Seizure (26 page)

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Authors: Kathy Reichs

BOOK: Seizure
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“This is called a high cross.” I clicked the brief description attached to the image. “A favorite of the Irish church, it was used in monuments as far back as the eighth century. Mostly headstones.”
“Ugh.” Hi was reading from his iPhone again. “The Celtic cross is now popular among white supremacy groups. The symbol has actually been banned in Germany.”
“Great job, Germans,” Shelton deadpanned. “Another ancient religious symbol ruined for all time. Shelve this one next to the swastika.”
“The top tine of Bonny’s cross always curves right,” I reminded them. “That must mean something, don’t you think?”
“It’s certainly distinctive,” Shelton said. “May I resume my work, madam?”
I yielded.
“I’ll keep looking.” Shelton was punching keys like mad. “But that might simply be Bonny’s thing.”
Fifteen minutes passed. Shelton ran through search screens faster than I could follow.
Then, “Oh no!” He slapped my laptop shut.
“What?” I asked. “Did you find something?”
“Nope!” Shelton’s left hand rose to his earlobe. “Hey, did anyone get a Mets score? My dad’s a big fan.”
“The Mets?” That didn’t make sense. “What’s going on?”
Shelton refused to meet my eye. “Your computer crashed.”
“No it didn’t. You closed it.”
“Spyware. Malware. I think you’ve got a virus.”
“It’s a Mac.”
His voice dropped to a mumble. “The battery died.”
“Shelton!” I’d had enough. “You’re lying. And you’re tugging your ear.”
“No I’m not.” The hand dropped.
That did it. “Stand aside, Devers.”
“No!” Shelton covered the laptop with both arms. “You’re gonna make a bad decision.”
“What’s wrong with you?” Ben barked. “Get out of the way!”
Shelton started to protest once more, then the fight drained out of him.
“Mistake,” Shelton muttered to Ben as he trudged to my couch. “You should’ve trusted me.”
I opened the screen and reloaded the last page.
And understood in seconds.
“Well?” Hi said. “Why did Shelton go nuts?”
“He located Bonny’s bent cross,” I said. “It’s real.”
“That’s great!” Hi exclaimed.
“No it isn’t,” Shelton moaned.
“Explain,” Ben said.
“A Celtic cross
identical
to one Anne Bonny liked to sketch was sold at auction fifteen years ago.” I couldn’t help but smile. “Right here in Charleston.”
“Even better,” Hi said. “I’m failing to see the downside.”
“Wait for it.” Shelton.
“Uh-oh.” A frown creased Ben’s brow. “Please tell me I can’t guess the buyer’s name.”
“You most certainly can,” Shelton said. “But now it’s too late.”
Hi’s gaze bounced from Ben to Shelton to me. “Out with it.”
I turned the screen to face him. “The winning bidder was Hollis Claybourne.”
“Oh,” Hi said. Then, “Crap.”
“I told ya’ll.” Shelton shook his head. “You should’ve let me erase the whole flipping hard drive.”
The boys glanced at me, knowing.
I didn’t disappoint.
“It’s time for a visit with Chance.”
CHAPTER 42
K
it’s text message sealed the deal.
Behind schedule. Home late. Feed self.
“We’re going today,” I said firmly. “No arguments.”
The other Virals groaned, but fell in line without much fight. Perhaps they were too tired to protest.
“Told you,” Shelton muttered. “Once she found out Hollis bought the cross, our tickets were booked.”
Hi hauled himself from the couch and stretched. “Are we stealing Kit’s 4Runner again?”
“We’re borrowing it,” I amended. “We’ll be back before seven if we hurry.”
I knew where to find Chance. Everyone did. His current address was an open secret.
It’s not every day that Bolton Prep’s most illustrious student is committed to a mental institution.
Psychiatric care facility, I should say. Chance had been a patient at Marsh Point Hospital since the shootout at Claybourne Manor three months earlier.
“Will he agree to see us?” Ben asked.
“Leave that to me.”
