Authors: Daryl Gregory
“I know,” Counselor Todd said. He sounded suddenly tired. “I tried to talk to her.”
Todd could be an idiot, but he did care about the patients. And as the only full-time counselor on the ward, he worked essentially alone. The neuro-atypical ward was a lab for the hardcore cog-sci docs, the neuropsych researchers. They didn’t much care for talk therapy, or for talking therapists like Todd.
So as Todd became more isolated, he couldn’t help but grow attached to the people he spent the most time with: The patients had become, without him realizing it, his cohort, his troop. I knew that my degrees intimidated him. He suspected that because of my résumé I was more aligned with the neuropsych folks—which was true. But my highfalutin background also made him secretly desire my approval. Sometimes I used my power to get the lab to do the right thing for the patients, but I wasn’t above using it to get myself out of here.
Todd did his best to pull himself back to counselor mode. “Were you disturbed by Francine’s symptoms?”
“How so?”
“They were so similar to your own. The religious nature of her hallucinations—”
“A lot of schizos have religious delusions.”
“She wasn’t schizophrenic, at least not naturally. We believe she’d been taking a designer drug.”
“Which one?”
“We haven’t figured that out yet. But I was struck by the way she talked about God as a physical presence. That was how you used to speak about your angel.”
Dr. Gloria looked at me over her glasses. This was her favorite topic. I stopped myself from glaring at her.
“I’ve been symptom free for months,” I said to Todd. “No angels. No voices in my head. I didn’t think the antipsychotics you prescribed would work, honestly. My hallucination’s been so persistent, so long, that…” I shrugged. “But you were right, and I was wrong. I’m not too proud to admit that.”
“I thought they were worth a try,” he said. “When you showed up here, you were in a pretty bad place. Not just your injuries.”
“Oh no,” I said, agreeing with him. “It was everything. I was fucked up.” I’d been sentenced to the NAT after creating my own drive-thru at a convenience store. I swerved off the road at 60 KPH and plowed through the wall at three in the afternoon. My front bumper crushed a woman’s leg and sent another man flying, but nobody was killed. The owner told a reporter that “somebody up there was watching out for them.”
God gets the easiest performance reviews.
I said, “I feel like I’ve finally gotten a handle on my problems.”
I glanced up. I’d delivered this statement with all the sincerity I could muster. Todd seemed to be taking it in. Then he said, “Have you been thinking about your wife?”
A question as subtle as a crowbar. Counselor Todd trying to pop me open.
Dr. G said, “He noticed that you’re touching your ring.”
I glanced down. The wedding band was polished brass, six-sided on the outside. A friend of ours had forged a matching pair for us.
I placed my hands on the arms of my chair. “I think of her every day,” I said. “But not obsessively. She’s my wife. I miss her.”
Perhaps this struck him as an odd thing to say about a woman who had tried to kill me. Instead he said, “It’s interesting that you use the present tense.”
“She
has
been dead almost ten years,” Dr. Gloria said.
“I don’t believe that there’s a time limit on love or grief,” I said. A paraphrase of something Counselor Todd had told me very earnestly in my first month on the ward. I was detoxing then, vulnerable and wide open, sucking in Todd’s bromides as if they were profound truths. When you can’t get the heroin, take the methadone.
“And your child?” he asked.
I sat back, my heart suddenly beating hard. “Are you working through a checklist there?”
“You’re sounding angry again,” Dr. Gloria said.
Todd said, “You mentioned her only once in our therapy sessions, but according to your file…”
If he flicked open that damn pen I was going to leap across the table at him.
“I don’t have a child,” I said.
Dr. Gloria looked over her glasses at me, the Medical Professional version of an eye roll.
“Anymore,” I said.
Todd pursed his lips, signaling disappointment. “I’m sorry, Lyda, I just can’t sign off on this. I think you’re trying to get out of here so you can score, and you still haven’t addressed some key issues in—”
“I’ll take the chip.”
He looked up at me, surprised.
“The terms of my sentence give me the option,” I said. “All you have to do is sign. You know I’ve been a model patient.”
“But you’re almost done here. Two more months and you’re out. If you go on the chip, that’s a mandatory year of tracking. You won’t be able to leave the province without permission.”
