It was very small. A sofa and chair and one lamp were in the living room, and a television on a
stand. Everything was brown or tan, even a shabby rug. A small kitchen with a half-size refrigerator; a
three-burner stove; two tiny cabinets that held a couple of plates, a few glasses, a single cup A tan
Formica-topped table with two metal and plastic chairs took up most of the space. In the bedroom it was
more of the same, barren and institutional: a single bed, a narrow chest of drawers, and a small closet
that held working clothes like the ones he now wore.
And something else, he thought vaguely, but nothing more than that came. Something else. He
looked in the refrigerator: milk that had gone bad, a few eggs, cheese, juice, apples.. .. Something else,
he thought again.
He went back to the living room and tried the television.
Three channels came in clearly, a game show, a children's show, and a show about lions. He
became aware of two windows across the room, darkness beyond, and hard rain hitting the glass. He
started to get up to pull down the shades, then checked himself. Tom never had noticed that he was like
a fish in a bowl. He knew all about Tom, what he did, how he spent his time in front of the television,
falling asleep in front of it most nights, dragging himself to bed in a stupor when snow filled the screen.
Never noticing if the shades were up or down. He knew all about Tom. He knew that he and Tom were
the same man, and he knew his name was not Tom, and in some way he could not comprehend, he knew
that Tom was not real and that he could not let anyone know he had learned this.
He forced himself to sit in front of the television, on which people were jumping up and down and
screaming and hugging one another. His head was starting to ache, and his eyes burned again, but the
tears were contained, and this time they were not caused by fear or pain, but by frustration because he
hated the shades' being up, hated being watched from out there in the darkness, and he did not know
what to do about it. His fear of the doctor was greater than his hatred of being watched.
The rain beat against the windows harder than before, swept against them by gusting winds. Sleet,
he thought then. It was sleeting. The idea made him shiver. He be came very still, considering, and
abruptly got up and went to the bedroom, pulled a blanket off the bed, and wrapped it around himself.
When he returned to the living room, he pulled down the shades. He went to the kitchen and pulled
down the shade on the single window there, then did the same in the bedroom.
Someone would come with his dinner tray and find him huddled on the sofa, wrapped in a blanket,
freezing. It was okay that the television sound was turned all the way down; Tom often watched it
without sound. He sat with his eyes closed, the blanket ready, and he thought about Tom's routine. This
week it had been different; they had brought him his food every day. He had to stop and try to think if
week was the right length of time, and he realized he didn't know. He had been too sick to notice.
Suddenly he knew he had not been suffering from the flu, but withdrawal Withdrawal, he repeated
silently. The red capsules He could have died, withdrawing like that. He dismissed the thought; he
didn't even know what it was he had withdrawn from. A heavy-duty tranquilizer; the answer came as
fast as he phrased the statement of ignorance.
file:///J|/sci-fi/Nieuwe%20map/Kate%20Wilhelm%20-%20Death%20Qualified.txt (4 of 399)17-2-2006 2:49:07