Yes, it was final. Her attorney's note was accompanied by a
copy of the divorce decree. She had only recently decided to
end her legal relationship to Mister Fotlock, whose name she
had stopped using five years earlier, when they had separated.
Now that she had the thing she wasn't sure exactly what she
was going to do with it. It would be a hell of a surprise for dear
Rendy, though, she decided. She would have to find a
reasonably innocent way of getting the information to him. She
withdrew her compact and practiced a "Well?" expression.
Well, there would be time for that later, she mused. Not too
much later, though . . . Her thirtieth birthday, like a huge black
cloud, filled an April but four months distant. Well . . . She
touched her quizzical lips with color, dusted more powder over
her mole, and locked the expression within her compact for
future use.
In the dining room she saw Doctor Bartelmetz, seated before
an enormous mound of scrambled eggs, great chains of dark
sausages, several heaps of yellow toast, and a half-emptied flask
of orange juice. A pot of coffee steamed on the warmer at his
elbow. He leaned slightly forward as he ate, wielding his fork
like a windmill blade.
"Good morning," she said.
He looked up.
"Miss DeVille Jill . . . Good morning." He nodded at the
chair across from him. "Join me, please."
She did so, and when the waiter approached she nodded and
said, "I'll have the same thing, only about ninety percent less."
She turned back to Bartelmetz.
"Have you seen Charles today?"
"Alas, I have not," he gestered, open-handed, "and I wanted
to continue our discussion while his mind was still in the early
stages of wakefulness and somewhat malleable. Unfortunate-
ly," he took a sip of coffee, "he who sleeps well enters the day
somewhere in the middle of its second act."
"Myself, I usually come in around intermission and ask
someone for a synopsis," she explained. "So why not continue
the
discussion
with
me?I'm
always
malleable,
and
my
skandhas are in good shape."
Their eyes met, and he took a bite of toast.
"Aye," he said, at length, "I had guessed as much.
Wellgood. What do you know of Render's work?"
She adjusted herself in the chair.
"Mm. He being a special specialist in a highly specialized
area, I find it difficult to appreciate the few things he does say
about it. I'd like to be able to look inside other people's minds
sometimesto see what they're thinking about me, of course
but I don't think I could stand staying there very long.
Especially," she gave a mock-shudder, "the mind of somebody
withproblems. I'm afraid I'd be too sympathetic or too
frightened
or
something.
Then,
according
to
what
I've
readpow!like sympathetic magic, it would be my problem.
"Charles never has problems though," she continued, "at
least,
none
that he
speaks
to
me
about.
Lately
I've
been
wondering, though. That blind girl and her talking dog seem to
be too much with him."
"Talking dog?"
"Yes, her seeing-eye dog is one of those surgical mutants."
"How interesting . . . Have you ever met her?"
"Never."
"So," he mused.
"Sometimes a therapist encounters a patient whose problems
are so akin to his own that the sessions become extremely
nprdant," he noted. "It has always been the case with me when
I treat a
fellow-psychiatrist.
Perhaps
Charles sees
in
this
situation a parallel to something which has been troubling him
personally. I did not administer his personal analysis. I do not
know all the ways of his mind, even though he was a pupil of
mine for a long while. He was always self-contained, somewhat
reticent; he could be quite authoritative on occasion, however.
What are some of the other things which occupy his attention
these days?"
"His son Peter is a constant concern. He's changed the boy's
school five times in five years."
Her breakfast arrived. She adjusted her napkin and drew her
chair closer to the table.
"and he has been reading case histories of suicides recently,
and talking about them, and talking about them, and talking
about them."
"To what end?"
She shrugged and began eating.
"He never mentioned why," she said, looking up again.
"Maybe he's writing something . . ."
Bartelmetz finished his eggs and poured more coffee.
"Are you afraid of this patient of his?" he inquired.
"No . . . Yes," she responded, "I am."
"Why?"
"I am afraid of sympathetic magic," she said, flushing
slightly.
"Many things could fall under that heading."
"Many indeed," she acknowledged. And, after a moment,
"We are united in our concern for his welfare and in agreement
as to what represents the threat. So, may I ask a favor?"
"You may."
"Talk to him again," she said. "Persuade him to drop the
case."
He folded his napkin.
"I intended to do that after dinner," he gtated, "because I
believe in the ritualistic value of rescue-motions. They shall be
made."
Dear Father-Image,
Yes, the school is fine, my ankle is getting that way, and
my classmates are a congenial lot. No, I am not short on cash,
undernourished, or having difficulty fitting into the new
curriculum. Okay?
The building I will not describe, as you have already seen
the macabre thing. The grounds I cannot describe, as they
are presently residing beneath cold white sheets. Brrr! I
trust yourself to be enjoying the arts wint'rish. I do not share
your enthusiasm for summer's opposite, except within
picture frames or as an emblem on ice cream bars.
The ankle inhibits my mobility and my roommate has gone
home for the weekendboth of which are really blessings
(saith Pangloss), for I now have the opportunity to catch up
on some reading. I will do so forthwith.
Prodigally,
Peter
Render reached down to pat the huge head. It accepted the
gesture stoically, then turned its gaze up to the Austrian whom
Render had asked for a light, as if to say, "Must I endure this
indignity?" The man laughed at the expression, snapping shut
the engraved lighter on which Render noted the middle initial
to be a small v.
"Thank you," he said, and to the dog: "What is your name?"
"Bismark," it growled.
Render smiled.
"You remind me of another of your kind," he told the dog.
"One Sigitiund, by name, a companion and guide to a blind
friend of mine, in America."
"My Bismark is a hunter," said the young man. "There is no
quarry that can outthink him, neither the deer nor the big
cats."
The dog's ears pricked forward and he stared up at Render
with proud, blazing eyes.
"We have hunted in Africa and the northern and south-
western parts of America. Central America, too. He never
loses the trail. He never gives up. He is a beautiful brute, and
his teeth could have been made in Solingen."
"You are indeed fortunate to have such a hunting
companion."
"I hunt," growled the dog. "I follow . . . Sometimes, I have,
the kill . . ."
"You would not know of the one called Sigmund then, or the
woman he guidesMiss Eileen Shallot?" asked Render.
The man shook his head.
"No, Bismark came to me from Massachusetts, but I was
never to the Center personally. I am not acquainted with other
mutie handlers."
"I see. Well, thank you for the light. Good afternoon."
"Good afternoon."
"Good, after, noon . . ."
Render strolled on up the narrow street, hands in his pockets.
He had excused himself and not said where he was going. This
was because he had had no destination in mind. Bartelmetz*
second essay at counseling had almost led him to say things he
would later regret. It was easier to take a walk than to continue
the conversation.
On a sudden impulse he entered a small shop and bought a
cuckoo clock which had caught his eye. He felt certain that
Bartelmetz would accept the gift in the proper spirit. He smiled
and walked on. And what was that letter to Jill which the desk
clerk had made a special trip to their table to deliver at
dinnertime? he wondered. It had been forwarded three times,
and its return address was that of a law firm. Jill had not even
opened it, but had smiled, overtipped the old man, and tucked
it into her purse. He would have to hint subtly as to its contents.
His curiosity was so aroused that she would be sure to tell him
out of pity.
"The icy pillars of the sky suddenly seemed to sway before