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Amnesia

Page 28

by G. H. Ephron


  “You say she’s seeing a therapist?” I asked.

  “Daphne.”

  “Daphne?” I was surprised, yet not surprised. Daphne Smythe-Gooding was Channing’s longtime mentor.

  “I know, I know. But she analyzed me more than fifteen years ago, and she’d never spent much time with Olivia. Besides, she’s a brilliant clinician … .” Channing’s voice trailed off.

  “But?”

  “Let’s just say the chemistry doesn’t seem to be working. Lately, seems like I have to drag Livvy, kicking and screaming, to her sessions with Daphne,” Channing said, avoiding my eyes. “Besides, Daphne’s a psychiatrist, like me. We come at this from a different point of view than you would as a psychologist. Maybe ours is the wrong point of view, in this case. If you spent even five minutes with her, I think you’d see things both of us miss.” She looked at me, her eyes pleading. “Nothing formal. Just a casual meeting, and then you tell me I’m being an overanxious parent.”

  I chuckled lightly, but I knew better. Whatever it was that Channing was sensing in Olivia, it was probably real. Perhaps not Asperger’s syndrome, but something with a name, and hopefully a treatment.

  “I’d be happy to see her. Informally,” I said.

  “How about this weekend?” Channing rushed on, as if she was afraid I’d change my mind if I thought about it for ten seconds more. “Saturday night. It’s my birthday, and we’re having some people over to celebrate. Olivia will be there.”

  “A party? Doesn’t seem like the ideal place to talk to her,” I said. The last party I’d been to at their house was a suit-and-tie affair, the kind a teenager would rather clean her room than attend.

  “I want you to get a fresh impression. If she knows you’re evaluating her, she’ll clam up. Say you’ll come.”

  Saturday I had plans for a quiet dinner with Annie Squires. Annie was a private investigator. For years I’d worked with her and attorney Chip Ferguson evaluating defendants, until I helped them defend Ralston Bridges, a sociopathic killer who violently objected to my diagnosis. Turned out, no one ever called him crazy and got away with it. After a jury pronounced him not guilty, he took his revenge by stalking and killing my wife.

  After that, I retired from forensic work. Permanently — I thought. But then I let Chip and Annie talk me into defending a man accused of murder. The prosecution’s entire case rested on the memory of his ex-wife, who’d survived a gunshot wound to the head. In the end, I wasn’t sorry I’d taken the case. It helped me a put a few of my own demons to rest.

  “Are you free?” Channing asked.

  She glanced at my left hand. I fingered my wedding ring. “Actually, I have a date,” I said.

  “You’re seeing someone?”

  The question gave me pause. I wasn’t ready to think of myself as seeing anyone. Over the last six months, Annie and I had had a couple of dates and a bunch of near dates. A few times, she’d had to cancel because of her work. I’d had to cancel because of my work.

  Our last date had been by accident — we’d run into each other at Wordsworth’s in Harvard Square and gone out for drinks, which turned into dinner, which might have turned into something more except Annie had plans to see her sister that night. Since then, Annie’s time had been occupied working and moving her office and Chip’s to a renovated building near the Cambridge Courthouse. They were going into private practice.

  I’d been busy. She’d been busy. I knew if I didn’t get off the dime, she’d soon be getting busy with somebody else. But I wasn’t sure I was ready yet for a serious relationship.

  “That’s wonderful! Bring your friend,” Channing said.

  Visions faded of juicy grilled steaks and that bottle of Turley zin I’d been saving. Not to mention the rest of a long, empty evening waiting to be filled.

  “Please, come,” Channing said.

  “Sure, can do,” I said finally. At least I’d still be seeing Annie.

  Relief flooded Channing’s face. She took a business card from her jacket pocket, wrote quickly on the back, and handed it to me. “Here’s where we are.” I recognized that precise, backward-slanted handwriting, more printing than script. “It’s right near our old house. Saturday night. Seven o’clock.”

  I walked Channing out. We plowed through the clouds of smoke that hung under the Corinthian columns at the front of the building. Nurses and doctors who knew better were huddled there, getting their nicotine fix. We crossed the pristine grass quadrangle, flanked by five, perfectly proportioned Greek Revival buildings, holding their own in the shadow of towering modern medical buildings that crowded in from behind.

  As we headed down the path toward the parking lot, Channing had her head down. She was holding her coat together under her chin, her shoulders hunched against the cold. March in New England can be so discouraging. More cold nasty weather when we’re all good and sick of it.

  Channing gaze a furtive look behind her before she spoke again. “You saw the note in JAMA?”

  “What note?” There was a pile of unread journals on my desk, including the last four issues of the Journal of the American Medical Association.

  “I’m amazed no one’s shown it to you. A team from Hopkins dismissed my research as” — with two fingers, she drew quotation marks in the air — “‘too flawed to be meaningful.’”

  In polite scholarly circles, the phrase was the ultimate insult. Her detractors — and there were many, since Channing minced few words when it came to exposing the questionable practices of others — were probably rubbing their hands together with glee.

