Authors: Stephen King
“Good,” he said thickly. “I'm glad someone is.”
“Son . . .”
“I hope you're not telling secrets,” Vera Smith said brightly, coming back into the room. She had an ice-clogged pitcher in one hand. “They said you weren't ready for fruit juice, Johnny, so I brought you the ginger ale.”
“That's fine, Mom.”
She looked from Herb to Johnny and back to Herb again.
“Have
you been telling secrets? Why the long faces?”
“I was just telling Johnny he's going to have to work hard if he wants to get out of here,” said Herb. “Lots of therapy.”
“Now why would you want to talk about that now?” She poured ginger ale into Johnny's glass. “Everything's going to be fine now. You'll see.”
She popped a flexible straw into the glass and handed it to him.
“Now you drink all of it,” she said, smiling. “It's good for you.”
Johnny did drink all of it. It tasted bitter.
“Close your eyes,” Dr. Weizak said.
He was a small, roly-poly man with an incredible styled head of hair and spade sideburns. Johnny couldn't get over all that hair. A man with a haircut like that in 1970 would have had to fight his way out of every bar in eastern Maine, and a man Weizak's age would have been considered ripe for committal.
All that hair. Man.
He closed his eyes. His head was covered with electrical contact points. The contacts went to wires that fed into a wall-console EEG. Dr. Brown and a nurse stood by the console, which was calmly extruding a wide sheet of graph paper. Johnny wished the nurse could have been Marie Michaud. He was a little scared.
Dr. Weizak touched his eyelids and Johnny jerked.
“Nuh . . . hold still, Johnny. These are the last two. Just . . . there.”
“All right, Doctor,” the nurse said.
A low hum.
“All right, Johnny. Are you comfortable?”
“Feels like there are pennies on my eyelids.”
“Yes? You'll get used to that in no time. Now let me explain to you this procedure. I am going to ask you to visualize a number of things. You will have about ten seconds on each, and there are twenty things to visualize in all. You understand?”
“Yes.”
“Very fine. We begin. Dr. Brown?”
“All ready.”
“Excellent. Johnny, I ask you to see a table. On this table there is an orange.”
Johnny thought about it. He saw a small card-table with folding steel legs. Resting on it, a little off-center, was a large orange with the word SUNKIST stamped on its pocky skin.
“Good,” Weizak said.
“Can that gadget see my orange?”
“Nuh . . . well, yes; in a symbolic way it can. The machine is tracing your brainwaves. We are searching for blocks, Johnny. Areas of impairment. Possible indications of continuing inter-cranial pressure. Now I ask you to shush with the questions.”
“All right.”
“Now I ask you to see a television. It is on, but not receiving a station.”
Johnny saw the TV that was in the apartmentâ
had
been in his apartment. The screen was bright gray with snow. The tips of the rabbit ears were wrapped with tinfoil for better reception.
“Good.”
The series went on. For the eleventh item Weizak said, “Now I ask you to see a picnic table on the left side of a green lawn.”
Johnny thought about it, and in his mind he saw a lawn chair. He frowned.
“Something wrong?” Weizak asked.
“No, not at all,” Johnny said. He thought harder. Picnics. Weiners, a charcoal brazier . . . associate, dammit, associate. How hard can it be to see a picnic table in your mind, you've
only seen a thousand of them in your life; associate your way to it. Plastic spoons and forks, paper plates, his father in a chef's hat, holding a long fork in one hand and wearing an apron with a motto printed across it in tipsy letters. THE COOK NEEDS A DRINK. His father making burgers and then they would all go sit at theâ
Ah, here it came!
Johnny smiled, and then the smile faded. This time the image in his mind was of a hammock. “Shit!”
“No picnic table?”
“It's the weirdest thing. I can't quite . . . seem to think of it. I mean, I know what it is, but I can't see it in my mind. Is that weird, or is that weird?”
“Never mind. Try this one: a globe of the world, sitting on the hood of a pickup truck.”
That one was easy.
