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damned_institute2009-04-10 01:10 am
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Day 40: Doctor's Office 6 (Dr. Wilson) [Fourth Shift]
Things could have gone better with Max, but they also could have gone much, much worse. Wilson was willing to take a somewhat awkward, tense session over a downright terrible one. As for his next two patients (the last two for this week), one was completely new to him while the other one would be a follow-up. He would have preferred the new patient have a shift to herself, but he had little say in how the scheduling worked in this place.
As for the returning patient, Wilson remembered Kyle well. The boy possibly had some sort of personality disorder, but unlike Allelujah-Hallelujah from earlier, he hadn't been aware of his other personality. Wilson had to wonder if the boy had made any effort to keep track of his moods and his memory to see if things didn't add up, but he supposed it wouldn't be long before he found out. The boy had been agreeable last time, so unless he was in a bad mood today (like Max), things should go smoothly. The new patient was a mystery, but Wilson did his best to keep an open mind.
As for the returning patient, Wilson remembered Kyle well. The boy possibly had some sort of personality disorder, but unlike Allelujah-Hallelujah from earlier, he hadn't been aware of his other personality. Wilson had to wonder if the boy had made any effort to keep track of his moods and his memory to see if things didn't add up, but he supposed it wouldn't be long before he found out. The boy had been agreeable last time, so unless he was in a bad mood today (like Max), things should go smoothly. The new patient was a mystery, but Wilson did his best to keep an open mind.
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But now it was time for another "therapy" session, and Kaito wasn't sure what to think of that. Dr. Wilson had been friendly enough, and some of the things he'd said hit close to home, but...
Well, it wasn't like he could talk his nurse out of seeing the doctor today, so he'd just have to grin and bear it. He smiled at the doctor when the nurse escorted him inside.
"Hi doc!" Kaito said, taking a seat.
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He almost greeted the boy with his name - his actual name - but managed to stop himself in time. He had quickly learned that that was the worst way to start things off with his patients.
"Good afternoon," he said. He remembered that the boy had called him "doc" last time, too, so there seemed little point in trying to correct him today. "How have you been since I last saw you?"
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And then there was the matter of his dad, whom he'd thought was dead. Or who had been dead. One of those. Maybe he could get some information from the doctor about that.
"My dad came to visit me," he said, leaving out the part where it should have been impossible. "I can't say I expected to see him; it's been a long time... Where'd you guys dig him up?"
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"I can't say I know, since I'm not really in charge of organizing any of that, but I would figure he was the person who admitted you in the first place?" Wilson posited as he eyed the young man. "Unless that's not the case."
Kyle should know who was responsible, but oftentimes it seemed that the patients didn't remember actually being brought to the institute. However, since most of them had some sort of breakdown or episode that required them to be brought here in the first place, that wasn't so strange.
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"I'm not sure," he said. Maybe it was dad, maybe it was someone else, maybe it was both of his parents... He hoped it wasn't the latter, because that would mean that they had his mom, too. "I don't, ah... I don't really remember being admitted."
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What Kyle said didn't stand out from the stories he'd gotten from all of the other patients. Still, if Kyle's father had come to visit, then chances were he had been involved in getting the kid committed.
Still, Kyle thought it had been a while since he and his father had seen each other, so Wilson thought it might be a good idea to get a feel for the boy's family situation.
"Are you and your father not on good terms?" he asked with a slight frown. Family issues were always tough to deal with, not to mention they were often the root of people's mental problems.
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His frown deepened. How was he supposed to answer that? They'd been on great terms, up until the part where his dad had died eight years ago. But with his dad showing up alive and claiming to be a detective? He supposed he didn't get along with this "new version" of him, at least not how he'd gotten along with the dad he'd known...
"I'm not sure," Kaito said in compromise. "I've always idolized him, but..."
