by Mark Fuson
The question was a valid one. Even Tim had noticed Darwin’s distraction since Mary’s arrival in New Haven. The two had been attached at the hips and hands and not a moment went by when the two weren’t together. Tim had not dared ask Darwin his intentions, or even if Mary had been infected yet. He trusted his friend to do the right thing, but Mary was becoming more than just consuming in Darwin’s everyday life –she was even answering the phone in the Mayor’s office in Darwin’s absence.
“Speak of the devil,” Dave uttered under his breath.
“Hey Tim, how’s it going? Dave.” With his anchor in tow Darwin acknowledged Dave in order of rank…last.
Mary stated in pride as she jumped on Darwin’s shoulder, giving him a half hug, “You know Darwin was just showing me the new Hadamar Wellness Retreat. I think it’s simply fantastic that your town can be so progressive in offering a humane center for the mentally deficient. And to think that such progress came from such a young mind!”
“There was more to it than me, Mary.” Darwin chuckled awkwardly. “She’s putting me on a pedestal…it’s embarrassing.”
“You must learn to take credit for your achievements! You’re an amazing thinker, among other things!” Mary replied with a coy expression.
“Oh, Yeah, like what?” Darwin grinned ear to ear and slid his hand onto her ass.
“Like that thing you do with your tongue.” She chuckled devilishly while Darwin’s fingers weaved their way deeper into the crack of her buttocks that was only shielded by a tight pair of denim shorts.
“Okay then.” Dave snorted.
“What’s the matter Dave?” Darwin asked with his perma-grin planted squarely on his face. Receiving no answer, Darwin turned his partial attention to Tim.
“What do you two have planned for the afternoon?” Tim asked politely.
Mary interrupted, “We’re having a picnic. I made some sandwiches and homemade chocolate chip cookies! Darwin wants to show me this hot spring he found in the woods and have lunch there; skinny dipping anyone?”
“What’s a man to do?” Darwin laughed, squeezing her ass tightly causing her to yelp.
“Frankie, let’s go! I want to get back on the road; the kids can eat their pizza slice in the car!” Bryan shouted as he crossed the street towards the lycan leader.
“Bryan, can’t we look around a bit? We just got here!” Frankie pleaded.
“I have to work in the morning and I don’t must be bagged my first day on the job. I promise we can come back here some other time; I agree, pretty town…now in the car!” Bryan corralled.
“Welcome to New Haven, folks enjoying your stay?” Darwin asked like a diligent leader.
“Sure kid. Great time,” Bryan replied.
“Well, you enjoy the rest of your trip! Tim, Dave!” Darwin politely nodded excusing himself from the human who had just offended him in a way that would have meant death if they had been in private.
“See you around Mister Mayor!” Tim hollered as Darwin and Mary walked away.
“Mayor. Huh!” Bryan chuckled, “strange, fucking place.”
The rushed family piled back into the SUV and pulled away seconds later. Frankie looked at all the shops that went by and she commented how it would have been nice to go through some of them. On their way out of downtown the family passed the thrift store where Terri Bonner waved and licked her chops at the passing children.
At the four way stop before turning east to leave town, a young pup on his bike plowed into the side of the SUV. Bryan dashed out of the vehicle and was at the child’s side before Frankie even knew what happened.
“What the fuck?” Bryan shouted as he placed his hand on the shoulder of the child who cowered next to the wheel.
The child snapped at Bryan and quickly grabbed his bike before riding away back down Main Street. The boy looked back in anger at Bryan, but said nothing.
Frankie reassured her husband, “That was strange. I guess he was all right. Anyway he hit us babe, it wasn’t your fault, we were stopped.”
“I know!” he barked. “Little fucker bit me when I tried to help him; drew blood too.” Bryan showed his bleeding finger to his wife as he walked to the driver’s side to depart New Haven.
“Poor baby! You want me to kiss it better?” Frankie mocked lovingly.
“Let’s go, you can do all the kissing you want when we get to Cransen.”
Chapter Twelve
Hadamar Wellness Retreat looked to be a cross between a senior’s complex and a Detox Center. The halls were permeated with the smell of fresh paint that covered up the odor of the former rotting residents-though a hint of bed sores could still be detected by the keenest of noses. Portraits of serene landscapes dotted the corridors that had once meant to remind the residents that peace existed beyond the walls.
Beyond the entry and administrative areas, the stark reality existed. In this place death was harbored and fostered into reality. Hadamar was death; it merely hid its motives and did the worst thing possible. It provided hope to the residents where no such thought should ever have existed.
The facade of the institution was really no different than any other mental hospital. It was nothing more than an illusion; smoke and mirrors to make the public feel better about the treatment of the mentally defunct and deficient. What the image did was encourage families of patients from other states to send their loved ones to Hadamar; by choice or force was inconsequential.
The patient facilities were not as pleasant as the administrative areas. Despite the lower quality, they still boasted services and comforts not traditionally seen in a mental hospital setting. The day room—or TV room as it might have been referred to at Riverview—was made to look like a lobby in a mid-range hotel. Plush carpeting, couches and floor lamps were designed to make the room feel like a home; the first steps in making the patients feel human.
