CHAPTER ONE
It was Friday afternoon in the office of Babbitt Cars, Los Angeles.‘But I have waited five weeks for these cars. Where are they?’
On another phone, Charlie’s secretary, Susanna, was talking to a customer.
Susanna put her hand over the phone.
‘Tell them I’ll pay oft Monday,’ said Charlie.
Charlie put the phone down and smiled for the first time in a week. Monday.
He looked over at Susanna, his Italian secretary.
‘Are you ready for our weekend in Palm Springs?’
Susanna looked surprised. ‘We’re still going?’
‘Of course,’ said Charlie. ‘Don’t worry about this little problem.
They were driving through the desert when a call came through on Charlie’s car phone.‘Mr Babbitt? Mr Charles Babbitt?’ It was a girl’s voice.‘Yes?’
‘I’m calling for Mr John Mooney. He’s your father’s lawyer…
‘Oh, no!’ Susanna said, her eyes on Charlie.
‘The funeral is on Sunday, Mr Babbitt. I’ve got his telephone number if you…’
But Charlie was not listening. He just continued to look at the road in front of them.
‘Oh, Charlie,’ Susanna said softly. ‘Are you all right?’
He didn’t answer, but a few seconds later he turned off the road and stopped the car. ‘Sorry about the weekend,’ he said finally.
‘Look,’ he said quietly, ‘I hated my father and he hated me.’
Susanna looked across at him.
‘Poor Charlie! That’s very sad.’
‘My mother died when I was two. And then it was just… me and him.’
Susanna bit her lip and touched Charlie on the shoulder. ‘What happened?’
Charlie was silent. Then he said, ‘Nothing I did was ever good enough for him.’
‘I’m going with you to the funeral,’ Susanna said suddenly.
Charlie smiled. ‘That’s nice,’ he said, ‘but you don’t need to.’
‘I want to go,’ Susanna said.
Charlie looked across at Susanna.
‘Where are we going now?’ Susanna asked.
‘East Walnut Hills.’
Walnut Hills is the richest part of Cincinnati. All the houses are big and very expensive.
Charlie parked the car in front of one of the largest, most expensive houses in Walnut Hills — Sanford Babbitt’s house. ‘This is my father’s place,’ he said.
Susanna got out of the car. ‘Is this where you lived when you were a boy?’
‘Yeah, but I left when I was sixteen,’ Charlie said.
‘I had no idea… you came… from all this,’
It was a 1949 Buick Roadmaster.
‘I’ve always known this car,’ Charlie said in a quiet voice, ‘but I only drove it once.’
Near the garage was a flower garden with some wonderful roses.
‘Someone must water those roses,’ said Susanna, who loved flowers.
‘I hate those roses!’ Charlie said suddenly.
Susanna looked at him in surprise, but Charlie was already opening the front door.
Later that afternoon, Charlie and Susanna were looking round Charlie’s old bedroom.‘You know that car in front of the garage?’ Charlie asked suddenly.
‘It’s beautiful.’
‘My father loved that car. The car and the roses.
‘What happened?’
‘My father telephoned the police. He knew I had the car, but he telephoned the police and said, «Someone has stolen my car». The police stopped us and took us to the police station.’ Charlie’s face was angry now. ‘My friends’ parents came for them after an hour. My father left me there for two days.’
‘Two days!’ Susanna said. ‘And you were only sixteen. Poor Charlie!’
But now Charlie was picking up an old coat from a box in the corner of the room.
‘Is that yours, Charlie?’ Susanna asked.
Charlie didn’t answer. He was looking carefully at the little coat.
‘What are you talking about?’
‘What?’ Charlie looked over at Susanna and then back at the coat.
‘Yes, I think everyone does.’
‘What was the name of my secret friend?’ Charlie asked himself.
Susanna laughed and touched Charlie’s arm. ‘What happened to your friend?’
‘I don’t know,’ Charlie said. ‘I just… grew up, I think.’
‘Let’s go and eat.’
Charlie Babbitt and his father’s lawyer, John Mooney, met in the dining-room that evening.Mr Mooney put on his glasses and took some papers from his case.
