WATCHING BRAD
Part 104
Brad woke me up when he climbed into bed that night. He curled up against me, using my shoulder as his pillow and my chest as his armrest as he had done countless times before. I should have welcomed his contact. Instead, it weighed down upon me and I almost wished he would simply roll over and leave me alone.
He fell asleep quickly, probably exhausted from all the studying he had been doing. I was not so lucky. It was many, many hours before I finally fell asleep again. Many hours of lying there and doing far-too-much thinking for my own good.
Morning came early. Far earlier than I would have wished. I felt as if I hadn't even gone to sleep. I could hear Mom moving about in the kitchen, and I could hear my boys giggling at something on the television. I pulled on my robe and was heading for the bathroom to take a shower when Brad stopped me.
"Hey, Pops," he said. "Forgetting something?"
I turned to face him as he stood there in his own bathrobe, his ‘good morning' smile on his face. "Sorry," I said as I stepped back to him.
He took me into his arms and kissed me, but he could feel that my kiss was nothing more than perfunctory and cut it short, leaning away from me and staring into my eyes. The smile was gone from his face. "Ted? Are you sure you're okay? You're still shaking."
"I'll be fine, Brad," I told him. "I have a lot on my mind. That's all." How could I tell him that I wasn't shaking until he grabbed me in his arms?
"I'm worried about you."
"Don't be. I'll be okay once things settle down again." Brad didn't look convinced, which didn't surprise me. I hadn't even been able to convince myself.
We grabbed a quick shower and got changed, then I went out to help Mom finish preparing breakfast while Brad gathered his books and the things he would need for his exams that day. The twins ran to me and jumped into my arms for their morning hugs and kisses. The events of the night before seemed never to have happened in their minds.
"What kind of cereal would you like for breakfast?"
They told me, and then Justin asked, "Can we watch it in here?"
"No," I said.
"But we want to watch. . ."
"I said ‘no'. Please don't argue with me. Not today. You'll eat breakfast in the kitchen with everyone else."
"Okay, Daddy," Justin relented. He didn't look very happy about it.
I sent them back to watching television while I went to prepare their breakfast. Mom met me in the kitchen with yet another kiss. "Good morning, Dear," she said. "Did you sleep well?"
"No," I muttered.
"Perhaps you should take a few days off. . ."
"I don't need a few days off, Mom," I told her firmly. "I've got everything under control. I wish everyone would stop worrying about me."
Mom began to say something and stopped herself. Instead, she asked, "What would the children like for breakfast?"
"I'll get it for them," I told her and set about doing so.
Lindsay arrived, dressed and ready for school. I picked her up and gave her a huge hug and complimented her on how pretty she looked that morning. She gave me one of the most beautiful smiles a father could receive and it made me smile, yet it made me feel very sad at the same time. I wondered for a moment how many more times I'd be greeted in the morning by that pretty, smiling face.
I gave her one more hug and kiss and set her back onto the floor. She went to the pantry to pick out her cereal and to prepare her own breakfast as I set about making toast for the kids.
We all ate breakfast together that morning - mostly in silence. Except for the twins, of course. They were rarely silent and always seemed to find something to talk about. I decided to walk Lindsay to school myself that morning. We walked hand-in-hand along the street. It was a beautiful Spring day and the flowers were abloom and the trees were a cheerful green once more. The birds were singing and the air smelled clean and fresh. The sky was blue except for one wispy white cloud. I watched it as we walked along and the cloud followed me all the way, hanging over me like some haunting shadow.
I stopped at the park on the way home, sat on my favourite bench near the jungle gym and swings, and pulled out my cell phone. I called Sally at work and told her I would be in later. I sat there all morning, thinking. I cried twice and I didn't know why. All I know is that I had lied to Mom. I had told her that I had everything under control.
I didn't.
And that cloud hung over my head all morning.
* * * * *
Lindsay was surprised to see me at school when I went to pick her up and to walk her home for lunch. She had been walking to school and back home with her friends since the snow melted. She was old enough to do that now and she knew all the rules to keep herself safe. That day, her friends walked on ahead of us.
"What are you doing here, Daddy?" she asked.
"I wanted to spend some time with you, Sweetheart. I want you to know how much I love you."
