Addiction (14 page)

Read Addiction Online

Authors: G. H. Ephron

BOOK: Addiction
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“You wouldn't—”
“I would.”
He closed his eyes and seemed to find his center. “Just give me a minute,” he said. He smoothed his hair.
“You've got some tissue …” I pointed to my chin.
He picked off the tissue paper stuck to his face. He tucked in his shirt. He undid his tie and tied it again, this time with the knot fastened smartly at the neck. Then, he took a deep inhale and squared his shoulders. “Okay. Let's go.”
When we got back to Olivia, he took her under his arm. “Okay, kiddo. Let's get this over with.”
I brought them to the dining room. Gloria escorted MacRae and Officer Connor in. MacRae set his leather briefcase on the floor, took out a tape recorder, and put it on the table. Connor lay a pad and a pen alongside.
I sat at the nurses' station, where I could keep an eye on what was going on through the glass panel. While I waited, I slid the floppy disk into the computer at the desk. There was a single file on it: REPORT-DRAFT. It was dated two weeks before Channing died.
In the dining room, MacRae was leaning back in his chair, his chin doubled into his chest, listening to Olivia. She seemed flat, emotionless.
I opened the file. There was Channing's thirty-page analysis of the Kutril-trial results. It was a draft with sections missing. But everything I needed to understand the treatment protocol was clearly spelled out. I scrolled through the tables and charts. Though I'm not an expert on clinical pharmacology, the results seemed impressive. I sat back and waited for the report to finish printing out.
Now MacRae was taking some pieces of paper out of his briefcase and showing them to Olivia. She grabbed them from him, crumpled them up and threw them into the corner. Then she broke down, weeping and shaking her head. Drew looked as if he wanted to vault over the table and strangle MacRae.
Then, suddenly it was over. MacRae put away the tape recorder. Officer Connor took Olivia's fingerprints. MacRae and Connor stood to leave. I went over and opened the dining-room door.
When MacRae saw me, his face went rigid. “You lied to me,” he said through clenched teeth.
“I never lied,” I said, keeping my voice calm and even.
“You … you …” he sputtered.
I held up my hands. “I didn't. Not once. I didn't tell you everything, but I answered your questions truthfully.”
“You deliberately misled …”
Give it a rest, I wanted to say. I felt very tired. “I did what I needed to do to protect my patient. She needs to be under a doctor's care.”
“Right now, that girl doesn't need a doctor. She needs a very smart lawyer.” He waved me away and marched out with Officer Connor trailing after him.
I returned to the dining room. Drew and Olivia were still seated at the table. Drew looked ashen. Olivia was sitting very still, her head in her hands.
“Why are they treating her like a criminal?” Drew asked.
“Police don't like surprises,” I said. “They don't like to be the last to find out that a witness handled the murder weapon.”
“There's more,” Olivia said quietly, raising her head and sitting erect.
I sat down. I knew I didn't want to hear what it was.
Drew retrieved the balled-up paper from the corner of the room. “They got this off Channing's computer. They were able to salvage the hard drive.” He smoothed the three pieces of paper on the table.
I scanned them quickly, feeling sick. They were e-mail messages from Olivia to Channing. Paragraphs of vitriol. The last one dated the morning Channing died. It ended with:
I hate you I hate you I hate you! I wish you would just die and then I won't have to deal with your shit.
Olivia sobbed, “See, it's my fault? I made her do it.”
Now, I understood. This was why Olivia had freaked out, gone back into Channing's office and sent the computer through the window. She had to destroy the instrument she'd used to communicate
her anger to her mother. Was it out of guilt and remorse? Or a deliberate attempt to hide evidence from the police?
“Olivia, when did your mother do anything in this world because someone told her to do it?” Drew asked. Olivia looked up at him, red-eyed. “Your mother could be the stubbornest, most bullheaded, contrary person in this world.” Olivia giggled, in spite of herself. Drew put his hand under Olivia's chin and looked her in the eye. “If she killed herself, and notice I say
if,
because I don't believe for one minute that she did, you can be sure of one thing—it wasn't because any of us told her to do it.”
