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Chapter no 40

If Only I Had Told Her

This looks like an AA meeting.

Not that Iโ€™ve ever been to an Alcoholics Anonymous meeting, but this scene fits the depictions of books and movies. Weโ€™re in a room in the hospital basement, which makes it both a little too cold and too humid, creating a creeping chill that makes me hug my elbows. Weโ€™re sitting in a circle of folding chairs. By โ€œwe,โ€ I mean myself and twelve other people, all older than me, except for one girl whoโ€™s around my age. She arrived late, in pajama pants and reeking of cigarettes. Her shouted apology as she grabbed another folding chair sounded cursory and insincere.

Iโ€™m trying to focus on the woman whoโ€™s speaking; sheโ€™s describing how much she misses her work as a public defender in the juvenile system, though the job gave her PTSD. I kept thinking that she was going to describe being attacked or something, but it seems the system did it to her, the unrelenting waves of children whoโ€™d never been given a chance passing through her office, then being funneled on.

Iโ€™m trying to listen to her talk about the times the job had given her joy, when sheโ€™d won motions to clear someoneโ€™s record or keep someone out of the adult system. The girl my age sits directly across from me and fidgets in her seat, playing with her dirty-blond hair and smacking her gum. I watch

her face as her bored gaze wanders around the circle. I avert my eyes before she reaches me.

โ€œAnd I worry about the kids,โ€ the lawyer is saying. โ€œThe kids I defended before and the kids Iโ€™m not defending now that I do contract law.โ€ Her voice quavers. โ€œIs anyone listening to them? Do they have anyone who cares about their stories?โ€

I look back at the new girl to see if sheโ€™s listening, but sheโ€™s staring straight me, and she doesnโ€™t look away. She cocks her head in what seems to be a greeting, but I turn and refocus on the lawyer, who has quietly started crying.

โ€œBut I canโ€™t go back. I canโ€™t face it. I tried for ten years, and it broke me, but sometimes I wish I could go back.โ€

From the other side of the circle, Dr Singh says, โ€œItโ€™s hard when the source of our trauma is also a place where we once had joy or a sense of identity. Does anyone have thoughts on what Marcia or someone like her should do with those feelings, hmm?โ€

โ€œYou should be focusing on the kids you did help,โ€ the blond girl says loudly. โ€œLike, when I was in juvie, I wish Iโ€™d had a lawyer who had given a shit. Maybe Iโ€™d be in a better place now if youโ€™d been my lawyer.โ€

โ€œRemember language, Brittaney,โ€ Dr Singh says, his accent making her name three syllables.

โ€œBut like you said,โ€ Marcia says, โ€œmaybe you would be in a better place if Iโ€™d been your lawyer. Iโ€™m not putting kids in a better place anymore.โ€

Brittaney shrugs and smacks her gum. โ€œYou did what you could for as long as you could, and you canโ€™t anymore, so what else can you do?โ€ She shrugs again, as if the matter is settled.

โ€œWhat about the loss of identity that Marcia spoke about? Did that resonate with anyone else?โ€ Dr. Singh asks.

A former soldier named Carlos begins to speak, and the next half hour is more productive. We have another forty-five minutes to go when Dr. Singh

says we should take a bathroom break and stretch our legs.

The moment he says โ€œbathroom,โ€ I need it urgently, and I sprint out of my chair into the hallway, where the restroom is easy to find, thankfully.

When I come out of the stall, sheโ€™s waiting for me.

โ€œYouโ€™re pregnant, right?โ€ Brittaney says before Iโ€™ve reached the sinks. โ€œYes,โ€ I say, then I turn on the faucet.

โ€œI knew it!โ€ Brittaney crows. โ€œI can always tell. Sometimes I know and the girl doesnโ€™t even know it. Iโ€™m like that. Youโ€™re what, four months?โ€ She spits her gum into the trash can.

โ€œThree.โ€ Iโ€™m a little over three, but I donโ€™t owe her my medical information. I begin to rinse the soap from my hands.

โ€œGirl! You having twins then? Iโ€™m kidding! Youโ€™re not that big. Youโ€™re so tiny that youโ€™re showing early. Not that most people could even tell, but whatever. When Iโ€™m pregnant, I donโ€™t show until Iโ€™m almost seven months gone.โ€

โ€œHow many times have you been pregnant?โ€ I canโ€™t help asking. Our eyes meet in the mirror.

โ€œThree. But I miscarried once, and I just got the three-year-old with me now.โ€ She looks away from my gaze and shrugs, similarly to when sheโ€™d been talking about the lawyerโ€™s PTSD.

โ€œIโ€™m sorry,โ€ I say. Iโ€™m as shocked by the statement as I am by the way it has been relayed, as if it is of little consequence.

โ€œOh, it was real early, and the baby daddy was an asshole, soโ€ฆโ€ She shrugs again.

Iโ€™m drying my hands and praying that she wonโ€™t ask me about my โ€œbaby daddyโ€ when she says, โ€œSo youโ€™re what, eighteen?โ€

โ€œNineteen.โ€ I toss the brown paper towel into the trash can and turn back to her.

โ€œI just turned twenty-one,โ€ she says proudly. โ€œItโ€™s nice to see someone here besides the old fogies.โ€

โ€œYeah,โ€ I say as I head to the door. I donโ€™t need a friend here, and I donโ€™t imagine we have anything in common.

Brittaney chatters at me about all the pregnancies sheโ€™s successfully predicted in the past the whole way back to the room and our folding chairs. Before sitting down, she assures me that sheโ€™ll be able to tell me the s*x of my baby if I give her a few more weeks.

โ€œCool,โ€ I say and am relieved that Dr. Singh is calling the room to order. I manage to not meet her eyes for the rest of the group therapy session, and afterward I quickly leave and find Mom in the waiting room, ready to escort me to the car. The same chill Iโ€™d felt in the basement greets me outside. My jacket is too tight around my middle. Iโ€™m going to have to let Mom buy me a maternity coat before much longer.

โ€œHow was it?โ€ she asks. โ€œDo you think it will be helpful?โ€ โ€œI donโ€™t know,โ€ I say.

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