Authors: Wally Lamb
He told me about a voice that had been encouraging him to hang our mother’s crucifixes upside down, another that kept ordering him to go to the maternity ward at the hospital and strangle the infants. He wasn’t sure whose the latter voice was, but it might have been someone from the Manson family. Maybe Charles Manson himself. He wasn’t sure. “You should hear the way
he
talks,” Thomas said. “It’s disgusting.” He took a sip of his shamrock shake. “Nothing I can repeat in public.”
“Thomas?” I said.
“Then there’s another voice—a religious voice. He keeps telling me to memorize the Bible. It makes sense, really. Once the Communists take over, watch out! The first thing they’re going to do is burn every single Bible in the United States. Don’t think they won’t, either. That’s why I’ve started memorizing it. Who else would do it if I didn’t?”
I felt light-headed, robbed of oxygen. This wasn’t happening, I promised myself.
“Is this . . . is this the same voice that’s telling you to do the other stuff?”
“What other stuff?”
“The bad stuff.”
Thomas sighed like a parent whose patience was ebbing. “I just
told
you, Dominick. It’s a
religious
voice. He disapproves of everything the other voices say. They bicker all night long. It gives me headaches. Sometimes they
scream
at each other. You know who it might be? That priest that Ma used to listen to on television. On Saturday nights. Remember? He had white hair. I can see him, but I can’t remember his name.”
“Bishop Sheen?” I said.
“That’s it. Bishop Sheen. He’s our father, you know? He impregnated Ma through the television. It can be done; it’s more common than anyone thinks. ‘This is Bishop Fulton J. Sheen saying good night and God loves you.’ . . . I don’t know. It might be him, but it might not. You know that Dr. DiMarco and the Manson family have orgies, don’t you? In Dr. DiMarco’s office. One of them guards the door so that patients don’t walk in on them accidentally. They do anything
they want to each other.
Anything.
It’s disgusting. That’s why I’m in danger. Because I know about the link between Manson and the Communists. I shouldn’t even be out here in public like this. It’s a risk. I know too much—about the plan to blow up the sub base, for instance. They’re very, very dangerous people, Dominick—the Communists. If they ever suspected I’ve begun to memorize the Bible, I’d be shot in the head. There’d
be orders to shoot on sight. Listen!
‘In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth; the earth was waste and void; darkness covered the abyss, and the spirit of God was stirring above the waters.’
I’m only up to chapter 2, verse 3. It’s a lifetime’s work. It’s risky business. How’s Dessa?”
“Dessa?” I said. “Dessa’s . . . “
“That’s why I had to break it off with her sister, you know. It was too dangerous. They might have hurt her to get at me. What was her name again?”
“Her . . . ? Angie? You mean Angie?”
He nodded. “Angie. It was just too dangerous, Dominick. Do you want the rest of my fries?”
That conversation—and the psychiatric lockup that followed it later that night, Thomas’s first—occurred a full ten months after the panic attack that had made my brother trash our jointly-owned typewriter in May of the previous year. In the interim, the war had escalated, man had walked on the moon, and I’d tried as hard as possible not to see what was coming—what, inch by inch, had already arrived.
On that first night of many nights when I drove my brother between the brick pillars and onto the grounds of the Three Rivers State Hospital, I went home to our shared bedroom on Hollyhock Avenue and dreamed a dream I have remembered ever since.
In it, my brother, Ralph Drinkwater, and I are together, lost somewhere in the Vietnamese jungle, wading ankle-deep in muck. A sniper, perched in a tree, raises his rifle and aims. No one sees him but me; there’s no time to tell the others.
I duck, pulling Ralph down with me. There’s a dull crack. A bullet rips through my brother’s brain. . . .
“Almond, peanut butter, or crunch?” Lisa Sheffer asked.
“The usual,” I said. “One of each.” I fished into my wallet, slid three bucks across the desktop.