Nestled within a tangle of creeks, ponds, and meandering swampland, Wadmalaw Island is one of Charleston’s most bucolic districts. Quiet, pristine, and intensely rural, its acreage is some of the least developed in the Lowcountry.
Winding country roads criss-cross the landscape, which is lined with family farms and roadside produce stands. The local population is sparse: most residents are farmers, fishermen, and employees of America’s only active tea plantation.
With only a single bridge connecting Wadmalaw to the outside world, conditions were perfect for the island’s most discrete tenant.
We drove north to the Maybank Highway, then headed southeast across Johns Island. Minutes later we crossed to Wadmalaw and followed signs toward Rockville. Several miles before the small village, Ben turned right onto a narrow private drive.
“Guardhouse,” he warned. “Dead ahead.”
Three officers sat inside a roadside booth, each wearing a firearm, their attention focused on a small TV. We stopped at the gate and waited.
Finally, a guard peeled his eyes from the screen, emerged, and walked to the driver’s-side window. Bald, paunchy, and well past forty, the guy’s name tag announced him as Officer Mike Brodhag.
“Name?” Bored, and slightly annoyed.
“Tory Brennan,” I answered from the passenger seat.
“ID?”
I handed over my Bolton Prep library card.
Brodhag’s gaze shifted to Hi and Shelton in the backseat before returning to me. Everyone was wearing a Bolton Prep uniform.
“State your business.”
“We represent the Bolton Academy student council,” I said cheerily. “We’re here to present Chance Claybourne with this year’s Human Spirit Award.”
Brodhag appeared unimpressed. “Do you have an appointment with someone on the medical staff?”
“I spoke to a—” quick glance at my notes, “—Dr. Javier Guzman. He’s expecting us.”
Brodhag retreated to the guardhouse and picked up a telephone.
“Human Spirit Award?” Hi whispered. “That’s the dumbest thing I’ve ever heard. And why would we give it to a lunatic?”
“Shhh.” My eyes stayed on Brodhag. “I thought something official-sounding would be more likely to get us inside.”
Brodhag cradled the receiver and returned with a yellow guest pass.
“Proceed directly to the building and park in a visitor’s spot.” Monotone. “Do not stop along the way. Display this tag in your vehicle at all times.”
We rolled forward through dense swampland. Massive ferns and droopy willow trees crowded the driveway, creating a natural tunnel. The air was thick with the smell of stagnant water and the buzz of flying insects.
Twenty yards down the blacktop the shoulders dropped away and the road became a bridge across a shallow tidal lake. Reeds and bulrushes rose from the water. Tricolored herons searched for food on long, spindly legs.
“Prime gator country,” Ben said. “Look at those sandbars.”
Dry land reappeared a few hundred yards ahead. Stretched across it, on the crest of a small rise, was a massive building that looked like a medieval nightmare.
“The grounds are an island within an island,” Shelton said. “Creepy.”
“You couldn’t design better security,” said Hi. “This road must be the only way in or out.”
Another quarter mile brought us to the hospital itself. Three stories tall and built completely of stone, the brooding monstrosity was a moat and drawbridge short of being a full-blown castle.
Ben parked in a gravel lot beside the main entrance. A smiling dark-haired man stood before the front doors. I guessed his age at maybe thirty-five.
“Let me do the talking,” I whispered.
“No problem,” Hi said. “I couldn’t sell this Human Spirit garbage if I tried.”
Dr. Javier Guzman was a compact man with bronze skin and a neatly trimmed black goatee. Old-fashioned spectacles sat high on a thin nose. Behind them was a pair of intelligent brown eyes.
“Miss Brennan?” Spoken with a slight Spanish accent.
“A pleasure to meet you, Dr. Guzman.”
Guzman’s smile revealed dazzling white teeth. “The pleasure is mine. Welcome to Marsh Point Psychiatric Hospital. I can’t tell you how much I appreciate this.”
“You’re welcome.” I had no idea what he was talking about, but didn’t let that stop me. “The council is excited to bestow its award upon such a worthy recipient.”
