Therapist's Office, March, 2001
Patient:
She's destroying herself. It... it's heartbreaking. She needs help.
Counselor:
And you think
you
should be the one to help her?
Patient:
No, probably not. But I want to be. And no one else is...
Counselor:
Do you think it's possible you might just make things worse for her?
(silence)
Counselor:
I'm not saying you would. I'm just asking if you've considered that possibility.
Patient:
Of course. But if there's any chance I could make it better...
Counselor:
And what about you?
Patient:
Me?
Counselor:
Yes. What if it just makes things worse... for you?
*******
I felt sad about Ben. He was nice, certainly as nice as I could expect to find. And he wasn't a bad lover, either. But he had crossed the line I couldn't let anyone cross. I took the picture down for a few days, but then I put it right back in its place. It didn't seem right to remove that one testament to my former life.
The weeks dragged on, their monotony broken only by an unseasonably warm stretch of days at the end of the month. I had a picnic in the park. I invited Vicky to join me, but she was busy. It didn't matter. No one around meant no awkward conversation to remind me of all I'd forgotten. My job was dull enough, the fact that it was almost the only thing I had to talk about made it worse. Maybe a new hobby was in order. Vicky was always telling me to start over, to leave my old life behind and try new things. I didn't know where to begin. Is reading a hobby?
I had my picnic in a sunny spot near a man-made lake in the park. I wondered if I'd ever been there before. It felt... not familiar, exactly, but like it reminded me of something I loved. I sometimes wandered down streets or biked through new neighborhoods, hoping the sights would spark a memory. So far, nothing had. Or if anything, it was like the lake: it made me think of something vague, like perhaps a dream I might be able to remember later. Or maybe it wasn't an image I was remembering, but a feeling.
*******
Eventually, I became restless again. I won't even pretend it was simply physical desire that drove me to the bar. There were times, sure, when I felt horny, but those weren't the times I chose to go find someone to share my bed. It was the times when I just wanted to connect, to feel close to someone. I wanted to not feel like someone was looking through me or past me. I went home after work on Friday, showered, changed, and headed out to find some companionship - someone to touch me and to stare at me with hunger in his eyes.
To my initial surprise, the bar was almost empty. Darla saw me looking around and laughed.
"Slow night?" I asked. Not even Zeke was in his usual spot.
"March Madness," she said, as if that explained everything. My confused look must have told her it didn't.
"College basketball?" she prompted. I shook my head and shrugged. Didn't ring a bell. "It's like a... well it
is
a tournament for college basketball. It lasts almost all month. You
do
know what basketball is, right?"
I rolled my eyes. Darla was one of the few people with whom I'd shared my condition, and she occasionally allowed herself a lighthearted joke at my expense. When I first told her I had amnesia, she quickly informed me I had an outstanding bar tab of several hundred dollars from before my accident. Darla knew how to tease me without hurting me.
"So no one comes here?" I asked. There was a small TV behind the bar with a basketball game on.
"No, honey, not here," she answered. "They go to the places where the TVs are as big as walls. We might get a few stragglers who aren't into the game, but even Julia has moved on to greener pastures for the month. They're heading into the second round."
"You should get a bigger TV," I suggested.
Darla half-smiled and said, "Actually, business is doing OK overall, so I like a few weeks of downtime to get some things cleaned up and rearranged. It's a good time to train new employees, too," she said, nodding in the direction of a young waitress struggling to keep a tray of dishes from toppling.
I nodded slowly and ordered a plate of food. I had skipped dinner in my haste to get there before guys got too drunk. But I figured I might as well take care of my stomach's craving, even if I was denying other desires.
Darla and I chatted off and on for an hour while I ate. She was a little older than I and had a thick build. She looked like she could have been an athlete. She once joked that her boobs kept her out of sports but kept her bar in business. They were very large, and I'm sure they had some help staying so high on her chest. But Darla was more than just sexy: she was a sharp businesswoman and a good conversationalist. Most guys didn't realize she was the owner as well as the bartender. She tolerated flirting from her patrons, but she also demanded respect and a certain level of decorum. It kept the atmosphere a little classier than most other places like it in town.
As I was finishing my meal, I noticed the stranger was in his usual spot. The next time Darla was passed by me, I asked her softly, "Any more word on the guy in the booth?"