Down the hall was the game room where there was TV and a large selection of video games. This room was carpeted with a Berber style rug and had fun decorations on the wall like old cola advertisements, but it could have easily passed for a recreation room in someone’s home. The pool table was set up ready for its first game that would likely never come but it assured any passing visitors of the good intentions the hospital had.
Kimbel and Giddon had arranged to meet Dave Cronin at Hadamar after they had completed their tour with Doctor Gagnon. The walk around Hadamar was nothing more than a formality, Riverview had weeks, if not days to live and any objections by the duo would only be given lip service.
The administrator and doctor both chuckled to themselves at the posh environment. The patients would soil the furnishings in a matter of days and within weeks the carpets would be destroyed through involuntary and intentional fecal discharges.
“Novices,” Doctor Giddon said under his breath as he stroked the whiskers of his short beard.
“Attractive, but inappropriate for the clientele,” Kimbel replied.
“The living units are down this corridor gentleman. They are much more Spartan than what you are seeing here, but we tried to continue the upbeat feel through a bright and airy decorum.” Doctor Gagnon, walking well ahead of the small tour, stopped to swipe her ID card to unlock the living unit doors. She could hear the muffled comments of the men, but she played on as though her human ears were ignorant to their critical conversation.
“Are the patients single celled or are you double bunking them?” Doctor Giddon asked, raising his voice to catch the attention of their speeding tour guide.
Gagnon said, “We prefer to call them living quarters. The term ‘cell’ has a negative connotation attached to it, but to answer your question, most rooms are single occupied. We do have a few rooms that have the ability to house two patients, but we would reserve use of these rooms for spouses and family members wanting to spend time with their loved ones.”
Doctor Giddon burst into a laugh that he quickly stifled when he realized he was the only one who found the notion amusing. “You
are joking, right? I don’t mean to demean your concept here. In another time and place this might work-they’re gonna trash this place in a matter of days, you realize this? The idea of housing family with patients is ludicrous! It’s not safe!”
“Thank you for your vote of confidence, but that is now my concern,” Doctor Gagnon quickly shot back. “Hadamar has been designed utilizing some of the world’s foremost studies on mental health initiatives. We have eliminated the elements that don’t work and have opted to exemplify components that have been proven effective in similar settings. This is in addition to the calming environment and a rigorous and proactive approach to medication and psychological interventions. Hadamar, I believe, will become a model for all future facilities.”
Giddon replied becoming more unglued, “I get that except for one thing…the idea won’t work! You can change the wallpaper, put art on the wall if you want…but you can’t make the patient see the beauty. If they see the dark shadows chasing them, hear the voices telling them to kill their families or open the sores on their leg talking to them continuously until they snap-it’s all for not. You can’t change the nature of the mentally ill. Their brain doesn’t work that way; if it did, they wouldn’t be here. I don’t know what reports you’ve been reading, but you’re setting yourself up for failure.”
“Statistics show that inmates in the penitentiary system reintegrate into society more readily if they are treated like a normal member of society during their incarceration.”
The tour guide stopped with the living unit door partially ajar.
Giddon continued, imploring, “and you know as well as I do that statistics are often fudged to achieve a purpose. Numbers are a wonderful thing but just because they get published in a journal doesn’t make them true. In our politically correct left-leaning world, the powers that be want to believe we are changing people for the better. We can’t spend money on housing them indefinitely—there has to be a happy outcome. Here’s a news flash, it doesn’t work that way. I can make my statistics look like gold if I change the criteria in which they are produced. If I lower my expectations to almost zero, my success rate soars to one-hundred percent. That doesn’t make it right. I can’t believe you’d buy into it.”
“We’ll have to agree to disagree I guess. I expect the first shipment from Riverview on Monday. It’s now my problem, whatever the outcome I will have to live with it,” Doctor Gagnon replied as professional as she could, holding back her growing animal. “I think we should cut our tour short, Dave Cronin is here.”
Both men looked puzzled as silence still filled the vacant hospital. The hard woman had shut down, and nothing more needed to be said. Doctor Giddon had worn out their welcome and they would never know the full potential of the facility. Beyond the doors that Doctor Gagnon held open by a few inches laid the frame work for what Hadamar truly stood for.
It had been a gamble. The tour was never going to proceed past the doors, and if it had, both Kimbel and Giddon would have disappeared that very moment. The living units told a story that would raise too many questions. The halls provided a continuation of the lie from the common areas, but the cells were far worse than any prison.
* * * *
What patients were housed at Hadamar would be confined to their beds by force. Chains and straps would fasten them tightly to the thin mattresses. Leather head gear and mouth restraints were in close reach to further limit the patient’s communications and senses.
It was decided that the orbital sockets and ear drums should be destroyed upon admittance to Hadamar. Escape as well as any form of resistance would be far more challenging if they were unable to see or hear. A simple system of compressed air would be forced down the ear canal bursting the ear drums. After this procedure was complete, the patient would have their eyelids removed, which would eventually result in blindness and an aggravation of an already existent insanity.
