20

He shut the door of the office, and told me to lock it from the inside. Locking the door became the focus of all the mental and physical effort I could muster. There was a click. I tested the door, and I was safe.

Safe, but much weaker, now. I was depleted, every object in the room drained of color, all of it turning into a black-and-white photograph.

“Did you hear that?” said Susan, somewhere downstairs.

“No one ate the macadamia nuts,” said Dr. Opal.

“I thought I heard a door,” she said.

“They ate all of your vegetable pâté,” he said. “Look—there’s nothing left but this smidgen.”

“You don’t have to sound so puzzled,” she said with a laugh. “Didn’t you like it?”

Perhaps I was a little miffed at Dr. Opal for being involved with such a bustling person. The late Mrs. Opal had been a quiet woman with a kind smile, someone who never did anything like cook or wash dishes. She had been regal and charming, and—it was a handicap that gave her special weight in my childish view—color blind. It would have been a shock to see her peeling a potato.

Now here was a potential new Mrs. Opal, downstairs hustling party remains into the dishwasher, speaking in a loud voice over the sound of running water. Her voice’s carrying power made it easy for me to hear every word she said.

Everyone else in the East Bay seemed to be asleep by now, and here was this jovial temptress beguiling Dr. Opal with stories of how the poor dear she had driven home couldn’t even put her house key in the right little slot. She had no idea a pineapple juice and something, vodka or rum, would do so much damage.

“Good thing you offered to drive,” said Dr. Opal.

“You look so tired, Samuel,” said Susan, her line of chatter pausing. “I’m sorry. I should be going home. Do you realize what time it is?”

“No, I’m glad you’re here,” said Dr. Opal. He meant: and I’ll be glad to see you some other night, too. He was about to add that he could finish washing the cheese tray or whatever it was himself—I could feel his impatience.

But Dr. Opal’s characteristic niceness was proving to be a handicap. “I told you I would take care of all the little chores,” she said, and Dr. Opal must have given her some sign, weariness, dismay, some expression she misunderstood.

“And you’re so exhausted,” she said. Cupboards opened and shut. “I’m tired, too,” she added, her words full of meaning.

Then I realized that Dr. Opal wanted this woman to stay. He enjoyed her company, and he did not want to be left alone in the house with me.

“Why don’t you let me make you a hot toddy?” said Susan.

I couldn’t hear Dr. Opal’s reply.

“It’s no trouble. Go on upstairs and go to bed. I’ll bring it up in a minute.”

Dr. Opal said he really had to be alone tonight to finish an article he was writing. It was a shame, he said. He would love one of her good lemon toddies.

“Some other time,” said Susan, giving the words a forlorn twist.

“I hope so,” said Dr. Opal said, with a fervor she could only partly understand.

The mirror insisted. It had the same leaden commanding quality a sign has, far from any human agency, police or security guards, to enforce it, No Trespassing or No Smoking, words so black and so peremptory that most people feel compelled to obey.

Come look the mirror said.

I felt the mirror’s continuing pull. Surely I had been mistaken. Surely I could stand before that glass and see. The Latin mirari means to look at with wonder. The wonder of proving to myself that I was outrageously mistaken. Imagine my mistake, I would say, years from now.

Some say Narcissus sinned, falling in love with his own reflection. Others say the reflection sinned, hungering for its image in the twin mirrors of Narcissus’ eyes. The invention that gave birth to our world was not the hearth or the wheel. It was the looking glass, like this rectangle, this window on the wall. I knew why Narcissus kept looking into his reflection in the quiet water of the stream.

Pounding.

He was outside the office, pounding, saying what people say when the knob won’t turn. “Richard, let me in—are you all right?”

Had I fallen? Or had I lain myself down to sleep, without really wanting to. I don’t need rest, I told myself. But what I meant was: I didn’t want to lose consciousness.

A rattle, and a period of intense quiet. At last Dr. Opal was in the room, the lock picked. Or maybe there was a spare key somewhere, a bottom drawer, a shoe box full of keys and foreign coins. But each old key clearly labeled—his life was intelligently cluttered, not chaotic, everything in its place.

He bent over me. “She’s gone,” he was saying. “I practically had to drag her out of here. I thought she was going to move in this very night.”

When I didn’t answer he felt for my pulse.

“I’m going to go out for half an hour or so,” he said. “I’m coming back. I don’t want you to worry.” His reassurance made me worry all the more. I knew he had mixed feelings about returning.

He saw the fear in my eyes. Don’t leave me.

