Maddy shook her head. "Oh my, I'm not surprised. The Pavilion is a festering, snake-pit, time-bomb. I've autopsied two patients who have gotten killed over there in the last couple of years. We're lucky it hasn't been worse. Monique Desmonde deserves multiple gold medals for staying in that hell hole."
"Oh, do you know Monique? I didn't know that."
"Of course, I know Monique. I love her. We female docs have to stick together, particularly in this godforsaken, good old boy network town. I don't see her as much as I'd like, but we do get together fairly often."
"Good to know. I'm afraid the perp could be one of her patients."
"Boy, Commander, I feel real sorry for you. Monique will protect her patients like they are her children. She’s a marvelous physician and psychiatrist. If you ever need an advocate, she is there for you."
Jack shrugged his shoulders and rolled his eyes. "Yeah, I know. There could be a struggle. I've already figured that out. Now, why did you call me down here again on this hot as hell day when I could be eating chocolates in my air conditioned office?" Jack smiled, but his dark eyes were serious.
The two locked eyes for several moments and then Jack knew without Maddy telling him. He shook his head and said, "Oh no!"
Maddy just stared at him and said simply, "He's back. St. Germaine is back."
Jack looked miserable. "Yeah, I thought so. I was afraid of that. What the hell, here we go again.” He could feel his gut tighten up and cramp. He was instantly depressed and despondent.
Maddy nodded and said, "Yeah, you're right. Here we go again. And we got zip from the bodies. We still need to identify them."
"So, I guess you’re telling me that their throats were torn out just like the lady in 2009?"
"Yeah, and their wrists were slit, as well. We could get no fingerprints off the bodies so, hopefully, your team got some. You were right. The bodies had some pretty scary tattoos on them. They were definitely into the occult. They had less than 200 mls of blood that we could drain out."
Jack looked glum. "This sounds identical to 2009 and 1933, at least as far as we can tell from the police report from 1933. And God knows how many more that we never found. Anything else?”
Maddy gestured negatively and said, "Oh, there may be one thing. I don't think they were killed in the Quarter. There were scrapes to both victims’ legs that were post mortem. It looks like they had been dragged. There was grass and pebbles embedded in their clothes that I am sure didn't come from the Quarter. The female's shoulder was broken, possibly from being shoved into a small space or, perhaps, she was dropped from a balcony. I can't be sure."
"I'll have the guys check around. Can you maybe pinpoint the grass or rocks?”
Maddy nodded, "Will do my best. We're running them through the database. We're also data-mining everything we know. Jack, have there been any sightings of St. Germaine lately that you've heard about?"
Jack shook his head. "Only the ones from tourists who have been on cemetery tours or have over-indulged. We are always getting St. G. sightings from drunks, at least a couple a week. We investigate, but there is nothing. We've found nothing substantive since just before the 2009 murder," Jack reported and sighed with fatigue. “Damn, I feel about 200 years old now. We don't need this Maddy. Keep it to yourself. We don't need any media hype of this stuff. You know the mayor will have a fit and we'll get the BS about hurting tourism."
"Got'cha. Okay. I'll ask the tech to keep quiet, but you know I can’t promise anything. Word, no matter what you do, travels in cases like this. Just be prepared for a media onslaught.”
Jack nodded, "Just do your best and keep in touch."
"You, too." Maddy hugged Jack for the second time that day. "We've got to stop meeting like this," she quipped.
"Yeah, for sure. Thanks, Maddy," Jack said as he left her office.
12
Jack couldn't wait to get into the solitude of his luxury automobile, cut on the air, and be alone for the second time that day. He unlocked his car, laid his head back on the Cadillac's thick cushions, and closed his eyes, grateful for the darkly tinted windows. After a few moments, Jack once again forced himself to review the legend of St. Germaine. He really didn't want to, but he knew he had to. His thoughts drifted as he reviewed St. Germaine.
