whether I had any dreams while they were in progress. Then he told me about
Croyd finished his beer, fetched a second bottle and opened it.
'Mr. Crenson,' Hannah Davis stated, and he met her eyes, 'your tail seems to have developed wandering hands.'
'Sorry,' he said. 'Sometimes it has a mind of its own.'
The tiger-striped appendage emerged from beneath the table to lash behind him. Croyd took a drink.
'So the man represented himself as being able to cure your wild card condition?' she said.
'No,' Croyd replied. 'He never said that he could cure it. What he proposed later was something different — a rather ingenious-sounding way of stabilizing it in a fashion that I'd no longer need to fear going to sleep.'
'Of course he was a fraud,' she said. 'He took your money and he got your hopes up and then he couldn't deliver. Right?'
'Wrong,' Croyd said. 'He knew what he was talking about, and he was able to deliver. That wasn't the problem.'
'Wait a minute,' she said. 'It would have made world headlines if someone had found a way to mitigate wild card effects. Tachyon would've picked up on it and been distributing it on street corners. If it worked, how come no one ever heard about it?'
Croyd raised his hand, and his tail.
'Bear with me. If it were simpler, I'd be done talking,' he said. 'Excuse me.'
He was gone. A man-sized form flashed past the bar at the corner of her seeing. She heard a door open and close. When she looked toward the sound, there was no one in sight. A moment later, however, a shadow flashed by and Croyd was seated before her again, sipping his beer.
'Rapid metabolism,' he explained.
'Pan Rudo,' he continued then, as if there had been no interruption, 'seemed quite taken with my story. I talked all afternoon, and he took pages and pages of notes. Every now and then he'd ask me a question. Later, Mrs. Weiler knocked on the door and told him it was quitting time and asked whether he wanted her to lock the office door when she left. He said no, he'd do it in a few minutes. Then he offered to take me to dinner and I took him up on it.
'We went out then and had a few steaks — he was surprised at my metabolism, too — and we continued to talk through dinner. Afterwards, we went to his apartment — a very nice pad — and talked some more, until fairly late. He'd learned my story by then, and a lot of other things I don't usually talk about, too.'
'What do you mean?' she asked.
'Well,' Croyd said, 'then, and in the days that followed, he told me about some of the more popular psychological theories. He'd even known the people who'd developed them. He'd studied with Freud for a while, and later at the Jungian Institute in Switzerland at the same time he was doing
Croyd paused for a drink.
'It sounds very manipulative,' Hannah said, 'and it seems as if it puts the therapist in a kind of godlike position. You help this guy find the key to your personality, then he goes in, looks around, and decides what to throw away, what to keep, what to remodel.'
'Yeah, I guess it does, Croyd said, 'when you put it that way.'
'Granting that this approach is effective, it looks as if even a well-meaning adjustment might sometimes cause some damage — not even considering the possibility of willful abuse. Is that what he did to you? Mess with your self-image and your world-view?'
'Not exactly,' Croyd said. 'Not intentionally or directly. He explained that he did want to explore my life lie because he had to know my fears, because they would relate directly to what he had in mind for stabilizing my condition at a level I'd find emotionally satisfying.'
'You did pick up the jargon, didn't you?'
'Well, I was reading a lot in the area the whole time he was working with me. I guess everyone does that.'
He took another drink of beer.
'Are you stalling now?' she said. 'Because you don't want to talk about those fears? If they're not essential to the story you can leave them out, you know.'
'I guess I am,' he acknowledged. 'But I'd probably better mention them, for the sake of completeness. I don't know how much you know about me….'
'Mark Meadows told me a few things about you. But there were a lot of gaps. You sleep a lot. You lie low lot — '
He shook his head.
'Not that kind of stuff,' he said. 'See, I'd thought of seeing a shrink for some time before I actually did. I guess I read a lot more in the area than I really let on — not just self-help books — some fairly heavy-duty stuff. There were two reasons for this. One is that I know what it feels like to be nuts — really out of your mind. I do it to myself regularly with amphetamines, because I'm afraid to go to sleep. And I usually wind up pushing it too far, and I can remember some of the crazy things and some of the terrible things I did when my thinking and my feelings were all screwed up. So I know what psychosis feels like, and I fear that almost as much as I do sleeping.'
He laughed.
''Almost,'' he said. 'Because they're really tied up together. Rudo showed me that, and I guess I owe him for the insight, if nothing else.'
'I don't understand,' she said, after he'd risen and stood staring out at a sudden rainfall for at least half a minute.
'My mother went crazy,' he said then, 'after the wild card business. Most likely, I was a big part of it. I don't know. Maybe it would have happened anyway. Maybe there was a schizoid gene involved. I loved her, and I saw her change. She spent her last years in asylums, died in one. I thought about it a lot in those days, wondering whether I might wind up that way, too. I was afraid of that kind of change. Then every time I took drugs to postpone sleeping I
'Wouldn't it have been better just to sleep then?' Hannah asked. 'After all, it was going to happen anyway.'
Croyd turned and he was smiling.
'That's the same thing Rudo asked me,' he said, and he walked slowly back to the table.
'I didn't know the answer then,' he continued, 'but he helped me to find it. It's a part of my life lie.' He