You deserve it. For being so stupid. For thinking you could ever come in from the cold wastes of the world of The Survivor. In those wastes there are no hopes and only the worst can happen, and when it does happen you are ready for it. When you leave that world you immediately take on hopes which disarm you. Or if you let yourself have hopes they must be tiny ones, ones so close to being nothing that they can’t hurt you much. The thing with Julie was too big, stupidly big, so you deserve whatever will happen now.
When the meal is finished you file out with the others and get through The Gauntlet—though it doesn’t matter now—and go into the dayroom and sit alone in the alcove. You are trying to feel whether you feel different yet and wondering how the effects will come. The blue tablets are Stelazine. You know from seeing others they can have very bad side effects. You picture various men you’ve known who became slobbering zombies. Barry Clarke was like that in MAX. He dribbled green slime.
After a couple of hours you begin to feel strange. A sort of restlessness is on you, making it hard to sit still. You walk across the alcove but you immediately feel weak and must sit again. As soon as you sit the restlessness comes back. By bedtime you feel very bad.
It is impossible to rest. It has nothing to do with sleeping. You couldn’t sleep properly in the dormitory before anyway. Now you can’t even bear to lie prone because the restlessness is too much. You think perhaps if you do some push-ups you might be able to tire yourself out, so you go into the shower room and try it. After two push-ups your energy is gone and you have to stop. You lie in bed again, then try more push-ups, then lie down for another few minutes, then try push-ups again. The two forces are exactly balanced—restlessness and lack of energy.
Morning takes years to come. You have to force yourself to sit still at the table. You feel so weak the spoon seems heavy as lead. They give you more Stelazine. You’re to have it three times daily.
You go to your spot at the side and try to read, to return to David Allison and the cold muddy wastes, but you’ve no concentration. You put the book aside, take it up, put it down. You had arranged to meet Julie at the canteen at nine-thirty. You aren’t going. To see her would only start you crying or something. Anyway, it’s all different now.
Just after nine-thirty the thought of Julie overcomes everything and you go to the canteen. It seems a long way and you must keep stopping to gather your strength. She isn’t there. You are almost glad. You sit by the water till it seems lunchtime, but you find it isn’t even ten-thirty. Time can’t drag this slowly, it’s impossible. The thought of Julie is powerful again, so you make your way, slowly, like an old man, to a part of the road where you can see Admission. She doesn’t come. You are almost glad. Better it ends this way.
They give you more tablets at lunchtime and now the effects are building to full strength. You hobble to the canteen after lunch, then to the place where you might see her coming from Admission. The only thing that could make this bearable would be if you knew that when the day ended, years and years from now, you could sleep. But all that will happen is that years and years of night will start.
OT isn’t a refuge any more, not from this. You can’t stay at the sewing machine for more than a minute and must get up to fiddle with some other job, then the weakness drains you and you sink into the chair again for another minute. You tell Con Pappas about the Stelazine. Just the fact of it. It isn’t a thing you can describe properly to anyone.
Cheryl and Janice know you are on this medication and can see you aren’t too happy. But they are nurses and part of their job is to make things like this happen to people. If they really understood how you feel they’d have to understand that their job is partly cruel and wicked, and you can’t expect them to do that. Mr Trowbridge thinks the Stelazine is a mistake, not because it’s cruel and wicked but because Work is the best medication.
“There’s usually a period of discomfort before you become stabilised,” he tells you. “Two to three weeks.”
But you can’t grasp normal time any more. Two to three weeks will hardly get you to the end of today.
Going back from OT you hear her call. She’s walking quickly along from Admission.
“What’s wrong?” she asks, looking at you.
“Nothing.”
“Are you mad at me?”
“No.”
“Yes you are. You think I’m a bitch for not meeting you yesterday.”
“It doesn’t matter.”
“My parents came. I couldn’t get away. Truly.”
“It doesn’t matter.”
“I felt like a bitch, if that’s any consolation to you.”
“You aren’t.”