"Daddy, what's wrong?"
"Nothing's wrong, Sweetheart."
Lindsay stopped walking and gripped my hand tighter, causing me to turn and face her. "You're different, Daddy," she said. "You changed after you talked on the phone yesterday."
I bent down and picked her up. "I have a little problem, that's all," I told her as I gave her the best reassuring smile I could. "Everything is going to be just fine."
"When you used to get mad at Mommy, you were different like this," she said quietly. "Are you mad at Mommy again?"
I grabbed Lindsay in a huge hug and held on for dear life.
"Daddy, you're hurting me," she whimpered.
I released my grip, but I still held on to her. "I'm sorry, Sweetheart."
"I'm a big girl now, Daddy. I'm ten years old. If this is about me, I should know."
I leaned her away from me so I could talk to her. "Yes, you are, Sweetheart. But you're not too big for me to carry for a little while." I started walking home. "And you're old enough to know the truth. That was your mother on the phone yesterday. I didn't want to tell you because I didn't want to upset you."
"Is she getting out of prison?"
"Maybe," I said. "There's a thing called ‘parole', which means that people in prison can get out early if they have been behaving themselves."
"Has Mommy been behaving herself?"
"I don't know, Sweetheart. We will know in a few weeks."
"If she gets out, will I have to go back to live with her again?"
"Do you want to?"
She shook her head ‘no'. "I want to live with you and Brad and J and J."
"Then I'll do everything I can do to make sure that happens. I promise you my very best promise."
I hugged and kissed Lindsay once more before setting her on the ground again. She took my hand and we continued our walk home. To take her mind (and mine as well) off the future, I asked her about her morning in school and all she had learnt that day so far. She was still telling me when we walked in the door.
"There you are, Son," Dad said. "We wondered where you got yourself to when you did not come back for your car."
"I was sitting in the park near the school, thinking," I replied. "I'm going to work this afternoon after I drop Lindsay off."
"I'll set another place," Mom said.
I felt good about talking to Lindsay about her mother, but, after lunch, when I had gone to work, I sat at my desk and doubts began to flood my mind. Should I have lied to her? Perhaps I shouldn't have told her the truth, or, at the very least, not told her anything at all. Perhaps I should have simply passed the entire thing off as a problem that I must handle alone.
But it wasn't my problem alone. Lindsay was very-much involved. It was her future as much as mine, and now I had involved her more fully. In trying to do the right thing, I may possibly have done the worst thing I
could have done.
A sudden chill flew up my spine and I had the horrible, gut-twisting feeling that everything I held dearly to me was slipping slowly away from me, and it was all my fault.
I picked up my half-filled cup of coffee and brought it toward my lips. About halfway, my arm froze in place and my hand began to shake. Coffee sloshed over the rim of the mug and splashed on my desk. As I sat there, watching it in stunned silence, I could feel my heart begin to pound in my chest and I could feel the perspiration breaking out on my face and under my arms. I tried to set the cup onto the desk and dropped it instead. The mug smashed and coffee splattered everywhere.
I pushed my chair away from my desk, leaning back in it and closing my eyes tightly, breathing hard and fast. My chest grew tight. Breathing became an effort. I could not only feel my heart now. I could hear it as well. Sweat rolled off my forehead in tiny streams, dripping down my cheeks and nose and falling in droplets to my shirt. I had never experienced this before and I had no idea what was happening to me.
For several minutes, I sat there, scared to death to move in case I might be having a heart attack and even more scared that someone might walk into my office and see me like that. And suddenly, everything returned to normal. My heart slowed down and ceased pounding inside me. My breathing calmed and became easier. The perspiration subsided. I opened my eyes and held up my hand, fingers splayed and palm facing down to the floor. My hands were still shaking, but more out of fear of what had just happened than as a result of the incident itself.
I quickly grabbed a handful of tissues from the box on my desk and wiped my face dry and dabbed at the wet spots on my shirt, then set about the task of cleaning up my smashed coffee mug and the mess it had made.
Then I phoned my doctor's office and made an appointment for Thursday morning.
* * * * *
Somehow I made it through the rest of the day and was greatly relieved to be going home. People at work had noticed my stand-offish behaviour and, for the most part, had left me alone in my office.
