"We're gonna die on this train," Steven said at one point.
"It's a death-train," Maggie said.
"I talked to the conductor," my father said. "He said it'll be awhile."
Maggie groaned. "What does 'awhile' mean?"
"It means," my father said as he played a flush and pulled the Dorritos and corn nuts to his corner of the table, "don't get your hopes up."
"We'll never even make it to Helper," my brother said, and it dawned on me then that my family did not know of my time in Helper.
"Did your conductor-friend tell you exactly why we wouldn't be moving?" Maggie asked.
"Something to do with computers," my father said.
"You'd think that Amtrak would've had these glitches worked out by now," Steven said. "I mean, how long have these passenger trains been running across this country?"
Glitches. That was always one of Dr. Fay's favorite words, usually along the lines similar to "you've got to learn that glitches will pop up," or, "sometimes there's a glitch in every relationship." Sometimes her lisp would get in the way of the word and she sounded as though her mouth were full of Kleenex.
"Where's the rest of the family, anyway?" Maggie said. I wondered if she was starting to get tired of being around us.
"I was wondering about that," my father said. "How could we spend so much time on this damned train without running into everyone else?"
"Why don't we write in the notebook," my sister said.
"Feel free," Steven said. "Write something profoundly medical."
I handed the Rhodia to Maggie, and she turned a few of the pages in the middle. "It's pretty full," she said, and she looked at me. "You still didn't write anything, did you."
I shook my head.
"It's your notebook," Maggie said.
"Why is it his?" Steven said as he lifted the Rhodia from Maggie's hands.
"He found it," my father added.
"It's not mine," I said. "Any one of you can keep it." I felt this, too--the thing had become a burden, a responsibility.
Steven gave it back to Maggie, who opened to a random page. "So, this Ophelia is the one who started things." She read something. "She's got a lot to say. How about if I read you boys a little story."
"What about the poker," my father said. He sipped from the flask and handed it to me. When I was done, gave it to Steven, who shook it as though measuring its contents, then poured some into the plastic cup that had once held Pepsi.
"You win," I said. "Read something, Maggie."
Maggie cleared her throat. "Here's something. Ophelia's. It's called 'Thinking.' Not an original title." And then she read.
ThinkingI want to say something to the effect that I do not know if I will be the hero of my own story, but Charles Dickens used words close to those. Maybe I should just say that I don't know my own story even though I know how it will end. For now, though, I will simply think out loud.I woke up this morning with a pain in my side that lasted for a couple of hours. I did not know what to think of that, though I did have suspicions. I dreamed last night that my mother and I were traveling from Maine to Rhode Island in the Chevy Vega she loved so much and that had taken us up and down the Eastern Seaboard in search for a new home that was more stable the one we'd just left. By the time I was twelve I had been to six schools in three different states, and I had slept many nights in that Vega as my mother held me to the soft throat of her loneliness. I am glad that we are friends now, but there were times when I would have traded her for a sack of groceries.I suppose that I carry as many of her stories as I do of my own--a girl learns a lot about her mother's life when the two of them are shivering at a rest stop somewhere outside of Providence. I was glad that she finally found my father, though I was not glad to learn that I had two brothers that my mother had never told me about. "Kind of slipped my mind somewhere in South Carolina," she said and, really, I found that enough. I should call my parents, and I wonder how many times they have re-read the note I left for them. Will they believe the part that I am okay?
Maggie sighed. "That's it. A peculiar ending. This girl needs help."
"She sounds fine," Steven said. "She's working things out on her own."
"Young people never work things out on their own," Maggie said.
We were getting uncomfortably close to my experience with the good Dr. Fay, something my father seemed to recognize. He took the notebook and glanced through a few pages. "Someone has to write something," he said. "Maggie's right--it's pretty full." He gave the notebook to me. "The hell with it. Let's eat the money."
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