The Shibboleth

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The Shibboleth Page 8

by John Hornor Jacobs


  The drugs hit me like a tidal wave, and I swoon, a tsunami of drugs flooding my system. I feel tremors building in my limbs, like some itch I can’t scratch, but that itch breeds in the muscles of my arm, my biceps and triceps, my quads and laterals. My body quakes and my heart staggers into a sitting position. Temples pound. Hands numb as my tongue. As my soul.

  How much has the wild blue yonder affected me? Those etheric heights that Quincrux spoke of—now I miss them terribly, even with the responsibility and weight that accompanied the shibboleth. I miss it.

  I am become small now, inconsequential. I was before infinitesimal, but like a spark, active and shimmer-bright. Now I’m a piece of ash falling from dead skies, carried along by the soft eddies of wind and the suck of gravity.

  Dr. Sinequa says, “Yes, I think that will do. Notate his chart that he’s due for another dose in eight hours.” He brushes his hands together, sweeps back his doctor’s coat, and puts his hands in his pockets. He whistles tunelessly as he strides off.

  Stuck in the meatsuit for the duration.

  We’re gonna have to do this the hard way.

  It’s a good thing I’m a thief.

  Eventually, Buster stops glaring at me and tromps away, and the nurses return to their stations. All of them shoot me varying degrees of stink-eye as I stand there, swooning in the tide. There’s a moon in the same sky as the sun, today.

  I make my way back to my cot. I try to keep the dull smile from creeping across my face. The flesh of my cheeks, my lips, feels numb, masklike.

  When I’m at my cot, I carefully place the key card I’ve held so tightly in my left hand underneath my cot’s sheets. Clipped while he was yanking me around and I scrabbled at his chest. It reads Sylvester Smith, RN, PMHN.

  Time to blow this dump.

  TEN

  It’s night now, or what passes for night in this echo chamber of a building. It’s not quiet; the patients are restless and muttering, barking, making birdcalls and strange ululations.

  I didn’t see Rollie for the rest of the day, and I looked for her as they gave me my second dose of Haldol—a sharp pinprick in my ass and then the sucking tide of numbness as Dr. Sinequa and two frowning nurses watched. The juice almost blotted out my feelings of remorse; with Rollie gone, I was left to imagine the horrors she’d be exposed to by the staff here. All because she helped me.

  Sometimes I’m such a selfish prick. I’ll set the world on fire and burn everything down to get exactly what I want. The terrible realization of my selfishness is muted and dull in the vast cathedral of antipsychotics. I got what I wanted. But Rollie paid the price.

  I wish I could tell her I’m sorry.

  One of the nurses has walked down the hall, spraying air freshener, so now the hallway stinks of mold, feces, urine, vermin, sweat, and Ocean Fresh Scent with Oxidizer.

  Two cots down from me a boy is singing, softly, over and over, I am you and you are me, though we always disagree, me is you and you is she, two makes one and one makes three. The same song the girl was singing. It reminds me of the old poem, “Yesterday, upon the stair, I met a man who wasn’t there, he wasn’t there again today, I wish, I wish he’d go away …” Something about the verse tugs at me, reminds me of the shibboleth.

  It’s a long hall—dimly lit now to promote sleep for those who can get it—and I’m two-thirds of it away from the entrance to the main psych ward and nurse station. Those patients in the mental ward that actually do have rooms, tonight they’re on lockdown, incarcerado. One big bull-nurse sits in a chair at the far end of the boy’s ward, face illuminated by his smartphone—he’s obviously playing some game, the way his torso occasionally twitches. He’s at the farthest point away from the entrance, watching the zomboids and shamblers as they don’t sleep. The door to the stairwell is beyond him, with the key card system.

  I am you and you are me, though we always disagree, me is you and you is she …

  At this point, I can’t feel anything except the dull tug of flesh and my personal need for sleep. Yet the tension in the hall seems palpable. The temperature has risen, and the air is so muggy it feels like we’re submerged in some sluggish underwater seascape. I move slowly, shifting in the cot, watching, sheened in sweat.

  It’s time to go.

  The boy stops singing as a thin young man approaches and stands over him, saying something under his breath that I can’t make out.