But what? Did he dare tell Dr. Wilson that his father was supposed to be dead? Yukari had been visited by her father, too, so maybe there were others who had visits from the deceased. Maybe Dr. Wilson already knew about that. Maybe it would just make Kaito sound crazy.
He sighed, looking away from the doctor. He was already in a mental hospital, so Dr. Wilson surely already thought he was crazy... A little more crazy probably wouldn't change things.
"But I was pretty sure he died a long time ago," he finished.
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Now Kyle's claim that he hadn't seen the man for a while made some more sense, but everything else was in question. It was hard to imagine that Kyle had been mentally ill from a young age-- it would have been noticed far earlier than now, not to mention it was very rare for insanity to present in young children.
Still, Kyle hadn't specified an actual period of time. Wilson cleared his throat and eyed the boy.
"How long ago, exactly?"
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Kaito glanced at Dr. Wilson briefly, but then averted his eyes, taking great interest in the floor instead.
"Eight years ago," he answered after a moment. How strange to have been just talking about this to Yukari the other day, and now to be talking about it again. "There was a, uh... work-related accident."
He shook his head, and then faced Wilson again. "He was a magician, and I wanted to be just like him. I've always been following in his footsteps, but when he showed up this week, apparently alive, he was... well... a little different."
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Eight years was definitely long enough that Kyle's belief that his father had died most likely wasn't tied to his illness. Wilson found it hard to believe that the boy had been suffering from it for that long, which meant that either his father had faked his death somehow, or Kyle was distorting his sense of his past and childhood due to his more recent mental problems.
Still, the kid was being surprisingly open about his supposedly dead father, and so Wilson decided to hear him out for now. This was obviously important and probably had some relation to the boy's condition, so the doctor planned on finding out as much as he could.
Wanting to follow in one's father's footsteps was a normal enough feeling, although a magician wasn't the most run-of-the-mill occupation. But Wilson straightened when Kyle mentioned that his father was "different" now.
"What do you mean by that?" It was the obvious question to ask, but that at least meant that Kyle should be prepared to respond.
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"He looked like I remember," he ended up saying. "He acted a lot like I remember, too. But there were things about him that weren't right... For one, he claimed to be a detective."
If Dr. Wilson had known Kuroba Toichi, and really known him, he would have known how ridiculous the idea being a detective was. As it was, Kaito just hoped the doctor would be able to take his word of it being not right.
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"He says he's a detective, but you think he's a thief," Wilson remarked. "I guess there's a pretty big difference there," he continued with a slight smile. Maybe it wasn't the best idea to be joking about something like that, but patients generally felt more comfortable if they were able to see that their doctor was a person rather than a figure. And people joked.
"So, why do you think this happened? Who's wrong, him or you?" Wilson figured Kyle would insist he was right (most people functioned on the belief that they were), but it would be interesting to judge his answer anyway.
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He tried to calm himself, focusing on the change in his dad and trying to push any panic over Kid to the side.
"Why do I think this happened?" Kaito echoed. "Honestly, I don't know. I've been trying to figure it out. But I don't think I'm the one who's wrong."
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"I mean, if anyone was looking at this situation as an outsider, I'm pretty sure most people would side with your father as being the right one. I can't put words in your mouth, but I'd think that being in this place would shake someone's confidence a little... So how are you so sure?" Instead of accusatory, Wilson only seemed curious. A lot of the patients here had strong resolves, which he hadn't been expecting.
It might be that they were just that delusional, but he didn't like to write things off so easily.
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He was quiet for a moment, trying to decide on the best way to explain it. "It just doesn't feel quite right. Last week you said I'm supposed to have multiple personalities, right? I can't just take that kind of thing on faith, not when I've got a whole life's worth of memories that have nothing to do with this 'Kyle Crowe' person you all are claiming I am. I just... I know who I am, the same way that you know who you are."
It was more than just that, though. "And... Correct me if I'm wrong, but delusions aren't normally shared, right?"
