bright, sunny day; bars of sunlight were coming through the venetian blinds, spreading into the room. He glanced at the clock9:27. Hed decided to cancel his patient appointments for today, but he felt well enough to work and planned to have a few phone sessions.
He didnt think about the shooting at all until he went downstairs, passing the spot on the staircase where the body had fallen. He didnt look very closely, but it seemed like the police technicians or ambulance workers or whoever had done an excellent job cleaning up all the blood and even repairing some of the wall damage. It was almost like it hadnt even happened.
Dana wasnt in the kitchen, but there was evidence that shed been there: a coffee mug in the sink; some crumbs probably from a bagel on the countertop; the Times, folded open to the crossword puzzle, on the kitchen table. There was no sign that Marissa had been downstairs yet, not that he expected there to be. On most days she slept until at least eleven oclock, sometimes past noon. Today shed probably sleep till one or two.
He poured his own cup of coffee, then opened the newspaper. Although hed spoken to a Times reporter at some point last night, as well as to reporters from the News and the Post, he knew the story about the robbery and shooting couldnt have made it into todays papers. But it would be in all of the major papers tomorrow for sure.
He skimmed the front page, reading about the latest bombings in Israel and Iraq, then went right to the sports section. The Jets were playing the Patriots on Sunday and he read about the game. After finishing his coffee and skimming an article in the Times on a promising new drug to treat schizophrenia, he went online with his BlackBerry and e-mailed a patient, Jane Heller, asking her if she wanted to have a phone session this afternoon at four. He also e-mailed Carol, his colleague, to see if she had time for a session sometime this week.
He didnt hear any fuss outside and wondered if there were still neighbors in front of the house. He went into the living room and parted the shades. A Fox News truck was parked across the street, but that was it.
As he headed upstairs to shower and get dressed, once again he had to pass the spot where the body had been. What had Clements said his name was, Sanchez? Yeah, Sanchez, Carlos Sanchez. Adam stared at the spot for a while, feeling remorseful until he reminded himself that it was Sanchez whod made the decision that had led to his death, not Adam. If hed killed someone for no reason, murdered someone, or even if hed killed someone accidentally, by a mistake hed made, hed have something to feel guilty about. For example, if hed killed someone in a traffic accident, he wouldve had to accept responsibility. But this situation had been completely different. This hadnt been an accident; this had been self- defense.
Adam went into the shower, and under the hot spray he was able to relax. He remembered the dream hed had, about the black rat. He wondered why the dream had begun in his office. Was it really work related, or did his office symbolize a familiar place where he felt comfortable? And what was the significance of the black rat beginning as Jodi Roth or Kathy Stappini? The rat was threatening, but Jodi and Kathy were hardly threatening. He thought it might have to do with the therapist- patient relationship in general. As a therapist he was in a position of control, but then he lost control when he was attacked by the rat. So perhaps the dream was about losing control or, more specifically, being attacked. When had he ever felt attacked? He thought of his overbearing mother, his distant father, the bullies whod tormented him throughout elementary school and ju nior high, and how in his marriage he sometimes felt attacked by Dana. Maybe the rat was actually Dana, symbolically attacking him, smothering him.
He made a mental note to bring all this up in his session
Justine Dare Justine Davis