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7/31/2019 The Image of Valentine Filipov
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The Image of
Valentine Filipov
Luke Chinworth
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I think about alarms most of the time. They are very annoying.
In my experience there are three different ways a person can wake up to an alarm.
Usually you wake up before your alarm, your body anticipating the wake up time you set not
only on your clock, but also in your mind. You lay there in that state of limbo, dreaming and
waking persistently, awaiting the sound of the alarm but wishing it to never come. When your
alarm goes off, you are fully conscious of what is happening and promptly get out of bed and
turn it off and start your day.
Other times your body is so tired that no matter how hard your mind tries to convince you
it is about time to get up, your alarm goes off before you regain consciousness. The alarm
manifests itself in your dream as your mind wrestles with the exterior auditory input. Slowly your
mind puts the pieces together as it meanders towards consciousness eventually convincing itself
that the noise is in fact the alarm that you set the previous night and not the cry of your
childhood friend falling down an endless well, which you were pretty sure was actually
happening moments before. You are not fully conscious of reality until several moments after you
have turned your alarm off.
Sometimes your mind lies somewhere between these two which allows it to snap from
unconsciousness to consciousness in an instant. The unconsciousness is complete; there is
nothing on your mind. Nothing. You are asleep and dont even know it. Your mind has left behind
all concerns, functions, dreams, and synapses.
You dont even exist. Or at least you have no way of knowing that you do.
Then your mind cracks as your alarm shatters the nonexistence, and you bolt upright in
bed, the consciousness also complete. It is rather shocking and quite unpleasant and disturbingly
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memorable if youve ever had the misfortune of experiencing unconsciousness and
consciousness only a moment apart.
Your brain will feel it: the full trek between the most distant parts of your mind in an
instant.
I have made that trek more times than I care to count; they said I was just a deep sleeper.
Then there are the people who dont use alarms at all: those that want a brief holiday
from the machinations of society every once in a while, and those that never use them either
because their mind is geared so accurately they wake at the exact moment they desire, or they
have no reason to wake, and thus sleep their life away. While everyone can agree that they have
had days in the shoes of each of these sleepers, and have found them to be rather comfortable for
a season, most people utilize alarms.
The startling awakenings used to shock me, but I have realized that my life goes on. I go
about my day, its monotonous cycle erasing thoughts and memories from my mind.
Setting.
Sleeping.
Waking.
Walking.
I dont know about you, but I felt most alive when I was sleeping. There was more sense
in my dreams than in the real world. Yet my dreams didnt make complete sense. They seemed
like a memory, except altered in some way. They all converged upon a single image, each night a
different memory morphing to arrive at the same moment. Whether or not the memory had come
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to pass yet seemed impossible to perceive, but the volume of the moment overloaded my senses,
the magnitude of its importance evident. But the ending was always cut short by an alarm, the
image frozen in my mind.
It was frustrating losing that ending every night. Downright annoying.
Imagine my surprise, and joy, when I fell asleep one day and never woke up.
* * *
Sofiya Filipov stepped out of her car and closed the door. The dry voice on the radio had
mentioned something about rain, and Sofiya had chose, or rather the flat tire on her car had chose
for her, the exact moment to leave cover and be christened with the first rain drop from the gray
cloud overhead. She was not stranded on the side of the road, but rather had been able to coast
the car just off the main road into the parking lot of the hospital which was her intended
destination. The evening wind had blown the rain clouds in from the East to where they now
hung, demanding the attention and fear of all below, and darkening the landscape a shade.
The humidity and moisture did little to disrupt her naturally course brown hair which
flowed wildly and beautifully when she was in the wind. She had the face of her father, a full
blood Soviet, or so they used to be called, and the petite womanly features of her mother, an
American five years her fathers senior. As she made the long walk from the back of the lot to the
hospital across the steaming pavement, her face grew more and more into a grimace as it was
assaulted by the rain. Her grimace did not make her ugly, as grimacing has a tendency to do to
some people when they see a person they particularly detest, or when they decide to take a
mouthful of lemon juice, or when it is obvious that something very unimportant, like losing a
sock, has caused them them to become annoyed, but instead, made her more attractive, as a
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grimace of determination can do if it is on the right person. With her lips pursed and her brow
furrowed, Sofiyas most striking features became even more prominent. Her gold, thin-framed
glasses added to her intellectual look without overriding her inherited features. Her chin was
small and her jawline distinct; at the age of thirty-two, she was an extraordinarily beautiful
woman.
The doors slipped open as Sofiya approached, and the receptionist at the counter asked
her before looking up, How can I help direct y-, but exclaimed, My goodness, youre
soaked, after taking her eyes from her work.
Sofiya seemed to only hear the former; Im here to visit a patient. The phone rang and
the seated woman answered it as she handed Sofiya a visitors form on a clipboard. On the line
labeled RELATION TO PATIENT, she slowly wrote, SISTER.
As she walked down the hallway, now dimmed for the night, she saw the bright
parallelogram projected onto the speckled tile through the open doorway. She was expected and
she was late and she reached the door and stopped short of the light and hid behind the dark
edge; Sofiya was not eager to face what was in the room.