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Kyle (or Kaito) definitely sounded sure of himself, and lucid on top of it, but Wilson had to believe that the boy wouldn't be here unless he needed to be. What would be the point of institutionalizing people who weren't insane?
The question about shared delusions was one he got often, so Wilson at least had a prepared response. "Not normally, no, but it has been known to happen. It would definitely have to be the case here," he agreed.
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His reply to Dr. Wilson was an unconvinced-sounding, "Hmm... If you say so. But if you ask me, sharing a delusion is harder to swallow than it not being a delusion."
Unless the doctor could provide compelling evidence to prove that people who had never really met could share the same knowledge, like of Kid's latest heist, Kaito would cling to the belief that said knowledge was proof that he wasn't crazy.
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"I can see where you're coming from, but what point would there be in institutionalizing people who aren't actually crazy?" he asked with a frown. There was no way that sort of thing would happen without there being repercussions, so Kyle really was crazy if he thought that something like that hadn't caught people's attention by now. It would have been all over the news...
Besides, Wilson couldn't really bring himself to believe that he would be working for such a place. He had to admit that there were some strange aspects of Landel's, but not that weird.
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"Beats me," he had to admit, looking a little sullen about it. It was a good question, the point of it all... He just wished he had some idea of the answer. What were they trying to do? "I'll get back to you on that."
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Besides, it looked like their conversation thread was running out, and it wasn't too long before his next patient would be along, if he was judging the time right.
"Well, you do that," he said with a nod, and he somehow managed to not seem sarcastic about it. One of Wilson's skills, as it were. "Looks like our time is about up. I'll see you next week?"
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The truth was that she was afraid. The worst of the brainwashing seemed to take place at night--it wasn't too likely that this doctor was going to try to shove a gun in her hand, but she had to be prepared for the lies he was going to tell her. He might even believe them, if the story he'd heard about her was anything like the one Domino had to tell. She couldn't let her guard down. And if she was faced with an option she just couldn't risk not taking...well, she'd cross that bridge when she came to it.
Meche was half-expecting to find fire and brimstone as the dominant décor in the office, but she realized before the door had even opened all the way how far that was from the truth. The office was tasteful, cozy-looking, dominated by a big desk and an even bigger black sofa--a lot nicer than Manny's, even. She felt a bizarre sense of déjà vu.
Dr. Wilson, too, looked non-threatening--even friendly. But Meche couldn't afford to be totally at her ease here. "Good afternoon," she said quietly, crossing the office and taking the chair in front of his desk. She folded her hands in her lap and waited. Let the professional make the first move.
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Besides, as he watched the young woman enter the office, give it a once-over, and then head toward the seat, he could already tell that she would be easier to deal with than some of the other people who had walked through that door. She sat down without being asked, she said something to him -- this was shaping out nicely already.
"To you too," he greeted in return, clasping his hands on his desk in front of him. "In case you didn't know, I'm Dr. Wilson. This is your first time in therapy here, right?" He didn't remember seeing any note about a transfer, but he didn't trust the system here all that much.
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This was her chance, before he got started on any other tangents. "Would you mind if I asked you a question before we got started?" Meche asked. "There was a man admitted at the same time I was--kind of short, big smile; he would've been calling himself 'Manny Calavera.' I haven't seen him in several days and I've been told he's in the infirmary. I'm not asking you to break confidentiality or anything like that, but I've been worried about him. Can you tell me how he is, or is there any way I could see him?"
She didn't realize until she finished talking that she'd been leaning forward in dead earnest--she hadn't meant to be so obvious about her anxiety. Well, her cards were on the table. All she could do now was wait to see how fairly Dr. Wilson would play his own hand.
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He doubted the woman had done that to herself, so it did make him worry about what kind of trouble she'd gotten into. He was about to ask her if it was set properly or if he should give it a look, but that was when she started in on her own question.
