The Diceman

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by Luke Rheinhart


  Chapter Fifty-two

  `I want you to help me to escape,' Eric said quietly, holding the tuna-fish-salad sandwich in his hands lightly, as if it

  were delicate. We were in the Ward W cafeteria crowded in amongst other patients and their visitors. I was dressed

  casually in an old black suit and a black turtleneck shirt, he was in stiff gray mental-hospital fatigues.

  `Why?' I asked, leaning toward him so I could hear better over the surrounding din of voices.

  `I've got to get out; I'm not doing anything here anymore.'

  He was looking past my shoulder at the chaos of men in line behind my back.

  `But why me? You know you can't trust me,' I said.

  `I can't trust you, they can't trust you, no one can trust you.'

  `Thanks'

  `But you're the only untrustworthy one on their side who knows enough to help us.'

  `I'm honored. 'I smiled, leaning back in my chair and self-consciously taking a sip from the straw leading into my

  paper carton of chocolate milk. I missed the beginning of his next sentence.

  `. . . will leave. I know that. Somehow it will come to pass.'

  `What?' I said leaning forward again.

  `I want you to help me to escape.'

  `Oh, that,' I said. `When?'

  'Tonight.'

  `Ahhhh,' I said, like a doctor being given an especially interesting set of symptoms.

  `Tonight at 8 P.M.'

  `Not eight fifteen?'

  `You will charter a bus to take a group of patients to see Hair in Manhattan. The bus will arrive at 7.45 P.M. You will

  come in and lead us out.'

  `Why do you want to see Hair?'

  His dark eyes darted at me briefly, then back to chaos beyond my shoulder.

  `We're not going to see Hair. We're escaping,' he went on quietly. `You'll let us all off on the other side of the bridge.'

  `But no one can leave the hospital like that without a written order signed by Dr. Mann or one of the other directors of

  the hospital.'

  'You will forge the order. If a doctor gives it to the nurse in charge no one will suspect a forgery.'

  `After you're free, what happens to me?'

  He looked across at me calmly and with utter conviction said `That is not important. You are a vehicle.'

  `I am a vehicle,' I said.

  We looked at each other.

  `A bus, to be exact,' I added.

  `You are a vehicle, you will be saved.'

  'That's a relief to know.'

  We stared at each other.

  `Why should I do this?' I finally asked. The noise around us was terrific and we had unconsciously brought our heads

  closer and closer to each other until they were separated now by only six inches. For the first time a hint of a smile

  crossed his lips.

  'Because the die will tell you to,' he answered softly.

  `Ahhh,' I said, like a doctor who has finally found the symptom which makes the whole syndrome come together. 'The

  Die will tell me to '

  `You will consult it now,' he said.

  `I will consult it now.'

  I reached into my suit-coat pocket and pulled out two green dice.

  `As I may have already explained to you, I control the options and their probability.'

  'It makes no difference,' Eric said.

  `But I don't think much of the option to lead you in-such an escape.'

  'It makes no difference,' he said, his slight smile returning.

  `How many am I supposed to take to Hair with you?'

  `Thirty-seven,' he said quietly.

  I believe my mouth fell open.

  `I, Dr. Lucius M. Rhinehart, am going to lead thirty-seven patients in the largest and most sensational mental-hospital

  escape in American history tonight at eight?'

  'Thirty-eight,' he said.

  'Ah, thirty-eight,' I said. We probed into each other's eyes at six-inch range, and he seemed utterly without the slightest

  doubt about the outcome of events.'

  `Sorry,' I said, feeling angry. 'This is the, best I can do.'

  I thought for several seconds and then went on: `I'm going to cast one die. If it's a two or a six I'll try to help you and

  thirty-seven others escape somehow from this hospital sometime tonight.'

  He didn't reply. `All right?'

  'Go ahead and shake a six,' he said quietly. I stared back at him for a moment and then cupped my hands, shook the

  die hard against my palms and flipped it onto the table between my empty milk carton and two lumps of tuna salad

  and the salt. It was a two.

  `Ha!' I said instinctively.

  `Bring us some money too,' he said, leaning back slightly but without expression. `About a hundred bucks should do.'

