My mother sits down on my bed. I am lying on my side, facing the window. If I ignore her, she might go away.
โAutumn?โ she says. Her voice is low. She thinks I am sleeping. โAutumn, we need to talk.โ She runs her fingers through my hair and I let her; it feels good. She keeps stroking and the bristling resentment relaxes. I sigh.
โAbout what?โ โCan you sit up?โ โIโm tired.โ
โIโm worried about you.โ I shake her hands from my hair and sit up. โIโm fine,โ I say. โIโm just having trouble sleeping at night. It will be
okay when winter is over. I just have to get through winter.โ
โI think itโs more than that, honey,โ she says. โIโve made an appointment with Dr. Singh.โ
At first, the statement is so ordinary that I do not know why she is telling me. Dr. Singh is her psychiatrist. She sees him every few months. But she keeps looking at me.
โFor me?โ I say. She nods and tries to touch my hair again. I flinch away again.
โIโm not depressed,โ I say. โYou are.โ โI know the symptoms,โ she says.
โNo. Youโre just projecting on me. Everything is fine. When itโs warm again, Iโll feel better. Thatโs the only thing thatโs wrong.โ
โIโll be picking you up early on Thursday,โ she says, and she starts to get up.
โI donโt need drugs,โ I say. She closes the door behind her. Her footsteps going down the stairs are the only sound. At dinner she says nothing, and the next day she lets me sleep.
***
The call from the office comes fifteen minutes into English class. I begin to pack my bag as soon as the intercom beeps. I want it all to be over already.
โThere isnโt any homework,โ Mrs. Stevens says. โIs there somebody you can get notes from?โ
โYes,โ I say. I am standing now.
โWho?โ she says. This is why I do not like her. I suspect her of suspecting things of me.
โFinn,โ I say, and then I remember Jamie and Sasha have this class too. It wouldnโt help to take it back now. Mrs. Stevens looks surprised. She likes Finny; perhaps she doesnโt think he would associate with someone like me. The scattered whispers I hear tell me that a few of my classmates are surprised too.
โI can drop them by tonight,โ Finny says. I wonder if he is sort of defending me. I donโt look at either of them when I leave.
***
My mother is sitting in the office in a tailored suit with leather pumps and a clutch purse in her lap. Her ankles are crossed and the secretary is laughing with her. She rises when I open the door and smiles at me.
โHave a nice day,โ the secretary says to her, smiling too. Iโm sure she could never imagine the rest of my motherโs life, the medication and the fights with my father, her times in the hospital. Sometimes I admire my motherโs ability to appear perfect; today I hate it.
My motherโs shoes click evenly on the linoleum as we walk down the hall.
โWhat class are you missing?โ she asks. โEnglish.โ
โOh. Sorry. Too bad it couldnโt have been math,โ she says. I shrug. โI love you,โ she says.
โMom,โ I say. She doesnโt say anything else.
***
The office my mother brings me to has the smallest waiting room I have ever sat inside. It reminds me of my motherโs walk-in closet, the small, windowless room where Finny and I turned out the lights and told ghost stories in the middle of the day. I sit down on one of the padded plastic chairs and my mother tells the nurse my name. I flinch at the sound; I do not belong here. Two chairs down from me, an old man is bouncing his left leg, then his right, back and forth. Every once in a while, he snaps his fingers as if someone just called bingo before him.
โDamn,โ he mumbles. Across the room from us, a large black woman is weeping silently. Both of her fists are stuffed with tissues. Still sobbing, she reaches in her purse and takes out a piece of gum, scattering tissues over the gray carpet.
My mother sits down next to me and crosses her ankles. โItโll be a bit,โ she says. โHeโs running a little late.โ She picks up aย Newsweekย and begins reading.
I look down at the table. Most of the magazines are for parents or golfers. While Iโm looking, a man gets up and takes a kidsโย Highlightsย magazine off the table and sits back down.
โMom?โ I whisper. She looks at me and raises her eyebrows. โAll these people are really weird.โ My mother covers her mouth and laughs silently.
โHoney,โ she whispers, โwhat did you expect? And what do you think they would say about the girl with the tiara and ripped knee socks?โ I scowl
at her and she goes back to reading.
โAw, shucks,โ the old man mumbles.
