looked several sizes too large. In fact, he looked lost behind the huge desk. A poster to the side read:
Some industry. “I’ve got some questions, sir, about the—”
“The so-called ‘Handyman’ case, yes?”
Jameson must’ve talked to him, but that didn’t make a whole lot of sense because I never told Jameson I’d be coming to see Desmond. “That’s right, sir. I’m fascinated by your clinical write-ups regarding—”
“Potential profiles of the killer?”
“Yes.”
He stared at me as of chewing the inside of his lip. “What you need to understand is that I don’t officially
“So it’s not cool with you that I mention your name as a consultant in any future articles I may write?”
“No, please. It’s not…
“But I’d be pleased to answer any questions you may have on an anonymous basis. The only reason I must insist on anonymity is probably obvious.”
“Uh,” I said. “I’m sorry, sir, but it’s not quite obvious to
The doctor let out the faintest of snorts. “If you were consulting with the police about a serial-killer case, would you want
“Good, because if it is, I’ll sue you and your newspaper for multiple millions of dollars,” he said through a stone cold face. “And I’ll win.”
I stared back, slack-jawed.
“I’m kidding! My God, can’t anybody today take a joke?”
I nodded glumly after a long pause.
“I trust it was the good Captain Jameson who sent you?”
“No, sir, he didn’t
“What do you think of Captain Jameson?” Desmond asked. “He’s quite a character, isn’t he?”
I opened my mouth to answer, but only my lips quavered.
“Come on, son. Tell me the
I guess he was right. Doctor-client privilege and all that, even though I wasn’t a patient. So I said it. “I think Captain Jameson is a clinical alcoholic with enough hatred in him to burn down the city…. But I also think he’s probably a pretty effective homicide investigator.”
“You’re correct on both counts,” Desmond acknowledged. “He’s a tragic man in a tragic occupation. You’d be surprised how many of my patients are veteran police officers.”
This struck me as odd. As a psychiatrist, Desmond could not legally verify that Jameson was a
Until now, perhaps.
««—»»
“You profiles,” I said to move on.
“They’re not profiles, not as of yet. Think of them as
“Er, right. I’ve read every page of the caseload compiled thus far, but I’m still a little shaky on a lot of it. These are highly clinical terms, I need layman terms.”
“All right. Understood. So go on.”
I must’ve sounded like I was babbling. “Well, er, sir, it seems that you’ve, uh—”
“Compartmentalized the potential clinical profiles into three groups?”
“Yes, and—”
“And you don’t know what the
My shoulders slumped in the chair. “You hit the nail on the head, doctor.”
Dr. Desmond stroke his bare chin as if he had a goatee. “What’s the first question a paramount journalist such as yourself might be inclined to ask after examining to full details of this case?”
I’d already learned this one the hard way. “Why is that killer taking the hands? It can’t be to obfuscate fingerprint discovery because he’s clearly demonstrated a total lack of concern as to whether or not the authorities positively identify the victims or not.”
“Excellent,” Desmond said.
“Which means that the killer is
“Well, not
I nodded. “That’s what I’m not clear on, sir.”
In his hand, Desmond was diddling with a small pale-blue paperweight that said
Suddenly, I was beginning to see. “But who’s the enemy in
“Clearly, the mother. The first profile possibility indicates someone who was severely abused as a child my the mother-figure. A woman who beat the child, with
It made some sense…but there were still more possibilities. “And the second profile?” I asked.
“The converse. The polar opposite, in a sense. No abuse in this instance but simply a
The office sat just behind the McDonald’s on Stone Way; all I could smell were french fries and Big Macs, which kind of threw me for a loop: smelling fast food while listening to psych profiles seemed bizarre. “Both of those descriptions make sense,” I said. “But I’m wondering—just how crazy is this guy?”
“In Profile #1, the perpetrator may be quite ‘crazy,’ to use your term. He may be psychopathic or merely sociopathic, but more than likely the former. He’s probably in the mid- or late-stages of a hallucinotic syndrome, and has long since experienced a mid-phased episodic reality break.”