Home > Books > The Collective(17)

The Collective(17)

Author:Alison Gaylin

Camille Gardener: Why are there no men?

Melissa Reese: Too much mansplaining!

20 , 10

* * *

Daria Ann (admin): Lol, Melissa. We did have some dads in the group when we started, Camille, but we found it made it more difficult for some of us to share.

Tara Jacobson: In other words, like Melissa said lol.

Violet Langford: It isn’t their fault. It’s just the way we’ve all been conditioned. Every parents-of-victims group I’ve belonged to has been mostly women, yet there’s always been a man in charge. They talk, we listen. It’s the way of the world, but it’s also part of our pain and anger. On top of everything else, we don’t ever get to feel heard. Men don’t understand that, bless their hearts.

7 , 3

* * *

Daria Ann (admin): It’s not that way of our world, though. We listen to each other.

Tara Jacobson: Amen.

Camille Gardener: Well, thank you again. But I don’t think I want to tell my story. Is that okay?

Daria Ann (admin): Everything is okay here, Camille.

Camille Gardener

January 10 at 1:41 a.m.

I’m ready to tell my story now.

Seen by 79 people

* * *

45 , 30

* * *

Daria Ann (admin): We’re listening.

Camille Gardener: My daughter was killed at a fraternity party. It happened in January, on a Friday night. She was fifteen years old. I wasn’t around when she asked if she could go to the party. She had been invited by a boy—a freshman at Brayburn she had met a few weeks earlier. Her dad said yes. I wouldn’t have. For years I’ve tried to think about my ex-husband’s line of reasoning: This boy wasn’t the first older friend my daughter had made. She was an only child, and wise beyond her years. She had several close friends who were seniors, and a college freshman didn’t seem that different. Brayburn is small and not that far away from us, and it’s not a notorious party school. She promised she would be home by her eleven p.m. curfew. My ex-husband, I’m sure, had any number of reasons. I still wouldn’t have let her go.

Anyway, at the time, I worked for a Hudson Valley tourist magazine, and we were closing an issue that Friday, and so I didn’t get home until close to eleven. It was one of those nights that was too cold for snow, a clear night with a sky full of stars and a full moon. I looked in the closet and saw that her winter coat was missing, and I remember saying to her dad, “At least she brought her coat.” We both knew how she hated wearing a coat, no matter how cold it was. She found it constricting. She found everything constricting—her school, her town, her parents. It was nothing unusual. She was just at that age. My husband said, “I’m sure she’ll be home soon. She’s a good kid.” But then midnight came, and there was still no sign of her. She didn’t answer our texts. That was when her dad told me it was a college fraternity party she’d gone to, and that she’d gone with a boy who had picked her up at our house. Her dad didn’t have a cell phone number for the boy, just a name. The boy she had met a few weeks before at a friend’s house. I can recall my daughter saying that this college freshman was “very nice,” and that I would like him if I met him. The good news was, my husband remembered the name of the fraternity. We looked up the number and called its landline, over and over and over, hoping to find him and our daughter. No one answered for a long time. Then finally someone did. It was a very drunk-sounding boy. He said he couldn’t find either one of them, and that he was pretty sure there were no underage girls at this party, which from the sound of things was still in full swing.

We called the police. They told us “don’t worry” and to “sit tight.” But of course we worried. Before I tell more of this story, there’s something you all need to understand. Our daughter may have been sophisticated for a fifteen-year-old, but in our town, all that meant was that she wore a lot of black and colored her hair and listened to music with swear words in it. She didn’t drink or do drugs. She’d never had a boyfriend or even been on a date. She worked hard in her classes and played the piano in the school jazz band. She liked to bake cookies. She was a virgin.

 17/115   Home Previous 15 16 17 18 19 20 Next End