Read The Unforgiving Minute Online
Authors: Unknown
can find myself. If I go back now, I’ll only be restless again
and it won’t be good for our marriage or anything else.”
Christine, who had been quiet until now, joined in.
“Why in the world didn’t you just tell Julie that you had
to get away alone? Why did you just disappear? I really don’t
understand you? How could you bring such anguish and pain to
people who love you. You’re very sick and you need
help … don’t you see that?”
“Of course I’m sick,” I said. “Do you really believe that
I think this is normal behavior?” I put my head on my hands and
felt lower than I’ve ever felt. “I just don’t know what to do.
I’m in a state of great mental anguish. I’m at my wit’s end.”
John got up and filled all of our glasses with cognac.
Both he and Christine had looks of great concern on their faces.
“There is no need to be at your wit’s end, Robert. All
you have to do is go home, beg Julie’s forgiveness, apologize to
your children, and seek help.” John was quite authoritative.
“Tell me, it’s very important for me to know. What in the
hell is it that makes you two so happy after all the years you’ve
been together? I’d give my eye teeth to have that kind of peace
in our relationship.”
“I’ve never thought about it,” Christine said. “I should
think that a couple like us, with no children, has even less of a
chance of being happy.” She stared, pensive, for a moment and
finally said, “I think maybe it’s our careers. We’re both very
successful and respected in our professions and we’re in no way
jealous of each other. We both contribute equally to our
affluence, so neither one of us thinks we are the financial
savior of the family. Our careers also give us something
interesting to talk to each other about. We are both very
interested in each other.”
“I think you’ve got something,” I said. “The key is
probably always being interested.”
I thought to myself that this was probably, aside from
newness, one of the things I liked about love affairs. Since I
really didn’t know the person, all of the conversations we had
with each other either contained new information or alluded to
how happy we were with each other. By the time it got tiresome,
the love affair was over.
Christine’s voice softened, “What are we going to do about
you, Robert?”
I was lost for an answer when John suggested we adjourn to
the small neighborhood restaurant where he had made dinner
reservations. I was grateful for the respite and stood up,
almost too quickly.
The restaurant was small, quiet and intimate. We sat at a
table in a corner and were able to continue our conversation
without embarrassment. The conversation quickly shifted to
catching up on each other’s lives since last we met. We dined on
a typical English dinner of roast beef, potatoes, and Yorkshire
pudding. We had an excellent red wine and a Trifle for dessert
that was marvelous. We were sipping our coffee when Christine
brought the subject up again.
“Robert, perhaps we’ve been a little strong with you, but
it’s only because we love you both. You know that, don’t you?”
“Chris, I know that, but trust me, I just can’t go home
yet. What I’d really like to do now is go to a spa somewhere and
diet and exercise. I want to lay off alcohol and stop eating so
much, and I think the exercise and massage therapy will relax me.
After that, I promise I’ll go home … please.”
They looked at each other and seemed to be communicating.
I got the idea that they would like to confer with each other,
without me being present.
“Would you excuse me for a moment,” I said and headed
discreetly to the men’s room. I purposely stayed there longer
than was necessary before returning. Christine spoke first.
“All right. I guess you’re going to do it anyway, but
there are conditions attached. Firstly, we’re going to call
Julie and tell her you’re all right and that we’ve counselled
you. We will not, however, tell her your next destination. That
is up to you, but we strongly advise that it would be imminently
fair to her if you would tell her.”
John spoke next. “Robert, I’ve nothing terribly different
to add, but I am pleading with you to stop this madness. We’re
both very concerned about you and Julie. We’re going to tell you
about a wonderful place and I’m sure it will do you worlds of
good, but our first preference is for you to go home and give
yourself up, so to speak.”
I sat there pensively for a few moments. “I accept your
terms. As a matter of fact, I’m slightly relieved that there is
a way to communicate with my family. I might very well call
Julie when I’m at this place. It’s even possible that after a
few days there, I’ll be relaxed enough to call off the rest of my
trip and go home.”
“Good show,” said John and Christine nodded her assent
with a smile. “I hope we can get into this place as soon as
possible. Let me tell you about it. It doesn’t even have a
name. It’s in the Alps, about an hour and a half from Geneva by
train. The problem is they only cater to ten clients at a time.
It’s owned by a retired psychiatrist and staffed with the finest
exercise therapists, nutritionists, and beauty technicians. I
hope you realize that it will be outrageously expensive.”
I waved my arm in a gesture that said, “money is no
object.”
“Have either of you been there?” I asked.
“No, we haven’t,” Christine said. “I went to school with
the resident physical therapist and I’ve sent them countless
people who have raved over the place.”
“That’s good enough for me,” I said. “When do I leave?”
“I’ll have to wait until tomorrow morning to call. Let’s
say about nine o’clock. I’ll call you as soon as I know
anything.”
“I’d really like to go immediately. I don’t feel like
just hanging out in London. It’s very important. I’d even be
willing to pay extra.”
Christine patted me understandingly on the back of my hand
and said, “I understand, I really do, but it’s a matter of
available rooms. I’ll do the very best I can.”
We left the restaurant and I thanked them for the dinner
and for all of their help and advice. After a warm round of
goodbyes, I hailed a cab and went back to the hotel. I slept
that night as well as I’d slept since the night before I broke it
off with Jane.
I awoke at eight o’clock and bathed and dressed. By the
time I finished it was eight forty-five and I decided to
breakfast in my room lest I miss Christine’s phone call. I rang
the butler button and asked him for the breakfast menu.
“Sir,” he said with a look of impish surprise, “we don’t
have a menu. You can have whatever you want.”
“Of course,” I laughed. “For a moment I forgot where I
was.”
I ordered porridge (oatmeal), wheat toast and jam, and
tea. I decided to start eating healthy immediately. I tried to
eat as slowly as possible and concentrate on the morning paper
and not look at my watch constantly. I was strangely relaxed
after many days of nervous agitation and wasn’t even thinking
about it when the phone rang.
Christine’s voice was cheery and ebullient.
“Good news, Robert, you’re on your way!” She proceeded to
give me instructions on where to go and when to be there.
“Slow down, Chris, you’re going too fast. It’s too much
to digest at once.”
“All right. Get a pencil and paper and take this down
carefully.”
I couldn’t believe my luck. There was space at the spa
for me and I could leave London as soon as possible. Christine
fed me the details and I wrote furiously.
“Chris, I want to thank you again, so much, for
everything.”
“I’d like to tell you it’s my pleasure, but I must tell
you we’re both very angry with you. This whole thing is
disturbing and we meant what we said. We’re calling Julie
tomorrow. I only hope that your stay with Dr. Bierbauer will
help you to shake whatever it is that’s bothering you.”
“You won’t believe this, Chris, but so do I … I really
do. I’ll keep in touch with you. I’ll call you in about a week
and let you know how I’m doing.”
She repeated the instructions several times and made sure
that I would make air and train arrangements immediately.
Her tone softened as she wished me a good trip and no
sooner did we hang up than I was on the line with Swissair. The
airline made my train connections for me and I would be on my way
at one-thirty. It was important to me that Ann Marie know my
whereabouts since my only communication with her would be by
mail. I sat down at the desk in my room and took my pen in hand
to write her. The tone of my letter would be repentant and I
really meant it. Between Ann Marie and the Dinsmores, I had been
roundly chewed out in the last few days.
Dear Ann Marie,
Please forgive me for upsetting you in our last
phone conversation. It hurts when the only person I
really believe in turns on me. I guess I’m so used to
getting my way with you that I can’t believe it when you
stand up to me.
I miss you every day but, believe me, I just
can’t come back yet. Do you remember me telling you
about the Dinsmores, a delightful couple we met in
London? Well, I got in touch with them soon after our
phone conversation and we had dinner. Would you
believe that the whole evening turned out to be a
continuation of the conversation I had with you? They
were all over me about how wrong I was and arranged
for me to go to a spa in Switzerland which is run by a Dr.
