Level Zero Dan McDowell (books to read in your 20s female .TXT) đ
- Author: Dan McDowell
Book online «Level Zero Dan McDowell (books to read in your 20s female .TXT) đ». Author Dan McDowell
Not again.
âWhatâs your deal with me, man? Iâm just here to do a job. I didnât do nothinâ to bother you.â
âForget it,â Joe said. âLet me pour this on you. Itâll make you right as rain. You know, I think youâre alright. Your story might even make âhonorable mentionâ up top on Level Seven, Surprise and Scare. Letâs dig up your wifeâs parakeet and dog, give âem to Chris, and have him stuff âem and put âem on the floor for inspiration. Taxidermy and Texas go well together, donât they? If youâre lucky, I might even pump your useless behind up with formaldehyde and stick you in a glass case, too.â
Livewire studied the cuts on his arms, watching them heal as Joe poured a clear liquid over them. Creeper Joe grinned as he stared at Livewire.
âThatâs better, isnât it?â
âNo, no⊠This ainât right. I ainât got no business messinâ around here.â
âTake a swill while youâre at it,â Joe said. âIâm sure youâll see something worthwhileâŠâ
âNope,â Livewire said. âWhatâs going on here?â He tried to stand up and Joe knocked him back to the floor.
âHealing waterâŠâ Joe said. âIsnât that what you called it?â
I donât believe this.
âSay what?â
âSpring of Life. You give to Oak Hollow. It gives back to those it deems worthy.â
âSay no more.â
Iâve got to stay in good graces with this guy. I bet I can get on more comfortable terms treatinâ him better than he deserves. The freakâs never had a support structure a day in his life. Thereâs somethinâ strange about him. Some kind of aura⊠I donât know.
CHAPTER TWENTY-SEVEN
TODD ADAMS looked into Julieâs eyes as his next therapy session went by at a snailâs pace. The rearrangement to the room since their previous session unsettled him.
Find a distraction. The time will go by faster. Sheâs an airhead. Did she change the order of her degrees on the wall? The doctorate used to be on the top.
She continued her discourse, âThe thing about the manic and the depressive is that they are day and night with each other. Yin and Yang. Sometimes, Iâll see a patient, and theyâll be a lovely spring lily, standing out amongst a field of others that are all the same. The next time I see them, theyâre withered away, flat, and out of the frame while the others grow and blossom. Fast forward another session later, and I see an entire field⊠dark and charred, no lilies in sight, and then the strangest thing happens⊠a fire poppy grows amidst a field of ash.â
Why do you have to be so good looking? Your analogies could use some work, thoughâŠ
Todd smiled. âAnd whatâs that to me? Why do you feel the urge to tell me this?â
âI think you have the potential to be all of them. Youâve got to watch yourself so you can sense when the seasons are changing. Most folks bob up and down near the middle, about like a metronome, up, down, up, down. Being cyclical in our mood isnât a foreign concept. For others, the cycle is more chaotic, up, up, up, up, down, down, down, down, up, up, up, up, up, up, up, up, down, down, down, down, down, down, down. Then just when youâre expecting to go back up again and find a normalcy in your cycle, you get a burst of up or down so high or low, you feel youâre going to fly right off the rails.â
So deep. This talk is libâŠerating.
âTodd, look at me. Whereâs your head? There are solutions buried deep within you. Youâre already helping by talking to me and taking the medication. Now youâve just got to connect the dots with where your mood is. Neutralize the worst parts of yourself when youâre out of sorts and capitalize on the very best of yourself when youâre on top of your game.â She adjusted herself across from one side of the office chair to the other and sighed. âListen, Iâm not here to sugar-coat anything. Iâm here to help you improve your life.â
Todd smirked. He flung a magazine off the table into the floor, knocking over Julieâs glass of water.
âTodd, whatâs going on?â
âAnd just like that, she explains why the world spins at an angle⊠when we all knew that already. Look, I appreciate what youâre saying and you trying to help me pull it together. The thing is, Iâm dealing with something worse than a little mania here, Julie. Itâs a fu⊠itâs a nightmare.â
âSay it how you feel it. You donât have to censor yourself around me. Let out that pinned up emotion. This is a safe-haven.â
I canât say it how I feel it. Are you kidding me? Self-control. Good man. Good man.
âHow I feel it? Okay, then. I think youâre beautiful. I think this relationship could lead me to trouble. I think that Iâm capable of a lot of things I want to be capable of, and even more that I donât. Whatâs the point? How do you fix that? I take my medication. I do my exercise. I even went out like you told me the other night and met somebody. Just as luck would have it, sheâs a soon to be divorcee with a chip on her shoulder the size of Alaska. So⊠what the hell do I do with that? You got a solution for me?â Toddâs voice rose to an excessive yell, âDoes your little DSM tell you how to deal with this shit?â He flipped the end table over and stood up, towering over Julie.
Julie reached her hand out and grabbed his arm. âI donât appreciate the damage to my office, Todd. Weâll get to that later. Itâs okay. Iâm here to help you.â
Toddâs mind raced away, and he glimpsed into the past through another manâs eyes.
A middle-aged man stood in the middle of a pasture, staring down at him. He was soft-spoken.
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