Hanley was falling into himself. He had been in Ward Seven for three weeks and each day grew more indistinct in mind and memory. Was today Wednesday or was it the day before? Was it spring? Was it this year or last?
In lucid moments, he knew that it was the medicine. There were pills in the morning and at night and there were pills as part of therapy and there were pills to ease the pain and to encourage sleep and to end anxiety and to modify behavior. He felt drugged all the time and yet the dependency was restful to him. He needed it.
Hanley began to speak to himself for company. He knew they didn’t care. They were very tolerant of the gentle patients and he was a gentle patient. He was learning all the lessons they wanted him to learn.
He sat at the window in his room and looked through the bars and watched the inmates walk to and fro in the exercise area. They were insane, he knew; at least, most of them. He was not so certain about Mr. Carpenter, who had been in the place for six months and who said he had been an assistant security chief at NASA and that he had been placed in St. Catherine’s after he had made certain allegations about the safety of the shuttle program. Like Hanley, he had been a bachelor. The place was full of bachelors, divorced men, and homosexual men. That was an oddity, Hanley thought in lucid moments. Hanley knew that he had few lucid moments now. It was why he sat at the window and spoke to himself; he thought the sound of his own voice might keep some sanity in the broken bowl of his mind.
He felt an almost physical sense of losing control. He felt spastic at times, as though his limbs might begin to work or shiver without his instructions. He finally mentioned this phenomenon to Sister Duncan, who relayed the information to Dr. Goddard, who talked to Hanley in a chummy way and changed Hanley’s daily dosage of drugs. The condition worsened.
Hanley said aloud, “It feels as if my body has become very small and the world has become very large. Not as though I am a child but that I am much much smaller. As though I am shrinking. Is that why they call psychologists shrinks?”
He smiled at that. A smile was not such a rare thing anymore. Much in the world amused him; at least, the part of the world that did not frighten him.
He thought of Washington, D.C., and it seemed to him a long time ago. Not so much a place but a memory of something that had once been an important experience to him.
It was absurd now, in his present state, to believe he had been a director of espionage. Espionage was such a ludicrous idea. Look around: What would a spy have to do with a place like this? That world must be as insane as this one, he thought with great satisfaction.
He had bananas and corn flakes for breakfast. The taste of the food lingered in memory. When he had been a child, he had eaten cold cereal and fruit for breakfast.
Tears came to his eyes. He thought of the child he had been. He thought of that often now in the dim days of faltering images. The child he had been was gangly, alone on a farm with elderly parents, a watcher who was slow to speak. When he was a child, he would awaken each morning to go to the window in hopes there was some change in the endless, flat Nebraska landscape. The only change was weather. There was snow and blistering summer heat and, in the fall, a brief and beautiful time of color that was melancholy even to an eleven-year-old boy. He wept and watched out the window. The day was warm and bright, almost sultry. The spring came like a woman waiting for sex. There was a perfume that haunted the world. The day was lascivious, almost wanton. Hanley thought of a woman—once, a woman in memory—and open legs on a narrow bed, a woman with the smell of sex on her lips.
Hanley realized he was aroused again. Sometimes, now, he was aroused five or six times a day. The experience was not pleasant finally because the arousal—and his masturbation—had eventually chafed his penis. He had not masturbated since he was a child. Arousal was pain. He thought he should tell someone but there was only Sister Duncan, who would blush, and Dr. Goddard, who would give him more medicine.
Am I sick? he thought. He watched Carpenter walk around and around the yard with large, angry strides. How did Carpenter resist?
Resist, he thought, turning the word over and over in mind until it almost tumbled out of mind.
He blinked.
He was still aroused and he could smell the perfume of spring all around him. He touched himself and felt pain. Pain and pleasure; arousal and sleepiness; memory and failing images all around. He blinked his eyes. They were wet.
“Mr. Hanley.”
He removed his hand, turned, saw Sister Mary Domitilla, a large nun shaped like a cookie. She was smiling and sweet-faced and it frightened Hanley because he did not think she was a sweet woman. He blinked and the wetness was almost gone. He said nothing.
“How are you today, Mr. Hanley?”
“I’m fine,” he said. His voice was low and flat and not accustomed to being used. “I’m fine today. I’m better today, feeling better.”
If you did not feel better, they gave you medicine to help you to feel better.
