Her mother answered with a heavy sigh, but she complied with the request. Tessa felt the jagged edge of panic ease at the sound of the blinds clattering closed.
Not that she felt relaxed now. Not even close. They would have to reschedule the desensitization exercise for another day.
Tessa opened her mouth to say so, but she hesitated at the sight of her mom’s outfit: hospital scrubs, rumpled and stained after a long overnight shift. Her mother had rearranged her whole work schedule to make time for this today. Tessa could just imagine the explosion when her mom found out that she had worked a night shift for nothing.
“Why aren’t you dressed, Tessa?” Her mother eyed her with hands on hips. “You’re going outside like that?”
Tessa looked down guiltily. She’d started to put on clothes when she first got up that morning, but the Today Show had stopped her in her tracks. Now, she still wore her cotton pj’s from last night, with a pair of fuzzy, hot-pink bunny slippers.
“Bright eyed and bushy tailed,” Tessa mumbled.
“Fine.” Her mother stifled a yawn. “Whatever. Come on. I’m tired. Let’s get this over with. Are you coming?”
Tessa gulped, working up the courage to break the news. “Can we do it later, Mom?” she asked in small voice.
“No, we can’t do it later. I need to sleep!”
Tessa chewed on her lower lip. Should she try to go through with it after all? Maybe she could do her breathing exercises on the way downstairs…
Her mother picked up the white cardboard box again, and her tone softened as she opened the lid to reveal the contents: a half dozen freshly glazed donuts. “Krispy Kreme,” she said, waggling her eyebrows. “Come on, I swiped these from the nurses’ station. We can sit out on the front stoop and eat.”
Tessa pulled in a deep breath and held it for a five count. Then she nodded resolutely and took a step toward the bedroom door.
Small steps, she reminded herself. One foot in front of the other. She could do this. No big deal.
She made it to the top of the stairs before her confidence started to waver. Her ears registered the sound of a low rumble from outside. Was that a passing car?
“Mom, maybe we should go on the back deck instead,” Tessa said. Why hadn’t she thought of that before? Still outside, but at least it was protected from view of the road. The rickety, old deck jutted out over a ten-foot drop-off. Tessa always used to love it back there: her own private hideaway, suspended in the air, peaceful and secluded.
Her mother didn’t break stride as she replied over her shoulder. “No way.”
“Why not?” Tessa trailed her mother quickly down the stairs.
“No one’s used that deck for years. The railing’s rotted through. Only a matter of time before someone falls and breaks their neck.”
Tessa scowled, wishing her mother would stop for one second to discuss. She hit the bottom landing and rushed onward. “I thought you were getting that fixed,” she said.
“With what, Tessa? All that money went to a certain someone’s college fund.”
Tessa didn’t miss the bite in her mother’s tone. She knew a guilt trip when she heard one. Her mother had been livid when Tessa had deferred freshman year of college, months after the nonrefundable tuition deposit had already been paid. Tessa had promised that it was only a temporary setback. She’d head off to college once her recovery was far enough along.
Now here they were, a week into the fall semester, and Tessa had yet to trade her bunny slippers for an actual pair of shoes.
“OK then.” Tessa drew in a shaky breath. “Front stoop it is.”
She could do the front stoop. She must have run down those steps a million times over the course of her childhood. She just needed to shut her mind off. Focus on the task at hand.
Her mother reached for the door, but she stopped and stepped aside. She knew the drill. The two of them had been doing these desensitization exercises for weeks now. It was Tessa’s job to open the door herself.
“Sometime this century, perhaps?”
“Mom, I’m trying,” Tessa said. “I’m almost there.”
The door loomed before her, and Tessa closed her eyes.
Breathe in.
Eric one…Eric two…Eric three—
“For goodness sake, Tessa. It’s just a doorknob!”
But Tessa didn’t hear her mother’s voice. Not anymore. When her eyes reopened, she didn’t see her own front door at all.
Tessa’s head swiveled wildly as she tried to orient herself, but the edges of her vision had gone black. Tunnel vision. The area that remained visible slowly constricted. Soon she would be blind. And where she couldn’t see, she could sense the lurking menace all around her.
The rational corner of her mind gave way as the mindless fear overtook her. Tessa staggered against a side table as the memory crashed down. She was somewhere else now. Not her childhood home. A darkened hallway…a different door…fiddling with an unfamiliar lock, with the sound of those shuffling footsteps coming up behind her… Her head swam as her clumsy fingers fumbled, and for a moment she thought she would fall. Only the fear kept her upright. The terror that she wouldn’t get the door open before…before…
Her vision clouded over completely, and the blood in her veins turned to ice. She felt the gentle pressure of a hand on her upper arm. “No!” she cried, wrenching free.
“OK, sweetheart. Take it easy.” Her mother kneeled beside her, pulling the hair out of Tessa’s face. “You’re OK. Let’s go back upstairs and get your pills. Are you dizzy? Are you going to faint?”
Tessa barely heard, her thoughts still fragmented with all-consuming terror. She never should have left her room. Not today. She knew how it would go. Now she stood unsteadily and allowed her mom to lead her toward the narrow stairwell, all the while trying desperately to block out the images from her mind.
Think about something else.
Anything.
Anything else.
Like the click of a deadbolt, her mind switched over to a different scene. Two figures danced before her. A waltz around a stage. Then he stood alone in the center, dabbing at his chest with a bloodied towel.
“Eric,” Tessa whispered. She knew she was projecting, but she didn’t care. Defense mechanisms had their purpose. She let her words tumble out, unchecked. “How can they laugh about it? He was bleeding! What if she had a knife? It’s not funny! How can they all think it was funny?”
They reached her bedroom door now. Tessa lunged across the room for the bottle of anxiety pills by her bed as her mother tried to make sense of the jumbled words. “Who had a knife? Tessa, did someone at your summer program have a knife?”
“What? No. I’m not talking about that.” Tessa quickly palmed two pills and let them dissolve under her tongue.
“What are you talking about?”