‘Before I read the will,’ he said, ‘your father has asked me to read you a letter that he wrote to you. Is that all right?’
Charlie did not want to listen to his father’s letter.
‘»To my son, Charles Babbitt. Dear Charles,»‘ the lawyer began.
‘He wrote it,’ Charlie said, with a very small smile. ‘I hear his voice.’
‘»And I remember too,»‘ Mooney continued reading, ‘»the day you left home.
He looked up at Charlie, but there was no change in the young man’s expression.
Mooney did not look up from the letter again. ‘»You did not write, or telephone, or come back into my life in any way. For all these years I have not had a son.
John Mooney stopped reading and put the letter back into its envelope.
Now Mooney picked up the will. Without looking at Charlie, he began to read.
‘»To Charles Sanford Babbitt, I give my 1949 Buick. I also give him my roses.»‘
Charlie moved anxiously in his chair. He did not like what he was hearing.
I am leaving my home and all my money to someone who is very important to me.
‘Your father’s money, around three million dollars, will go to someone who cannot use it,’ Mooney explained. ‘Another person will look after the money.’
So Charlie Babbitt was not getting his father’s house, or his father’s money.
‘What’s the name of the person who is going to get the money?’ he asked.
John Mooney put the will back into his bag. ‘The will says that I cannot tell you.’
Charlie was beginning to get angry.
‘No, it isn’t me,’ Mooney said. The old lawyer stood up and picked up his hat.
‘Who is it then?’‘I’m sorry, Charles,’ Mooney said.
‘I’m your father’s lawyer. I can’t tell you.’
‘Sanford Babbitt. You want to be his son for five minutes?’
Charlie was so angry, he could not continue speaking.
Next morning, he went to his father’s hank and talked to a woman there.
With Susanna next to him, Charlie drove the Buick out of Cincinnati.
‘This is beautiful,’ Susanna said. ‘Where are we going?’
‘We’re going to see a Dr Bruner,’ Charlie answered. He did not say another word.
Twenty minutes later Charlie slowed the car down and turned to the left.
‘But why have we come here, Charlie?’ Susanna asked.
‘It’s something about my father’s will,’ Charlie said. ‘It won’t take long.’
On the way up to the house, they saw a strange man.
‘I’d like to see Dr Bruner, please.’
The nurse took them into a comfortable waiting-room.
The nurse left the room.
‘Charlie,’ Susanna called. ‘Where are you going?’
She followed him into the other room where a group of people were watching television. Others sat at tables, playing with children’s games.
‘I don’t like being here, Charlie,’ Susanna said.
Dr Bruner was a big man. He was about fifty-six, with grey hair and a calm face.
‘Could you please tell me the name of the person who will get my father’s money?’
‘I’m sorry. I cannot tell you that.’ Just like Mooney.
‘Why is it a secret?’ Charlie left his chair and went over to stand by the window.
From the window, Charlie could see the old Buick. Susanna was sitting in the back, enjoying the afternoon sun. A small man, carrying a bag, moved towards the car. He walked in a strange way, moving from side to side.
‘Mr Babbitt, I knew your father from the time you were two years old,’
‘The year my mother died,’ he said quickly.
‘Yes,’ said Bruner. ‘Now, the will names me as the person to look after the money. But this hospital and I get none of that money. I am doing this for your father.’
Charlie was beginning to feel very angry. To calm himself, he turned back to the window. The man with the bag was now standing next to the Buick.
‘I think you have been upset,’ Bruner said softly, ‘by a man who never knew how to show love.’Charlie knew that this was true.
He did not know what to say. Outside, the man was taking a small notebook out of his bag. He began writing in it.
‘I understand how you feel,’ Dr Bruner continued. ‘But there’s nothing I can do.’
‘I’ll fight for my money, Dr Bruner,’ Charlie said.
Dr Bruner got up from his chair. ‘I’m sure you are a fighter, Mr Babbitt,’ he said.
Dr Bruner walked with Charlie out through the front door.
The little man with the bag was still standing by the Buick.
‘Raymond,’ said Dr Bruner, ‘go back inside.’
The man with the notebook was not listening. He continued writing in the notebook.
‘Of course, this car is not white,’ Raymond said.
Charlie looked at Raymond in surprise. He was a small man of about forty.
Smiling, Charlie turned to Susanna. ‘You know,’ he said slowly, ‘this car was white.
‘And, and,’ Raymond continued quickly to himself, ‘… it cost an arm and a leg.’
The smile left Charlie’s face.
Charlie looked at the man called Raymond. Raymond looked up for a second.
But Charlie was moving closer to Raymond. ‘Do you know this car?’ he asked.
A frightened expression came across Raymond’s face. He looked at Dr Bruner for help. ‘I… don’t… know,’ he muttered.
‘Yes, you do know this car!’ Charlie said angrily. ‘Why do you know?’
‘That’s enough, Mr Babbitt,’ Dr Bruner said. ‘You’re upsetting him.
Now Raymond looked from Susanna to Dr Bruner.
‘Babbitt Charlie. Charlie… Babbitt. Charlie Babbitt. 1961 Beechcrest Avenue.’
Charlie was astonished. ‘How do you know that address?’ he asked.
Dr Bruner spoke quietly. ‘Because he’s your brother,’ he said.
‘But I don’t have a brother,’ the astonished Charlie said. ‘I never had a brother.’Charlie and Dr Bruner walked through the flower garden and talked together. Susanna sat with Raymond, who was still writing in his notebook.
‘What can I tell you?’ the doctor asked.
‘Where to begin?’
‘What does he write in that notebook?’
‘He writes down things that he thinks are dangerous.
‘Why does he do that?’
‘I think he writes dangerous things down to try and hide them.
‘What do you mean?’
‘Raymond always eats the same way, sleeps the same way, talks the same way. Everything.
Dr Bruner looked at Charlie for a second or two, then he continued. ‘Raymond cannot have relationships with other people, and he cannot see the relationship between things. He talks to you, but he also talks to the car and the television. Everything is the same to him. Doctors call this sort of person autistic.’
Charlie thought about this. It was difficult to understand.
‘And the most important thing is that Raymond can’t feel.
‘What Raymond did with you today… that was very good,’ Dr Bruner said softly.
Charlie shook his head and laughed. ‘The world is strange,’ he said.
It was late afternoon. Charlie was walking with Raymond.
Charlie walked quickly towards the Buick. Raymond walked next to him.
‘This is Daddy’s car,’ Raymond said. ‘It was white. But now this is a blue car.’
Charlie got into the Buick. ‘Get in, Raymond,’ he said.
Raymond got into the car.
‘Charlie, wait a minute!’ Susanna said. ‘Where are we taking him?’
‘For a holiday,’ Charlie said. He started the car and they drove away.
‘Don’t worry, Raymond,’ Susanna told him, ‘you’re coming back.’
Charlie said nothing.They drove back to Cincinnati.
They went to a hotel, and took two rooms. Charlie showed Raymond his room.
‘This is your room, Ray,’ he said.
That was a big mistake.
Raymond looked around the room. ‘This is not my room,’ he said.
‘Just for tonight,’ Charlie said.
‘Until we take you home,’ Susanna said.
But Raymond was very upset now. He was shaking his head from side to side and muttering to himself. ‘Of course, I’m going to be here a long time. A very long time… Of course, they moved my bed.’
‘Sorry, Raymond,’ Charlie said. ‘You like the bed under the window.’
But Raymond was still unhappy. He started muttering about books.
‘Charlie, let’s take him home,’ Susanna said.
‘He’s OK,’ Charlie said. ‘Do you like pizza, Ray?’
‘Do you like pizza, Charlie Babbitt?’ Raymond knew the word ‘pizza’ because ‘pizza’ was a Wallbrook word. This calmed him a little.
‘I’ll ask the hotel to send a pizza up to your room,’ Charlie said.
‘Charlie, he still doesn’t look happy,’ Susanna said.
‘Ray’s fine,’ Charlie said, ‘all he needs is some TV and some pizza.
