False Memory
pocket of his jeans, and scooped the fragments of the pen off the counter. The ballpoint was inexpensive but not poorly made. The one-piece transparent plastic casing was rigid and strong. The pressure required to snap it like a dry twig would have been tremendous.
Skeet was incapable of the necessary rage, and it was difficult to imagine what could have caused him such extreme distress that he would have pressed down on the ballpoint with the requisite ferocity.
After a hesitation, Dusty threw the broken pen in the trash.
Valet stuck his snout in the waste can, sniffing to determine if the discarded item might be edible.
Dusty opened a drawer and withdrew a telephone directory, the Yellow Pages. He looked under PHYSICIANS for Dr. Yen Lo, but no such entry existed.
He tried PSYCHIATRISTS. Then PSYCHOLOGISTS. Then finally THERAPISTS. No luck.
17
While Susan put the pinochle deck and score pad away, Martie rinsed the lunch plates and the takeout cartons, trying not to look at the mezzaluna on the nearby cutting board.
Susan brought her fork into the kitchen. You forgot this.
Because Martie was already drying her hands, Susan washed the fork and put it away.
While Susan drank a second beer, Martie sat with her in the living room. Susans idea of background music was Glenn Gould on piano, playing Bachs Goldberg Variations.
As a young girl, Susan had dreamed of being a musician with a major symphony orchestra. She was a fine violinist; not world-class, not so great that she could be the featured performer on a concert tour, but fine enough to ensure that her more modest dream could have become a reality. Somehow, she had settled for real-estate sales instead.
Even until late in her final year of high school, Martie had wanted to be a veterinarian. Now she designed video games.
Life offers infinite possible roads. Sometimes your head chooses the route, sometimes your heart. And sometimes, for better or worse, neither head nor heart can resist the stubborn pull of fate.
From time to time, Goulds exquisite sprays of silvery notes reminded Martie that although the wind had diminished, cold rain was still falling outside, beyond the heavily draped windows. The apartment was so cloistered and cozy that she was tempted to succumb to the dangerously comforting notion that no world existed beyond these protective walls.
She and Susan talked about the old days, old friends. They devoted not a word to the future.
Susan wasnt a serious drinker. Two beers were, to her, a binge. Usually, she got neither giddy nor mean with drink, but pleasantly sentimental. This time, she became steadily quieter and solemn.
Soon, Martie was doing most of the talking. To her own ear, she sounded increasingly inane, so at last she stopped babbling.
Their friendship was deep enough to make them comfortable with silence. This silence, however, had a weird and edgy quality, perhaps because Martie was surreptitiously watching her friend for signs of the trancelike condition that had previously overtaken her.
She couldnt bear to listen to the Goldberg Variations yet again, because suddenly the musics piercing beauty was depressing. Strangely, for her, it had come to signify loss, loneliness, and quiet desperation. The apartment quickly became stifling rather than cozy, claustrophobic rather than comforting.
When Susan used the remote control to replay the same CD, Martie consulted her watch and recited a series of nonexistent errands to which she must attend before five oclock.
In the kitchen, after Martie slipped into her raincoat, she and Susan embraced, as they always did on parting. This time the hug was more fierce than usual, as though both of them were trying to convey a great many important and deeply felt things that neither was able to express in words.
As Martie turned the knob, Susan stepped behind the door, where she would be shielded from a glimpse of the fearsome world outside. With a note of anguish, as if suddenly deciding to reveal a troubling secret that she had been keeping with difficulty, she said, Hes coming here at night, when Im asleep.
Martie had opened the door two inches. She closed it but left her hand on the knob. Say what? Whos coming here while youre asleep?
The green of Susans eyes seemed to be an icier shade than before, the color having been intensified and clarified by some new fear. I mean, I think he is. Susan lowered her gaze to the floor. Color had risen in
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