. โWhat do you want me to do with this?โ
The question was quite unnecessary. It was obvious what Alicia wanted. She wanted me to read it.