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Billy
told
the
writer
of
disturbing
changes
he
was
noticing
in
himself
.
Without
switching
to
Tommy
,
he
opened
locked
doors
without
keys
.
He
rode
his
new
motorcycle
without
switching
to
Ragen
,
yet
he
rode
it
as
Ragen
would
have
,
up
steep
hills
.
He
felt
the
pulsating
adrenaline
,
as
Ragen
had
felt
it
,
physically
aware
of
himself
every
muscle
working
well
to
do
the
things
he
was
now
able
to
do
,
though
he
himself
had
never
been
on
a
bike
before
.
He
also
found
himself
becoming
antisocial
,
annoyed
at
the
other
inmates
,
impatient
with
the
staff
.
He
had
the
strange
sense
of
wanting
desperately
to
get
a
six
-
foot
metal
rod
with
a
hook
at
the
end
and
go
down
to
the
electric
terminal
.
He
knew
where
the
U
-
80
current
transformer
was
.
By
pulling
it
down
,
he
could
turn
the
juice
off
.
He
argued
with
himself
that
it
was
wrong
.
If
the
pole
lights
went
off
in
the
street
,
someone
might
have
a
wreck
.
But
why
did
he
want
to
do
it
?
Then
he
remembered
one
night
when
his
mother
and
Chalmer
had
been
arguing
.
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Unable
to
stand
it
,
Tommy
had
gone
off
on
his
bicycle
down
Spring
Street
.
He
d
(
ridden
to
the
terminal
,
crawled
in
and
knocked
the
electricity
out
.
Tommy
knew
that
when
the
lights
went
out
,
people
got
(
calmer
.
They
d
have
to
stop
fighting
.
Three
streets
had
lost
power
Hubert
Avenue
,
Methoff
Drive
and
Spring
Street
.
When
he
got
back
it
was
dark
,
but
the
argument
was
over
,
and
Dorothy
and
Chalmer
were
sitting
in
the
kitchen
,
drinking
coffee
by
candlelight
.
That
s
what
had
made
him
want
to
do
it
again
now
.
He
d
heard
from
Kathy
that
Dorothy
had
been
having
some
bad
arguments
with
Del
.
Billy
smiled
as
he
looked
up
at
the
power
xansformer
.
Just
a
case
of
sociopathic
deja
vu
.
He
also
suspected
there
was
something
else
wrong
with
him
iow
,
because
he
had
little
interest
in
sex
.
He
d
had
opportunities
.
Twice
when
he
was
supposed
to
be
on
leave
at
his
sister
s
louse
,
he
had
checked
into
motels
in
Athens
with
young
vomen
who
had
shown
interest
in
him
,
but
both
times
,
seeing
fie
police
cars
watching
him
from
the
road
,
he
had
given
it
up
.
He
felt
like
a
guilty
kid
anyway
.
He
intensified
his
study
of
himself
watching
the
phases
of
the
)
thers
inside
him
,
and
he
knew
their
influence
was
getting
milder
.
He
had
bought
a
drum
set
during
the
weekend
,
after
playing
on
it
n
the
store
and
being
amazed
at
his
skill
.
Allen
used
to
play
the
drums
,
but
the
ability
now
belonged
to
the
Teacher
and
even
the
unfused
Billy
.
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He
also
played
the
tenor
sax
and
the
piano
,
but
the
drums
gave
him
a
more
powerful
emotional
release
than
any
of
the
other
instruments
.
They
stirred
him
.
When
the
news
reached
Columbus
that
Milligans
treatment
plan
once
again
included
furloughs
,
the
attacks
against
Dr
.
David
Caul
were
renewed
.
The
Ohio
Ethics
Commission
was
instructed
to
begin
an
investigation
with
a
view
to
pressing
charges
against
Caul
for
improper
conduct
in
the
performance
of
his
duties
.
It
was
alleged
that
Milligan
was
receiving
special
privileges
because
Caul
was
secretly
writing
a
book
about
him
.
Since
the
law
required
that
a
complaint
be
lodged
before
such
an
investigation
could
take
place
,
the
Ohio
Ethics
Commission
had
one
of
its
own
attorneys
file
the
complaint
.
Finding
himself
now
attacked
from
another
quarter
,
his
efforts
to
treat
his
patient
compromised
and
his
reputation
and
medical
career
threatened
,
Dr
.
Caul
filed
an
affidavit
on
July
17
,
1979
: