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THE TURNING HOUR
Shelley Fraser Mickle
River City Press
Fiction
ISBN: 0913515221
240 pages
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Chapter One
Bergin
I'm still inclined to lie about this. Because the lowdown is, the truth didn't set anybody
free.
And I wasn't after attention or revenge, as most people will think. At least I know that's
what goes through someone's mind when they hear that a girl has tried to do a mean
two-step with Saint Peter. Or to buy the whole farm. Or to cash in her chips, if you know
what I mean. No. Words had more to do with this.
Words.
And if there had been any on the piece of paper that I saw that day at lunch when I was
sitting on the side steps of the school, it didn't matter. It was a wide scrap of paper. A
single torn slip of paper that danced up on the wind and floated. Then was carried off to
somewhere I could not see. I took it for a sign. Not a word had been spoken out loud or
even in my head. But that single piece of paper spoke to me, telling me that it was okay.
That this was to be how it would be. So in a few hours I was standing in my father's
kitchen alone, knowing how I would do this.
I didn't study how to kill myself, either.
I had some ideas about it from a story I once read in a magazine. The point being that I
knew that high places and guns and heavy drugs weren't really necessary. No. I just went
down the hall from the kitchen into my father's bathroom in his big new house, opened up
his medicine cabinet and took out all I knew I would need. It was a three dollar and
fifty-nine cent bottle of aspirin. Microcoated and buffered. Really, this was going to be
very simple.
That's what everybody would love to hear about. Everybody still is so interested in WHY I
did it. And HOW. As though someone like me, who has been where I have is kin to a saint.
Or a freak. Somebody who has seen things and been places no one else has. And yet, at the
same time, a lot of people seem afraid of me. Afraid to know what I know, I guess.
It doesn't really matter, though, not now. Not anymore. Because what interests me now.
What I don't just want to know but HAVE to know. NEED to know. DESPERATE to know, if you
really want to get down to the skin and bones of this, is--now that I am still here. And
well, DUH, that's pretty obvious. And everyone thinks that I am fine, doing okay really.
I've always been good at faking it.
But how do I get back?
Chapter 2
Leslie
Thinking about those early days, I see my shoes, right there at the foot of the bed, my
shoes. I would come home from the hospital where I would sit beside Bergin (why, why
running through my mind like the drip from a broken faucet--and why had there been no
clues? How could I, her own mother, not have known?) and I would lie down fully dressed,
the toes of my shoes--black heels, plain pumps, or brown loafers, tennies, even--like
splayed fenceposts on top of the bedspread. If I slept, I don't remember. It certainly
wasn't sleep as I had known it. My body was a mannequin that I inhabited from eight to
two, that I then laid down on the bed to be refueled.
When Bergin decided to take her life, she took mine too; but then, I guess that was partly
the point. Before then we were certainly as severed and distant as two clocks keeping time
in separate rooms. I attributed our difficulties to her being sixteen and me being
premenopausal. (Lord knows--as everybody knows--hormones make the most dangerous minefield
in the free world!)
But as the facts unraveled, as Bergin began to let go of them, and I began to enter
Bergin's mind, see things the way she saw them--I saw myself. Our history was so messy, so
unresolved. There are always multitudes of leftovers when you love someone and then leave
that love, as I left Doug, Bergin's father.
Don't ask me about sorrow. Don't ask me what I know of my guilt. Because this is what I
want to know, HAVE to know, find out somehow and soon: Where is Bergin's resilience now?
Excerpted from THE TURNING HOUR © Copyright 2003 by Shelley Fraser Mickle. Reprinted with permission by River City Press. All rights reserved.
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