Wilson listened to her description, but he knew from the start that he wasn't going to be able to help her. His access to any information about patients that weren't assigned to him was limited (read: nonexistent). Once she'd finished, he gave her a slightly pained look. He wished he could help, but...
"They actually don't give me access to much of anything, so I don't know who is or isn't in the infirmary. The only information I have is about my own patients, and I don't think a Manny Calavera is one of them." His expression was apologetic now, and it wasn't forced. It was tough to worry about a friend.
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Well, getting an answer to those questions was really what she'd been hoping for out of this session. Now that it was obvious one wasn't forthcoming, Meche was at a loss for anything to try other than actually having a therapy session. She took a few seconds to sit quietly, looking at the little trinkets on his desk (she liked that), letting the disappointment sink in. Then she looked up again. "Well, then, I guess I'm ready to get started when you are. I'm afraid I don't know too much about how this process works."
The whole scene still reminded her overwhelmingly of that first visit to Manny's office. At least then the guy on the other side of the desk had really been on her side, even if she hadn't known it then. Then again, at least this time she didn't have to worry about disappointing anyone. All she had to do here was look out for herself.
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"It's not too complicated," he assured MarĂa when she admitted that she wasn't too familiar with talk therapy. Wilson really had to wonder where all of this patients came from (seriously, did they live in the midwest or something?), but there was also a chance that their condition was to blame for their ignorance.
"We just talk, and you tell me about things that are bothering you, or just anything that you need to get off my chest. If you want my advice about anything, I'll try to give it, and hopefully we can work at helping your rehabilitation along." It felt like a well-practiced speech to me, and that was what it was becoming after a few weeks of his being here. Then again, how many speeches did he recite to his cancer patients? A whole lot.
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She was going to have to give him something--better make it something not too important, for starters. "I'm really frustrated with the lack of communication around here," she said. "Just like that--my friend is obviously sick; he's been missing for days. But where is he, what's wrong with him? You don't know, and I certainly don't know. Patients get discharged--" because surely that was what they'd say had happened to Peter the first time, "--and they don't even get to say goodbye. For us, they just disappear.
"I know there probably isn't much you can do about it. It's just...it's hard to focus on getting better when we have these constant setbacks, you know?" she finished with a sigh.
She wasn't focusing this well. Maybe she should be trying to find out what they were supposed to have done, or how much Dr. Wilson was in on the monsters. She couldn't waste this time; who knew when she'd get another chance to be in the same room with one of the bosses?
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In this case, however, he could completely understand where the woman was coming from, seeing how he'd had his own problems with that lack of information exchange himself. "I definitely agree with you, even if you're right and there's nothing I can do," he started. "A lot of the time I'll come back into the office for the start of the week and find out that a handful of my patients have been discharged... and no one bothered to tell me."
He was supposed to be the one who made decisions like that; since he didn't, sometimes it was hard to know what purpose he was even serving by talking to the patients once a week like this.
Still, it was a cushy job and going back to Princeton apparently wasn't going to happen for a while, so he was going to make the best of his time here. Somehow.
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He just looked so candid; it was starting to get to her. If he hadn't been working for Landel, Meche would've been tempted to trust him. But a bad guy was a bad guy, wasn't he, whether through intention or just negligence. Or did they have something on him too?
"What do they tell you?" she asked. "I'm not sure where to begin. It would help if I had a sense of what you know--about the delusions I was having when I arrived, about what's happened to me at Landel's. Then we could jump off from there." She couldn't risk asking about her "real life"--the goal was to sound as sane as possible, and that meant doing her darndest to be MarĂa.
Besides, with her luck, Domino would probably come back and tell her all about it in a couple of days. She wasn't even going to ask how they got him here.
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He really should have looked it over in advance, but he hadn't had time. Or maybe he had, but he had ended up putting it off. When he made it back home (or as home as his place in Doyleton could be), the last thing he wanted to do was curl up on his couch and read about the depressing things that his patients had gone through.
