Sean walks down the darkened corridor towards me. He looks at me with pleasurable dislike and I back away, repelled. He motions silently with his arm if he can go into the room. I shrug and dismiss him.
He comes out of the room moments later and not with the white mask of shock I’d thought he’d be wearing, but with a simple and expressionless look on his face. No smile, no sadness. The eyes, bloodshot and half-closed, still manage to exude hatefulness and a weakness of character that I find abhorrent. But he’s my brother, and at first I let it pass. He heads toward the restroom.
I ask him, “Hey, where are you going?”
“The john,” he calls back.
The night nurse at her desk looks up from the chart she’s been going over, to quiet us, but when she sees me gesture at her, she relents.
“Meet me in the cafeteria,” I tell him, before the door to the restroom shuts. What he does in there is so pitifully obvious to me (cocaine? is he into crack?) that I’m ashamed at his lack of concern and at his capacity to tick me off.
He sits across from me in the darkened cafeteria, smoking cigarettes.
“Don’t they feed you up there?” I ask.
He doesn’t look at me. “Technically, yes.”
He plays with a swizzle stick. I drink the rest of my Evian water. He puts the cigarette out and lights another.
“Well … are we having fun?” he asks. “What’s going on? Why am I here?”
“He’s almost dead,” I tell him, hoping a shred of reality will break through to that wasted mindless head bobbing in front of me.
“No,” he says startled, and I’m unprepared for a millisecond at this show of emotion, but then he says, “What an astute observation,” and I’m embarrassed at my surprise.
“Where have you been?” I demand.
“Around,” he says. “I’ve been around.”
“Where have you been?” I ask again. “Specifics.”
“I came,” he says. “Isn’t that enough?”
“Where have you been?”
“Have you visited Mom lately?” he asks.
“That’s not what we’re talking about,” I say, not letting that one throw me off.
“Stop asking me questions,” he says, laughing.