  He pushed back his chair and stood up and looked down at me with a bright smile.

  `God works in mysterious way,' he said.

  I looked back at him and for the first time realized that I too wanted not my will but the Die's will to be done.

  `Yes,' I said. `The vehicles of God come in many shapes and-'

  `See you tonight,' he said and edged his way out of the cafeteria.

  Actually I wouldn't mind seeing Hair again, I thought, and then, smiling in dazed awe at the day I had before me, I set

  to work planning the Great Mental Hospital Escape.

  Chapter Fifty-three

  `You're cured,' Jake said. `If I do say so myself.'

  `I'm not sure, Jake.'

  I said. We were in his office that afternoon and he was trying to tell me that this would be our last analytic session

  together.

  `Your interest in dice therapy has given you a rational base upon which to work with the dice. Before, you were using

  the dice to escape your responsibilities. Now they have become your responsibility.'

  `That's very acute, I must admit. But how do we know the Die won't flip me off in some new direction?'

  `Because you've got a purpose now. A goal. You control the options, right?'

  'True.'

  `You think dice therapy's hot stuff, right?'

  'Sometimes.'

  `You aren't going to risk the advance of dice therapy for another roll in the hay with some dumb broad. You're not.

  You know now what you want.'

  `A smart broad?'

  `The advance of dice therapy. The advance of dice therapy. It gives your life precisely that foundation which it's been

  lacking since you rejected your father in the form of Freud and Dr. Mann and began this random rebellion.'

  `But a good dice therapist must lead a random life.'

  `But he's got to meet the patient regularly. He's got to show up ' `Mmmmm.'

  `He's got to listen. He's got to teach.'

  `Hmmm.'

  `Moreover, you've got Lil trying dice therapy, your kids. Your new self is being accepted. You don't have to play the

  fool anymore.'

  `I see.'

  `I even accept the new Luke. Arlene has introduced me to several, Ah, positions of dice therapy. I spoke to Boggles.

  Dice therapy makes sense.'

  `1t does?'

  `Of course it does.'

  `But it will tend to break down the sense of a stable self so necessary for a human to feel secure.'

  `Only superficially. Actually, it builds a dice-student's - Jesus, I'm using your terms already - a patient's strength by

  forcing him into continual conflict with others.'

  `Builds ego strength?'

  'Sure. You're not afraid of anything now, are you?'

  `Well, I don't know.'

  `You've made an ass of yourself so many times that you can't be hurt.'

  'Ahh, very acute.'

  'That's ego strength.'

  `Without any ego.'

  `Semantics, but it's what we're after. I can
't be hurt because I analyze everything. A scientist examines his wound, his

  wounder and his healer with equal neutrality.'

  `And the dice-student obeys the dice decision, good and bad, with equal passion.'

  `Right,' he said.

  `But what kind of a society will it be if people begin consulting the Die to make their decisions?'

  `No problem. People are only as eccentric as their options and most of the people who will go through dice therapy are

  going to develop just like you; that's what makes your case so important. They're all going to go through a period of

  chaotic rebellion and then move into a lifetime of moderate, rational use of the dice consistent with some overall

  purpose.'

  'That's very nice, Jake,' I said and leaned back on the couch from the alert sitting position I had been in.

  `I'm depressed,' I added.

  `Moderate, rational use of the dice is rational and moderate and every man should try it.'

  `But the dicelife should be unpredictable and irrational and immoderate. If it isn't, it isn't dicelife.'

  `Nonsense. You're following the dice these days, right?'

  `Yes.'

  `You're seeing your patients, living with your wife, seeing me regularly, paying your bills, talking to your friends,

  obeying the laws: you're leading a healthy, normal life. You're cured.'

  `A healthy, normal life -'

  `And you're not bored anymore.'

  `A healthy, normal life unbored -'

  `Right. You're cured.'

  `It's hard to believe.'

  `You were a tough nut to crack.'

  `I don't feel any different than I did three months ago.'

  `Dice therapy, purpose, regularity, moderation, sense of limits: you're cured.'

  `So this is the end of my booster analysis?'

