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I hear him breathing hard. He’s right there, right next
to me, but he says nothing.
Aftershave.
That’s what I smell. I have no association to go with
it, which makes me think it can’t be one of the orderlies.
I know each of them by their body spray or shampoo or
mouthwash.
I hold my breath, waiting, completely aware of how
helpless I am. The man grabs my upper arm and then fum-
bles toward my wrist, finally locating my hand. He presses
something into my palm and wraps my fingers around it. It
feels like a plastic bag.
A moment later, he retreats, and then I hear the door
click shut.
I’m alone in the dark again, but I feel a rush of some-
thing that I haven’t felt in a long time: hope, curiosity, and
a little bit of anger.
I feel alive.
11
CHAPTER 2
wenty minutes later I’m out of the halo, and the lights
Tare back on full blast. I haven’t dared to look down at
what’s in my hand. I keep my fist at my side, practically
sitting on it.
I’m being transferred back to my room in a wheelchair.
One of the orderlies, Steve, is pushing me down the hall.
Steve is this huge, tall black guy with feet like canoes. I
spend a lot of time looking down at the floor, and I fig-
ure his feet for a size fourteen, easily. He wears a scarf all
the time and usually a cap, too. I wonder if he has trouble
keeping his head warm—too far for the blood to travel.
He’s probably the only person in this place I feel comfort-
able around. I have no idea why.
“Key lime pie with dinner tonight, Sarah! You like that.
I know you do.”
I have no real feelings one way or the other about key
12
lime pie, but it seems rude to contradict him when he’s
trying to be nice.
He whistles as we roll along and asks me for the second
time, “So, how’re you doing today?”
We’re always supposed to say “good” when someone
asks how we are. It shows we’ve got a positive attitude.
“Mmm, okay,” I say.
“You’ll be done soon. Then you can get on with your
life. Fresh start, and all that.”
Even though the power has returned, things are not
back to normal yet. I can still feel something in the air,
some echo of fear. As we pass the first-floor nurses’ station,
I see that it’s empty.
“Where is everybody?”
“Of course you’d notice. I knew you would. You notice
everything.”
“That’s why I’m your favorite.”
“That’s right.” He rubs my head, and I wince when
he accidentally presses down on the bandage covering
the loose halo insert. “Whoops. Sorry about that. You
okay?”
“I’ll live.”
He leans over me and whispers, “I’m not supposed to
tell you this, because the doctors don’t like us to say any-
thing that might worry the patients, but we’re expecting a
big blizzard tonight.”
“Oh.”
“Yeah. They’re sending people home. Last flight out’s in
13
thirty minutes. Down to a skeleton crew tonight. But don’t
you worry. You’ll still be in good hands.”
Last flight out. Something about that idea makes me
jumpy.
“Did the storm cause the power outage earlier?” I ask.
“Which power outage?”
“There’s been more than one?”
“Yeah. Three or four, mostly in areas of the com-
pound we don’t use much. If you ask me, it’s all this fancy
equipment they got here. Wind turbines, solar panels, geo-
thermal whatnot. I’m telling you, the least little problem
and it’s on the fritz.”
“Where are we, Steve?”
“You know I can’t tell you that.”
“We’re so far from civilization they can’t use electrical
cables to bring us power?”
“I’ll tell you this much: We’re off the grid. Way, way
off the grid!”
“I hear helicopters a lot,” I say. “That’s how you guys
get to and from work, isn’t it?”
He ignores me and starts whistling again.
“I get it. It’s a secret. How about I just guess what state
we’re in? It’s somewhere with a lot of snow. And moun-
tains. Maine? Montana? Some other state that starts with
an M?”
“Hawaii. We’re in Hawaii.”
“Ha-ha.”
He walks on with his big, canoe-length steps. I keep my
fist tight around the little plastic bag.
14
“Have you seen Jori lately?” I ask.
He gives a cough and waits a moment before answering.
“She’s fine.”
“Is she?”
“You just worry about you, Miss Nosy.”
Jori is another patient here, and I haven’t seen her in
more than three weeks. I’m worried that something hap-
pened to her. People have a way of vanishing from this
place. One day they’re here; the next day they’re not. I
don’t know if it’s because their treatment is completed or
because something else happened to them. Something
potentially “upsetting” to the rest of us. All they’ll say is
that a patient is “gone.” That could mean anything from
transferred to released to dead. You don’t mess around with
people’s brains without losing a few, but they don’t want to
come right out and tell us when people die.
Except Nurse Jenner. She doesn’t mind sharing bad
news.
I have trouble believing Jori’s been cured and released.