Raymond looked at his watch. ‘The Lucky Money Wheel,’ he told the watch.
‘Great. Sit down, and you can watch it.’
Charlie turned on the television. The Lucky Money Wheel came on.
‘You’ve got your TV,’ Charlie said. ‘You’ve got a pizza coming.
Charlie looked at Raymond and Raymond looked at Charlie, but there was no expression on his face.‘Do you ever smile, Ray?’ Charlie asked.
‘Do you ever smile?’ Raymond repeated. There was still no expression on his face.
Raymond sat on his bed and watched television. Charlie came in with a pizza.
Ray looked at the pizza and shook his head. ‘What’s the problem, Ray?’
Raymond wanted to eat the pizza the way that he ate it at Wallbrook.
Charlie and Susanna went off to their room. Raymond watched a film.
Raymond continued to look at the television, but now there was nothing to watch. He heard the sound of another television in Charlie and Susanna’s room.
Charlie and Susanna were in bed. They did not see Raymond come into the room. Raymond sat on
Susanna saw him first. ‘Charlie,’ she said, in a quiet voice.
Charlie sat up and saw that Raymond was watching TV and eating pizza. ‘Raymond, what are you doing in here?’ he shouted. ‘Get out!’
Raymond got up and went back to his room.
‘What for?’ Charlie asked.
‘Because he’s frightened,’ Susanna said.
Susanna was astonished. ‘What do you mean he’s not going back to Wallbrook?’
Charlie looked away from her and bit his lip. ‘I took Raymond,’ he said quietly,
Susanna’s eyes widened. ‘What money?’ she asked.
‘Dad left Ray some money. A lot of money.’
Money! Now Susanna was beginning to understand.
Charlie looked away again. ‘He left him his house and all his money,’ he said. ‘Three million dollars.’
Susanna muttered some angry words in Italian and jumped out of bed.
‘What are you doing?’ Charlie asked.
‘I’m leaving you, Charlie.’ She was coldly angry.
Now Charlie was astonished. ‘Why?’ he asked.
Susanna pushed her things into the suitcase and pulled on her coat.
‘I have not kidnapped him! I just want my money. What’s wrong with that?’
‘Everything!’ Susanna shouted. She looked at Charlie for a second and shook her head. Then she picked up her suitcase and moved towards the door. When she got to the door, she turned and looked at Charlie again. ‘I did love you, Charlie,’ she said sadly. ‘But you are not the man that I thought you were.’The next morning Charlie took Raymond to have breakfast in a cheap restaurant near their hotel.
A pretty waitress came to their table. ‘Good morning,’ she said.
Raymond read the girl’s name on the front of her dress.
Sally Dibbs was astonished. ‘How do you know my telephone number?’ she asked.
Charlie was also astonished. He looked at Sally and then at Raymond.
‘How do you know her number, Raymond?’ he asked.
‘The telephone book,’ Raymond muttered. ‘In the hotel. The telephone book.’
‘You read the telephone book!’ Charlie said. He turned to the waitress and laughed.
‘This is Tuesday,’ Raymond said. ‘Breakfast is coffee and cakes.’
‘That’s fine,’ Charlie said to the waitress. ‘We’ll have coffee and cakes.’
The waitress went to get the food. Suddenly, an anxious expression came across Raymond’s face. ‘Where are the toothpicks?’ he asked.
‘We don’t need toothpicks for cakes,’ Charlie said.
Raymond shook his head from side to side.
Charlie closed his eyes and counted to ten. ‘All right, Raymond,’ he said.
Charlie was on the phone. ‘Dr Bruner, this is Charlie Babbitt.’
Dr Bruner was silent for a second. Then he asked calmly, ‘Where are you, son?’
‘That’s not important,’ Charlie said. ‘What is important is who I’m with.’
‘You have to bring Raymond back, Mr Babbitt,’ the doctor said.
‘Yes, I will,’ Charlie said. ‘When I get my one and a half million dollars, sir.
‘I can’t do that, Mr Babbitt. You know I can’t.’
Charlie turned to watch Raymond. He wasn’t at their table! Then he saw him: Raymond was looking all round the restaurant. He still did not have his toothpicks.