  A pair of doctors passed us going in the opposite direction. One of them nodded and then resumed his conversation with his colleague. “They’re all talking about it,” Channing said, lowering her voice. “They’re treating me like a car wreck they don’t want to get involved in. It makes me so goddamn mad. And it’s complete bullshit. When I got a call from the team that reviewed my research, they told me their results appeared to be confirming mine. A month later, it’s like ‘Never mind, her research is corrupt.’ I want to know what happened to change their minds.”

  I smiled. Here was the old Channing, the maverick who followed her own compass — which probably explained why she’d run the Drug and Alcohol Rehabilitation Unit for years but had never officially been named director.

  “What’s the study about?” I asked.

  “I was reporting the preliminary results of a pilot project-about twenty subjects. A treatment for addiction. We got patients fresh out of detox programs — they take care of the easy part, the physical addiction. Then we focus on the psychological craving.” Channing’s voice was animated and enthusiastic. “Keep them for two weeks. Treat them with a compound called Kutril.”

  “What is it?”

  “You’re going to laugh. It’s actually a highly concentrated extract of kudzu, combined with Trilafon.”

  “Kudzu? Isn’t that the vine that’s devouring the state of Florida?” I envisioned a viscous green potion.

  “That’s it. Actually it’s the root that’s medicinal. The Chinese used it at least as far back as the first century A.D. to inhibit the desire for alcohol.”

  “You’re serious, aren’t you?”

  “Completely. There had been trials with rats that showed promise. Imagine if it works for humans? Kudzu isn’t even a prescription drug! And Trilafon has been on the market for nearly thirty years. It’s cheap. We’ve got a company in New Jersey making up batches of the compound in pill form.”

  Trilafon was one of the first antipsychotics developed. It tranquilized without sedating. “What about side effects?” I asked. I recalled that was one of the reasons doctors had stopped prescribing it.

  “From long-term use, yes. This treatment is short and intensive — patients take a dose every four hours the first day. Every eight hours for a week. Twice a day for a week. Then we discharge them with a dose a day for two weeks. Then nothing. Kills the craving right from the beginning, and it doesn’t seem to
return, even after the treatment is discontinued.”

  “What’s the success rate?”

  “We just finished analyzing the results of the full-blown study. It confirms the findings of our pilot. Eighty percent after six months. Sixty-five percent after twelve months.”

  I whistled. That was impressive.

  “The only serious adverse events we had were two patients who had seizures, which were then well controlled with Neurontin.”

  “Can it be administered outpatient?”

  “Perhaps. Eventually.” Channing glowed with satisfaction. “Sounds like a magic bullet, doesn’t it? Talk to the drug companies, you’d think it was a subversive plot to put them out of business. Acu-Med went ballistic when they heard. And oh, big surprise, one of the guys who submitted that note to JAMA used to work for them.” She gave a disgusted sniff. “Wouldn’t surprise me if he’s still on retainer.”

  “They’re probably trying to develop a prescription drug to do exactly the same thing.”

  Channing’s eyebrows rose in surprise. “Peter, you’re starting to think like me. Actually, they are. Liam Jensen is running the clinical trials.” Jensen was a doctor who worked with Channing in the Drug and Alcohol Rehabilitation Unit. Channing slowed down until a middle-aged couple walked past. “I’ve got most of my final report drafted. The final stats are being reviewed now.”

  “Sounds like you think they’re out to get you.”

  “You think I’m being paranoid?”

  “It’s not paranoia when you’re surrounded by assassins,” I said. “After all, you’re the one who’s still fighting greed, injustice, and the American way. I think you’ve got it written into your job description.”

  Channing didn’t smile. “How much longer, I wonder? You’ve heard the other allegations against me?”

  “I haven’t.” I tried to keep my head out of the noxious cloud of gossip that floats around the Pearce.

  “You’re probably the only one, then. They’re questioning my clinical judgment.”

  Clinical judgment — a euphemism vague enough to cover just about anything. That and not a team player were the terms used to brand those who didn’t go along or get along.

  “They’re saying that I behaved inappropriately. Got too close. Violated the boundaries.”

  I paused, mid-step. “You?”

  Channing laughed. “Oh, come on, Peter. I’m not that much of a prig.” She gave me a sideways glance. “Well, maybe I am.” She took my arm and pulled me forward. “Anyway, some people find it credible. The worst part is that these allegations are being made in a way that I can’t confront them. Character assassination by innuendo.”

  We stopped near the edge of the parking lot, at the foot of an enormous concrete lion. The creature had his mouth open, his mane curling about his head as he hugged a shield emblazoned with the word Veritas. Channing glanced up at the beast and shivered.

  “Truth,” she said, spitting out the word. “I know that’s what this place is supposed to stand for. But sometimes I wonder if we’re embracing it or devouring it whole.”

  AMNESIA

  Copyright © 2000 by G. H. Ephron. Excerpt from Addiction copyright © 2001 by G. H. Ephron.

  Cover photo © Ansgar/Zefa/Photonica

  All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles or reviews. For information address St. Martin’s Press, 175 Fifth Avenue, New York, NY 10010.

  St. Martin’s Paperbacks are published by St. Martin’s Press, 175

  Fifth Avenue, New York, NY 10010.

  eISBN 9781429973557

  First eBook Edition : March 2011

  Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: 00-031730

  St. Martin’s Press hardcover edition / September 2000

  St. Martin’s Paperbacks edition / September 2001

 

 

 


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