Dr. Edgar Havens kept a journal. It was his professional habit--to document, to classify, to impose order upon the chaos of the human mind through the careful application of scientific method.
The journal was bound in black leather, its pages filled with neat handwriting and precise observations. It contained the case histories of hundreds of patients: women suffering from hysteria, men afflicted with what the French called nostalgia, children who had seen things they could not unsee. But the journal I am speaking of--the one I am writing about now--is not Dr. Havens' professional...
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