‘Bring him back, Mr Babbitt,’ Dr Bruner repeated. ‘Bring him back now.’
‘I have not kidnapped him,’ Charlie said. This was something which worried him. Was Susanna right? Was Charlie the Businessman now Charlie the Criminal?
‘I know you haven’t kidnapped him,’ Dr Bruner said.
Charlie breathed more easily.
‘But we know how to look after Raymond here,’ Dr Bruner continued.
Raymond was still looking round the restaurant for toothpicks.
‘I’m Raymond’s brother,’ Charlie said into the phone, ‘and my lawyer says I can get custody of him.
‘It’s not your money, Mr Babbitt,’ the doctor was saying.
Charlie was not listening. He was waving to the waitress.
‘Toothpicks!’ he shouted and he pointed at Raymond. ‘He wants toothpicks!’
‘I cannot give you what you want, Mr Babbitt,’ Dr Bruner continued.
At last, Sally gave Raymond a full box of toothpicks.
Charlie was getting angry. ‘Dr Bruner, you’ve made a big mistake!’ he said.
Raymond stood up quickly and knocked the box of toothpicks off the table.
‘Oh, Raymond!’ Charlie shouted.
But Raymond was looking down at the toothpicks on the floor. ‘Eighty-two,’
Charlie shook his head.
Raymond’s expression didn’t change. ‘Eighty-two, eighty-two, eighty-two.
Charlie turned to Sally Dibbs. ‘How many toothpicks in the box?’ he asked.
The girl picked up the box and read the number off it. ‘Two hundred and fifty.’
Charlie smiled at his brother. ‘That was very close, Raymond,’ he said.
As they walked to the door, Sally Dibbs called after them.
‘He was right! There were two hundred and forty-six toothpicks on the floor.
At the airport Charlie telephoned his office. The news was not good. Both the bank and the customer for the Lamborghini cars were still very unhappy.
Charlie picked up his bag. ‘OK, Raymond,’ he said. ‘We’ve got to move quickly.
Charlie pointed out through the window at the plane.
‘Crash,’ he muttered. ‘That plane… crashed in August. August 16, 1987.
‘That was a different plane, Ray,’ Charlie said. ‘This is a beautiful plane.
‘Crash,’ Raymond muttered. ‘Crash and burn.’
Charlie did not know what to do. They had only four minutes to catch the plane.
Charlie put his hand on Raymond’s arm.
For a second, Charlie just looked at his brother with an astonished expression. Then he saw that he had to calm Raymond down. ‘It’s OK, Raymond,’ he said quickly. ‘It’s OK. We’ll drive to Los Angeles.
Raymond stopped screaming. His body stopped shaking and slowly the anxious expression left his face.
‘I’m sorry, Raymond,’ Charlie said softly. ‘I’m sorry I upset you.’
Charlie turned and began walking out of the airport.
He needed to get back to Los Angeles fast to try and save his business.
The next evening they stopped at a hotel. Their room had a small bathroom. Charlie went in to have
But Raymond continued cleaning his teeth.
‘Will you stop that, Ray!’ Charlie said.
Raymond did not stop. ‘You like it, Charlie Babbitt,’ he muttered.
Charlie shook his head. ‘No, I do not like it!’ he shouted.
‘You say, «Funny Rain Man… funny teeth.»‘
Suddenly Charlie stopped shouting. Fumy Rain Man. Rain Man! That was the name of his secret friend when he was a child. ‘What did you say?’ he asked.
‘You can’t say Raymond,’ his brother said. ‘You’re a baby.
Charlie sat down on the side of the bath. He didn’t know what to think.
Raymond put his hand in his pocket and pulled out an envelope.
Charlie took the photograph and looked at it. A young man of about eighteen was looking at the camera, but not smiling. He was holding a baby in his arms.
‘Daddy took the picture,’ Raymond said.
Charlie looked at the photograph for a long time. He was astonished.
‘And you… lived with us then? When… did you leave us?’
‘It was Thursday,’ Raymond said.
‘Which Thursday, Ray?’