She stood there dripping quite a long time, unable to decide if she truly believed her
brother waited within that lit room, comatose and unable to respond. What good news, as her
mother had said, could await her in that room? She pressed her back up against the wall of the
hallway, forcing her shoulder blades into the jagged wooden numerals of the room label, willing
the pain to give her an answer.
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Eventually, after a good while, she slid down the wall and sat facing away from the room,
focusing on the numbers across the hall. When this distraction failed, tears came to Sofiyas eyes.
A shadow appeared in the bright outline of the door as her breathing became audible, and
Sofiya saw its hand reach down and rest on her shoulder. Sofiyas hands went to the place and
grasped it, her sobs beginning to pass.
When her breathing came under her control, Sofiya turned her head up in that childish
way that is only possible from below, and looked into the face of her mother with eyes wide
open. Her mothers face, though rough from age, was so soft and kind it brought comfort just
looking at it. Many times when Sofiya was younger she had found that peace from distress came
exclusively from that shape. Her voice was just as sweet and welcome as her face.
Sofiya rose to her feet into the brilliance of the light to view her father leaning against the
wall, legs crossed. As she tilted her head to see around the door frame, her brother came into
view, his eyes open, wandering the room.
Sofiya burst into tears as she hurdled toward his bed
She was above him saying, Liev? Its Sofiya, Liev. Im here. Liev? Liev? The tears
choked her voice, causing intermittent explosions in volume and horrible gulps as she gasped for
air. But Liev made no response; he was looking through Sofiya, his eyes mistakenly focused
somewhere between her and the distant wall, unconscious of his sister above.
Sofiyas head dropped in frustration. It bobbed as she silently sobbed, the tears dripping
from her nose onto her brothers chest. Her shoulder blades came together as she inhaled deeply,
the mirror image of the room number still visibly impressed into her back. After a good many
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tears had rolled off her face, Sofiya looked up. Liev was looking intensely into her face. Sofiya
thought about it a while before starting.
She whispered as her voice shook, Will you cry with me, brother? Liev made no
response. Will you weep with me?"
Slowly, his face began to contort. His eyes were fixed on his Sofiyas; his face became
unsettling. His mouth was open in agony.
He started crying, loudly.
* * *
My joy passed quickly, at least relatively speaking. How long Ive been like this, wherever
I am or whatever I am, I cannot say. All I know is that the feeling of joy was fleeting and has
since been replaced by a feeling of familiarity, a familiarity of my previous waking life.
I cannot say how I know that I am more aware of my subconscious life than my waking
life. For what else have I to compare my waking life with other than my subconscious reality.
With a basis of only the two, there is no way to distinguish one from the other except by the level
of awareness I experience in each. With that reasoning, I would accept whatever reality I
experienced most lucidly as my waking reality. And I did.
Most people do.
But something happened that day that I went to sleep and didnt wake up. Like I said, I
had always felt more alive when I was sleeping. But when I went to sleep that day, I had a
sensation that was reminiscent of waking. I couldnt quite pin it down then, but Im sure of it now.
I am experiencing my subconscious reality in my sleep.
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That familiarity I felt was my past life. How do I know I am experiencing my
subconscious in my eternal sleep and did not simply wake up into my subconscious as usual?
Because it persists. In my past life, the waking and sleeping brought my subconscious and living
realities, respectively, in cycles. But now there are no cycles; I retain a constant reality. And
because it is not possible for me to be awake incessantly, I believe I am sleeping, probably in a
coma of some sort.
I submit that any number of things may have happened to me of which I have no
knowledge or understanding. But I know the feeling of experiencing my subconscious. The
environments and features are unmistakable. And I have been in those same environments since
that fateful day.
The day that they changed me.
The day they changed my mind.
Somehow, they swapped my subconscious and waking realities, and I dont know whether
I should thank them or kill them, not that I am able to do either at the moment.
* * *
Sofiya stood across from the doctor, glancing at Liev every so often. What does this
mean, Doctor?
The doctor responded coolly, It means your brother has a chance of waking up.
The family attacked him with questions; the three of them antsy for an explanation.
She had hugged and hugged and laughed and cried at Lievs response. With her neck
twisted back, she beamed at her parents as she held her brothers shoulders, and looked back into
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his weeping face, embracing him again and again. The tears mixed with the laughter, and the
tension in the room soon melted away. Anna and Valentine, Sofiyas parents, had exchanged
glances of relief at their daughters response to Lievs new development.
When did this start? Sofiya asked excitedly.
Thursday, Anna answered. Thats when we got the call. She continued
enthusiastically, The doctor said hes waking and resting in normal sleep cycles now!
Valentine added reluctantly, Though, pausing, theyre hardly any different. The
amount hes stimulated doesnt seem to correspond to his response. Sometimes he cries like he
just did with you, but sometimes its for no reason at all.
Sofiya knelt against the side of Lievs bed, her head turned right, towards her parents. She
stood and walked towards her father at the wall as she said softly, But at least hes finally
getting better. I mean, we didnt know if he would ever come back. Valentine closed his arms
around her as she placed her hands on his chest.
He set his dimpled chin on her head as he said, It really is great honey. His responsive
mood seems to come randomly, so whether his tears are from a memory, you, or simply a
mistake in his brain is impossible to tell right now.
I know dad. Her voice was sweet.
Okay.
