logic of it - waking, after all, was an almost natal state. You surfaced without a history, then spent the blinks and yawns reassembling your past, shuffling the shards
into chronological order before fortifying yourself for the present. What was far crueler were the ways in which a seemingly illogical list of objects could trigger memories of his wife that lodged in his brain like a lit match. He could never predict what one of the objects would be - a shaker of salt, the gait of a strange woman on a crowded street, a bottle of Coca-Cola, a smudge of lipstick on a glass, a throw pillow.
But of all the triggers, nothing was less logical in terms of connective tissue, or more pungent in terms of effect, than water - drizzling from the" tap, clattering from the sky, puddled against the sidewalk, or, as now, spread around him for miles in every direction. He said to Chuck: "There was a fire in our apartment building. I was working. Four people died. She was one of them. The smoke got her, Chuck, not the fire. So she didn't die in pain. Fear? Maybe. But not pain. That's important."
Chuck took another sip from his flask, offered it to Teddy again. Teddy shook his head. "I quit. After the fire. She used to worry about it, you know? Said all of us soldiers and cops drank too much. So..." He could feel Chuck beside him, sinking in embarrassment, and he said, "You learn how to carry something like that, Chuck. You got no choice. Like all the shit you saw in the war. Remember?" Chuck nodded, his eyes going small with memory for a moment, distant.
"It's what you do," Teddy said softly.
"Sure," Chuck said eventually, his face still flushed.
The dock appeared as if by trick of light, stretching out from the sand, a stick of chewing gum from this distance, insubstantial and gray.
Teddy felt dehydrated from his time at the toilet and maybe a bit exhausted from the last couple of minutes; no matter how much he'd learned to carry it, carry her, the weight could wear him down every now and then. A dull ache settled into the left side of his head, just behind his eye, as if the flat side of an old spoon were pressed there. It was too early to tell if it were merely a minor side effect of the dehydration, the beginnings of a common headache, or the first hint of something worse - the migraines that had plagued him since adolescence and that at various times could come so strongly they could temporarily rob him of vision in one eye, turn light into a hailstorm of hot nails, and had once-only once, thank God - left him partially paralyzed for a day and a half. Migraines, his anyway, never visited during times of pressure or work, only afterward, when all had quieted down, after the shells stopped dropping, after the pursuit was ended. Then, at base camp or barracks or, since the war, in motel rooms or driving home along country highways - they came to do their worst. The trick, Teddy had long since learned, was to stay busy and stay focused. They couldn't catch you if you didn't stop running.
He said to Chuck, "Heard much about this place?"
"A mental hospital, that's about all I know."
"For the criminally insane," Teddy said.
"Well, we wouldn't be here if it weren't," Chuck said.
Teddy caught him smiling that dry grin again. "You never know, Chuck. You don't look a hundred percent stable to me." "Maybe I'll put a deposit down on a bed while we're here, for the future, make sure they hold a place for me."
"Not a bad idea," Teddy said as the engines cut out for a moment, and the bow swung starboard as they turned with the current and the engines kicked in again and Teddy and Chuck were soon facing the open sea as the ferry backed toward the dock.
"Far as I know," Teddy said, "they specialize in radical approaches."
"Red?" Chuck said.
"Not Red," Teddy said. "Just radical. There's a difference."
"You wouldn't know it lately."
"Sometimes, you wouldn't," Teddy agreed.
"And this woman who escaped?"
Teddy said, "Don't know much about that. She slipped out last night. I got her name in my notebook. I figure they'll tell us everything else."
Chuck looked around at the water. "Where's she going to go? She's going to swim home?"
Teddy shrugged. "The patients here, apparently, suffer a variety