“I understand that.”
He gave me a long look. “You know they can’t be spoofed, yes? Not like the old chips. Your blood alcohol levels will be sent to us every ten seconds. Anything stronger than aspirin throws up a red flag. And any use of a controlled substance, other than those prescribed to you, gets immediately reported to the police.”
“Any drug can and will be used against me,” I said. “Got it.”
“Good. Because the last time I brought up the chip, you told me I could shove it up my ass.”
“Well, it
is
very small.”
He suppressed a smile. Todd enjoyed being joked with. Made him feel part of the troop. And as the least insane person on the floor (if I said so myself), I was the person he could most easily talk to. The only question was, would he be insecure enough to keep me here, just so we didn’t have to—sob—break up?
Time to seal the deal. I looked at my feet, feigning embarrassment. “I know this may not be technically allowed after I leave, but…”
“This room is a safe place to say anything,” Todd said.
I looked up. “I’d like to keep in touch with you. If that’s all right.”
“I’m sure that would be fine,” Todd said. “If I sign on for this.” But of course he had already made up his mind.
* * *
The NAT ward was small, a population of twenty-five to forty, depending on the season. News traveled the floor with telepathic speed. Two of the residents believed they
were
telepathic, so who knows.
I was packing when Ollie appeared in my room. Five foot two, hair falling across her face. Quiet as a closed door. And like everyone on the ward, Severely Fucked in the Head.
She stared into the room, eyes pointed in my direction. Trying to work out the puzzle. That stack of shapes probably belonged to one thing, those horizontal shapes to something else. Once sorted, labels could be applied: bed, wall, duffel bag, human being.
To help her out I said, “Hi, Ollie.”
Her face changed—that slight shift of recognition as she assigned the label “Lyda” to an arrangement of red hair and dark clothes—then went still again. She was angry. I’d made a mistake by not telling her I was leaving. Not as big a mistake as sleeping with her, but enough.
At last she said, “Can I see it?”
“Sure,” I said. Ollie concentrated on the changes in the scene: The object that swung toward her in her visual field must be, logically, my arm. From there she found my wrist, and slid a finger along my forearm. Tactile information integrated more easily than the visual. She peeled back the Band-Aid, pressed the tiny pink bump. She was as unself-conscious with my body as with her own.
“So small,” she said.
“My new portable conscience,” I said. “Like I needed another one.”
Her fingers lingered on my skin, then fell away. “You’re going to look for that dead girl’s dealer.”
I didn’t try to deny it. Even on meds Ollie was the smartest person I’d ever met, after Mikala.
She closed her eyes, cutting out the visual distraction. She looked like a little girl. Told me once that her Filipino mother was 4’10”, her white Minnesota father over six feet, and she was still waiting for those Norwegian genes to kick in.
“You can’t know that it’s the same drug that hit you,” she said without opening her eyes. “There are thousands of countertop tweakers out there. Somebody just happened to whip up something with the same symptoms.”
The glories of the DIY smart drug revolution. Any high school student with a chemjet and an internet connection could download recipes and print small-batch drugs. The creative types liked to fuck with the recipes, try them out on their friends. People swallowed paper all the time without knowing what they were chewing. Half the residents of the NAT ward weren’t addicts; they were beta testers.
“You’re right,” I said flatly. “It’s probably not the same drug at all.”
She opened her eyes. Now seeing right through me. “I can help you,” she said.
There was a certainty in her voice. Ollie used to do things for the US government, and the US government used to do things to Ollie.
“I don’t think they’re going to let you walk out of here,” I said. Ollie was not one of the voluntary patients. Like me, she’d been convicted of a crime, then sent here because the docs thought she was an interesting case. “Just stay here,” I said. “And heal.”
Heal.
That was a NAT joke.
She said, “I can be out of here in two—”
“Nurse,” I said in a low voice, warning her. We residents did this a lot on the ward, like kids playing in the street calling “car.”
“Seconds,” Ollie finished.
Dr. Gloria and one of the day-shift nurses walked toward the room. “Ready?” the nurse asked me.
Dr. G looked at Ollie, then back toward me, a knowing smile on her face. “If you’re all done here,” she said.
