“I see,” Dr. Frey said, fingering his files.
“I understand that she was recently admitted to the emergency room there after a possible suicide attempt and was kept overnight under observation, under your care?”
“Yes, that’s right. She was released to her mother’s custody the next day, and that’s the last I’ve seen or heard from her, I’m afraid.”
“So that was November first?”
Frey hesitated and checked his desk calendar as he pondered the date.
“Doctor? Are you there?”
“Yes,” he replied, uncharacteristically bemused. “She was admitted on the night of October thirty-first, Halloween, and discharged on November first.”
“All Saints Day,” Murphy observed.
“What?” Frey asked, still distracted. “Ah, yes, it appears so.”
“In a sinner and out a saint, huh?” the cop joked.
“Are you trying to be clever?”
“Hey, Doctor, if a person with multiple personalities
attempts suicide, would you consider that a hostage situation? Now, that’s clever.”
“Like I said, I’m very busy.” Frey’s reputation for humorlessness was well known. “Especially so now.”
“Okay, any indications she might take off? The mother is beside herself. You know, with this weather and with all that, you know, happened.”
“None.”
“Anything unusual that you noticed or may have discussed with her in your evaluation?”
“No, but I couldn’t tell you even if there were. Patient confidentiality, Captain. I presume you know the law.”
The line went silent for a few seconds while the captain pondered how offended he should be by the doctor’s comments.
“This is a young girl out on the street, for all we know. If someone out there doesn’t get her, the storm will.”
“The relationship with the mother seemed frayed, as I recall. Couldn’t she be with a friend? She didn’t present to me as a flight risk.”
“Did she have any awareness of what transpired the other night?”
“Not that she discussed with me. Why?”
“She was in the emergency room when that boy, your patient, escaped.”
“So?”
“The video cameras in the building were tampered with so we can’t be sure, but our best guess is that he came out
of the hospital through the emergency room.”
“And you think they might have had some contact?”
“It’s a long shot, but we have to track down every lead. We’re getting a lot of pressure to find this girl. I don’t want this leaking out and the papers making a connection before we do.”
“I wouldn’t be too concerned yet,” Frey said, playing it off somewhat dismissively. “What is the status of the investigation into Sebastian’s disappearance?”
“The status? Ongoing. I assigned a few men to the case who’ve been pulled off on storm duty.”
Frey wasn’t pleased. “Have you checked the churches yet?”
“First place we looked. Nothing.”
“This is an urgent matter. A public-safety issue. Is your department in the habit of letting killers run wild? New York’s Finest, indeed.”
“What is it with you and this kid?”
“I know him, Captain. That’s all. Without proper care, he could be a danger to himself and others.”
“With all due respect, Doctor, your lack of cooperation hasn’t exactly helped move the investigation forward. He isn’t the only suspect.”
“If you want to speak to other patients under my care, in this ward, you will have to follow procedure. I have a job to do and patient rights to protect.”
“One of your orderlies is found at the bottom of the elevator shaft, and you are making me get a court order to talk to that bunch of lunatics?”
“These lunatics are human beings.”
“I arrested one of your current patients, Sicarius, myself. He’s a soulless, bloodthirsty bastard. What he’s doing up there with you in a minimum-security ward instead of in solitary is a travesty of justice.”
“I don’t make the laws. Besides, he is medicated, controlled. Hardly any trouble at all.”
“He is a sick fuck. What he did to those little girls. His own goddamn kids. If you want me to guess who tossed your orderly down the chute, I’d put my money on him.”
“I don’t want you to guess. I want you to find Sebastian.”
“The kid has no history of violence.”
“The fact that he just happened to disappear the night before the orderly was found notwithstanding?”
“You don’t need to tell me my job, Doctor.”
“I wouldn’t presume, Captain,” said Dr. Frey, condescension dripping from his voice.
“For now, the orderly’s death has been reported as accidental. We don’t want to panic the city with wild headlines about escaped mental patients and kidnapped teenagers. Especially not with this weather insanity going on. You understand? We’ll find him.”
“The sooner the better.”
“I’ll be by to interview Sicarius and a few of the others as soon as this blows over.”
“You’ll bring the court order, of course?”
“Thanks for your time, Doctor. If anything occurs to you on the Fremont girl, give me a call.”
“Good-bye, Captain.”
Dr. Frey lingered over the calendar and Agnes’s file, reviewing his notes, reconstructing his impressions of her and of their meeting. Of the unstable patients he’d seen recently, she was the most stable, her wounds more a mission statement than mental imbalance. Not being one to take unnecessary chances, he decided to take a closer look.
“Nurse,” he called. “Get the patient log for the ER from last weekend.”
“I don’t think anyone is down in records, Doctor,” the nurse advised. “Is it urgent?”
“Now!”
13
Cecilia found it difficult to shake off her dream and began to recover only when the sounds of the street began to make their way through the church walls. Agnes was seated nearby, but not too close. She noticed Cecilia’s agitation.
“Can I get you some water?” Agnes offered, ignoring her own distress.
“I’m okay,” she snapped. “I just need to be by myself for a minute.”
CeCe got up and walked toward the back of the church and into the vestibule and paused, looking back at Agnes.
Sorry,
she mouthed to Agnes.
Thank you.