If there was one thing Jack knew a lot about, it was New Orleans's dark and murky underworld. Witches and black magic, voodoo and the occult, they were all part of New Orleans's dark, sensual, shadowy underbelly that Jack had learned to navigate as a rookie cop. While most cases were readily solved, it was true that the St. Germaine cases remained an enigma to even the most senior members of the NOPD, including Commander Jack Françoise and his dad, retired NOPD.
St. Germaine sightings were reported either by sober, imaginative, and/or terrified locals or by drunken tourists walking the dark streets of the Quarter at night. Legend had it that Comte St. Germaine, a Frenchman of royal lineage, had lived in Europe for many years before immigrating to New Orleans shortly after the city was settled. St. Germaine was known to be an extraordinarily wealthy man with amazing abilities, who had left France shortly before the French Revolution, fearing for his life. It was rumored that St. Germaine was a musician and could play any instrument, but favored the piano and the violin. The comte was also well versed in linguistics and was fluent in many languages. In addition, he was charming, eloquent, and an excellent conversationalist. St. Germaine had a reputation for liking the ladies, although he never married. It was also said that he liked men as well.
As Jack continued to review his knowledge of the comte, he remembered his grandfather talking about St. Germaine when he was in his eighties, expressing how unfair it was that his good friend never showed his age. In fact, no one ever knew St. Germaine's age because he never seemed to change physically. He was and always purported to be about forty years old, although he remained that age for at least a half of a century according to octogenarians who had known St. Germaine in their youth. Many of New Orleans's finest citizens had partied with St. Germaine in their youth and swore his face never aged.
In addition to being ageless and rich, St. Germaine was known to have wonderful dinner parties where his friends would dine for hours on the very best cuisine that New Orleans had to offer. Germaine was never seen to take a bite. He never ate. He only sipped red wine, pleading a sour stomach and a taste for only "white" food. The comte loved the ladies, but never had a steady girlfriend or mistress. Many New Orleanians reported he visited the brothels almost every night. In fact, Germaine was on the A list for years, much loved and revered in his adopted city. A dinner invitation from the comte was to die for, until one night when things seemed to go amiss.
St. Germaine had hosted an amazing dinner party that included guests from Europe, as well as the locals. After everyone had left, he asked a very lovely lady to have a nightcap with him on his balcony. All seemed well until the lady murmured that she must leave to prevent gossip about them. Suddenly, St. Germaine lunged for the beautiful lady, grabbed her tightly around her shoulders, and tried to bite her neck while pressing her slender body against the ornate wrought iron balcony. Fortunately, for the lady, the balcony was rusty and gave way. She plunged to the ground and landed in azalea bushes, apparently unhurt, and ran through the Quarter for safety.
The incident was reported to the police the next morning, but when the police invaded St. Germaine's home, the comte had disappeared. The police searched his home and only found tablecloths with large red splotches that appeared to be wine, although it was later determined to be part wine and part human blood. In his wine cellar, St. Germaine had stored hundreds of bottles of red wine with French and Italian wine labels, but a random testing of the cache proved them to be a mixture of wine and blood. Several cases of this wine had remained in the NOPD evidence room until it washed away in the Katrina waters a few years back, along with almost all of the evidence from the St. Germaine case. But, the evidence was clear that the bottles contained wine a
nd blood.
As the air conditioner continued to purr softly, Jack felt himself falling asleep and gave into the feeling. It had been a pretty rough day, and it wasn't getting any better. He deserved a few minutes of shut-eye. He continued to drift off until he was rudely awakened by a blaring horn of a presumably irate driver. After flipping the driver off, Jack shook his head to wake up and shake out the cobwebs remaining in his brain from his short nap. Jack also managed to convince himself that St. Germaine was a legend and only a legend, just another good old NOLA ghost story. But, then reason and logic set in and he was forced to confront the number of unsolved murder cases and deaths where the bodies were discovered upon autopsy to have no blood or just a minimal amount of blood. The most recent case had occurred in 2009, but three other cases had occurred in the 1980s, shortly after Jack had joined the NOPD. Police records also had similar crime reports that dated back to the early 1900s. Unfortunately, a lot of those files had been lost in the floodwaters of the storm.