They were going to give Carpenter electroshock treatments in a week. Of course, they didn’t say that but everyone knew that was what Mr. Carpenter’s condition indicated. He was on the schedule to report to Room 9 for “therapy” sessions next week. No one spoke of Room 9 because the people who came out of Room 9 were altered. They did not seem to be the same person.
“Mr. Hanley? Mr. Hanley? Are you with us today, Mr. Hanley?”
“Oh. Yes. Yes I am.” He got up from the straight chair by the window. He smiled at Sister Mary Domitilla. They all wanted you to smile; it was the first rule of Ward Seven. Smile and the world smiles with you.
“You have a visitor, Mr. Hanley,” said Sister Domitilla in the manner of one giving a child an unearned treat. “I want to be certain that you’re up to seeing him.”
“Who am I seeing?” Hanley said. “Yes, yes. I’m up to seeing him.” He felt a nervous shiver of anticipation.
“You’ll see soon enough,” said Sister Domitilla. “Come with me.”
He followed her out of the room. Her dark habit flowed down the hallway, accompanied by the clattering of the large rosary she wore at her belt. She was not as tall as Hanley and she was fat. She spoke in a musical voice in a way that most women have not spoken for years. Her voice had the notes of a toy xylophone.
Hanley shuffled behind. He wore bedroom slippers most of the time. They seemed more comfortable than shoes. What was the point of shoes? Or wearing trousers? He wore his pajamas and the hospital robe—it was gray and carried the insignia St. Catherine’s above a small cross—and he hadn’t brushed his hair for days. His hair was turning white, what was left of it.
“In there,” said Sister Domitilla. She stopped by an unmarked door. She nodded to the door. Hanley opened the door.
He blinked.
The man who sat on the edge of the table in the small, windowless room was lean and edgy and wore glasses. Hanley felt certain he knew him but he could not place him for a moment. The puzzlement crossed his features and made him frown.
“Perry Weinstein,” the man said, to jog memory. “You remember me?”
“Perry Weinstein,” Hanley repeated. “You’re the Assistant National Security Adviser.” There, it clicked into place just like that.
“Yes,” Perry said. He paused and studied Hanley’s face. “You all right?”
“Yes. I’m fine.” And Hanley smiled the smile they all expected.
“Are you sure?”
“Yes,” said Hanley.
“I’d like to talk to you,” Perry said.
“Yes. Yes, let’s talk.”
“Could we go outside? Take a walk?”
“Yes. If you want.”
“Do you want to dress?”
“I am dressed.”
“I mean… well, it doesn’t matter.”
“No, not at all. I’m fine, I tell you.”
“Is something wrong?”
“No, not at all.”
They walked out of the room, down the hall, out into the yard. Into the open front yard, not the yard behind the building where the others walked. Dr. Goddard glanced out his window at them and frowned. It wasn’t a good thing, to see Dr. Goddard frown. Dr. Goddard only frowned when he had a problem.
The air assaulted Hanley. He shivered and Perry Weinstein said: “Are you cold?”
“No, not at all. I’m fine.” Could he explain that the air was a woman’s perfume and the smell of trees and buds growing on bare branches and the smell of the earth itself aroused him? He could bury his face in the earth and lick it. He thought of that and he was embarrassed again and fastened his robe tightly around him. He walked painfully along.
Perry Weinstein said nothing for a long time. They walked down the gravel drive toward the other buildings. Toward the gate. Hanley saw the gate and thought about it. Beyond the gate was the valley and beyond the valley was the world.
“There are no spies,” Perry Weinstein said. He said it in an offhand voice, as though saying it was a fine day.
Hanley blinked and said nothing. They stopped walking. Perry pointed to a green bench and said, “Let’s sit down.”
They sat down. Hanley folded his hands over his crotch to hide his erection from the other man. He felt foolish and embarrassed. He blushed and stared at the gravel and then, once, looked up and saw the gate down the path.
“Why did you say that?”
“Why did I say what?”
“ ‘There are no spies.’ ”
“Did I say that?”
“You said it in a telephone conversation. Do you remember?”
“My memory… is failing. I remember events of thirty or forty or fifty years ago quite clearly but I forget so much. I think I might be going blind. Not outside but inside.”
“Are you on medication?”
“Don’t you know?” Hanley said in a quick, sly voice.
“I don’t know. I came up here to see you.”
