by Wolfe, Gene
“I wonder if you could tell me who the doctor was. Possibly I know him.”
“I’ve forgotten his name. He told me—or somebody did—but I forget. That’s a problem I have, a real bad problem.”
“I see.”
“Another problem is remembering. You’d think the two of them would get together and cancel out, wouldn’t you? But they don’t. I’m always remembering things I want to forget—you know, like what happened last night—and forgetting stuff I need to remember, like somebody owes me twenty.”
“Perhaps we should begin at the beginning, then. I suppose that’s what we ought to have done all along. What is your name?”
“Candy Garth. Listen, I didn’t really do anything so bad, did I? Just shook that girl up a little. When are you going to take these straps off me and let me go?”
“Candy is your legal name?”
“Catherine. Catherine M. Garth, all right? The M is for Margaret.”
“Do you know what day of the week this is?”
“You mean like is it Monday or Tuesday? I guess not. Usually I keep track, but sometimes I forget. See, I don’t have a regular job, and I don’t go to church, so it’s all about the same to me. The stores are open all the time anyway, and so are the bars.”
“Guess, please.”
“You mean just take a stab at it?”
“That’s right.”
“Wednesday. How’s that?”
“And what is the day of the month, please?”
“Well, this is January. I had one hell of a hangover after New Year’s, but that was back a couple of weeks ago anyway. I’d say about the fifteenth.”
“This is Friday the twenty-first, Candy. Where do you live?”
“You mean right now?”
“Yes.”
“I just don’t have what you call a fixed address right now. I’ve been staying with friends.”
“I want to be quite open with you, Candy. When you were admitted here, we went through your purse. We weren’t snooping, we—”
“Oh, God! The kid!”
“Yes?”
“I had a kid with me, Little Ozzie. Is he okay? My God, I forgot all about him.” Candy tried to sit up, the straps indenting her soft flesh, her round face red with the strain.
“Don’t worry about the little fellow. I saw him myself a few minutes ago, and he was just fine.”
“You’ve got him in here?”
“We’re trying to locate his father.”
Candy mumbled something, and Dr. Bob leaned forward. “What did you say?”
“Shut up. I’ve gotta think. Jim sent him to see that doc, but I can’t remember his name.”
“I’m sure it will come to you as we talk.”
“I don’t know where Jim will be either. What’s the time?”
Dr. Bob glanced as his watch. “A quarter to three.”
“Will you still be here at six?”
“I can be, if there’s a reason for it.”
“At six, phone the Consort. Ask for Madame Serpentina’s room. Ozzie ought to be there then. We were going to meet there.”
“Madame Serpentina is rather an odd name.”
“Really. She’s a pretty weird woman too, so I guess it fits her.”
“Is she an American?”
“Why not? Every geek who can get one foot on the beach is American now. She can speak English, if that’s what you mean. Half of them can’t. I don’t think she was born here.”
“You don’t like her, do you?”
“What the hell business of yours is that?” Candy hesitated. “I guess I do, a little. Sometimes. When are you going to take off these straps?”
“Tomorrow. I think I mentioned that.”
“I got to go to the john.”
“When I leave, I’ll send in a nurse and an attendant. Until then, I’m afraid you’ll have to wait. Have I mentioned that we went through your purse? We did. You were carrying no identification whatsoever.”
“There were some of my calling cards in there.”
“You are John B. Sweet, Executive Vice President of Mickey’s Jawbreakers Incorporated?”
“Oh, him. Jesus, I’d forgotten about him. Don’t call him. No, I meant the candy bars. People call me Candy, see? So I always say those are my cards. I leave the wrappers behind, anyhow.”
“But you had no real identification.”
“I used to have one of those little cards that come with the wallet, but I lost it.”
“Can you drive a car, Candy?”
“Uh huh.”
“You didn’t have a driver’s license in your purse.”
“I got ripped off once. He took everything—my money, my license, all that crap. I never got another one. What for? I don’t have a car.”