Liev had been in a coma for the past six months, and he nearly scared the liver out of the
Miss Pansy when he awoke while she was in his room making her sheet-changing rounds. She
had paused after glancing his open eyes, looking up again for a double take. When the realization
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hit her, she had gone screaming and hollering right out the door and down the hallway to the
receptionist. She had paced up and down those halls for a while after, unsure of what to make of
the awakening, eventually phoning the doctor, who added Liev to his list of visitations that
evening. When the doctor concurred concerning the magnitude of the increase of Lievs
consciousness, the parents were called, and the parents called Sofiya.
Minimally conscious? Sofiya inquired incredulously.
Yes. I realize that its not exactly the most poetic term. He is not in a coma but he is not
fully conscious either. The doctor waited to continue. He is in between, how far from one or
the other is impossible to tell right now; his awareness level comes in waves.
The doctor knew his stuff, and he certainly was nice enough. He answered each of their
questions with the utmost respect and the family grew comfortable talking with him. He was not
like those doctors who inhabit the same space as doors: you may get some interaction out of
them but they will most certainly remain wooden. He was personable, likable, and sure of
himself and his knowledge concerning comas. But Sofiya found herself unsatisfied with his
answers. She wanted to ask Liev about Liev, not this strange man she had only just met. But Liev
was asleep and she could not wake him.
The questions continued.
They had grilled him pretty thoroughly, and they all were becoming rather tired. The
main thing to remember is that your son now has a chance to come back.
The doctor quickly added, Not that your son is absent,
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Anna smiled. Yeah. Its okay. You dont have to sweeten you words just for our sake.
Valentine stood up out of his chair, placing his hand on the small of his wifes back and
saying, We know hes not all there. We accept where he is and where we are. We arent the kind
of people to fuss about the things that we cant change. Sofiya looked intently into his face and
watched his mouth move. What we can change for the better, we do together and as often as we
can. But whatever happens, happens; though Im glad to hear you have hope of a recovery.
The doctor pondered Vals words, eventually deciding, Its healthy, your response. He
smiled, glanced at his clipboard, looked back at the family of four, and said smiling, Well, good
night.
Good night doctor, Valentine answered for the four of them, and the doctor turned for
the door. He lifted Lievs clipboard up to the holder on the door, pausing in mid air.
Now under the doorway, he slowly set the board into its place as he turned back to the
family, saying, I usually dont tell people this. Probably because Im not supposed to. After all,
Im an MD, not a psychologist. Pausing again, he finally continued. How you choose to handle
this has more effect on your son, and brother, glancing at Sofiya, than you may think.
The Filipovs were unsure of how to respond to such a statement so none of them did.
The doctor glanced at his watch. It was eight oclock.
Come to my office at ten fifteen. There is someone I want you to meet. She is a sort of
neurologist but dont tell her I said that. She has something to show you that I think youll be
very interested in.
The Filipovs were stunned by the bizarrely ambiguous request. Sofiya was the first to
respond.
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Two hours. Where is your office? Sofiya asked.
The receptionist can tell you; I forget half the time myself.
But why the wait, asked Sofiya.
The psychologist has a ways to come. I would just have her show you now but shes
away at the moment.
Anna inhaled, Dont make her come all the way here just for us. Certainly not at this
time of day. Shell have to drive home in the middle of the night!
I assure you it wont trouble her in the least. This is what she does. She needs to come
here tonight.
Sofiya proposed, Cant we just call her on the screen?
Im afraid not. What she has to show you can only be... he searched for the words,
experienced in person. Ask the receptionist for my office number. Ten fifteen.
Valentine voiced, I assume you do not tell this to every family you talk to. So my
question for you is: why us? Is it something about Liev? Something about us?
You are correct Mr. Filipov. And my answer is that it will make more sense when she
talks to you. Im sure of it. The reassuring look on the doctors face seemed to satisfy the
familys inner thoughts.
Just as the doctor was leaving, Valentine spoke: All this time you have been so formal
with our rising temperament and endless questions, soothing our fears and reassuring our hope.
You called me Mr. Filipov, and I embarrassingly realized that I have not got your name.
The doctors face showed his genuine appreciation of the cordial man. My name is hard
to pronounce. Most people call me Dr. Z.
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Nice to know you Dr. Z, Val said smoothly nodding his head with his arms crossed.
Sofiya asked snobbishly, What are we to do while we wait.
Take a nap; thats what Im going to do. Youre going to need the rest. Just dont forget
to set an alarm.
Dr. Z disappeared into the hallway, stopped at the front desk, and made a call.
* * *
I think it happened the day I went to SciMag. That day is kind of fuzzy because I wasnt
supposed to remember it. But I wasnt supposed to end up wherever I am now either. I guess
nothing really went as planned that day. I dont remember all of it yet the memory is surprisingly
vibrant.
As usual, the air was dry and my lips were cracked.
I stepped through an opening in the bushes to view a row of buildings before me. They
were bricked together into one amorphous mass like those big city homes built in the early
twentieth century; their verticals, perfectly aligned, but their tops, a set of random parallel lines
and peaked roofs. I remember recognizing the beauty in its unshaped, yet structured grandeur. It
was the sort of thing I always found beautiful. But beauty no longer speaks to me, and possibly
may never again.
Scimag had converted the home into its offices a couple years earlier, installing the
equipment over the course of several days.
