Overmedicated Kindness
Harold Brinkman hadn’t meant to take three pills—just one. But the extra two rattled in the bottle, and in his foggy logic, it seemed kinder to balance the load. By the time the late-night news muttered its last half hour, the edges of his vision blurred, the ceiling fan warped into a slow-turning flower, and he felt as heavy as a damp quilt. Harold was sixty-two, thick in the middle from decades behind an insurance desk and never refusing seconds. He lived alone in apartment 3B, a rent-controlled one-bedroom in a brick block that smelled faintly of boiled cabbage in winter and cigarette smoke in summer. His evenings followed a sacred routine: slippers, tea, whatever PBS wasn’t interrupting, and bed by ten-thirty. But tonight, the pills tugged the floor far away and cast the hallway lights in a strange, golden glow. Somehow, he found himself fumbling a key into the lock of 3A. The key didn’t fit, but the door wasn’t latched. A small miracle, Harold thought in his haze. Inside, the air ...