Nurse Scolari and a chunky, red-faced nurse named Beth Howe both did for Susan what she had been unable to do for herself: They talked her down, just as Jeff McGee had talked down the raving, hallucinating acid freaks in that Seattle hospital where he had served his residency. They brought her around behind the counter at the nurses’ station and settled her into a spring-backed office chair. They gave her a glass of water. They reasoned with her, soothed her, listened to her, cajoled her, calmed her.
But they couldn’t entirely convince her that it was safe to go back to room 258. She wanted another bed for the night, a different room.
“That’s not possible, I’m afraid,” Tina Scolari said. “You see, there’s been an upturn in admissions the last day or so. The hospital’s nearly full tonight. Besides, there’s really nothing wrong with two fifty-eight. It’s just a room like any other room. You know that’s true, don’t you, Susan? You know that what happened to you was just another of your attacks. It was just another dysfunctional episode.”
Susan nodded, although she wasn’t sure what she believed any more. “I still ... I ... don’t want ... to go back there,” she said, her teeth chattering.
While Tina Scolari continued to talk to Susan, Beth Howe went to have a look in 258. She was gone only a couple of minutes, and upon her return, she reported that all was well.
“Mrs. Seiffert?” Susan asked.
“She’s in bed where she belongs,” Beth said.
“You’re sure it’s her?”
“Positive. Sleeping like a rock.”
“And you didn’t find ... ?”
“Nothing else,” Beth assured her.
“You looked where it might have hidden?”
“Not many places to hide in that room.”
“But you did look?”
“Yes. Nothing was there.”
They coaxed Susan into a wheelchair, and both of them took her back to 258. The closer they got to the room, the more violently Susan shivered.
The curtain was drawn tightly shut around the second bed.
They pushed her wheelchair past the first bed and kept going.
“Wait!” Susan said, sensing their intention.
“I want you to have a look for yourself,” said Beth Howe.
“No, I shouldn’t.”
“Of course you should,” Beth said.
“You must,” Tina Scolari said.
“But... I don’t think ... I can.”
“I’m sure you can,” Tina Scolari said encouragingly.
They wheeled her right up to Jessica Seiffert’s bed.
Beth Howe pulled the curtain aside.
Susan snapped her eyes shut.
Clutched the arms of the wheelchair.
“Susan, look,” Tina said.
“Look,” Beth said. “It’s only Jessie.”
“You see?”
“Only Jessie.”
With her eyes closed, Susan could see the dead man—a man she had perhaps loved a long time ago, a man she now feared because the quick were meant to fear the dead—could see him on the inside of her eyelids as he sat up in the bed and smiled at her with soft lips that were like bursting pieces of spoiled fruit. The horror show behind her eyes was worse than what might lie in front of them, so she blinked; she looked.
An old woman lay in the bed, so small, so shrunken, so badly withered by disease that she looked, ironically, like a wrinkle-faced baby mistakenly placed in an adult’s bed. Except—her skin was waxy and mottled, not smooth like a baby’s skin, and her complexion was yellow, not newborn-pink. Her hair was yellow-gray. Her wrinkled mouth resembled a drawstring purse that had been pulled as tight as only a miser could pull it. An IV drip seeped into her through a gleaming needle that punctured her left arm, an arm that was far skinnier than Susan’s.
“So that’s Jessica Seiffert,” Susan said, greatly relieved that such a person actually existed, but shocked that her befuddled brain could so easily—and more to the point, so convincingly—transform the old woman into a super-naturally animated male corpse.
“The poor old dear,” said Beth.
“She’s been the most popular citizen of Willawauk since I was a toddler,” Tina said.
“Since before you were even around to toddle,” Beth said.
“Everybody loves her,” Tina said.
Jessica continued to sleep, her nostrils flaring almost imperceptibly with each shallow breath.
“I know two hundred people who’d be here to visit if Jessie would accept visitors,” Beth said.
“But she doesn’t want anyone seeing her like this,” Tina said. “As if anyone would think less of her just because of what the cancer’s done to her.”
