Precious Monster
Introduction:
Somethingâs wrong with Lily.
-Lewis Carroll, âAliceâs Adventures in Wonderlandâ
***
âI know people are afraid of me,â Lily said. âAnd I understand why. So I wonât take it personally if you prefer not to work with me directly.â
Asheâs pen scratched across her notebook. She looked up only occasionally. The room was blank, white, antiseptic, marked only by the dull sheen of the one-way mirror. Lily wore a hospital gown; it was the smallest size the clinic had but it hung off her like a sail. She had electric blue eyes and shiny copper hair and freckles and looked exactly like a ragdoll. She toyed with a loose thread while she talked.
âIâm just saying that if you want to talk with me through the glass partition or even through my cell window, thatâs all right,â Lily continued. âYou wonât hurt my feelings. Most of the doctors donât like being in the same room with me. Some of them donât even like to look at me on the monitors.â
âHow does that make you feel?â Ashe said.
âItâs okay,â Lily said. Her voice brimmed with geniality. âI wouldnât want to be around someone like me either.â
âWhat do you mean âsomeone like youâ?â The pen scratched some more.
âDonât you know?â Lily said. âYou must know, since you read my file, and anyway, everyone knows.â She smiled; it was a tiny, beautiful, completely sincere gesture.
âIâm a monster,â she said.
***
Ashe rewound the video and played it a second time. The director of medicine sat at her desk on the other side of the office and the assistant director (who, like Ashe, was new, having arrived that very morning) hovered over her.
âMy God,â he said, âsheâs as bad of a mess as everyone says.â
Ashe ignored him, focusing on the recording.
âWho was the first person to use that word with you: âmonsterâ?â she heard herself say.
âMy mother,â Lilyâs voice said. âOr maybe my father? It had to be one of them. Iâm sure itâs in the file.â
âWhere are your parents now?â
âPapa hung himself. Thatâs when I wasâŠâ On the video she furrowed her brow, tugging one ruby-red lip in thought. âFive. Yes, five years old. And then Mama brought me here. Sheâs dead now too.â
âLily, do you think youâre dangerous?â
âOh yes.â
âHave you ever killed anyone?â
âGoodness gracious, no!â
âEver hurt anyone?â
âOf course not. And I never would. Oh no. The very thought!â
âBut you still say youâre dangerous?â
âTerribly dangerous. Nobody should even come near me.â She sounded somehow pleased. Ashe turned the tape off. She finished making notes before turning to the director.
âHow long has she been like this?â Ashe said.
âAll her life. All her life here, anyway, which is all the life she really ever had,â the director said. âHer parents were terrified of her. I really think they might have killed her if we hadnât agreed to commit her here full-time. It was that bad.â
âWhat were they frightened of?â
âThey never would say. They just called her a monster.â
âDid anyone ever suggest treating them instead of her?â asked the AD.
âOf course. We had spectacular arguments over it and they were under investigation from the child welfare services. Then they died and settled the matter.â
Ashe fanned herself with Lilyâs file. It was almost too thick to hold. âAnd in fifteen years sheâs had how many primary physicians?â
âAt least a dozen,â the director said. âMost of them donât last a year. Itâs a troubling case. It takes a heavy toll.â
âIâve talked to the clinic staff and what she says is true,â the AD chimed in. âMost of them donât even like being around her. She makes themâŠuncomfortable.â
âAnd how does she make you feel?â Ashe asked.
The AD squirmed.
âThatâs why youâre here,â the director said. She moved to the window and her view of clinicâs western wing, where Lily lived. âIâve spent my entire career looking for someone who can get through to her. If you can do thatâŠwell, I suppose that would just about be a miracle.â
She closed the blinds.
âAnd for a miracle worker, a lot of doors can open up. A lot of things that, under normal circumstances, couldnât be done, would suddenly become quite a bit moreâŠâ She hesitated. The AD chimed in:
âPlausible.â
Ashe felt a little thrill. She gathered up her notes, and the file, and the tapes.
âOur facilities are entirely at your disposal,â the director said. âYouâre here as an outside specialist, which means you report to me and no one else. The only things we canât give you access to are the notes left by Lilyâs previous primaries. We had an agreement with each of them.â
âBut how will I treat her without knowing her full case history?â
âIf we see you pursuing a dead end weâll notify you. Lilyâs case is sensitive. Every treating physician needs to feel they have complete freedom to try unorthodox methods. A privilege youâll enjoy now, too.â
âIâŠunderstand,â Ashe said. âAnd I want to sayââ
âSave it,â said the director. Then, perhaps seeing how startled Ashe was, her voice softened a bit. âI meant, save it for later. After youâve worked with her for a while you might find that you donât want to thank me.â And she ushered Ashe out with a handshake and an oddly solemn âThank you.â
Ashe and the AD shared an awkward elevator ride down together. He tried to make small talk. It wasnât much of an effort. The clinic couldnât set Ashe up with quarters on the grounds, so instead they found her an apartment on the outskirts of the city, a 45-minute drive. Everything was still in boxes but she didnât bother to unpack, or even to eat (although she was famished) before playing the tapes again. This time she read back her notes from the interview as the tape ran, to assess her own reactions.
âHave you had a lot of doctors?â Ashe said on the tape.
âHow many is a lot?â Lily said.
