Home > The Lost Girls of Willowbrook(16)

The Lost Girls of Willowbrook(16)
Author: Ellen Marie Wiseman

“Stalag Six?” Dale said.

“That’s what we call the houses,” Leonard said. “Stalag Six, Stalag Thirteen. You get the idea.”

Nurse Vic laughed. “You’ve got a lot to learn, boy. But don’t worry, old Leonard here will teach you the ropes. You ready to have some fun tonight?”

Dale grinned. “The real question is, are you ready? I’m pretty sure I can teach you guys a thing or two about partying.”

“I doubt it,” Leonard said. “I survived Woodstock.”

“Yeah?” Dale sounded amused. “So did my brother. But he didn’t say anything about seeing any geriatric hippies there.”

Sage wanted them to shut up. She needed them to shut up and listen to her. Couldn’t they see she was terrified? Didn’t they know she was falling apart? And what about the crying and moaning coming from out in the hall? Couldn’t they hear it? Didn’t they care?

Nurse Vic winked at Dale. “We’re not as old as you think, honey. We’ll see who teaches who.”

Leonard and Dale laughed, then pulled Sage toward the end of the counter. She looked over her shoulder at Nurse Vic as they dragged her away. “Please,” she cried. “This isn’t right!”

Nurse Vic sat back down and lit another cigarette.

When they went around the counter and started down the hall, Sage stopped in her tracks. If the attendants hadn’t been holding her up, she would have fallen to her knees.

Young girls, ranging in age from children to gangly teenagers, lined each side of the hallway. They were crowded together by twos and threes in beds and chairs and wheelchairs. Some of the beds were more like carts, with large wheels and handles for pushing, and several of the wheelchairs were made of wood, with rusting wheels and thin armrests, as if they’d been pulled from a Victorian museum. Many of the wheelchairs had long, wooden boxes in place of seats, like coffins without lids, in which girls lay crumpled on grimy sheets, their pale, thin limbs pulled into fetal positions, their wrists and hands curled up to their chests.

Most of the girls were either wearing cloth diapers, in various stages of undress, or naked; all were thin, their spines like pale ridges, their shoulder blades sticking out like sharp wings. Bruises and scrapes covered their skin, and a few had what looked like cigarette burns. At first Sage thought some of them were dead, their features and limbs were so cadaverous, but then she realized they were sleeping, or unable—or unwilling—to move. Several tossed their heads around, blind eyes searching and searching, while others looked at Sage with haunted eyes, reflecting all the horror she felt.

One girl’s face was crusty and bleeding, as if it had exploded from the inside. Some were missing body parts, arms or legs or hands, while others had misshapen heads, or deformed limbs or torsos. Dark splotches and brownish-yellow puddles speckled the tiled floor, and moans, honking cries, and gibberish filled the air, along with the stench of human waste.

A black terror grew inside Sage’s chest, choking her, closing her throat. The rumors were true. This was no school. It was a nightmare, a dumping ground for the broken and insane and unwanted. No wonder the people in charge never allowed parents in the ward. They would have called the police. Again, she asked herself how her mother could have left Rosemary in such a horrible place.

Dale put his free hand to his nose. “Sweet Jesus,” he said. “What is that smell?”

“You’ll get used to it,” Leonard said, and yanked Sage forward.

Undeterred by her resistance, he and Dale dragged her down the crowded hall, past a young girl inside a coffin-like box stained with something dark and sticky-looking. The girl turned her head and looked up at them, her face full of pain, her eyes pleading for help. An older girl smiled at Sage, gleeful and happy, as if she had a hilarious secret that she was determined to keep to herself. Sage squeezed her eyes shut and tried to cover her ears, but Leonard and Dale kept tugging her arms down. Her heart hammered like a runaway train in her chest. This couldn’t be real. It couldn’t be. No one would do this to children. No one would treat them like this. Maybe she was dead. Maybe the bus had crashed on the way here and she had been killed. Maybe this was hell.

A loud buzzer sounded and she jumped, the deafening tone going on and on and on. The girls in the hallway grew agitated, flailing and crying out and screaming, impossibly louder than before. A door slammed behind them and a bald attendant with muscular, tattooed arms ran past them, then turned down another corridor.

Leonard and Dale followed his route, taking Sage down the same hall. This one was narrower than the first and was lined with four sets of double doors marked Ward A, B, C, and D. Outside the door to Ward A, a teenage girl in a wheelchair was hitting another girl who was sitting on the floor and yowling, her hands up to ward off the blows. Leonard let go of Sage and pulled the two girls apart, pushing the one in the wheelchair away from the one on the floor. Then he grabbed Sage’s arm again and kept going without looking back to see if the fight had been averted. At the end of the hall, they stopped at the double doors to Ward D. Leonard unlocked one side and pushed it open. Wails and shouts and screams erupted from inside the room, along with bursts of profanity. A rancid stench as thick as the paint on the walls wafted over them, making Sage gag. Unbelievably, the odor was even stronger than it had been in the main hall, like shit and piss and vomit mixed with the underlying tang of disinfectant and bleach.

“Oh my God,” Dale said, coughing.

“Better buckle up, buttercup,” Leonard said, then yanked Sage into Ward D.

It was hard to tell which was worse, the noise or the smell. The air tasted like death; the inhuman, guttural cries coming from what sounded like a hundred tortured souls, rising and falling and rising again, made the hair on the back of her neck stand up. She’d never heard anything like it in her life, not even in the horror movies Noah loved to watch.

Ward D was L-shaped, with a vast main room and a smaller tiled space off to the left that looked like it might be a large, open restroom. Hooded strips of fluorescent lights lined the peeling ceiling, the long white tubes that still worked filling the room with a stark light. What looked like a hundred iron beds filled the main floor, all of them white and crammed together end to end, footboard to headboard, with a narrow walkway in between. Every bed was occupied, some with two girls on each mattress. Many of the girls were wearing straitjackets, sitting or kneeling or lying vacant-eyed; a few were tied to headboards with ropes, while others lay in their own waste. Some of the residents were naked; many wore only cloth diapers, while others were in crude, handmade uniforms. More rail-thin girls in wooden carts lined the right side of the room, while others crawled or jumped from bed to bed, laughing and howling and screaming. It seemed like everyone was moving—rocking back and forth, rolling their heads, licking their fingers, twisting their arms, shaking all over, like a roiling sea of human beings. The few who weren’t moving sat still as stones. One young woman sat forward on her bed, her torso bent impossibly flat against her legs, her head between her knees as if she’d been folded in half like a piece of cardboard. Another lay on the filthy floor next to the wall, her ankle tied to a support beam with a chain.

Sage stood in shock, numb and speechless and appalled. Willowbrook, the school where her beloved sister had been locked away for the past six years, reminded her of a concentration camp. She’d seen the photos in history class: the skeletal inmates, lying and standing and sitting in spaces made for half as many, some dirty, others partially clothed, all eyes devoid of hope and sanity. How was this abomination allowed to exist in the United States of America? And in the seventies, no less, when they could record music on an eight-track tape and put a man on the moon? This had to be a nightmare. It had to be. How could anyone survive?

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