“Truly?”
“Truly.”
“D’you want to have a walk now? Look, buttons all in front.”
She’s so sweet, so kind. You just want her to go away and leave you in the cold wastes.
“I can’t go for a walk.”
“Is something really wrong?”
“It doesn’t matter.”
“What doesn’t?”
“I can’t see you any more.”
There is a long silence. You are staring at the ground.
“I get the message.”
“There isn’t any message.”
“You used me!”
“No,” you say. You don’t want her to think that. “If I’d just used you I’d try to use you some more, wouldn’t I?”
“Then you’re tired of me!”
“No.”
“God, I haven’t any tabs on myself, but I thought I could satisfy a man for longer than a week!”
“You’re a wonderful person.”
“That’s a bloody easy thing to say!”
You have no energy left. Standing here has sapped you.
“I have to go inside now.”
“Len,” she says in a softer tone. “Are you sick? You look it.”
“No, I just can’t see you any more.”
“Just like that?” Her voice is hard again.
When you are heading into the cold wastes it doesn’t matter what anyone thinks of you. It’s better and simpler, really, if they hate you. But you don’t want any of the hate to rub off on her. You don’t want her to think this is happening because of something wrong with her. There’s one more thing you can say.
“I’m doing Life. You know that. Sooner or later, in a few weeks, you’ll have to go away. I’d rather have the break now while I can still stand it. If I’m with you for a few more weeks I won’t be able to.”
“Christ, is that all? I could keep seeing you! Every weekend!”
“No.”
“We’d still be together!”
“I have to go inside now.”
“Wait a minute!”
“I have to go in.” You walk away, with your last bit of energy.
“You’re a liar!” she calls after you. “I was a handy fuck, wasn’t I! Well fuck you!”
You think she is crying. A thought comes. It might be important if you had the energy to examine it. Maybe all the stuff about the cold wastes is a way for you to kill the ideas of things, kill them symbolically in your mind—love and optimism and innocence and other things. You pretend you’re a victim. Maybe you are really a kind of sadist.
It’s been a week. You have tried to talk to the Charge Sister but your mouth has gone peculiar. You can say a few words okay, then you get a sensation like lockjaw and if you try to speak any more the words begin to sound like a retard’s grunts. If you try to speak to the screws and nurses they look at you as if they can’t imagine what could possibly be wrong apart from there being something wrong with your mind. You manage to ask the Charge Sister why you’re on Stelazine.
“The doctor noticed you in the grounds one day and decided you required extra help.”
“But why?”
“Better ask the doctor.”
Of course it’s because of the lovemaking. It has to be. You’ve done nothing else wrong. You don’t bother asking “The German”. In Group Therapy you hold yourself rigid in the chair, trying to seem composed. You try to get at the back of the group where “The German” won’t notice you so much. But you mustn’t appear to be hiding or she might pay you extra attention. When she asks you a question you answer as much like a bright five-year-old as possible, so she’ll be satisfied and not press you. If you had to say very much your jaw would seize up and you’d be grunting.
It’s been two weeks. You are at the waterfront on Sunday morning, lying with your face pressed into the grass. You are counting seconds. Counting seconds is a way of keeping a slight grip on things. You count sixty and another minute is over, then count again and you’ve got through another minute. If you could do it sixty times you’d be through a whole hour, but you can’t concentrate for more than three or four sixties and must get up and walk about until the weakness drains you and you sink down again to count some more.
Someone comes past. It’s one of the Admission patients Julie introduced you to at the film night.
“Hi,” he says.
You don’t want to answer in case he stops and wants to talk. You can’t talk to anyone now. But you need to ask him something.
“Hi,” you say, looking up. “How’s Julie?”
“Oh, she left,” he says. “Got herself discharged the other day.”
You bury your face in the grass so he’ll go away.
