five weeks.â
âI wouldnât mind at all,â said the engineer earnestly.
They looked at him. âHow long have you been up here?â Mrs. Vaught asked.
âFive years. Seven, including my two years at Princeton. All my immediate family are dead. Do you know this is the first time I have talked to a, ah, family in years. I had forgottenââ he broke off and rubbed his forehead. He saw that he was expected to give an account of himself. âNo, really. I donât think it is bad to be here. It reminds me of a time I was in the hospitalâfor three monthsâand it wasnât bad at all! In fact I felt better in the hospital than anywhere else.â
âWhat was the matter with you?â Jamie asked him.
âI had a nervous condition, nothing very serious, an episode of amnesia, if you want to know the truth.â
âAmnesia,â said Kitty, looking at him for the first time.
âYes. I didnât know my own name, but I knew enough to put myself in the hospital. It was caused by a toxic condition.â
âYou committed yourself,â said Mrs. Vaught.
âYes maâam. I went to a very expensive place in Connecticut and was soon much better.â
âHow did you recover your memory?â Kitty asked him curiously.
âThat was the strangest thing of all. For two months I remembered nothing. During this time I had gotten into the habit of playing Chinese checkers with another patient, a girl with a more serious condition than mine. She had not spoken to anyone for two yearsâshe had not uttered a single wordâeven though she had received shock treatment. There was something familiar about her. Perhaps that was why I was attracted to herâthat and the fact that I too was shy about talking and since sheââ
They all laughed and he looked startled. âYes, itâs true. I was shy! I donât know why Iâm not shy now. Anyhow she said nothing and I remembered nothing, and so it wasnât bad. You asked me how my memory came back. It was very simple. One night as we played Chinese checkers I looked at her and remembered who she was. âArenât you Margaret Rich?â I asked her. She said nothing. âDidnât your family have the cottage next to ours in Monteagle ten years ago?â (That was before we started going to Mentone.) Still she said nothing. âWhy, I remember the dress you wore to a dance,â I told her (I always remember the remote past first). âIt was an orange-colored cotton twill sort of material.â âThat was my piqué,â says she as normally as you please.â For some reason he flushed and fell silent.
âDo you mean that she spoke normally after that?â asked Kitty presently. She had swung around and was searching his face with her bold brown eyes.
âNo, not normally, but it was a beginning,â he said, frowning, feeling irritated with himself for being garrulous.
âI donât understand why she didnât speak before,â said Jamie, thrashing his legs.
âI understand it!â cried Kitty. But then she blushed and turned away.
The others were not as amazed by the engineerâs somewhat disconnected story as one might expect. For, strange to say, it was understood that it was open to him at that moment to spin just such a yarn, half-serious and curious.
âYes, I know why your stay in the hospital was not so bad,â said Jamie. âYou werenât really sick.â
âIâll trade with you any time,â said the engineer. âBelieve me, it is a very uncomfortable experience to have amnesia.â
At that moment the Handsome Woman whispered something to Kitty and the two of them kissed the patient, said their goodbyes and left. He waited for another brown-eyed look but Kitty had lapsed into vacancy again and did not seem to notice him. The talkative engineer fell silent.
Presently he roused himself and
Ophelia Bell
Kate Sedley
MaryJanice Davidson
Eric Linklater
Inglath Cooper
Heather C. Myers
Karen Mason
Unknown
Nevil Shute
Jennifer Rosner