Guzman nodded seriously. “For a while I worried that Bolton Prep would sweep Mr. Claybourne under the carpet, so to speak. I’m pleased to learn I was wrong.”
Totally lost. But I bounced Guzman’s smile right back at him.
“We are thinking of allowing him regular visitors soon,” Guzman said. “I think a school delegation such as yours is an excellent starting point. Please come inside.”
“Chance hasn’t had any visitors?” I asked as we passed through the main lobby.
“None. His father is in prison, and, frankly, a major cause of Mr. Claybourne’s psychological rift to begin with. He has no other family to speak of.”
Despite all he’d done, I could empathize with Chance. I know what it’s like to feel completely alone.
“There’s a long road ahead,” Guzman continued. “Of course, professional ethics prohibit me from discussing the particulars of Mr. Claybourne’s condition, but I’ve grown convinced that he’s neither suicidal nor a danger to others. His main issues appear to be ones of trust.”
“That’s good to hear,” I said.
“Mr. Claybourne has been largely isolated since his breakdown.” Guzman led us up a flight of marble steps. “The catatonia subsided some time ago, but he only recently resumed speaking. I’m hoping some friendly faces will spur him to seek more human interaction.”
Friendly faces? I had no clue how Chance would react to our visit. He’d been humiliated and locked away as a direct result of my actions. He might flip the frick out.
My pulse quickened. Too late for second thoughts now.
We entered a bright, airy room with pastel walls. Art supplies filled one corner. Easels. Paints. Stacks of blank canvas. Circular tables sat in casual disarray beneath a row of large bay windows. The space had a happy, optimistic feel.
“This is our artist’s retreat,” Guzman said. “Mr. Claybourne spends a great deal of his time here, so I thought it would be a comfortable meeting place.”
“Sounds perfect.”
I began to sweat. Awesome.
“I can only allow two of you to meet with the patient.” Guzman wore a pained expression. “I’m terribly sorry, but he’s not ready for a larger group at this time. There’s a bench in the hallway where the others can wait.”
“We understand completely.” Shelton.
“I wouldn’t dream of endangering a patient’s recovery.” Hi.
The two beelined back out of the room.
I glanced at Ben, who nodded.
“Ben and I will handle the presentation.”
“Wonderful.” Guzman gestured to one of the tables. “Please have a seat. Mr. Claybourne will arrive in a moment.”
“You’re not staying?”
Though it caught me off guard, this was a lucky break. I hadn’t worked out how to question Chance in front of his doctor.
“I think it best if you talk unaccompanied by medical staff.” Guzman’s face went serious. “Mr. Claybourne is highly suspicious. I’m hoping time alone with friends will be beneficial.”
Friends. That word again. I swallowed hard.
“I hope so, too.”
“I’ll return in five minutes.” Guzman’s heels clicked sharply as he strode from the room and down the main hallway.
Seconds later, Chance ambled in through a rear door. He was wearing navy sweatpants and a gray Bolton lacrosse tee. Dark crescents hung below his piercing, deep brown eyes. A scraggily beard clung to his chin.
No matter. Even in nuthouse garb, the guy was freaking gorgeous.
Chance was grinning as if remembering a joke and trying not to laugh. He made it two steps before seeing me.
He froze. His eyes locked on mine. Then his head moved slowly from side to side.
Chance’s gaze flicked to Ben. Returned. Crossing to the table, he sat, leaned back in his chair, and regarded me.
An awkward silence ensued.
Eventually, I had to break it.
“On behalf of the students of Bolton Academy,” I began, “we are honored to present you with this year’s—”
“Stop.” Never taking his eyes from me, Chance pointed at Ben. “Leave.”
Ben snorted. “Piss off, Claybourne.”
Chance’s jaw tightened. “Leave. Now.”
“Go, Ben,” I whispered. “We don’t have much time.”
Ben hesitated, then stood and strode from the room. Chance never glanced in his direction.
I started again. “On behalf of the students—”

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