The unsolved cases perplexed Jack beyond belief, and it pissed him off that he had been unable to solve the crimes. He also wondered about the hundreds of people who had disappeared in NOLA over the years, never to be heard of again. Of course, many of them were prostitutes and druggies, but they didn't deserve to disappear without a trace. There were also hundreds of bodies that had washed up on the shores of the mighty, muddy Mississippi, too decomposed to identify. Fortunately, now they could often identify the corpses via DNA evidence, but even that evidence had been lost in the storm. He was no closer to solving the St. Germaine legend than he had been in the 1980s and he didn't like that feeling. It irritated him beyond belief. Then he returned to his theory that St. Germaine was a serial killer who preyed on the vulnerable and downtrodden. He continued with that thought until his cell phone rang. Damn, he thought as he listened, here we go again.
13
After lunch, Alex made several attempts to analyze pending malpractice claims. She was totally not into it and her attention kept returning to Angie and the night before. She called the O.R. and learned that Angela was in the recovery room. A little after 2:00 p.m., her temporary secretary, Mona, checked in and Alex asked her to transcribe the depositions that were left over from yesterday. Unable to work, Alex decided to go off-campus to the psychiatric units to learn if the team had uncovered any possible suspects.
The heat was unbearable as she walked the distance between the main hospital and the Pavilion. Alex noticed the cordoned-off crime scene. The yellow-taped area showed her exactly where Angela had been assaulted, raped, and beaten. Several detectives were still trying to uncover any bits of evidence that could possibly exist. Alex wasn't surprised to see Commander François directing them. Jack waved as Alex passed. She looked at the shaded areas and shuddered when she thought of how dark it must have been last night and how scared Angie must have been. The crop of trees where Angela's body had been found was dense and the overhanging moss gave the area an eerie feeling, even during the day. It must have been awful for Angie. Alex said a quick prayer for Angela and her family.
The Pavilion loomed in front of Alex and she couldn't believe how ominous the building appeared, even in the daylight. The psychiatric hospital was a two-story converted storage building, painted grey in color, with most of the windows barred or shuttered, either to protect against the summer heat or to keep patients from looking out – or, more likely, jumping out. Alex wasn't sure which. Probably more to keep patients from jumping out of the windows, she finally decided. Some of the bars in the windows shined brightly in the Louisiana sun. They were a gunmetal color. Everything was grey. How depressing. It was all absolutely, totally depressing, Alex thought to herself as she entered the building.
The foyer of the Pavilion presented as much as the outside, grey and dreary. A pair of metal benches with grey, fake leather cushions was on either side of the door and a bank of elevators stood to the right. The walls were painted grey. Alex wondered what had happened to hospital green. That used to be the color in hospitals. The doors to the stairway and several other areas were locked. Good, Alex thought to herself, as she tried to open them.
The silence in the foyer was deafening. Alex could hear herself breathe. As she looked around, she thought about all of the sick, deranged, and criminally insane patients who had crossed through this space. Deathly quiet. It was as if the walls were waiting for her to say something.
She pushed the elevator button and it slowly crept down towards her, making a slow rattling noise. Geez, the elevator sounds like someone rattling chains, she thought to herself. There was nothing normal or comforting about this place, she thought, as the metal albatross rolled to a banging stop and the door crept open. The elevator was unmanned. There was no operator onboard. Usually, the elevator would be manned by a psych tech or mental health worker to usher people up and down the floors of the old storage building – for safety reasons, of course. As she began the slow ascent to the inpatient units, she wondered if the lack of an elevator operator was also part of the budget cuts. She sighed sadly to herself.
Alex rang the bell for admission into the closed unit. She was easily admitted and was escorted by a large man, presumably a psych tech. As they walked down the hall towards the day room, Alex was surprised by the silence. It was as silent as a tomb on the unit. Deathly quiet and dark, the sun shuttered out by long drapes.
