
Graham passed the treadmill test but seeing all those electrodes on his shaven body made him feel weak and sickly and he had to lie down on a hospital bed while Dr. Lowell, a pudgy-faced man with a shiny pate and thin white hair, looked down at Graham with what looked like irritation.
“There’s nothing wrong with you,” he said. “You’re free to leave.”
Graham’s feelings were hurt, like the doctor, annoyed that Graham had faked his condition, was taking up Dr. Lowell’s valuable time.
“I said you’re free to leave,” the doctor continued. “You can take your things and go. There’s someone waiting for you in the lobby. She’ll drive you home.”
Graham looked up and saw Mary, wearing a cloying smile, standing in the doorway.
He wanted to tell the doctor that he did not feel well at all, that further testing was in order. However, the real problem, he knew, was not physical but pertained to the trauma of seeing the manikin.
“We’re taking you home,” Mary said, “where you can get some rest.”
“You’re lucky to have her,” the doctor added. “She’s one of the best. Now let’s go.”
The doctor briskly tore the sheet off the bed and told Graham to hasten his departure. He had more pressing matters to take care of. Graham slipped his pants on, grabbed his watch and wallet, and followed Mary to her car. The inside was covered with cigarette ashes and smelled of caked-on dirt and nicotine. The black vinyl seat was cracked and its slits dug into his rear. Behind him in the back seat was the manikin still dressed in his clothes. The dummy had a seat belt strapped across its waist. Its wide-eyed expression seemed to be one of great joy and satisfaction, like the family dog who at the last minute is allowed to ride in the car to the family picnic.
Mary started the car and told Graham she’d give him a nice warm bath when they got to his apartment. He wanted to protest but the thought of the dummy behind him, its leering smile scorning Graham’s very existence, forbade him to speak.
About a mile from the hospital was a cemetery. Green knolls were spotted with flowers and gray tombstones. Mary waved in the direction of a grave plot, then explained that she was just saying hello to a friend. Did she mean someone she had once known? Or was she speaking in the present tense to suggest that she regularly communicated with the dead? Graham did not know and he could not ask. His powers of speech remained null.
When they returned to his apartment, Mary filled the tub, told him to undress, and said he should go to sleep afterward. She was worried he might be suffering from a Valley Fever relapse. While he bathed himself, she would tidy up his apartment. As he sat in the steaming water, he remembered a dream he had the night before. Carrie and Samantha, two glamorous characters from his favorite television show Sex and the City, were at a Manhattan cocktail party that Graham attended and because of Graham’s low social status the two cosmopolitan women berated the party’s host, a tall, dark man in a tuxedo, for allowing riffraff like Graham to be allowed in their presence and they persuaded the host to expel Graham from the premises. When Graham awoke from his dream he felt deeply hurt as if somehow the dream, especially as it pertained to his inadequacy, had been true. The wound of rejection resurfaced and he sunk his head beneath the sudsy water and started to cry. He thought about drowning himself but was too scared of being punished in the afterlife. Overcome by self-pity, he got out of the tub, studied his wrinkled skin in the mirror and put on a robe. He heard Mary call him into the bedroom. He opened the door and saw Mary sitting upright on his king-sized bed. She was wearing a black nightie and eating chocolate turtles from a lacquered box shaped like a treasure chest. Next to her, also sitting upright, was the dummy, now undressed. Graham’s stolen clothes were neatly folded and draped over a nearby chair. The dummy’s hands were in its lap. In the hands was an International Male catalog. Strewn across the bed were other catalogs for clothing, electronics, and automobiles, all of which Mary had retrieved from the nearby dumpster.
“I thought you
might have missed these,” she said, smiling at the catalogs. She ate a
chocolate and then lifted her left hand for him to see. On her wedding finger
was a zirconium ring she had purchased while watching a late-night infomercial.
"You can’t
tell it apart from a diamond,” she said. “Come here. I want you to take a close
look.”
Graham stared at
the dummy, which seemed to be communicating with him, warning him not to come
any closer, but to flee for his life. No! No! No! No!
"This is my room,"
Graham managed to say. "You're not supposed to be here."
"Of course I
am. You need me."
Graham felt
painful palpations in his chest. "I’m still experiencing discomfort,” he
said.
"Come here
and let me help you feel better."
Against his will, he walked closer so that he was just inches from her. He stared at the dummy. Its expression urgent, frightful.
No! No! No!
But it was too late. She grabbed Graham’s hand.
You don’t
belong here, he wanted to tell her. But he had
no more strength to speak. He felt her pull him toward her. He felt his knees
buckle as he fell on the bed. He heard the dummy urging him to run for his
life, to go somewhere far, far away, but he could not resist Mary’s powerful
arms, which drew him closer and closer.
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