Authors: James Patterson
Tags: #General, #Fiction, #Romance, #Suspense, #Thriller, #Anthologies (multiple authors), #Fiction - Espionage, #Short Story, #Anthologies, #Thrillers, #Suspense fiction; English, #Suspense fiction; American
“The great minister who won the war.”
“I could not have done it.”
“No, you could not have done it, and I could not have done
it, and the peddler, whoever he really is, could not have done it.
Only Paul could have done it,” Greta said. She studied the patterns drawn in the dust by the minister. Ancient patterns like the
sun and moon of cavemen, hieroglyphics. “He knew he was the
only way.”
Below, among the orange trees, two young boys ran and
shouted, played soldier.
John Lescroart is a bestselling writer of legal thrillers. M. J.
Rose is an international bestselling writer of thrillers about
a sex therapist and her patients. Intersecting those two variations seemed like a difficult challenge, but that’s exactly
what
The Portal
does. Via e-mail from one coast to another,
Lescroart and Rose explored the psyche and actions of Lucy
Delrey, a young, disturbed woman who, at different points
displayed facets that surprised both authors. For Rose,
Lucy’s therapy is the portal itself: a door that opens into a
darkened room, which is all Dr. Morgan Snow (from Rose’s
thriller
The Halo Effect
) can see. Consequently, the therapist’s advice, which Lucy takes to heart and which propels
the story forward, is based on elusive shadows. For Lescroart, the story represented an opportunity to revisit the
legal world from which he drew his bestselling thriller
Guilt
.
Lucy’s trip to exorcize her demons takes her straight to San
Francisco (Lescroart’s main stomping grounds), where sophisticated professionals eat in fine restaurants, stay in fine
hotels and mingle within a society that, for all its surface
appeal, hides many a dark secret.
“I think there is something wrong with me, emotionally.”
I nodded. She’d said this before. In almost every session. Lucy
Delrey had been in therapy with me for two months. Every Tuesday evening at 6:00 p.m. she arrived at my office on Manhattan’s
Upper East Side, sat opposite me, and we chipped away at her
defenses.
“Why do you feel there’s something wrong?” I asked her.
“I just don’t feel anything, Dr. Snow. Not even in the most extreme circumstances.”
“What are the most extreme circumstances?” The conversation we were having was almost identical to the conversation
we’d had last week, and every week before that. We always got
to this point when Lucy would shut down, sit silently for a few
minutes, and then change the subject and talk about how as a
child she’d wanted to be an artist and about the man who had
inspired her.
Tonight she answered me, for the first time.
“When I destroy someone. Even then, Dr. Snow. I don’t feel
anything.”
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She paused. Looked at me. Waited. Tried to read my face. But
I was sure I hadn’t shown any shock or surprise. I was used to
confessions. Even overly dramatic ones, like this.
I persevered. “What do you mean, destroy someone?”
In the few seconds it took until she answered, I anticipated
she meant that she was speaking of destruction metaphorically.
I waited, curious.
“Destroy. You know. Assassinate.” Her voice started out as a
whisper and became softer with each additional word. “Annihilate.”
And softer still so that the last word, “Kill,” was barely audible.
There was no change of expression while she spoke, but as
soon as she finished, a look of exhaustion settled on her face. As
if just saying the words had been tiring.
It was this expression that made me wonder for a brief second if it was actually possible that she was—no. In all the time
she had been in therapy, nothing she had ever said suggested she
was capable of killing anyone. She was using these words as a
metaphor for the psychological destruction of people she loved.
“I should feel something. I should be upset.” Her voice was
back to its usual timbre.
This was the longest Lucy had ever gone without mentioning
Frank Millay—the artist she had known when she was a child—
who had painted watercolors on the boardwalk in Brooklyn
Heights.
Some sessions she described the paintings: how they captured
the essence of the river and the cityscape, how they moved her
and made her want to learn how to use the brush and the pigments to create washes that would mean something. Other nights
she told me about the painter himself and how it had taken her,
a girl of seven, months to get him to talk to her and then finally
to show her how to use the brush on the thick paper that had a
texture created to capture the merest hint of color.
During all those sessions I had become aware of my patient’s
attention to detail. Her obsession with color. Her memory that
retained every nuance of those days.
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But even after all those months I did not know why Lucy had
come to me.
Oh, I knew she was troubled by what she perceived about her
lack of emotion. But we never got further than the fact of it. The
only real emotion she ever exhibited was when she spoke about
the painter and the paintings and her impression of them.
Now, finally, she had broken the repetition of her childhood
memories with a revelation that caught me off guard.
“What do you think about when you are—while you are destroying someone?”
“Just that it’s a job. I’m concentrating on the steps. On the work.”
I still didn’t believe that she was serious. Nothing in her character suggested it. I had worked with men and women in prison.
I’d listened to descriptions of cold-blooded murders and crimes
of passion. I’d watched patients’ faces contort with anguish as
they described breaking out of a fugue state and finding a knife
or a gun in their hand or their fingers around someone’s throat,
the skin a milky blue-white streaked with finger burns.
“I’m sorry, Lucy. I’m not sure I understand. ‘It’s a job’? Do you
mean that literally? I thought you were a photographer.”
“I am. But in addition…people hire me…” Lucy’s words
trailed off.
I nodded, encouraging her to go on.
“It’s not something I talk about in polite society. I’m not used
to talking about it. But I think you need to know so that you understand me better. So that you can help me figure out why I don’t
even care about how I fuck up people’s lives. Destroy them.”
I put my right foot out in front of me instinctively.
To press down on the panic button.