“It’s always been the inner Jessie that Willawauk loves,” Beth said.
“Exactly,” Tina said.
“Feel better now?” Beth asked Susan.
“I guess so.”
Beth closed the curtain.
Susan said, “You looked in the bathroom?”
“Oh, yes,” Beth said. “It’s empty.”
“I’d like to have a look myself, if you don’t mind,” Susan said. She felt like a fool, but she was still a prisoner of her fear.
“Sure,” Beth said obligingly. “Let’s have a look and set your mind at ease.”
Tina pushed the wheelchair to the open bathroom door, and Beth switched on the light in there.
No dead man waited in the white-on-white room.
“I feel like a perfect idiot,” Susan said, feeling a blush creep into her cheeks.
“It’s not your fault,” Beth said.
Tina Scolari said, “Dr. McGee circulated a fairly long memo about your condition. He made it perfectly clear.”
“We’re all on your side,” Beth said.
“We’re all pulling for you,” Tina agreed.
“You’ll be well in no time. Really you will. McGee’s a whiz. The best doctor we’ve got.”
They helped Susan get into bed.
“Now,” Tina Scolari said, “at the discretion of the night nurse, you are permitted to have a second sedative if the first one doesn’t do the trick. They’re mild enough. And in my judgment, you sure do need another one.”
“I’ll never get to sleep without it,” Susan said. “And I was wondering ... could you...”
“What is it?”
“Do you think ... could someone stay with me ... just until I fall asleep?”
Susan felt like a child for making that pathetic request: a dependent, emotionally immature, thumb-sucking, goblin-fearing, thirty-two-year-old child. She was disgusted with herself. But she couldn’t help it. No matter how often she told herself about the bizarre effects of temporal-lobe brain lesions and sand-grain blood clots, regardless of how earnestly she argued to convince herself that one of those— or perhaps one of a dozen other—medical maladies was the cause of her imaginary, entirely imaginary, encounters with dead men, she was nonetheless terrified of being awake and alone in room 258—or anywhere else, in fact.
Tina Scolari looked at Beth Howe and raised her eyebrows inquiringly.
Beth considered it for a moment, then said, “Well, we aren’t short-handed tonight, are we?”
“Nope,” Tina said. “Everyone who was scheduled for duty showed up this evening. And so far there haven’t been any big crises.”
Beth smiled at Susan. “Slow night. No three-car crashes or barroom brawls or anything. I think one of us can spare an hour to sit with you until the sedative works.”
“It probably won’t even take an hour,” Tina said. “You’ve overtaxed yourself, Susan. It’ll catch up with you in a few minutes, and you’ll go out like a light.”
“I’ll stay here,” Beth said.
“I’d really appreciate it,” Susan said, loathing herself for her inability to face the night alone.
Tina left but returned shortly with the second sedative in a pill cup.
When Susan took the pink tablet, she poured only a half-measure of water for herself because her hands were shaking too badly to safely manage a full tumbler. When she drank, the glass rattled against her teeth, and for a moment the pill stuck in her throat.
“I’m sure you’ll have a good night now,” Nurse Scolari said before she left.
Beth pulled up a chair beside the bed, smoothed her uniform skirt over her round knees, and sat quietly, reading a magazine.
Susan stared at the ceiling for a while, then glanced at Jessica Seiffert’s curtained bed.
She looked the other way, too, at the darkness beyond the half-opened bathroom door.
She thought of the corpse scratching insistently at the closed bathroom door against which she had been leaning. She remembered the
click-snickety-click
of his fingernails as he probed the cracks around the door frame.
Of course that had never happened. Purely imaginary.
She closed her eyes.
Jerry, she thought, I loved you once. At least it was as close to love as an inexperienced, nineteen-year-old girl could ever get. And you said that you loved me. So why in the name of God would you come back now to terrorize me?
Of course it had never happened. Purely imaginary.
Please, Jerry, stay in the cemetery there in Philadelphia, where we put you so long ago. Please stay there. Don’t come back here again. Please stay there. Please.
