II
Cooling off
I quaffed the whole flask off in one go and regretted it instantly. The taste, which was as foul as the smell should have led me to expect, shocked me into the realisation that in a moment's frustration and despair I had swallowed some rank concoction of unknown composition and potency. I half expected to collapse to the ground in agony like someone in a hackneyed Jekyll-and-Hyde transformation scene but, to my relief, I could sense no immediate ill effects beyond the memorably vile taste. With a slight sense of anti-climax, I drank several glasses of water, did a quick tour of the house to ensure it was secure and everything was turned off, and rang for a cab.
It was only when I sat down to wait that I became aware of a mild discomfort, like a slight stomach cramp. But by the time the cab arrived, mere minutes later, I was almost doubled up with abdominal pain, had a steadily worsening headache, and was beginning to sweat profusely. I really wanted to go to hospital but I felt embarrassed to admit what had happened and I was too proud to let Wendy think that she had driven me to attempt suicide (if she had; I do not think my motives were that clear). So I told the cabbie to take me home, assuring him that, despite appearances, I was perfectly all right. ("You OK, guv?" "Yes, I'm fine. Too much to drink, that's all." -- almost the truth, really.)
At home I let myself in as quietly as possible and collapsed into the spare room bed. I was still in great discomfort and hardly expected to sleep, but in fact I dozed off at once. My night was marked, however, by a series of dreams of an extraordinarily intense eroticism. One after another, in fact often several at a time, buxom young women ripped off what little they were wearing and threw themselves upon me. One or two them I knew, notably little Connie from work who appeared more than once, and a few of them were from Uncle Albert's laboratory wall, but most of them were conjured up from my own imagination.
The next thing I remember, a hand was gently rocking me awake, sunlight was filtering through the curtain and Wendy, dressed for work, was sitting on the bed looking at me with a curious mixture of animosity and solicitude, the former predominating.
"I thought I'd better wake you up before I left," she said. "I don't know what's wrong with you. You haven't got a temperature but you're terribly flushed and you're in a cold sweat. I've rung your office and told them you won't be in because of a bereavement. Do you want me to call Dr Wyatt?"
I managed to mumble something to the effect that it must be some reaction to the trauma of the night before.
"Yes," she said, "I suppose so. I'm sorry for the bad timing, but I meant what I said. We'll talk tonight if you're feeling better. I must go now, I'm late. Goodbye."