I had watched them from across the bushed-in parking lot from the window of my
apartment and didnt think anything of it. Little did I know I would be crossing that parking lot
several years later, kicking my feet through the dried and faded yellow and red leaves, downed
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after the October winds robbed the trees of their coverings. It too was a beautiful thing. The
topography was ever changing; the frail piles formed and unformed at the force of the wind,
never to be the same again.
I also, was never to be the same again.
The four steps up to the door were brick, and as I gripped the door handle, beginning to
shift my weight to pull it out, I paused to read the words etched into the glass embedded in the
door frame.
I was distracted reading the text and the door burst open and crashed through my nose,
my chapped lips leaving a red imprint on the glass like a St. Valentines day image. The dots
above it from my bloodied nostrils gave the image a toad like quality, quite similar to the stumpy
man before me at first glance.
He said something about being really sorry, and I could tell he meant it by the tone of his
voice. His arms were so full of boxes they covered his face.
He set the boxes on the flat concrete cap of the brick stair guard and rushed me inside.
The interior went by in a blur as the tears in my eyes clouded my vision. Shapes were indistinct; I
saw only colors. The egg shell of the ceiling was tinted just a hint orange from the setting
sunlight coming through the west windows and reflecting off the walls. I felt the carpet through
my flat sole shoes as I tilted my head back to keep my blood inside my nostrils; that ferrous taste
came to the back of my tongue.
The man led me to a sink after flipping a light switch and guided me through my own
clean up. He pulled the towel down, soaked it, and pushed it to my nose.
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After my eyes were cleared, and my nose stuffed with tissue, I viewed the man for the first
time. He was old, maybe five feet tall. His glasses were the larger kind, not square but rounded,
and thick! White tufts stuck out from under his baseball cap blocking his ears from view. He was
a plain and simple man in every good way. He reminded me of my chemistry teacher in college;
he looked like he could tell you everything about anything if you just were brave enough to ask
him.
He asked me if I would be all right, apologized once more, and said something about
keeping the pressure on it before abruptly leaving. He may have said more, in fact Im sure he
did, but it is not coming to mind at the moment. The images I remember clearly, but almost
everything else is guesswork, especially the words.
I remember coming to myself in that room, as if the pressure I had been applying to my
nose had blocked all cognition. I pulled the towelette from my nose and stared at the blood stain.
I applied a different clean spot to my nose and pulled it away. The towel remained white.
I assume I had been lost in the mystery of why I had come to Scimag in the first place.
As I looked around the room, I noticed it was more or less the same as any dentist room.
That was when I realized there was a doctor in the room.
Apparently I didnt think anything of it. I felt very comfortable with the woman.
When I asked the doctor what Scimag specialized in she said something about the science
of memory. Then she started tilting me back.
She leaned over me, flipping a switch on the console to my left and adjusted my
headband. An image of my father immediately appeared in my mind. I dont how to explain it, but
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I saw my father inside my head, or rather, who at first looked like my father but turned out to be
Donatas Banionis. I recognized the image from my high school English class. It was the 1970s
film adaptation of Stanislaw Lems scifi classic Solaris.
The doctor said something about focusing and Mr. Kelvin.
It would have made sense if she had said, Try to focus on Mr. Kelvin, because I was.
The character of Kris Kelvin was all I could see.
However, of everything said that day, I am most certain of what the doctor actually said:
Try to focus, Mr. Kelvin.
Who Mr. Kelvin was I did not know, but I was pretty sure he was missing his appointment
at Scimag, driving away with his back seat full of boxes wearing a Chicago Cubs cap, stretching
his neck to barely see over the dash.
* * *
As Sofiya, Anna, and Valentine napped, they each dreamed a different dream. With Liev
weighing heavily on each of their minds, they naturally dreamed of him.
Anna dreamed she was on the lakes of Canada. In a two person kayak, she and her little
son traveled through the dark, frigid waters. They came to a rock face. Trees were hanging over
the edge, their roots twisting every which way in search of dirt and ultimately moisture. As they
went to explore a break in the face of the rock, the roots that dangled down kept poking Liev in
the eyes.
The passage narrowed until their lengthy two-man kayak became lodged in a curve. Anna
panicked as the roots grew around Liev locking him in place, eventually completely entombing
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the small boy. The roots wrapped around his body like a spiders catch with only his face
visible. The littlest ends of the roots wriggled their way though Lievs ears.
The screams were horrendous.
Anna wanted to stop the pain but she didnt know what to do. She pulled at the grimy
roots, blackening her hands. She could hardly look at her boys face, the shape deformed and
stretched by its own muscles and tendons underneath.
Anna weeped at her inability to help her little boy. She cried and cried.
Eventually, Lievs screams turned to intermittent yelps and a silent, stone sob inside the
tomb of roots. He told his mother, Mom, its okay. Its okay. It doesnt hurt. I just dont like
them inside my head is all. When things get in your head, thats when you get messed up. Dont
let them put things in your head. You cant let them put things in your head. It will change your
mind. It will mess you up. You wont be yourself. Youll be everybody else.
Anna cradled the boys face in her hands leaving black handprints on his cheeks. She
looked into his eyes and knew he meant what he said. She sat there on the lodged kayak in front
of Liev for hours swatting away little roots trying to weasel their way into her sons skull.
