I shrugged and gestured for Dr Walker to come in. She entered and sat primly down on the chair near my desk. She put the blue clipboard on her lap.
She glanced quickly at the piano and then away, as if it embarrassed her.
"Well," she said.
She pulled an envelope out from the clipboard and handed it to me, with what looked like an attempt at a friendly smile.
"Your notification," she said.
I opened it and pulled out a letter. It said I was to be assessed pending my appearance before the Tribunal on charges of sedition, consorting with the enemy, possession of a banned instrument and crimes against the Administration.
I let the letter fall to the floor. I felt too weary to give a sh*t.
"Well then," Dr Walker said. "I'm going to ask you a few questions.
"Do you suffer from anxiety, depression, panic attacks, substance abuse disorders?
"Do you take medication? Do you feel alienated? Do you engage in suicidal ideation?
"Do you feel," she leaned forwards and looked at me closely, "under seige?"
I rattled off yes, no, yes, no, yes, no, yes.
The Calma-Pills had made everything foggy and slow motion. Colours were too bright and edges were too sharp, they threatened to cut me like paper.
I noticed Dr Walker had stopped questioning me. She was looking out the window over the piano, which she had not mentioned once, as if it would have been impolite.
"You know, you can do an experiment on rats where you subject them to random electric shocks," she was saying.
"They don't know when to expect a shock, so they're not able to do anything to avoid it.
"We know from these rat models that the best way to induce neurosis is to put them in a constant state of fear and anxiety without giving them the means of taking evasive action.
"You can tell people they're at the highest level of alert but not give them anything to do about it. Some have questioned the value of this as a social policy."
She pulled out a pile of ink blots. She showed me the first one.
"What does this look like?" she said.
"A piano."
"And this?"
"A horse *** a woman."
"This?"
"A plane. Flying into a building."
"This?"
"A person. On a box. With their arms stretched out and wires on them. Looks like Jesus. Looks like someone from the Ku Klux Klan."
"And this?"
The man who wouldn't tell me his name. As if I was going to tell her that.
I looked away.
Dr Walker leaned back. "Now," she said, "I need to give you an injection. Please roll up your sleeve."
The needle slid under my skin and I was standing on an endless stretch of beach.
I couldn't see the end up or down. It just disappeared into a haze of salt air. It was banked by huge white sand dunes.
The sky was huge and impossibly blue. The water was glassy and green and extended unbroken by islands or boats to the horizon.
The horizon was so vast that it curved around in the shape of a sphere. I had never been anywhere so empty, so silent, so vast.
TO BE CONTINUED...