I write this not knowing why or to what end -- only that I am obligated by my rehabilitation to do so. I am here of my own accord, realizing fully the extent to which I am mad, and desiring to regain control of my mind, I booked my stay here -- Le Lapine Insanite -- for rapid recovery.
Dr. Remy Cartien recommended -- when I first arrived -- that I keep a journal of all my thoughts and experience in order that we may go over them once a week to monitor my recovery more closely. A kind of confessional. That?s what he told me.
"Martin," that's what he calls me, "keep this pad and paper with you at all times: by your bed, at the dinner table, in bed, while dressing, even on the toilet. Anytime a recollection or thought comes to you, jot it down in here." He reched over his desk and handed me the thick tablet and stubby yellow pencil.
The pages of the tablet were blank -- every one of them, and reminded me vaguely of the women's wash room. Clean and stainless, not written on like the walls of the men's room. The pencil had small teeth marks embedded in it, and smelled strongly of pipe tobacco -- the kind Dr. Cartien smokes.
"Thank you," I said, "and this jotting down of thoughts will help me with my condition?" Dr. Cartien rose from the black leather chair behind his desk -- the white coat stayed open around his ample belly -- and came around to sit on the edge of it. He tilted his head sideways and smiled.
"You have very pretty eyes, Martin," he said. It didn't surprise me. my mother had always said that very thing to me.
"Yes. I know. But the tablet and pencil. They will help me with my recovery?" I held myself on the edge of the wooden cane chair in front of Dr. Cartien, and allowed myself a glance up at him.
He was old. Perhaps fifty. His silver-framed glasses rode half way down on his nose, and his grey hair fell in thin wisps across his narrow cheeks and ears. A slight stubble of grayish beard dotted his face and rode down his neck to just above his unbuttoned collar and loose tie. He had thick, hairy arms and short legs. Wide shoulders finished off his appearance. He looked to me as if he spent a great deal of his youth playing rugby, and a great deal of his adult life thinking about it. He smiled and I looked back at my feet, clutching the tablet and pencil, wishing to be well again.
"Certainly they will help you, Monsieur," he said, "simply write all your thoughts and visions and dreams in that tablet each time you have them." I looked up at him again. "Very pretty eyes." He smiled and pulled at his zipper with his right hand.
"Tell me why you're here, Martin." Dr. Cartien moved in front of his desk and leaned against it, sitting on the edge. He looked down at me and smiled.
"To write," I replied, "and also because I am mad."
"Perhaps, if you wish, I can arrange for you to use the typewriter. You may find that easier than the tablet, of course, the tablet is indispensable for portability, but still. . ." he trailed off and shifted his weight.
Using a typewriter. The thought of it drove me wild. To be able to caress concave keys of a perfect machine, to hear the clack click of my mind spilled onto paper, to see the black, slight impressions of letters and numbers glaring harsh on clean white paper.
"That would be wonderful, Dr. Cartien." I moved forward in my seat, uncontrollable at the thought of typing. Of finally getting a chance to write. I stood up in front of Dr. Cartien and clasped my hands. "I would do anything to be able to use that typewriter. Is there a waiting list? Work I could do for it?"