Authors: William Peter Blatty
Tags: #Horror, #Fiction, #Exorcism, #Supernatural, #Horror fiction, #Demoniac possession, #Media Tie-In
"How's she doing?" he persisted.
"Just rotten. I mean, suddenly rotten."
He grunted.
"Why'd you ask?" she repeated
"Well, it's part of the syndrome."
"Of what?"
'Nothing serious. I'd rather not guess about it oven the phone. Got a pencil?"
He wanted to give her the name of a Washington internist.
"Marc, can't you come out here and check her yourself?" Jamie. A lingering infection. Chris's doctor at that time had prescribed a new, broad-spectrum antibiotic. Refilling a prescription at a local drugstore, the pharmacist was wary. "I don't want to alarm you, ma'am, but this... Well, it's quite new on the market, and they've found that in Georgia it's been causing aplastic anemia in..." Jamie. Jamie. Dead. And ever since, Chris had never trusted doctors. Only Marc. And that had taken years. "Marc, can't you?" Chris pleaded.
"No, I can't, but don't worry. This man is brilliant. The best. Now get a pencil."
Hesitation. Then, "Okay."
She wrote down the name.
"Have him look her over and then tell him to call me," the internist advised. "And forget the psychiatrist for now."
"Are you sure?"
He delivered a blistering statement regarding the readiness of the general public to recognize psychosomatic illness, while failing to recognize the reverse: that illness of the body was often the cause of seeming illness of the mind.
"Now what would you say," he proposed as an instance, "if you were my internist, God forbid, and I told you I had headaches, recurring nightmares, nausea, insomnia and blurring of the vision; and also that I generally felt unglued and was worried to death about my job? Would you say I was neurotic?"
"I'm a bad one to ask, Marc; I know that you're crazy."
"Those symptoms I gave you are the same as for brain tumor, Chris. Check the body. That's first. Then well see."
Chris telephoned the internist and made an appointment for that afternoon. Her time was her own now. The filming was over, at least for her. Burke Dennings continued, loosely supervising the work of the "second unit;" a generally less expensive crew that was filming scenes of lesser importance, mostly helicopter shots of various exteriors around the city; also stunt work; scenes without any of the principal actors.
But he wanted each foot of film to be perfect.
**********
The doctor was in Arlington. Samuel Klein. While Regan sat crossly in an examining room, Klein seated her mother in his office and took a brief case history. She told him the trouble. He listened; nodded; made copious notes. When she mentioned the shaking of the bed, he appears to frown. But Chris continued:
"Marc seemed to think it was kind of significant that Regan's doing poorly with her math. Now why was that?"
"You mean schoolwork?"
"Yes, schoolwork, but math in particular, though. What's it mean?"
"Well, let's wait until I've looked at her, Mrs. MacNeil."
He then excused himself and gave Regan a complete examination that included taking samples of urine and her blood. The urine was for testing of her liver and kidney functions; the blood for a number of checks: diabetes; thyroid function; red-cell blood count looking for possible anemia, White-cell blood count looking for exotic diseases of the blood.
After he finished, he sat for a while and talked to Regan, observing her demeanor, and then returned to Chris and started writing a prescription.
"She appears to have a hyperkinetic behavior disorder."
"A what?"
"A disorder of the nerves. At least We think it is. We don't know yet exactly hgw it works, but its often seen in early adolescence. She shows all the symptoms: the hyperactivity; the temper; her performance in math."
"Yeah, the math. Why the math?"
"It affects concentration." He ripped the prescription from the small blue pad and handed it over, "Now this is for Ritalin."
"What?"
"Methylphenidate."
"Oh."
"Ten milligrams, twice a day, I'd recommend one at eight A.M., and the other at two in the afternoon."
She was eyeing the prescription.
"What is it? A tranquilizer?"
"A stimulant."
"Stimulant? She's higher'n a kite right now."
"Her condition isn't quite what it seems," explained Klein. "It's a form of overcompensation. An overreaction to depression."
"Depression?"
Klein nodded.
"Depression..." Chris murmured. She was thoughtful.
"Well, you mentioned her father," said Klein.
Chris looked up. "Do you think I should take her to see a psychiatrist?"
"Oh, no. I'd wait and see what happens with the Ritalin. I think that's the answer. Wait two or three weeks."
"So you think it's all nerves."
"I suspect so."
"And those lies she's been telling? This'll stop it?"
His answer puzzled her. He askedd her if she'd ever known Regan to swear or use obscenities.
"Never," Chris answered.
"Well, you see, that's quite similar to things like her lying--- uncharacteristic, from what you tell me, but in certain disorders of the nerves it can---"
"Wait a minute," Chris interrupted, perplexed. "Where'd you ever get the notion she uses obscenities? I mean, is that what you were saying or did I misunderstood?"
For a moment, he eyed her rather curiously; considered; then cautiously ventured, "Yes, I'd say that she uses obscenities. Weren't you aware of it?"
"I'm still not aware of it. What are you talking about?"
"Well, she let loose quite a string while I was examining her, Mrs. MacNeil."
"You're kidding! Like what?"
He looked evasive. "Well, I'd say her vocabulary's rather extensive."
"Well, what, for instance? I mean, give me an example!"
He shrugged.
"You mean 'shit?' Or 'fuck'?"
He relaxed. "Yes, she used those words," he said.
"And what else did she say? Specifically."
"Well, specifically, Mrs. MacNeil, she advised and to keep my goddam finger away from her cunt."
Chris gasped with shock. "She used those words?"
"Well, it isn't unusual, Mrs. MacNeil, and I really wouldn't worry about it at all. It's a part of the syndrome."
She was shaking her head, looking down at her shoes. "It's just hard to believe."
