“Sure,” Mike said. “You think this is what Rosemary McDevitt is doing at Club Jaguar. She has this nightclub and all these underage kids go to it legally. It makes sense, on one level.”
“And on another level?”
“A woman whose own brother died of a drug overdose pushing pills?”
LeCrue smiled at that one. “She told you that little sob story, did she? About her brother who didn’t have an outlet so he partied too hard and died?”
“It’s not true?”
“Total fiction, far as we can tell. She claims that she’s from a place called Breman, Indiana, but we’ve checked the books. No case like the one she describes happened anywhere near there.”
Mike said nothing.
Scott Duncan looked up from his note taking. “She’s smoking hot though.”
“Oh, no doubt,” LeCrue agreed. “A fine first-class honey.”
“A man can get stupid with a woman who looks like that.”
“Sure can, Scott. That’s her MO too. Gets a sexual hold on a guy. Not that I’d mind being that guy for a little while, you know what I’m saying, Doc?”
“I’m sorry, I don’t.”
“You gay?”
Mike tried not to roll his eyes. “Yes, fine, I’m gay. Can we move on with this?”
“She uses men, Doc. Not just the dumb kids. Smarter men. Older men.”
He stopped and waited. Mike looked at Duncan and then back at LeCrue. “Is this the part where I gasp and suddenly realize that you’re talking about me?”
“Now why would we think something like that?”
“I assume you’re about to say.”
“I mean, after all”—LeCrue spread his hands like a first-year drama major—“you just said you never even met her until today. Isn’t that right?”
“That’s right.”
“And we totally believe you. So let me ask you something else. How’s work? I mean, at the hospital.”
Mike sighed. “Let’s pretend I’m thrown by your sudden change in subjects. Look, I don’t know what you think I’ve done. I assume it has something to do with this Club Jaguar, not because I did something but because you’d have to be a moron to not realize it. Normally, again, I would wait for my lawyer or at least my wife, the lawyer, to show up. But as I’ve repeated several times, my son is missing. So let’s cut the nonsense. Tell me what you need to know so I can get back to finding him.”
LeCrue arched an eyebrow. “It turns me on when a suspect talks all manly like that. It turn you on, Scott?”
“My nipples,” Scott said with a nod. “They’re hardening as we speak.”
“Now before we get too gooey, I just have a few more questions and then we can end this. Do you have a patient named William Brannum?”
Again Mike wondered what to do and again sided for cooperation.
“Not that I can recall.”
“You don’t remember the name of every patient?”
“That name doesn’t ring any bells, but he might be seen by my practice partner or something.”
“That would be Ilene Goldfarb?”
They knew their stuff, Mike thought. “Yes, that’s correct.”
“We asked her. She doesn’t remember him.”
Mike didn’t blurt out the obvious, What, you talked to her? He tried to keep still. They had talked to Ilene already. What the hell was going on here?
The grin was back on LeCrue’s face. “Ready to take it to the next entrepreneurial level, Dr. Baye?”
“Sure.”
“Good. Let me show you something.”
He turned back to Duncan. Duncan handed him a manila folder. LeCrue put the unlit cigarette in his mouth, reached in with tobacco-stained fingernails. He plucked out a sheet of paper and slid it across the table toward Mike.
“Does this look familiar?”
Mike looked down at the sheet of paper. It was a photocopy of a prescription. On the top were printed out his name and Ilene’s. It had their address up at NewYork-Presbyterian and their license number. A prescription for OxyContin had been written out to William Brannum.
It had been signed by Dr. Michael Baye.
“Does it look familiar to you?”
Mike made himself stay silent.
“Because Dr. Goldfarb says it isn’t hers and she doesn’t know the patient.”
He slid another piece of paper. Another prescription. This time for Xanax. Also signed by Dr. Michael Baye. Then another.
“Any of these names ringing a bell?”
Mike did not speak.
“Oh, this one is interesting. You want to know why?”
Mike looked up at him.
“Because it is made out to Carson Bledsoe. Do you know who that is?”
Mike thought that maybe he did, but he still said, “Should I?” “That’s the name of the kid with the broken nose you were jawing at when we picked you up.”
The next entrepreneurial step, Mike thought. Get your hooks into a doctor’s kid. Steal prescription pads and write them yourself.
“Now at best—I mean, if everything breaks your way and the gods are smiling in your direction—you will only lose your medical license and never practice again. That’s best-case scenario. You stop being an M.D.”
Now Mike knew to shut up.
“See, we’ve been working this case for a long time. We’ve been watching Club Jaguar. We know what’s going on. We could arrest a bunch of rich kids, but again if you don’t cut off the head, what’s the point? Last night we got tipped off about some big meeting. That’s the problem with this particular entrepreneurial step: You need middlemen. Organized crime is making serious inroads into this market. They can make as much from OxyContin as cocaine, maybe more. So anyway, we’re watching. Then last night things started going wrong over there. You, the doctor of record, show up. You get assaulted. And then today you pop up again and wreak havoc. So our fear—the DEA’s and U.S. Attorney’s Office—is that the whole Club Jaguar enterprise will fold its tent and we’ll be left with nothing. So we need to crack down now.”
“I have nothing to say.”
“Sure you do.”
“I’m waiting for my attorney.”
“You don’t want to play it that way because we don’t think you wrote those. See, we also got some legitimate prescriptions you’ve written. We tried to match the handwriting. It isn’t yours. So that means you either gave your prescription pads to someone else—a big-time felony—or someone stole them from you.”