Bierbauer who is a psychiatrist. I intend to discipline my
mind and body for about a month. By the way, the
Dinsmores have told me in no uncertain terms that they
are going to call Julie. So don’t be surprised if Julie
mentions to you that I am in England. They are not
going to tell her my destination, so only you will know
where I am.
Here is the address:
Mr. Robert Boyd
c/o Dr. F. Bierbauer
Drawer 3423
Baig, Switzerland
Please write to me. It is important that I hear
from you. I need you desperately. You are what holds
me together. Hopefully, after a month with Dr.
Bierbauer and his staff, my attitude will change and we
can be together.
All my love and adoration,
Robert
I placed the letter in the envelope, sealed it, and
slipped it into the top pocket of the jacket I would wear on the
trip. I eagerly started to pack my belongings and looked forward
to leaving London, even though it was and is my favorite city in
all the world.
Chapter 5
The train rolled along through the lush Swiss countryside.
There were mountains in the distance and their peaks in October
were already glistening in the afternoon light with white snow
tinged with a hint of blue. It would be a relatively short train
ride with a transfer to a cog railway in the town of Brig and,
thereafter, a twenty-minute ride. The train was spartan in
appearance and contained no compartments. It was obviously a
short-haul train and the seats were made of plastic. The train
was not made for comfort but for quick, convenient transport.
I sat back, extremely relaxed, finally getting into Madame
Bovary, when suddenly I smelled the sweet, nauseating odor of
pipe tobacco burning somewhere in the car. If there is any smell
that enrages me it is that of someone smoking a pipe. It seems
to permeate any area it touches and makes me nauseous with a
throbbing headache. I looked up and saw that the car was neither
smoking nor non-smoking, which meant in effect that it was a
smoking car. I muttered under my breath as I threw open the
train window. I would assume the temperature outdoors was about
fifty degrees, making the wind-chill factor of the air flowing
into the train fairly low. Most of the people in the train were
dressed in suit jackets, light sweaters or, in the case of the
women, dresses or sweaters and skirts. The occupants of the
train glared at me. I ignored them completely and, although I
was cold, continued to read. There were shouts in French of,
“Fermez la fenetre.” Since there were no “s’il vous plaits,” attached, I
knew they were angry shouts. I knew I was getting into one of my
obstinate moods. I get this way when I am very annoyed at
injustice or lack of manners. I have this thing about pipe
smokers that is probably my greatest prejudice. I would never
hire a pipe smoker in all my years in the business world. I
consider them plodding, lethargic, boring and, above all, the
most inconsiderate people I have ever seen. They have ruined
meals for me on many occasions by lighting up in restaurants and
permeating the room with the foul odor of their pipes. Even
though I don’t particularly like the smell of cigarettes, they
don’t bother me that much and cigars only seem to spread their
odor in the general vicinity of the cigar smoker himself. Just
the sight of someone lighting a pipe gets me going. I knew that
war was about to start. It was me against the pipe smoker and
the other passengers. In about five minutes, a conductor
appeared and, without a word, reached over me and brusquely
closed the window. Like a finely choreographed scene, my arms
reached up and opened the window almost at the exact moment that
it closed. The conductor reached over me and closed it again.
I, in turn, opened it again. I remember thinking that “The Anvil
Chorus” would have made great background music for this scene.
Finally, the conductor left the car in a huff, obviously to get
reinforcements. I knew I was painted into a corner, so I took a
parting shot by screaming across the car at the pipe smoker in my
very fractured French.
“Idiote. Qu’est votre probleme … vous n’aimez pas d’air? Votre pipe tobac rassemble
merde.”
He in turn let loose a flow of invectives in French that
must have been too idiomatic for me to understand.