She’s a terribly limp thing, short and skinny, with skin the
color of undercooked fish. She’s always hunched over, with
her hands clutched in front of her chest like she’s trying not
to crush the wings of a butterfly she’s managed to catch.
She’s fragile, nervous, and more than a little weird, even by
the standards of this place. And though no one on staff will
admit it, I’m pretty sure girls like that don’t go on to live
happily ever after, no matter how many bad memories are
cut out of their brains.
Steve steers me toward the elevators and presses the
15
button. We wait, but no car comes. He keeps pressing and
pressing the call button. Still nothing.
“Maybe it’s out because of the storm?” I say.
“Yeah. I bet that’s it.” He yanks the wheelchair back.
“We’ll go around the other way.”
Going around the other way means cutting through the
main lobby to get to the north bank of elevators, which
takes a few minutes of backtracking. As we pass the lobby’s
floor-to-ceiling windows, I see that the mountains in the
distance have been erased by heavy gray sky.
Just then the wind kicks up. At the harsh, skittering
sound of icy snow against glass, Steve starts taking longer
and longer strides across the marble floor. I don’t know that
I’ve ever seen him move this fast before.
We pass the entrance to the first-floor ward, which is
unused. From deep inside the pitch-black hallway there’s
a rumble and crack that sounds just like a thunderclap. It’s
followed seconds later by the creak of hinges.
Steve stops.
I tip my head back and look up at his face as he stares
into the darkness. A strong draft blows toward us, and then
the unmistakable scent of “outside” hits me.
“Smells like snow,” I say.
Steve sucks his teeth. “Yeah. One of the doors must’ve
blown open. I’ll have maintenance look into it.”
I don’t know how a door could have possibly blown
open. This whole place is locked up tight. Plus, they built
this hospital complex into the side of a hill. First the main
16
building, where we are now, and then the smaller building
next to it —South Wing. As Steve wheels me past the walk-
way that connects the two buildings, my eyes are drawn to
South Wing. Something strange goes on in there. No one
ever talks about South Wing.
Steve grips the wheelchair handles tighter and steps up
the pace even more. I turn around in the chair, staring at
the walkway. I’ve always wondered why the letters E and
C are etched into the glass. The staff only call this place
“the Center.” Or sometimes, when they refer to the two
adjoining buildings along with the grounds themselves,
they’ll say, “the compound.” But the E. C. has to stand for
something.
“Steve?”
“Eyes in front, Miss Sarah,” he says, gently turning my
head back around. “And don’t be asking any more ques-
tions. You just think about getting better.”
Getting better. That’s what I’m here for. And getting bet-
ter means forgetting the past. Because the past is bad. Very
bad. Worse than very bad. So much worse than very bad
that I might not get over it otherwise.
Drastic measures. These are them.
When traditional therapy, drug therapy, and behavioral
therapy all fail, you land here, and they drill through your
skull and pull out the bad memories like they’re pulling
weeds.
Everyone at the Center is being treated for severe post-
traumatic stress disorder. At first, I thought that meant
17
something traumatic had happened to me. But then one
day I realized that assumption might be wrong. Probably
around the time I noticed that my ward seemed to be the
only one with round-the-clock security guards and a bank
of monitors that displayed every inch of the floor. And
there’s this feeling I get from the staff, like they’re all wary
of me but pretending not to be. I asked my therapist if
maybe I was the cause of whatever traumatic event I was
supposed to forget. She just sniffed, pushed her glasses up
onto her nose, and said, “Of course not.”
Of course not.
Then there was the time—after my third injection
series—when a new orderly was wheeling me back to my
room. He smirked at me and asked, “So which kind are
you?”
“Which kind of what?” I didn’t know what he meant.
“Victim or perpetrator,” he said.
“What do you think I am?”
He looked me up and down and laughed. “You ain’t no
angel, that’s for sure.”
I’m bored. All the time, horribly, horribly bored. I’m also
filled with this sense of unease that I can’t ever shake. It’s
like, even though my mind can’t remember why, my body
is straining to get back to whatever it was doing before I
came here.
At some point I started counting the doors, the light
fixtures, the floor tiles. Anything and everything, until I
18
could visualize this entire place in my head. I know the
layout of every floor and every ward—well, everywhere
I’m allowed to go. And I do all this to stop myself from
dwelling on “unproductive” thinking.
As Steve wheels me down the hallway, I look at the
floor. I know there are eighteen black tiles between the
elevator and the rec lounge, and as I count the final tile, I
lift my eyes and see that that’s exactly where we are.