âDid you like your other doctors?â
âI liked Dr. Benway. He was very kind,â Lily said. âBut heâs not here anymore.â
Here Ashe had put her notebook away. âLily, thereâs something I want you to know, and Iâm telling you because I think we should both be completely honest with one another.â
Lily folded her hands in her lap and looked attentive.
âYou should know that Iâm not a real doctor. Iâve had all the schooling but I could never pass the final examinations. The clinic brought me in to work with you because some of my university work made them think I might be able to help. Itâs a special arrangement.â
âThatâs kind of you,â Lily said. âAnd if you help me, will they let you become a real doctor?â
Ashe paused. âYes,â she said. âBut thatâs not the reason Iâm here. Iâm here because I really care about your case.â
âYouâre very sweet,â Lily said, and she gave a full smile now, a bright, dazzling, 50-watt movie star-style smile. âCan I still call you Dr. Ashe?â
âIf you want to. As long as you know itâs not true.â
Lily leaned in a little. âItâll be our little secret,â she said. And she giggled.
***
Lilyâs Diary, Day 1:
Dr. Ashe asked me to write things in this book every day. She says that she will not read it, and that neither will anyone else, but I do not understand why you would ever write words that no one was going to read. I think if you leave words around someone is bound to read them sooner or later. But I will do what Dr. Ashe asks. I do not think my doctor would ever tell me to do something that was not good for me.
I do not know what to write in a message to no one. Dr. Ashe said I should think of it as a message to myself, but what can I write that I do not already know? Dr. Ashe does not seem like the other doctors I have had. She says that she cannot help me, but she can teach me to help myself. She said that, with things like this book, she can teach me how to know everything about myself.
I do not think it would be good to know everything about myself. I think the idea is scary.
Dr. Ashe said that I should write my dreams. I do not have dreams. But I know that a dream can also mean a wish, so I wish that Dr. Ashe will find a way to help me before she has to stop being my doctor, like all the others.
***
Another awkward elevator ride with the AD. He had walked her to her car the previous night and asked her to dinner, and Ashe had said no. Now he said nothing except a polite âGood morning.â He checked his phone twice in the time it took to pass four floors.
âIs she waiting for me?â Ashe said.
âEverything is the way you wanted,â the AD said.
âThank you,â Ashe said, and was surprised to see him blush.
Lily was in the same interview room theyâd met in yesterday. A guard was posted at the door, and she knew two others would observe from behind the mirror. Lily always had three guards at all times, though Ashe did not know why. It was related to one of her previous doctors, and therefore the details were off-limits. The clinic staff considered guarding Lily the least desirable assignment, even worse than toilet duty.
Lily sat with hands folded, waiting. When she saw Ashe she lit up with another movie-star smile. She never blinks, Ashe realized. She suspected that if she watched the previous dayâs tapes very closely she would find that Lily blinked only once every two minutes, maybe less. Ashe sat. It was impossible to get comfortable in these chairs, but they didnât seem to give Lily any trouble. Maybe after a lifetime you can get used to anything, she thought.
âWeâre going to have a little talk,â she said. âYou can think of it as a kind of game.â Lily was attentive. âIâm going to ask you some questions about what you think you might do in the situation I describe, and you should answer honestly and as fast as you can. Do you understand?â
Lily nodded; her bangs bounced.
âAll right: If you saw a homeless person on the streetââ
âOh, I wouldnât be on the street,â Lily said.
âBut if you were?â
âI wouldnât be.â
âWhy not?â
âItâs too dangerous. For everyone else.â
Ashe pondered for a moment. âPretend that it wasnât. Pretend that everyone else in the world was like you.â
âYou meanâŠeveryone would be a monster?â
Ashe flinched at the word but let it slide, âYes. Imagine thatâs true for all of these.â
Lily looked as if this were a lot for her to take in, but she nodded again.
âImagine someone on the street asks you for money because he canât eat. Would you give it to him?â
âWhy would he have to eat?â
âPeople get hungry.â
âI donât. And you said everyone was like me in these questions.â
âYou would get hungry if the clinic ever forgot to feed you.â
âI donât eat. Ever.â
Ashe paused. She leafed through the file. There was a section at the end marked âphysical abnormalities.â She had only skimmed it before because she was sure it must be riddled with errors, based on what sheâd already seen. She looked for the section marked âdiet.â It consisted of only one word: None.
What in the world�
âNever mind then. Next question: If you were hurt and needed help, who is the first person you would call?â
âI donât think anyone would help me if I was really hurt. I think most of them would probably think it was a good thing.â She paused. âBut I guess if I really needed help I would call you.â
Ashe felt a headache coming on. âLetâs try something different: If you had a petââ
âI would kill it.â
Asheâs pencil broke. She looked up. Lily appeared calm. Asheâs throat was dry, so she swallowed. âWhy?â she said.
âIâm told that pets always die and when they do itâs very sad. So Iâd rather get it over with. It would be less sad the sooner it happened. Wouldnât it?â
Ashe skipped the next few questions.
âIf someone you didnât know gave you a hugââ
âA man or a woman?â
âA woman,â Ashe said, without thinking. âIf a woman you didnât know gave you a hug, what would you do?â
âI would wait for her to finish.â
âIs that all?â
Lily thought. âI would ask her if she wanted to have sex with me.â
Asheâs pencil broke again. Lilyâs eyes flicked down to it.