‘It was snowing outside. Maria stayed with you when Daddy took me to my home. January 21st, 1965. On a Thursday.’
‘That’s when our mother died,’ Charlie breathed softly. ‘Just after New Year.’
‘And you had your coat. And you waved to me from the window. Goodbye,
Suddenly Charlie remembered deep into his past. He remembered the snow.
‘I sat with that coat,’ Charlie said.
For a minute Raymond just looked at his brother.
When Raymond finished singing, Charlie moved closer to him.
But Raymond was cleaning his teeth again. Charlie picked up the photograph and muttered something about how nice it was. Then he put it down on the side of the bath and turned on the water.
Suddenly Raymond began to scream. ‘No, no, no, no!’ Charlie looked up and saw
Quickly, Charlie turned off the water. He remembered it all now. His brother giving
That was why his father sent Raymond to Wallbrook. That was the end of the relationship between Charlie and Rain Man. And poor Raymond remembered it all.
‘It’s OK, Ray,’ Charlie said softly to his brother. ‘It’s OK, man. I didn’t bum. I’m fine.’
It was late. Raymond was sleeping on one of the two beds in the hotel room. Charlie lay on the other bed, and smoked a cigarette. He felt very tired and very sad. He needed someone to love.
Charlie pulled the telephone towards him.
‘Hello?’
‘Hello, it’s me, Charlie,’ he said softly.
There was no answer.
‘I… I just want to hear… that our relationship is not…’ Charlie waited for Susanna to say something. When she still did not speak, he said, ‘I’m frightened that it’s finished between us.’
Finally, Susanna spoke. ‘Don’t ask me today, Charlie. You won’t like my answer. Give me some time.’
‘I’m… going to get custody of Ray. I’ve talked to my lawyer and he says that it is possible. Firstly, I have to take Ray to see a special doctor in Los Angeles.’
She didn’t understand. Nobody understood his relationship with Raymond.
Susanna didn’t say yes, but she didn’t say no either.The next morning Charlie heard more bad news from the office. They were taking the Lamborghinis away. And Charlie had very little money left. He was paying for everything with his American Express card.
Charlie and Ray sat together in the hotel restaurant.
Raymond looked over at the table.
‘Of course that bill is ninety-three dollars, forty,’ Raymond said.
Charlie laughed. ‘How can you know that, Ray?’
‘Ninety-three dollars, forty,’ Raymond repeated.
The waitress returned with the bill. Charlie read over her shoulder.
‘How do you do it, Ray?’ Charlie asked.
‘Today is Thursday,’ Raymond said. ‘Thursday is coffee and cakes.
Charlie looked at his brother. Suddenly he had an idea.
‘Raymond,’ he asked his brother. ‘Have you ever played cards?’
The next day they arrived in Las Vegas.
‘Do you understand how to play now, Raymond?’
‘I count cards,’ said Raymond.
‘Yes, but you must never say that.’
They went into the Golden Casino at four o’clock in the afternoon. They sat down at one of the card tables. Five hours later, they got up from the card table.
He smiled at his brother. ‘Raymond, you have won us ninety thousand dollars.’
Raymond did not look up from the television he now carried everywhere in his hand. ‘Eighty-nine thousand, seven hundred and fifty-six dollars,’ he said.
And that was only in one visit! ‘You’re going to make us rich, Ray,’ Charlie said.
Raymond looked from his television to his watch.
Charlie smiled. Raymond was still Raymond. ‘Ray, we’re going to stay in the best room in the hotel here,’ he said. ‘Tomorrow we’re going to come down and enjoy ourselves. Perhaps we’ll find you a girl.’
Raymond was watching his television again. ‘A girl,’ he repeated.
‘Yes, why not?’
But first Charlie needed a hot bath and a good night’s sleep.
There was a knock on the door. Charlie opened it. ‘Susanna!’
‘How did you know we were here?’ Charlie asked her. Susanna spoke softly.
‘Oh, don’t worry about that,’ Charlie said happily. ‘We have some news to tell you. Ray, tell Susanna what we’ve done.’
