This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is coincidental.
Copyright © 2012 Ted Dekker
All rights reserved. No portion of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means—electronic, mechanical, photocopy, recording, or any other—except for brief quotations in printed reviews, without the prior written permission of the publisher.
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CHRISTY PACED behind the table, chewing on a fingernail she’d already worn to a nub. Austin sat, nervously tapping his fingers, staring at the wall. They’d been led to the same room in which she’d been profiled by Nancy Wilkins. At the time the therapist had seemed reasonable and understanding. But wasn’t it Nancy who’d concluded that she was mentally cracked?
“Do you mind sitting down?” Austin glared at her. “You’re going to wear out the carpet.”
Austin had remained quiet, lost in thought, which was his way when he became engrossed. To say he was single-minded didn’t begin to describe just how cut off he could become when he put his mind to a task—anything from reading a thick textbook to watching a boring lecture, one leg bouncing, eyes fixed on the screen.
How often had she told him things in his flat only to learn that he wasn’t even hearing her? Nothing short of yelling seemed to yank him out of his fixation. In this way, she’d always been invisible even to Austin, her closest friend. She’d always known that she didn’t belong to anyone or anything, and Austin’s preoccupation with his own inner world only reinforced that certainty.
Christy ignored his request to sit.
“We have to get out of here, Austin.”
He said nothing, which only increased her anxiety. He was hearing her perfectly, and it wasn’t like Austin not to have some answers. She’d never seen him quite like this.
She could understand most of the logic behind most of the events that had put them both in the psych ward. But something seemed out of balance in her mind, something that prevented her from shaking the one thought that had buried itself in her mind like a stubborn tick.
What if the administrator was right?
What if she was delusional?
“Austin?”
He offered her a halfhearted grunt.
“I’m worried.”
Austin looked at her for a few seconds. Took a long breath.
“I know you are. But it’s going to be okay. I’ve already explained that.”
“Tell me again.” When he hesitated, she said, “Please? Just for my reassurance.”
He closed his eyes briefly and then glanced up at her.
“You stumbled into the wrong place at the wrong time. I followed you and stumbled into something no one was meant to see.”
“Alice.”
“Yes, Alice. Fisher needed to get rid of Alice and get rid of me. So he made you Alice, which takes care of her—”
“He killed her.”
“No, we don’t know that. But he got her out of the picture. Don’t make things worse than they are.”
“Sorry.”
He continued. “He took care of me by admitting me as a patient who suffers from delusions of grandeur, given to fanciful stories. Nobody on the inside or outside is going to believe a word I say. Nor you. So now we have to figure out how to either get out or get word out before anything worse happens to us.”
“What if we can’t?”
“We will. It’s only a matter of time. But we have to play it smart, and that means keeping our heads on straight.”
Her mind stalled.
And what if my head isn’t on straight?
Austin saw her hesitation.
“How many times do I have to tell you, you’re not schizophrenic or delusional, Christy.” His voice was stern yet calm. And he anticipated the subject of her greatest concern without waiting for her to ask yet again.
“Everything that happened in Lawson’s office has a perfectly logical explanation. Knowing that unstable patients might try to get out, they set up the reception room to fool them, like it fooled us. The door without the exit sign is the way out to the main hospital. The buzzer opened one that leads to Lawson’s office.”
She nodded, pacing still. “There’s another buzzer or something that opens the real exit.”
“Of course. But getting out that way will probably be impossible. They’re too smart to let anyone out through the front door.”
“And the closet is just a mechanical trick,” she said.
“A false closet that slid into place at the push of a button. Enough to freak out anyone not thinking things through. Easy enough to construct. The main point is that anyone who would go to such elaborate planning has thought this through very carefully. We aren’t just going to walk out of here.”
To this she had no response. Her mind was stuck on what he’d just said about the closet being enough to freak out anyone not thinking properly.
Like her.
“We have to think our way out,” Austin said. “Talk our way out. Scam our way out. Something they haven’t thought about. Until we figure what and how, we have to play along. The last thing we can afford is to push Fisher’s buttons. We don’t need him thinking he needs to go further.”
He’d said this much repeatedly. She got it. His repetition of the concern wasn’t helping matters.
“And there’s no way they could be right about us, right?”
“We aren’t nuts,” he said with a little too much defensiveness for her comfort. “It’s absurd. I was in a lecture hall at Harvard this morning. I got a call from you. The professor asked me if I would be interested in attending full time! I can assure you there’s not one loose nut in my head.”
He was right, of course, although she would have put it differently. They had both always been different. And neither one of them could remember much of their childhoods.
“What about your headaches?”
He blinked several times, then spoke in no uncertain tone.
“Neither one of us is remotely unstable. You just remember that. Don’t let them get in your head. We’re going to get out. Soon. I have a doctor’s appointment to get to.”
The door opened and she startled. Kern Lawson walked in, shut the door behind him, and faced them, void of expression. He put on a smile that made Christy think he savored both his role and his element.
“Hello, my friends. Sorry to keep you waiting. Wait, wait, wait.” He flipped a hand. “Sometimes I think all there is to life is waiting. Waiting for things to get better. Waiting for things to get worse. Waiting to find out what’s going to happen or not happen. Life can be a pain.”
He walked to end of the table and pressed his fingertips on the surface, like one of those jungle trees that had roots above ground, reaching down. He was now wearing a white lab coat.
“I like to give our new arrivals a cursory orientation personally. Have a seat, Alice.”
Alice.
Christy glanced at Austin, who remained calm, then slid into the chair opposite him.
“There we are.” Fisher stood erect and paced slowly to one side then back before continuing.
