“Of course it’s unfair. You don’t deserve this. But look at what you have— a lovely home, a career, a wife who loves you and a daughter who worships the ground you walk on. If that can’t outweigh any other problems then we’re all in trouble.”
“I don’t want anything to change.” I hate how vulnerable I sound.
“Nothing has to change.”
“I see you watching me. Looking for the signs. A tremor here, a twitch there.”
“Does it hurt?” she asks suddenly.
“What?”
“When your leg locks up or your arm doesn’t swing.”
“No.”
“I didn’t know that.” She puts her fist in my hand and curls my fingers around it. Then she makes me turn so her eyes can fix on mine. “Does it embarrass you?”
“Sometimes.”
“Is there any special diet you should be on?”
“No.”
“What about exercise?”
“It can help according to Jock, but it won’t stop the disease.”
“I didn’t know,” she whispers. “You should have told me.” She leans even closer, pressing her lips to my ear. The droplets of water on her cheeks look like tears. I stroke her hair.
Hands brush down my chest. A zipper undone; her fingers softly caressing; the taste of her tongue; her breath inside my lungs…
Afterward, as we lie in bed, I watch her breasts tremble with her heartbeat. It is the first time we’ve made love in six years without checking the calendar first.
The phone rings. The glowing red digits say 04:30.
“Professor O’Loughlin?”
“Yes.”
“This is Charing Cross Hospital. I’m sorry to wake you.” The doctor sounds young. I can hear the tiredness in his voice. “Do you have a patient named Bobby Moran?”
“Yes.”
“The police found him lying on the walkway across Hammersmith Bridge. He’s asking for you.”
Julianne rolls over and nestles her face into my pillow, pulling the bedclothes around her. “What’s wrong?” she asks sleepily.
“Problem with a patient.” I pull a sweatshirt over my T-shirt and go looking for my jeans.
“You’re not going in are you?”
“Just for a little while.”
13
At that hour of the morning it takes me only fifteen minutes to reach Charing Cross. Peering through the main doors of the hospital, I see a black janitor pushing a mop and bucket around the floor in a strange waltz. A security guard sits at the reception desk. He motions me to the accident and emergency entrance.
Inside the Perspex swinging doors, people are scattered around the waiting room, looking tired and pissed off. The triage nurse is busy. A young doctor appears in the corridor and begins arguing with a bearded man who has a bloody rag pressed to his forehead and a blanket around his shoulders.
“And you’ll be waiting all night if you don’t sit down,” says the doctor. He turns away and looks at me.
“I’m Professor O’Loughlin.”
It takes a moment for my name to register. The cogs slip into place. The doctor has a birthmark down one side of his neck and keeps the collar of his white coat turned up.
A few minutes later I follow this coat down empty corridors, past linen carts and parked stretchers.
“Is he OK?”
“Mainly cuts and bruises. He may have fallen from a car or a bike.”
“Has he been admitted?”
“No, but he won’t leave until he sees you. He keeps talking about washing blood from his hands. That’s why I put him in the observation room. I didn’t want him upsetting the other patients.”
“Concussion?”
“No. He’s very agitated. The police thought he might be a suicide risk.” The doctor turns to look over his shoulder. “Is your father a surgeon?”
“Retired.”
“I once heard him speak. He’s very impressive.”
“Yes. As a lecturer.”
The observation room has a small viewing window at head height. I see Bobby sitting on a chair, his back straight and both feet on the floor. He’s wearing muddy jeans, a flannel shirt and an army greatcoat.
He tugs at the sleeves of the coat, picking at a loose thread. His eyes are bloodshot and fixed. They are focused on the far wall, as if watching some invisible drama being played out on a stage that no one else can see.
He doesn’t turn as I enter. “Bobby. It’s me, Professor O’Loughlin. Do you know where you are?”
He nods.
“Can you tell me what happened?”
“I don’t remember.”
“How are you feeling?”
He shrugs, still not looking at me. The wall is more interesting. I can smell his sweat and the mustiness of his clothes. There is another odor— something familiar but I can’t quite place it. A medical smell.
“What were you doing on Hammersmith Bridge?”
“I don’t know.” His voice is shaking. “I fell over.”
“What can you remember?”
“Going to bed with Arky and then… Sometimes I can’t bear to be by myself. Do you ever feel like that? It happens all the time to me. I pace around the house after Arky. I follow her, talking about myself constantly. I tell her what I’m thinking…”
At last his eyes focus on me. Haunted. Hollow. I have seen the look before. One of my other patients, a fireman, is condemned to keep hearing the screams of a five-year-old girl who died in a blazing car. He rescued her mother and baby brother but couldn’t go back into the flames.
Bobby asks, “Do you ever hear the windmills?”
“What sound do they make?”
“It’s a clanking metal noise, but when the wind is really strong the blades blur and the air starts screaming in pain.” He shudders.
“What are the windmills for?”
“They keep everything running. If you put your ear to the ground you can hear them.”
“What do you mean by everything?”
“The lights, the factories, the railways. Without the windmills it all stops.”
“Are these windmills God?”
“You know nothing,” he says dismissively.
“Have you ever seen the windmills?”
“No. Like I said, I hear them.”
“Where do you think they are?”
“In the middle of the oceans; on huge platforms like oil rigs. They pull energy from the center of the Earth— from the core. We’re using too much energy. We’re wasting it. That’s why we have to turn off the lights and save power. Otherwise we’ll upset the balance. Take too much out from the center and you have a vacuum. The world will implode.”
“Why are we taking too much energy?”
“Turn off the lights, left right, left right. Do the right thing.” He salutes. “I used to be right-handed but I taught myself to use my left… The pressure is building. I can feel it.”
“Where?”
He taps the side of his head. “I’ve tapped the core. The apple core. Iron ore. Did you know the Earth’s atmosphere is proportionately thinner than the skin of an apple?”
He is playing with rhymes— a characteristic of psychotic language. Simple puns and wordplay help connect random ideas.
“Sometimes I have dreams about being trapped inside a windmill,” he says. “It’s full of spinning cogs, flashing blades and hammers striking anvils. That’s the music they play in hell.”
“Is that one of your nightmares?”
His voice drops to a conspiratorial whisper. “Some of us know what’s happening.”
“And what is that?”
He rears back, glaring at me. His eyes are alight. Then a peculiar half smile passes over his face.
“Do you know it took a manned spacecraft less time to reach the moon than it did for a stagecoach to travel the length of England?”
“No. I didn’t know that.”