Inside the confines of the tiny
room she was sat in, the unnamed woman felt very fearful. Apparently,
the reason she was being held here was to make her feel completely at
ease, but it was failing as all she really wanted right now was to
get away from there. She had no idea where she would go, but she
believed anywhere would be better than this place. The bright, white
walls and the cream coloured bed and chair were making her nauseous.
She hoped the mysterious man would return to her soon.
The unnamed woman couldn’t be
sure if she’d ever experienced a place like this before, but
feeling isolated and scared would surely remain a part of her
memories, wouldn’t they? She doubted she would ever forget being
here right now, unless she chose to block it out. Could she do that?
The unnamed woman didn’t know.
Several minutes passed by, and she
didn’t move at all during this time. There was a window nearby, but
she couldn’t see out of it. There was a piece of material covering
it and she didn’t think she could figure out how to move it out of
the way. Besides, she didn’t really want to see out at the moment
in case it frightened her more. What if she was trapped on an island
in the middle of a vast ocean? She would rather assume everything was
fine outside of this room and aim to find out by escaping rather than
let her spirit get crushed before she even attempted it. The
mysterious man would return soon, she was sure of it.
Another minute or two passed her
by. As she felt herself drifting off into slumber, she wondered
whether she had been forgotten about. How long had it been since she
was last spoken to? Maybe she should just give in and fall asleep,
even though the mysterious man had told her not to. She couldn’t
really fight it any longer, so she closed her eyes...
“Wake up!” The male voice
shouted, though in a worried tone rather than a demanding one. The
unnamed woman opened her eyes and was now staring into the pupils of
a rather older gentleman, who had his fingers on either side of her
head. “I told you not to go to sleep, not until we’re sure you’re
all right.”
It was indeed the mysterious man
she was now looking at, though he had changed slightly. Before, he
had been wearing normal clothes, a shirt and trousers, but now he was
dressed in a clean white coat. What was the reason for that?
“How do you feel?” He asked,
while inspecting her head closely.
“I feel fine.” She fibbed. She
felt fine physically, but emotionally her head was all jumbled up and
she didn’t know how to explain it, so she didn’t.
“Does any of this hurt?” He
continued to enquire, while using his fingers to put pressure on
certain parts of her head. “You fell down pretty hard.”
“No.” She didn’t really feel
comfortable at all with all this questioning, but assumed there was
no other sensible way to react other than to answer him. Maybe if she
told him the right answers, he would let her go.
“Well, from what I can tell you
seem pretty much good to go.” The mysterious man took a step back
and looked over her. He seemed as if he was trying to avoid eye
contact with her, or maybe she was just imagining it.
“I can leave?”
“I’m afraid I can’t let you
go yet, but soon. I’ve spoken to your emergency contact and he
should be here with you any minute now. Seeing as you don’t have
any visible injuries, I think we’d be all right in letting you go
home tonight. No reason to keep you here any longer than we have to.”
Emergency contact? There was a
more pressing question on her mind at the moment, and as the
mysterious man seemed keen on letting her go, maybe it wasn’t such
a bad idea to ask him.
“Umm...” She began, before
pausing to wonder about how to phrase the question. “Can you tell
me something?”
“I’ll try my best, go ahead.”
“Who am I?”
The mysterious man seemed to
expect the question. He reached into his pocket without even raising
an eyebrow, and pulled out a tiny, folded piece of leather and handed
it to her.
“We found this card holder on
you after the incident as you couldn’t tell us your own name. It
contains your ID.”
As she took the wallet, all other
thoughts were cleared from her mind. Whatever she was about to look
at was going to reveal a lot about her; who she was, where she came
from, the places she frequented. It occurred to the unnamed woman
that she might not like what she saw, and what then? She deduced that
while it may not be too late to change all those things she would
find out, her true self had clearly already chosen a path and she
would be likely to return to it. It was natural, and this scared her.
“Aren’t you curious to find
out?” The doctor asked, with a fleck of impatience hidden in the
tone.
“I’d like some privacy
please.” She responded, retaliating with a defensive attitude.
“Very well. I’ll be waiting
just outside.” And with that, the doctor left.
All alone now, she wondered why
she had asked him to go as she didn’t really feel like he was
imposing. She ran her fingers over the leather, appreciating how cool
it was and how smooth it felt. Before opening it, she tried to
remember her name without help. As she ran through every letter of
the alphabet, she tried to recall anything she’d ever done or said
or heard, but it was useless. Each time she felt like she recognised
something, it turned out to be something extremely general or
something she had experienced since the incident.
“What the hell.” She said,
before finally flipping open the card holder and reading aloud the
name on the first card. “Freid, Pandara.”
Pandara was looking at her ID
card, a standard method of identification, with their general
information printed onto it. It turns out Pandara was twenty five
years old, a fact that surprised her as she had not once considered
finding out her age during this whole ordeal. If she had to start a
new life, she decided her age wouldn’t render this such an issue.