âThatâs something people do, right?â she said.
âSometimes,â Ashe said. She got a new pencil.
âHave you ever had sex?â
âIâyes, of course.â
âIâm told that almost everyone has sex but very few people talk about it. Isnât that silly? I assume if someone was willing to hug me she might be willing to have sex with me. Is that a good guess?â Before Ashe could answer Lily made a dismissive gesture. âOh, well, I guess it doesnât matter, since Iâll never find someone like that. Anyway, do you have any more questions, Dr. Ashe?â
Ashe looked at her notebook. Sheâd barely written a word. She flipped to a new page.
âNo. No, I think thatâs all the questions for today. Letâs move on to something elseâŠâ
Ashe suddenly remembered the men watching behind the mirror. They would have heard every word, and of course the whole thing was on tape now. She imagined then laughing and felt a crushing embarrassment. She imagined herself back in the classroom, staring at her blank exam sheet and realizing that, somehow, sheâd run out of time again. Just breathe, she told herself; itâs not an exam, itâs only your notes, and this isnât a classroom, itâs the clinic, and youâre not in school, and no one is judging you, and you can do this, you just have toâ
âItâll be all right.â
âWhat?â Asheâs eyes snapped open. She did not remember closing them. She felt sick with vertigo. How long had she been sitting here? It must only have been a few seconds if no one had intervened, but it was impossible to be sure. A few seconds and a few hours felt exactly the same when she had an attack. But Lily was still here, and in fact she was leaning in again in her precocious âWe have a secret,â kind of way.
âI said itâll be all right,â Lily said. âYou looked like something was bothering you. So I wanted to be reassuring.â She paused. âDid it work?â
Ashe blinked a few times. The vertigo subsided. She could breathe again. The room no longer felt so confining. She could look at the blank page without fear.
âYes,â she said. Then she smiled. âIâm okay. Thank you Lily. SometimesâŠsometimes everyone needs a little help, I suppose.â
Lily just smiled.
***
Lilyâs Diary, Day 23:
I had a thought that scared me today. I wondered what happens inside of a room when I am not there.
I used to think that when I was not in a room that it meant the room was not there anymore, but my old doctor explained that is not so. He said that people are still there even when I do not see them, and that they do things I do not know about. Today, when I left the room with Dr. Ashe, I became afraid. I realized that once I was gone from a room, anything could happen inside it.
The idea of all the things that could happen behind a closed door made me very afraid. It is the first time that I can ever remember being afraid of something besides myself. It is not a good feeling, but perhaps it means that what Dr. Ashe is doing is starting to work.
I wonder what words are in this book when I close the cover. The pages are all blank when I open them, but there could be anything at all written here when I am not looking at them anymore. Empty books may not be any safer than empty rooms, and words may do things I do not know about, just like people.
***
Five minutes in the door Ashe knew something was wrong. The orderlies huddled around the interview room like gossipy schoolgirls. When she approached they all stopped talking at once and would not meet her gaze. Rather than listen to their denials she walked past them. Whatever had them worked up it could only be something about Lily.
The room was different now. Someone had wheeled in a TV. Lily watched it with her back to the door. When Ashe saw what was on the screen she stopped, gaping. Then she closed the door again. The orderlies all looked away. One of them snickered.
âWho?â Ashe demanded. No answer.
âWho?â she said again.
âOrders from the AD,â one of them mumbled.
Ashe pushed past them and took the elevator to the next floor. She walked into his office without knocking and dropped Lilyâs file on the desk to get his attention. It made a hard smacking sound. He looked at her over his glasses. âAre you insane?â she said.
âYou tell me. Specialist.â
Ashe opened her mouth but immediately swallowed the words sheâd been about to say. Think this through, she told herself. Instead she sat down, folded her skirt over her knees, and took a deep breath before speaking again.
âTell me what happened,â she said.
âShe wouldnât stop asking the staff questions. Normally she rarely speaks to anyone. Since you started treating her sheâs become chatty.â
âThatâs a good sign.â
âMaybe. But the things she was askingâŠdisturbed people. Remember, no one is comfortable working with her anyway. She was asking veryâŠexplicit questions.â
âQuestions about sex?â
âYes.â
âWhatâs so bad about that?â
The AD picked up a memo and handed it to her. Ashe read a few lines, then grew pale.
âI went and spoke to her myself and she asked for the moviesâ the AD continued. âIt seemed like an efficient way to address herâŠcuriosity. Sheâs been watching them for eleven hours now.â
Unsure what to say, Ashe just made notes. When it was evident that the AD had nothing more to add she folded up her notebook and said, âThank you for keeping me updated on my patientâs status.â And she walked out.
Lily was still watching the television. Ashe closed the door and locked it. The orderlies had the keys and could open the door if they wanted to, but the locking was a signal. She wished she had curtains to put over the mirror as well. Lily raised a hand in greeting, but did not turn around. She sat less than a foot away from the TV screen.
