Read Love In The Time Of Apps Online
Authors: Jay Begler
With the slightest hint of smoke rising from his body the reporter responded, “Hiss!”
Besides being able to parry successfully with the members of the press, Goodwin had also managed to go on a number of television interviews and, with coaching by Schnell, deflected accusations and claims deftly and managed to be quite charming. His ratings began to inch up.
About this time, Shelia and her mysterious cocoon were beginning to become stale news. The public, continually insatiable for something new, was becoming bored with the Sheila story. Sheila’s cocoon of light was viewed as some kind of weird physical event and nothing more. The side benefit of this was that the press and media also began to lose interest in Goodwin and the plethora of the negative press that plagued him had virtually disappeared. The Med TV room once filled to capacity with reporters was virtually empty. All of the Shelia brand merchandise, so hot a few months earlier, was placed in the Meditainment Center’s gift shop’s clearance bins. The SPA IV “eating trend” tanked, as did the restaurants that specialized in this type of “food.” Nike advised Schnell that it was “re-thinking” the sneaker deal because it was beginning to “bomb in the test market.” The Meditainment Center even began making plans to move Sheila to a more conventional room in favor of using the Med-TV room for a “medical guest” with “higher Nielson ratings.”
If Sheila’s celebrity was diminishing, Goodwin’s was rising, at least in his limited circle of friends. He had now become a minor celebrity at Harborside and, fitting comfortably within this role, took pleasure in regaling his friends at the club with stories, some real, some exaggerated and some in between, about his encounters with the press. All of this was reflected in his PPR, which miraculously crept back up to a 25, while Sheila’s dropped to a 22. People began laughing at his jokes again, though they were no different from the ones he told a few months before when he was a 16.
Best of all, he was mildly involved with a woman named Lolli Glick, the very attractive and very sensuous widow and former trophy wife (Playboy’s Miss October 1994) of Maurice Glick, the richest member of Harborside. While Goodwin still secretly yearned for Sophie and would have left Lolli or for that matter any other woman in a heartbeat had Sophie returned to him, he knew that at this point in his life he needed to move on.
Two weeks earlier, Goodwin and Lolli had been teamed together in a couples’ golf tournament and began light tactile contact by the time they reached the ninth hole. He had escorted her to the club’s tournament dance that evening. They danced closely to old standards and kissed quietly behind the thick maroon velvet curtains of the club’s ballroom. This post-golf evening they planned to have a quiet supper at her mansion after drinks at the club’s bar. His evening with Lolli was going to be a perfect ending to a perfect day.
Goodwin’s second shot landed about 170 yards from the green, but directly behind, by about 30 yards, Hell’s Angels. He would have to hit over them. While Goodwin didn’t know it, this was about the same position that Sam Snead was in when he hit his third shot in the earlier tournament. Snead’s shot had cleared the trees and came to rest four feet from the pin, allowing him to birdie the hole.
Goodwin spoke with his caddy, chose a five iron, took one practice swing, set up and swung effortlessly. The ball flew high off of his club, well over the imposing twin maples, and landed softly behind the pin. Because of the angle of Goodwin’s downswing, his ball had backspin and rolled backwards to the very lip of the cup where it teetered
precariously until an imperceptible wisp of wind, or the rotation of the Earth, or the God of Golf, who is usually merciless in these situations, caused it to fall in. An eagle! No one, not even the great Sam Snead, had ever made an eagle on McDonald’s Folly.
By the time Goodwin had left Harborside’s luxurious locker room and entered the “19
th
Hole” to have a drink with his buddies and to rendezvous with Lolli, the buzz about his great shot had spread throughout the club. It was somewhere around the time that one of the members made a toast to Goodwin and suggested that maybe they should change the name of the hole to “Goodwin’s Conquest,” that the bartender said, “Excuse me, Mr. Goodwin, there’s something on the TV I think you should see.” Goodwin at that wonderful moment was mellow and relaxed, made so by a combination of a couple rounds of drinks used to toast his golfing success, the good and, importantly, loyal, friends who surrounded him, and Lolli, who had her arm around his waist. He was thinking that he hadn’t felt this good or happy since the morning he had first seen his Pragat rating. In this fine state, he fully expected to see a video of his famous shot. He turned slowly towards the television set that hung over the bar.