“I had a friend in college who went to Italy. He stayed in a very nice hotel in Sorrento, and the bellboy there told him he could get him a girl. Do you know what I mean, Candy? For so many hundred lira or thousand lira or whatever it was.”
“I know what you mean, all right. I guess better than you do.”
“So my friend said okay, and the bellboy came back with a very beautiful Italian girl … .”
“And when he woke up next morning his wallet was gone.”
“Yes, it was. His passport too. How did you know?”
“How would anybody know? The woman needed some extra money, or she didn’t like the way it had gone the night before or something. What are you after, advice for next time? You shouldn’t have gone to sleep while she was still in the room. You shouldn’t have done it at all.”
“It wasn’t me.”
“Really. I never knocked on anybody’s hotel room door late at night either. One of my friends told me about it. Anyway, ever since it happened, you think the john’s the only one that ever gets ripped off. Bullshit. There isn’t a damn thing a woman carries with her that I haven’t got stolen from me one time or another—my purse, my shoes, my clothes, you name it. I’ve been slapped around plenty. I’ve had enough guns and knives pointed at me to start a war.”
The door opened; a woman’s voice said, “A Dr. Makee to see you, Dr. Roberts.”
Chapter 36
SIMPLE ASSAULT
The room in which Barnes and Dr. Makee waited was much like the one in which Dr. Bob had talked to Candy, though it was not the same room. An examination table with restraining straps had been pushed to one side. There were several very light folding chairs. Barnes sat primly, knees together, hands clasped in lap, his sample case half hidden behind the chair. Dr. Makee almost sprawled, his old brown tweed overcoat cast off and gaping behind him, his old gray herringbone jacket open to show his tattersall shirt and black string tie.
A nurse with a clipboard looked in. “Dr, Make-ee?”
“Makee. Say it like ma’s key, then leave off the S.”
The nurse nodded and wrote something on her clipboard. “You’re the patient’s personal physician?”
“I was the last to treat him, I believe, before he got sent here. I’m not sure he has a personal physician.”
“And when was that?”
“Yesterday. I told all this to Dr. Roberts.”
“I know, but I have to have it for his record. Did he show signs of anxiety or confusion when you examined him?”
Dr. Makee shrugged. “He was anxious about his condition. He’d had a head injury, and he was afraid it might be serious. I didn’t think it was, and I told him so. That seemed to reassure him. I wouldn’t have said he was confused.”
When the nurse was gone, Barnes said, “Well, Doc?”
“Well what? I haven’t seen him yet.”
The door opened again, and a tall, red-faced man with a long nose peered through. “Shipmate!” he hissed.
Barnes glanced up.
“Remember me? Seaman Reeder?”
Barnes nodded. “What the hell are you doing here?”
The sailor stepped inside and shut the door. He wore the soiled white pajamas of a patient. “I got
picked up. I was in a bar—cuttin’ up pretty silly, I guess.”
“And they brought you here?”
“I been in the brig a lot—it wouldn’t have been much fun to go again. So I just kept on cuttin’ up—sillier, even—and they brought me here. The food’s better, a little.”
Dr. Makee said, “Stretch out both hands, young man.”
Reeder did.
“Pronounced tremor. How long had you been drinking?”
“I don’t know. Before Christmas.”
“About a month, then. I’ve seen them a lot worse, but you’re bad enough. Dee tees?”
“I don’t think so. Anyway, how can you be sure?”
Barnes asked, “When were you supposed to be back to your ship?”
“January fifth. It was a Christmas leave.”
Dr. Makee said, “I’m surprised you weren’t picked up by the Shore Patrol. In my day, you would have been.”
“I just kept missing the bus,” Reeder told him. “Honest. There’s only one to Norfolk from here, and it leaves at eleven twenty in the morning. Sometimes I wouldn’t make it. Sometimes I’d get there early, but I’d get tired of waiting and go off for a drink someplace.” He turned to Barnes. “You got to get me out of here, Mate. That’s why I came. I saw you when they brought you up. You know the last thing my mom said when she died?”
Barnes shook his head.