Ashe regarded the image on it: a tanned woman bent over a table, legs splayed, while a man whose face was always out of the frame railed her from behind, his knees and thighs working like pistons while her sculpted backside bobbed in and out of view. The coils of her own hair piled up like a pillow beneath her head as she pressed her cheek to the tabletop and thenâ
The scene changed. Now it was a man and a woman on the beach, he sprawled out on a blanket and she crouched on top of him, riding his erect cock. The tide came in behind them. The woman (dark-haired with large, dark nipples) leaned all the way forward so that the camera could swivel around for a view of her cunt opening and sliding along the shaft ofâ
The scene changed again, and again, and again, never more than thirty seconds on any one. Now it was a woman giving a blowjob on the hood of a car in a deserted alley. Now two women showering, soaping and fondling each otherâs breasts with red lipstick smiles. Now a woman writhing on red satin sheets, a bizarrely obtrusive sex toy lodged between her legs. Lily was passive throughout it all. Ashe tapped her pencil against her notepad and said, âWhat do these films make you think about?â
âIâm not sure,â Lily said.
Now the screen showed a woman in a vinyl suit turning a lever while another woman, naked, writhed in simulated agony on the rack. Alligator clips adorned her pink nipples.
âWhich of these is sex?â Lily said.
âAll of them,â said Ashe. The volume on the television was turned down to the minimum but the performersâ voices were still audible:
âDo you like it, you filthy whore?â
âOh GodâŠoh God!â
âBut none of them are the same,â Lily said. âHow can you tell what is sex and what isnât?â
âThatâs why I asked how it makes you feel.â
The scene changed again: A redheaded woman (her hair a few shades off from Lilyâs) arched on all fours on a table with a man on either side, pivoting between them, one cock in her ass and the other in her mouth. Ashe realized, suddenly, that she had actually written the phrase âOne cock in her ass and the other in her mouth,â on her notepad as she watched, without meaning to, and scribbled it out.
âAll this just confuses me,â Lily said. She swiveled in her chair. âWhat about you?â she said. âHow do they make you feel?â
âWeâre not here to talk about me.â
âBut Iâd like to.â Lilyâs blue eyes gleamed. âYouâre normal. I want to know what normal people think about sex. Itâs important, isnât it?â
Ashe wasnât sure if it was Lilyâs gaze, the scenes on the television, or simple embarrassment, but she was having trouble catching her breath. Her voice sounded throaty. Another girl-girl scene was on now, an extreme close-up of one womanâs splayed thighs while a blond crouched between them with vibrator in hand. The blond licked her lips, then the plastic tip of the toy. Ashe was painfully aware of the glare from the one-way mirror and her ignorance of who was behind it. Rather than think about it, she concentrated on Lily. Only Lily mattered anyway.
âSex can be very important,â Ashe continued. Lily was attentive. More attentive than Ashe remembered her ever being before, actually. The TV speakers continued to punctuate their conversation:
âAhhh, yesâŠyesâŠohhhh, fuck, YES!â
âItâs an urge that lets you knowâŠwhen youâve found someone remarkable. Someone youâre willing to compromise yourself for.â
It sounded awful, but it just rolled right out of Asheâs mouth and Lily seemed to accept it. The screen changed to a woman, bent over and manacled to the ground, her ass flogged by offscreen assailants. Her screams approached an Aria-like pitch:
âOh, fuck, Iâve been badâŠIâve been so badâŠIâve been terrible, dirty, awful, and very, very, very, AH, God!â
âLike you?â Lily said. Asheâs mouth went dry. âYou told me to be willing to learn about myself. Thatâs something I never wanted to do, so thatâs compromising. And Iâve never had a doctor like you, so that means youâre remarkable. I think, if you werenât my doctor, youâre someone Iâd be attracted to.â
For a fleeting second Lilyâs little pink tongue flickered over her soft, juvenile lips; it was both alluring and obscene. âDo you think Iâm right, Dr. Ashe?â
âI thinkâŠâ
Ashe could not help but notice Lilyâs handsâwhite as goose down and, by the looks of them, just as soft. They were making an enticing journey up Lilyâs bare calves, across her knees and then to the hem of her ill-fitting hospital gown, which crept a fraction of an inch up the bare flesh of her legs to reveal naked thigh. She squeezed her legs together but slid three fingers into the tight space between them. She bit her lower lip. Ashe was very careful not to shift her legs or hips. There was an ache she didnât want to betray. The cold, sterile clinic room felt hot and humid all of a sudden. She stopped to daub perspiration from her throat. Lily reached out, murmuring, âLet me,â and thenâŠ
Ashe switched the TV off. Lily sat back, suddenly rigid. For a moment they stared at one another. Then Ashe said: âAs I was saying, attraction can be a valuable insight into your own person. The things you see in someone else are often what you want to see in yourself. Itâs something we can talk about at length when you feel comfortable exploring the subject further. But as your doctor, there are certain limits to what is appropriate, and these limits are for your own good. Do you understand?â
Lilyâs face was impossible to read. Ashe pretended to make a few notes. She did not look at the mirror. Finally she said: âI need to get a little air. Weâll continue our conversation from yesterday when I get back. All right?â She smiled as wide as she could and left without seeing whether Lily returned it.
In the corridor, once out of sight, she wiped her palms on her sleeves. She was still sweating when she left the building.
***
Lilyâs Diary, Day 72:
I watched one of the nurses for a long time today. I wanted to see what he did when I was not around. But then I realized I did not know if he really did not know if I was around or if he was just pretending. So I asked him whether he knew I was there or not. He screamed very loud.
