by Neal Baer
As if he might somehow answer her.
Claire showered, ran a brush through her shoulder-length brown hair (no time for the blow-dryer), and pulled a sharp navy blue Donna Karan suit, a white blouse, and a pair of black Louboutin pumps from her closet. A year ago, when she’d entered the Forensic Psychiatry Fellowship at Manhattan State University Hospital, wearing this “costume” every day was unthinkable to her. She’d come there from research work in a lab at the National Institutes of Health, where nobody cared what one wore under their white coat.
But that was before the trouble started. In the months since she returned to the program following some much-needed time off, she found herself filling her closet with suits, shoes, and scarves. And actually enjoying wearing them. She wondered if her sudden interest in fashion was a way of filling the emptiness, the void in her life, with material instant gratification.
She was about to slip on her shoes when she remembered the guest sleeping in the other room. She picked up the pumps in one hand, carefully opened the door to her bedroom, and tiptoed toward the front door. She picked up her Coach purse and brown, soft leather briefcase and took a quick look into the living room. The sight of the man sleeping on the sofa bed brought the day’s first smile to her face. Her father.
Frank Waters had begun spending more time with his daughter after she’d returned to the family’s home in Rochester, New York, for a leave of absence from her Forensic Psychiatry Fellowship last fall. Frank, a physicist specializing in fiber optics, had worked his way up to vice president of his company, which built computer networks and the devices to run them. His new position freed him to step away from the office during the day, allowing for late breakfasts and early lunches between father and daughter, giving Claire time to enjoy the dad she had barely seen as a child.
Then one morning at home in Rochester, Frank was in the kitchen brewing a pot of coffee when Claire came in and announced it was time for her to go back to Manhattan and resume her life.
“I can’t stay here forever sponging off you and Mom,” she’d joked.
Frank had thrown his arms around Claire, his pride and joy, telling her he was ready to help her move.
Claire had called her mentor, Doctor Lois Fairborn.
“Sweetheart!” she’d exclaimed, just one of the many terms of endearment Fairborn used on a constant basis. “Please tell me you’re coming back.”
“I’m ready,” Claire had said. “But I want to make sure it’s what’s best for the program.”
“Having you here is what’s best for the program,” Fairborn had interjected, assuring her that she’d shoehorn her star student right back in whenever Claire thought she’d return to New York.
They agreed she’d appear at Manhattan State two weeks from the following Monday. Claire knew she’d need every second of the time before then to get herself settled.
Father and daughter had left Rochester early the next morning, a Friday, flying to La Guardia and renting a car to begin the always arduous task of finding a Manhattan apartment. In Claire’s case it had to be one she could afford on the meager salary of a medical fellow. She and her late fiancé, Ian, had split the rent on their shared flat, a beautiful second-story floor-through in a small, secure building in Chelsea. Claire knew going it alone would mean a step down from that. She was hoping she wouldn’t have to accept a one-room studio.
After grabbing bagels at Daniel’s on Third Avenue, they were walking down Fortieth Street toward the East River. Just past the ancient firehouse, Frank steered her into a high-rise, luxury, doorman building with a sign outside announcing there were apartments available within.
“Are you kidding me?” Claire whispered as she looked at the rich furnishings in the lobby. “This place is way out of my league.”
“Indulge the old guy, okay?” Frank had replied, not bothering to slow down.
The building’s rental agent took them to the nicest one-bedroom she had. On the twenty-eighth floor, facing east toward Second Avenue, with views over the East River to Long Island City and the rest of Queens beyond. And a terrace from which one could enjoy them.
Claire was about to thank the agent for her time and make a graceful exit when Frank had asked, “How soon can she move in?”
“Monday,” the agent had replied.
“Do you accept cosigners on the lease?” asked Frank, patting his pockets for his checkbook.
“As long as you pass the credit check,” the agent had responded.
“Dad,” Claire had pleaded, “I still can’t afford this.”
