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Authors: Douglas Clegg

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her get hurt, particularly from the techs and nurses on the floor, all of whom seemed to loathe the woman for no apparent reason. Once he’d calmed her down, she’d gone to her bath fairly easily; he watched while they held her and then he had taken the sponge himself, frothy with soap, and had spread it across her neck and arms and along her back before the female nurse had taken over. He felt bad for poor Daisy, but still, she had made him stay an extra two hours over his shift before he got his freedom again.

And now, the bar, the beer, and the pretty girl who could not be more than twenty-two; even so she worked hard to exude girlishness. Her skirt too short, her laugh too tinkly, her eyes much too shadowed.

“But the insane, that’s who you work with?”

He shrugged. “That’s one way of looking at them. They’re ordinary people who have had something go wrong. Sometimes, what went wrong is small and nearly unimportant, but it’s enough to make them want to attempt suicide. Sometimes, it’s a big wrong, and a few of them have murdered or harmed others. Sad thing is, bottom line, they’re there to be protected from themselves more than anything.”

39

“Crazy people,” she shook her head. “I can’t imagine. My mother went crazy during the storms…”

“They were bad,” he grinned, noticing that something seemed to be ripening about her right there, in the bar, at nine o’clock in the evening, fertility swept her hair and lifted her breasts and reddened her lips like a Nile goddess. He wanted her. He wanted to touch her.

“When the river flooded, we had to go to my grandfather’s place in the hills, and we almost didn’t get my mother out in time,” she laughed, shaking her head. He bought her a beer, she sipped it, and he had another one, and it seemed as if he’d just ordered another one when he was in the dark with her, in a small bed, and he was almost inhaling her skin and kissing down and up the smoothness of her. Even when they made love, he looked beyond her, out the arched window of the bedroom in her mother’s house, at the moon casting nets of light across the river, sparkling like fish on its rumbling surface; across from them, up the third hill, the asylum waited to snatch his days. He smoked three cigarettes afterward, and fell asleep in the crook of her arm. 40

“I can’t offer you coffee,” she said. Angela. That was her name. Out the window, it was still night. He smiled, almost afraid he would forget her name. “Mom would throw a fit if she knew you were here. Got to be quiet.”

“How old are you?”

“Nineteen,” she said.

Shit, he thought.

“You?” she asked.

“Twenty-eight.”

“When you were ten,” she said.

“I know, you weren’t even walking.”

“When you were ten,” she repeated, “you found your father crawling on all fours and braying like a mule.”

“How did you know that?” he gasped.

“You told me last night. Remember? You wept.”

“I wept?”

She kissed his cheek as he buttoned his shirt. “I thought it was sweet. It’s why you became a nurse. Remember? Your father attacked 41

you finally and you had to somehow take care of it all. I can only imagine.”

Layton laughed, hugging her. “My god, what was in that beer?”

“Shh,” she said, covering his lips with her hand. “I have to get her breakfast and then get ready for class. You need to go.”

“What time is it?” He glanced at the clock on the table. It was nearly six; not quite light out. “Damn it.”

3

“A lot can happen in twenty minutes,” Sheila said, her starched blouse looking like white armor covering her starched soul. “In twenty minutes I could’ve been home in bed already.”

“Sorry. I’ll come in early tomorrow." Layton took up one of the pens from the cup, and signed his name on the yellow paper next to her hand.

“I am exhausted.” Her eyes would not meet his – typical – and she signed off on her papers, her shift done, passing him the clipboard.

“Jones and Marshall are on today, and at nine, Harper comes in to do 42

meds. Glover is over at State for three days. You need to do better on sharps check; I found this,” she drew something from her pocket. Passed it to him. He glanced at the thing in his hand – a safety pin. Her voice was gravel and rain. “Nix had it. Don’t know how he got it. Said something about some people giving it to him. He’s been known to kill with things like that.”

“I can imagine,” Layton said, trying to keep it light. Sheila could be a bitch if she felt like it, and she was senior staff and stupid, a terrible combination. She had Doc Ellis’s ear, and that meant she could make sure his review bit the dust, no raise, and no promotion to an easier ward. He grinned. “Thanks for covering for me. Twenty minutes is too much. Had a car issue.”