But pulling a gun on someone? Maria really hadn't seemed the type. "You... threatened to kill your boss," he stated with slight disbelief. She already knew this, obviously (or she should, anyway), but it was new to him.
"Do you remember doing it?" he asked. She could have blocked it out, or maybe it was another personality disorder, but Wilson wasn't going to jump to conclusions. "Do you know why you did it?" Chances were the answer to that one was no, if she had ended up here.
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"I was angry," she blurted out, completely honestly. "You don't know what it was like in that office, day after day, all his comments....Does it say in there that he used to lock me in the vault when he thought I was talking back a little too much for my own good? And there was no way out! The only thing I could do was try to keep my head down--but God, it was just so tough!"
She felt her fists clenching in her lap, tension in her left hand and outright pain in her right. Meche forced herself to loosen them and flattened her palms against her thighs. "So when I saw a way to fix things, I just--took it," she said, more quietly.
Where were her delusions supposed to come into it? Was it just the same story, except that they all had different names and they were alive? Maybe it was dangerous to make herself sound like she'd been too sane then.
She was probably allowed to sound like she'd come to her senses, though, so Meche took a deep breath, controlled herself, kept going. Made it sound good. "It wasn't a solution; I know that now. It didn't fix anything. But at the time, I was just at my wits' end." She left out her conviction that she'd do it again in a heartbeat, given the chance. She was really the queen of sins of omission today.
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It sounded like her boss was a pretty terrible guy, if Maria's word was to be trusted, but that didn't mean that she had gone about dealing with it in the right way. How had she even gotten hold of a gun?
The fact that she could admit that she had been at her wits' end seemed to suggest that she knew she hadn't been thinking straight. Wilson eyed her for a moment before speaking. "It does sound like your work environment was intolerable, but why do you think there was no way out? There must have been someone you could have reported your boss' behavior to..."
Unless the business had been something less than legal, in which case it was hard to sympathize with her. (He still did, of course, but it did make it more of a stretch.) Wilson knew that people did stupid things when they were desperate, but that kind of desperation could lead to making bad moves and having breakdowns, all of which Maria had learned the hard way.
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"To me, Victor was the hierarchy," she replied, thinking fast and catching herself before she could call him "Domino." "I couldn't go to his boss, and I didn't know anyone else I could turn to for help. And I had those two little children to try to take care of--what would happen to them if I quit?"
That was another thought. Were Pugsy and Bibi supposed to exist in "real life" too, and if so, where were they supposed to be? Were they delusions? Whatever the line was, she couldn't believe it, but she had to know. MarĂa would ask. "Does it say in there what happened to them?" Meche asked, leaning forward. "No one's been able to tell me. Are they all right?"
She watched Dr. Wilson carefully; the question of the children wasn't the only thing making her anxious. Meche wasn't sure how convincing all that sane honesty had been. What if she said she was illegal, that he'd get her deported if--but that was too easy to check, and Meche was a terrible liar. She'd better stick as closely as possible to the real story. MarĂa Morales was a saint gone astray, but she was also going to be well on the road to recovery. She just had to be here long enough to reconnect with Manny.
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Wilson wasn't surprised that she wanted to know about what had happened to her charges. There had been a mention of them in the general overview, but there had to be a more detailed note somewhere...
"One second," he said as he flipped through the file, and that was when he came across some paperwork having to do with moving the two children into foster care. That wasn't the best option by any means - foster care often messed people up pretty badly - but with their original caretaker here, apparently that had been the only place they could go.
It wasn't good news to deliver, but she had asked for a reason. "They're in foster care," he explained. He refrained from showing her the actual piece of paper since it had more details than she should probably know at this point. If she got better and was released, he was sure that she would be given all of the information at that time.
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Then she remembered the virgin-eating birds.