The other nurses said that I should not scare people like that. I told them I have always scared people. They said that I should learn to be decent. I said that I was trying, and that is why I wanted to see what the nurse did. Then they told me to go away.
They say that the nurse will not come back to work. They say he is in another hospital and is very sick from screaming. I wish I could see what he was doing now that I am really not around. Maybe one night I will.
***
Ashe only owned three real dresses and she had no idea which of them was the nicest, so she just picked one. The AD sat across from her, surprisingly sharp in a tailored suit. She was only just now realizing she did not remember his name. He did have one, didnât he? Or maybe ADs were grown in jars in hospital basements and given numbers instead of names. Maybe if she looked close enough she could find where his number was stamped on the back of his head. She tried not to laugh at the thought.
âSo why medical school?â he was asking.
Ashe swirled the ice in her glass. âI guess because I never really knew what I wanted to do with my life. I figured if I became a doctor at least no one could tell me I hadnât done enough. What about you?â
âTradition: All the men in my family are doctors. Except for my great uncle who drives a bus. We stopped inviting him to Thanksgiving over it.â
Ashe laughed. She was pretty sure it was a joke. It was reasonably funny in any case. She toyed with her hair; she hadnât been sure what to do with it, but she supposed it didnât matter. Iâm not here to impress him, she told herself. Why she was here at all was a mystery, but when heâd asked her (for the third time) the idea of a night out became appealing. And he wasnât all that bad company, really, once you talked to him for a while. He wasnât her type. But then, who was?
The waiter returned. Ashe ate roast duck and tried to remember the last time she had a meal that didnât come out of a can. Her stomach growled. She wondered if it was acceptable to order seconds. The harp player in the corner changed songs and Ashe shifted in the tight dress. The AD peered over the rims of his glasses, seeming to come to a kind of decision.
âWell,â he said, âno sense putting it off any longer: We have nothing to talk about except your case, so letâs talk about it.â
Asheâs relief surprised her, and also disappointed her. She blotted her mouth with her napkin to hide it.
âFor the most part, I think weâre coming to a helpful place,â Ashe said. âItâs really hard to know exactly where I stand with all of my predecessorsâ files sealed. But Iâm confident.â She tensed. The AD was ready for her.
âAnd you have something unorthodox that youâd like to propose, right?â
She exhaled slowly. This was it; now or never. âIâd like to take Lily out of the clinic. A supervised leave, in my custody.â
The AD sawed his knife through a braised haunch of lamb, still peering at her. âYou realize thatâll be a tough sell?â
âThatâs why Iâm asking for your help convincing the director.â
âWhat makes you think Iâll help?â
âYouâve already demonstrated that youâre also willing to explore unorthodox avenues of treatment with her.â She let her fork slide against her teeth as she took the next bite, keeping eye contact with him, daring him to back down. He switched tactics.
âAnd how will this help Lily?â
âI think that the clinic itself has become the focal point of her self-stigmatizing behavior.â
âAnd leaving will snap her out of it?â
âI think itâs the necessary first step.â
âYou do realize that thereâs more to her case than the psychological? Her physical abnormalitiesââ
âThose arenâtââ
âYou canât continue to ignore the facts. Sheâs not normal. Sheâs notââ
âHuman?â
âI didnât say that.â
âBut thatâs what you think. Thatâs what everyone thinks. Youâre afraid that if you let her leave the clinic that sheâll run wild in the countryside and terrorize the villagers.â
The AD sighed and shook his head. He forked a bite into his mouth. âYouâd need her consent to take her anywhere. She wonât like it.â
âIâll convince her.â
âYou think she trusts you that much?â
âYes,â Ashe said. She pushed her plate away. The harpist had stopped playing. The AD examined his cufflinks very closely, not meeting her eye. âYou like to gamble?â he said.
âThis isnât a gamble.â
âNo, I mean thereâs a casino on the upper floor. Are you a blackjack kind of woman?â
âOh.â Ashe blinked. âYes, I think I am.â
He pushed her chair in for her and escorted her to the elevator. âSo where do you propose to keep her for the duration of thisâŠsabbatical?â
Ashe smiled. âI have somewhere special in mind,â she said.
***
Lily shrank against Ashe for protection. Her electric blue eyes swept over the grass and the trees and the grey-gold of the sunlight through the clouds, and she clutched the hem of Asheâs shirt. âIs it all real?â she said.
âVery real,â Ashe said. She kept one arm around Lilyâs shoulders and closed the car door. It was a cold, foggy morning and she wore a heavy coat for protection. Lily wore only a light shirt and slacks; Ashe had bought the clothes for her herself. Lily had never worn anything but clinic-issued clothing and found her new outfits funny. Ashe guided her up the driveway, toward the house.
âIs this yours?â Lily said.
âIt was my fatherâs,â said Ashe. âWhich means itâs mine now. But I donât live here normally.â
âAndâŠhow far are we from the clinic?â She had asked that many times. Ashe had tried to answer in a way that would make sense to her, and even showed her several times on a map, but it was hard to make anything sink in. She pointed to the nearest copse of trees.