“Oh,” Sheila said, her voice now all sleet. “That’s twice in six weeks. Better get it into the shop.”

After she left – making sure to check his keys for him like he was a baby – he started on the basic rounds with one of the psych techs. Sharps check, whites check, laundry baskets rolled out as more staffers arrived, coffee in the vending room, twice-told jokes about the boy who 43

grew trees on his back, complaints from Shaw and Rogers about their treatment, a backed-up toilet on 2, followed by basic bed check – Rance had the sniffles, and Layton quickly checked his temp only to find a high fever and then, oh shit, the day was screwed. Harper arrived and began a mini-quarantine to make sure it wasn’t anything worse than the flu –

six ended up in Rance’s room, all with fevers, all beginning to moan about the demons who were scratching at them or their skin falling off, or any number of odd complaints. Diarrhea on the floor, dripping, spitting, and Layton going between them with juice and toast, just hoping for once they’d all get the plague and die.

When he finally got to Nix’s room, he unstrapped him. “I thought Shaw would’ve done this by now, damn it,” Layton said, muttering to himself, but Nix laughed.

“That’s the first time you’ve ever said anything that made sense, Mr. Conner,” Nix said, “and now, if you don’t mind, a little privacy?”

Layton nodded and turned his back. He watched the wall, and tried to ignore the pissing sounds coming from the toilet in the corner.

“All done,” Nix said.

44

“Glad to see no writing on the wall today,” Layton said, turning.

Nix had a face that was a genetic mix of wise child and prematurely old troll – Layton had never noticed ‘til now that Nix had a scar on his chin, or that he was beginning to go bald. His blond hair receded from a point on his crown. How old was he? Layton thought he was forty, but he might’ve been mid-thirties. It was on his chart, but who looked at the charts anymore? Administrative bullshit.

“She finally stopped,” Nix said, getting fidgety. His face became stormy – his brows twitched, his lips curled, his skin began wrinkling with nervous spasms.

Needs his meds.

“You sleep okay?”

“Not really,” Nix giggled, his fingers beginning their familiar snapping --

Where the fuck is Rogers and the med cart?

“Couldn’t sleep – “

“At all?” Layton asked.

“The baby kept me up, so I had to wander.” Nix said, and then went to the sink and began washing up. He shook like a drunk. Where 45

the hell was the med cart? Layton watched him in the steel mirror. “I went out and had a drink or two and then made friends.”

“Oh did you,” Layton nodded. He glanced at the open door. The squeaking whine of the med cart wheels echoed along the green corridor. Somewhere a fly buzzed. Out the window? He glanced outside, through the bars and glass, past the pavement, the fences, to the river and the valley – God, he just wanted to be there. Layton went and sat down on the mattress. It was clean –unlike other patients’ rooms.

“Another night on the town?”

Nix turned slowly, his face shiny with water. “Oh yes. I met someone and we spent the night together.”

“Well,” Layton grinned. “Not a total loss then.” Stretched his arms out, and hopped up again. Nix was an easy patient for the most part; violent when he was on the outside, but inside he was pretty much a kitten. Nix never went for the eyes. He spoke sensibly except when he went into some delusional talk. Layton went to the sink and brought up a towel for him.

46

Taking the towel, wiping his hands slowly, Nix said, “Not a total loss at all. But then…that baby was still wailing. She hadn’t changed him, that’s why. She doesn’t know how important it is. See, the thing is, she can understand all this movement, this jumble of molecules, but he’s just a baby, his mind hasn’t quite sorted it out. She thinks because he’s a baby he’s better at it. I had to change him myself.”

“Is that how you got the safety pin?”

“The what?” Covering his face in the white towel, Nix’s features came through the cloth. Layton shivered slightly. Something about the towel on the face reminded him of his father’s madness. The form without expression. The open mouth without sound.

“Nurse Allen found it, this little pin,” Layton grabbed the towel back, rolling it into a ball. “She took it from you. Last night.”

“Oh, that,” Nix swept a hand in the air. “That night nurse is no good. She’s a brick. She finds that and she thinks I’m just plotting to stab her in the neck twenty times with it or plunge it into her heart and extract it. She’s crazy.”