Sebastian, Lucy, and Agnes watched and waited for her to approach the front doors of the church, but she disappeared from their sight before she did. They did hear a door open, however, and the scrape of Cecilia’s boot soles along
a staircase. She reappeared above them, in the balcony in front of a massive pipe organ, like some waifish phantom of the rock opera. She looked down at them as if scanning an audience from the stage, then turned her back and sat on the bench before the keyboard.
She swayed as she touched the keys, which produced a faint sound muted by dust and age, but loud enough for each in the tiny audience below to hear her music. Cecilia broke out into song and a cold sweat. She seemed overtaken, dazed. It was a minor-chord plainsong, mournful and bittersweet. A chant, almost, with a lilting, ethereal melody.
It was easy for Cecilia to lose herself, but never more than in this place. Empty and in partial disrepair, it resembled nothing so much as a theater set in the process of being built, or maybe taken down—she couldn’t be sure which—but there was so much more embedded in it.
Lean out your window, golden hair
I heard you singing in the midnight air
My book is closed, I read no more
Watching the fire dance, on the floor
It was a musical arrangement of a James Joyce poem that she loved. It was like nothing she’d ever played in public before or for anyone but herself. Her own music was aggressive, confrontational, but these were the sounds of acquiescence, of resignation.
Full of grace.
“Auditions for choir are next week,” Lucy groused.
The tinge of jealousy in Lucy’s tone was obvious, as she eyed Sebastian and Agnes enthralled with Cecilia’s performance.
“Let’s just listen, okay?” Agnes shot back, irritated by Lucy’s pettiness.
I’ve left my book, I’ve left my room
For I heard you singing through the gloom
Singing and singing, a merry air
Lean out the window, golden hair
Her voice echoed through the chamber, reverberating through the wooden and metal fixtures placed, stacked, and hung throughout the church.
When she finished, Cecilia stood quietly and made her way back downstairs to the others.
“That was beautiful,” Sebastian said. “Spiritual.”
“Thanks,” she said shyly.
“Syd Barrett,” he said.
“Yeah,” Cecilia acknowledged. “A real hero of mine. How did you know?”
All the strongest connections she’d ever made were through music. Who you listened to, what moved you, told her everything about who you were. It was like a secret language. One she felt she now shared with him.
“A legend in his own time,” Sebastian added. “And a troubled soul.”
CeCe nodded.
“I don’t know where that came from,” Cecilia said, examining her hands in wonder. “I’ve never played anything like that before.”
“Maybe you’re just . . . inspired,” he said, smiling, grabbing her arms tight.
Cecilia’s faced flushed and she looked away. She wasn’t easily embarrassed or moved by a guy’s touch, but this felt different. Especially now. Her dream had frightened her, but it also thrilled her in a way she had never been. She only barely knew him, but she felt herself falling for Sebastian.
Cecilia looked up at him and smiled a little, crossed her arms, which were bare and had turned to gooseflesh from him and the damp interior. She walked over to Lucy and Agnes, where she was greeted with a gentle hug from Agnes and grudging compliments from Lucy.
They were all moved, whether they wanted to admit it or not. They each felt like she was singing directly to them and about them. For them.
“Nice, but it didn’t sound like a hit to me,” Lucy said defensively.
“What is your obsession with being the biggest and the best?” Agnes asked.
“I wasn’t completely serious, but think about it, why bother pursuing anything unless you shoot for the top?” Lucy spat.
“What about really moving just a few people?” Cecilia
said, joining the fray in her own defense. “I’d rather just reach a few people who really get it.”
“How arrogant,” Lucy chided. “People who get it? It’s your job to
make
them get it.”
“A little sensitive about the whole selling-out thing, aren’t we?” CeCe pushed back. “Art is not a job, or shouldn’t be.”
“Please,” Lucy countered. “If you wanted to be musician, you can do that in your parents’ basement or in front of your bedroom mirror. The minute you put your music out there, charge for a download or a ticket at some old-man bar, you are in the music business. You are asking people to make a purchasing decision, to choose.”
“And what are you selling?” Cecilia asked.
“A fantasy.” Lucy said. “Me.”
“You’d rather be a fantasy?” Agnes asked.
“It’s all about the numbers, about outreach. There is only one of me,” Lucy said, “but everybody has a fantasy.”
“Well, before you hit send, it might be a good idea to think about what you are putting out there first,” Cecilia said.
“Womp. Resentful much?” Lucy scoffed. “Maybe I’d feel the same if I was playing those toilet bowls you headline.”
“I’m trying to reach people,” CeCe said. “Not rape people or whore myself out to the highest bidder.”
“Whoring? You must have us confused.”
“Not really. I guess I just prefer to bare my soul than sell it.”
“Well, I say go big, or don’t go. Anything else is a bust.”
“She reached me,” Agnes said quietly. “She played how I’ve always felt inside.”
Sebastian watched the argument go down and listened carefully to each girl make her case. What they were saying and what they meant to say.
“You need both,” Sebastian said, ending the quarrel by splitting the difference and their differences. “A message and a messenger.”
3
The upper-right corners of the hospital files were dog-eared and yellowed from use, the faintest outline of a fingerprint—Dr. Frey’s—beginning to appear there. Pinching the edges, he had been intently alternating between one page and then the other, searching for some sort of connection, some common thread, a person, place, or thing, in their backgrounds. It was far too coincidental for this girl, he thought, to just up and disappear so soon after Sebastian.