“She said, ‘God, you gotta take care of Baby Phil, because he won’t never take care of himself.’ I wasn’t there, but Bubba was, and he told me. God has to get me out, and you’re His chosen instrument.”
“Instrument, hell. I never even met Him!”
Dr. Makee chuckled and nudged Barnes with an elbow. “Don’t be too sure.”
“Besides, why do you have to get out? They’ll just send you back to the Navy, and that’s where you ought to go anyway.”
“Shit, man, not like this! You know what they’re doin’ here? Buildin’ up a file on me that says I’m crazy as a bedbug. I want to get back to my ship.”
Dr. Makee said, “I would think it’s already sailed, if you’re as late as you say.”
“They’ll hold me till she comes back, or maybe fly me—”
The door swung wide, and a burly young man with crew-cut hair led in Proudy, his arms pinioned by a canvas straitjacket. Before he could stop himself, Barnes said, “I didn’t think you really used those things.”
The attendant told him, “They’re a lot more humane than they look. He’s comfortable, but he can’t hurt himself or anybody else.” He glanced at Reeder. “You want this one out of here?”
“Let him stay, if it’s not against the rules.”
“Okay with me. Doctor?”
Dr. Makee nodded.
“At least you’ll have somebody to talk to. The sailor will talk your arm off. The cop won’t say a word.”
“I just want to reexamine that head wound.” Dr. Makee stood up. “I see somebody has changed the dressings.”
“Yeah, we did that.” The attendant closed the door behind him.
“Come over here, Officer,” Dr. Makee said. “Sit down.”
Proudy did not move. His face seemed paler than Barnes remembered it, the big nose nearly white at the tip. He watched them without expression.
“Some of ‘em don’t talk,” Reeder said. “Besides, they been givin’ him dope for sure. They give everybody dope, even me.”
Dr. Makee nodded, “Well, if he won’t come to me, I’ll have to come to him. It’s lucky he’s not a tall man.”
“You’re goin’ to get me out, aren’t you, Mate?” Reeder asked Barnes.
“I don’t see how,” Barnes told him. “I will if I can.”
“Listen, you can do it.” Reeder lowered his voice. “Mate, we don’t want the old doc mixed up in this, do we? You step outside with me for a minute. I know a place where we can talk. Hey, you know that puzzle I bought off you? The little guy in the cage. I think I just figured out how to get him out. I’ll tell you about that too.”
Reeder opened the door, and Barnes followed him. The same despondent men sat on the benches. The bright squares of light cast by the windows on the worn linoleum were longer now; the short winter day was drawing toward its close.
“There’s a room back here they don’t use any more,” Reeder said. “The light don’t work. This is one old, old building.”
“I’d think they’d keep it locked.”
“They do, but you can spring it if you push against the door frame. That’s how you get the little guy out, right? Spring the bars just ever so little, just like you’re goin’ to do for me. Here we are.”
To Barnes the door looked like all the rest, except that it had a fairly new lock of shining brass.
“We won’t have to do it this time,” Reeder said. “I left it off the latch when I was here before.” He pushed against the door, but it did not give.
“Somebody found it,” Barnes told him. He felt relieved.
“Yeah, probably one of the nurses saw the crack and pulled on the knob.” Reeder braced his back against one side of the warped frame and put a foot against the other, grunted, and pushed the door with his hand. It swung inward.
“Dark in there,” Barnes said.
“Yeah. There’s a window, but they got a steel hatch over it. Nothin’ to worry about in there, just old beds and stuff. Come in now before somebody sees us.”
Barnes stepped inside, and Reeder shut the door.
“Look, Mate, I’m sorry, but I forget your name.”
“Osgood M. Barnes.”
“Look, Barnes, like I said, I’ve already overstayed my leave. Even if I was to go back to Norfolk now, they’d toss me in the brig. So all I got to do, really, is turn myself in here. I can go to any Navy installation—a recruitin’ station, or whatever—and tell them a story, okay? Soon as I get out on the street, that’s what I’ll do. They got my money when they took me here, but I’m not even askin’ you for bus fare. If I had it, I’d probably go someplace and have a beer, and then it would be gone anyhow.”