Walking back to the ward you feel a sensation like goose pimples in your legs. Your legs won’t move properly. You stop by the roadside and the feeling goes. After you’ve gone another little way it comes back and you have to stop again. The feeling now is a bit like the feeling when your jaw seizes up. Your legs are paralysed. You wonder if this is how polio begins, or some other disease like that. You are terribly frightened. You hobble to the ward with many stops and starts and tell the Charge Sister what has happened. It’s hard to tell her because of your mouth going peculiar. She’s busy and hasn’t time to listen properly, but you manage to make her understand what your grunts mean.
“It’s just a side effect of Stelazine,” she says. “It isn’t uncommon.”
You can’t go to OT because of your legs, so you stay on the courtyard, counting seconds, for a few days. It’s hard even to walk into the dining room. You hobble a few paces in and then must grip the nearest table and stay there trying to keep your balance until the paralysis eases a bit and you can hobble a few more steps to your chair. A screw sees you acting this way and tells you to get to your place quick smart. You can’t explain because your mouth has gone peculiar again. The screw tries to frogmarch you across the room but your legs won’t stay under you and you fall over and bump a table. The screw thinks you are just being difficult in an idiot retard way and is ready to thump you. After that the Charge Sister says you can have your meals on a tray in the dayroom if you wish, though that would obviously be a nuisance for the staff. Her tone indicates just how much of a nuisance it would be, and also that you seem to be playing on your condition at least a teeny bit and could pull yourself together if you tried. So you keep hobbling into the dining room and the screws and nurses are fairly tolerant.
The paralysis stops after four days and you go to OT again, though you still can’t work properly because of the restlessness and weakness alternating every half-minute or so. You ought to be stabilising on the medication now but it’s as bad as ever.
You are writing to your mother, asking her to come and help you. Your writing is all squiggly and crazy. What will she think if she gets a letter that looks as if it was written by a madman? And you can’t concentrate well enough to frame what you need to say.
You understand you are in another of the brilliant traps. If you claim the doctor is treating you wrongly or cruelly you have a persecution complex. And if you aren’t claiming that then there’s no point saying anything at all. You try to make the letter sound reasonable but urgent. That doesn’t alter the trap of course. If you are being reasonable it shows the Stelazine is doing you good. If you aren’t being reasonable it shows you need the Stelazine to help you become reasonable.
Your mother comes up from the city and asks to see the doctor.
“Doctor’s busy just now,” says the Charge Sister. “But I’ll be glad to answer any queries you may have.”
We go into the Charge Sister’s office and sit down. The Charge Sister looks very matronly in her starched white veil.
“I’m a bit worried about this medicine Len is getting,” your mother says.
“What’s the trouble?”
“Len tells me it has a bad effect on him.”
“Oh, most medication has some side effects.”
“He tells me he was paralysed.”
“That does sometimes happen, but it passes off quickly.”
“I see,” says your mother. The Charge Sister’s veil is very white and shining.
“Any other worries?” asks the Charge Sister. She’s glad to be able to lay this simple woman’s anxieties to rest.
Your mother is trying to maintain the tone of a concerned parent and taxpayer who means to get to the bottom of this. It must seem pathetic to the Charge Sister.
“Just what is this stuff Len is on?”
“Stelazine? Oh, an excellent medication. We use it extensively.”
“I see. And why is Len getting this Stel … er, Steltazone?”
“Stelazine,” the Charge Sister corrects.
“Sorry, Stelazine.”
“Well, Doctor felt Len was rather withdrawn and needed extra support.”
That “withdrawn” is odd. Making love with a girl isn’t being “withdrawn”!
Your mother doesn’t know what more to say, but she wants to show you she is sticking up for you.
“Len always was a quiet boy.”
“Of course. But Doctor felt that Len needed extra support, you see, to improve his social interaction.”
“Well, none of our family is very outgoing.” Your mother is casting about in her mind for an illustration. “I mean, well, for instance, there are times when I just won’t answer the phone.”
“That isn’t quite normal behaviour, though, is it?”
You shouldn’t have got your mother into this. She’s a babe in the woods. They’ll have her on Stelazine in a minute. You make a movement to interrupt.
