He sighed. I was being stubborn, but then again so was he. He picked up the book from the bed, opened the cover and placed the bottles inside. He put the book back on the shelf along with the other books I had been flipping through, sat down on the bed and made me sit down beside him.
“OK,” he said quietly, and leaned his head toward mine, our faces close. “I hide them in there because Jenn doesn’t know I’m on medication…still.”
“Still? So she knew at one point?”
“Yes.”
“And she thought you got better, or..?”
“Yes.”
“And did you?”
He scratched at his sideburn and gave me a sideways glance before carefully saying, “In a way.”
“What does that mean?”
“It’s hard to explain. And no, I don’t have time to explain it now. But the point is, Jenn doesn’t know I’m on meds, certainly doesn’t know I’m taking this many different kinds, and to answer your question before you ask it, no, she doesn’t know I was in a mental institute.”
“How can you just lie to her like that?”
He shrugged. “It’s easy. And I’m not lying, I’m just omitting some stuff.”
“Would you tell her the truth if she asked?”
I watched him carefully. He pursed his lips, thinking it over. He better not think about lying to me.
“No, I wouldn’t,” he finally said. “I would lie. Because the past is the past and it doesn’t concern her in any way.”
“But it concerns you, so by default it should concern her.”
“You’d think that…”
I looked down at my hands and started playing with my nails. “It concerns me.”
“I know it does,” he said gently. “But you’re different, Perry. You’re very, very different. That’s why I…”
He stopped himself.
“What?” I prodded.
His lips twitched. “That’s why I’m glad you’re my partner.”
“Oh.”
I looked around the room, at the posters on the walls and the rock photos and the guitars and the weird books. None of this made any sense to me.
“How did you two even start going out?” I asked, thinking out loud, not really wanting an answer.
He shrugged again and wiped his chin quickly. “Honestly? She was hot, good in bed, and a bit of a bitch.”
Ouch. I could see he was telling the truth. It was a very guy thing to say, but it still stung. I covered it up, though, and raised my brow at him.
“Was a bit of a bitch?”
He smiled, sucked in his lip again, but didn’t say anything.
“Sorry,” I apologized, though I wasn’t really sorry.
“It’s deserved, kiddo,” he said and patted me lightly on the back. “I’m sorry she’s so prickly with you. Don’t take anything she says or does seriously, OK?”
That was way easier said than done. But I gave him a small smile back and told him that his secret was safe with me. I was good at keeping them.
~~
At 4 p.m., when the city skyline grew a dark grey with the threat of night and impending rain clouds, Dex and I piled our gear and equipment into his car and piloted off toward the Riverside Mental Institute.
After our discussion in the den, Jenn came back from her workout and I hopped on the computer to Google the shit out of the institute. Though I hated him for saying it, Dex was right, and there was no reason why I couldn’t be prepared.
The institute was built at the turn of the century to take care of the Pacific Northwest’s finest, most depressed people. I guess they had something to do with the first research into Seasonal Affective Disorder, and if there is any place where SAD affects most of the population, it’s probably here. I know I get more moody and have more panic attacks when the sun disappears and the gloomy winter clouds park themselves over Portland.
According to the official website, the institute was spread out over a massive acreage, housed three huge brick buildings and a spattering of cottages where the wealthiest patients would stay and rest until their health improved. The photos online were scans from about 80 years ago, showing patients playing crochet and bridge. Not your average mental hospital. At least, not on the surface.
Of course, like most mental hospitals in the country, only one building is still operational, with funding being cut drastically over the years.
But it wasn’t all just about curing the blues for wealthy Seattleites. The smallest brick building had been used as a sort of holding station for some of the most heinous criminals back in the day where they would undergo tests to see whether they could plead insanity or not. Naturally this was the place Dex was interested in exploring. The building, called Block C, had only been officially run for 20 years before a few accidents shut it down. Turns out a mental hospital wasn’t always the most high-security place to hold serial killers and the like.
Tonight, though, we probably wouldn’t be allowed to wander around the supposedly haunted Block C (and that was fine with me), though there were some weird stories about even the main building, which still housed mild mental cases. Regardless, I felt a bit more prepared than I had earlier, especially since Dex kept saying how we were just going to interview Dr. Hasselback and that was it. It put my mind at ease – as much as that was possible.
Back to the car. Abbey Road had picked up from where we last left it and we were treated to the moody, yearning sounds of “I Want You.” Though I tried not to listen to the lyrics, I knew they were expressing something I wouldn’t dare admit to Dex, and it was making me uncomfortable in my seat. I needed to drown the words out before they melted into that jagged, tumultuous ending.
“So, thanks for always driving us around,” I said to Dex after he slammed on his breaks before going through a fast-changing yellow light. I said it to just say something.
“No problem. We don’t have much choice, do we?”
“Well I guess I could stick you on the back of Putt-Putt,” I teased.