"Oh," Meche repeated, feeling like she'd just been slugged. "Guess I don't exactly have visitation rights, do I?" She shook her head; she was reeling a little now. Getting her off-balance was probably exactly what he wanted, she reminded herself. But to put those little children in foster care, scared and alone....there were a lot of good foster parents out there, but the system also had a lot of problems. Meche doubted those had gone away in the last ten years.
"I'd never hurt them," she said. The earnestness in her own voice surprised her, and she caught herself raking her left hand anxiously through her hair. "Maybe that's hard for you to believe after what I've done, but those angelitos...they really mean the world to me. Do you think there's any chance--if I work hard in here, if I can get better...?" She wasn't sure whether MarĂa or Meche was asking the question, and at the moment, the difference didn't seem to matter all that much.
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It sounded like she was even more eager to get better if only so that she could see them again. That was the kind of devotion that was usually only seen in parents towards their children. She wasn't their real mother, but that didn't always matter.
"I'm sure that if you recovered and were released, the matter would be looked at by a judge," he assured her. "I can't make any promises, but if it was established that you were well enough to take care of them and support them, then hopefully it would work out." She seemed like a good person who had just been pushed to the brink, so he did want it to turn out okay for her.
"As for visiting, I'm not sure if they would be allowed to come here," he said with a frown. It sounded like they were fairly young, so exposing them to this kind of environment might not be the best idea. Surely she would understand that, along with the fact that it would be hard for the children to see her in this state.
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"I understand," she replied, feeling a little heartened. "This is a pretty scary place for anyone, let alone children. It's probably better if they don't see me until I come home."
But how long was that going to be, she wondered. Even if they--if she, since Manny was down for the count right now--could get everyone out of here, that was still no guarantee that they'd have an easy way back to the Ninth Underworld. Would they just have to live out their lives on Earth until they died naturally? If they worked hard (fortunately, Meche knew the formula), they could get tickets on the Number Nine, but fifty years would be too long for those poor kids to wait; they'd give up hope.
"I wanted to ask what I have to do to be released eventually," she continued. "I feel better, but it's important that we're all sure, of course. Normally I'd guess if I keep behaving well and proving that I'm not going to have any more outbursts...but it sounds like it's not really your decision, is it? Sometimes the releases feel a little arbitrary, to be honest."
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He wasn't surprised when she asked about the process of getting released. It seemed like she had already pieced together how the system worked, but Wilson still let out a sigh.
"I agree completely. I take it there's some sort of panel that evaluates the patients, but it's not like they come asking for my opinion. It seems like they just let out who they want when they want. If that's the case, then..." What was he even doing here? But he couldn't say something like that out loud to a patient. He was supposed to want to be here and to want to help these people. He did want to help them, but the fact was that he always ended up feeling like he was just here for show.
If that was the truth, he'd rather be back with his cancer patients, where he did actually make a difference sometimes.
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What next? She couldn't ask too many questions herself--he probably wouldn't know the answers to most of what she really wanted to know, and if he did, he probably wouldn't tell her. Well, she'd pick a safe one. It might not help much, but any information at all was something. At the very least, it might impress Manny a little.
"Sorry, I just have one more question, and then I promise I'll be a good patient and get back to what I'm really supposed to be doing here." She gave him a smile. "Do you know the Institute's address? I understand we can send and receive mail, and I have some friends who'd probably like to hear from me. I just don't know what return address I should put, and I haven't had a chance to ask any of the nurses."
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At Maria's question, Wilson looked back to her, his eyes brightening when he realized this was something he should be able to help her with. "Oh, yeah, of course." He actually hadn't heard of patients sending out mail before, but it would make sense that they could. People could send letters from jail, for Pete's sake.
"Let me just..." He trailed off as he started looking through the different papers on his desk for an envelope or letter where the address would be noted down. When he didn't have any luck, he started to resort to digging through his desk drawers -- and still, nothing. How could he honestly not have one scrap of paper with the address on it?
"That's weird," he remarked to himself for than to the patient. "I'm sorry, Maria, but it looks like I don't have it on me right this second."