“What day is today?”
“Tuesday.”
“There are no visitors on Tuesday. Visitors come on Sunday after the last mass.”
“What do they do to you here, Hanley?”
“What do they do to you here?”
“Don’t you know?”
“I don’t know.”
“You should know.” And there was a sudden and unexplainable sob in his voice. “Yackley sent me here. You should know.”
Perry Weinstein studied the older man through his horn-rimmed glasses. His eyes were mild and quick. He slowly rubbed the bridge of his nose, back and forth.
“There are no spies,” Perry Weinstein said.
“Yes. That’s true. And all of what we do means nothing. It is pointless, fruitless, hopeless. The Section means nothing. We are to spy upon the spies. Well, there are no spies, are there?” And Hanley smiled and was crying.
“Of course there are spies,” Weinstein said. His voice was cold.
“You don’t know?”
“Know what?”
“Perhaps you don’t have a need-to-know.”
“Cut that bullshit, Hanley.” Weinstein came close to his face. “Why is November in Moscow?”
“Is he in Moscow?”
“You said he was—”
“I wanted to warn him,” Hanley began quickly.
“Warn who?”
“November.” Hanley waited. “November was in Denmark, he was going to Moscow, he had put out feelers to Moscow Center. He wanted to go over. I had to tell November—”
“The real November,” Weinstein said.
“Of course. He was sleeping. I had to tell him to come awake. The words were all wrong. I realize that. I wanted to tell him that none of it mattered, there were no spies in any case—”
“That’s crazy talk,” Perry Weinstein said. “Why are you talking crazy?”
“Burke in Romania. They had him on a string for three years and pulled him in and traded him for Rostenkowski who we had. We had Rostenkowski in Paris for four years. Three for four.” Hanley smiled.
“Are you crazy, then?”
“No, I’m not crazy. It is difficult to explain,” Hanley said. “I was tired, it was the shock of it all, I suppose. I wasn’t crazy. Every day I went to the same bar on Fourteenth Street and they closed it down. So I had to find a new place. I started to eat in the cafeteria. Can you imagine doing that? The food was awful.”
“It has to be awful up to GS 13; then it improves,” Weinstein said. And he smiled at Hanley.
Hanley realized he was smiling back. A tight and typical Hanley smile, the smile of the bureaucrat who does not wish to be amused about jokes concerning the bureaucracy. The smile that Hanley had not smiled in Ward Seven in the three weeks he had been there; or three months; or three years. Eventually.
The smiles faded.
“Tell me about the two Novembers,” Perry Weinstein said.
Hanley shrugged in his robe, as though to recede into it. The air was still and very cold for the time of year. When he spoke, his breath was puffed.
“Do you have a need-to-know?”
Perry Weinstein nodded. His face was grave.
Hanley thought about it for a long time. The spring seemed too sultry to him; he did not realize it was cold. The spring caressed him. The woman of the season blew into his ear and licked inside his ear and it made him shiver; another person would have thought it was cold. He could smell perfume and the peculiar touch of a woman’s fingers running up and down his arm. The woman in the season put her wet tongue into his ear and he shivered because she promised so many pleasures to him.
Hanley blinked. The reverie disappeared. The tongue and woman and smell were gone. He stared at Weinstein. “What did you say?”
“Tell me about November. Tell me what is wrong with Section,” Weinstein said.
“Wrong with Section,” Hanley said.
Weinstein waited. He was a listener.
“I have thought, for a long time, that someone inside Section does not mean us well. Does not mean well to Section.”
“Tell me,” Weinstein said.
“Nutcracker was taken from me. My nutcracker is gone,” he said. “I was given it and it was mine. My sister took it.”
“What about Section?”
“I see teeth and that face that will kill you to see you. It was my nutcracker,” Hanley said. He began to cry.
“I can get your nutcracker back to you,” Perry Weinstein said.
“No. You’re telling me that but you can’t. It was lost a long time ago.”
“Tell me about the Section. Tell me what’s wrong with Section.”
Weinstein waited.
“I tried to tell November. He wouldn’t listen to me. I think he knows, though.”
“Knows what?”
“That there is something wrong. With Section.” Hanley felt the cold around him, pressing on his pale skin. “I need to tell someone.”
“Tell me,” said Perry Weinstein.
And Hanley began then, in a slow voice, to tell him everything he could remember.