Part 21 (1/2)
”Speculation?”
”Tons, but it's still a mystery.”
Barrett sensed Anton holding back. She gently pushed. ”Right, somehow Jimmy just happens to be in the apartment of a woman, who he's been obsessed with for years, who just broke his eighteen-year-old heart by telling him she's engaged.”
”With no hard evidence to link him to the actual crime,” Anton added.
”So why was he there? How did he get in?”
Anton turned off at the Croton exit. As the sports car climbed the gently sloped hill toward the red brick administration building he said, ”I guess all of that is academic at this point. No one doubts that Jimmy was stalking her. Maybe he followed Carter, had some kind of rescue fantasy about stepping in after the boyfriend's killed. You know, like the knight in s.h.i.+ning armor. Maybe he even intended to kill Carter. Which, if he'd actually hired him, would have been a good way to cover his tracks ... plus, he'd come out looking like the hero.”
Barrett looked across at her boss as he parked. She was torn-it felt good being able to discuss Jimmy's case, and to have a halfway decent conversation with Anton; on the other hand, she had the strong feeling that he was hiding things. She also knew that to call him on it would backfire. She thought about a saying that Sifu Li had taught her years ago, ”A lie is like a mole. When you try to dig it out, it will only burrow three times deeper.”
”You ready?” he asked, popping the release for the tiny trunk that just barely held their briefcases.
”Sure.”
___.
A Croton escort waited for Barrett and Anton, as they checked all sharp objects, beepers, and cellular phones at the guard desk.
Barrett wryly observed how careful the guards were, imagining that there had been h.e.l.l to pay for the lapse that had resulted in the Charlie Rohr mess.
The first electronic steel door slid back while a guard walked them through a metal detector. Satisfied that they weren't carrying contraband or weapons, the second, and final, door opened.
”They're waiting for you,” the escort informed them. ”I was told you were going to be here half an hour ago.”
”Traffic,” Anton replied dully.
Barrett made an ”mmm” noise and nodded her agreement.
They followed silently as their guide brought them to the locked elevators and then down two flights to the underground conference room.
How politically correct, Barrett thought, as she looked at the people seated around the scarred oak table. Even the furniture was arranged so that there was no definite head-just like the round table. All the players had a.s.sembled for George Fitzsimmons' case conference, including the man himself, who sat between his attorney and his silver-haired mother.
They'd duded him up in a tan leisure suit, a lawyer's ploy designed to make the six-foot-five redhead appear less threatening. Tan leisure suits were about as low as you could go on the apparel food chain. If you wanted someone to seem powerful you put them in black-like the judge-if you wanted them to appear weak and ineffectual-wouldn't hurt a fly-stick them in a tan leisure suit.
She looked at all the doctors, social workers, consumer advocates, and administrators, most of whom she knew from other such conferences.
She took a seat and sipped from a styrofoam cup of coffee that had been handed to her. A plate of dry chocolate-filled cookies landed in front of her, she selected from the meager offerings and pa.s.sed them to Anton, as though they were so many communion wafers being dispensed to the faithful. In front of her was a thick stack of doc.u.ments that contained information on the patient, as well as a blank treatment plan onto which they were encouraged to ”brainstorm.”
She found it hard not to be cynical as she counted thirty-two people in the room and quickly calculated the meeting's cost to the taxpayers. Thirty-two professionals at an average of seventy dollars an hour; it would be at least two hours, plus travel time-around ten grand. And there'd be more meetings and ...
Her thoughts drifted while Felicia Morgan, Croton's medical director, called the meeting to order.
Anton nudged her and slid across a piece of paper.
She looked down at his hastily scrawled note, ”Five bucks says Felicia is going to recommend a group home, everyone will agree, and then they won't be able to find one willing to take him.”
Barrett grinned, grabbed the paper and wrote back, ”Duh.”
Dr. Felicia Morgan-an intense rail-thin woman in her forties, with black-rimmed gla.s.ses and dark hair that appeared to have been slicked back with brilliantine-turned to the patient/prisoner. ”Mr. Fitzsimmons, what do you think you'll need to make it this time? We don't want to see you have to come back.”
Barrett bit the inside of her mouth, while the medical transcriptionist hurriedly typed every word.
”Supervision,” George Fitzsimmons mumbled.
”Say more,” Dr. Morgan urged.
”I know that if I'm off by myself I get into stuff. I need to stay on my medications, and I want to ... but if I'm not supervised ... I might forget or something.”
”Do you know what kind of supervised setting you'd want?” Dr. Morgan asked.
Barrett felt like joining in.
”A group home,” he replied on cue. ”I think a group home would be best.”
For the next hour and a half the a.s.sembled congratulated George on his ”courage and creativity.” They then set about identifying potential group homes, all of which had sent representatives to the meeting. They had all reviewed George's records and one by one they politely declined to have him come live with them.
As Anton had predicted, the meeting went nowhere. Dr. Morgan closed the session by gus.h.i.+ng, ”This is all part of the process. I think we made real progress today. George, don't be discouraged.”
”I'm not,” he mumbled, while staring down at his size-fourteen loafers.
His previously silent mother roared to life. She glared at Dr. Morgan.
”I'm calling the commissioner and the governor!”
”This is unacceptable!” George's legal aide added. ”He needs to go to a least-restrictive setting!”
”You can't keep him here forever,” his mother said, ”it's not fair.”
Barrett tuned out the brewing fight. She knew that Dr. Morgan would try to appease everyone while doing absolutely nothing. The truth was, George would remain at Croton for years. Unlike Jimmy, he wouldn't be able to buy his way out.
The meeting broke up and Barrett and Anton edged for the door. It was best to get away before getting tagged for some kind of pointless task or subcommittee. The first time she'd attended one of these Anton had advised, ”Say little and keep your head low.”
Those were words to live by. The first time she'd spoken up at the release hearing of another patient, she was immediately sucked into a several-months project looking at the availability of supervised apartments in the greater Manhattan area. Only after they'd finished the task did she discover that the same study had been done four times before, and nothing had been done to improve the housing situation.
”Anton,” she whispered as they made their getaway, ”are you in a hurry?”
”Why?”
”I want to grab a look at Jimmy Martin's old chart.”
He looked at his watch. ”It's going to be on microfiche.”
”I know, but I'm curious about a few things. And besides, we're not going to make it back in time to do anything anyway.”
Reluctantly, he agreed. They got into his Jag and drove across the grounds to Gunther Hall. They showed their badges to the security guard, emptied their pockets into plastic baskets, and ran their briefcases through the metal detector.
In the climate-controlled bas.e.m.e.nt library, Barrett pulled up Jimmy's file on a microfilm viewer. At the top of the screen it indicated that over ten thousand pages of information had been scanned on James Cyrus Martin IV. She scrolled through the index to the section labeled, ”disciplinary.”