Since my brother’s commitment at Hatch, I’d had five meetings with Sheffer and had bought fund-raiser candy bars for Thomas each time. It was part ritual and part thanks to Sheffer for watching out for him. Part connection between me and my brother during our state-enforced separation: a candy bar bridge, a link of chocolate, nuts, and sugar. It was the first thing Thomas asked about whenever she saw him, Sheffer said. Had she seen me? Had I bought him any candy bars?
“Make sure your daughter remembers me when she graduates from Midget Football and becomes a Dallas Cowboy cheerleader,” I said.
“Oh,
please,
” Sheffer groaned. “I’d have to shoot myself.”
I asked her if her daughter looked like her.
“Jesse? No, she looks like the sperm donor.” I guess I must have
looked at her funny. “My ex-husband,” she said. “If I think of him as the sperm donor instead of the toad I was stupid enough to marry, it doesn’t make me seem like such a bad judge of character.” She fished a picture out of her desk and passed it over: a chubby brunette in a pink leotard.
“She’s a cutie,” I said. “Seven, right?”
“Seven going on thirteen. You know what she wants to do when she grows up? Wear eye shadow. That’s
it
—the sum total of her future goals: wear blue eye shadow with glitter in it. Gloria Steinem would be furious with me.”
I had to smile. “I met Gloria Steinem once,” I said.
“Yeah? Where?”
“Down in New York. At a
Ms.
magazine party. Me and my wife.”
“Really? Geez, Domenico, I wouldn’t have automatically assumed you were on the guest list. What was the occasion?”
“My wife—my
ex-
wife—had started a day care program with her friend at Electric Boat. For working women, single moms. It was right after the Boat started—”
The phone rang. “Excuse me,” Sheffer said.
I told myself I had to stop doing that: talking about Dessa all the time, forgetting to put the
ex
in ex-wife. It was pathetic, really: the abandoned husband who couldn’t let go. You got a divorce decree and a live-in girlfriend, I reminded myself. Get
over
it.
“Yeah, but Steve, what
you’re
not understanding is that I’m in the middle of a meeting,” Sheffer told whoever was on the other end of the phone. I picked up the picture of her kid again. It was kind of funny: this little girlie-looking girl belonging to Sheffer, with her crewcut and her wrist tattoos.
“I’m not saying I
forbid
it, Steve. I’m not in a position to
forbid
anything. I’m just saying it’s not particularly convenient right now because I have someone in the office with me.” She held the phone in front of her and mouthed the word
asshole.
“Fine,” she said. “
Fine.
Send him up then.”
She banged the phone back down and moaned. “God forbid that clinical needs should interfere with the maintenance schedule,” she
said. “I’ve been asking for two weeks to have that light replaced.” Her head nodded toward the dead fluorescent tube above my head. “Suddenly, it’s now or never, meeting or no meeting.”
I shook my head in sympathy. “So, anyway,” I said. “You told me over the phone you wanted to
talk about the hearing? Wanted to ‘brainstorm’ or something?”
She nodded, refocusing herself. “Okay, look. Here’s the deal. The Security Review Board meets on the thirty-first. Halloween. That gives us less than a week to build our case.”
“
Our
case?” I said. “I thought you were undecided about whether he should or shouldn’t stay here.”
She picked up a paper clip. Moved it end over end across her desk. “Well, Domenico, I had insomnia last night,” she said. “And somewhere around my twelfth or thirteenth game of solitaire, I joined your team.”
I looked at her. Waited.
“I really wasn’t sure before—I kept going back and forth—but I’ve come to the conclusion that another year here at Hatch would probably do him more harm than good.”
“What happened?” I said. “Did something else happen?”
She shook her head. “Nothing, really. Nothing out of the ordinary.”
“Which means
what
?”
“He’s been taking a little teasing here and there—at meals, at rec time. Don’t worry. We’re monitoring it. The trouble with Thomas—with anyone who’s paranoid—is that he tends to perceive run-of-the-mill ribbing as proof of grand conspiracy. Someone says something, and he immediately sees it as part of some master plan. And, of course, when he gives someone a big reaction, it invites more of the same. But he and Dr. Patel and I are working it out. Developing some strategies he can use when someone starts teasing him.”
