“I’ll tell you what I could do with it, Doctor. A little sample of what goes through my mind, and I don’t know where it comes from, this evil stuff, or how to stop it from coming.” The blue paper gown made a crisp and ominous crinkling sound like a dry chrysalis within which something deadly was struggling to be born. Her voice remained soft, though now there was an edge to it. “I don’t really care if it’s a Montblanc or a Bic, because it’s also a stiletto, a skewer, and I could snatch it off that folder and be at you before you knew what was happening, ram it into your eye, shove it halfway back into your skull, twist it around, twist it, twist, really screw with your brain, and either you’d fall down dead on the spot or spend the rest of your life with the mental capacity of a flicking potato.” She was shaking. Her teeth chattered. She clasped both hands to her head, as she had done in the car, as though striving to repress the hideous images that bloomed unwanted in the midnight garden of her mind. “And whether you were dead or alive on the floor, there are all kinds of things I could do to you after the pen. You’ve got syringes in one of those drawers, needles — and there on that counter, a glass beaker full of tongue depressors. Break the glass, the shards are knives. I could carve your face — or slice it off in pieces and pin the pieces to the wall with hypodermic needles, make a collage from your face. I could do this. I can see… see it in my head
Closterman came to his feet on the word
“First thing,” said the rattled physician, “is a prescription for Valium. How many of these episodes have there been?”
“A few,” Dusty said. “I don’t know. But this one wasn’t bad.”
Closterman’s round face was better suited to a smile; his frown was unable to achieve sufficient gravity, buoyed as it was by his ball of a nose, rosy cheeks, and merry eyes. “Not bad? The others were worse? Then I wouldn’t recommend these tests
“I’m disturbed going in,” Martie said.
“We’ll mellow you out, so it’s not such an ordeal.” Closterman stepped to the door, then hesitated with his hand on the knob. He glanced at Dusty. “Are you okay here?”
Dusty nodded. “These are only things she’s afraid of doing — not anything she
“Like hell I couldn’t,” she said from behind a veil of fingers.
When Closterman had gone, Dusty moved the reflex hammer and the ballpoint beyond Martie’s reach. “Feel better?”
Between her fingers, she had seen his act of consideration. “This is mortifying.”
“Can I hold your hand?”
A hesitation. Then: “Okay.”
When Closterman returned, having phoned in a prescription for Valium to their usual pharmacy, he had two individually packaged samples of the drug. He opened one sample and gave it to Martie with a paper cup full of water.
“Martie,” said Closterman, “I truly believe the tests are going to rule out any intracranial mass — neoplastic, cystic, inflammatory, and gummatous. A lot of us, we get an unusual headache that takes a while to go away — we right away think, at least in the back of our mind, it must be a tumor. But brain tumors aren’t that common.”
“This isn’t a headache,” she reminded him.
“Exactly. And headaches are a prime symptom of brain tumors. As is a retinal condition called choked disk, which I didn’t find when I examined your eyes. You mentioned vomiting and nausea. If you were vomiting
“Just these unpalatable thoughts, grotesque images in your head, but you don’t mistake them for things really happening. What I see is anxiety of a high order. So when all is said and done, though we have a lot of physiological conditions to eliminate first… Well, I suspect I’ll need to recommend a therapist.”
“We already know one,” Martie said.
“Oh? Who?”
“He’s supposed to be one of the best,” Dusty said. “Maybe you’ve heard of him. A psychiatrist. Dr. Mark Ahriman.”
Although Roy Closterman’s round face couldn’t produce the sharp angles of a suitably disapproving frown, it smoothed at once into a perfectly inscrutable expression that could be read no more easily than alien hieroglyphics from another galaxy. “Yes, Ahriman, he has a fine reputation. And his books, of course. Where did you get the recommendation? I imagine his patient list is full.”
“He’s been treating a friend of mine,” Martie said.
“May I ask for what condition?”
“Agoraphobia.”
“A terrible thing.”
“It’s changed her life.”
“How’s she doing?”
Martie said, “Dr. Ahriman thinks she’s nearing a breakthrough.”
“Good news,” Closterman said.