She spoke to two psych techs, one from the day shift and one from the evening shift counting sharps. Sharps were globally defined as anything that patients could use to harm themselves. Hopefully, most sharps, along with cell phones, were confiscated on admission, but psychiatric patients who wanted to die were ingenious at finding things to kill themselves with. Razors, scissors, glass perfume bottles, aerosol cans, and any other instrument the patient could use were kept in the nurses' station. Patients were allowed to use their razors during admission but only under the supervision of a staff member.
A quick conversation with one of the psych techs alerted Alex that all sharps were accounted for, except for one razor. The tech had laughingly informed her that one sharp was always missing – nothing to worry about. "We’re always missing at least one," he'd joked.
Alex didn't share his macabre sense of humor over the missing razor. In fact, she was concerned at the tech's nonchalance and casual dismissal of a dangerous instrument. Alex asked him where the staff and patients were. He directed her towards the community room on the North Hall, where the patients and staff were holding a group meeting.
Alex walked down the hall trying to remember what a therapeutic community was when her cell phone rang. Mona was calling her to tell her that the 3 o'clock executive meeting was canceled. Alex felt a tinge of impatience as she continued down the hall. She knew Don had not wanted to meet and figured that Farve had probably talked him out of it. She shook her head in disgust.
Finally, she remembered the definition of a therapeutic community. It was a model of behavioral health care that allowed psychiatry, nursing, social work, and patients to work together to establish a trusting environment at the hospital. In an effort to establish a psychiatric milieu, each group had an equal voice in the operation of the unit. The therapeutic community addressed issues and concerns that affected patients and staff. Alex paused outside the door and listened for a few moments.
Today's discussion was centered around the attack on Angie. The group leader was attempting to get patients to verbalize their feelings about the attack and share any knowledge of how it happened. About twenty faces stared at her as she entered the community room. Alex scrutinized the group, looking for a friendly face, but there were none. Only suspicious faces stared back at her.
She was surprised at the mixture of patients. Both genders and all ages were represented. Some patients looked acutely ill, psychotic in fact. A few had tardive dyskinesia, usually caused by the effects of long-term phenothiazine or anti-psychotic therapy. These patients were easily identifiable by their pill rolling mouths and
shuffling gaits. One little, old, white-haired lady looked like Mrs. Santa Claus. She sat attentively in the circle, her hands clasped around her 1950s vintage pearl pocketbook. She smiled sweetly at Alex and nodded. Finally, a friendly face. She spotted Monique in the group and gave her a faltering wave.
Dr. Desmonde, once again her unflappable self, signaled her in.
Alex entered the community room and Monique introduced her.
"Group, this is Alex. She's a nurse and the attorney for the medical center. Alex is a friend of Angie's and she wants to help us understand what happened." Dr. Desmonde looked carefully at the group, gauging their reaction to Alex. She was unsure what their response would be to a stranger and an attorney in their presence. She waited calmly for their response.
After a short silence a male patient angrily retorted, "I ain't saying nothing else. Why does she need to be here? She ain't part of this here. I ain't never seen her before!"
Dr. Desmonde looked nonplussed and replied, "Anthony, Alex is Angela's friend. She's here because she cares about her. She wants to know who hurt her. She's not here for any other reason."
Anthony continued to look angry and uncertain as he muttered, "Yeah, yeah, sure. What other BS you got for us, doc?"
Alex, unsettled for a moment, responded. "Dr. Desmonde is right, Anthony. Angie's my friend. Her twin sister, Bridgett, works with me. I'm concerned about her and what's happened to her." Alex eyed each member of the group. The silence seemed endless, an eternity. Of course, Alex remembered, silences in psychiatry were meaningful. Right? It probably wasn't an uncomfortable silence, it was simply a long silence, but for sure uncomfortable for her. Each patient looked at her speculatively. Some of them seemed skeptical and uncertain of her presence. Others looked interested in having her there. Alex met each of their stares with a straightforward look.
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