He can’t move them.
He reaches down, and feels the rough surface of plaster against his fingers. His legs are in casts. Both of them. He tries to lift them, but he can’t. Either the casts are too heavy or his legs are too weak. His only option is to go back to sleep and he doesn’t know how much time has passed when he’s jarred awake by the sound of the door opening, the flash of light from the hallway stinging his eyes. A figure appears next to his bed and he waits for a light to turn on but it doesn’t.
“What happened to my legs?” he asks, his throat painfully dry.
“Oh, you’re awake.” The man’s voice is familiar—it’s the doctor who was here earlier, stitching up Sam’s forehead. “You were in an accident.”
“An accident?” Sam says. “How long have I been here?”
“Three days.”
Three days. “Where’s my wife?” he asks, as the doctor wraps a Velcro band around Sam’s bicep.
“You were gotten to just in time,” the doctor says, ignoring his question, pumping the band tighter around Sam’s arm. “Pulled from the wreckage of that fancy car of yours. You’d think a man of your intelligence would have heeded the police chief’s advice and stayed off the roads.”
The Velcro rips apart and then a tube of light, like that of a flashlight, appears in the darkness, shining down on a medical chart in the doctor’s hands. Sam’s eyes adjust enough to make out the details of the room, cast mostly in shadow. He’s in a single bed, under a patchwork quilt. There’s a closet door and a small window, floral curtains drawn in front of it. Wallpaper—chartreuse yellow shapes feeding on themselves, like some sort of Escher-on-acid creation. Sam squeezes his eyes shut, realizing this isn’t a hospital room. It’s what looks to be someone’s bedroom.
“Where am I?” Sam asks.
“I don’t expect you would remember,” the doctor says. “The brain’s reasoning and cognitive processing centers tend to shut down during traumatic events. A way to help us forget the bad things.” The doctor turns to face Sam and Sam sees that what he thought was a flashlight isn’t a flashlight but a headlamp secured to the doctor’s head. “What am I telling you this for though, right, Dr. Statler? You probably understand that better than anyone.”
The doctor is beside him peering down at Sam over a pair of eyeglasses, and Sam can’t pull his eyes away from the face, his brain slow to put the pieces into place.
The short hair, graying at the temples. The bright blue eyeglasses hiding the same pair of eyes Sam felt watching from a window upstairs, in the Lawrence House, every day when he arrived for work.
“Albert Bitterman?” Sam says, sure he’s imagining it. “My landlord?”
Albert leans closer and smiles. “Hey there, heartbreaker.”
“Albert,” Sam says again, confused. “Why am I at your house?”
But Albert just shushes into Sam’s ear and presses two pills into his mouth. “Go to sleep, Dr. Statler,” he says, clicking off the headlamp as Sam floats toward the darkness. “You’ve been through a lot.”
Part III
Chapter 27
“Albert Bitterman?” the UPS man shouts from the open door of his truck the next morning.
“Yes, that’s me!” I call out, pulling on my jacket as I step onto the porch. He disappears to the back of the truck and then reemerges, pushing a hand trolley loaded with boxes. “You made good time,” I say as he approaches. “Saw you on the GPS. A little blue dot leaving the pickup facility just after 8 a.m. Quite a feature on the redesigned website.”
The man bangs the hand trolley backward up the steps. “It’s creepy, if you ask me,” he says and now I wish I’d said it first, because I completely agree. (In fact, if he were to check the recent comments on the UPS Facebook page, he’d see that an anonymous user (me) made the same observation twenty minutes ago: Am I the only one who sees the danger in allowing any schmo with an internet connection to follow a truck carrying thousands of dollars of top-ranked medical equipment?)
Rain drips from the brim of his UPS baseball hat as he draws a small machine from his back pocket, and I take stock of the inventory. One metal rolling cart with a retractable arm. One emergency crash cart with an attached trash can and side hooks for both a broom and a mop—one of the few pieces of equipment I’ve given a five-star rating to as a twenty-five-year employee of Home Health Angels, Inc.
“Looks like it’s all here,” I say.
“Want me to bring it in?”
“Inside the foyer is fine.”
“Suit yourself.” He backs the trolley inside and drops the boxes onto the floor. “Cool place,” he says, looking into the living room. “Nice and bright.”
“Can’t take any credit,” I say, as he hands me the computer to sign. “It was just as the last owner left it, and I haven’t wanted to change a thing.”
“Agatha, right? Nice lady.”