They pretty much all say the same thing.  I punch in one answer.

Don’t worry. I’m fine.

After I get a fresh bottle of whiskey from the kitchen, I pop more pills in my mouth, three of them. Then I add two more.

It isn’t long before the blackness comes back. I welcome it with open arms. I sing to it, I croon to it. I cradle it in my arms.  I do whatever the f**k I want to do to it because it’s blackness, the darkest of nights, and it doesn’t care.  If I am alone in the dark, nothing matters. I can’t hurt anyone but myself and I f**king deserve it.

I close my eyes and let the darkness cradle me.  It can f**k me for all I care.

********

Mila

I can’t think straight.  I accidentally didn’t charge a customer at the store.  So after that, I gave up and turned my sign to Closed.

I sit by the window of my store, staring out at the happy people walking down the sidewalk.  They don’t know how good they have it. Their lives are so easy.

I try to text Pax again, but like the four days prior, there isn’t any answer.  I’ve driven out there, pounded on the door, called him, even cussed into his voicemail.

No answer.

Only once.  Don’t worry, I’m fine.

He’s not fine. And no one seems to care but me.

I’ve thought about calling the police to have them check on him, but I doubt they would.  He’s not doing anything illegal, so what can they do?  It’s not illegal to drink yourself into a stupor.  And the only thing he has in the house, to my knowledge, is the prescription Xanax.  I once again wonder at the wisdom of prescribing that to Pax.

When I had asked Dr. Tyler about it, he explained that he had prescribed it because Pax isn’t an addict.

“He’s not addicted to any substance,” the doctor had said.  “He simply hasn’t formed proper coping mechanisms for stress.  If he feels like he can’t cope, I’d rather him take a Xanax during the short term while we’re working on these issues rather than seek out illegal drugs. Plus, you’ll be there with him.  Everything will be fine, Mila.”

But I’m not there anymore.  And things aren’t fine.

I see an image of Jill’s open, dead eyes and shudder.

That could have been Pax.  And I’m terrified that if someone doesn’t do something, that will be Pax.

With shaking fingers, I pick up the phone and do the only thing I can think of to do.

I call his father.

Chapter Twenty-Two

Pax

I am falling, falling, falling.

It is black and dark and I can’t see, I can’t think, I can’t feel.  But that’s how I like it.  If I can’t feel, then nothing hurts.  So I keep it that way.

If I wake, I drink myself back to sleep with a Xanax chaser.  It isn’t long before I’m in the black again, drifting pointlessly along, sleeping without nightmares.

Only blackness.

I sigh.  This is where I belong, where the dark is timeless.

Painless.

The light is painful.  The light is where I see her face and know how I failed her.

I’ll stay far away from the light.

Forever.

It isn’t worth it.

I start to close my eyes but realize that they are already closed, so I smile.

This is where I belong.

Chapter  Twenty-Three

Then I make my way to the kitchen, where I chug two bottles of water.  Even after that, my mouth is still dry so I must be pretty dehydrated.  I take another bottle of water with me to the living room, where my father is waiting for me.

He’s cleaned the place up while he waited, picking up the empty bottles of whiskey from the floor.  He’s sitting in a chair now.

He stares at me as I enter.

He’s grim and sober and I find that I suddenly don’t want to have this conversation.

“Fuck this,” I tell my dad.  “We haven’t talked about this in years.  I don’t see the reason to talk about it now.  The damage is done.”