“The first day is always the hardest for any patient, but I’m not one to throw sedatives at the first sign of resistance like most understaffed facilities. It only masks the illness and prevents true healing. The sooner you both accept your conditions and adapt to your new environment, the sooner we’ll be able to appropriate the correct therapy. Make sense?”
He didn’t wait for a response.
“By now you already know that getting out isn’t a solution. Neither is it possible. Please tell me that you understand at least this much.”
Waiting for Austin to take the lead seemed natural, so Christy let him give his nod before she did.
“Now, Scott…” The man held his smile for a few seconds. “I know that your particular condition probably has you thinking through solutions without end. You’re certain you don’t belong here, and you’re probably already hatching a way out, so let me help you by cutting to the chase.”
His smile vanished.
“All the exits are electronically controlled, and I’m not talking about the simple push of a button. There’s no cell service inside. The few lines out of the facility are monitored twenty-four hours a day and require electronic signatures to operate. We have a total of forty-seven patients on two floors. This floor is for those who present neither a flight risk, nor any threat to patients or staff. The upper level is reserved for our more challenging cases. We employ rather advanced, unconventional treatments on the upper level. Extremely effective, I might add.”
Two floors? She hadn’t seen any exit sign leading to another floor, but then she hadn’t been looking for one.
“It can be accessed only by a secure elevator and is operable only by qualified staff. There is no other way in or out. None.”
Lawson reached into his lab coat pocket and came out with a small box of toothpicks, one of which he withdrew before returning the box to his pocket. He slipped the sliver of wood into his mouth and rolled it with practiced ease as he studied Austin curiously.
“And since I’m sure you’re wondering, the crawlspace Alice found in the basement has been sealed. I was admittedly quite surprised to find it. Thank you, Alice, for bringing that to our attention.”
He looked at her, and then pressed when she offered no reply.
“A ‘you’re welcome’ would be appropriate here. Let’s try to be cordial, shall we?”
Play along
, Austin had said.
“You’re welcome,” she said.
“Well, thank you for saying ‘you’re welcome,’ Alice.”
She just looked at him.
“Are you going to say ‘you’re welcome’ for my saying thank you for saying ‘you’re welcome’?”
She blinked.
“No, you aren’t, because that would be circular, wouldn’t it? I’d keep saying thank you, and you’d keep saying you’re welcome. It would be insane. And your brain is working overtime trying to convince you that you’re not insane. Not even disturbed. Not even a little bit. Classic delusional behavior.”
“It’s also classic sane behavior,” Austin said.
“True enough. Only this time we know that’s not the case. Deep inside, Alice knows that. Like many in her shoes, she’s so accustomed to being the way she is that she honestly thinks it’s all completely normal. As is the case with you, my friend. You can see that, can’t you?”
Austin thought a moment, then followed his own advice.
“Yes.”
“Yes, of course. You see how much better this is than resistance. Simple acceptance is always the first step to freedom.”
“Makes sense,” Austin said.
“Everything I say will eventually make sense.” Lawson withdrew his toothpick and pocketed it, maybe for future use.
“All the therapists conduct their cases under my strict supervision,” he continued. “On occasion, I take cases on personally, which is what I’ve decided to do in your case, Alice. If you’re agreeable, that is.”
Christy wasn’t sure how to take him. The man that stood before her now seemed quite different from the one she’d first met in his office. And yet quite the same. She didn’t know when he was toying with her and when he was serious.
She looked at Austin, who still sat in stoic control. He offered her a slight dip of his head.
“Yes,” she said.
Lawson glanced between them.
“I can see that you two have formed a bond. Scott, you will remain on this floor until we develop a more thorough treatment plan. Based on your file, your illness is severe, but I see no manic behavior that concerns me.”
He faced Christy.
“Fortunately for you, Alice, we have an effective treatment for patients who display the kind of extreme dissociation you’ve exhibited. You’ll be taken up to the second floor as soon as we’re done here.”
“What?” The thought of being separated from Austin and placed in some secretive upper floor pushed her mind over some unseen cliff.
“I’m not a problem!” she cried, feeling her control slip. A voice somewhere told her to
play along
, but she couldn’t stop herself. “I’m not some nut and I’m no worse than Scott.”
“Maybe not, but make no mistake, Alice. You are a problem. You’ve been in here less than a day and you’ve already gone to great lengths to escape, once through the basement and once out the front. You injured yourself in the first attempt and took another patient with you on the second.”
“That’s not how it happened,” she snapped, but she saw immediately how Lawson could see it differently.
“That’s not how you’ve
convinced
yourself it happened,” Lawson said. “And that’s okay—you’re in a manic cycle now. You just called him Scott—that’s a good start.”
“Because you called him Scott.”
“Because his name is Scott. The truth is you are very ill, darling. So delusional, in fact, that you are completely unaware that your name is Alice. Most psychiatrists would already have you on medication. But the meds noted in your file clearly haven’t produced the kind of results we like to see. You’re a perfect candidate for our more progressive programs.”
“I am not!” Her hands were shaking. So was her mind. Screaming objections to his accusation that she wasn’t who she thought she was. Protesting the thought that he might be right, however impossible that seemed.
However much sense that actually did make.
She spun to Austin, frantic. “Tell him!” She jumped to her feet. “Don’t let him do this to me.”
“You see how emotional you become, Alice,” Lawson said. “I think you’re making my case as we speak.”
“Please, Austin!” She found her hands pressed together, begging. Tears flooded her eyes as her panic swelled. “Please…”
His eyes were calm, but his fingers were trembling.