As Drew was leaving, he and I talked privately for a few moments. I told him, “If the police decide that it wasn't suicide, they're going to be looking for someone to blame.
“I know that,” Drew agreed, his look somber.
“Olivia had opportunity. Her prints are on the gun. The e-mails suggest motive. They could easily charge her with murder.” I fished out my business card and wrote Chip Ferguson's name and phone number on the back. “She needs a good lawyer,” I said. “And it wouldn't hurt if you talked to him sooner rather than later.”
He hesitated. “We have a family attorney.”
“You'll need someone who's experienced in criminal law. I've worked with Chip. He's been a public defender; now he's in private practice. He's excellent. A thoroughly nice man. And he's got a daughter, just a few years older than Olivia.”
Reluctantly, Drew accepted the card.
WHEN I returned, Olivia was wrapped in a blanket and Gloria was making her a cup of cocoa. I took the report off the printer and went looking for Kwan. He was working in the conference room. He looked up and saw the report I was holding. “You've written a novella about a man who cuts off his nose to spite his face?”
Sometimes I think he's psychic. “How'd you hear?”
“About what?”
Of course he hadn't. But now I had to tell him. “I've given up coffee.”
It was one of the few times I've ever seen Kwan at a loss for words.
“No big deal,” I said. I wasn't about to admit that I'd struck a bargain with a seventeen-year-old. “Just felt like I was becoming overly dependent.”
“I know there have been times before when I've thought you were losing your mind. But now I'm sure of it.” Then with glee, “If this gets ugly, I hope I can watch.”
“Don't worry. You'll have a front-row seat.” I offered him the report. “Could you take a look at this for me?”
He glanced at the cover page and took the report from me. He
opened it and started to read through the introductory summary. Then he paged through the rest of the report, pausing here and there to examine a table or chart.
“Looks interesting,” he said. “I always knew Dr. Temple was a top-notch researcher. Tell me again, why exactly am I reading this?”
“I want us to consider putting Olivia Temple on Kutril. She's off Ritalin, but she's still craving it. She's dealing with her mother's death, various family problems, and on top of that, she might be charged with murder.”
“It hasn't been approved for treating addiction, has it?”
“No. But it's not like it's the usual experimental drug. We know Trilafon is safe in small doses, as long as you don't stay on it for a long time. And kudzu has been used since the first century by the Chinese.”
“Probably not concentrated in pill form,” Kwan pointed out.
“Still, seems like there's not a huge risk.”
“I have some time this afternoon,” he said.
“As soon as you can. Last night she was caught breaking into the med room.”
Kwan glanced at his watch. “Okay, okay. Give me an hour,” he said.
It was almost lunchtime. I'd agreed to pick up my mother at the senior center, where the bus was dropping them off. I got there just in time.
“How was your trip?” I asked. I tossed her suitcase into the trunk of my car and opened the door for her. My mother had on a pink sweatshirt with the insignia Casino Magic.
She squinted at me through the shade of a clear, green plastic visor. “Not bad,” she admitted as she sank into the seat. She pulled in her feet, settled back, and fastened her seat belt. “Made a few bucks.”
I got in. As I pulled out onto the street, I laughed. “Score some drugs?”
She shrugged. “Actually …” She snapped open her pocketbook and pulled out one bottle of prescription pills and then another. She struggled to open one of them. “Child-safe, phooey. I don't know how they expect grown-ups to do this.”
When we stopped at a light, I opened the bottles for her. She shook a pill from each. One was small and white, the other about twice as big and bright orange.
“I got these.” She pointed to the white one.
I turned down our street. “And these are … ?”
“For my arthritis. It shouldn't cost me a buck and a half a day. If I wanted to spend that kind of money, I could have cable. These are supposed to be the same as these orange ones that I get from Walgreens.”