On the nineteenth item, a rowboat lying at the foot of a street sign (who thinks these things up? Johnny wondered), it happened again. It was frustrating. He saw a beachball lying beside a gravestone. He concentrated harder and saw a turnpike overpass. Weizak soothed him, and a few moments later the wires were removed from his head and eyelids.
“Why couldn't I see those things?” he asked, his eyes moving from Weizak to Brown. “What's the problem?”
“Hard to say with any real certainty,” Brown said. “It may be a kind of spot amnesia. Or it may be that the accident destroyed a small portion of your brainâand I mean a really microscopic bit. We don't really know what the problem is, but it's pretty obvious that you've lost a number of trace memories. We happened to strike two. You'll probably come across more.”
Weizak said abruptly, “You sustained a head injury when you were a child, yes?”
Johnny looked at him doubtfully.
“There is an old scar,” Weizak said. “There is a theory, Johnny, backed by a good deal of statistical research . . .”
“Research that is nowhere near complete,” Brown said, almost primly.
“That is true. But this theory supposes that the people who tend to recover from long-term coma are people who have sustained some sort of brain injury at a previous time . . . it is as though the brain has made some adaptation as the result of the first injury that allows it to survive the second.”
“It's not proven,” Brown said. He seemed to disapprove of Weizak even bringing it up.
“The scar is there,” Weizak said. “Can you not remember what happened to you, Johnny? I would guess you must have blacked out. Did you fall down the stairs? A bicycle accident, perhaps? The scar says this happened to a young boy.”
Johnny thought hard, then shook his head. “Have you asked my mom and dad?”
“Neither of them can remember any sort of head injury . . . nothing occurs to you?”
For a moment, something didâa memory of smoke, black and greasy and smelling like rubber. Cold. Then it was gone. Johnny shook his head.
Weizak sighed, then shrugged. “You must be tired.”
“Yes. A little bit.”
Brown sat on the edge of the examination table. “It's quarter of eleven. You've worked hard this morning. Dr. Weizak and I will answer a few questions, if you like, then you go up to your room for a nap. Okay?”
“Okay,” Johnny said. “The pictures you took of my brain . . .”
“The CAT-scan,” Weizak nodded. “Computerized Axial Tomography.” He took a box of Chiclets and shook three of them into his mouth. “The CAT-scan is really a series of brain X-rays, Johnny. The computer highlights the pictures and . . .”
“What did it tell you? How long have I got?”
“What is this how long have I got stuff?” Brown asked. “It sounds like a line from an old movie.”
“I've heard that people who come out of long-term comas don't always last so long,” Johnny said. “They lapse back. It's like a light bulb going really bright before it burns out for good.”
Weizak laughed hard. It was a hearty, bellowing laugh, and it was something of a wonder that he didn't choke on his gum. “Oh, such melodrama.” He put a hand on Johnny's chest. “You think Jim and I are babies in this field? Nuh. We are neurologists. What you Americans call high-priced talent. Which means we are only stupid about the functions of the human brain instead of out-and-out ignoramuses. So I tell you, yes, there have been lapse-backs. But you will not lapse. I think we can say that, Jim, yes, okay?”
“Yes,” Brown said. “We haven't been able to find very much in the way of significant impairment. Johnny, there's a
guy in Texas who was in a coma for nine years. Now he's a bank loan officer, and he's been doing that job for six years. Before that he was a teller for two years. There's a woman in Arizona who was down for twelve years. Something went wrong with the anesthesia while she was in labor. Now she's in a wheelchair, but she's alive and aware. She came out of it in 1969 and met the baby she had delivered twelve years before. The baby was in the seventh grade and an honors student.”
“Am I going to be in a wheelchair?” Johnny asked. “I can't straighten my legs out. My arms are a little better, but my legs . . .” He trailed off, shaking his head.
