“Uh, not that I’ve heard,” Liam said.
The word assailant momentarily derailed him. It was one of those words you saw only in print, like apparel. Or slain. Or… what was that other word he’d noticed?
“And yet they claim they’re working to make this city safer,” Dr. Morrow said.
“Actually, I live in the county,” Liam told him.
“Oh, really.”
Exclaimed. That was another word you saw only in print.
“But the point is,” Liam said, “I was hit and knocked unconscious, and I don’t remember anything more till I woke up in a hospital bed.”
“They did a CT scan, I assume.”
“That’s what I’m told.”
“And they found no sign of intracranial bleeding.”
“No, but…”
Barbara used to say that he didn’t phrase things strongly enough when he visited his doctor. She’d ask, “Did you tell him about your back? Did you tell him you were in agony?” and Liam would say, “Well, I mentioned I was experiencing some discomfort.” Barbara would roll her eyes. So now he leaned forward in his chair. “I have a very, very serious concern,” he said. “I really need to talk about this. I feel I’m going crazy.”
“Crazy! You told me memory loss.”
“I’m going crazy over my memory loss.”
“What is it you don’t remember, exactly?”
“Anything whatsoever involving the attack,” Liam said. “All I know is, I went to bed, I slid under my covers, I looked out the window… and pouf! There I am in a hospital room. A whole chunk of time has vanished. Someone broke into my apartment and I must have woken up, because they say I got this hand injury fighting off the… assailant. Then a neighbor called 911, and the police came and the ambulance, but every bit of that is absent from my mind.”
“You do remember other things, though,” Dr. Morrow said. “The time before you went to bed. The time after you woke in the hospital.”
“Yes, all of that. Just not the attack.”
“Nor will you ever, I venture to say. People always hope for some soap-opera moment where everything comes back to them. But the memories surrounding a head trauma are gone forever, in most cases. As a matter of fact, you’re fairly unusual in recalling as much as you do. Some victims forget days and days leading up to the event, and they have only spotty recollections of the days afterward. Consider yourself fortunate.”
“Fortunate,” Liam said, with a twist of his mouth.
“And why would you even want to remember such an experience?”
“You don’t understand,” Liam said.
He knew he had used up his time. A new tension had crept into the room’s atmosphere; the doctor’s posture had grown more erect. But this was important. Liam gripped his knees. “I feel I’ve lost something,” he said. “A part of my life has been stolen from me. I don’t care if it was unpleasant; I need to know what it was. I want it back. I’d give anything to get it back! I wish I had someone like the… rememberer out in your waiting room.”
Dr. Morrow said, “The what?”
“The young woman who’s bringing in her, I don’t know, her father, I guess, to see you. He seems to need reminding of names and such and she’s right there at his elbow, feeding him clues.”
“Ah, yes,” Dr. Morrow said, and his expression cleared. “Yes, couldn’t we all use a rememberer, as you call her, after a certain age. And wouldn’t we all like to have Mr. Cope’s money to pay her with.”
“He pays her?”
“She’s a hired assistant, I believe,” the doctor said. But then he must have worried that he had committed an indiscretion, because he rose abruptly and came around to the front of his desk. “I’m sorry I can’t be more helpful, Mr. Pennywell. There’s really nothing I can do. But I think you’ll find that over time, this issue will seem less important. Face it: we forget things every day of our lives. You’re missing lots of chunks! But you don’t dwell on those, now, do you?”
Liam rose too, but he couldn’t give up so easily. He said, “You don’t think I could maybe, for instance, get hypnotized or some such?”
“I wouldn’t advise it,” the doctor said.
“Or how about drugs? Some sort of pill, or truth serum?”
Dr. Morrow had a firm clasp on Liam’s upper arm now. He was guiding him toward the door. “Trust me: this whole concern will fade away in no time,” he said, and his voice had taken on the soothing tone of someone dealing with a minor pest. “See Melanie at the cashier’s window on your way out, will you?”
Liam allowed himself to be ejected. He mumbled something or other, something about thank you, appreciate your time, say hello to Buddy, or Haddon… Then he went to the cashier’s window and wrote a check for more than he normally spent on a month’s groceries.
In the waiting room, Louise was nodding and tsk-tsking as she listened to a sallow girl in overalls-a new arrival who had taken Liam’s old seat. “I’m just watering the perennials,” the girl was saying. “I work at the Happy Trowel Nursery, out on York Road; know where that is? And all at once I start hearing this song playing way too fast. It doesn’t sound real, though. It sounds like… tin. All tinny and high-speed. So I say to this guy Earl, who’s hauling in the petunias, I say, ‘Do you hear Pavement singing?’ Earl says, ‘Come again?’ I say, ‘It seems to me I hear Pavement singing “Spit on a Stranger.” ’ Earl looks at me like I’m nuts. Well, especially since it turns out he had no i-dea Pavement was a musical group. He figured I meant York Road was singing.”
“Where has he been all this time?” Louise asked. “Everyone knows who Pavement is.”
“But he’d have thought I was nuts anyhow, because there wasn’t no music of any kind playing. It was all in my brain. This big old tangled clump of blood vessels in my brain.”
Liam jingled the coins in his pocket, but Louise didn’t look up. “That must feel so weird,” she said.
“Dr. Meecham thinks they can, like, zap it with a beam of something.”
“Well, you know I’m going to be praying for you.”
Liam said, “I’m ready to go, Louise.”
“Right; okay. This is my father,” Louise told the girl. “He got hit on the head by a burglar.”
“He didn’t!”
Louise told Liam, “Tiffany here has a tangled clump of-”
“Yes, I heard,” Liam said.
But he wasn’t looking at the girl; he was looking at the old man sitting next to Jonah, the one with the hired rememberer. You couldn’t tell, at the moment, that anything was wrong with him. He was reading a New Yorker, turning the pages thoughtfully and studying the cartoons. His assistant was gazing down at her lap. She seemed out of place next to the old man, with his well-cut suit and starched collar. Her face was round and shiny, her horn-rimmed spectacles smudged with fingerprints, her clothes hopelessly dowdy. Liam wondered how he could ever have taken her for the old man’s daughter.
Well, but consider his own daughter, rising now to grasp both of the overalled girl’s hands. “Just keep in your heart the Gospel of Mark,” she was saying. “Thy faith hath made thee whole. Go in peace and be whole of thy plague.”
“I hear you, sister,” the girl told her.
Liam said, “Could we please leave now?”
“Sure, Dad. Come along, Jonah.”
They passed between the two facing rows of patients, all of whom (Liam was convinced) were giving off waves of avid curiosity, although nobody looked up.
“Must you?” Liam asked Louise the minute they reached the hall.
Louise said, “Hmm?” and pressed the call button for the elevator.
“Do you have to air your religion everywhere you go?”
“I don’t know what you’re talking about,” she said. She turned to Jonah. “You were such a good boy, Jonah! Maybe we can get you an ice cream on the way home.”