‘I think it was when he started reading to me. I’d be in my pyjamas, lying in bed, and he’d take a book down from my shelves and sit with me.’ She smiled gratefully. ‘I loved the sound of his voice, and how he’d look at me expectantly, waiting to see my reaction to the story. I could tell he was really listening.’ Nodding at the rightness of her words, she added, ‘Dr Cohen, when Rolf is with you, you know you have all his attention. Maybe that’s why his patients like him so much.’
‘How do you know they like him so much?’
‘Because I go to his office sometimes, and I talk with them.’
‘So he’s your doctor?’
‘He wasn’t when I was little. Though he is now.’ She looked down, as if she’d said something shameful.
As Irene told me more about her present relationship with her stepfather, I began to suspect that her continued talk of his
Of course, my theory could have been wrong, and I was about to probe further into her stepfather’s daily routine when I realized why I’d experienced déjà vu: Irene had repeated what a young patient of Freud’s named Katharina had told him about the face of a man she envisaged whenever she suffered an anxiety attack:
If those weren’t the exact words quoted by Freud, they were very close. They were contained in Freud and Brauer’s
Katharina had told Freud she’d overseen her uncle making love to the family cook. Could that be why I’d concluded so quickly that Irene might have seen her stepfather with a woman?
The important question now seemed: was Irene aware that she had quoted a patient of Freud’s?
‘Tell me, Irene,’ I asked, ‘have you ever read any works on psychiatry or psychoanalysis?’
‘Yes, at my grandfather’s house in Zurich. I think he owns nearly everything Freud ever wrote.’
Since she showed no sign of having been caught out, I concluded that she’d repeated Katharina’s words unconsciously – had appropriated them because her predicament was so similar. Unsure as to how to proceed, I returned to what might have happened a couple of weeks earlier to start Irene believing that she was under threat.
‘Maybe it was a dream I started having,’ she told me. She shifted forward in her seat, as though to commit herself to making deeper revelations, though she put her cushion over her lap again.
‘Tell me the dream,’ I requested.
Gazing into herself, she said, ‘I’m with some children on a meadow. In the green grass are lots of yellow flowers. Each of us is holding a bunch of flowers we’ve already picked, and we start to pick more.’
‘How many children are with you?’ I asked.
‘At least two, though I think there may be more. It’s hard to tell.’ She looked at me for approval to continue, and I nodded.
‘A short man wearing a hat comes up from the town below, and he takes the flowers from us – from me and the children. And then he walks up the hill to a cottage where a friend of his is waiting – a much bigger man who seems almost like a giant.’
‘Go on.’
‘The man in the hat hands the flowers to his friend, and he receives a loaf of bread in return. And then the man in the hat walks to me and tears off a piece of his bread for me, and I… I look around for the children who’ve been on the meadow with me, so that I can share my bread with them, but they’re gone. And then the dream shifts.’
‘Shifts how?’
‘I’m standing with the man in the hat on the sidewalk of Krakowskie Przedmieście.’ Irene closed her eyes and reached her hand out as if seeking to touch what she was seeing. ‘In front of me is a curving staircase, and it leads up to the Holy Cross Church. The street is empty. I don’t know where the other kids are, and I’m terrified. And… and that’s when I wake up.’
Her eyes opened and she looked at me purposefully; she’d undoubtedly read that it was my job to offer an interpretation.