‘We played cards,’ Raymond said. ‘I counted cards and we won money.’
‘What?’ Susanna asked.
‘It’s a long story,’ Charlie said, pulling Susanna towards the bedroom.
Raymond knocked on the bedroom door.
‘Come in,’ Charlie called.
Raymond opened the door and stood there with his little television in his hand.
‘Six minutes until I find a girl. To dance with,’ Raymond said. ‘You said ten o’clock.’
‘A girl?’ Susanna asked.
Charlie was getting out of bed. ‘I taught him to dance. Now, we’re going to try to find him a girl to dance with.’
‘Five minutes,’ Raymond said.
They walked round the Golden Casino for an hour. It was very difficult to find a girl for Raymond to dance with. To other people Raymond seemed strange.
Charlie pointed to one of the tables. ‘This is where we played cards,’ he said. Suddenly, he felt a hand on his shoulder. He turned around to see two big men in suits.‘Mr Babbitt?’‘Yes?’
‘The boss wants to see you, please,’ one of the men said. He did not smile and Charlie guessed that there was a problem.
Charlie turned to Susanna. ‘Can you take Raymond back to our hotel room?’
‘Of course,’ Susanna said.
Susanna and Raymond took the lift back to their room. Raymond was watching
In the lift, Susanna looked at Raymond and felt sad for him.
‘I’ve danced with Charlie Babbitt,’ Raymond said. ‘One time. With Charlie Babbitt.’
The music from the dancing below came into the lift.
Susanna stopped the lift between two floors.
The song came to an end. Susanna started the lift again.
Later Charlie came up to the room. He looked very tired. ‘We have to leave here tomorrow,’ he said. ‘They won’t let us play cards here again.’
‘Why not?’ Susanna asked.
‘Because we won,’ said Charlie, ‘and they don’t like people winning.
Once Raymond drove the car for a few minutes.
‘I’m a… very good… driver,’ Raymond said.
Susanna got out at her flat in Santa Monica. Charlie and Raymond drove on to Charlie’s house in Los Angeles.
There was a letter waiting for Charlie. It was from Dr Bruner.
‘Mr Babbitt, I want to stop playing games,’ Dr Bruner said.
This doctor will decide who gets custody of Raymond. And you are going to lose.’
‘I think that is for the doctor to decide,’ Charlie said.
‘You think you have helped Raymond!’ Dr Bruner said. ‘But Raymond is still autistic. He will always be autistic! Neither you nor I can change that fact.’
Charlie turned to go. ‘I’ll see you on Friday, Dr Bruner.’
‘Don’t you understand, Charlie?’ Dr Bruner called. ‘Even if they give you custody of Raymond, you will not get your father’s money. I don’t have to pay you anything.’
‘Goodbye, Dr Bruner,’ Charlie said, walking away.
Dr Bruner called after him. ‘I’ll give you two hundred and fifty thousand dollars to have Raymond back now.’
Charlie stopped walking and turned round to face the doctor. He shook his head.
Friday came. Dr Marston sat at his desk. Next to him was Dr Bruner.
‘There’s no easy way to say this, Mr Babbitt,’ Dr Marston began.
He did not need to continue. Charlie understood.
‘They can look after him there,’ Dr Marston said.
‘But Raymond has changed,’ Charlie said angrily.
Dr Marston and Dr Bruner sat silently for a minute.
‘How was your holiday, Raymond? Tell me what you did.’
Raymond held his little TV to his heart. ‘I played cards,’ he said. ‘
Dr Bruner laughed. ‘You drove a car, Raymond?’
‘It was on a quiet road,’ Charlie said.
‘And I danced with Susanna,’ Raymond said.
Even Charlie was surprised at this.
Dr Bruner took a pen from his pocket and wrote something down in a notebook. Then he turned to Raymond.
‘I want to stay with Charlie Babbitt,’ Raymond said.
‘You see,’ Charlie said. ‘Raymond wants to stay with me.’
But Dr Bruner did not look at Charlie. He looked at Raymond.
‘I want to go back to Wallbrook.’
Dr Bruner wrote again in his notebook. Dr Marston also wrote something down.