“You know what sucks?” I said. “This security clearance bullshit. The way I can’t even
see
him.” I picked a candy bar up off her desk and waved it. “The way I gotta communicate with these things.”
She assured me my security clearance would be coming soon.
That the teasing was nothing out of the ordinary. “He’s
safe,
” she said.
“Oh, yeah. Safe with all the psycho-killers and pyromaniacs and God knows what else. Not to mention the goons in uniform. If he’s so safe, what made you decide he needs to get out of here?”
She sighed. “Well, ironically enough, the security. The inspections, the surveillance cameras, room checks—all the routines and precautions that
keep
it safe. The bottom line is: this is a very threatening environment for a paranoid schizophrenic. People
are
always watching you. I just think he could be better served, long term, at a facility where security is less of an issue.”
“But nothing else happened? He didn’t freak out in the dining room again or anything?”
“He’s
better,
Dominick
. Really.
His wound has healed nicely. The psycholeptics are starting to kick in. And he knows what to expect now—what the day-to-day routine is. But I’ll be honest with you. He’s miserable here—scared, withdrawn. It’s sad. I just feel that a maximum-security forensic hospital is an inappropriate placement for him.”
“Which is what I’ve been trying to tell everybody right along!”
She nodded. Smiled. “So, okay, you’re ahead of the rest of us. Go to the head of the class. Anyway, I’m going to help you fight for his release.”
Sheffer took out a legal pad and we began to plan our arguments for the Review Board: the things
she’d
say, the things
I’d
say. It was crucial that I be there to advocate for him, she said. It would show the board that Thomas had family support—a safety net to fall back on. She wanted to know if Ray was planning to attend. Given Ray and Thomas’s past history, I said, I wasn’t sure if it was a good idea or not. Sheffer suggested that Ray be there—sit there—but not say anything. “You’ll be the spokesperson; he can be the ‘extra.’ Okay?”
“Okay with me,” I said. “I’m not sure if it’ll be okay with Ray.”
“Do you want to ask him about it? Or should I?”
I looked away. “You,” I said.
Together, Sheffer and I came up with a list of potential advocates
for Thomas’s release: former docs, staff members at Settle, people from the community who might be willing to write a letter on his behalf. We divided the list; each of us promised to approach half. “Now,” Sheffer said. “We have to talk about the unit team recommendation.”
There was a knock on the door. “Maintenance,” Sheffer said. “Come in!”
But it was Dr. Patel’s little grapefruit-sized gray head that poked around the door. I’d have preferred the janitor.
“Hello, Lisa,” she said. “Hello, Dominick.” She explained to me that Sheffer had mentioned I was coming in for a meeting; she wanted to see me for just a minute. Was this a convenient time? “Yeah, sure, Rubina,” Sheffer said. “I’ve got something I should check on, anyway. I’ll be back in five minutes.” She closed the door behind her. It was a setup.
Doc Patel cut to the chase. “You missed your appointment yesterday,” she said.
I reminded her I’d phoned and left a message with her answering service.
“Which I received,” she said. “Thank you. But that is not the point. My point is:
why
did you cancel, Dominick?”
“Why?” She hated when I did that: answered her by repeating her question.
“You’d had a difficult time of it the session before and then you didn’t show up yesterday. Naturally, I’m wondering if—”
“It was the weather,” I said.
“Yes? The weather? Explain, please.”
“They were . . . they were predicting rain on Wednesday and Thursday.”
She shrugged. “My office is indoors, Dominick.”
“It’s the end of the outdoor season. The
painting
season. I got this house I’ve got to finish—big job—and with everything else that’s happened, I haven’t. . . . We’ve had frost two nights in a row now.”
She shrugged again.
“Your work’s not seasonal,” I said. “Us lunatics keep you busy all twelve months of the year. But I can’t afford to—”