But there was no such button in my office—it was in the small
room where I used to conduct therapy sessions at the prison. Lucy
was so convincing that she actually was a killer that I’d responded
the way I would with a criminal in prison and extended my foot
to call for help. This prickling realization—that Lucy might indeed be a killer and not just speaking in metaphor—chilled me.
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But I didn’t have the luxury of focusing on how I was feeling.
I had to say something. To get Lucy to keep talking. To get more
information from her. To figure out what I was going to do because the one time a therapist can break a client’s confidentiality is if a life is in imminent danger.
The one time.
“I don’t believe that you don’t have feelings about what you
do,” I offered. “Usually when we don’t feel it’s because we are
blocking our emotions.”
“Why would I do that? It’s how I make my living. I’m not
ashamed of it. I kill them with their own passions.”
“What do you mean?”
“Do you know that if you offer a man sex he won’t pay a
whole lot of attention to who you are? The same man who would
run a Dun & Bradstreet before he’d take your business call will
take a woman to bed without even knowing her last name. It’s
that lust that I count on. That hard-cock need that makes what
I do so easy. Too easy really. I don’t think that a man should be
that easy to murder. He should fight. He should be scared. He
should know his life is in danger—not just be lying there bareassed and spread-eagled with a blonde giving him head. They
don’t even know…” Lucy stopped here to take a sip from the coffee cup she’d brought in with her.
My own hand was shaking slightly. I hoped Lucy didn’t notice.
Yes, I’d heard confessions like this before, but always before
in the prison, with guards watching. Not here in my office.
“Does it give you pleasure?”
She nodded. “If I know enough about the man. And if he’s
enough of a scum. Yes. You could say I’m some sort of avenging
angel. I only kill men who deserve it. Who have done the unforgivable. Who need to be punished.”
I was watching for any sign of psychosis, still trying to tell if
this was fantasy or reality. But her pupils were not dilated. Her
breathing was regular. There was no sweat on her upper lip or
forehead. No sheen to her skin. Her fingers did not twitch in her
227
lap. Her feet did not tap. She spoke in the same even voice I’d
heard for a long time. She seemed in full control and connected,
very much in the present moment.
“The painter,” she said. I nodded. “When I was a kid, he made
me realize that anything could be made into something else. He’d
look at that water that I just saw as some stretch of muddy blue
and he’d find a hundred colors in it. Some of them brilliant.”
“Did the painter die?”
“I don’t know. He moved away. He didn’t tell me. One day, he
was just gone. I went looking for him. But no one knew what
happened. I look in galleries when I can. He’d be about fifty now.
Fifty-year-old men are easier to fool than thirty-year-old men.
The younger men aren’t always sure. They succumb but they can
be a little suspicious at first. Like, why is she coming on to me?
To me?
But the older guys are so damn flattered you can see their
eyes getting erections. They are too damn easy.”
I nodded. “Maybe the painter died. Maybe he didn’t move away.”
She didn’t say anything. But suddenly her eyes filled with
tears. One rolled down her cheek and she reached out to brush
it away. Her surprise at her tears was clear.
“I never thought about him dying.”
“Why not? Why did you assume he moved without saying
goodbye?”
She shook her head as if she were getting rid of the question
I’d raised. And then she changed the subject. “I should be upset
about what I do. I know I should. But it’s like these guys deserve
it. I mean most of them are doing something to someone. They
are abusing someone somehow. It’s not like they are all nice
guys. But I give all of them a chance. Before I take them back to
the room, I give them a chance to turn me down. I ask them if
they are married or if they have a girlfriend. And then ask them
if they really want to do this. If they really want to hurt the
women they are with.”
“Some of them must say no.”
“Not very many. Maybe two.”
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I wanted to ask her out of how many. But I didn’t want to
stop her.
“One man stroked my skin. His fingertips were as soft as a
woman’s. He had blue eyes. I remember his eyes. Because of those
damn fingers that ran up and down my arm making me shiver.
Usually, I don’t feel anything. That’s what I meant. Before. I don’t
feel anything when they touch me. Or when I pull the trigger.”
“You use a gun?”
I hadn’t meant to ask that bluntly—as if I doubted her. It was
unprofessional. I’d wanted to ask her how she killed them, not
blurt out the worse-case scenario I could imagine.
She looked at me as if I were the one who was crazy and
needed help. “A gun?”
“When you kill them?”
“Dr. Snow, I set them up. I pump them up. I am a hired assassin.
I expose them and ruin them. My whole apartment is a camera. I
destroy them by taking pictures of them and then turning them over
to cops or detectives or the tabloids. Character assassin.” She smiled.
And for a few seconds there was no question in my mind that
a man would go with her and not think twice.
“Do you think I should try to find him? Find Frank Millay, finally?”
It was the end of the session, but I didn’t stand as I often did
to signify that Lucy’s time was up. She had arrived at a crucial
point in her therapy and I didn’t want to cut her short.
“I think you want to find him. And that’s what’s important.”
Typically, I preferred to ask, not to answer, questions. In fact,
I’d told Lucy, the same way I told all my patients at some point,
that only by answering one’s own questions could one come to
terms with personal truths. But she had finally expressed a need,
a desire. And that was a breakthrough for her. From everything
she’d described, she hadn’t given in to any real emotion since that
last time she was with him. She called him the portal. After he
was gone, her emotional life effectively stopped.
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“There’s one thing, Lucy. We need to make sure that if you do
go find him it’s to understand. Not to act out.”
She smiled, slyly, seductively, slipping into the pose she used
when she needed to hide from me. From anyone, I guessed. I’d
witnessed her do this in almost every session. We’d get close to