‘But what do you want to do, Raymond?’ Dr Bruner asked again.
Raymond was now breathing very deeply. He shook his head from side to side, and moved uncomfortably in his chair. ‘Wallbrook… Charlie Babbitt… Wallbrook… Charlie Babbitt,’ he muttered.
Charlie jumped out of his chair. ‘Stop asking him all these questions,’ he shouted. ‘You’re upsetting him.’
Now Dr Bruner looked at Charlie. ‘I’m showing you that Raymond is still autistic, Charlie,’ he said calmly.
Charlie sat down and put his head in his hands. He saw that they would never give him custody of Raymond. Perhaps they were right.
But Charlie gave Raymond something they could not give him at Wallbrook.
All Charlie wanted was the best for Raymond.
‘Ray, they want you to go back to Wallbrook,’ Charlie said slowly to his brother.
It was a lovely picture of the eighteen-year-old Raymond and the two-year-old Charlie.
Rain Man and Charlie. Brothers. Raymond handed the photograph to Charlie.
Charlie began to cry softly.
‘Are you all right, son?’ Dr Bruner asked.
Charlie looked up and smiled. Then he turned to his brother.
‘I’m a very good driver,’ Raymond said.
An incensed Charlie manages to learn that the trustee is involved with Walbrook,
(Valeria Golino),
Charlie learns that the trustee is the head of the institution. As he is about to leave, Charlie meets a man named Raymond (Dustin Hoffman), who has recognized the classic car as his father’s. To his surprise, Charlie learns that Raymond is his brother, whom he never knew about.
From Dr. Bruner (the trustee), Charlie learns that Raymond is an autistic-savant, and is very high-functioning. Raymond has an incredible ability to remember information, but expresses virtually no emotion (unless he is upset). Seeing an opportunity, Charlie sneaks Raymond out of the institution and essentially holds him hostage: he tells Dr. Bruner over the phone that when the doctor hands over half of the $3 million, he will bring Raymond back.
When Dr. Bruner refuses to give in, Charlie decides to take Raymond to California, where he will attempt to get custody of Raymond (and therefore, the money). Susanna, upset at what Charlie is doing, leaves; Charlie is left alone with Raymond.
The next day, the brothers go to the airport, but Raymond, who remembers every airline crash in recent history, refuses to fly.
An irked Charlie decides to drive to L.A.
Very quickly, he becomes incredibly frustrated with Raymond, whose routines disrupt the road trip. Raymond insists on watching the same TV shows every day, no matter where they are; he cannot sleep unless the room is arranged exactly the same as his one at Walbrook; and he wants to eat the same food that is served at Walbrook.
When he gets nervous, Raymond begins reciting Abbott and Costello’s “Who’s on First” routine. Charlie also learns that Raymond is a math savant – he can do incredibly complex math problems almost immediately in his head, and he can count hundreds of objects at extreme speed. Eventually, Charlie realizes that he had met Raymond: what he had always thought was an imaginary friend,
Rain Man, was actually his older brother. When Raymond accidentally harmed the toddler Charlie, he was put in Walbrook.
Just after the boys pass Las Vegas, Charlie learns that needs $80,000 to cover his business deal. Remembering Raymond’s talent for calculating and remembering, Charlie teaches him to count cards. They then return to Vegas, where they win big at the blackjack table.
That night, Charlie also teaches Raymond how to dance, and Susanna comes back to Charlie. When they finally get to Los Angeles, Dr. Bruner is waiting for them. He offers Charlie a lump sum of $250,000 to essentially forget about Raymond, but Charlie refuses.
During the hearing, he tells Bruner and the psychiatrist (who is hearing the arguments) that while he was initially after the money, he know cares more about Raymond.
When Raymond is asked where he wants to live, he is shown to be incapable of deciding;he also becomes upset at all the questions.
Charlie stops the questioning, and in
a private moment, tells Raymond that he is glad to have him for a big brother.
The next day, Charlie takes Raymond to the train station, where he will be traveling back to Walbrook with Dr. Bruner.
Charlie promises to visit Raymond in two weeks.


