He could get up, go to the window, discover it was just a flying beetle
that was banging against the glass, relieve his mind.
Don't even think about it.
He took a long swallow of the second beer.
Tick.
Something standing on the dark lawn below, looking up at the window.
Something that knew exactly where he was, wanted to make contact.
But not a raccoon this time.
Don't, don't, don't.
No cute furry face with a little black mask this time. No beautiful
coat and black-ringed tail.
Motion, color, beer. Scrub out the diseased thought, purge the
contamination.
Tick.
Because if he didn't rid himself of the monstrous thought that soiled
his mind, he would sooner or later lose his grip on sanity. Sooner.
Tick.
If he went to the window and parted the draperies and looked down at
the thing on the lawn, even insanity would be no refuge. Once he had
seen, once he knew, then there would be only a single way out. Shotgun
barrel in his mouth, one toe hooked in the trigger.
Tick.
. He turned up the volume control on the television. Loud. Louder.
He finished the second beer. Turned the volume up even louder, until
the raucous soundtrack of the violent movie seemed to shake the room.
Popped the cap off a third beer.
Purging his thoughts. Maybe in the morning he would have forgotten the
sick, demented considerations that plagued him so persistently tonight,
forgotten them or washed them away in tides of alcohol. Or perhaps he
would die in his sleep. He almost didn't care which. He poured down a
long swallow of the third beer, seeking one form of oblivion or
another.
CHAPTER ELEVEN.
Through March, April, and May, as Jack lay cupped in felt-lined plaster
with his legs often in traction, he suffered pain, cramps, spastic
muscle twitches, uncontrollable nerve tics, and itchy skin where it
could not be scratched inside a cast. He endured those discomforts and
others with few complaints, and he thanked God that he would live to
hold his wife again and see his son grow up.
His health worries were even more numerous than his discomforts. The
risk of bedsores was ever-present, though the body cast had been formed
with great care and though most of the nurses were concerned,
solicitous, and skilled.
Once a pressure sore became ulcerated, it would not heal easily, and
gangrene could set in quickly. Because he was periodically
catheterized, his chances of contracting an infection of the urethra
were increased, which could lead to a more serious case of cystitis.
Any patient immobilized for long periods was in jeopardy of developing
blood clots that could break loose and spin through the body, lodge in