Brad was already home from his first day of exams and greeted me at the door with and enormous and proud grin on his face. He had, as he put it, ‘aced' his exams that day. I returned his smile, gave him a hug and kiss, then knelt on the floor to greet the twins and my daughter.
Mom sent us all into the livingroom to await dinner. The twins sat Indian style in front of the coffee table, playing, after they showed me their latest watercolour artwork they had done that afternoon. Lindsay sat on one side of me working on her needlework. Brad sat on the other. Dad sat on the settee. I didn't tell anyone about my ‘incident' at work, nor did I tell them of the appointment I had made with my doctor. I decided to keep that to myself.
Brad was telling us about his exams when Mom called us to dinner. As we ate, Mom and Dad told us that the carpeting and floors had been purchased and would be delivered Wednesday morning. Installation would begin in the afternoon and would be completed by Saturday. Thanks to recommendations from John Hayes, Dad had found painters who would begin painting on Monday of the next week. They would be finished by Thursday, June 8 - the day I would be in Toronto whilst my best friend in the world was having heart surgery. Five days after that, I would be in Kitchener, attending a parole hearing.
The impact of the days ahead hit me then and I excused myself from the table.
"Dinner is good, Mom," I assured her. "I'm just not very hungry, that's all."
As I turned to walk into the livingroom, I heard the scraping of a chair on the floor and then I heard Dad's voice saying quietly but firmly, "Bradley, sit. Let him be."
I went into the livingroom, turning on the stereo and sitting on the sofa, propping my feet up on the coffee table and losing myself in Schumann's Konzertstück. For a few minutes at least, the four horns carried me away from my life and I forgot all about Warren and the parole hearing and my parents and my family. For a few minutes at least, my life was not my own. It belonged to Robert Schumann.
All too soon, though, real life came back to me as Justin came into the livingroom carrying a dessert plate with a piece of Mom's home-made coconut cream pie. Jeremy followed him carrying a fork. "Daddy," he said, "Ouma asked us to bring you this. She said it's your fav'rite."
He held out the plate to me and I took it. "Did you have a piece?" The twins both shook their heads ‘yes'. "Did you like it?" Their head-shaking became more vigorous. "Well, then," I said to them both as I took the fork from Jeremy, "climb up here with me and help me eat this."
They did. I really wasn't hungry, but I couldn't resist Mom's coconut cream pie. The boys climbed into my lap and, bite by bite, the three of us finished the pie. It was, indeed, my favourite, and it always made me feel better to eat it.
I felt even better a little later on when I was giving the twins their bath. Dad was with me, washing Jeremy's hair as I washed Justin's. As usual, Dad and I were sitting on towels tossed over the side of the tub. Dad had finished rinsing Jeremy's hair with the hand spray nozzle and I was rinsing Justin's hair. His eyes were closed and, as he reached up to wipe lather from his face, he hit my arm, sending a spray of water over my shirt. As I twisted away from it, the towel began to slide - and so did I. Down I went, right into the tub, my legs dangling over the side. Fortunately, the boys had their legs pulled out of the way and I landed between the two as they faced each other.
Both boys froze, especially Justin, who was terrified that I would blow my top again. Even Dad looked concerned and ready to intervene if necessary. I looked at all three, and then I started to laugh.
Oh, how I laughed. It had been a long, long time since I laughed so hard. I looked at Justin, who was still unsure of what to make of it all. I scooped up a handful of bubbles and smacked them onto his head. Lather sprayed in all directions, and Justin's laughter joined mine. I did the same to Jeremy, who was already giggling away. Dad simply chuckled and stepped out of the way.
I opened my arms to my sons and they rolled onto their knees and came into them. I hugged them to me and we sat there in the tub, getting soaked to the skin and laughing. The twins were scooping up more bubbles and mashing them into my shirt and onto my arms and anywhere else they could reach. I just sat there and hugged them and laughed.
There was a sudden flash of light and I glanced at the doorway to see Brad standing there with the camera, taking pictures. He had, apparently, heard the commotion and had come to investigate, then went running back to the bedroom for the camera.