Your mother must catch her train. Before she goes she tells you not to worry and that everything will be alright. She almost tells you the doctor knows best, but checks herself. You understand her position. Relatives need to think that way and it’s a kindness to let them.
What the Charge Sister said about you being too withdrawn must mean they didn’t even know about Julie. You are getting Stelazine not because they know you had sex with a girl but because they didn’t know. It doesn’t really matter why you’re getting it. You just are. If it wasn’t for one reason it’d be for the exact opposite reason. That’s how the system works.
Thinking about all that takes too much energy. You go back to counting seconds. Cars often pass you on the road while you’re hobbling to or from OT and you begin to dwell on how easy it would be to step in front of one of them. You even begin to brace yourself when a car is approaching. But you might only be injured, or crippled. That wouldn’t solve anything. You’d need to be sure of being killed outright. And something else stops you: the knowledge that the system would have an easy explanation of your suicide. Poor deranged Tarbutt! If only he’d responded to treatment!
You are at OT, a month after the Stelazine began. Mr Trowbridge notices you are on the verge of breaking down. Your work has gone to pot.
“How d’you feel within yourself, Len?”
“I can’t stand it any more!”
“You don’t appear to be stabilising, that’s for sure.”
“I can’t stand it any more!”
“Have you spoken to your ward doctor?”
“Yes, she asked me how many fucking dwarfs Snow White had and I told her the answer and she was very fucking pleased with me!”
“Mmmmm … I can see you’re under a bit of strain.”
“Oh we mustn’t overstate the fucking matter! I just have a strong urge to kill my fucking self, that’s all!”
“Come with me,” says Mr Trowbridge.
We go out past Cheryl and Janice, who are both looking at you very seriously from their end of the room, up past REFRACT to the Administration block. You have to hobble fast to keep up.
“I’ll speak to the Medical Superintendent,” Mr Trowbridge says.
“What’s he got to do with it?”
“He ordered the Stelazine for you. Didn’t you know?”
We go into the Administration block and Mr Trowbridge goes in past a secretary to the Superintendent’s office. After a minute he calls you in. The Superintendent is peering across a desk. He has very bad breath. It fills up the room. This bad breath is famous. Everyone knows about it but him.
“I gather you aren’t very happy,” he says.
“The medication is unsuitable.”
“Len isn’t stabilising,” says Mr Trowbridge.
“We could try him on Melleril perhaps.”
“And I’d suggest a change of ward also,” says Mr Trowbridge.
“Ward 24’s awful,” you say, trying not to whine. “They’re turning me into a retard!”
The Superintendent stares at you. He has glasses on and the lenses are blank and bright. He looks inhuman.
“Let’s say a transfer to REHAB, as well as the change to Melleril,” Mr Trowbridge prompts.
“Alright,” murmurs the Superintendent. “We’ll agree to that then, shall we, Len?”
“Yes,” you say, as though your agreement matters, as though nobody here would dream of forcing anything on you. On the way back to OT you thank Mr Trowbridge. You want to tell him he can count on your help if he ever needs it. That’s just an emotional impulse. If inmates were able to help anyone, even themselves, they wouldn’t be inmates.
At lunchtime you are given a brown tablet instead of the blue ones, and after lunch the Charge Sister tells you to get your gear from the storeroom. A nurse will take you to REHAB. As you go along the corridor you sniff the stink of newness for the last time. The stink is mingled now, after three months, with a permanent reek of shit and piss.
The nurse walks down the slope from the courtyard and towards the area where the Admission wards are. REHAB is near there, on a sort of plateau that overlooks the lake from a different angle and lower down than the high hill of Ward 24. You follow the nurse. She doesn’t speak, and you’ve nothing to say. A car approaches along the road. The nurse turns and takes you by the sleeve and draws you to the side until the car is past. You let yourself be pulled. She’s just doing her job, keeping a retard from getting run over. You don’t want to be run over either. Not now.