Without realizing that she was approaching sleep, she stepped over the rim of it and was gone.
11
A nurse woke Susan at six o’clock Wednesday morning. It was another gray day, but no rain was falling.
Jeffrey McGee arrived before six-thirty. He kissed her on the cheek again, but his lips lingered there for a couple of seconds longer than they had before.
“I didn’t realize you’d be here so early,” Susan said.
“I want to personally oversee most of the tests.”
“But weren’t you up late last night?”
“Nope. I inflicted my after-dinner speech on the Medical Association, and then I quickly slipped away before they had time to organize a lynching party.”
“Seriously, how did it go?”
“Well, no one threw his dessert at me.”
“I told you that you’d be a big success.”
“Of course, maybe no one threw his dessert at me because it was the only edible part of the meal, and no one wanted to give it up.”
“I’m sure you were wonderful.”
“Well, I don’t think I should plan to have a career on the lecture circuit. Anyway, enough about me. I understand there was some excitement here last night.”
“Jeez, did they have to tell you about that?”
“Of course. And so do you. In detail.”
“Why?”
“Because I said so.”
“And the doctor must be obeyed.”
“Right. So tell me.”
Embarrassed, she told him everything about the corpse behind the curtain. Now, after a good night’s sleep, the whole affair sounded ludicrous, and she wondered how she could ever have been convinced that any part of it was real.
When Susan finished talking, McGee said, “God, that’s a hair-raising little tale!”
“You should’ve been there.”
“But now that you’ve had time to think, you do realize it was just another episode.”
“Of the Susan Thorton Soap Opera?”
“I mean, another attack, another hallucination,” he said. “You do see that now?”
“Yes,” she said miserably.
He blinked at her. “What’s wrong?”
“Nothing.”
He scowled at her and put his hand against her forehead to see if she was running a noticeable temperature. “Do you feel all right?”
“As right as I can feel under the circumstances,” she said morosely.
“Cold?”
“No.”
“You’re shaking.”
“A little.”
“A lot.”
She hugged herself and said nothing.
“What’s wrong?” he asked again.
“I’m... scared.”
“Don’t be scared.”
“Jesus, what’s wrong with me?”
“We’ll find out.”
She couldn’t stop shaking.
Yesterday morning, after she had broken down in front of McGee, after she wept against his shoulder, she had thought that she’d reached the bottom for sure. She had been ready and eager to believe that the future could only be brighter. For the first time in her life, she had admitted that she needed other people; she had confronted and accepted the unpleasant truth of her own vulnerability. That had been a shocking discovery for a woman who had built her life upon the erroneous but fiercely held assumption that she was strictly a creature of intellect, immune to emotional excess. But now she faced another realization that was even more shocking than the one whose impact she had already, somehow, absorbed: Having placed her fate in the hands of McGee and the Willawauk County Hospital’s medical staff, having relinquished to them the responsibility for her survival, she now realized that the people upon whom she depended might fail her. Not intentionally, of course. But they were only human, too. They couldn’t always control events, either. And if they failed to make her well, it wouldn’t matter whether their failure was intentional or accidental or inevitable; in any case, she would be condemned to a chaotic existence, unable to distinguish reality from fantasy, and in time she would be driven completely mad.
And so she couldn’t stop shaking.
“What’s going to happen to me?”
“You’ll be all right,” McGee said.
“But... it’s getting worse,” she said, her voice quavering in spite of her determination to keep it steady.
“No. No, it isn’t getting worse.”
“Much worse,” she insisted.
“Listen, Susan, last night’s hallucination might have been more gruesome than the others—”
“Might have been?”
“Okay, it was more gruesome than the others—”
“And more vivid, more
real
.”
“—and more real. But it was the first one you’ve had since early yesterday morning, when you thought the two orderlies were Jellicoe and Parker. You’re not in a constant state of flux between reality and—”
Susan shook her head and interrupted him. “No. The business with the orderlies ... and the apparition later, here in the room ... they weren’t the only things I saw yesterday. There was an ... an attack in between those two.”