Read The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time Online
Authors: Psmith93
Tags: #Novel; Asperger; Autism
And it was like standing on a cliff in a really strong wind because it made me feel giddy and sick because there were lots of people walking into and out of the tunnel and it was really echoey and there was only one way to go and that was down the tunnel, and it smelled of toilets and cigarettes. So I stood against the wall and held on to the edge of a sign that said Customers seeking access to car park please use assistance phone opposite, right of the ticket office to make sure that I didn't fall over and go into a crouch on the ground. And I wanted to go home but I was frightened of going home and I tried to make a plan of what I should do in my head but there were too many things to look at and too many things to hear.
So I put my hands over my ears to block out the noise and think. And I thought that I had to stay in the station to get on a train and I had to sit down somewhere and there was nowhere to sit down near the door of the station so I had to walk down the tunnel. So I said to myself, in my head, not out loud, "I will walk down the tunnel and there might be somewhere I can sit down and then I can shut my eyes and I can think," and I walk down the tunnel trying to concentrate on the sign at the end of the tunnel that said WARNING CCTV in operation. And it was like stepping off the cliff on a tightrope.
And eventually I got to the end of the tunnel and there were some stairs and I went up the stairs and there were still lots of people and I groaned and there was a shop at the top of the stairs and a room with chairs in it but there were too many people in the room with chairs in it, so I walked past it. And there were signs saying Great Western and cold beers and lagers and CAUTION WET FLOOR and Your 50p will keep a premature baby alive for 1.8 seconds and transforming travel and Refreshingly Different and IT'S DELICIOUS IT'S CREAMY AND IT'S ONLY £1.30 HOT CHOC DELUXE and 0870 777 7676 and The Lemon Tree and No Smoking and FINE TEAS and there were some little tables with chairs next to them and no one was sitting at one of the tables and it was in a corner and I sat down on one of the chairs next to it and I closed my eyes. And I put my hands in my pockets and Toby climbed into my hand and I gave him two pellets of rat food from my bag and I gripped the Swiss Army knife in the other hand, and I groaned to cover up the noise because I had taken my hands off my ears, but not so loud that other people would hear me groaning and come and talk to me.
And then I tried to think about what I had to do, but I couldn't think because there were too many other things in my head, so I did a maths problem to make my head clearer.
And the maths problem that I did was called Conway's Soldiers. And in Conway's Soldiers
you have a chessboard that continues infinitely in all directions and every square below a horizontal line has a colored tile on it like this
TO
And you can move a colored tile only if it can jump over a colored tile horizontally or vertically (but not diagonally) into an empty square 2 squares away. And when you move a colored tile in this way you have to remove the colored tile that it jumped over, like this
And you have to see how far you get the colored tiles above the starting horizontal line, and you start by doing something like this
And then you do something like this
► -+
And I know what the answer is because however you move the colored tiles you will never get a colored tile more than 4 squares above the starting horizontal line, but it is a good maths problem to do in your head when you don't want to think about something else because you can make it as complicated as you need to fill your brain by making the board as big as you want and the moves as complicated as you want. And I had got to
and then I looked up and saw that there was a policeman standing in front of me and he was saying, "Anyone at home?" but I didn't know what that meant.
And then he said, "Are you all right, young man?"
I looked at him and I thought for a bit so that I would answer the question correctly and I said, "No."
And he said, "You're looking a bit worse for wear."
He had a gold ring on one of his fingers and it had curly letters on it but I couldn't see what the letters were.
Then he said, "The lady at the cafe says you've been here for 2Vi hours, and when she tried talking to you, you were in a complete trance."
Then he said, "What's your name?"
And I said, "Christopher Boone."
And he said, "Where do you live?"
And I said, "36 Randolph Street," and I started feeling better because I like policemen and it was an easy question, and I wondered whether I should tell him that Father killed Wellington and whether he would arrest Father.
And he said, "What are you doing here?"
And I said, "I needed to sit down and be quiet and think."
And he said, "OK, let's keep it simple. What are you doing at the railway station?"
And I said, "I'm going to see Mother."
And he said, "Mother?"
And I said, "Yes, Mother."
And he said, "When's your train?"
And I said, "I don't know. She lives in London. I don't know when there's a train to London."
And he said, "So, you don't live with your mother?"