What he saw was a live television shot from the Med-TV room. It was immediately clear to Goodwin that something serious was happening. A crowd of doctors surrounded Sheila’s bed. When they moved and enabled the camera to focus more closely on her, Goodwin saw that Sheila’s cocoon of light had increased significantly in mass. A television reporter close to Sheila’s bed spoke, “While all of us covering this story assumed at first that Sheila’s cocoon of light had increased in size, this was not the case. According to several of the doctors, it is not the cocoon that has increased in mass, but Sheila herself. Her girth, by one physician’s calculations, has increased by more than 40 percent and is growing geometrically, every two hours. I spoke earlier today with the Meditainment Center’s administrator, Doctor Friedrich Wang, who wanted to go on record by saying that he is confident that Sheila’s increased size was not due to her special SPA -IV. Doctor Wang pointed out that when this change in her condition occurred, the doctors conducted a thorough examination and reported that thus far Sheila’s vital signs were fine.”
Wang had a tremendous reputation at the Meditainment Center, not only as an excellent doctor, but also as an extremely gifted administrator. Staff people spoke of him with a sense of reverence and usually did not call him Doctor Wang, but a more respectful, “The Administrator.” One nurse whom Goodwin had befriended several weeks earlier had once offered to show him Doctor Wang’s office, but noted that she would have to check to see “when The Administrator was not in and whether he would mind.”
This mosaic of admiration led Goodwin to conclude that Wang, a tall and handsome man in his early 60s, who seemed to always sport the kind of pinkish complexion one sees on movie stars or alcoholics, never lost control and could deal with virtually any type of crisis in a cool dispassionate manner. It was evident, however, that he was extremely perplexed by this unexpected change in Sheila’s condition. Wang looked worried, if not grim. Goodwin suspected that this was not at all due to a genuine concern for Sheila’s well-being, but because this whole medical episode was on national television. If there was a tragedy, he would be held accountable, not only by the nation, but more importantly the people that cut his pay check every month, the management of Marriott.
The potential for disaster was enormous, since Sheila had become a national heroine as well as a mystical and religious icon to a substantial number of people. As Goodwin watched this hospital drama unfold there was little doubt in his mind that his plans with the lovely Lolli Glick would have to be put on hold.
When Goodwin arrived at the Meditainment Center, Wang approached him and said in a rather shaken manner, “I think there is a slight enlargement of her head, something akin to being hydro-cephalic, nothing to worry about; pulse and heart rate are normal; blood tests okay and her blood pressure is perfect. I’m certain that the swelling will go down in a few days.” “Slight enlargement” was a gross understatement. Sheila’s head no longer resembled that of a human being. It looked more like giant watermelon.
“What do you mean slight enlargement of her head? Are you nuts or blind?” Goodwin’s explosive response was reflective of his desperately
bad mood, due in part to his sudden change of circumstances and the loss of a potentially wonderful, sexually oriented, evening with Lolli Glick who had promised him “a very special reward” for his eagle. No one had ever spoken to The Administrator in that manner before. The nurse who had offered to show Goodwin the Administrator’s office held her hand over her mouth in shock.
Up until this moment, Goodwin had little doubt that Sheila would ultimately emerge from her coma. He now had the deeply troubling thought that it was possible that Sheila might actually die. Notwithstanding a mounting sense of guilt stemming from his email he began to speculate about her funeral through a series of disjointed thoughts: “Do they make caskets like beds, single for a normal person, queen for a large person and king- sized for huge people? Will I have to get an oversized plot? Will I have to pay extra for perpetual care? Maybe I should have joined the Cremation Club. Maybe they’ll send me another discount coupon.”
As he considered Sheila’s hypothetical death, Goodwin noticed that a CNN reporter was interviewing Wang. Damage control appeared to be Wang’s primary goal. In a weak voice, Wang said: “And the good news is we’ve run an MRI, a CAT scan, and many other tests and they all prove negative. We also did a biopsy on a small piece of her skin and it proved negative. She’s just fine, except for being in a coma.” Wang’s unfortunate slip of the tongue simply underscored his high level of anxiety. “I’m so sorry,” he said, “I meant to say being in a beyond REM state.
