Laura van den Berg - Find Me

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After two acclaimed story collections, Laura van den Berg brings us
, her highly anticipated debut novel — a gripping, imaginative, darkly funny tale of a young woman struggling to find her place in the world.
Joy has no one. She spends her days working the graveyard shift at a grocery store outside Boston and nursing an addiction to cough syrup, an attempt to suppress her troubled past. But when a sickness that begins with memory loss and ends with death sweeps the country, Joy, for the first time in her life, seems to have an advantage: she is immune. When Joy’s immunity gains her admittance to a hospital in rural Kansas, she sees a chance to escape her bleak existence. There she submits to peculiar treatments and follows seemingly arbitrary rules, forming cautious bonds with other patients — including her roommate, whom she turns to in the night for comfort, and twin boys who are digging a secret tunnel.
As winter descends, the hospital’s fragile order breaks down and Joy breaks free, embarking on a journey from Kansas to Florida, where she believes she can find her birth mother, the woman who abandoned her as a child. On the road in a devastated America, she encounters mysterious companions, cities turned strange, and one very eerie house. As Joy closes in on Florida, she must confront her own damaged memory and the secrets she has been keeping from herself.

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“I hope you understand why these lists must remain confidential,” Dr. Bek continues, and suddenly the Venn chair is sitting normally on the floor and nothing about him is distant at all. “Any hope of success depended on them believing, first consciously and then unconsciously, in their own survival, in their ability to keep remembering.”

The folder has become inevitable. I open it again and begin to read the names. Louis and I are separated: he is in one column; I’m in the other. My column is much shorter than his. Clustered around his name I see the names of patients who have died and then the print goes blurry and I think maybe I won’t be sitting up in this chair for much longer.

“We’ve been trying to learn all that we can. The dormancy alone is a miracle. How can they stay asymptomatic for so long? Can the window be extended? Can they be cured?”

He pauses again. His cheeks are bright with sweat.

“We had hoped that the immune patients, like you, Joy, would help show the others how to live, present them with a contagious model of health, but that hasn’t quite gone as planned, has it?”

I think of Louis roaming the Hospital, soaked in fluorescence, time ticking down inside of him, and feel my stomach rise.

“This is our last appointment,” Dr. Bek says. “It ends in five minutes.”

I slap the arms of the Venn chair.

“How do you know I won’t tell everyone what you’ve done?” The folder is sitting in my lap and I’m afraid to keep touching the pages. They feel contaminated. “How do you know I won’t run out there and tell everyone the truth?”

Dr. Bek’s silver suit makes a strange whistling noise.

“It takes a certain kind of person to look into the eyes of another and tell them their life will soon be ending. Are you that kind of person, Joy?”

“Maybe,” I say, because the truth is I’m still trying to understand what kind of person to be. “Maybe I am exactly that kind of person.”

He looks at me, his eyes wide and patient behind the shield, like he is trying to teach me a lesson I am being very slow to learn. He makes a steeple with his gloved hands.

“It will not feel unnatural to keep the information I’ve shared between us. Some people would be burning to tell, but secrecy is your natural state. You are used to keeping them — secrets from other people, secrets from yourself.”

* * *

After my last meeting with Dr. Bek, I find Louis in the fifth-floor hallway. I take him by the hand and pull him into the stairwell. He stands on the stairs, one step below me, so we are the same height, and I touch his face and his soft blond hair and think about how I am already missing him.

“Let’s go back to that first month,” I say. “I want to go back.”

Time changes when you know you’re running out. Now I want the slowness, the wet heavy thing, but the days are tumbling by. I tell Louis about my mother, about Mysteries of the Sea. In our room, I show him the photo. He stares at it for a long time, tilting it around in the light, and then tells me what he sees. We talk about leaving the Hospital and going south, to Florida. We talk about white beaches and endless sunshine and alligators and how we will find my mother there. We are becoming like the twins, only Florida is our Hawaii.

From a guidebook on the Everglades, Louis knows that alligators have been alive on the earth for millions of years. As I listen to him, I comb the air with my fingers and pretend I’m making my way through a sea.

That night, after Lights Out, we sit on his bed, in darkness, a sheet draped over us. We have decided to hold a séance, to see if we can reach the twins. We press our palms together and shut our eyes. We regulate our breathing. We try to enter a trance, but I keep getting distracted. His skin is warm. He has the clean smell of bar soap. How many breaths does he have left, how many memories? All the other patients look different to me now; I can see their pain hanging over them like a shadow. I keep thinking that maybe Dr. Bek is wrong. Maybe his data is mistaken. Maybe I am the one who is going to die and this is just another way of testing me, of trying to reach my unconscious mind.

“Did you hear anything?” I ask.

“Nothing.” Louis shifts under the sheet. His palms slip against mine. He is so alive. “I think we have to go deeper into the trance.”

“What if we can’t?” Cocooned inside the sheet, so close to him, it’s almost possible to pretend we are no longer in the Hospital.

I open my eyes. Our foreheads are touching. His eyes are still closed, his curved lashes dusting his skin. His lips part, preparing to answer. For the first time in weeks, I don’t hear anything in the twins’ room. I just hear him.

19

In Allston, the Psychologist said he was training my brain waves. During our sessions, the Spanish music played on his laptop. He told me a man named Plácido Domingo was singing. He told me that he always wanted to live in Spain, where people sat under umbrellas in beautiful stone plazas and all the buildings were ancient and you could sleep through the middle of the day. When the music stopped, he asked me if I liked it and I nodded. He told me I could start it again with my mind, if I concentrated hard enough.

I was sitting on his bed. The white electrodes were stuck to my scalp. I thought as hard as I could about Plácido Domingo, who I had never heard of before. I tried to picture what he would look like and saw a man with a heavy black beard. Nothing happened.

“It’s okay,” the Psychologist said. “This is just practice.”

Practice for what? I did not think to ask.

At the end of one session, he turned the computer around to face me. An image of my brain quivered on the screen. It was round and dense as a planet, the color a liquid green that kept shifting into yellows and blues.

“Imagine something happy,” he said.

I thought of the rope swing in Ms. Neuman’s backyard, the sensation of being airborne, and watched blue wash into the center of my brain. Plácido Domingo’s voice returned.

“Now imagine something scary.”

I thought of the white electrodes lying flat as leeches on my skull and his drawer full of eyeglasses. A watery red line swam around the front of my brain and the singing vanished.

“The trick,” the Psychologist told me, “is to train your brain to think about the happy thing while the scary thing is going on.”

* * *

He never explained himself to me, not in the way Dr. Bek explained himself to me, and maybe I should thank God or whatever for that.

* * *

During an Internet Session, I look up Plácido Domingo. I find the following: Plácido Domingo was born in Madrid. Onstage, he’s played over one hundred and fifty roles. In the eighties, in Mexico, he pulled earthquake survivors from collapsed buildings. In this earthquake, he lost his aunt and his uncle and his nephew and more. There is a statue of him in Mexico City. I find a photo of the statue, a bronze figure standing with his arms raised. He has met the pope.

* * *

In the Hospital, I keep playing along with the examinations and the Community Meetings and the meditations. I try to be a good model of health, so good that my model might become contagious. Also: Louis cannot know what I know, because if he does then what I know will become real.

One night I show Louis the hole. We’re naked and wrapped in our sheets. We keep the lights off. We sit in front of the hole, the sheets pooling white around us. A dull light rises from the opening. Louis leans over it and closes his eyes and I wonder what he is thinking or if the buzzing has walked inside his brain and taken away his ability to think at all.

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