ניל ירדן / Lawyer's Disease |
I stare at the mirror in amazement. I stare and I reach with my hand and I touch the top of my head right there and, yes, I can definitely feel it. It's there, all right. My amazement winds down as logic replaces instinct. It's a new phase, that's all it is. I wasn't expecting this but, come to think of it, it isn't all that unusual, all things considered. It's been going on for close on half a year now, I suddenly recall; when red spots first started to appear on my torso and on the back of my neck, I went to see a dermatologist. He said it was probably some kind of fungal infection and gave me a prescription. It didn't help. Afterwards, going to the doctor didn't seem much of an option anymore. I detach from my remembrance and take a good look in the mirror again. It isn't very visible, I suppose, but now that I know it's there it seems unrealistically apparent. I touch it again, slowly, as though it might bite if I make too many sudden moves. This can't be right, I'm thinking now. Skin disease is one thing, but this... I kept applying the salve twice a day, just like the doctor said. I did that for three months before I ran out of salve and needed another prescription, which meant going to see the doc again, which meant I wasn't going to do it. It wasn't much help, anyway. For I time I thought it was making it worse. The few red spots I first noticed every time I undressed to take a shower started multiplying. I wasn't bothered at first, because it didn't sting or burn or itch or anything. Only when my chest was full of red spots, several of them bigger than my index finger, and people started commenting on the strange rash I had on my neck, did I start paying any mind to it. I sat down and examined myself closely. Well, intended to examine myself closely. I hardly had the means to conduct proper experimentation, and probably wouldn't have wanted to if I had. So I probed the things. Tried scrubbing them off. Felt them around. The only definitive conclusions I made were that the rash, if that's what it was, somehow had different texture than my healthy skin, and that unless I was going to use sandpaper, it can't be scrubbed off. I put some salve on it. And there was something else bothering me. I didn't think I could easily get hemorrhoids at my age, and I wasn't bleeding anywhere, but I started to have a strange feeling every time I sat down. A very uncomfortable feeling. Even painful. One evening that month, when I showered, I felt something strange as I scrubbed myself. It was too strange a feeling to be believed, at first, so only when I got out and examined myself in the big mirror, looking with effort over my shoulder, did I accept the unacceptable. My behind was covered in that wretched eczema, and a sort of tumor seemed to be attached there. Something short, ugly and red. If I hadn't known it was so ridiculous, I might have said it was a stub of tail. This was when it first occurred to me that, maybe, this was too embarrassing to show to a doctor. "Er, excuse me doc, but I seem to have, uh, I mean, recently, that is, you see, um, funny thing there...". No. There was no way I was going through this. After a time I decided I was probably hallucinating the whole thing. And, of course, I started adopting a different sitting position. One that didn't put too much squeeze on my bothersome hallucination. Remembering, I avert my eyes from my head reflected in the mirror and turn my body around. Yep, it's still there, just as red and four times as long, with a little triangular flap of skin at the end. It's a much prettier tail than it used to be, I'll grant you. I've become strangely proud of it. I stand straight again and examine, once more, the problem at hand. Now I'm even less surprised, least of all amazed. Sure, why not? Compared to a tail-like tumor, this is nothing. Almost nothing. About a week before I ran out of medicine, I noticed the next development in my state. Aside from having the damn things spreading further, and also inexplicably starting to appear on my arms and (this mostly) my legs, they were also turning a darker red, over the merely dark pink they used to be. Some of them veritably glistened red. I was starting to have cancer in mind, back then. I was already resolved to go see the dermatologist again about it, perhaps once the medicine was over, when I realized some of the spots looked... different. At first I thought some of the bigger ones had slightly swelled, but once I handled them I saw I was wrong. They hadn't swelled - rather, they had gone flaky, but hard to the touch. I tried rubbing some of it off, and it didn't come off very easily. In the end I was left with a few crimson flakes in my hand. I had to see someone, I realized. But I didn't have the time; work was murder right now, with us getting a couple more big clients and the rest coming up with all kinds of strange demands. I was making a shitload of money and there was no way I was going to give that up now. This is nothing, I told myself. It will probably go away. A week later almost all the marks on my skin had changed. And what seemed to be a crust of flakes toughened, lengthened, and became little red scales, covering large areas of my skin. Nowhere in plain sight, fortunately, but having these things in my sight had a bad enough effect. I was definitely not going to the doctor with this, I knew now. What could I possibly say when he told me to strip? "Listen doc, though I wouldn't want to interfere with your diagnosis, my symptoms indicate that I seem to be in the early stages of turning into a reptile. Nothing a little bit of medicinal treatment can't cure, I'm certain". That's the best line I could come up with. Unthinkable. I tried thinking about my physical state in philosophical terms. What could it say about me as a person? Well, that I was very ill, for a start. I dropped the philosophical attitude fairly quickly. It wasn't going anywhere. My more immediate problem was what people were going to say. They may have gotten used to the red marks on my neck, though I had to tell them it was a late-manifesting genetic trait, but if it kept spreading, I could be facing some bothersome questions that I didn't want to answer or even know the answers to. To make matters worse, the scaly spots started oozing small quantities of yellow pus, which stank like hell. It was unavoidable that people would notice. I cleaned myself up as best I could, and used large amounts of aftershave, but it wasn't enough. At work, I was starting to get tired of being asked ten times a day whether I had just farted. And then they stopped. That is, somehow people suddenly became blind to any and all of my chronic symptoms. At first I thought that perhaps my colleagues simply decided to be polite about it, but none of my clients said anything, though you could probably smell my office from a mile off. And now this. And at times I find myself thinking again if it could mean anything. What could I have done to deserve this irritating, not to mention alarming infliction? It's almost as though I'm punished for some unfathomable crime. And I'm not such a bad person, really. People in the firm rather like me. I'm on my way to become a partner. So I don't give any money to these assholes coming to beg for the ravaged people of Bosnia or wherever. And I don't recycle; all that "we're destroying the planet" is bullshit anyway. So I overcharge my clients, but who doesn't? Being a tax lawyer is all about charging a client for an hour's work because their case crossed my mind in the shower. So what? The more I think about it, the more I come to the conclusion that this has nothing to do with my morality, or lack thereof. I've survived so far. With a little luck I can carry on like this for years. Maybe it is just part of the same thing, I think as I give it one last look in the mirror before I turn away to dress for work. It's not exactly skin related, I noticed at once, but who knows? With everything I've already been through, this shouldn't have come as any shock at all. Already it's hell dressing in the mornings. And once, at work, a few scales burst out, ripping straight through my shirt at the elbow and remained exposed to the world all that day, though nobody said anything. And the acrid smell in my house became so pungent that I once boiled a rotten egg and was halfway through eating it before I noticed it was inedible. Nobody says anything. I think I won't even wear a hat to try and conceal this. After all, in my condition, what can a little set of horns mean, anyway? July 26th, 2002 23:08 PM |
היצירה לעיל הנה בדיונית וכל קשר בינה ובין המציאות הנו מקרי בהחלט. אין צוות האתר ו/או הנהלת האתר אחראים לנזק, אבדן, אי נוחות, עגמת נפש וכיו''ב תוצאות, ישירות או עקיפות, שייגרמו לך או לכל צד שלישי בשל מסרים שיפורסמו ביצירות, שהנם באחריות היוצר בלבד. |
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