Adrian calls to tell me that his partner, Rene, tried to kill himself.
“Rene almost did himself in last night. He put one of those dry-cleaning bags over his head. It didn’t work. There was something wrong with the bag.” Adrian sounds distraught.
I swerve onto the shoulder of the road as Adrian says this—the white line snaking up into my vision. That’s me: Trying to talk on the phone and drive convincingly. Note to self: Not good to combine dark northern California overpass with the aforementioned.
I can’t help but detect a hint of something else in his voice. Something submerged there in his opening. I let it go. The cel charger stares up at me from my unused cigarette lighter—a cat eye in the night.
“Jesus, I’m sorry. Wow…. A hole in it?”
Then also from me: “How long did he have the bag over his head?”
“It had a hole in it, yeah. I don’t know how long he had his head in he bag.” Pause. “Then he tried to stick his head in the oven.”
“The oven.”
“Yeah, but that didn’t work either. He just got too hot. He had to pull his head out. He has an electric oven.”
“Oh.” So gentle reader, get me here: My sympathy is abundant, yes, but so is some panic. There’s also something else: I’m on the verge of letting myself be entertained by this.
“Did he know that you can only kill yourself by sticking your head in a gas oven? And I’m not sure that would even kill you, really. There’s too much outside air coming in.”
Silence.
Rene lives in Seattle, so I imagine Adrian will probably take a short flight out from SFO.
I’m still empathetic. “Adrian, I’m so sorry. Is he on antidepressants that are reacting with
something else? Like booze or amphetamines?”
“No,” Alan says. “He’s not doing anything like that. He never has.”
“Which, the booze? The coke? Or the prescribed drugs?”
‘He’s never done drugs.”
“I see.” What I picture just then are sheep lying together in slumber, 20 enmeshed in a field. The sunset casts a mist above them. Occasionally, one of the sheep peeps back at me, as I gaze, inspired.
“Adrian, if there’s anything at all I can do for you, will you call me? Call me from Seattle. Better yet, do you want to meet somewhere now?” I like to help my friends when I can.
“No, I couldn’t meet you now. I’ll call you from Seattle.”