  `It's all over but the shouting.'

  'How much do I owe you?'

  `Miss R'll have the bill for you when you leave.'

  `Well, thank you, Jake.'

  `Luke, baby, I'm finishing up "The Case of the Six-Sided Man" this afternoon and after poker tonight. I thank you.'

  `It's a good article?'

  `Tougher the case, better the article. By the way I've asked old Arnie Weissman to try to get you invited to speak at

  this fall's annual AAPP convention - on Dice Therapy. Pretty good, huh?'

  `Well, thank you, Jake.'

  `Thought I'd present "The Case of the Six-Sided Man" on the same day.'

  'The dynamic duo,' I said.

  `I thought of titling the article "The Case of the Mad Scientist," but settled on "The Six-Sided Man."

  What do you think?'

  `The "Case of the Six-Sided Man."

  'It's beautiful.'

  Jake came around from behind his neat desk and put his arm way up on my shoulder and grinned up into my face.

  `You're a genius, Luke, and so am I, but moderation.'

  'So long,' I said, shaking his hand.

  `See you tonight for poker,' he said as I was leaving.

  `Oh that's right. I'd forgotten. I may be a bit late. But I'll see you.'

  As I was softly closing the door behind me, he caught my eye one last time and grinned.

  `You're cured,' he said.

  `I doubt it, Jake, but you never can tell. Die be with you.'

  `You too, baby.'

  Chapter Fifty-four

  [From The New York Times, Wednesday, August 13, 1969, late edition.] In the largest mass escape in the history of

  New York State Mental Institutions, thirty-three patients of Queensborough State Hospital of Queens escaped last

  night during a performance of Hair at the Blovill Theater in midtown Manhattan.

  By 2 A.M. this morning ten of these had been recaptured by city police and hospital officials, but twenty-three

  remained at large.

  At the Blovill Theater the patients sat through the first act of the hit musical Hair, but as the second act was beginning they made their escape. Most of the patients began to snake-dance their way onto the stage to the music of the first number of Act 2 `Where Do I Go?', mingled with the cast, and then fled backstage and hence to the street. The Blovill

  audience apparently assumed the performance of the patients was part of the show.

  Hospital officials claim that someone apparently forged the signature of Hospital Director Timothy L. Mann, M.D., on documents ordering staff members to make arrangements to transport thirty-eight patients from the admissions ward to see the musical by chartered bus.

  Dr. Lucius M. Rhinehart, whom the forged documents had ordered to organize and guide the expedition, stated that he and his attendants had concentrated on holding the three or four potentially dangerous patients and could not make an effort to pursue the majority when they fled backstage. In all, five patients were restrained within the theater.

  `The excursion was ill-tuned and ill-planned - ridiculous in fact and I knew it,' he said. `But I attempted on four separate occasions to get in touch with Dr. Mann to question him about the request, and, failing, had no choice but to carry it out.'

  Police indicated that the size of the mass escape, the character of some of the patients involved, and the complicated series of forgeries needed to fool responsible staff members indicate a plot of major proportions.

  Among those who escaped were Arturo Toscanini Jones, a Black Party member who recently made news when he spat in Mayor Lindsay's face during one of the mayor's walking tours of Harlem, and hippie figure Eric Cannon, whose followers recently caused a disturbance at the Cathedral of St. John the Divine during the Easter Mass.

  A complete list of the names of those who have escaped was being withheld pending communication by hospital officials with the relatives of those who fled.

  The patients who escaped were dressed for the most part in khakis and tee-shirts and informal footwear such as sneakers, sandals, and slippers. A few patients, it was reliably reported, had been wearing pajama tops or bathrobes.

  Police warned that some of the patients might be dangerous if cornered and urged citizens to approach all known escapees with caution. They noted that among them were two of Mr. Jones's Black Party followers.

  A full investigation of the breakout was under way.

  Officials of the Blovill Theater and Hair Productions, Inc., denied that they had managed the mass escape as a publicity stunt.

  How simple it all seems now reading about it again in the Times. Forge documents, charter bus, drive to theater, flee during performance.

