Even Stephen.
By jolono
- 7545 reads
Stephen Roberts was awake but kept his eyes closed.
He began counting numbers in his head. Waiting for the right time to start his day. He stopped when he got to one hundred and twenty eight and opened his eyes. He turned his head and looked at the clock on the bedside table.
05.57. He didn’t like that number. It was an “odd” number. He didn’t do “odd” numbers, they made him angry. He closed his eyes quickly so the odd numbers wouldn’t affect his day. He started counting again from one to sixty four. He did this four times confident that this would make the odd numbers go away. He smiled when he opened his eyes for the second time. The clock was showing 06.00.
Better, much better. 06.00 was a good number, an “even” number. But not a safe number. 06.04 was a safe number. It contained the magical numbers six and four. Sixty four was his most favourite and safest of all the “even” numbers. It could be halved into “even” numbers right the way down to number one and as everyone knows number one doesn’t really exist as it’s a “starting” number. Number two is where everything begins.
For the next four minutes he stared at the clock forcing himself to look at 06.01 and 06.03. During those painful seconds he could feel his temperature rise and his pulse quicken. He wanted to smash the clock with his fist and shout the most obscene words out loud, but then along came 06.02 and the anger left him. It wasn’t as bad at 06.03 because he knew he was close to his beloved 06.04.
And then it happened. He grinned. His day could start. It was 06.04.
There was no way he could describe the joy he felt when his magical number appeared, it was as if a pair of invisible arms were holding him tight making him warm and safe.
He pulled back the covers and dragged his skinny body out of bed. He took eight carefully paced steps and entered the bathroom. He pulled the light cord eight times so that there were four shorts bursts of light and four times when the small room was plunged back into darkness. He took four tiny steps and stood next to the toilet. He urinated while he slowly counted to sixteen. He pulled the chain and then waited for the cistern to refill. He pulled it again. Two was an acceptable even number.
He walked back to the bedroom counting out his steps as he did so. He took a handkerchief from his bedside cabinet and draped it over the clock. He didn’t want to see the numbers for the rest of the day. Certain numbers frightened him. Seven and eleven were the worst. He NEVER wanted to see those numbers again.
Last year he’d had one of his “episodes”. The neighbours called the Police at 07.11 after they’d heard him screaming. His doctor thought it best if he went away for a while. The people in the hospital were nice enough but they just didn’t understand about the numbers. He was there for four weeks. He could have come home after three, but that would have been wrong and would never have worked. Too many “odds”. Three weeks was twenty one days, he couldn’t have that, no way. So he stayed for another week. That was good. Two sets of evens. Four weeks equalled twenty eight days. He remembered the doctor saying that he had something called Arithmophobia. Since then a lady called Clare came to see him every day and he knew he was making progress.
He liked Clare. It was her idea to get rid of the clocks in the flat and cover up the one in the bedroom after 06.04. Who needed a clock anyway? He ate when he was hungry and slept when he was tired. He didn’t have a television or radio so no one could surprise him by telling him the time and making him upset. That was another one of Clare’s ideas. Clare seemed to understand about the numbers.
He didn’t go out anymore. Not since the “episode” with the number seven bus. It wasn’t his fault. It should never have been on that road. Only numbers twenty eight and sixty two use that route. But there were roadwork’s up by the Post Office and the number seven was diverted. He saw it coming towards him and just froze. A nice man came and took him back home.
So now Clare comes in every day and brings him everything he needs.
He felt sad about Clare. She’d be coming soon and he knew he couldn’t let her in. Not anymore.
When she first started visiting he asked her how old she was. She said she was forty six. That was good, almost perfect. But last week she’d let slip that it was her birthday soon. He’d asked her which day and she said Tuesday. Today in fact. So she’d be forty seven. There was no way he could let the number forty seven into his home. The doctors would just have to get someone else.
He wondered if Clare might consider coming back in a year’s time.
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Comments
Nice to read another tale
Nice to read another tale from you jolono.
This one I enjoyed very much, it reminds me of an austic child I know, routines, numbers etc
And poor Clare at forty seven, never mind you can always send her to my place
ps Suggest a cherry eds
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exhausting even to read this.
exhausting just to read this. Can't imagine living it
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it must be so paralysing!
it must be so paralysing!
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This is so realistic and
This is so realistic and moving - on the cusp of funny because it has a light touch but paralysing's the word. I was hung up on symmetry and even numbers as a kid. Common in childhood isnt it.
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oooh ooh - was it that he
oooh ooh - was it that he murdered her? I thought while getting to the end that it could be!
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ha- yes, that would be good!
ha- yes, that would be good! out with a bang!
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This is very well portrayed.
This is very well portrayed. I know a bit about OCD and the number obsessions people get, so much more common that the well worn path of obsessive cleanliness. As another reader said, just the act of reading it puts you completely into the mechanisms of Stephen's head. There's a nice touch of how people have helped him cope with his problems, although it doesn't seem to be helping him overcome them. There's a lot of mileage in this character for more stories.
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This combines the two
This combines the two elements so well - the heartbreaking nature of the situation and the humour. The last line makes us smile but we also know it makes perfect sense to Stephen. Great piece.
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380 for me. Great character
380 for me. Great character and perspective, I think there are lots of people who latch onto numbers, it can be calming but, as in this case, can get out of control, would love more about Stephen,
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Well done :)
Well done :)
I particularly liked this well formatted paragraph. "He felt sad about Clare. She’d be coming soon and he knew he couldn’t let her in. Not anymore."
Its pacing and subject fit together well.
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Poor Stephen, so many of us
Poor Stephen, so many of us can relate to this I think. As young kids we spend a lot of time learning to count to ten and get lots of praise when get there. Perhaps that's what makes odd numbers seem sort of incomplete, I don't know? Well deserved cherries.
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