Charlie opens this report by
referring to his "escape." The media have picked up the story, and Charlie
reads a newspaper article in which his sister and mother are interviewed. The
article notes that Rose and Norma haven't had any contact with Charlie for
seventeen years. In the article Norma comments that she thought that her
brother was dead, since she had been told this by her mother, until she was
approached to give consent for Charlie to participate in the experiment. Norma
does, however, ask that anyone who knows Charlie's whereabouts contact the
family. The article also notes that Charlie's father is now estranged from his
mother. A picture of Rose in the article makes Charlie anxious, as he recalls
his mother's dual nature, one of loving acceptance and one of harsh physical
treatment. He now questions whether he should seek them out. He has another
memory where his parents argue about institutionalizing him, his mother
desperately calling for it and his father taking a stand against it. For now
Charlie decides not to contact his relatives.
Charlie gets another
apartment close to Times Square. It has a piano which he thinks he may learn
to play. He has picked up the phone to contact Alice but has not gone through
with it. Charlie reserves the second bedroom for Algernon and plans to
construct an elaborate maze in it so that Algernon can continue learning.
Charlie accidentally locks himself out of his apartment and meets his neighbor,
Fay Lillman, a painter with a manic personality. Her apartment is a mess, but
Charlie finds her strangely attractive. Fay accompanies Charlie to his
apartment and comments on his overly organized nature; she also asks him for
some money. When Fay enters Algernon's room, she thinks the maze is a modern
sculpture. Charlie lets Algernon run through the maze, and Fay playfully
discusses the ways that it could be seen as art.
Charlie decides to visit his
father, who now owns a barbershop in the Bronx. He reviews what he remembers
about his father and notes that he admired the man because he had taken Charlie
for what he was, had always defended him, and had treated him as a human
being. His father's shop is in an impoverished part of the city. Charlie
recognizes his father, but his father doesn't recognize him. A nervous Charlie
jerks as his father shaves him, causing his father to accidentally cut him.
This prompts Charlie to recall the night his father took him away to the Warren home. His parents had a loud argument during which his mother complained that she
didn't want him in the house another day because he was ruining life Norma's
life. Rose picked up a knife and threatened to kill Charlie, saying that he'd
be better off dead. Matt took Charlie to his Uncle Herman's house.
When the haircut is
finished, Matt holds up the mirror for Charlie to see the work. The multiple
reflections send Charlie's mind spinning, making him wonder who the real
Charlie Gordon is. He becomes suddenly ill and struggles to decide whether to
reveal himself. He ends up leaving without identifying himself.
Charlie continues to create
more complex mazes for Algernon. Algernon no longer requires food as
motivation; the mouse seems to want to learn for the sake of learning. Yet
Charlie has noticed some abnormalities in Algernon's behavior.
Fay visits Charlie and
brings a female mouse for Algernon. The next time Charlie sees Fay she is
drunk and with a man. Fay invites Charlie to come to her apartment, but he
refuses. At home, alone, Charlie imagines Fay and the other man making love.
He hears an argument develop in Fay's apartment and the man leaves. Moments
later Fay appears at Charlie's apartment, and the two of them discuss the
events. Fay says that she didn't bring the man home to sleep with her, but
Charlie replies that she had to expect some sort of advances. Fay notes that
though she didn't sleep with the man, she might sleep with Charlie. She says
she can't figure him out and asks if he's a homosexual. Charlie vehemently
denies this, and the pair begin to kiss. But Charlie feels somehow removed
from the situation; there's no real passion in the act, and he tells her that
he's not feeling well. Fay asks to spend the night anyway. She gets Charlie
drunk, they end up in bed, and Charlie awakens the next morning with a
hangover. When Charlie asks Fay if he was drunk the night before, she tells
him that he acted very strangely, talking about how he wanted to learn to read
and write, as if he were truly dimwitted. Charlie thinks that being drunk
somehow tapped into the old Charlie. Perhaps the old Charlie never really went
away, he ponders.