“Okay, I won’t give you bus fare. I haven’t got it anyway. But how can I get you out?”
“Change clothes with me!” It was a hoarse whisper.
“Are you crazy?”
“Hell, no. The crazy ones don’t want out—not really. That’s why they call it an asylum. I got a fancy hotel room I was going to skip out on, and there’s some dirty uniforms in there. I’ll tell ’em I lost my key, they’ll give me another one, and I’ll go up and change and call the Navy. You wait to give me time to get away, then you tell them who you are, and they’ll let you out.”
“Reeder, you must be four inches taller than I am.”
“It ain’t that much. I—”
The creaking of a supply cart in the hall silenced Reeder for a moment. Instinctively, Barnes held his breath too and tried to step away from the door, bumping into a bed piled with rolled mattresses.
“Shut up!” Reeder hissed.
Barnes nodded, aware even as he did that the nod probably could not be seen. The furnace vent to the storeroom had been shut off, and he was beginning to feel cold.
“It’d work,” Reeder said. “I swear it would. We could do it. That suit’s a little big on you anyhow—”
“I’ve lost some weight.”
“I’d hang the pants low, get it? Like jeans. And I’d kind of scrunch down when I walked. Listen, Matey, let’s try it. Let’s switch. If it looks too bad, I won’t go. I’ll leave you all your money and stuff.”
“Reeder, I need the suit. I’ve got a date tonight.”
“So wear somethin’ else. Nobody wears a suit on a date anyhow. Wear a sportcoat and slacks. I’ll leave you your topcoat.”
“Jesus, that’s decent of you.”
“Listen, Matey, you’re the one that’s bein’ decent, lettin’ me do it. Don’t think I don’t appreciate it. You’re givin’ me back my life, whole years of my life.”
Barnes felt sweat in his p
alms despite the cold. “Reeder, won’t you sit down so we can talk about this sensibly?”
“No, I won’t sit down, Matey. Take off your jacket and those pants. I guess I’ll need the shirt too, and I might as well have the tie. Let me try your shoes too. I don’t think they’ll fit, but I ought to try ’em.”
Barnes’s eyes had adjusted well enough for him to see Reeder untie the cord of his hopital pajamas and step out of the trousers. “This is crazy,” he said. “Reeder, the Navy’s going to examine you and send you back to your ship. That’s all.”
There was no reply. Reeder pulled his pajama shirt over his head and dropped it on the floor.
“Reeder, that’s all there’ll be to it. I swear to you.”
“I can’t do it, Matey. I’ve seen them—just sittin’ around, starin’ at the floor. That’s not goin’ to be me. Strip!”
Barnes reached for the doorknob, but Reeder put his back to the door. “You’re not goin’ out for a while, Matey. Not till I’ve had time to get away from here.”
Barnes sighed and backed away. “Reeder, damn it, all I have to do is yell.”
“And you’re not yellin’. I appreciate that, Matey. You’re all right. I knew it when I saw you in the depot.”
“All you have to do is yell too. That’s what I’ve been trying to tell you. You’re a Navy man, and you were in uniform when they picked you up. By this time they will already have notified the Navy. In a day or so someone will come to get you. Yell. Tell them you’re sane, it’s all a mistake. They’ll examine you, lock you for a week or so for being AWOL, and that’ll be the end of it.”
“I like you, Matey. I like you as much as I’ve liked anybody I’ve met in a long time. Now take off those pants.”
“Reeder—”
“Take ’em off!”
“Reeder, what were you doing in that bar?”
“You heard me, Matey!”
“You said you were acting silly. I guess deductions are really my friend Stubb’s department. But even Dr. Watson catches on in the end—you know what I mean?”
Reeder said nothing. He was breathing quickly and deeply, each breath sounding like the labored working of a bellows.
“What was it, Phil? I’m your buddy, your shipmate. Remember?”
“Just this,” Reeder said.
“Just what?”