“I promise,” he said, “I’ll be right back.”

Didn’t he know anything? Didn’t he know that a living person can make no such promise? Every sort of harm could happen to him out there, in the night streets. I tried to warn him, to ask him to stay here, but I felt absurdly wasted, withered and boneless, and I could make only a senile ah, the sort of noise proverbial doctors are always wanting you to make as they depress your tongue.

It even sounded as though I agreed. Uh-huh, yes, go. Instead I was trying to say No.

Fish are like this, pancaked on the bed of ice, eyes like the elevator buttons you push and feel the finger sink in and change begin to happen, levels descending, the floor rising. Fish have that tragic-comic gape, the comedy mask and the tragedy mask interbred to produce this, the never-closing expressionless gawp.

I couldn’t move. When I was aware of anything, I could see the photos of my family, my father’s hairless arms, the gray net over half my mother’s face, like a mermaid who will escape the fisherman this time, but not for long.

It was hard for him to move me. He had been trying, panting, the carpet bunching up under me. Now that I was awake he was trying to encourage my cooperation. He gave up and unzipped a black leather bag.

“It took me a lot longer than I expected,” he said.

I was against the wall in the next instant, sitting, trying to make sense of what was before me, the plastic bag of solid dark color, black, or near-black, an alloy of beet juice and mother earth.

Dr. Opal was wide-eyed. I tried to encourage him, to tell him to hurry, but instead I could only open my mouth in what must have been an unsettling smile.

A stainless-steel rack glinted in the light. Plastic tubing snaked in the light from the desk lamp, and my skin was numbed with alcohol. No, Doctor, I wanted to tell him. No need to worry about infection in my case.

A needle slipped into a vein in my arm. The substance flowed, the loops of plastic tubing turning red, pretty as a Valentine’s Day streamer, the red defining its way downward.

Into my flesh, this scarlet skywriting, this course of port wine up my vein. I could see it happen, all the way along my forearm, a serpent that gave pleasure as it pierced—pleasure and pain as the collapsed tunnels and cavities of my body inflated, tingling. Until even the black-and-white photos on the wall were rich with hue.

“Thank you, Dr. Opal,” I said, the pole wobbling, the plastic bag of blood swaying. How did you know? I wanted to ask. How did you know exactly what I needed?

My voice was strong. I could inhale deeply. My lungs were clear. I told him what to do next, and he followed my request, looking ashen, thin-lipped. When he was back in the room he carried a pan, something to do with stir-frying, I thought. A little nick in another plastic bag of blood and the fluid pattered musically, the notes growing more and more alto, until at last they were too low for human hearing, the bag empty, the final drops shaken out.

I lifted the pan with its wobbly burden. I put my lip over the edge of the pan, tilting it like a punch bowl, a partygoer dispensing with glass cups and ladles, tilting the entire fragrant brew and drinking. I drank it all.

When the pan was empty I set it down and slipped the needle from my vein. Dr. Opal was not quick enough to help me. A drop of blood glittered there, and then my body drew it in, the entire pearl disappearing into the tiny puncture.

I sensed the neighborhood around me, the lives.

He helped me into a spare bedroom, the one he saved for medical celebrities. “I painted the watercolor next to the closet,” he said.

I let myself pretend to be weaker than I felt, while he showed me the amenities of this large guest bedroom, switching lights off and on, demonstrating the cord that opened the curtains, with all the brisk apathy of a bellhop. But I knew why he chose this room.

He shut the door and left me alone, only to return with a piece of furniture. I listened as he slid it along the carpet, a stout oak chair, one from the dining room, I guessed. He propped it under the doorknob outside. This room had a particularly strong door, a barrier designed to protect the rest of the house from the snores and love-moans of visiting guests.

The windows were double glazed, and had the gelatinous quality of bullet-proof glass. At some point in the past security precautions had been taken. A visiting Russian physicist could rest his sleepy head without the least apprehension. I was trapped.

It was a pleasant room—floral print drapes, a gray carpet. A slapdash, colorful watercolor decorated one side of the room, a sailboat in a sunset—or sunrise. With difficulty I managed to make out the signature, SO, like a mild challenge.

An Eisenstaedt portrait of Robert Frost commanded one wall, with that airless, preserved quality of certain photographs, the living moment turned to silver. Directly across from Frost hung a wood-framed, full-length mirror.

I could not help looking, once more. Perhaps, I told myself, this mirror will be different. Surely it would. All I had to do was take one more look.

I could see the entire room, if I shifted from angle to angle. But I could not see myself.