Grimoire Diabolique

Read Online Grimoire Diabolique by Edward Lee - Free Book Online

Book: Grimoire Diabolique by Edward Lee Read Free Book Online
Authors: Edward Lee
Tags: no tyme for meat
Ads: Link
sexual base. And Sartre was right too. Existence proceeds essence. It is our existence , Mr. Barrows, which makes us what we are. Conversely, the inexplicable trimmings of that existence are what cause our mental problems.”
    Barrows sighed in frustration.
    As the sun set in her Pioneer Square window, the shiny dark-gray hair seemed to glow from behind, like an angel’s aura. But this is one cold bitch of an angel, he thought.
    “Let me guess,” Dr. Untermann posed. “You had a normal childhood.”
    “Yes.”
    “You were raised by loving and well-to-do parents.”
    “Yes.”
    “And you received an excellent education.”
    “Private school and Harvard Yard.”
    The woman didn’t seem the least bit impressed. “And this affliction of yours—it started in your late-teens?”
    “I was twenty…”
    “And your first sexual—or I should say copulative —experience came shortly before that?”
    “Nineteen…” Barrows’ eyes narrowed. She was hitting each nail directly on the head, which made him feel better. “You know a lot.”
    “Obsessive-compulsive disorders have many objective lay-lines.” She seemed casual suddenly, even bored. “They’re all different but they’re all the same in certain ways. You probably married shortly after college?”
    “Immediately after.”
    “But you didn’t love her, did you?”
    Barrows stalled. At first he was offended that she make such an accusation, but then he remembered that it was true.
    “No,” she went on. “You married her because you thought that wedlock—a normal incident—might guide you back to normalcy yourself.”
    Irritated, he shirked in his seat. “Yes.”
    Dr. Untermann lit another long, thin cigarette. A blur of creamy smoke appeared between her lips then vanished in a blink. “Tell me about the circumstances of your divorce.”
    Barrows challenged her. “I’m not divorced,” he said. “I’m still happily married.”
    “Mr. Barrows,” she immediately sighed, “if you want to pay me $450 per hour to lie, then go right ahead. I’ll take your money. But that’s hardly productive now, is it?”
    His smirk made his face feel hot. He felt like a naughty child. This ice-queen is a real piece of work. “Guess not,” he admitted.
    “Your marriage did not return you to normalcy, did it?”
    “No.”
    “Your ‘affliction’ only increased, and you hid it from your wife until—”
    Barrows loosened his collar. “Yes, until she caught me red-handed. She got the flu one week. She…”
    “Go on. I’m your psychiatrist, Mr. Barrows. The more you tell me, the more I can help.”
    Barrows’ shoulders slumped. “She caught me eating her Kleenex out of the wastebasket. In truth—”
    “Yes?”
    “—whenever she had a cold or the flu…I loved it.” He rubbed his face in his hands. “All that Kleenex. All that snot and phlegm.” It was like a treat, like a midnight snack.
    When Barrows looked back up at Untermann, it was shamefully, between his fingers. But the curt, elegant face remained unchanged. It remained inquisitive, calculating. Not shocked.
    He sat back up straight in the leather chair. “How come you’re not disgusted?”
    “For the same reason an oro-facial surgeon is not ‘disgusted’ by a critical burn victim. The same reason a dentist isn’t disgusted by an abscess. Your job is ministering to the intricacies of finance, Mr. Barrows. My job treating bizarre and often repellent mental disorders. To me, however, they’re neither bizarre nor repellent. They’re merely disorders.”
    Barrows was amazed at her professional detachment…so then he sought to challenge her again, not with lies this time, but with a simple question with which to gauge her response.
    “Let me ask you something. May I?”
    Coils of faint smoke drifted upward. “Yes, but I’ll only answer if I deem it to be productive toward your therapy.”
    All right. By now Barrows couldn’t deny a flirting attraction to her, and this seemed a sorry

Similar Books

Sunset Thunder

Shannyn Leah

Shop Talk

Philip Roth

The Great Good Summer

Liz Garton Scanlon

Ann H

Unknown