  “I am you and you is she—” the boy says, loud enough for me to hear.

  I glance at the bull, who’s lifted his face away from his phone, squinting past me down the length of the hall.

  The standing boy raises his hands, and I can see now that he’s got a pillow clutched in them. His silhouette is almost the caricature of a murderer, a logo for the Smotherers Association.

  But the boy pops up, off the cot, faster than you can imagine, screeching, “THOUGH WE ALWAYS DISAGREE—” and barrels into the other one, their faces coming together with a thud and twisting into something looking like a manic homecoming kiss. He’s pushing him back against the far wall, hands drawing him tight into an embrace, pushing his face into the boy’s, mouth to mouth. The lanky boy makes a muffled bellow, falling backward, and I realize it’s not a kiss. But I guess the bull realizes the same thing and he barrels past me, hand going to his Taser, bellowing himself.

  I don’t wait to see if he’s bitten the poor fucker’s tongue completely off. I fumble under my cot’s covers until I have the card in my hand, and I move as quickly as I can, a slow sluggish shamble, toward the exit.

  There’s yelling now behind me, and I feel like I should look, see what’s happening, if there are any bulls coming after me. I reach the door—feeling like I’ve just swum through fifteen feet of molasses—raise my fist, clutching the key card, and swipe it. It’s an eternity before the little light at the top of the keypad turns green. I pull the door open and step through.

  I haven’t really thought this out.

  Once the door shuts behind me, sending echoes up and down the stairwell, I realize I have no idea where these steps lead and no time to figure out where I’ll exit. But I head down the steps—I can only hope that there are windows I can peek through so I don’t have to open doors blindly.

  The clack and swoosh of a door opening below me and the sound of the footfalls and heavy breath that comes with climbing steps reaches my ears. I retreat, heading back up. Who the hell would take the stairs when there are elevators?

  I keep following the stairs up, making left turn after left turn, trying to stay quiet and get a glimpse of the person below me in the gap between flights. But I can’t see anything except a white hand on the balustrade and a flash of nurse’s blues. Can’t tell if it’s a man or woman. But it doesn’t matter anyway.

  I remember, once, another chase in a stairwell, with Quincrux and his multitude of slaves streaming blood from their noses, marching after me with limps, and that gives me a little tremor. Things happen in patterns, child, Quincrux said.

  I’ve had to use people—I’ve taken and used them just like Quincrux to escape Quincrux. But this time the shibboleth is locked away, and I’m tired and underfed. This time I just have to sack up and get out, alone.

  I rise, taking steps two by two. It’s amazing what your body can do, even on drugs. My blue-slippered feet make padding sounds as I ascend. Looking up in the space between flights, I can see we’re coming to the end of the line. Taking a left and another, I end up at a blank door with a bar release.

  I stop, listen again, blood surging in my temples, hot breath blasting from my open mouth.

  The sound of feet and wind being pumped in and out of lungs. Maybe some exasperation in there as well.

  I press the bar as slowly as I can. It’s a heavy, thick metal door. Industrial strength.

  Below me, the footfalls continue.

  When the gray door opens, there’s a hot wind matching my breath, whipping inside the building due to some pressure differential I can only imagine, and I
see an expanse of black and then white gravel and then black once more. I slip outside, onto the roof, as gracefully as I can manage, some drug-addled reflection of it. I’m out and moving away from the door before I realize that it might shut with a loud clang and alert the nurse.

  Turning, I see the door swinging shut.

  In movies, I’d make some dramatic leap, some superhuman dash, and stop it before it closes. But I’m still swimming in molasses, and an ungainly lurch is about all I can manage.

  The door slows its movement at the very end, when it’s about to close and latch, but I’m still too slow and now I see there’s no handle to grab onto anyway, just a deadbolt. I fumble at it, hands numb, but the damned thing clangs shut.

  The wind whips over the roof, making any other noise small and indistinct. But I heard the clang of the door shutting, and if I did, I have to assume whoever was ascending the stairs did as well.