Valentine dreamed of a Red Wings game.
The stands were embarrassingly vacant, and Valentine could guess why. The Chicago
coach was deranged.
Laughing maniacally at the players on the ice, he slapped some of their helmets grinning
excitedly.
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Haha, only one period left boys. Youve got twenty minutes to show me youre not a
complete waste of money. The coach crossed his arms and threw his head back as he arched his
back to let out a terrible guffaw.
He was childlike, acting more like a chimpanzee than a hockey coach. He taunted the
other teams players, threw objects at them, and jumped up on the barrier, crouching precariously
on his toes, laughing and pointing at his own injured goalie on the ice. He walked along the
barrier as if on a tight rope trying to impress his players. The officials repeatedly warned his
ridiculous behavior, but he was never ejected because Valentine didnt want him to be; he was
too interested in the strangely demented man.
Aw, youre gonna have to come out? he mocked in an exaggerated voice.
But the second string goalie was missing. The coach laughed at the notion and
improvised, pointing at Liev, who Valentine just noticed was sitting next to him.
You! I want you to be goalie. Surely you can do better than this sod, he said as he
kicked the bleeding goalie, now in the box. The little Liev ran down before Val could stop him.
But he looked so excited as the coach, grunting like a tough guy, gave him a behind the back
high five, and he saw his face when he suited up in the huge uniform, so Val decided to let him
be.
The coach playfully shoved Liev onto the ice who seemed to be apprehensive about his
previous excitement, as Val was also. Dont forget your helmet, the coach said with a giggle as
he tossed the mask to Liev.
The game was underway and the coach was as giddy as ever, eager to see the
performance of his new shining star. But the uniform was way to big for Liev. He could hardly
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hold his stick with the massive gloves, and the shin pads came up to his chest. Little Liev let in
every puck that came at him, the coachs laugh growing more grotesque with each passing goal
until the end of regulation.
For the first time in the game, the coach was still. He simply stood with a very satisfied
closed-mouth smile on his face; he was obviously very pleased with his selection, though Val
was not sure why. Liev headed doggedly ashamed back to the players box with his head hung
low. The transit seemed to never end.
Sofiya dreamed of a white van.
It had pulled up in front of her childhood home, crashing through the plastic trashcan,
spilling its contents into the yard. From where Sofiya sat inside their home, the massive oak in
their front yard blocked her view through the window to the driver of the van as she looked up
from her book. She had heard the roar of the engine before the van came into view, and she knew
its purpose from the moment she heard it; she had to find Liev, quickly.
She heard pounding above. She ran out the front door, the men in white painters suits
already running towards her. Their grizzled beards and long shaggy hair chilled Sofiya to the
bone. Even more frightening were their uncovered faces which shifted in and out of shadow,
indistinct of all human facial features.
Sofiya came out from under the front roof overhang and was blinded by the intensity of
the sun as she craned her neck up to the left while spinning around to get a view of the second
story roof, from which Liev was now throwing rocks. He had brought the collection of stones to
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the roof in a small bucket, and was now trying to land them in a second bucket he had left in the
backyard, but he missed consistently.
Sofiya tried to tell him to stay on the roof but it was no use. He had run out of rocks and
was already making his descent down the ladder to the first roof, humming a tune gently and
contently.
She knew it was inevitable: Liev being taken. She couldnt make Liev hear her voice no
matter how loud she screamed.
As Liev was thrown into the open doorway, her fear became so intense she was nearly
paralyzed. She did not want to get any nearer to the van because its aura consumed all life;
however, she hesitantly made her way across the lawn towards the rumbling beast.
Just as she began timidly tapping on the closed sliding door of the white van, her
breathing chopped and intermittent, the engine engaged the driveshaft and the van rocketed
away. Sofiya turned her head to the left, watching the back of van grow smaller and smaller
down the very straight road.
She went and sat under the oak tree and thought about how they had taken him.
She had missed it; he was up on the roof and was all of a sudden being thrown into the
back of the van. She could not figure out what she had been doing to have missed the whole
thing.
Liev dreamed he was laying in a hospital bed.
There were two people sleeping in maroon, padded chairs across the room. There was a
third sleeping in a chair of the same kind near to him.
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Liev found the three people very beautiful, and he thought sharing the room with them
was very peaceful.
Then a thin figure entered the door to Lievs right. It wore black tights and a tight-fitting
black cotton shirt that wrinkled as he stealthily moved around the room. His stealth was not
practical but theatrical, enhanced by his Shakespearian comedy mask.
The smile only frightened Liev.
Liev could tell it was a man by the way he tip-toed around the room with exaggerated
steps, mocking the sleeping three as if he was a child trying to remain silent. He immediately
knew the figure meant no good, with the smiling mask intended purely for irony, but could not
will any part of his body to move in order to warn his three new friends. The figure was not
trying to hide from Liev, in fact, he was practically performing, using the room as his stage. Liev
would not have been surprised if he took a bow before exiting. But he remained, and was silent.
His silence sucked the ambient sounds from the room. The fan overhead, the whirring of
the instruments beside his bed, the creak of the floor from the figures shifting weight; nothing
escaped the immense gravity of the black figure. Liev always imagined outer space would be
something like this.
The figure taunted Liev, miming throat-slitting motions on his three friends.