Frank was already writing out a check and handing it to the agent, whose eyes, when she saw the amount, grew as wide as saucers.
“That should cover one month’s security and half a year’s rent,” Frank assured her with the click of his ballpoint pen.
An hour later, with the paperwork all signed and credit approved, they’d walked through the building’s ornate marble lobby and out onto Fortieth Street. Claire’s head was still spinning. Her father had always been such a meticulous, careful man, especially when it came to money.
“Dad,” she’d said, “you didn’t have to do that.”
Frank walked with purpose, the stride of a man well satisfied with himself. “All your life, even as a child, you never asked for anything. Not a toy, not a book, not a cent. Nothing.”
It was the first time he’d said anything like that to her.
“Are you telling me or asking me why?” she’d asked him.
Frank continued as if he hadn’t heard her. “Everything you’ve achieved, everything . . .” He’d drifted off, as if having the conversation with himself. “You did it all yourself.” He’d seemed to realize she was right beside him. “We saved so much money for your education,” he’d said. “Enough to pay for everything, in full, no loans. And you kept getting full scholarships so we never had to use any of it. It’s been sitting there, in a trust account with your name on it, all these years. I just thought it was time we put some of that cash to good use.”
He looked up at the apartment tower that was soon to become Claire’s new home and raised his arm, palm upward, as if holding a new world in his hand. “It’s time you let yourself live a little,” he’d smiled. “Just a little.”
Now she was about to open the door when a wide-awake voice came from behind her.
“You look beautiful.”
Claire turned. Her father was sitting up. Frank Waters was tall, thin, sporting a full shock of thick gray hair and the piercing green eyes his daughter had inherited. His devotion to the gym made him look and move like a man who was a decade younger than his sixty-six years. He lifted the comforter, revealing blue silk pajamas a shade lighter than Claire’s suit.
“Thought I was being quiet,” Claire said, heading into the living room.
“You didn’t wake me,” her father assured her.
She gave him a kiss on the cheek. “Go back to sleep,” she said.
“Nah,” Frank replied. “Gotta hit the gym and then I have a day full of meetings. What time do you think you’ll be home?”
Claire knew it was his way of being protective. “Probably around eight,” Claire replied. “My day’s loaded too.”
“That why you’re so rattled?” Frank asked.
Claire thought she’d given away nothing. How did he know?
“I could always tell when you were upset,” he said, “even before you knew.”
“It’s nothing,” Claire replied, slipping her pumps on. “I had a nightmare.”
“You had those as a child too,” said Frank, trying to find his slippers with his feet. “You’d wake up in the middle of the night and tell me all about them.”
“I’d tell you about this one. But I can’t remember it.” She pretended to adjust her skirt so she wouldn’t have to look at him. She didn’t want to talk about the dream lest it make her late and open the anxiety floodgates.
“Maybe I can jog your memory,” Frank offered through a yawn as he open
ed the drapes, not waiting for Claire to refuse. “Do you remember how you woke up?”
“I sat up in bed with my hand over my mouth,” Claire answered, checking her watch to give her father the hint that she didn’t have time for this.
It didn’t work. “So I wouldn’t hear you scream?” Frank asked as he folded the comforter. “Why would you think to do that in a nightmare?”
Claire smiled at the irony of having her head shrunk by a physicist. “So I wouldn’t wake you up?” she asked playfully.
Now her father smiled. “Maybe the nightmare was about me.”
“I don’t think so,” Claire said.
“But you said you don’t remember,” he reminded her, folding the bed back into the sofa. “So how can you be sure?”
Checkmate. The conversation ended where it always did—at a brick wall. Frank, in perpetual motion, replacing the couch pillows, tried another tactic.
“You know,” Frank began, plopping down on the sofa, “when you were a child you used to talk to someone who wasn’t there.”
“Yes, Dad,” Claire said, sighing. “That I do remember.”
“We were worried about you. Your mom and I.”