âWell, if you hike through there, you find yourself just on the edge of the headlands, and if you hike a little ways further you can see the bridge.â She paused. âThe Golden Gate Bridge.â She waited for Lily to react. Lily just stared. Ashe sighed inside. âNever mind,â she said. âYou donât need to think about the clinic while youâre here. Thatâs the point.â
She had to let Lily go to pick up both of their bags and unlock the front door. The girl all but clung to her back. The house was dark and quiet in that way that only old houses long unlived in can be. Once inside Lily seemed a bit better; she at least let go of Ashe, though she always hovered a few feet away. She seemed not to know what to make of the houseâs dark corners and wood paneling and soft carpets, so different from the glacial white environment sheâd grown up in.
Outside, the black, curling roots and branches of the old trees and the long, winding paths looked like a dark, fairy tale forest. Ashe thought the atmosphere suited Lily. It was easy to imagine her making a home in the forest like a fairy creature or gliding, silent and ethereal, along the houseâs long dark hallways in the middle of the night, like a Victorian madwoman. But the imagery was not frightening; she imagined she could watch Lily here endlessly, days going by without her even noticing.
She bit her lip, admonishing herself.
Lily found her way to the library. She had a fascination with books and read much, but rarely more than a few pages of any one thing. She did not understand fiction at all, and only a few nonfiction works kept her interest. But Ashe knew she could leave her here, crouched on the floor with a thumb running back and forth over the leatherbound spines of each volume, for hours.
Then Lily stumbled on the VHS tapes. âWhat are these?â
âMovies,â Ashe said.
âLike the ones we watched before?â
âNot quite.â
Lily picked one up. It was James Whaleâs Frankenstein. Boris Karloffâs face glowered from the cover. Red letters under the title declared: âThe Man Who Made a Monster!â Ashe flinched. Sheâd meant to remove that one.
âCan we watch this one?â Lily said.
ââŠsure. Yes. Letâs go to the TV room.â
They sat on a small sofa, the same one where Ashe had sat on her fatherâs lap first time she watched this same movie. Lily leaned against Ashe a little, bare arm to bare shoulder, the smallest square inch of skin to skin contact. It was the first time they had ever been so close.
It was hard to gauge Lilyâs reaction to the film. As the movie neared its end Lily asked, âWill the doctor hang himself?â
âWhy would he do that?â
âBecause thatâs what my father did.â
Ashe groped for words. âNo,â was all she came up with.
***
Lilyâs Diary, Day 113:
I like the movie. I have watched it every day since we came here. Dr. Ashe usually watches it with me.
I asked why the movie was made. She said, to scare people. I asked, do people like to be scared? She said, sometimes. She said there are people whose entire job it is to make books and movies that will scare other people. I never thought that you could make someone happy by scaring them.
I wonder if people are happy when they are scared of me? I hope they are. I am glad for the nurse who screamed when I talked to him. He must have been very happy.
I have a surprise for Dr. Ashe. To thank her for what she taught me.
***
It was the feeling of being watched that woke Ashe. She fumbled for the lamp in the pitch-black room. It flickered on, revealing Lily at the bedside. âHello, Dr. Ashe,â she said.
Ashe sat up, hugging the covers; the room was cold, but Lily wore barely anything. âAre you having trouble sleeping?â
âI donât sleep.â
Ashe had read that in the file too, but of course it couldnât be true. Some severe insomniacs claim not to have slept in days or even years but really they had sleeping spells so brief werenât aware of them. These facts tumbled through Asheâs head as she tried to dispel the late-night confusion. Then Lily climbed up onto the bed with her.
ââI was watching you sleep because I was worried,â she said. âI thought you might have died. Dead people and sleeping people look a lot alike to me. I canât ever tell the difference.â
âIâm fine. You should go back to bed. In the morningââ
Lily took Ashe by the hand. She ran her manicured fingers over Asheâs. Sheâd seen a modelâs hand in a magazine and asked Ashe to treat and paint her nails the same way. Now they looked like tiny pools of blood on her fingertips. âDo you always sleep alone?â she asked.
âThatâsâŠa personal question. But thereâs no one else here but you and me.â
âI know,â Lily said. She placed Asheâs hand against her chest; she was wearing only a thin cotton nightgown. âDo you feel my heart beating? Itâs very, very slow. One of my first doctors said my heart beat so slowly it would be a medical record, if they were allowed to write about me. He would listen to my heartbeat every day. Once he did it for a whole hour.â
Lilyâs skin was hot and flushed under Asheâs fingers. She felt the curved sides of Lilyâs tiny breasts and squirmed, crossing her legs under the comforter. Lily leaned in.
âDo you like being my doctor?â
âYes.â It was barely a word.
âBut you donât want to be my doctor forever.â
âIâŠwant you to get better so that you wonât need anymore doctors in your life. But I always want to be someone in your life even after that.â
âWhat would you be if you werenât my doctor?â
âYour friend.â
âIâve never had a friend. Do friends do this?â Lily kissed Ashe on the cheek. It made Ashe think of strawberries. She let out a quavering breath.
âSometimes,â she said.
âAnd this?â Lily kissed the ridge of Asheâs ear. Her tongue darted out. Ashe squeezed her legs together harder.
âSometimes.â
Lily pressed Asheâs hand even harder against her chest. Her heartbeat became so slow Ashe could swear it wasnât there at all. But the promise of Lilyâs milky white flesh was very real, and very warm. âKiss me here,â Lily said, pointing to the place between her breasts, just above the bow on her nightgown. She clambered up onto Asheâs lap and thrust herself forward. Asheâs lips touched Lilyâs bare skin; a feeling like electricity tingled across her skin.