  Do you have any idea how many documents have to be forged to get one single patient released for one single hour from a mental hospital? From the time I left Eric at 11.30 A.M. that morning until my analytic hour with Jake at 3

  P.M. I was continually typing documents, forging Dr. Mann's signature and rushing away to have the orders delivered to the appropriate staff. I got so I could sign Dr. Mann's signature faster and more accurately than he. As it was, I still had signed eighty-six fewer documents than were legally required for such an excursion.

  Would you be suspicious if someone called up in muffled voice with a hint of a Negro accent and requested a forty-five seat bus to take thirty-eight mental patients to a Broadway musical on six hours' notice that very evening. Have you ever tried to lead thirty-eight mental patients off a ward when half of them don't know where they're going or don't want to go, aren't dressed for it or want to watch the Mets' night game on TV? Since I didn't know which thirty-eight of the forty-three patients on the ward my sponsor wanted to lead to freedom, I had to choose at random thirty-eight names - which naturally did not correspond with those Mr. Cannon had in mind. Do you think that the head nurse or Dr. Lucius M. Rhinehart would permit any substitution for the names on this list? `Look here, Rhinehart, two of my best men are not on this list,' Arturo whispered desperately into my ear at seven fifty-three that night.

  'They'll have to see Ha
ir another night,' I said.

  `But I want these men,' he went on fiercely.

  `These are the thirty-eight names on the list. These are the thirty-eight patients whom I will escort to Hair.

  He dragged me farther off into the corner.

  `But Cannon said only that the dice said-'

  `The dice said only that I would try to help Mr. Cannon and thirty-seven other mental patients escape. It mentioned no

  names. If you want to take some initiative, I assure you I don't know Smith from Peterson from Kling, but I myself am

  taking only people who call themselves Smith, Peterson and Klug.'

  He rushed away.

  Five minutes later Head Nurse Herbie Flamm waddled up `Say, Dr. Rhinehart, I don't see Heckelburg on this list but I

  just saw him leave with that last group with your attendants.'

  'Heckelburg?' I said. `Perhaps not. I'll check.'

  I walked away.

  Flamm caught me again just as I was leaving.

  `Sorry to bother you again, Doc, but four of the guys on your list are still here and four guys who aren't on your list

  have just left.'

  `Are you positive, Mr. Flamm, that you now have five patients left on the ward?'

  `Yes sir.'

  `And that only thirty-eight have left?'

  'Yes sir.'

  `Are you sure my name is Rhinehart?'

  He stared up at me and began using his big belly nervously.

  `Yes, sir. I think so, sir.'

  `Yon think my name is Rhinehart?'

  `Yes Sir.'

  `Who is that patient - over there?'

  I asked, pointing to one I'd never seen before and hoped was a new admission.

  'Er . . . ah . . . him?'

  `Yes, he,' I said coldly towering over him.

  `I'll have to check with the attendant, Higgens. He-'

  `We're going to be late for the opening curtain, Mr. Flamm. I'm afraid I can't rely on your fuzzy memory for names to delay us any longer. Goodbye.' `Goo - goodbye, Doc-'

  'Rhinehart. Remember it.' Have you ever walked down Broadway in the middle of a line of thirty-eight men dressed variously in khakis, sneakers, sandals, Bermuda shorts, hospital fatigues, torn T-shirts, African capes, bathrobes, bedroom slippers, pajama tops and sweat suits and led by an utterly serene eighteen-year-old boy wearing a white hospital robe and whistling `The Battle Hymn of the Republic'? Have you ever then walked beside the beatific boy to lead such a line into a Broadway theater? And looked natural? And relaxed? When half the seats were in the front row? (The summer doldrums made it possible for me to get seats at the last minute - 4.30 P.M. that afternoon - but twenty of them cost $8.50 apiece.) Have you then tried to seat thirty-eight odd people when half the seats were scattered like buckshot over a five-hundred seat theater? When three of your patients were walking zombies, four manic-depressives and six alert homosexuals? Have you then tried to maintain a sense of dignity, firmness and authority when one of these unfortunates keeps coming up to you and whispering hysterically about when are they all supposed to escape?

 

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