"Look, I doubt that she even understood what she was saying," he soothed.
"Yeah, I guess," murmured Chris. "Maybe not"
'Try the Ritalin," he advised her, "and we'll see what develops. And I'd like to take a look at her again in two weeks."
He consulted a calendar pad on his desk. "Let's see; let's make it Wednesday the twenty-seventh. Would that be convenient?" he asked, glancing up.
"Yeah, sure," she murmured, getting up from the chair. She crumpled the prescription in a pocket of her coat. "The twenty-seventh would be fine."
"I'm quite a big fan of yours," Klein said, smiling as he opened the door leading into the hall.
She paused in the doorway, preoccupied, a fingertip pressed to her lip. She glanced to the doctor.
"You don't think a psychiatrist, huh?"
"I don't know. But the best explanation is always the simplest one. Let's wait. Let's wait and see." He smiled encouragingly. "In the meantime, try not to worry."
"How?"
She left him.
**********
As they drove back home, Regan asked her what the doctor had said.
"That you're nervous."
Chris had decided not to talk about her language. Burke. She picked it up from Burke.
But she did speak to Sharon about it later, asking if she'd ever heard Regan use that kind of obscenity.
"Why, no," replied Sharon. "I mean, not even lately. But you know, I think her art teacher made a remark." A special tutor who came to the house.
"You mean recently?" Chris asked.
"Yes, it was just last week. But you know her. I just figured maybe Regan said 'damn' or 'crap.' You know, something like that."
"By the way, have you been talking to her much about religion, Shar?"
Sharon flushed.
"Well, a little; that's all. I mean, it's hard to avoid. You see, she asks so many questions, and--- well... " She gave a helpless little shrug. "It's just hard. I mean, how do I answer without telling what I think is a great big lie?"
"Give her multiple choice."
**********
In the days that preceded her scheduled party, Chris was extremely diligent in seeing that Regan took her dosage of Ritalin. By the night of the party, however, she had failed to observe any noticeable improvement. There were subtle signs, in fact, of a gradual deterioration: increased forgetfulness; untidiness; and one complaint of nausea. As for attention-getting tactics, although the familiar ones failed to recur, there appeared to be a new one: reports of a foul, unpleasant "smell" in Regan's bedroom. At Regan's insistence, Chris took a whiff one day and smelled nothing.
"You don't?"
"you mean, you smell it right now?" Chris had asked her.
"Well, sure!"
"What's it smell like?"
She'd wrinkled her nose. "Well, like something burny."
"Yeah?" Chris had sniffed.
"Don't you smell it?"
"Well, yes, hon," she'd lied. "Just a little. Let's open up the window for a while, get some air in."
In fact, she'd smelled nothing, but had made up her mind that she would temporize, at least until the appointment with the doctor. She was also preoccupied with a number of other concerns. One was arrangements for the dinner party. Another had to do with the script. Although she was very enthusiastic about the prospect of directing, a natural caution had prevented her from making a prompt decision. In the meantime, her agent was calling her daily. She told him she'd given the script to Dennings for an opinion, and hoped he was reading and not consuming it.
The third, and the most important, of Chris's concerns was the failure of two financial ventures: a purchase of convertible debentures through the use of prepaid interest; and an investment in an oil-drilling project in southern Libya. Both had been entered upon for the sheltering of income that would have been subject to enormous taxation. But something even worse had developed: the wells had come up dry and rocketing interest rates had prompted a sell-off in bonds.
These were the problems that her gloomy business manager flew into town to discuss. He arrived on Thursday. Chris had him charting and explaining through Friday. At last, she decided on a course of action that the manager thought wise. He nodded approval. But he frowned when she brought up the subject of buying a Ferrari.
"You mean, a new one?"
"Why not? You know. I drove one in a picture once. If we write to the factory, maybe, and remind them, it could be they'd give us a deal. Don't you think?"
He didn't. And cautioned that he thought a new car was improvident.
"Ben, I made eight hundred thou last year and you're saying I can't get a freaking car! Don't you think that's ridiculous? Where did it go?"
He reminder her that most of her money was in shelters. Then he listed the various drains on her gross; federal income tax; projected federal income tax; her state tax, tax on her real estate holdings; ten percent commission to her agent; five to him; five to her publicist; one and a quarter taken out as donation to the Motion Picture Welfare Fund; an outlay for wardrobe in tune with the fasbion; salaries to Willie and Karl and Sharon and the caretaker of the Los Angeles home; various travel costs; and, finally, her monthly expenses.
"Will you do another picture this year?' he asked her.
She shrugged. "I don't know. Do I have to?"
"Yes, l think you'd better."
She cupped her face in both her hands and eyed him moodily. "What about a Honda?"
He made no reply.
Later that evening, Chris tried to put all of her worries aside; tried to keep herself busy with making preparations for the next night's party.
"Let's serve the curry buffet instead of sit-down," she told Willie and Karl. "We can set up a table at the end of the living room. Right?"
"Very good, madam," Karl answered quickly.
"So what do you think, Willie? A fresh fruit salad for dessert?"
"Yes, excellent!" said Karl.
"Thanks, Willie."
She'd invited an interesting mixture. In addition to Burke ("Show up sober, dammit!") and the youngish director of the second unit, she expected a senator (and wife); an Apollo astronaut (and wife); two Jesuits from Georgetown; her next-door neighbors; and Mary Jo Perrin and Ellen Cleary.
Mary Jo Perrin was a plump and gray-headed Washington seeress whom Chris had met at the White House dinner and liked immensely. She'd expected to find her austere and forbidding, but "You're not like that at all!" she'd been able to tell her. Bubbly-warm and unpretentious.