“It’s common for children to have invisible playmates,” she said in her official psychiatrist’s voice.
Frank knew that tone; he’d heard it from his daughter many times and was no stranger to what it meant: I’ve gotta go. He’d used a similar tone with her many times—something he didn’t like to admit to himself—and knew when to stop pressing her.
“It’s okay. Don’t be late,” he said as he rose from the sofa.
“Thanks, Dad.”
He came over, gave her a kiss. “Have a good day, puppy,” he said.
Claire smiled over his shoulder as he hugged her; he’d called her that pet name for as long as she could remember and she loved it each time. She kissed his cheek again and turned to head for the door, feeling just a little more secure.
He didn’t want to be late. He gathered all the items he would need: the pots, the rolled up cloth with the razor-sharp chef’s knives and shears. He felt a pounding in his head. A rhythm almost like a drumbeat that drowned out any thoughts that would stop him from what he was compelled to do. He grabbed the tent along with the pots and knives and left his apartment, stepping out into the cool, early morning sunlight that promised a beautiful day.
CHAPTER 2
“Bet you didn’t think you’d be talking about brain science here,” said Claire, hoping she could stimulate the brains of the seven people sitting before her as opposed to putting them to sleep. “But there’s a lot of new evidence out there that’s helping us explain why people turn to a life of crime.”
“Because they’re psychos,” murmured Miguel Colon, twenty-five, a serious-looking, hard-bodied Latino with a tattoo of a dagger adorning his oversized right bicep. His Hispanic-Bronx accented comment brought snickers and smiles to the others in the room, including Claire.
“Not all of them,” Claire corrected. “But you’re not wrong either, Miguel. It’s just a bit more complicated than that.”
Miguel and his five young colleagues who sat at a modern, graphite-colored table before her were students at Manhattan State University’s renowned School of Criminal Justice and Forensic Science.
Claire turned to the dry-erase board behind her and in large block letters wrote a single word—EPIGENETICS—which she underlined and then turned back to the group.
“Anyone know what epigenetics is?” she asked.
Not surprisingly, not one hand went up. And the one man in the room over the age of forty, Professor Walt McClure, knew better than to raise his.
McClure was a “friend” of Claire’s mentor, Lois Fairborn, and speculation was that they were a lot more than just friends. He taught the class in which Claire now sat, a senior seminar in criminal profiling, and had asked Fairborn (perhaps during pillow talk) whether Claire would be up for coteaching the class with him, enlightening his students on recent advances in psychiatry and genetics, especially the emerging field of epigenetics, and how it might apply to criminal behavior. Fairborn had approached Claire with the request shortly after she returned to work two months earlier. At the time it was the last thing Claire had wanted to do. But she owed Fairborn for her compassion, understanding, and flexibility in arranging her leave from the fellowship and found it impossible to refuse. Believing it would be a one-time deal, Claire figured she’d do it, get it over with, and hope it didn’t hurt too much.
Fortunately, it wasn’t what she’d expected or even feared. There were only six students in the class plus Professor McClure, in a small but far from claustrophobic seminar room. To her surprise she’d lit up the moment she began talking, as if telling a story to a bunch of friends at a dinner party, engaging the students in a lively discussion of her experience tracking a serial killer the previous year. They’d listened raptly and asked numerous questions. McClure was ecstatic, and the way they’d tag-teamed the class proved to both of them they worked well together. Claire, for her part, was shocked she’d taken to teaching in the way she had and, hesitant though she was, enjoyed the distraction.
This was session number two. From the looks on the students’ faces, she wasn’t off to the same gangbusters start as last time. Epigenetics was dry material for people with medical backgrounds, and these kids were all headed into law enforcement—as either cops, federal agents, or forensic investigators. Not that any of this marked them as unintelligent or underachievers. She knew Miguel Colon, for one, had somehow managed to survive being raised by gang-member parents without getting killed or hurt and minus a criminal record. A straight A student all through college, Miguel wanted to go to law school after graduation and then into the FBI. Rough around the edges though he was, Miguel was Claire’s hero. What he’d overcome made medical school look like a piece of cake. But still, he and the other students were laymen and women. She’d better find a way to make it interesting.