I picked up my bag. “I’ve got to go,” I said to Ollie. I touched her shoulder on the way out. This is me, the touch told her. This is me moving away from you.
* * *
“She’s in love with you, you know,” Dr. G said.
“Hospital infatuation,” I said.
We stood on the sidewalk outside the hospital, waiting for my ride under a gray sky leaking sunlight. Dirty snow banked the sidewalk, peppered with black deicer pellets. Behind us, staff and visitors passed in and out of the revolving doors like ions through a membrane.
I folded up the plastic bag that contained my prescription and jammed my hands into the pockets of my thin jacket. It had been early fall when I went in, and my street clothes had failed to evolve while in storage. But I was not about to go back inside that building, even to stay warm. I was a free woman—tethered only by the plastic snitch attached to my vein, broadcasting each taste of my bloodstream to the ether.
Dr. G had followed me out. “You’d be better off staying with her and finishing your sentence inside,” she said. “Less temptation. You were staying clean, Lyda.”
“Edo’s making NME One-Ten.”
“You don’t know that.”
“All Francine could talk about was ‘the Numinous.’ That is no fucking coincidence. Edo broke his promise.”
“He never made that promise,” she said.
“Yeah, well, I made a promise to
him
.”
“Listen to yourself,” Dr. Gloria said. “You’re pissed off. Have you considered that you’re overreacting to the girl’s death? You have a blind spot for little lost girls.”
“Fuck off.”
“Lyda—”
“I’m responsible for the drug that killed her.”
“Even if the substance
is
the One-Ten, which is doubtful, that doesn’t mean that it’s Edo Vik.”
“Then I guess I have to find out who
is
making it.”
A car pulled up to the curb, a decrepit Nissan hybrid. The cost of the gas had to be enormous. The driver jumped out of the car, ran to me with arms out. “Lyda!”
Bobby was a could-have-been-handsome white boy, twenty-three years old, with stiff black hair and almond eyes, so maybe a little Asian in the mix. A former ward-mate, and batshit crazy. But a good kid. More importantly, he lived in Toronto, and he owned a car.
I let him hug me. The price to pay for the ride.
“You look all healthy,” he said. Hanging from a leather thong around his neck was a small plastic treasure chest, one of those aquarium accessories with
Real Working Hinge
. He never went anywhere without it.
“Where are we going?” he asked me.
“Take me to my dealer.”
He blinked in surprise. “Uh, are you sure?”
“Relax. I just want to talk to him.”
“You just got out of the ward. Don’t you want to go home?”
“I don’t have a home. That apartment is long gone.”
“Oh, then maybe a hotel?”
“I’m getting cold out here, Bobby.”
He opened the passenger door for me, then hustled around to the other side.
Dr. Gloria said, “I can’t protect you if you don’t listen to me.”
“Then stay here.”
“Oh, you don’t get away that easy.” Dr. Gloria’s wings unfurled from her back with a snap, and the world vanished in a blaze of heavenly radiance. I winced and looked away.
“Lo, I am with you always,” she said. I opened one eye. She pulsed like a migraine aura, throwing off megawatts of holy glow. Then her wings convulsed, and she was airborne.
CHAPTER TWO
We rode into Toronto on the 401 with Dr. Gloria flying point: a star to guide us. Bobby couldn’t see her, of course. The doctor was
my
permanent hallucination, a standing wave thrown up by my temporal lobe and supported by various other members of my mental parliament. My supernatural companion was a fake, but unlike Francine, I knew it.
We left the highway and dropped south toward the lake. I rolled down the window, and cold wind filled the car.
“What are you doing?” Bobby asked.
I tossed out the bag containing my prescription bottles. “Ballast,” I said.
“What?”
“Eyes on the road, kid.” He slowed as we entered the university campus. It was a Wednesday, the start of the college weekend, so Brandy, my old dealer, would be working the frats. We cruised past Victorian houses lit up and vibrating with heavy bass. College boys in shorts stood outside, ankle deep in the snow. Girls in microdresses teetered on high heels across the icy sidewalks. Bobby drove slow, one hand on the treasure chest and the other on the wheel, while I kept an eye out for Brandy’s vehicle, a beat-up VW delivery van. Twice we jerked to a stop as drunken kids lurched into the street.