Charlie goes to the movies
and restlessly wanders from one film to the next, prompting him to realize that
he is longing for human contact. He ends up at a diner, where a young boy of
limited intelligence drops a tray of dishes. As some of the customers heckle
the boy, Charlie becomes angry and shouts for them to stop it because the boy
is a human being too. Charlie leaves the restaurant and feels ashamed of his
actions. He starts to feel that he should devote his time and intelligence to
helping others become smarter. He vows to ask the Welberg Foundation to allow
him to pursue the issue. He also notes that he can no longer stand to be
alone; he has to contact Alice.
Charlie calls Alice and visits her. She remarks how worried they have been about him, but Charlie tells
her not to scold him, that he needed time to reflect. Charlie discusses how
the old Charlie is still inside of him; he's simply been pushed into the
recesses of his mind. He notes that he believes he has changed recently, that
he can't solve his problems alone and that he needs someone else to help him.
He understands that he needs the company of others. Charlie fantasizes about making
love to Alice, but again his subconscious, the old Charlie, won't let him.
Then he has an idea how to hold the old Charlie at bay: he will make love to Alice but think of Fay. It seems to work, but in the last moments he pushes Alice away. Charlie exclaims that he loves her but that he can't make love to her. He
tells Alice that he doesn't yet understand it, but that the old Charlie simply
won't let him do it. He leaves Alice's apartment, asking her to tell Nemur and
Strauss that he will return to the lab in a few days.
On the street, Charlie
doesn't know which way to turn; he visualizes himself in a maze, his path is
blocked at every turn and he receives shocks when he goes the wrong way. He
boards the subway, buys a bottle of gin, and drinks some of it as he waits to
board a bus. When he returns to his apartment, he looks in on Fay, but she
isn't home. When Fay returns, he spies on her from the fire escape, then goes
to her door and knocks. They drink together and Charlie aggressively pursues
her. They begin to make love on the couch and somehow Charlie knows that this
time he will be able to complete the act. He senses the old Charlie's presence
but manages to push it aside as they make love.
Charlie feels he needs to
finish some of his personal projects before he returns to the lab. He calls a
scientist at another institute to discuss a project he would like to undertake,
but realizes that it will have to wait. Again, he feels a sense of urgency, a
recognition that he is unaware of how much time he might actually have left at
his present state of ability.
Charlie's relationship with
Fay begins to deepen, but she warns him not to try to change her. He feels
that she's exciting to be with and enjoys her free spirit. He recognizes that
he's not in love with her, but he holds a deep affection for her nonetheless.
He notes that the old Charlie has stopped watching them. Charlie writes a
piano concerto for Fay and learns that she was broke when he met her because
she had taken in a destitute woman who ended up stealing her savings. Charlie
loves that Fay is so open and trusting, but she is running him down with their
nightly club hopping.
Charlie finishes several
personal projects, and Alice calls to find out when he is coming back to the
lab. He notes that Algernon's erratic behavior has returned and the female
mouse seems to be afraid of him. The report ends with Charlie commenting that
Algernon bit Fay and attacked the other mouse, Minnie. Charlie feels that
Algernon is confused, noting that there seems to be an urgency in the mouse's
actions. Charlie feels that he must return Algernon to the lab and vows to
call Nemur in the morning.
Analysis
At this point in his
intellectual development, it is easy to see why Charlie would be attracted to
Fay: she is the complete opposite of everything that he has become. Whereas
Charlie is extremely logical, methodical, and structured in all that he does,
Fay is highly freeform in her art and her life. Fay also offers the opportunity
for Charlie to further develop sexually. Charlie's visit to his father's
barbershop is an important milestone in his emotional development, for he has
now reached the point where he can begin to seriously deal with his past.
Unfortunately, his inability to reveal himself to his father illustrates that
he is not yet ready to take this step. The slight abnormalities in Algernon's
behavior and Charlie's odd behavior when drunk further signal that something
may be wrong with the experiment. Charlie's reaction to the boy in the
restaurant and his subsequent need to contact Alice suggests that rather than
establish contact with his family he may be feeling the need to establish his
own family. His failed attempt to make love to Alice shows that the old Charlie
is still dominating his subconscious; however, his ability to make love to Fay
suggests that the conscious mind can develop strategies for dealing with the
unconscious mind. Algernon's attack of his companion mouse and of Fay is a
clear indication that something is wrong with the mouse's mind. The "urgency"
Algernon exhibits in his behavior foreshadows the newly awakened sense of
urgency that Charlie is exhibiting.
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