I pulled the car into the driveway and glanced into her hand. “They sure don't look the same.”
She dropped the two containers back into her bag and snapped it shut, giving me her patient smile. “We always said you could have been a rocket scientist.”
“Don't get snippy.”
“So how many of these”—she poked the white pill—“should I take, when I'm supposed to take one of these?” She poked the orange pill.
“You didn't get any instructions with it?”
“You don't ask a gift horse.”
I took the two pills from her and examined them. The orange one was a large oval. The white one was nearly a figure eight and scored in the middle—it looked as if you were supposed to break it in half. “Well, don't take any of these until I find out what you've got,” I said. With Kwan's help, I figured I'd be able to find out. The
Physicians' Desk Reference,
the doctors' drug Bible, has photographs of every medication being manufactured today. We'd be able to find a match and then equilibrate.
I'd pulled my mother's suitcase out of the trunk and was halfway up the walk when I realized she wasn't following me. The car door was open and my mother had her legs sticking straight out of the car. “Petey!” she called. I cringed. I've asked her a million times not to call me that.
I came back. “This car,” my mother fumed. “The seats are so low, it's a wonder your tush doesn't scrape the road every time you hit a bump.”
“Need a hand?” I asked, and helped her up.
“Aging, feh,” she said, massaging her hip as she started up the walk.
When I got back to the Pearce, Kwan was up in his office. The research report was on his desk alongside a half-eaten Boston Cream doughnut—my favorite—with an oversize cup of Dunkin' Donuts coffee.
“You don't even like coffee!” I exclaimed.
“You've always extolled its virtues, so I thought I'd give it a try.”
“You're just doing this to torment me.”
“Is it working?”
This was something I'd have to get used to. “I need to ask another favor,” I said.
“What will it be? Turn you into a handsome prince? We already tried that, and it didn't take.”
“Some of us are just princely on the inside.” I fished my mother's pills out of my pocket. “This orange pill is my mother's arthritis medication. The white one is supposedly the same thing. Problem is, she doesn't know how many of the white ones to take for each orange one her doctor prescribed.”
Kwan looked leery. “Where'd she get this stuff, anyway, that she doesn't know how much to take?”
“Canada.”
“Ah!” Kwan said, as if that explained everything.
He got up and took down a huge red volume from behind his
desk. He turned to the color photos of medications. He ran his finger across the rows of pictures, pausing on the occasional small white pill. “Close, but no cigar,” he said at last. “Where did you say she got this?” Kwan asked, indicating the little white pill now sitting on his desk.
“In Canada.”
“From a pharmacy?”
“That's my impression.”
Kwan shook his head. “Well, if it's here, it's not obvious. Maybe it's something brand-new … .”
“I don't think so.”
“Let me hang on to this for a day or two. I'll show it to someone I know. He may be able to figure out what she's got here.”
“Thanks,” I said. “So, you read the report?”
“Very impressive.”
“Do you think Kutril could help Olivia?”
“Possibly,” he said. “Only problem is, Dr. Temple was working with alcoholics and heroin abusers. It's never been tried with addiction to psychostimulants like Ritalin. And she was working with adults. Not eighty-seven-pound adolescents. On the other hand”—he shrugged—“I can't think of any other treatment that appears to be as overwhelmingly effective in reducing the psychological craving. And given that there are relatively few side effects, I'd say the potential benefits far outweigh the risks. But she should be closely monitored. We're talking large doses of a compound we don't know a whole lot about.”
Then Kwan called the New Jersey company that had been making Kutril for Channing and arranged for them to ship us enough for a single course of treatment.
After Kwan got off the phone, he picked up the report and riffled through the pages. “Acu-Med is going to have a fit when this gets published. Aren't they trying to develop something that does basically the same thing?” He handed me back the report. “Be sure you put this in a safe place.”