47

Layton wanted to add: it’s what you did to two women on the Outside, Nix. Why wouldn’t she think you’d use it on her, too?

4

Layton met Angela again the following Saturday, they got a little drunk again, ended up down on the muddy bank of the river, found a dry rock, kissed, almost began to make love, but she said she just wasn’t in the right mood. “It’s my mother,” she said. “She’s been giving me hell lately.”

“I keep forgetting you’re nineteen.”

“I turned twenty.”

“When?”

“Thursday.”

“Happy Birthday.”

“I don’t care about birthdays or age. Or anything. It’s all this proof. It means nothing. If I told you I was twenty seven, you wouldn’t really know the difference. It’s just revolutions of the earth. Years go by. Gravity pulls. We all buy into it.” Angela reached into her breast pocket 48

and withdrew a pack of cigarettes. She offered him one – he snapped it up – and then sucked one up between her lips, lit it, puffed, and sighed.

“All learning is about trapping. Keeps you trapped inside this…vehicle…we call a body. We learn that we’re flesh and bone, but somewhere it’s all particles. Somehow the particles convince us we’re solid. I took molecular biology last semester and barely understood a word, but the way I see it, we’re all just convincing ourselves that anything we are or see is solid, but it’s not. It’s confetti. Bits and pieces and then it’s all like this river. Look at the river – silt and fish and water and amoebas and all kinds of things, and we call it river, but it’s all one thing, and who’s really to say that the fish actually moves or if it becomes water and in the next second is fish again only because it was water?”

“Well,” he said, nibbling on her ear, “college and beer are doing you good I see.”

“Well, it’s hard to swallow some of the bullshit.”

“Yeah, tell me about it. It’s like being raised Catholic.”

“You? Catholic?”

49

He laughed. “Yeah, you know all that belief shit. Even science is full of its little beliefs, and half the problem is buying into them or not. Just like you said.”

“Well,” she shrugged, “I believe in a lot of what you’d probably call belief shit.”

“I gave up believing in anything I can’t see when my father died,”

he said quietly. He wanted to laugh and make a joke of this, but he couldn’t.

She opened her mouth to speak, but smoke came out. She stubbed the cigarette out on the rock.

“My mother is basically dying,” Angela began, almost inaudibly. She said it again a bit louder. Layton had nothing to add. He wanted to say something wise and kind, but no words came to mind. “She’s dying, and I’m just getting started on life. She’s a nightmare at times. I’ve wished her dead with each surgery. For her own sake. I’ve wished her gone. Can’t imagine having a daughter like me.” She brightened for a second. “Change the subject, quick. I don’t want to think about it.”

50

“I had a boring week,” he said. “You don’t want to hear about it. I’m sorry about –“

“I really mean it. Change the subject. Poor baby. Boredom is worse than dying. Change the subject. Your work, your boyhood, your religious awakening, anything.”

“In my job, boredom is good.”

“Well, then.” She lit another cigarette. “Tell me how it was boring.”

“No attacks, no riots, no bizarre rituals involving stray cats, no eyes getting popped out.”

“Something to celebrate.”

“Along with your birthday.”

“Now I feel like it,” she said, leaning into him, and he felt her ripen again, as if she wanted him to open her, to be part of her. The cigarette went into the mud, his hands found their way beneath her blouse, her hands encircled his back. Nature took over –-he found himself making love to her on the rock, in the torn fingernail of light along the banks of the flooded river. They dozed afterward for just a 51

few minutes; then she said something; he opened his eyes but was still in a half-dream.

“You see? You’re in it, too. You think you’re outside but you’re really in,” she said. When he asked her what she meant by that, she acted as if he had dreamed it. It was two a.m. when he walked her home, and kissed her on the forehead. She looked surprised.

“You took all my passion,” he laughed.

“Ah,” she nodded. “Well, I best get some sleep. I have a Physics exam on Monday, bright and early.”

“Physics? Ouch,” Layton grinned. “My worst subject.”

“I kind of like it. We have a bizarre professor who talks about string theory and molecular shake ups and why we can’t just go through chairs and things.”

“Okay,” Layton nodded. “You lost me. I’m just a nurse.”

“Don’t play dumb,” she swatted him playfully. “Hey, wait, before you go, you need to give me something.”

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