  I whirl about, my hospital gown giving a little flourish, and scope out my surroundings. Big metal boxes, gray-green, and some galvanized tin pipeworks. There’s a wall of what looks like stone to my right, and capping the stone are little ornamental teeth, like the jagged skyline of a castle. It’s an old building, the Tulaville Psychiatric Hospital.

  I shuffle across what I realize now is black tar roofing. I hit a sticky spot, and it pulls the slippers from my feet. I take four steps before I realize the slippers are gone. I turn back to get them, stop, and then turn back again to the gray-green shapes I was heading for. Some sort of electrical or air-conditioning units like gargantuan building blocks. As quickly as possible, I hide behind the bulkiest of them.

  It’s dark now, and the meager lights of Tulaville wink and tremble in the steamy night air. It’s humid and loud with the roar of some ventilation machinery, and the spray of stars above is lost in the high, wispy cirrus clouds whipping by on hot winds.

  I peek around the corner at the door. There’s a single wire-framed bulb above it, swarmed with insects battering themselves against the glass. The door remains closed.

  Breathless, I wait long enough to know that whoever was in the stairwell doesn’t have an inquisitive bone in his body. Either that, or he’s deaf.

  Five minutes? Ten? I can’t tell. My breath has slowed, and I’m not panting anymore. Sweating, though.

  Eventually, I stand and shuffle back to the door and see if I can open it.

  No dice.

  I look around, wandering to the edge of the roof, the toothed—no, crenellated—wall surrounding me. Not much up here except splatters of bird shit and tar roofing and patches and puddles of water. There’s some metal sheeting stacked in a corner, behind the stairwell hutch.

  I can see most of Tulaville from the vantage, and beyond that, the phosphorescent lights marking the trestle bridge over the Arkansas River. Below me, the soft, manicured lawns. A parking lot, dimly lit. The building is old and over six stories tall. And judging by the crumbling mortar along the crenellations, falling into serious disrepair. But I guess I already knew that from my stint downstairs.

  In the dark, I can make out a sub-roof below me, over the wings of the fourth floor and what looks like another stairwell hutch or some sort of rooftop storage shed, but it’s a drop of twenty-five feet. Tulaville Psychiatric Hospital is an absolute beast of a building.

  I don’t know what to do. I can bang on the door and hope someone hears. But then it’ll be more doses of candy and the wet blanket getting wetter. Or I can try to climb down with a high probability of falling to my death.

  I have visions of groundskeepers driving trucks with beds full of bags of mown grass and leaves and me just jumping off the side of the building and landing amidst the soft, fluffy lawn detritus like a stuntman from a movie. But to get to where I can jump down over the parking lot—all of the eighty- or ninety-foot drop—I’ll have to jump down the first twenty-five to the sub-roof.

  They don’t do lawn care at night, anyway.

  I sit down under the single-wired bulb, arms on my knees and back to the door, and rest my head on my forearms.

  After a long while, exhaustion and the seep of drugs wash over me. And I find sleep.

  Sometime in the night, a furious explosion of black wings awakens me. I lift my head and try to stand but discover that my ass and most of my legs are numb.

  It takes a long while for the pins and needles to subside. Finally, I rise, creaky, to look at the now clear sky, brilliant with a million stars. The air has cooled as the hours ticked by, and my skin ripples with goose bumps as I look up into the indifferent heavens. I can see the arm of the galaxy whirling around us, the milky wash of light arcing across the sky.

  A raven stands on one of the teeth of the crenellations, in profile. I feel like it’s watching me, but it’s hard to tell in the dark. Its caw sounds more like the bray of a donkey when it comes, and I jump in my skin. The raven leaps upward, spreading its wings, wheeling out of sight. And then, as I turn my eyes back toward the heavens, the bird crosses my vision, flying overhead, a patch of absolute dark obscuring the spill of stars.

  After that, I’m alone. The world settles and dims. All is quiet.

  I’m a sentry in the castle, watching for the dragon. Waiting for the attack.

  I am the eye of the world.

  Later, I lie on the roof bone-weary, cradling my head in my arms. Thoughts bubble up in my frazzled brainpan, unbidden.

  Rollie.

  There’s so many I should have helped, if I only wasn’t so selfish—Vig, Moms, Coco, even Ox, Warden Anderson. Booth.