“I will. I had a helluva time getting my hands on it in the first
place. But the raw data, test protocols, patient information—the rest is gone.”
“You're kidding.”
“I wish I were.” Without the raw data to defend her conclusions, the research report wasn't publishable. And it could take years to duplicate the work. By then, Acu-Med's new drug would be established in the marketplace.
Kwan scratched his head. “You don't suppose she took the files home?”
I hadn't considered that possibility. “Maybe. Or maybe someone helped themselves … .”
Kwan liked that idea. “Those Acu-Med reps hang around here like flies on a rotting corpse.”
“Or maybe someone from the Pearce, someone on retainer to Acu-Med …” I could see Liam Jensen's foot, shoving against that file-packed drawer. An oasis of disorder in an otherwise perfectly ordered landscape. I wish I'd gotten a closer look.
I called Drew at home that night. I told him we'd like to try an experimental treatment for the psychological aftereffects of drug addiction, the treatment Channing had been working on. I told him I wasn't certain it would help Olivia, but I thought it was worth a try. He agreed.
When the package arrived the next morning, I headed downstairs to see Olivia. At the nurses' station, I poured myself a cup of decaf. I took a sip. It wasn't too bad. I added milk and sugar. I could do this, I told myself.
I was afraid Olivia might have retreated to the closet again, but she hadn't. She was in the living room, curled up on the corner of a brown vinyl sofa. Matthew Farrell sat beside her. When I came over, Matthew left.
“You okay?” I asked. “The police gave you a rough time.”
“How was I supposed to know they'd get my private e-mail messages?”
she said, her voice shaking. “I never would have sent them if I thought that could happen.”
Words on a page are so unforgiving. In black and white, they take on meaning that the writer is powerless to shade. Olivia's words could certainly make a jury think that she hated her mother, maybe enough to kill her.
I pulled over a chair. “Why did you send them?” I asked.
“She told me to!”
“She?”
“Dr. Daffy. I was so angry at my mother, she said I should write down my feelings, say all the things I couldn't say to her face.” Olivia sobbed. “I was only doing what she said. I
hated
it. And now it makes it look like … look like …”
I'd heard of this therapeutic approach. It began with something called countertransference analysis, CTA, and Daphne had made herself a minor celebrity in the 1980s when she'd written a book about it as a technique to help therapists keep their perspective when working with troubled patients. She'd even been asked to testify in the high-profile trial of Dr. Margaret Bean-Bayog, a therapist whose psychotic young patient stole her personal journals filled with intense sexual fantasies about him. The doctor terminated treatment, but soon after that, the patient committed suicide. The doctor's personal journals became the basis for the family's malpractice lawsuit. There was an out-of-court settlement, and Dr. Bean-Bayog surrendered her medical license.
The case had sent a collective shudder through the therapeutic community—if your personal feelings and thoughts could be examined in court and used against you, then writing them down at all was committing professional suicide. Needless to say, it had a chilling effect on the use of CTA.
Following in her mentor's footsteps, Channing once told me she, too, kept a journal. She used it to work through her impulses and fantasies. That way, she said, she could confront her demons before they ambushed her.
Apparently Daphne hadn't abandoned the method. Working with Olivia, she'd pushed the approach, having a patient write down angry feelings. Maybe it helped. What I didn't get was, what's the point of communicating those angry feelings to the other person? Here was another one of those well-intentioned therapies I'd like to consign to the dung heap, along with encounter groups and primal scream.
“It doesn't work,” Olivia said. “I told her it didn't, but she kept making me do it. Sometimes I made things up, just so she'd stop bugging me.”
I bit my tongue. Daphne's own experience with CTA blinded her to how inappropriate it was for Olivia. Olivia's floundering, her tears, probably only convinced Daphne that she needed CTA. Just as she needed “structure.” Rigid preconceptions are more than dangerous in therapy—they can be criminal. But as Daphne's colleague, I couldn't say any of that.

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