I do know that whatever he said to me inspired laughter in
the other passengers, who were clearly on his side. I had the
distinct feeling that I had already lost the battle if not the
war.
Sure enough, in about five minutes three conductors came
through the door. One of them looked like he could easily break
me in half and throw away the pieces. I smiled weakly, reached
over, and closed the window. The three conductors scowled at me
but stopped and went about their business. The other passengers
were all scowling at me except for the pipe smoker who had on his
victory smile as he contentedly smoked his pipe, loosing billows
of foul blue/white smoke throughout the car. When we arrived at
Brig, I was nauseous, irritable, and had a world-class throbbing
headache. I dragged my two large suitcases and shoulder bag off
the train and found a porter with a wooden wagon to take them to
the cog railway which was three tracks over. He, too, was surly.
“My God,” I said to myself. “Doesn’t anyone smile in this
country?” I tipped him and got a derisive grunt in return as I
boarded the cog railway.
The little train on the cog railway was like something
from the nineteenth century. It was quite narrow with plush
seats and wooden wall panels. I had taken this trip years before
on a ski trip to Zermatt. If you continued on this railway for
about an hour and a half, you arrived at Zermatt which is in the
valley of the Matterhorn. If you take three cable cars to the
top, you can ski into Cervinia in Italy. My destination,
however, was at the first stop, which was twenty minutes away. I
couldn’t believe that I had been in London until eleven o’clock
this morning. It seemed like ages ago. I leaned back in my seat
and closed my eyes. The agitation of the train ride to Brig was
behind me and I was calm and relaxed in anticipation of a
therapeutic stay at Dr. Bierbauer’s retreat.
As I stepped off the train I saw a man of indeterminate
age with leathery tanned skin, holding a sign with my name on it.
When I identified myself, he took my bags to a cart pulled by two
horses straight out of a Budweiser ad. I climbed up on the seat
next to him and he soon turned onto a road that I doubted could
accommodate an automobile. He spoke little English and my German
is not very good, so we plodded along silently. We had crossed
the line somewhere along the way from French-speaking Switzerland
to German-speaking Switzerland. The smell of the woods was
invigorating and clean after weeks of Paris and London pollution.
The air was cool, crisp and dry, and I felt incredibly alive
already.
After about ten minutes, we broke through the woods into a
clearing nestled among some hills and trotted through a bubbling
brook. Before my eyes was one of the most beautiful complexes
I’d ever seen. A stone wall about three feet high enclosed a
group of cottages and rectangular-shaped buildings. In the
center of the buildings was the main house. It resembled in many
ways an antebellum southern mansion rather than the Swiss chalet
I expected. Pathways of cobblestones connected all of the
buildings, which looked as if they had been freshly painted white
the day before. A wide cobblestone path led from the main gate
to the large house. I could hear the clip-clop of the immense
hooves as we pulled up to the main house.
The driver took my bags into the house and I was instantly
greeted by an elderly woman in a starched white uniform. She
spoke English with a German accent.
“Welcome, Mr. Boyd. I trust you have had a pleasant
journey. Please come inside and I will process you as far as I
can this evening.”
I stepped inside and was led to a small, white antiseptic
looking office.
“I am Frau Blecker, Dr. Bierbauer’s secretary. You will
be meeting him in the morning, after your physical. This evening
you will be shown to your cottage, where you will be served a
meal. You will not be eating in the dining room until after you
are processed. Our meals there are customized to each guest.
“You will be going through extensive examinations and
tests tomorrow. We give you a full physical with stress
electrocardiogram and check all facets of your health right down
to your body fat content. After your physical you will meet with
Dr. Bierbauer for a psychiatric evaluation. We have our own
laboratory on the premises, so by the time you are finished with
Dr. Bierbauer, you will receive printouts with your diet and
exercise schedule and will be assigned your own personal trainer.
We have, for your entertainment, a fully stocked library in four
languages and a video tape library, the contents of which are
available to take to your cottage and play on your own personal
tape player. You may also, in the evening, come to the main
lobby to socialize with the other guests, but I must warn you
that the exercise program is so vigorous that most of the guests
are in bed by eight-thirty each evening.”
