None of the rest offered any comment. The feeling that they shared her opinion was strong, but luckily I was spared confirmation by the opening of the door.
The senior attendant reentered with half a dozen small myrmidons, but this time the group was dominated by a handsome woman of about thirty. Her appearance gave me immense relief. She was neither little, nor Amazonian, nor was she huge. Her present company made her look a little overtall, perhaps, but I judged her at about five-footten; a normal, pleasant-featured young woman with brown hair, cut somewhat short, and a pleated black skirt showing beneath a white overall. The senior attendant was almost trotting to keep up with her longer steps, and was saying something about delusions and “only back from the Centre today, Doctor.”
The woman stopped beside my couch while the smaller women huddled together, looking at me with some misgiving. She thrust a thermometer into my mouth and held my wrist. Satisfied on both these counts, she enquired: “Headache? Any other aches or pains?”
“No,” I told her.
She regarded me carefully. I looked back at her.
“What?” she began.
“She’s mad,” Hazel put in from the other side of the room. “She says she’s lost her memory and doesn’t know us.”
“She’s been talking about horrid, disgusting things,” added one of the others.
“She’s got delusions. She thinks she can read and write,” Hazel supplemented.
The doctor smiled at that.
“Do you?” she asked me.
“I don’t see why not but it should be easy enough to prove,” I replied, brusquely.
She looked startled, a little taken aback, then she recovered her tolerant half-smile.
“All right,” she said, humouring me.
She pulled a small notepad out of her pocket and offered it to me, with a pencil. The pencil felt a little odd in my hand; the fingers did not fall into place readily on it, nevertheless I wrote: “I’m only too well aware that I have delusions and that you are part of them.”
Hazel tittered as I handed the pad back.
The doctor’s jaw did not actually drop, but her smile came right off. She looked at me very hard indeed. The rest of the room, seeing her expression, went quiet, as though I had performed some startling feat of magic. The doctor turned towards Hazel.
“What sort of things has she been telling you?” she enquired.
Hazel hesitated, then she blurted out: “Horrible things. She’s been talking about two human sexes just as if we were like the animals. It was disgusting!”
The doctor considered a moment, then she told the senior attendant: “Better get her along to the sickbay. I’ll examine her there.”
As she walked off there was a rush of little women to fetch a low trolley from the corner to the side of my couch. A dozen hands assisted me on to it, and then wheeled me briskly away.
“Now,” said the doctor grimly, “let’s get down to it. Who told you all this stuff about two human sexes? I want her name.”
We were alone in a small room with a gold-dotted pink wallpaper. The attendants, after transferring me from the trolley to a couch again, had taken themselves off. The doctor was sitting with a pad on her knee and a pencil at the ready. Her manner was that of an unbluffable inquisitor.
I was not feeling tactful. I told her not to be a fool.
She looked staggered, flushed with anger for a moment, and then took a hold on herself. She went on: “After you left the Clinic you had your holiday, of course. Now, where did they send you?”
“I don’t know,” I replied. “All I can tell you is what I told the others that this hallucination or delusion, or whatever it is, started in that hospital place you call the Centre.”
With resolute patience she said: “Look here, Orchis. You were perfectly normal when you left here six weeks ago. You went to the Clinic and had your babies in the ordinary way. But between then and now somebody has been filling your head with all this rubbish and teaching you to read and write, as well. Now you are going to tell me who that somebody was. I warn you you won’t get away with this loss of memory nonsense with me. If you are able to remember this nauseating stuff you told the others, then you’re able to remember where you got it from.”
“Oh, for heaven’s sake talk sense,” I told her. She flushed again.
“I can find out from the Clinic where they sent you, and I can find out from the Rest Home who were your chief associates while you were there, but I don’t want to waste time following up all your contacts, so I’m asking you to save trouble by telling me now. You might just as well. We don’t want to have to make you talk,” she concluded, ominously.
I shook my head.
“You’re on the wrong track. As far as I am concerned this whole hallucination, including my connection with this Orchis, began somehow at the Centre how it happened I can’t tell you, and what happened to her before that just isn’t there to be remembered.”
She frowned, obviously disturbed.
“What hallucination?” she enquired, carefully.
“Why, this fantastic setup and you, too.” I waved my hand to include it all. “This revolting great body, all those little women, everything. Obviously it is all some projection of the subconscious and the state of my subconscious is worrying me, for it’s certainly no wish fulfilment.”
She went on staring at me, more worried now.
“Who on earth has been telling you about the subconscious and wish fulfilments?” she asked, uncertainly.
“I don’t see why, even in an hallucination, I am expected to be an illiterate moron,” I replied.
“But a Mother doesn’t know anything about such things. She doesn’t need to.”
“Listen,” I said. “I’ve told you, as I’ve told those poor grotesques in the other room, that I am not a Mother. What I am is just an unfortunate M. B. who is having some kind of nightmare.”
“M. B.?” she enquired, vaguely.
“Bachelor of Medicine. I practise medicine,” I told her.
She went on looking at me curiously. Her eyes wandered over my mountainous form, uncertainly.
“You are claiming to be a doctor?” she said, in an odd voice.
“Coloquially, yes,” I agreed.
There was indignation mixed with bewilderment as she protested: “But this is sheer nonsense! You were brought up and developed to a Mother. You are a Mother. Just look at you!”
“Yes,” I said, bitterly. “Just look at me!”
There was a pause.
“It seems to me,” I suggested at last, “that, hallucination or not, we shan’t get much further simply by going on accusing one another of talking nonsense. Suppose you explain to me what this place is, and who you think I am. It might jog my memory.”
She countered that. “Suppose,” she said, “that first you tell me what you can remember. It would give me more idea of what is puzzling you.”
“Very well,” I agreed, and launched upon a potted history of myself as far as I could recollect it up to the time, that is to say, when Donald’s aircraft crashed.
It was foolish for me to fall for that one. Of course, she had no intention of telling me anything. When she had listened to all I had to say, she went away, leaving me impotently furious.
I waited until the place quietened down. The music had been switched off. An attendant had looked in to enquire, with an air of polishing off the day’s duties, whether there was anything I wanted, and presently there was nothing to be heard. I let a margin of half an hour elapse, and then struggled to get up taking it by very easy stages this time. The greatest part of the effort was to get to my feet from a sitting position, but I managed it at the cost of heavy breathing. Presently I crossed to the door, and found it unfastened. I held it a little open, listening. There was no sound of movement in the corridor, so I pulled it wide open, and set out to discover what I could about the place. All the doors of the rooms were shut. Putting my ear close to them I could hear regular, heavy breathing behind some, but there were no other sounds in the stillness. I kept on, turning several corners, until I recognised the front door ahead of me. I tried the latch, and found that it was neither barred nor bolted. I paused again, listening for some moments, and then pulled it open and stepped outside.