For the next few hours, virtually every hour on the hour Sheila’s body mass appeared to grow substantially. Sheila’s weight, for reasons the physicians could not explain, increased from 105 pounds to 270 pounds. All of this was being broadcast in real time. Pressed hard by reporters for explanations, the best the doctor could do was to use a default explanation. Sheila’s weight gain was due to a “physiological anomaly.’
When Sheila hit 500 pounds, Schnell received a call from the producer of the
Biggest Loser
, “just to say hello.” The producer of
Dancing With The Stars
, still hoping to get Sheila on the show, comatose or not, asked his assistant to check the weight bearing strength of duct tape.
By the time Sheila had quadrupled in size, about three hours after Goodwin’s arrival at the Meditainment Center, all regularly scheduled television programming was pre-empted by the broadcasts from the Med-TV room which was once again filled to capacity with reporters. Sheila’s merchandise was put back on the shelves and even marked up. Nike advised Schnell by fax and email that the sneaker deal was back on and that it would be sending over a fully executed sneaker agreement and a $500,000 advance the following morning.
There also appeared to be a developing correlation between Sheila’s expansion and the aggressive nature of the questions put to Wang by reporters, the greater her girth, the tougher the questions. Just about the time that the Meditainment Center announced that Sheila had quadrupled her size, a reporter shouted at Wang, “What do you mean you don’t know what to do? Did you see the sign in the parking lot? This wonderful woman’s medical bills are over $750,000 and you don’t know what to do? Why not? You’re a doctor.” Wang, the man who was always in control, the man who was held in awe, “The Administrator,” panicked and to the shock of all around him, folded under the pressure and admitted that he never had a medical degree, only a PhD in Hospital Administration with a sub-specialty in “hospital cafeteria arts,” and “was not responsible for medical decisions.”
Several hours later, a rather desperate and nervous Wang called Goodwin into his office. On second viewing, Wang’s office appeared to be rather modest. The Administrator was drinking from a mug that carried the notation” Prescribe HALCYON,” and an illustration of a sailboat on a calm sea. Wang’s hands were shaking so violently, however, that the boat, like Wang, appeared to have encountered a perfect storm.
“Mr. Goodwin,” Wang said while he attempted unsuccessfully to steady his hands, “first, let me tell you that we are giving your wife the very best care possible. I know you’d like an explanation, but we don’t have one. The swelling appears to have accelerated and is beyond levels we have experienced in any patient we have ever treated. We checked with hospitals all over the country and I’ve had a team of physicians review the computerized literature on the subject. Unfortunately, we
have come up with nothing solid, but we have a theory and a way we would like to treat Mrs. Goodwin. While we do not know what the outcome will be, the consensus is that if the swelling and weight gain continue, Mrs. Goodwin’s life will be in danger. And, quite frankly, we see no contraindications in the procedure we propose.”
“Contraindications?”
“In layman’s terms it means downside risks or bad side effects. In some patients, certain adverse things happen to them when they take drugs or undergo a procedure, even if the procedure is executed correctly. Sometimes the results are quite startling, even bizarre.”
“But how,” Goodwin asked, “do you know if a procedure is contraindicated in a patient?”
“All reports on drugs and operative procedures contain sections devoted to their respective side effects or contraindications. We’ve reviewed all of the relevant literature and find no contraindications on the procedure we have in mind for your wife. More importantly, we never have had a problem with it. It is perfectly safe.”
“You see, every person has a slight electromagnetic field which surrounds them. We have some very sophisticated diagnostic tools in our medical arsenal including what we call an EMM, short for electromagnetic meter. The EMM has been used by us for a number of years as a diagnostic aid with its primary function being the analysis of patients with migraine headaches. It is particularly useful in determining whether abnormalities in the patient’s electromagnetic field might be related to the onset of migraines. The statistics, however, are inconclusive. On average, the electromagnetic field that surrounds most healthy individuals has a ratio of positive to negative charged electrons in the order of 1000:1. Headache patients’ ratios reach levels as high as 3000:1. The highest ratio we ever found was 8000:1. Interestingly, the patient in that case was a severely obese woman. In fact, we are just beginning to study these ratios in connection with obesity, but don’t know where our research will lead us.