Evita Gagnon had fallen from her Hippocratic Oath into the realm of total hypocrisy in her short time as head of New Haven Medical Services. With near perfect health in all citizens the purpose of a doctor had merely become that of window dressing. Evita, in the early months, had labored to keep busy but as they say, idol hands are the devil’s play thing.
For the others, the transition from human to werewolf had been relatively easy. The lust for death consumed the average person in short order. A high from the kill and the pleasurable physical reaction hooked the young pups into the new life faster than a heroin addict; but the citizens of New Haven never saw it that way.
Evita had been slow to embrace the acts of death. It was true that she indulged in the lycan delicacies no less than any other member of New Haven, but she avoided killing. She was an aristocrat, or that’s how she carried herself. Tearing her former patients limb from limb was beneath her, even though the thought fascinated her. She was probably the only citizen that could name each muscle and bone in the human body. Still, she opted to have prepared meals from properly butchered specimens.
Her sadistic side only began to emerge when it occurred to her that she could do medical experiments—without guilt-for the purposes of advancing her understanding. In addition, working on live cadavers would give Evita the rare opportunity of watching the mental and psychological changes that would occur before the subject became a bona fide carcass.
Death was, after all, the inevitable outcome for all of the Hadamar residents. It amused Evita to an unhealthy level by referring to the dying of Hadamar as corpses while still working on live flesh. It was this dark sense of humor that brought Evita Gagnon out of her shell.
At Special Handling in the spring, she had selected certain undesirables to “play” with. She would never have admitted it to anyone—selfish pride, perhaps—but in her mind that was exactly how she referred to it.
Her first withdrawals from the mine were twins. Evita had no feelings towards the brothers, only a zealous interest in the responses she would receive if both twins were exposed to certain stimuli separately. As a Doctor she had read numerous articles and journals on the phenomena of twins but she wanted to duplicate the findings herself.
Cut off one’s foot; will the other feel the pain? This singular question rattled around inside her head for weeks before she finally broke down and did it. Her findings, though unscientific, discovered no correlation between real pain in one and possible sympathy pains in the other.
It was a disheartening revelation.
She did discover that direct actions brought direct results. After the failure of the foot severing, she realized the best way to achieve results was to physically tamper with the subjects. She contemplated running basic cognitive functions tests and even rudimentary surgical procedures to compare healing rates.
In the end she decided to explore neurology, an area of medicine that baffled science and researchers since the dawn of reason. Her experiments were brutal and uncouth. With the skull cap of each brother removed she placed electrodes into the brains. One twin having the right hemisphere wired while the other had the left engaged. Each light shock caused twitching and stammering, but the emotional response differed with one twin appearing almost euphoric while the other appeared furious and ready to kill.
She had wanted to run the same experiment twice, reversing the position of the electrodes to see if the side of the brain stimulated was the driving force behind the form of seizure. Unfortunately, a moment of clumsiness with the voltage and slow reaction time caused a spike in the electrical charge in the younger of the two twins…younger by two minutes, that is. By the time smoke was billowing from his exposed cranium, Evita could only stand there watching as his body convulsed on the table. Part of her wanted to watch the brain burst into flames, but the smell of the cooking meat made her hungry and it caused a momentary loss of sophistication which disturbed her.
She partially changed in the operating room while her potential dinner was about to flambé. Her white lab coat ripped at the seams as her control weakened. She pulled
herself back, wrenching the electrode from the crisping matter. She spun around to the other brother; her eyes still aglow with desires.
“Please,” Was all the remaining brother could say.
“I’m sorry about that. I should have been more careful,” Doctor Gagnon announced as she regained her human appearance. “I guess we’ll have to move on to another question that makes me wonder; it’s far more dangerous though.”
On that day Doctor Evita Gagnon began experimentation of “the gift”. It was a task that Darwin had asked her to do, to learn what they could about it; but Evita wanted to know more. What caused it? Was it viral? If it was a virus could it mutate? What could destroy the gene and ultimately kill the wolf? Could it be cured and if so, was there a way to prevent a cure? Could the lycan gene be isolated and genetically modified to make werewolves completely resistant to death? Could infected blood reanimate the recently deceased?
In a normal laboratory setting the good doctor would have begun by extracting samples of tissue from the deceased. After exposing it to her own blood she would watch under a microscope to see if reanimation occurred. She was eager and did not want to wait and follow proper scientific guidelines.
She grabbed a syringe and took a large sampling of blood from her arm. Unsure of where to place the blood, she opted to inject 4cc’s into the brain of the deceased twin who was still warm with a light trail of smoke rising from his meat. He was barely dead, could the wolf cure him?
After ten minutes, there were no signs of resurrection. Frustrated but not totally surprised, Evita turned her attention to the live brother who sat silently waiting for his own end. Hooking up a blunt tip blood drawing needle, she drew several vials of human blood from his arm that she would use as a base comparison after she turned him. She planned to expose one vial of her own blood to see how quickly the assimilation process took. The other vials would be stored to compare against findings.