The other cards in the wallet
didn’t provide her with as much information as she’d hoped. She
was a regular customer of some local coffee house, she attended a gym
whose membership expired two years ago and she owned a library card
but whether she had borrowed any books with it was a mystery to her.
For all the fear she had initially felt about discovering herself, it
seemed it was just wasted energy.
What now? She had just been given
a glimpse into her old life and come away from it with nothing of
use. The ID card that held so much potential for her had now become
useless. She picked it up in her hand and was about to throw it away
when she noticed something on the back that she hadn’t noticed yet.
An address.
Now her life suddenly had a base
location, a place she used to call home. Surely there would be
something she could learn from inside it. She had to go there.
“Ms Freid,” It was the doctor,
who had opened the door and stepped inside, without as much as a
knock. He looked extremely pleased with himself, which irritated her.
“Your visitor is here.”
Before she could find the time to
say anything, the visitor had stepped inside the room behind the
doctor and smiled at her. He was quite tall, fairly slim and had
really dark brown hair which reached down to his shoulders. The extra
stranger was spectacled, wearing a set of very round frames which
made him appear a lot more intellectual, but whether that was true
was yet to be seen. From first glance, the man seemed shy and
unassuming and made no impression in her mind, though that was not
surprising given her circumstances.
“Hey Pan.” The stranger called
out to her, a quiet and nervous quality to his voice. “I’m here
to pick you up and take you home.”
“Who are you?” She spoke
emotionlessly.
“Well that’s a fair question
given your circumstances, but, well, I’m your husband.”
Pandara gave the man another look,
and began to wonder how she had fallen for such a person. She felt no
attraction to him at all, and yet somehow he and her had been wed.
“My name’s Callum. Do you
remember me even a little bit?”
“No.” She responded instantly.
Callum seemed taken aback, and cleared his throat.
“Well that’s all right, I
mean, you’ve been through a terrible situation.”
The doctor meanwhile was admiring
the awkward conversation with a little grin on his face. Pandara
noticed it and threw him an annoyed look but he didn’t even notice.
He was too busy listening and staring at the floor.
“I don’t know who you are, and
I’d feel uncomfortable going anywhere with you.”
It was during this moment that the
doctor seemed to give himself permission to enter the conversation,
as he stepped between the two of them and clasped his hands together.
“I’m afraid as the medical
professional here, I would be against Ms Freid leaving this
establishment alone due to fears over her wellbeing. If you cannot
both work something out, I’m afraid you’ll have to spend the
night here while we monitor you.”
Callum and Pandara looked at each
other. In her mind, she wondered whether she could stay here a whole
night. She had only minutes ago compared it to a prison and she was
doubtful she could bear a whole night of staring at these blank
walls, as she was sure it would drive her crazy. On the other hand,
the man standing before her right now had a very off-putting quality
about him and she would also worry for her safety if she had to go
under his care. The choice had to be made, and made soon else the
doctor would make her mind up for her.
“You are my husband, correct?”
She asked Callum.
“Well, yes, of course.” His
response was more nervous than before. “We’ve been married for
three years now, four in May.”
“I think I can trust you enough
to take me home for now.” Pandara lied. “Doctor, whoever you are,
you can let me go now.”
“I’m Doctor Milne. Clayton
Milne. And yes, you can both go, I’ll just need you to fill in some
paperwork for me first Mr Freid. If you’d just like to wait here a
few moments Ms, I mean Mrs Freid, I’ll be right back.”
Callum and Clayton left the room,
leaving Pandara once again on her own. She felt a huge wave of relief
at being allowed to get out of this room finally, but first there was
something she wanted to do. Approaching the window, she took a hold
of the blinds by either side and yanked it off the window frame.
The room instantly flooded with
natural light as the glowing sun hung high over the horizon, not a
cloud in sight. She was a few floors up and the view over the city
was fantastic. Skyscrapers dominated the skyline in one direction
while an enormous park blossomed in the other, covering a massive
area in luscious green carpet. Her imagination took a hold of her,
and she realised that even if she didn’t know who she was yet, she
knew that her destiny would lead her to remain in this beautiful city
until she figured it out. The top segment of the window had a lever
attached to it, and Pandara reached up for it and pulled. The window
opened, and she felt a gentle breeze flowing into the room, and for
the first time that she could remember, she felt relaxed.
In her hand, the ID card still
remained and she looked down at it. Her face on it looked so
stressed, so bogged down, so sad.
“Whoever I was, I’m not going
to be that person any more. You’re useless to me now.”
And with that, she threw the card
out of the window, where it fell ever so gently onto the floor many
metres below. For the first time, she felt free.
Next Chapter: CHAPTER EIGHT
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