She handed me several brochures in English describing the
facility. At a quick glance, I could see that the facilities
were enormous. There were both indoor and outdoor pools and two
fully-equipped gyms. The complex consisted of forty acres. I
didn’t glance at the prices yet but I could imagine that they,
too, were enormous. I really didn’t care what it cost. I was
certain that this place was the answer to all of my problems.
I was shown to my cottage which was breathtaking, to say
the least. The bedroom was quite large with a king-size bed with
down pillows and a down comforter that was like a soft cloud.
There were night tables on either side of the bed, one with a
large clock and both with large lamps, easy to read by, unlike
most hotel rooms. There was a unique feature in an alcove right
off the bedroom. It was a three-way mirror that swung out for
easy viewing of your own body from all angles. I decided to
immediately strip naked and view mine. I didn’t like what I saw
at all. My muscle tone was still good, but large love handles
were starting to sprout at my lower back and my chest was
becoming fleshy. My first estimate was about ten pounds and a
lot of toning work. I walked naked to the bathroom and, before
stepping into the shower, observed it. It was a large bathroom,
white, like everything else in this place seemed to be. A
bathtub with whirlpool jets with a real shower head rather than
the hand-held shower head you find in hotels in Europe. The
bathtub seemed large enough for two and brought back memories of
Jane, which I quickly tried to shake from my mind. The sink had
a large console which was stocked with creams and oils which
obviously were products of the spa, since they had no brand
label, only instructions for use. The bath had heat lamps, a
suspended shaving mirror, and a hair dryer.
I was in the bedroom, in the fluffy terry robe provided
for me when there was a knock on the door. I opened the door and
a porter stood with a covered tray of food which I accepted with
thanks. I hadn’t realized how hungry I was. I looked at the
tray incredulously. The meal was spartan at best.
It consisted of a salad of sliced carrots, lettuce,
radishes, peppers, and raw cauliflower. There was no dressing,
only a slice of lemon. Next to it was the main course. It
consisted of a small slice of chicken, a few half-cooked green
beans, and about an ice-cream-scoop worth of brown rice. Dessert
seemed to be an apple and a small orange. There was no salt, no
gravy. The only condiment was pepper. Instead of bread there
were two large crackers that seemed to be made of cardboard. The
beverage was a bottle of sparkling water, again with no brand
label. There was no butter but there was a small container of
what seemed to be apple butter. What I really wanted was a drink
but I knew that I had to get alcohol out of my mind. From the
looks of where I was, I would guess there was no alcohol within
twenty miles.
There was a doorway from the bedroom that led to a small
deck overlooking a lush forest. On the deck was a small white
table and two chairs. I carried my meager fare out to the deck
and placed it on the table. I decided that the only way to be
satisfied by this meal was to eat very slowly and make it last.
I brought the literature that Mrs. Blecker had given me
and read it with my meal. I squeezed the lemon onto the salad
and brought a forkful to my mouth. God, how I yearned for some
salt! How was I ever going to get used to this? While reading
the literature I noted that they recommended drinking eight to
ten bottles of their water, which was ostensibly obtained from a
spring on the property, every day. There was a refrigerated
locker where guests could take as many bottles as they wished,
twenty-four hours a day. I poured some into my glass. It had a
lightly carbonated tang to it and was quite good, but still it
was only water. I made the salad last as long as I could but the
lack of flavor was totally unsatisfying and I was still hungry.
The main course wasn’t much tastier even when I doused it with
pepper. After finishing the main course, I spread the two
totally tasteless crackers with the apple butter and chewed them
slowly. I then sliced the orange into quarters and hungrily
devoured it. For a moment, I considered trying the peel. I took
the apple back into the bedroom and decided to eat it later, when
I was sure I would be so hungry that my stomach would be
screaming for food. I remembered my love handles in the mirror