“The ligaments shorten,” Weizak said. “Yes? That's why comatose patients begin to pull into what we call the prefetal position. But we know more about the physical degeneration that occurs in coma than we used to, we are better at holding it off. You have been exercised regularly by the hospital physical therapist, even in your sleep. And different patients react to coma in different ways. Your deterioration has been quite slow, Johnny. As you say, your arms are remarkably responsive and able. But there
has
been deterioration. Your therapy will be long and . . . should I lie to you? Nuh, I don't think so. It will be long and painful. You will shed your tears. You may come to hate your therapist. You may come to fall in love with your bed. And there will be operationsâonly one if you are very, very lucky, but perhaps as many as fourâto lengthen those ligaments. These operations are still new. They may succeed completely, partially, or not at all. And yet as God wills it, I believe you will walk again. I don't believe you will ever ski or leap hurdles, but you may run and you will certainly swim.”
“Thank you,” Johnny said. He felt a sudden wave of affection for this man with the accent and the strange haircut. He wanted to do something for Weizak in returnâand with that feeling came the urge, almost the
need,
to touch him.
He reached out suddenly and took Weizak's hand in both of his own. The doctor's hand was big, deeply lined, warm.
“Yes?” Weizak said kindly. “And what is this?”
And suddenly things changed. It was impossible to say how. Except that suddenly Weizak seemed very clear to him. Weizak seemed to . . . to
stand forth,
outlined in a lovely, clear light. Every mark and mole and line on Weizak's face stood
in relief. And every line told its own story.
He began to understand.
“I want your wallet,” Johnny said.
“My . . . ?” Weizak and Brown exchanged a startled glance.
“There's a picture of your mother in your wallet and I need to have it,” Johnny said.
“Please.”
“How did you know that?”
“Please!”
Weizak looked into Johnny's face for a moment, and then slowly dug under his smock and produced an old Lord Buxton, bulgy and out of shape.
“How did you know I carry a picture of my mother? She is dead, she died when the Nazis occupied Warsaw . . .”
Johnny snatched the wallet from Weizak's hand. Both he and Brown looked stunned. Johnny opened it, dismissed the plastic picture-pockets, and dug in the back instead, his fingers hurrying past old business cards, receipted bills, a canceled check, an old ticket to some political function. He came up with a small snapshot that had been laminated in plastic. The picture showed a young woman, her features plain, her hair drawn back under a kerchief. Her smile was radiant and youthful. She held the hand of a young boy. Beside her was a man in the uniform of the Polish army.
Johnny pressed the picture between his hands and closed his eyes and for a moment there was darkness and then rushing out of the darkness came a wagon . . . no, not a wagon, a hearse. A horse-drawn hearse. The lamps had been muffled in black sacking. Of course it was a hearse because they were
(dying by the hundreds, yes, by the thousands, no match for the panzers, the wehrmacht, nineteenth-century cavalry against the tanks and machine guns, explosions. screaming, dying men, a horse with its guts blown out and its eyes rolling wildly, showing the white, an overturned cannon behind it and still they come. weizak comes, standing in his stirrups, his sword held high in the slanting rain of late summer 1939, his men following him, stumbling through the mud, the turret gun of the nazi tiger tank tracks him, braces him, brackets him, fires, and suddenly he is gone below the waist, the sword flying out of his hand; and down the road is warsaw, the nazi wolf is loose in europe)
“Really, we have to put a stop to this,” Brown said, his
voice faraway and worried. “You're overexciting yourself, Johnny.”
The voices came from far away, from a hallway in time.
“He's put himself in some kind of trance,” Weizak said.
Hot in here. He was sweating. He was sweating because
(the city's on fire, thousands are fleeing, a truck is roaring from side to side down a cobbled street, and the back of the truck is full of waving german soldiers in coal-scuttle helmets and the young woman is not smiling now, she is fleeing, no reason not to flee. the child has been sent to safety and now the truck jumps the curb, the mudguard strikes her, shattering her hip and sending her flying through a plateglass window and into a clock shop and everything begins to chime chime because of the time. the chime time is)
“Six o'clock,” Johnny said thickly. His eyes had rolled up to straining, bulging whites. “September 2, 1939, and all the cuckoo birds are singing.”
“Oh my God, what is it we have?” Weizak whispered. The nurse had backed up against the EEG console, her face pale and scared. Everyone is scared now because death is in the air. It's always in the air in this place, this