Lily hung her arms around Asheâs neck. Her legs wrapped around Asheâs body, strong and lithe. Then she pressed her mouth to the side of Asheâs neck; her kisses were awkward in their eagerness, like a teenager. She ground against Ashe through the flimsy fabric of her nightgown.
Ashe resisted the urge to put her hands on Lily. She even resisted the urge to kiss her more. But she did not push Lily away either. She let Lily clamor over her, remaining still as the girlâs lips slid down her neck, over her shoulders, across her collarbone. When Lily pulled the blankets down Asheâs body, Ashe did not protest. She was naked under the sheets and Lilyâs mouth followed a line down the center of her body, from her throat to the space between her breasts and then across the plane of her stomach, tickling her navel for a moment and then going even lower, Lilyâs mouth glanced against the light thatch of pubic hair where Asheâs hips converged. Her lips were so soft they barely felt real; like a butterflyâs wings.
The feel of Lilyâs fingers on Asheâs bare skin was barely there too. Just the tips of her fingers glided up and down the center line of Asheâs back, and then across the spread of her bare shoulders, and down the sensitive skin of her forearms, stimulating the tiny, invisible hairs there. She felt like a ghost; Ashe thought that any sudden movement would banish Lily completely, scattering her as if sheâs never been there in the first place, so she kept still. The bedside lamp provided just enough dim yellow light to silhouette Lilyâs figure. Ashe felt like she could hide in that little light and the world would never see either of them again.
The unexpected arrival of Lilyâs mouth on one of Asheâs nipples made her tense up. She felt like a closed fist. Then it happened again; the soft touch of Lilyâs bubblegum-pink lips and strawberry red tongue on the erect point of Asheâs left nipple, and then, just as unexpectedly, on the right. She clenched again and this time couldnât unwind no matter how hard she tried. She was wound almost to the breaking point. Her breasts had always been particularly sensitive. She risked opening her eyes to peak for just a moment and the sight of Lilyâs electric blue gaze staring up at her while her pert mouth closed over one of Asheâs full, large breasts sent a dark, hot flush down her thighs. She was aching wet in a few seconds.
Lilyâs fingers slid under the covers, groping up and down Asheâs legs. Ashe spread them a bit. Lily curled around Asheâs body, pulling the straps of her nightgown down so that their bare skin touched. Ashe fixated on Lilyâs mouth. It was like a tiny pink bud, wet with dew. She wanted to touch it but it seemed too fragile. She pictured a flower shedding all of its petals.
Lilyâs groping fingers went higher. She touched the wet spot and Ashe groaned and rolled her eyes. She spread her legs wider. Lily pressed her cheek to Asheâs and whispered, her tiny voice almost smothered by the dark: âMaybe you donât want me to call you just a friend?â
Asheâs mouth was too dry to speak. Lily was rubbing against her now, grinding the heel of her palm against Ashe. She whispered again:
âMaybe what you really want me to call you isâŠMama?â
Asheâs eyes snapped open. Lilyâs breath was hot on her ear.
âIs that it? Do you want me to be Mamaâs bad little girl? Do you?â A
she remembered the day in the clinic, the dialogue on the movie, the one her eyes had lingered on for just a second longer than the others. Too small a thing to notice, or so she had thought (and just how would Lily know when her back was turned the whole timeâŠ), but now Lilyâs small, sweet voice poured the same words into her ear, each one shaped like a pearl by her utterly exquisite mouth:
âPunish me. Punish this bad little girl. Punish me Mama. Teach me a lesson.â
Lilyâs small fingers moved quick now, rubbing in a circle. Ashe felt paralyzed; the world, she was certain, was crashing down around them. But she couldnât staunch the urge to thrash and churn or stifle at least the hard edge of her moans. She was coiled up like a spring and she couldnât hold it forever; the tension threatened to shake her to pieces.
Finally Lilyâs hand found the right spot. She pushedâŠand Ashe fell back, helpless, lost, weak, screaming, struggling, blind. Her body was on fire; the pointed tips of each of her nipples tingled like lightning. Her hands balled into fists so tight they hurt. When she finished she found she was crying, and Lily wrapped her up in her arms, cradling Asheâs head against her chest, whispering:
âShhhh. Itâs all right. Itâs all right.â
Ashe cried. She slept. She woke. She cried then slept some more. Lily was already awake each time. All through the night, Lily never slept.
***
Lilyâs screams woke Ashe up..
Her arms were around the girl before she knew what was going on. Lily thrashed, hugging the sides of her head with her hands, screaming until her lips split. Ashe couldnât believe how loud she was. She thought her eardrums might burst.
Lily kicked the covers away and Ashe saw blood painting the sheets. Lily tried to rub it away with her hands but all she did was stain her fingers. Ashe took her by the wrists and shook her. âStop, stop!â
The screams stopped instantly, like an alarm turned off with the push of a button. She remained brittle and tense, eyes wide, pupils shrunk.
âItâs all right,â Ashe said. âItâs just your cycle. You should have told me you were close.â
âClose to what?â
âYour time. It happens to everybody.â
âIt doesnât happen to me.â
Ashe looked Lily in the eye. âDo you meanâŠyou never menstruate?â
Lily shook her head.