Apparently the man was performing for himself, because he stiffed up suddenly as if he
had just noticed Liev was in the room. He tilted his head forward and said angrily in a simple,
strong voice, What are you doing here?
When the man broke the silence, he broke the tension with it. More comfortable now
after the eerie silence, Liev wanted to ask the man the same question but could not respond.
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The man drew closer.
How am I supposed to perform with an audience? Liev again could not respond, this
time grateful, at a loss for how to respond to such a paradoxical question.
The figure drew closer still.
They tell me, Hit center stage with a bang! He flourished the word with a wave of his
hands. Then his hands dropped disappointedly limp to his sides as he said, So, where do they
expect me to go? Each of his questions seemed to make less sense to Liev than the one that
came before it.
They dont like me. Thats why. They never have. They never appreciated me or my
clothes or my mask. And now youve got nothing good to say about me either! Liev was afraid
of the stalking creature upon his entrance, but how he was just annoyed by the self-administered
depression of the sad masked man. At least these statements did not expect a response that Liev
was unable to give.
The man turned from the bed, untying the bow that secured his mask, and slowly shuffled
his feet across the room. The clang of the metallic smile on the tile floor disguised the crash of
the window slamming shut as the depressed trouper plummeted ten stories.
The clatter startled the napping Filipovs and awoke them abruptly.
Im so sorry, Miss Pansy ended with teeth clenched behind open lips. She looked
dreadfully embarrassed to have awoken them and promptly bent down behind the bed to retrieve
the metallic bed pan.
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Anna was as sweet as ever after the feeling of shock as passed, saying for the three of
them, Oh, dont worry about it. Weve been sleeping long enough anyways. And after looking
at her watch, she said, Oh shoot, we should have woken up five minutes ago. Thank you Miss
Pansy. Anna ushered with her hands as she said to Valentine and Sofiya, now standing, Come
on, its ten fifteen. We still need to get the number from the desk too. Valentine grabbed his
khaki coat and pushed his arms through the holes as Sofiya looped the strap of her purse off the
back of her chair and over her shoulder.
Miss Pansy said, Drive safe. Its Saturday night.
Being the last in the room, Sofiya said, Were actually not going home. We have a
meeting with Dr. Z.
Oh. For what? But Miss Pansy quickly stopped herself, Oh my Lord, there I go again.
Always trying to get in peoples business. Dont let me interrogate you like that honey. Now you
go have a good night and talk to Dr. Z about whatever you want to talk about.
Sofiya smiled as she left Lievs room.
* * *
I am pretty sure the world is gone now. The last thing I saw was my father. I guess life
could be worse.
Because what I went through in that room, the procedure or therapy or whatever you
want to call it, was intended for Mr. Kelvin, not the character but the man who placed me in his
spot, and not intended for me, I suspect that my mind reacted differently than his mind and what
the lady in the room was expecting.
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I remember being awake in that chair and then being where I am now, though the feeling
from the chair continued into this place. I suspect I stayed in my subconscious while traveling
into my current location because the shock of the error, or whatever happened, put me to sleep
without allowing my subconscious to subside.
It didnt hurt, I mean, there wasnt a painful explosion in head. All I know is that I was in
that room with the doctor, watching Solaris inside my head, and then I wasnt. It took me a while
to realize it, but I know for sure I am not there anymore.
While I know that, I can only wonder practically everything else. I wonder where I am
and how long Ive been here.
I wonder if I am alive or dead.
Ive never thought of this until now, but I wonder what my family is doing.
My mother and father.
My sister.
* * *
The Filipovs had got the office number from the desk lady, taken the elevator to floor ten,
two lefts turns, and one right, and were now standing before room ten ninety-eight. It was ten
twenty-one when Valentine knocked on the wood door; they heard voices inside the office.
Dr. Z beckoned them to let themselves in, and as Valentine turned the lever handle and
cracked the door, he saw a brunette twist her neck to the right from a seated position to see the
entering family.
The office was a decent size for five people. The matching chairs opposite and facing
each other in which Dr. Z and the woman sat were complemented by the perpendicular couch
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between them, which also displayed its exposed, ornately-carved, wooden legs, all of which sat
on a lavishly detailed rug atop the tile floor. Completing the square was Dr. Zs handcrafted
mahogany desk.
The woman and Dr. Z stood to greet the Filipovs.
The woman extended her hand to Valentine, looking him straight in the eye, saying, Its
wonderful to finally meet you Mr. Filipov. My name is Elena Chakwas.
Dr. Z imposed, Dr. Elena Chakwas, emphasizing the doctor. Valentine gracefully took
the womans hand in his own. As if he was trying to make up for his embarrassing introduction
to Dr. Z, Valentine was sure to make this introduction formal, maybe even grandiose.
He let Elenas hand down with his own right hand while stepping to the side, placing his
extended left hand on his wifes back, and introducing her saying, This is my beautiful wife
Anna. She rolled her eyes at her husbands excessive embellishment, acting annoyed but
actually relishing the compliment, and accepted the hand of Dr. Chakwas, who smiled sweetly
with her mouth small. Valentine slid his left hand over his wifes back and around her left
shoulder, pulling her closer to reveal Sofiya.
Valentine gestured with his free right hand as he said, And this is my lovely daughter
Sofiya, who accepted the compliment exactly like her mother.