So she looked Miguel in the eye. “Epigenetics is the study of how genes change permanently over time without the DNA changing as well—and what causes those changes.”
“You mean, like how animals adapt to changes in their environment,” said Kara Wallace, a petite blonde from Alpine, New Jersey, who, to the horror of her wealthy family, had dreams of joining the NYPD.
“How their genes adapt—and ours as well,” answered Claire. “And the environment doesn’t just include the air we breathe, water, food . . .”
“And all the toxic chemical shit in them,” smirked Wesley Phelps, a funny, smart, and handsomely dark-haired, slate-eyed, future prosecutor—or so he’d written in his profile on Facebook. “We are what we eat.”
“Speak for yourself,” said Justine Yu, a hot twenty-four-year-old forensic science major with long black hair, heavy mascara, and red lipstick one shade over the line of tasteful to Claire. Before Miguel could weigh in on how Wesley’s answer might apply to Justine’s sex life with her live-in girlfriend, Claire did a preemptive strike.
“That’s correct, Wes, but it’s not the whole story. We also are where we’re from. Where we’ve lived and with whom. How we were raised. Whether we were victims of trauma—physical or emotional—during our lives. All of these life-cycle factors cause reactions in our body and brain chemistry that leave marks—chemical marks—on our genes. So if you think of the DNA in those genes as computer hardware, the mechanisms of epigenesis are like software directing or affecting how the genes work over time.”
“When you say ‘over time’ do you mean the time we’re alive?” asked Leslie Carmichael, a pretty, lithe, African-American woman with long dreadlocks pulled back into a ponytail, who’d just returned to finish college at the age of thirty after a six-year interruption to care for her chronically ill mother who’d recently died.
“Yes,” Claire said, “though there’s new evidence that epigenetic changes to our genes can be passed down to future generations. One study followed a group o
f infants who were born grossly underweight because their mothers were pregnant during a famine. Makes sense, right? These kids grew up with as much to eat as they needed. Anyone wanna guess what happened when they gave birth to their own kids?”
Cory Matthis, a lanky twenty-five-year-old from Staten Island who still had acne, had his hand up before Claire had even finished. “The babies had low birth weight too.”
“Enough of them to show a trend,” Claire affirmed. “So let’s circle back to where we started—”
“Whoa, whoa, whoa,” Miguel interrupted, holding a hand up. “You saying I was in a gang ’cause my parents were and my kids’ll be too? ’Cause I’ll kill ’em.”
“But your kids will be born to a parent with a responsible job and they’ll grow up in a positive atmosphere,” Claire reminded him.
“First you gotta find someone who can stand you enough to make ’em with you,” muttered Justine, who had a love-hate relationship with Miguel.
“You volunteering?” Miguel shot back, a wicked grin crossing his face.
Professor McClure covered his urge to laugh but knew it was time to step in. “Maybe one of you clowns could speculate on why this has anything to do with criminal behavior,” he said, quieting the room and bringing the seminar back into focus. Claire shot him a look of thanks, reminding herself that teaching was more than just imparting information. It was an exercise in managing the personal dynamics of some very different people.
“Okay,” she said after silently taking a deep breath. “Any thoughts?”
“It’s sort of what Miguel said,” offered Kara Wallace, “isn’t it? That if you grow up in a family of crooks you become one by osmosis. Like Tony Soprano,” she finished, referring to the popular TV character and proud of herself for it.
“He’s a fictional character,” Leslie Carmichael shot back in a tone of voice that said, “What kind of idiot are you?”
Claire felt a burst of inspiration. “Hold on, Leslie,” she said. “There’s a lot of examples of this in pop culture. Let’s go with Kara’s example. What else do we know about Tony Soprano’s background?”