But he was still deeply unsatisfied. He had been involved in many unusual cases. He had seen things that very few doctors had seen; he had examined extraordinary presentations of criminal pathology. But he had never before seen anything quite like this. For perhaps the first time in his professional career, he felt he had not touched on the core mystery of this patient's psyche--not in the least.
Normally, that would make little difference in a bureaucracy such as this. Technically, his work was done. But still he had withheld his conclusion pending further evaluation, giving him the opportunity for another interview. And this time, he decided, he wanted to have a conversation. Just a normal conversation between two people--nothing more, nothing less.
He turned a corner, continued making his way down the endless corridors. The noises, the cries, the smells and sounds of the secure ward barely penetrated his consciousness as he mulled over the mysteries of the case. There was, first, the question of the young woman's identity. Despite a diligent search, court administrators had been unable to find a birth certificate, Social Security number, or any other documentary evidence of her existence beyond a few genteel and intentionally vague records from the Feversham Institute in Putnam County. The British passport found in her possession was real enough, but it had been obtained through an exceedingly clever fraud perpetrated on a minor British consular official in Boston. It was as if she had appeared on the earth fully formed, like Athena sprung from the forehead of Zeus.
As his footsteps echoed down the long corridors, Felder tried not to think too much about what he would ask. Where formal questioning had not penetrated her opacity, spontaneous conversation might.
He turned a last corner, arrived at the meeting room. A guard on duty unlocked the gray metal door with a porthole window and ushered him into a small, spare, but not entirely unpleasant room with several chairs, a coffee table, some magazines, a lamp, and a one-way mirror covering a wall. The patient was already seated, next to a police officer. They both rose when he entered.
'Good afternoon, Constance,' said Felder crisply. 'Officer, you may remove her handcuffs, please.'
'I'll need the release, Doctor.'
Felder seated himself, opened his briefcase, removed the release, and handed it to the officer. The man looked it over, grunted his assent, then rose and removed the prisoner's handcuffs, hooking them to his belt.
'I'll be outside if you need me. Just press the button.'
'Thank you.'
The cop left and Felder turned his attention to the patient, Constance Greene. She stood primly before him, hands clasped in front, wearing a plain prison jumpsuit. He was struck again by her poise and striking looks.
'Constance, how are you? Please sit down.'
She seated herself. 'I'm very well, Doctor. How are you?'
'Fine.' He smiled, leaning back and crossing one leg over the other. 'I'm glad we've had a chance for another chat. There were just a few things I wanted to talk with you about. Nothing for the record, really. Is it all right if we speak for a few minutes?'
'Certainly.'
'Very good. I hope I don't seem too curious. Perhaps you could call it a liability of my profession. I can't seem to turn it off--even when my work is done. You say you were born on Water Street?'
She nodded.
'At home?'
Another nod.
He consulted his notes. 'Sister named Mary Greene. Brother named Joseph. Mother Chastity, father Horace. Am I right so far?'
'Quite.'
'I don't recall.'
'Well, of course you wouldn't
'I'm afraid I don't.'
'It must have been, what, the late '80s?'
A ghost of a smile moved briefly across her face, passing almost before Felder realized it was there. 'I believe it would have been more in the early '70s.'
'But you say you're only twenty-three years old.'
'More or less. As I mentioned before, I'm not sure of my exact age.'
He cleared his throat lightly. 'Constance, do you know that there's no record of your family residing at Water Street?'
'Perhaps your research hasn't been thorough enough.'
He leaned forward. 'Is there a reason why you're concealing the truth from me? Please remember: I'm only here to help you.'
A silence. He looked into those violet eyes, that young, beautiful face so perfectly framed by auburn hair, with the unmistakable look he remembered from their first meeting: haughtiness, serene superiority, perhaps even disdain. She had all the air of... what? A queen? No, that wasn't quite it. Felder had seen nothing like it before.
He laid his notes aside, trying to assume an air of ease and informality. 'How did you happen to become Mr. Pendergast's ward?'