The room tipped. I gripped the arm of the chair to steady myself. It did not make sense. On the television, a blond woman was screaming at an older man, telling him she hated him. I wanted to scream, too.
“What?” I said.
“She said that you and Ben were separated. Ben left you. A year or so after you moved to Waring House.”
“Separated?” I said. It felt as if the room was receding, becoming vanishingly small. Disappearing. “You’re sure?”
“Yes. Apparently. That’s what she said. She said she felt it might have had something to do with Claire. She wouldn’t say anything else.”
“Claire?” I said.
“Yes,” he said. Even through my own confusion, I could hear how difficult he was finding this conversation, the hesitancy in his voice, the slow picking through possibilities to decide the best thing to say. “I don’t know why Ben isn’t telling you everything,” he said. “I did think he believed he was doing the right thing. Protecting you. But now? I don’t know. To not tell you that Claire is still local? To not mention your divorce? I don’t know. It doesn’t seem right, but I suppose he must have his reasons.” I said nothing. “I thought maybe you should speak to Claire. She might have some answers. She might even talk to Ben. I don’t know.” Another pause. “Christine? Do you have a pen? Do you want the number?”
I swallowed hard. “Yes,” I said. “Yes, please.”
I reached for a corner of the newspaper on the coffee table, and the pen that was next to it, and wrote down the number that he gave me. I heard the bolt on the bathroom door slide open, Ben come onto the landing.
“Christine?” said Dr. Nash. “I’ll call you tomorrow. Don’t say anything to Ben. Not until we’ve figured out what’s going on. Okay?”
I heard myself agree, say good-bye. He told me not to forget to write in this journal before I went to sleep. I wrote Claire next to the number, still not knowing what I was going to do. I tore it off and put it in my bag.
I said nothing when Ben came downstairs, nothing as he sat on the sofa across from me. I fixed my eyes on the television. A documentary about wildlife. The inhabitants of the ocean floor. A remote-controlled submersible craft was exploring an underwater trench with jerky twitches. Two lamps shone into places that had never known light before. Ghosts in the deep.
I wanted to ask him if I was still in touch with Claire, but did not want to hear another lie. A giant squid hung in the gloom, drifting in the gentle current. This creature has never been captured on film before, said the voice-over to the accompaniment of electronic music.
“Are you all right?” he said. I nodded, without taking my eyes off the screen.
He stood up. “I have work to do,” he said. “Upstairs. I’ll come to bed soon.”
I looked at him, then. I did not know who he was.
“Yes,” I said. “I’ll see you later.”
Wednesday, November 21
I have spent all morning reading this journal. Even so, I have not read it all. Some pages I have skimmed over, others I have read again and again, trying to believe them. And now I am in the bedroom, sitting in the bay, writing more.
I have the phone in my lap. Why does it feel so difficult to dial Claire’s number? Neuronal impulses, muscular contractions. That is all it will take. Nothing complicated. Nothing difficult. Yet it feels so much easier to take up a pen and write about it instead.
This morning, I went into the kitchen. My life, I thought, is built on quicksand. It shifts from one day to the next. Things I think I know are wrong, things I am certain of, facts about my life, myself, belong to years ago. All the history I have reads like fiction. Dr. Nash, Ben. Adam, and now Claire. They exist, but as shadows in the dark. As strangers, they crisscross my life, connecting, disconnecting. Elusive, ethereal. Like ghosts.
And not just them. Everything. It is all invented. Conjured from nothing. I am desperate for solid ground, for something real, something that will not vanish as I sleep. I need to anchor myself.
I clicked open the lid of the garbage pail. A warmth rose from it—the heat of decomposition and decay—and it smelled, faintly. The sweet, sick smell of rotting food. I could see a newspaper, the crossword part filled in, a solitary tea bag soaking it brown. I held my breath and knelt down on the floor.
Inside the newspaper were shards of porcelain, crumbs, a fine white dust, and underneath it a plastic bag, knotted closed. I fished it out, thinking of dirty diapers, decided to tear it open later if I had to. Beneath it, there were potato peelings and a near-empty plastic bottle that was leaking ketchup. I pushed both aside.
Egg shells—four or five—and a handful of papery onion skin. The remains of a de-seeded red pepper, a large mushroom, half-rotten.