  Where has that raven gone, and why was it here?

  I am pinioned by stars until I cannot take any more of it.

  I close my eyes.

  It’s hot already, and the sky is streaked with rosy streamers in the east when I wake. The air-conditioning units roar white noise and cacophonous fury, and I roll to my hands and knees and pant into the morning air like a damned dog, tailless and without a master.

  My mouth is dry, and there’s a pressure behind my eyes.

  I stand, look out upon the world. I see the tops of the trees, the shadows below them shifting, shortening. The black tar road from the highway, lined with Bradford pears, lies straight, an arrow toward the highway. And as I watch, a state trooper turns down the lane, approaching the building.

  They’ve figured out I’ve escaped. Well, almost escaped.

  I could jump. If I lived, I could see what’s below. Maybe there’s a drainpipe I could shimmy down. Maybe there’s a window or a door I could get in through.

  I can jump. I can do it. And who cares even if I die?

  Jack.

  Jack cares. Vig, maybe. Booth.

  And I’m a coward. And selfish. I don’t want to die yet. Hell, I don’t even want a twisted ankle.

  And it’s already hot again. Sweat trickles from my temples and prickles my back. I haven’t had anything to drink since a slurp at one of the water fountains on the ward yesterday afternoon.

  The sun’s over the tree line now. An ambulance, sirens silent and lights unlit, turns off the highway, following the trooper’s route to ye olde Tulaville Psychiatric Hospital.

  It passes out of my sight, beyond the lip of the roof.

  I wait.

  Damn, I’m thirsty. But even so, I’ve got to relieve myself, and I’m half ashamed that I’ve been eyeing the corner of the roof where the stairwell hutch meets one of the old stone walls.

  There’s no atheists in foxholes. There’s no modesty on the roof.

  And no toilet paper.

  On my way around the hutch, I pick up the tar-grimed, blue-green slippers that came with my induction into the Lethargic Boys’ Choir.

  I take care of the paperwork, holding onto the inner bicuspid of the roof’s jaw, not having to strain too hard, and feel miserable afterward, leaving my scat there to petrify in the summer sun.

  I’ve never felt more rooted in my body, more prone to the effects of gravity.

  My stomach rumbles. My mouth is dr
y and my tongue like sandpaper. There’s a five-foot pool of standing rainwater near the eastern edge of the roof, black and evil-looking.

  I wait, watching the grounds. The air conditioners continue to howl—it’s amazing, all this sound and fury just to keep a bunch of crazy folks cool.

  I watch for the ambulance or the trooper. Maybe someone else got into an altercation, driven to violence by lack of z’s and, well, being batshit crazy. Mr. Fingernails, maybe.

  More cars turn down the drive. SUVs and sedans. A white city van pulling a trailer full of lawn equipment. It stops near the western edge of the grounds, and they begin unloading lawnmowers and Weed Eaters and other instruments of destruction and begin work, the buzz of their two-stroke engines inaudible above the steady roar of the air conditioner.

  “Hey, guys!” I yell, top of my lungs, like I’m at a football game. I wave my arms. Nothing. They don’t turn, but continue to weed-whack and trim and edge.

  My mouth feels like I’ve been gnawing on chalk.

  I walk to the eastern side of the roof. Already I’m getting comfortable here, the expanse of black tar. Where’s that damned raven?

  On my knees, I drink the standing water, trying not to think about how much birdshit I’m ingesting.

  It tastes like fresh-squeezed juice from a burning-tire tree. My mouth rebels at the noxious taste—my lips burn, and the soft inner flesh of my cheeks feels hellish as I probe at them with my outraged tongue.

  “Good times, Jack,” I say and vomit it all up in a rush.

  Weaker now, watching the grounds. The ambulance leaves. After I watch it go, I sit in the meager shade offered by the hutch, letting my headache blossom and grow to cancerous proportions.

  There’s a pressure growing behind my eyes. My eyeballs feel like thumbs holding back the water in a hose.

  Water.

  I could jump.

  I stand, go to the edge of the roof over the lower sub-roof. Sun’s high and bright and beating down. Twenty-five feet? Maybe. If I hang by my hands and then drop, I might not die.

 

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