âDo you even know what that word means?â
Another head shake. Then: âI want to go back to the clinic.â
âThereâs nothing to be afraid of. Let me explainââ
âI want to go BACK!â The last word was so loud it made Asheâs skull ache.
âThe clinic is hours away,â Ashe said. âThereâs a closer hospital in Marin.â
âThe clinic,â Lily said. She squeezed Asheâs hands; blood smeared both their fingers. âThe clinic.â Ashe heard her own heartbeat in her aching ears. It made her feel crushed and helpless.
âAll right,â she said. âIf thatâs what you really wantâŠâ
***
The AD would not look at her for some time. Maybe he was waiting for her to say something. But she wouldnât let herself be trapped that way. Instead she waited.
The phone rang. The AD listened without saying anything. He looked at Ashe now. When he hung up he had to clear his throat twice before he could speak.
âLily is fine,â he said.
Ashe nodded. âI told her she was just menstruating, butââ
âShe doesnât menstruate.â
âExcuse me?â
âNever. Not once in the entire time sheâs been here. Itâs in the file. But it seems there were a lot of things in Lilyâs file that you never took the time to become familiar with.â
âThere were serious errors in it.â
The AD leaned back in his chair a little. âThe blood came from two self-inflicted wounds she made on her thigh. With a pair of nail clippers from off your nightstand.â
Ashe blinked several times, trying to grasp what sheâd been told. âSheâs never shown any self-abusive behavior before.â
âAnd she didnât this time either. She did it so that you would bring her back here.â
Panic. Ashe pushed it away.
âShe told us someâŠalarming things, about her time in your care. Although you are not a doctor, you are still bound by certain basic ethical obligations when it comes to the patients here. Lily said that you took certain advantages of her. She saidââ
He broke off. Then he swore under his breath. âAre you really going to make me drag this out? Just come clean and tell us everything that happened. Itâll be easier.â He looked very tired, and surprisingly sad.
Ashe considered her words carefully. âIâd like to see Lily.â
âNot a chance.â
âIâm her primary.â
âLike hell you are. Youâre lucky we donât have you arrested.â
âDid the director tell you that?â
The AD paused. âSheâs not in.â
âOnly the director can order me removed.â
âShe will.â
âBut until she does Lily is still my patient and you canât bar me from attending to her. So I want to see her. Right now.â
The ADâs ruddy face went pale. Ashe realized she had never seen him get angry until now. With stiff movements he picked up the phone, dialed a single number, and said, âThe woman is coming down. Admit her.â He turned his chair away when he hung up.
Everyone stared at Ashe as she walked down the halls. Or maybe it only seemed that way? They couldnât possibly all know, she told herself. She kept her eyes on her feet.
The room was not Lilyâs ordinary room: Monitors and medical equipment was stacked up on either side of her bed, but most of them didnât even seem to be turned on. There was, as always, a one-way mirror. Lily smiled at Ashe. âIâm feeling much better now,â she said. âThe bleeding stopped. Iâm sorry if I worried you.â
âThatâsâŠall right,â Ashe said. She fumbled with the chair in the room. Her knees quaked even as she sat. Lily still smiled. It pierced Asheâs heart. âLily,â she said, âdid you tell themâŠâ
The words wouldnât come. She licked her lips and tried something else:
âI think this is goodbye. I think Iâm not going to be your doctor anymore.â
Lilyâs smile flickered. âOf course.â
âNot because I want to,â Ashe was quick to add. âTheyâre making me go away.â
Lily nodded. âYes, I know. Iâm sorry. It must be very hard for you.â
Ashe nodded. Then she started to cry. The room blurred into a single blinding white smear. Lily touched her hand.
âDr. AsheâŠare you in love with me?â
Ashe nodded.
âOh my. Do you love me more than anyone youâve ever known?â
Another nod. Lily leaned in.
âDo you love me so much you could die?â
Ashe pushed the word from her mouth: âYes.â
She felt empty once it was out of her. Empty, and relieved, and ridden with grief. Lily became thoughtful for a moment. She closed her eyes and kept them closed, something Ashe had never seen her do. For a second the corners of her mouth twitched, though Ashe could not tell if she was about to smile or about to cry. Then, in a tiny, soft voice she said:
âOh. Well. I guess you had better hurry up and do it then.â
***
Lilyâs Diary, Day 114:
There was so much screaming today.
You would think the people here had never seen someone hang themselves before.
***
Lilyâs Diary, Final Entry:
I meet my new doctor today. He is a man.
I heard the director and the assistant director talking about him. They were behind the mirror, but they never realize that I can hear them when they are back there. The assistant director was very upset. He is still new. I think he liked Dr. Ashe a lot. He asked why they let it happen. The director said that it was the whole point. She said they had to keep studying me to find out why the people who love me always kill themselves. She said it started with my parents and it never stopped.
The assistant director said, âI donât understand. Does she make them do it?â
And the director said, âI donât know. I donât think even she knows.â
The assistant director said, âHow many more will it take?â
And the director said, âAs many as it has to. Until we understand her.â
I think it was a silly conversation.
Dr. Ashe must have loved me very much. And I think, at the end, she was very scared of me too. I will work hard to make my new doctor just as happy.
I do not know what I will do with this book now. I do not think that I should keep writing it in it now that Dr. Ashe is not my doctor anymore. Perhaps I will have them bury it with her. That way, she will have something to remember me by.