Eventually, the moment passed and the laughter died down. I released the twins and they went back to their places. I looked down at myself, at all the wetness and lather, and I looked at Dad and smiled. He was still smiling.
"I believe that laugh was very necessary," he said. "I shall bring you some dry clothes." As he left the bathroom with Brad, he pulled the door closed behind him.
I looked at the twins. They, too, were still smiling. "That was fun, Daddy," Justin said to me. "Can we do that again sometimes?"
"Not on purpose," I told him. "But yeah, it was a lot of fun."
I pulled my legs into the tub and stood up and took off my shirt, wringing it out in my fists before dropping it to the tile floor. I pulled off my socks and pants next and wrung them out as well. I was twisting the water out of my underwear when Dad returned with my bathrobe and dry underwear for me. He set them on the sink, grabbed a towel off the shelf and brought it to me before taking the briefs from my hand and gathering up the rest of my wet clothes. He left again without a word.
As I dried myself, the twins went back to playing. Dad was right. I definitely needed that laugh. I felt better than I had in days. I stepped out of the tub, finished drying myself, then got dressed.
"I'll be back in a little while to get you dry and dressed for bed, okay?"
"Okay, Daddy," my sons said.
My happy feelings lasted for a short while as I sat in the livingroom and listened to Dad telling Mom all about my impromptu bath. Brad was there, sitting beside me, passing around the photos he'd taken the time to print off. I even enjoyed the hug and kiss he gave me. Just like old times.
All too soon, though, Brad went back to his studying and I went back to the bathroom to get the twins ready for bed. We watched
Wheel of Fortune and
Jeopardy! together, then it was off to bed for them. An hour later, I tucked Lindsay in and kissed her ‘goodnight' and returned to the livingroom to relax on the sofa.
I was so very tired, both physically and mentally. I hadn't had much sleep those past few days and my mind had been working overtime, trying to deal with everything at once, and I still had three more nights to go before I could get in to see my doctor. And still my mind began working once more. I tried to think about the impromptu bath I had taken with my sons, but it seemed so many months ago rather than the few hours it had really been. All the problems came flooding back once more in one fell swoop, my mind insisting upon showing me the very worst possibilities of my future. Unfortunately, given my warped state of mind at that time, I didn't spend one single moment thinking of ways to try to prevent it from happening.
At ten o'clock, I locked up the house, bid goodnight to Mom and Dad, and headed off to bed. Brad was shutting down the computer when I got there.
"Finished studying?" I asked.
"Yup," he replied. "If I don't know it by now, I won't know it by tomorrow morning." He stood up and turned to face me. "You look as tired as I feel."
"I am," I said. "That's why I'm going to bed."
"So am I, as soon as I go take a leak. Is the house locked up?"
I nodded.
"Kids okay?"
I nodded again.
"Okay," he said. "I'll be right back." He began to leave, then stopped suddenly and turned back to me. "Oh, did you take a sleeping pill?"
"No."
"Want me to get you one?"
"No."
"Are you sure? You look like you. . ."
"Bradley, please!" I shouted. I didn't understand why he gave me such a strange, startled look until much later.
By the time he returned from the bathroom, I had taken off my robe, turned out the overhead lights, set the alarm, and climbed into bed. I still wore my underwear. Brad noticed immediately when he undressed and climbed into bed with me, snuggling up against me.
He tried to make light of it. "What's up with the Jockeys?" he asked jokingly. His hand moved down my body to cup my crotch.
"I felt like wearing them, that's all," I said. "Please don't touch me like that."
Brad turned suddenly serious, removing his hand and moving his body away from me. He sat up, twisting himself so he could look at me. "Ted, what in hell is going on here?"
"Nothing's going on, Brad. I just felt like wearing my underwear to bed."
"Don't give me that bullshit, Ted," he said angrily, but quietly. "I'm not stupid! I know you're having problems, but a few minutes ago, we were hugging and kissing and now you don't want me anywhere near you."
"Brad. . ."
"No, Ted, I want you to listen! You don't think I've noticed what's going on? Lately you've been going farther and farther away from me. Now, when I hug you, I might as well be hugging a scarecrow. Let's not even
talk about
kissing! One minute you're laughing and the next minute you're crying. You haven't told me you love me in two days. You've got big problems, and if us getting married is part of it, then I'll be damned if I'll go through with it."