Satisfied, I replaced the things in the bin and closed it. It was true. Last night, we had eaten an omelet. A plate had been smashed. I looked in the fridge. Two pork chops lay in a polystyrene tray. In the hallway, Ben’s slippers sat at the bottom of the stairs. Everything was there, exactly as I had described it in my journal last night. I hadn’t invented it. It was all true.
And that meant the number was Claire’s. Dr. Nash had really called me. Ben and I had been divorced.
I want to call Dr. Nash now. I want to ask him what to do, or, better, to ask him to do it for me. But for how long can I be a visitor in my own life? Passive? I need to take control. The thought crosses my mind that I might never see Dr. Nash again—not now that I have told him of my feelings, my crush—but I don’t let it take root. Either way, I need to speak to Claire myself.
But what will I say? There seems to be so much for us to talk about, and yet so little. So much history between us, but none of it known to me.
I think of what Dr. Nash had told me about why Ben and I separated. Something to do with Claire.
It all makes sense. Years ago, when I needed him most but understood him least, my husband divorced me, and now we are back together he is telling me that my best friend moved to the other side of the world before any of this happened.
Is that why I can’t call her? Because I am afraid that she might have more to hide than I have even begun to imagine? Is that why Ben seems less than keen for me to remember more? Is that even why he has been suggesting that any attempts at treatment are futile, so that I will never be able to link memory to memory and know what has been happening?
I cannot imagine he would do that. Nobody would. It is a ridiculous thing. I think of what Dr. Nash told me about my time in the hospital. You were claiming the doctors were conspiring against you, he said. Exhibiting symptoms of paranoia.
I wonder if that is what I am doing again now.
Suddenly a memory floods me. It strikes almost violently, rising up from the emptiness of my past to send me tumbling back, but then just as quickly disappears. Claire and me, another party. “Christ,” she is saying. “It’s so annoying! You know what I think is wrong? Everyone’s so bloody hung up on sex. It’s just animals copulating, y’know? No matter how much we try and dance around it and dress it up as something else. That’s all it is.”
Is it possible that with me stuck in my own hell Claire and Ben have sought solace in each other?
I look down. The phone lies dead in my lap. I have no idea where Ben really goes when he leaves every morning, or where he might stop off on the way home. It might be anywhere. And I have no opportunity to build suspicion on suspicion, to link one fact to another. Even if one day I were to discover Claire and Ben in bed, the next I would forget what I had seen. I am the perfect person on whom to cheat. Perhaps they are still seeing each other. Perhaps I have already discovered them, and forgotten.
I think this, and yet, somehow, I don’t think this. I trust Ben, and yet I don’t. It’s perfectly possible to hold two opposing points of view in the mind at once, oscillating between them.
But why would he lie? He just thinks he’s doing the right thing. I keep telling myself that. He’s protecting you. Keeping from you the things that you don’t need to know.
I dialed the number, of course. There was no way I could have not done so. It rang, for a while, and then there was a click, and a voice. “Hi,” it said. “Please leave a message.”
I knew the voice at once. It was Claire’s. Unmistakable.
I left her a message. Please call me, I said. It’s Christine.
I went downstairs. I had done all I could do.
* * *
I waited. For an hour that turned into two. I spent the time writing in my journal, and when she did not call, I made a sandwich and ate it in the living room. While I was in the kitchen—wiping down the countertop, sweeping crumbs into my palm, preparing to empty them into the sink—the doorbell rang. The noise startled me. I put down the sponge, dried my hands on the tea towel that hung from the handle of the oven, and went to see who it was.
Through the frosted glass I could see the outline of a man. Not uniformed; he was wearing what looked like a suit, a tie. Ben? I thought, before realizing he would still be at work. I opened the door.
It was Dr. Nash. I knew, partly because it could be no one else, but partly because—though when I read about him this morning, I could not picture him, and though my husband had remained unfamiliar to me even once I had been told who he was—I recognized him. His hair was short, parted, his tie loose and untidy, a sweater sat beneath a jacket with which it clashed.
He must have seen the look of surprise on my face. “Christine?” he said.
“Yes,” I said. “Yes.” I did not open the door more than a fraction.
“It’s me. Ed. Ed Nash. Dr. Nash?”
“I know,” I said. “I . . .”
“Did you read your journal?”
“Yes, but . . .”
“Are you okay?”
“Yes,” I said. “I’m fine.”
He lowered his voice. “Is Ben home?”
“No. No, he’s not. It’s just, well. I wasn’t expecting you. Did we have a meeting arranged?”