***
โAutumn?โ a nurse in blue says. I stand up, suddenly feeling exposed in front of the others. The old man and the crying lady have been replaced by a girl my age and her cranky baby.
โIโll be waiting,โ my mother says. I do not look at her. The nurse leads me to a narrow hallway. A small Indian man is waiting for me.
โAutumn?โ he asks. I nod. He pronounces my name โAh-tim.โ โAh,โ he says, โcome with me.โ His accent is thick, like a character in a movie, like Iโve never heard in real life before. We walk to an office even smaller than the waiting room, and crowded with a desk, a bookshelf, a filing cabinet, and a small chair. He motions for me to sit in the small chair. Iโm disappointed that it isnโt a couch. He sits down at the desk and opens a file.
โSo, Autumn,โ he says. โWhat brings you here today?โ โMy mother.โ
โMmhhm, and why is that?โ
โShe says sheโs worried about me.โ
โHmm,โ Dr. Singh says. I look back at him. โWhy do you wear the tiara?โ
โBecause I like it.โ
โI see, and how long has this been going on?โ โI donโt know. A couple of years.โ
โAre you frightened to be without it? Anxious or worried?โ
โNo.โ We stare at each other for another few moments. He writes something down.
โHow is your appetite, Autumn?โ โFine,โ I say.
โReally? What did you eat today?โ It sounds like โetโ when he says it. โMy mother made me oatmeal for breakfastโโ
โAnd did you eat the oatmeal your mother made you?โ โYes.โ
He makes some notes on his papers. I watch him. His handwriting is too small and messy for me to read.
โAutumn,โ he says. He stands. โCome over here and I will check your weight.โ He leads me over to a small scale. The scale is covered with the name of a drug Iโve seen advertised on TV. I stand on the scale and he makes some notes.
โI donโt have an eating disorder,โ I say.
โMmhhm,โ he says and makes more notes. We sit down again. โWhy is your mother worried about you?โ he says.
โShe thinks Iโm depressed,โ I say. โLike her.โ
โLike her?โ He gives me an intent look as if Iโve let something slip. โSheโs one of your patients,โ I say.
โAh,โ he flips through some papers in the file. He reads something, looks at me, then reads again. Finally he closes the file.
โAnd so tell me about your depression, Autumn.โ
โI donโt think Iโm depressed.โ He cocks his head to the side. โAre you sad?โ he says.
โWell, yeah.โ
โWhat is making you sad?โ โI donโt know,โ I say.
โYou do not know?โ he says. I shake my head and look at the floor. He writes something down and keeps talking. It is the longest he has looked away from me this whole time.
โHow long have you been sad?โ
โA few months,โ I say. โItโs winter.โ โAre you sad every day?โ
โPretty much, but thatโs not that weird, right? I mean, itโs not that big of a deal.โ
โDo you have increased feelings of anger, Autumn?โ โI donโt know.โ
โAre you finding yourself irritated more often?โ โWell, yeah,โ I say.
โAre you anxious or worried?โ โNo.โ
โHow are you sleeping?โ
โOkay, I guess,โ I say. โI sleep a lot, but Iโve also been waking up early in the morning.โ
โAnd you cannot get back to sleep?โ he says. โNo,โ I say.
He nods. Dr. Singh lays his pen down and looks at me. โHave you had any suicidal thoughts? Do you wish to die?
โNo,โ I say.
โAre you sure, Autumn?โ
I nod slowly. The question frightens me.
He continues, โDepression affects the sleeping patterns. Some sleep more and some sleep less. Very often, the people who wake up very early in the mornings are the ones who have suicidal thoughts.โ
โBut Iโm not depressed,โ I say.
โYou think you deserve to be sad,โ he says. There is a moment of silence as we look at each other. โYou think it is okay for you to be sad every day. But it is not okay. And you do not deserve it.โ
I look down at the floor, even though I know he has already seen the tears stinging my eyes.
โIt is not shameful,โ he says. โIt is okay.โ
I nod. I hear his pen scratching against the paper as he writes again.
***
My mother takes the prescription from me without saying anything and we drive by the drugstore before we go home. At first, she is constantly asking me if I took my medicine, then it drops off and no one says anything about it ever.
After a few weeks, I start to feel better, but whether it is because of the pills or because spring has finally come, I am not sure.