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The Silent Patient summary by Afroz Khatib

Afroz_Khatib
7
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The average realized release rate over the past 30 days is 7 chs / week.
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Chapter 1 - Prologue

I don't know why I'm writing this.

That's not true. Maybe I do know and just don't want to admit it to myself

I don't even know what to call it—this thing I'm writing. It feels a little

pretentious to call it a diary. It's not like I have anything to say. Anne Frank

kept a diary—not someone like me. Calling it a "journal" sounds too

academic, somehow. As if I should write in it every day, and I don't want to

—if it becomes a chore, I'll never keep it up.

Maybe I'll call it nothing. An unnamed something that I occasionally write

in. I like that better. Once you name something, it stops you seeing the

whole of it, or why it matters. You focus on the word, which is just the tiniest

part, really, the tip of an iceberg. I've never been that comfortable with

words—I always think in pictures, express myself with images—so I'd never

have started writing this if it weren't for Gabriel.

I've been feeling depressed lately, about a few things. I thought I was doing

a good job of hiding it, but he noticed—of course he did, he notices

everything. He asked how the painting was going—I said it wasn't. He got

me a glass of wine, and I sat at the kitchen table while he cooked.

I like watching Gabriel move around the kitchen. He's a graceful cook—

elegant, balletic, organized. Unlike me. I just make a mess.

"Talk to me," he said.

"There's nothing to say. I just get so stuck in my head sometimes. I feel like I'm wading through mud."

"Why don't you try writing things down? Keeping some kind of record?

That might help."

"Yes, I suppose so. I'll try it."

"Don't just say it, darling. Do it."

"I will."

He kept nagging me, but I did nothing about it. And then a few days later he

presented me with this little book to write in. It has a black leather cover

and thick white blank pages. I ran my hand across the first page, feeling its

smoothness—then sharpened my pencil and began.

He was right, of course. I feel better already—writing this down is

providing a kind of release, an outlet, a space to express myself. A bit like

therapy, I suppose.

Gabriel didn't say it, but I could tell he's concerned about me. And if I'm

going to be honest—and I may as well be—the real reason I agreed to keep

this diary was to reassure him—prove that I'm okay. I can't bear the

thought of him worrying about me. I don't ever want to cause him any

distress or make him unhappy or cause him pain. I love Gabriel so much.

He is without doubt the love of my life. I love him so totally, completely,

sometimes it threatens to overwhelm me. Sometimes I think—

No. I won't write about that.

This is going to be a joyful record of ideas and images that inspire me

artistically, things that make a creative impact on me. I'm only going to write positive, happy, normal thoughts.

No crazy thoughts allowed.