Brad reached for his ring and began to pull it off his finger. I grabbed his hand in mine to stop him. "Brad, don't do that."
"Then, damn it, Ted! Tell me what you want me to do to help you!"
"You can't do anything to help me except to be here for me when I need you."
He slipped the ring back into place. "You know I want be here, Ted, but not if you keep pushing me away like this. If you don't love me anymore, then tell me, but don't leave me hanging here."
"I do, Brad," I said.
"Do ‘what', Ted?" he said, challenging me. "Tell me what you do!"
I couldn't. Heaven help me, I couldn't say it.
Brad nodded. "You need to know, Ted. I did some research tonight on the internet. I think you're heading for a breakdown."
"That's just stupid!" I protested.
"No, it isn't, Ted. I saved the pages. You have all the symptoms. If you don't do something about it. . ."
"I'm not having a breakdown, Brad," I told him. "I need some time, that's all. A few weeks and it will be over. That's all I ask for. A few weeks."
Brad stared down into my eyes for a long time. I held his gaze as I waited for his response. Finally, he nodded again. "A few weeks," he said softly. "But that's all. If things don't start going back to normal after Warren's surgery and the parole hearing, I'll drag your ass to the hospital myself and sign you in. Until then, you start taking it easy around here. You're not Superman, Ted. You can't do everything."
He waited for my reaction. I didn't give him one.
"Remember," he said after a few moments, "a few weeks. No more than that. But, for God's sake, if you don't want to marry me, please don't wait until after you do to tell me."
"That's never going to happen, Brad," I said. "And I told you before to stop worrying about me."
"I have to, Ted. I can't live without you now. If anything happens to you. . . to us, I might as well be dead." He paused for a short time. "I love you, Ted. Maybe you can't say it, but I can. I love you more than ever."
"I really do, Brad. I don't know why I can't say it, but I do."
"I hope you really mean that, Ted." He leaned down and kissed me, and I let him. Then he turned over to his other side and lay down facing away from me.
I checked the alarm one more time and reached up to turn off the light. Yet again, I lay there awake for a long time except that, this time, I lay there wondering if I was, indeed, heading for a breakdown. I knew something was happening to me. Could that really be it? And could that be the reason I was suddenly so afraid to let Brad get close to me?
I wanted to cry again. Not only had I lost control of my life, there was a good possibility that I was losing control of my mind as well.
* * * * *
I remember very little of the following morning. I don't even remember sleeping, although I must have done because I awoke at the sound of the clock alarm. I don't remember what I ate for breakfast let alone eating it. I don't remember driving to work and I don't remember getting there. I don't remember much of anything until I felt someone shaking my shoulder and calling my name.
"Ted!"
When I opened my eyes, I realized I was at my desk in my office, sitting there with my elbows resting on the desktop and my forehead propped in my hands. I looked up toward the sound of the voice.
"JW," I said. "What are you doing here?"
"Why aren't you answering your phone?" my boss asked.
I looked at the telephone on my desk as if it would tell me why I hadn't heard it ringing. "Sorry," I said as I looked back at him. "I'm tired and I've got a lot on my mind. I haven't been sleeping very well."
"Then go home, get some sleep, and sort it out, Ted. You're not doing us any good sitting around here stewing about it. Take the time you need and sort it out."
I sat there in silence for a long moment, then took a deep breath and let it out again. "Maybe you're right."
JW put is hand back on my shoulder. "Whatever time you need, Ted. We'll manage. I'll work it out with Sally. Now, please. Go home."
I remember JW asking me if I wanted someone to take me home and I remember saying ‘no'. I remember him walking me to the door and I remember him saying ‘good luck' to me. I don't remember anything after that. I don't remember getting into my car in the parking lot and I don't remember starting it. I don't remember driving through the lot toward the street and I certainly don't remember turning right instead of turning left. I don't remember driving and I don't remember parking. I don't even remember ringing the doorbell when I got to where I was going.
I don't remember anything until the door opened and a startled and anxious voice said, "Teddy? What are you doing here?"
"Warren," I pleaded desperately, "help me."
To Be Continued