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Waking Olivia(11)

By:Elizabeth O Roark


"Jesus Christ," I exhale. "Whatever you do, don't hitchhike."

"I had to! I wasn't going to make it in time for the meet otherwise."

"You're going to get hurt. That's far worse than missing a meet. You've probably already gotten hurt at some point."

She closes her eyes. I'm beginning to decipher Olivia-speak. Anything  that isn't flat out argument is unwilling agreement. She has gotten  hurt, and I'm guessing it was bad.

"There's got to be some kind of sleeping pill they can give you," I insist.

"Yeah, and it'd make me comatose the next day. You think my run today was shitty? Watch me the morning after I take the drugs."

"Olivia, there are things that matter more than running."

She looks at me like I'm insane. "Not for me."

This girl. This stupid, stupid girl. Does she not realize how badly she  could be hurt? How in a moment's time it could all just disappear?

"What about your life?" I ask. "Isn't that more important than running?"

She turns to me with a single brow raised, her eyes bleak and  unapologetic. Nothing's more important to her than this. It's an answer I  understand all too well. That's exactly how I felt about climbing.



The next few days are uneventful. She's on time without a single scowl  or acid-laced barb. She gives me exactly what I ask for, bearing my  adjustments to her form in silence, but she also avoids my gaze  entirely. She puts on a good act, but I'm beginning to suspect that  tough shell of hers is there for a reason. That perhaps it's hiding  something so fragile she's not sure it could survive out in the open.

It's not until Friday that she's done it again. That she can't keep up,  and ends up hanging back with the slowest girls on the team. I almost  tell her to stop. When they come back to the track, I see her hands and  legs jerking, the muscles spasming, and she clasps her arms around her  waist to hide it as best she can. Still not meeting my gaze.

"Good practice, ladies," I call. "Head in and I'll see you Monday. Enjoy  your last free Friday for a while." She starts in and I stop her. "Hang  on, Olivia."                       
       
           


///
       

She nods but stares at the ground, her legs knocking together. It's hard  to watch. How much must this girl drive herself in order to keep up on  the days when there's nothing left?

I tell her to sit and hand her a drink. "What are we going to do about this, Olivia?"

Her glance at me is both panicked and angry, shooting quickly toward me and then away. "I don't know. If I knew, I'd do it."

"What makes it better? What makes it worse?"

"Exhaustion. Exhaustion makes it better. Stress makes it worse."

I look out over the track as I let this sink in. What this tells me is  that races create the perfect storm for her. Not enough of a workout to  tire her the day before and tons of stress on top of it. And me there,  acting like she's going to lose her scholarship the minute she messes  up. Coaching a runner isn't rocket science, and yet I'm at a loss as to  how I can help her.

"Your parents must have had a way to stop you, though," I say. "They  couldn't have allowed a kid to just run out in the middle of the night."

She looks at me again, that small wounded thing inside her making only  the briefest appearance before it goes away. She shakes her head.  "Nothing stopped me."

God, the idea of her out running like that unnerves me. She thinks she's  tough, but the truth is that she's 5'7 and about 110 pounds. A large  child could probably take her down. The idea of her hitchhiking to get  home ...

It sits in my stomach like a stone.

"You know if you get too far from campus you can call me, right?" I  finally ask. "Or if you just need a ride when you wake up? For Christ's  sake, don't hitchhike, anyway."

She almost smiles, but not quite. "How am I going to do that, Will? I don't stop to grab my phone on the way out the door."

Jesus. She's right. She's absolutely right. I can't stand the idea of  her taking the risks she must take when it happens. "You need to go to  counseling."

"It won't do any good," she says flatly.

"I said that wrong. What I meant is you are going to counseling. This is  not a negotiation." She glares at me and I laugh. "You're giving me  that look like you wish I were dead again, so at least things are back  to normal."

Her mouth twitches. All of the trouble she's caused me so far feels worth it the moment I see her almost-smile.





17





Olivia



This is going to go so poorly.

Will, I'm sure, thinks I'm going to go in to see this counselor, and by  the end of the session I'll be crying about how I never felt loved or  how my mom skipped my ballet recital when I was five or whatever it is  normal people cry about. And then I'm going to pop out of my chair,  healed and ready to move on. Except I'm not normal. I'm so far from  normal that I doubt even the psychologists have seen one of me before. I  have experience with this. I have so much experience with this that I  swear to God I could switch chairs and counsel myself.

It doesn't work.

The therapist's name is Ms. Daniels. She's small and chunky and has a  big, fake smile on her face. I hate her on sight, which seems like a bad  omen. I'd love to ask, since she's apparently the picture of  psychological health, why she can't get her weight under control. I  manage to hold back.

She has a whispery little baby voice and sings her words to me like I'm a  toddler. "Olivia?" she hums. I don't bother correcting the name because  I already know I'm not coming back. "I'm so happy to meet you," she  coos as we sit in her office. She still has that eager smile on her face  as if I'm here to plan a trip to Bali and she's on commission. "Why  don't you tell me what brings you in today?"

This is bullshit. She knows exactly why I'm here. Why should school  funds pay for her to sit there and listen to me recount something she  can read for herself? "Isn't it already in my file?" I ask.

"I saw a few things," she sings, "but I want to know why you want to be  here." She continues to smile. It's freaky. I didn't come in here  because I just won the lottery, so why the fuck is she smiling?

I tell her I'm only here because my coach forced me to be. "If you'd  read my file you'd know that," I add. That gets her. I watch her lips  twitch, her eyes blink a little extra. She's growing nervous.

"Well, then we can talk about why you don't want to be here."

"Because I've done this before. It just doesn't work."

"Not all therapists are the same," she says, eyes brightening. "Maybe your last one just wasn't a good fit."

"No, I mean that I don't think it works for anyone," I reply. "Did you  know psychiatrists commit suicide more than any other profession?"

Her mouth twitches again. "I don't think that's true."                       
       
           


///
       

"Look it up."

"I don't need to look it up, Olivia," she says, growing flushed. "This session is for you to talk about your feelings."

"My feeling is that you're scared to look it up." I almost feel sorry  for her, but not quite. If she wants to position herself as the expert,  then she should freaking be an expert.

She glances at the wall behind me. No doubt she has a clock there and is  trying to gauge exactly how many more minutes this will drag out. And  it will drag out, believe me, because I plan to make this every bit as  unpleasant for her as it is for me.

It's one of the very few things I'm good at.





18





Will



On Tuesday afternoon, I tell the team that there will be a time trial  the next morning. The top three runners will fly to Oregon in early  December for the Cooper Invitational. I don't want to look at Olivia's  face, but I do, and I regret it. She's scared. I can see it in her eyes.  She deserves one of those three spots. Hell, she deserves all of them.  She's the best runner this school has seen in a decade, if not more. But  that fear I see is only going to feed on itself, ensuring that she runs  tonight. I feel powerless as I send her off. I hate the feeling, and I  hate that it's probably how she feels almost all of the time.



Jessica and I have an early dinner. I walk her to her door, but I don't  come inside. "You're not staying?" she asks, looking at me beneath long  lashes, arching her limber frame so her chest brushes mine. She has the  kind of body few men can say "no" to, and she's well aware of it.

"I'm sorry, I've got to be up early tomorrow." She knows I don't sleep  well at her place. It's nothing personal, but I inevitably wind up  sleeping on her couch because I can't fall asleep next to someone. I've  never been able to, but that has nothing to do with why I'm not staying  tonight.