And if you’d brought the book over to her, she might not have been down in the ER when the teenager pulled his knife, Richard thought, marveling at how everyone found some way to blame himself. If only the lookouts had seen the iceberg five minutes earlier, if only the
But the fact remained, they were going too fast, they didn’t have enough lifeboats, he had turned his pager off. “It was my fault, not yours,” he started to say, but she was still talking.
“I’d been looking for the book for her for weeks, and then when I found it, it was too late to be of any help to her. She wanted so much to find out what caused near-death experiences, how they worked. That’s why I brought the book to you. She didn’t get a chance to finish what she started, but maybe it’ll help you in your research.” She held the book out to him.
He didn’t take it. “I’ve shut the research project down,” he said. And now she would say, “You only think you feel that way now.”
She didn’t. “It’s the textbook they used in Joanna’s English class,” she said as if he hadn’t spoken. “My uncle was her English teacher in high school. Joanna asked me to look for it. She thought there might be something in it that made her NDEs take the form of the
“I don’t need it,” he said. “I already know the answer.”
“I talked to Vielle,” she said. “She told me about your theory, that you think she was really on the
“Not think,” he said. “Know.”
“Joanna didn’t think she was. She thought the
“I know why she was seeing it. Because it was real. I have outside verification.”
“You mean because she said, ‘SOS’? That could mean lots of—”
“No.”
“Then what?”
“Because I went after her.”
She stared at him for a long minute. “After her? What do you mean?”
“I mean, I went under to try to save her.” He gestured at the RIPT scan, at the examining table between them. “I self-induced an NDE and went after her to try to bring her back.”
“You went after her,” she said, struggling to understand. “Onto the
“No,” he said bitterly. “I was too late for that.”
“I don’t understand.”
“There are apparently several varieties of hell. Mine was to stand in a crowd in the White Star office and listen to an official read the names of the passengers who’d been lost.”
“You were there?”
“I was there. It really happened. She went down on the
And now that it was out, Kit would say — what? “You left her to
None of the above. She said, “How do you know? That you were really in the White Star office?”
“I
“Joanna said it felt real,” she said, “not like a dream. She said it was a very convincing hallucination.”
She was offering him a way out, just like, “It wasn’t your fault,” and, “There’s a reason for everything,” only this one was even better: it was only acetylcholine and random synapses and confabulation. He had conjured the White Star office out of Joanna’s NDE accounts and the movie, created a unifying image out of panic and grief and temporal-lobe stimulation.
It almost worked. Except that Joanna, dying, had called out to him for help: “SOS. SOS.” “No thanks,” he said and handed her back the book.
And now she would say, “You owe it to Joanna to continue your research. It’s what she would have wanted.”
But she didn’t. She said, “Okay,” and put the book in her bag and then walked over to his desk and wrote on a pad. “Here’s my phone number if you decide you need it.”