“Thing is, I already put in the preliminaries with Orrin Mather. I think I established a little bit of rapport with him.”
“I assume everything pertinent is in the file. Is there anything else, Sandra? I don’t mean to be rude, but I have people waiting.”
She knew it would be useless to push. Despite his medical degree, Congreve had been hired by the board of directors for his managerial talents. As far as he was concerned, the intake psychiatrists were nothing more than hired help. “No, nothing else.”
“Okay. We’ll talk later.”
Threat or promise?
Sandra settled behind her desk. She was disappointed, obviously, and a little angry with Congreve for his preemptive behavior, not that it was uncharacteristic.
She thought about the file on Orrin Mather. She hadn’t entered anything into her notes about Officer Bose’s interest in the case. She’d promised Bose she would be discreet about the sci-fi narrative Mather had allegedly written. Was that promise still binding, under the circumstances?
She was ethically required to divulge to Congreve (or the new guy, Dr. Fein) anything that might be relevant to the evaluation. But intake evaluation was a weeklong process, and she guessed there was no need for full disclosure just yet. At least not until she had a better sense of why Bose was interested and whether the document she had been reading had in fact been written by Orrin Mather. She’d have to ask Bose about that, and as soon as possible.
As for Orrin himself… there was no rule against paying him a social visit, was there? Even if he was no longer her patient.
Nonviolent patients awaiting assessment were encouraged to socialize in the supervised lounge, but Orrin wasn’t the sociable type. Sandra guessed he would be alone in his room, which proved to be the case. She found him sitting cross-legged on his matttress like a bony Buddha, staring at the cinderblock wall opposite the window. These small rooms were pleasant enough, if you ignored the evidence that they were effectively prison cells: the shatterproof window panes threaded with fiberglass, the conspicuous absence of all hooks, hangers, and sharp edges. This one had been recently repainted, disguising the generations of obscene graffiti scratched into the walls.
Orrin smiled when he saw her. His face was guileless, transparent to every emotion. Big head, high cheekbones, eyes pleasant but open too wide. He looked like he would be easy to lie to. “Dr. Cole, hi! They told me I wouldn’t be seeing you again.”
“Another intake physician has been assigned to your case, Orrin. But we can still talk, if you like.”
“Okay,” he said. “That’s fine.”
“I spoke to Officer Bose yesterday. Do you remember Officer Bose?”
“Yes, ma’am, of course I do. Officer Bose is the only policeman who took an interest in me.” Poe-
“I don’t know, but I’ll be talking to Officer Bose later—I can ask.” She added, not knowing how to approach the subject except bluntly, “He mentioned the notebooks you were carrying when the police picked you up.”
Orrin seemed neither surprised nor upset that Sandra knew about the notebooks, though his sunny expression dimmed a little. “Officer Bose says the police have to keep them for now but I can have them back sooner or later.” He frowned, buckling a V under his high hairline. “That’s true, isn’t it? No matter what they decide about me here?”
“If Officer Bose says so, I think it’s probably true. Are the notebooks important to you?”
“Yes, ma’am, I suppose they are.”
“May I ask you what’s written in them?”
“Well, that’s hard to say.”
“Is it a story?”
“You could call it that I guess.”
“What’s the story about, Orrin?”
“Well, it’s hard for me to keep in my mind. That’s why I like to have the notebooks, so I can refresh my memory. It has to do with a certain man and a certain woman. More than that. It’s about… you could say God? Or at least the Hypotheticals.” Hah-poe-
“Did you write the story yourself?”
Peculiarly, Orrin blushed.
“I
“Except what, Orrin?”
“Except
Sandra didn’t want to push it any harder. “I understand,” she said, though she didn’t. One more stab at it: “Turk Findley… is that someone in your story, or is he a real person?”
Orrin’s blush deepened. “I don’t guess he exists, ma’am. I guess I made him up.”
It was obvious he was lying. But Sandra left it at that. She smiled and nodded.
When she stood up to leave, Orrin asked her about the flowers growing in the small garden outside the window of his cinderblock room: did she know by what name they were called?
“Those? They’re called ‘bird of paradise.’”
His eyes widened; he grinned. “That’s their real name?”
“Mm-hm.”
“Huh! Because those flowers surely do look like birds, don’t they?”
The yellow beak, the rounded head, the single drop of crystalline sap that glinted like an eye. “Yes, they do.”
“It’s like a flower that has the idea of a bird inside it. Only nobody put it there. Unless you could say God did.”
“God or nature.”
“Maybe comes to the same thing. You have a nice day, Dr. Cole.”
“Thank you, Orrin. You too.”
Bose finally returned her call midafternoon, though his voice was hard to hear, coming through a background of what sounded like mass chanting. “Sorry,” he said. “I’m down at the ship channel. It’s some kind of environmental demonstration. We have about fifty people sitting on the railroad tracks in front of a string of tanker cars.”
“More power to them.” Sandra’s sympathies were entirely with the demonstrators. The environmentalists wanted to ban the import of fossil fuels from beyond the Arch of the Hypotheticals, in an attempt to keep global warming under five degrees Celsius. Sufficient unto the planet are the carbon resources thereof, they believed, and to Sandra it was ridiculously obvious that they were right. As far as she could tell, the exploitation of the vast oil reserves under the Equatorian desert was a disaster in progress, enabling a mad prosperity purchased at the price of redoubled CO2 emissions. The generation that had grown up in the wake of the Spin wanted cheap gas and boom times and no cavilling voices at the table, and the whole world was (or would be) paying the piper.
Bose said, “I’m not sure having an activist crushed by a freight train would be absolutely helpful. You got the document I sent?”
“Yes,” she said, wondering how to proceed.