And I said, "No. But I'm going to."
And then he sat down next to me and said, "So, where does your mother live?"
And I said, "In London."
And he said, "Yes, but where in London?"
And I said, "451c Chapter Road, London NW2 5NG."
And he said, "Jesus. What is that?"
And I looked down and I said, "That's my pet rat, Toby," because he was looking out of my pocket at the policeman.
And the policeman said, "A pet rat?"
And I said, "Yes, a pet rat. He's very clean and he hasn't got bubonic plague."
And the policeman said, "Well that's reassuring."
And I said, "Yes."
And he said, "Have you got a ticket?"
And I said, "No."
And he said, "Have you got any money to get a ticket?"
And I said, "No."
And he said, "So, how precisely were you going to get to London, then?"
And then I didn't know what to say because I had Father's cashpoint card in my pocket and it was illegal to steal things, but he was a policeman so I had to tell the truth, so I said, "I have a cashpoint card," and I took it out of my pocket and I showed it to him. And this was a white lie.
But the policeman said, "Is this your card?"
And then I thought he might arrest me, and I said, "No, it's Father's."
And he said, "Father's?"
And I said, "Yes, Father's."
And he said, "OK," but he said it really slowly and he squeezed his nose between his thumb and his forefinger.
And I said, "He told me the number," which was another white lie.
And he said, "Why don't you and I take a stroll to the cashpoint machine, eh?"
And I said, "You mustn't touch me."
And he said, "Why would I want to touch you?"
And I said, "I don't know."
And he said, "Well neither do I."
And I said, "Because I got a caution for hitting a policeman, but I didn't mean to hurt him and if I do it again I'll get into even bigger trouble."
Then he looked at me and he said, "You're serious, aren't you."
And I said, "Yes."
And he said, "You lead the way."
And I said, "Where?"
And he said, "Back by the ticket office,"and he pointed with his thumb.
And then we walked back through the tunnel, but it wasn't so frightening this time because there was a policeman with me.
And I put the cashpoint card into the machine like Father had let me do sometimes when we were shopping together and it said ENTER YOUR PERSONAL NUMBER and I typed in 3558 and pressed the ENTER button and the machine said PLEASE ENTER AMOUNT
and there was a choice
And I asked the policeman, "How much does it cost to get a ticket for a train to London?"
And he said, "About 30 quid."
And I said, "Is that pounds?"
And he said, "Christ alive," and he laughed. But I didn't laugh because I don't like people laughing at me, even if they are policemen. And he stopped laughing, and he said, "Yep. It's 30 pounds."
So I pressed £50 and five £10 notes came out of the machine, and a receipt, and I put the notes and the receipt and the card into my pocket.
And the policeman said, "Well, I guess I shouldn't keep you chatting any longer."
And I said, "Where do I get a ticket for the train from?" because if you are lost and you need directions you can ask a policeman.
And he said, "You are a prize specimen, aren't you."
And I said, "Where do I get a ticket for the train from?" because he hadn't answered my question.
And he said, "In there," and he pointed and there was a big room with a glass window on the other side of the train station door, and then he said, "Now, are you sure you know what you're doing?"
And I said, "Yes. I'm going to London to live with my mother."
And he said, "Has your mother got a telephone number?"
And I said, "Yes."
And he said, "And can you tell me what it is?"
And I said, "Yes. It's 0208 887 8907."
And he said, "And you'll ring her if you get into any trouble, OK?"
And I said, "Yes," because I knew you could ring people from phone boxes if you had money, and I had money now.
And he said, "Good."
And I walked into the ticket office and I turned round and I could see that the policeman was still watching me so I felt safe. And there was a long desk at the other side of the big room and a window on the desk and there was a man standing in front of the window and there was a man behind the window, and I said to the man behind the window, "I want to go to London."
And the man in front of the window said, "If you don't mind," and he turned round so that his back was toward me and the man behind the window gave him a little bit of paper to sign and he signed it and pushed it back under the window and the man behind the window gave him a ticket. And then the man in front of the window looked at me and he said, "What the fuck are you looking at?" and then he walked away.
And he had dreadlocks, which is what some black people have, but he was white, and dreadlocks is when you never wash your hair and it looks like old rope. And he had red trousers with stars on them. And I kept my hand on my Swiss Army knife in case he touched me.