The rec lounge is one of the few places I’m allowed to
go without supervision. I’d much rather go to the gym
and burn off some energy, but they won’t let me do that
anymore. Not since I pushed myself as hard as I could for
as long as I could, just to see what I was capable of. I did
seventy-four push-ups in a row and went up the climbing
wall like a monkey. After that they rationed my gym time.
They told me I was at risk for a treatment setback.
As we move past the glass partition between the hall-
way and the lounge, I sit up tall in the wheelchair to see if
there’s anyone inside.
There is. Jori.
I wave to her, and she waves back with twice the enthu-
siasm. I have to say, even if she does sort of give me the
creeps, I’m glad to know she’s not dead.
“Can’t we stop a minute?” I ask.
“Nope.”
“Why?”
“It’s not good for either of you.”
I guess they must have found out what Jori and I were
19
talking about last time I saw her. We were watching Bugs
Bunny, and she whispered to me, “Quick. Tell me what I
look like before the nurse comes back.”
So I did, even though we’re not supposed to.
“You’ve got blue eyes, a high forehead, a small nose
with kind of a ball on the end of it.”
“Really?” She pinched the end of her nose, trying to
feel it. “Am I pretty?”
I lied. “Sure, I’d say you’re pretty.”
“Good. How old do you think I am?”
“Fifteen?” I was being generous. She really looks like
she’s thirteen, twelve even.
“Maybe. I think I’m older than that, though. I think . . . I
just have a feeling. I think I may have had a baby.”
“Really?”
“Yes. I had a memory of touching my tummy. And it
was round and kind of hard.”
When I asked her what I looked like, she smiled and
said, “Strong.”
That’s when the nurse appeared and shooed her away
from me. I didn’t get a chance to ask her what color my
eyes are, but I guess they’re probably brown. Most people
in the world have brown eyes. Like 75 percent. I’m not sure
how I know that.
When Jori sees that Steve’s not stopping, she rushes
toward the glass, putting her fingertips on the window like
a lizard crawling up the sides of a terrarium. I turn toward
her and raise my hands like, What can I do? Jori’s face falls
as Steve whisks me around the next corner.
20
We’re halfway up the hall when a nurse trots after us.
“She’s very agitated right now,” she says, looking back
over her shoulder. “Could I borrow Sarah for a few min-
utes? She’s the only one who can calm the girl down.”
Steve rubs his chin. “Doc said not to.”
“Come on. I’ve been dealing with her outbursts all day.
I need a break.”
He takes his hands off the wheelchair. “I’m gonna get a
cup of coffee. You get caught, it’s on you.”
A moment later I’m doubling back toward the lounge,
and as I get closer, Jori starts clapping. The nurse opens the
door and nods toward me. “Five minutes, Jori. That’s it.”
“Thank you, Nurse Lemontree!”
As soon as she’s gone I say, “Your nurse’s last name is
Lemontree?”
“Oh, no. It’s something with a lot of s’s and z’s, and
I think there’s an icki at the end. I thought Lemontree
sounded much nicer.”
I get up from the wheelchair and walk toward the couch.
As soon as I sit down, Jori slides in next to me, pushing
herself up under my arm and pulling her knees to her chest.
She always does this. I must remind her of someone who
once made her feel safe.
“I’ve been wanting to see you, but they wouldn’t let
me,” she says in a whisper.
“Yeah. I know.”
The nurse wasn’t kidding. Jori is agitated. And twitchy.
She keeps looking toward the observation window to make
sure the nurse’s back is turned to us.
21
“I need to tell you something.”
“What’s that?”
“They were talking about you,” she says quickly, lacing
her fingers together in front of her chest.
“Of course they were. They talk about all of us.”
“This is different. It’s that woman from New York. The
one with the red hair.”
“Ms. Hodges?”
“Is that her name?”
“Yeah.”
I close my eyes and see her in my mind. A fiery hatred
engulfs me, but once again I force myself to ignore it.
“She doesn’t like you. I think she . . . I think she’s up to
something, Sarah. Something really bad.”
I can’t help but shift myself away from Jori. Yes, I had
similar feelings about that Hodges lady not even an hour
ago, but hearing Jori say it makes me feel like Jori and me,
we’re the same, and I don’t like that idea one bit. Even in
a place like this, you want to believe that you’re not the
worst off.
I cock my head to the side and try to smile. “Jori. Come
on. You know what the doctors tell us. Sometimes we have
these feelings like people want to hurt us, but it’s not true.
All that stuff is just in our heads.”
“I know, I know, but I’m telling you, this is different.
You need to stay away from her. Get out of here, even.”
“Where would I go? Down to the corner to wait for the
next bus in my hospital gown and slipper socks?”
22