Its wonderful to meet all of you, Elena said graciously, shaking Sofiyas hand.
My son Liev could not be here, but I suspect you know his condition, Valentine said.
Yes. I am very sorry about the whole thing, Elena said looking down at the end.
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Anna said, Thats where Liev lives! Her tone was full of guess and suspicion.
Yes. Like I said, Scimag specializes in Alzheimers research specifically for visually
impaired patients. Your son was accidentally put through a testing session for patients.
Pulling her upper back from the support of the couch backing, Sofiya leaned toward Dr.
Chakwas as she supported her chin with her elbows on her knees and said with scorn, What
happens in a testing session?
Well... Dr. Chakwas started immediately, but at a loss for words, paused to straighten
herself in her chair, starting again, Using an MRI, we capture the data from the visual centers of
the brain of healthy control subjects as they watch movies. We then transmit this data into the
visual centers of the the brain of visually impaired Alzheimers patients. Your sons brain was on
the receiving end ofSolaris.
Whats Solaris? asked Anna, mystified.
Its a science fiction film from the 1970s. We collect suggestions for specific movies
from the family members of the patients, in this case specifically, Kathleen Kelvin, the husband
of Ben Kelvin, the man I just spent the last six months trying to get released from a southeastern
Balkan prison. Mr. Kelvin suffers from dementia as a result of his Alzheimers disease and got
himself into trouble after leaving Scimag that day. Somehow he placed your son in his place for
the transmission and escaped. Dr. Chakwas pushed the strand of hair off her cheek and behind
her right ear as she said added quickly and ashamedly, Im very sorry to tell you that I have no
idea why your son came to our offices, whether forced or of his own will, how he ended up in a
transmission seat, or how Mr. Kelvin escaped with the patient records from the last three years.
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The room was quiet other than the creak of Dr. Zs swiveling wooden chair, the Filpovs
pondering Elenas words.
Elena continued with apprehension in her voice, Im sorry I have nothing to tell you
about how your son came to be in that chair. She waited, looking into the faces of the three
Filipovs.
But, I was there when it happened. She lowered her head and continued staring at her
writhing hands and wrists, I was distracted, thinking about where our records could have gone.
It was late in the afternoon and I got lazy. I skipped the checks. Checks that were instituted to
prevent the very thing that happened to your son. She looked up with tears in her eyes, the first
already fallen, caught in between her cheek and nose.
Anna said stuttering, choking on her own tears, How did it happen?
Elena quietly snorted the way crying people do before saying, Thats the thing. I dont
know. I know what happened, but I dont know why he went into a coma. When I realized your
son, not Mr. Kelvin, was in the chair, he was already unconscious. The situation didnt seem too
serious at first, so I left to find Mr. Kelvin, leaving a technician with your son. All I can guess is
that the stimulation from his own eyes mixed with the external stimulation ofSolaris and
overloaded is mind. We normally place sleeping masks over the eyes of the patients to prevent
this, though their eyes provide little stimulation to their visual centers anyway. The stimulation is
rather intense; it is intended to prevent neural degradation, but we never knew the
overstimulation could cause this type of damage. She inhaled after finishing abruptly, now out
of breath.
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Valentine said calmly, How did our son end up in this hospital with no trace of where he
had come from or what had happened to him?
I dont know Mr. Filipov. I left your son with a technician after foolishly not assuming
the worst. He had come to tell me that they had found a witness outside who saw Mr. Kelvin
walk out with boxes, and came to my assistance when he saw your son. The situation seemed to
be under control, and after discovering that the street camera got the license plate number of Mr.
Kelvins vehicle, I left instructions with the technician to handle your son and left immediately. It
was stupid. Looking back I dont know what I was thinking.
Sofiya asked, Didnt the camera get a view of Liev?
Elena answered, Yes, but only of him coming through the break in the ivy fence and
crossing the street.
Sofiya posed more questions: What did your technician do? Why did he not tell the
hospital anything? How could Liev have arrived here without source or cause? Each of her
questions grew increasingly disgusted.
I myself have wondered the answers to those questions as intensely as you just have. But
the endless wondering has given me none of their answers. The Filipovs looked away from Dr.
Chakwas, focusing on nothing in particular.
Elena looked down, then at Dr. Z who returned her gaze. And after glancing at floor, she
looked up and said finally, That technician committed suicide the night of your sons arrival at
this hospital.
Valentine, Anna, and Sofiya continued their gaze into each of their respective indiscrete
locations.
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Im sorry that I know hardly anything that you hoped to discover tonight, Elena
apologized adding, But I think I have a way to coax Liev from sleep.
The three Flipovs, who were studying the detailed rug, focusing on Elena words, all
looked into the face of Dr. Elena Chakwas at these words.
* * *
My sister is beside me.
I am laying in bed and she is seated to my right in a gray plastic chair, holding my hand
with both of hers. I see only the top of her head, her nose glued to her thumbs at my hand.
She is crying and talking and crying, but I cant understand her words.
But then I heard them in between the sobs.
They are the words of prayer.
It is a prayer for my life, for my very soul.