He held back for a moment, a fraction of a second, enough to disrupt the rhythm of our exchange. We had not, I knew that. Or at least I had not written of one.
“Yes,” he said. “Did you not write it down?”
I hadn’t, but I said nothing. We stood across the threshold of the house that I still do not think of as my home, looking at each other. “Can I come in?” he asked.
I did not answer at first. I wasn’t sure I wanted to invite him in. It seemed wrong somehow. A betrayal.
But of what? Ben’s trust? I did not know how much that mattered to me anymore. Not after his lies. Lies that I had spent most of my morning reading.
“Yes,” I said. I opened the door. He nodded as he stepped into the house, glancing left and right as he did. I took his coat and hung it on the coat rack next to a rain slicker that I guessed must be mine. “In there,” I said, pointing to the living room, and he went in.
I made us both a drink, gave his to him, sat opposite with mine. He did not speak, and I took a slow sip, waiting as he did the same. He put his cup down on the coffee table between us.
“You don’t remember asking me to come over?” he said.
“No,” I said. “When?”
He said it then, and it chilled me. “This morning. When I rang to tell you where to find your journal.”
I could remember nothing of him calling that morning, and still can’t, even now he has gone.
I thought of other things I had written of. A plate of melon I couldn’t remember ordering. A cookie I hadn’t asked for.
“I don’t remember,” I said. A panic began to rise within me.
Concern flashed on his face. “Have you slept at all today? Anything more than a quick doze?”
“No,” I said, “no. Not at all. I just can’t remember. When was it? When?”
“Christine,” he said. “Calm down. It’s probably nothing.”
“But what if— I don’t—”
“Christine, please. It doesn’t mean anything. You just forgot, that’s all. Everyone forgets things sometimes.”
“But whole conversations? It must have only been a couple of hours ago!”
“Yes,” he said. He spoke softly, trying to calm me, but did not move from where he sat. “But you have been through a lot lately. Your memory has always been variable. Forgetting one thing doesn’t mean that you’re deteriorating, that you won’t get better again. Okay?” I nodded, trying to believe him, desperate to. “You asked me here because you wanted to speak to Claire, but weren’t sure you could. And you wanted me to speak to Ben on your behalf.”
“I did?”
“Yes. You said you didn’t think you could do it yourself.”
I looked at him, thought of all the things I had written. I realized I didn’t believe him. I must have found my journal myself. I had not asked him here today. I did not want him to talk to Ben. Why would I, when I had decided to say nothing to Ben myself, yet? And why would I tell him I needed him here to help me speak to Claire, when I had already phoned her myself and left a message?
He’s lying. I wondered what other reasons he might have for coming. What he might not feel able to tell me.
I have no memory, but I am not stupid. “Why are you really here?” I said. He shifted in his chair. Possibly he just wanted to see inside the place where I live. Or possibly to see me, one more time, before I speak to Ben. “Are you worried that Ben won’t let me see you after I tell him about us?”
Another thought comes. Perhaps he is not writing a research paper at all. Perhaps he has other reasons for wanting to spend so much of his time with me. I push it from my mind.
“No,” he said. “That’s not it at all. I came because you asked me to. Besides, you’ve decided not to tell Ben that you’re seeing me. Not until you’ve spoken to Claire. Remember?”
I shook my head. I did not remember. I did not know what he was talking about.
“Claire is fucking my husband,” I said.
He looked shocked. “Christine,” he said. “I—”
“He’s treating me like I’m stupid,” I said. “Lying to me about anything and everything. Well, I’m not stupid.”
“I know you’re not stupid,” he said. “But I don’t think—”
“They’ve been fucking for years,” I said. “It explains everything. Why he tells me she moved away. Why I haven’t seen her even though she’s supposedly my best friend.”
“Christine,” he said. “You’re not thinking straight.” He came and sat beside me on the sofa. “Ben loves you. I know. I’ve spoken to him, when I wanted to persuade him to let me see you. He was totally loyal. Totally. He told me that he’d lost you once and didn’t want to lose you again. That he’d watched you suffer whenever people had tried to treat you and wouldn’t see you in pain anymore. He loves you. It’s obvious. He’s trying to protect you. From the truth, I suppose.”
I thought of what I had read this morning. Of the divorce. “But he left me. To be with her.”
“Christine,” he said. “You’re not thinking. If that was true, why would he bring you back? Back here? He would have just left you in Waring House. But he hasn’t. He looks after you. Every day.”