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There was always the possibility that they really couldn't send mail, but then what was a mail room doing on the map? That might be worth exploring one of these nights.
"Oh, well, thanks for looking. I'll just ask one of the nurses the next time I think of it," she replied easily. "That's one of the pitfalls of keeping your desk neat--as soon as I clean it out, I'm guaranteed to need the exact paper I just threw away."
Well, it didn't look like she was going to get a lot of answers here. Probably she should just be grateful that he hadn't made her shoot anyone yet. Meche looked to the doctor, refolding her hands neatly in her lap. What a saint, she thought. "Did you have any more questions for me, Dr. Wilson? I'm happy to talk about whatever will help."
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When Maria put the conversation topic back in his court, Wilson took a moment to consider. They had gotten through a good deal of the woman's questions and it was getting late, but they could probably go on for a little longer.
"I guess for now, all I would like to know is if you've had any problems or concerns while here at the hospital. I don't necessarily mean about the people waiting for you outside, but..." He shrugged. It wasn't like he was a mind-reader. If she did have any problems, she would probably know what he meant.
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"Aside from that...sometimes I feel really--" She shook her head, alert to the still-unfamiliar sensation of her hair swishing against her cheeks. "I don't know. Really--uncertain, maybe that's the word. I used to think of myself as a good person, but after that incident, I'm not so sure anymore. I start to think, maybe he really did take that out of me." She looked down at her hands. "Pretty tough to point a gun at someone and still be the good guy, right? And then I catch myself wondering, well, what's going to happen the next time I get upset?"
The incident she was talking about wasn't her encounter with Domino, but Meche had nonetheless hit at the heart of what was bothering her.
"It's not too often," she added quickly, just in case she'd managed to convince him that she really was clinically insane. "I've met some nice patients in here, and talking helps a lot. Maybe you just always have that lingering doubt."
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"I think it's better that you have that doubt," he carefully replied. "If you weren't thinking about what you did and being bothered by it, that would be much stranger." It was slightly worrisome that she didn't feel like she had control of herself or her emotions, but that was one of the main things she was going to have to work on while here.
"Your boss probably made you feel like you didn't have a proper hold on your life, and you went to an extreme in order to fix that. Now you just need to figure out how to regain that control in a healthier way. You need to make sure it doesn't happen again," he said, feeling confident about his advice this time. He really wasn't half-bad at psychoanalyzing, considering how often he practiced it with House.
"The next time you get upset, you should be aware of it. See how you deal with it. If there's something wrong with your response, then try to figure out how to correct that. That's about all I can tell you," he finished.
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Had she been having trouble because they were tough moral calls? Because she'd been brainwashed? Or because she really wasn't anywhere near as saintly as she liked to pretend she was?
"You're right," she said. "I'll watch myself. He came to visit last weekend, actually, and I was okay then--I mean, I wasn't thrilled to see him, but I didn't get the urge to hurt him, even when he got insulting." She gave a little shrug. "That's progress, I guess."
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Personally, Wilson thought she might be well enough to leave this place soon, but hadn't the two of them just been discussing how he really had no say in that sort of thing?
Sending a glance down at his wristwatch, Wilson realized that they were nearing the end of their time, which meant Meche was off to dinner and he was headed home for a nice, long weekend. "Well, I think that's enough for today, Maria. Thank you for being so cooperative and I'm... sorry I couldn't be more helpful," he finished with a sigh.
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"Not at all," she replied, getting to her feet. "It's nice just to have someone to vent to. You helped more than you think you did." He'd told her a little more about her "real life," for one thing, and some new things about how the Institute operated. And--well...it had felt good to talk to someone, even if she couldn't be completely on the level with him either.
As she reached the door, she turned back to give him another quick smile and a goodbye: "Thanks. Have a good weekend." I really hope you're one of the good guys, she added silently on her way out.