* * *
Dr. Chakwas positioned the headband on Anna, saying, Youre not going to feel
anything. Just focus on your husband. Anna and Valentine sat facing each other in gray plastic
chairs along the length of Lievs bed. Curly wires hung from Annas headband terminating at the
headband around Lievs skull. There was a sleeping mask over Lievs eyes.
Dr. Z and Sofiya stood against the wall opposite Liev.
Elena flipped the switch on the console to her right as she gazed into Lievs face, trying
to gage his acceptance of the transmission. He grimaced immediately; a good sign, Elena
thought.
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As Valentine said, What is supposed to happen? Liev reached up and pulled the
sleeping mask from his eyes. Fearing a second coma, Valentine jumped from his seat and pulled
the mask down over his sons eyes. But Elena had already ceased transmission of Annas view of
Valentine Filipov.
Its okay, Elena said with a blank expression, You can take it off.
Dr. Z and Sofiya were now standing close.
With his face hovering over his sons, Valentine slowly slid the mask up.
* * *
I have a memory of my mother crying. I dont remember what happened between the
hallway and seeing my mother, but I remember the lighting. The room was dark, lit only by the
light pouring in through an open doorway. She was sitting on the toilet I think; there were tears
and the noise.
I wanted to help, to make the pain stop hurting, but I didnt know what to do. I didnt
know how to help my mother because she wasnt hurt.
My father came to me and explained that sometimes people cry not because they are hurt
but because they are sad. I asked my father why people cry when they are sad, and he said that
people cry when they are sad because they cannot change what they are sad about.
Unchangeable? What cannot be changed? I was skeptical.
My father was telling me that people go stiff and cannot come back, and sometimes
people go stiff sooner than people think is fair. I asked where the stiff people go, and my father
said that no one in the whole world truly knows, but most people trust that where they go is a
good place. He told me that he hoped I was in a good place, and hoped I would come back.
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My father paused.
When I thought on my fathers last words, I always wondered what he meant by that, but
the confusion never amounted to anything nearly as inscrutable as that pause.
I always thought that memory queer because my father paused for such a long time,
unsure of how to continue. Its duration so long, I cannot remember what he said next; I have a
suspicion I have never heard it in the first place.
Is it a memory at all, or the persistent dream of my waking reality? Was my fathers
image paused each morning by my alarm?
What I do know is that the image of Valentine Filipov pondering his next words remains
with me to this day. However, I honestly cannot say whether it is the image of my father from my
childhood memory, the image of Banionis from Solaris, or a still from the prophetic vision of my
waking reality, paused on my fathers face each morning at the sounding of my alarm. The three
have melded into a single reality inside my mind.
Nevertheless, it is an image that has persisted: the face and mouth of my father searching
for the perfect words.
I saw my fathers mouth taste the words, approving some and dismissing others.
In that pause my father aged, and his image became clear to me. My broken mind came
together, the two pieces made into one by some angel of clarity. Then I felt that age old sensation
between dream and waking. It was a feeling I have not felt in a very long time.
I saw my father speak and heard his words. His language was no longer a memory.
For the first time, waking up felt like I was coming alive.
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Authors Note and Errata
The main inspiration of the story came from a November 2011, TIME article entitled A Flicker of
Consciousness that I found in an online database. I took the family directly from the article, only Valentine is the
vegetative patient in real life, and I created Liev and swapped Anna and Sofiyas roles. The part where Sofiya coaxes
Liev to cry actually happened, only between Valentine and his wife Sofiya.
The visual image capturing using an fMRI came from a March 2012 Mechanical Engineering article about
neurologists capturing the data from the visual center of peoples brain while they watch movies and form images
from the data that nearly match the original film images. I completely fabricated the notion of stimulating visually
impaired, Alzheimers patients minds with the visual data in order to help them retain their memory. This treatment
is not based on any scientific facts.
The film reference was originally The Great Gatsby,but I changed it to Solaris so that the actor Banionis
could be confused with Valentine. Redfords red hair couldnt really fit with a russian named Filipov.
Beyond the direct inspiration, I was also inspired by the idea that certain dreams can be so vivid that they
become difficult to distinguish from actual memories. Over time, it becomes impossible to determine whether the
event actually happened or was merely a dream.
When my brother Mark was young, he thought my dad had pushed him off of our roof, and he became
somewhat afraid of him. My father of course would never do this, but my brother was convinced of it. After my
brother talked with my mother about it, he realized it must have been a dream that had him convinced. I tried to
express this fusion and confusion of dreams and memories in this story, hoping to possibly allow readers to
experience the effect if they have never experienced it in real life.
While some of things in the story are purely fiction, many of the events, locations, and memories found in
the story are based on real events, dreams, memories, and random things from my own life. However, I took many
liberties in adding or removing whatever came to mind at the time of their writing.
The I know / Okay dialogue between the Val and Sofi I stole directly from Cormac McCarthys The
Road.
Scimag is a shortened version of Science and the Imagination, the science fiction class for which I wrote
this story in the first place.
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The Lakes of Canada in Annas dream is a song by The Innocence Mission that I find beautiful. I also
phrased a line in that dream after a lyric in the song Cattail Down by mewithoutYou.
The depressed trouper in Lievs dream was inspired by V from V for Vendetta.
The name Chakwas is the name of a doctor from the video gameMass Effect 2, though the characters are
similar in name only.
I would also like to thank my brother Matt for creating the sweet cover art.
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