| Previously...
James and
David broke the news of Ethan's death to a devastated
Brooke. Stormy blamed Alex for Kelly leaving him.
James and Alex waited for Miranda to awaken from her
coma, sure that she would be destroyed upon learning
of the burns she suffered. James invited Renee
to move into the mansion after Hotel Terranova
was destroyed in the earthquake. James questioned
Renee about her past with T.T. Renee squashed
T.T.'s attempts at reconnecting with her, angry over
the fact that he'd allowed her to fall for him years
ago while he was engaged. Benji assumed that Sierra
was falling for him after he bravely rescued her from
the fire. When she maintained her commitment to
Malcolm, Benji grew belligerant. The police discovered
that the body found on Jordan's estate was Troy Beauchamp,
Jordan's half brother, and that he'd been dead for over
twelve years. Jordan was arrested for suspicion
in the death. Concerned over Heather's reaction
to the earthquake, Brett, against his better judgement,
took her to see Dr. Anderson. After Anderson's
vague response to Brett's questions about the treatment
he was providing his wife, Brett pulled off Anderson's
fake beard. A frazzled Anderson fled before Brett
could question him further. Later, Brett learned
that Anderson was not registered as a psychiatrist in
California or any other state. After getting a
phone call, Heather disappeared from their condo. Brett
went to Anderson's office to find her but found the
place empty and new tenants moving in.
Episode
93
"We're
All Criminals Now"
Jordan turned
to the side as instructed, scowling angrily while the camera operator took his
picture. Mug shots were always less than
flattering, but then again they weren’t meant to be handed out as calling cards. He wondered how long it would take for the
media to get word of the latest scandal.
At least this would knock Alex and Scott Kelly off of the front page for
the first time in weeks.
But
even that wasn’t much comfort. “I have
to find my daughter,” he said as the guard led him across the room and jammed
his fingers into an inkpad. “Are you
going to go look for her or not?”
The
guard continued with his task of taking Jordan’s fingerprints.
“She’s
in trouble. She’s missing.”
“Here,
use this,” the guard said and thrust a handi-wipe into his palm.
Jordan
groaned
in frustration as he was ushered down a corridor toward a holding cell. “Great.
So you’re wasting time locking me up for some trumped up charge and
meanwhile my daughter is out there somewhere with some maniac.”
The
guard delivered him to his cell, keys clanging while he locked the door between
them.
“Are
you listening to me?” Jordan
demanded, grabbing the bars and gritting his teeth in anger.

“I
can’t listen to this,” Brett insisted, pacing the floor of Detective Callahan’s
office elsewhere in the police station.
“I couldn’t care less who you found buried on Jordan’s property. My wife is missing. You’ve got to do something.”
“According
to you, she hasn’t been gone but a couple of hours, Mr. Armstrong,” Stephanie
replied, sitting behind her metal tank desk, a small circular fan blowing
papers back and forth. “That hardly
constitutes a missing persons case.”
“You
don’t understand,” Brett said, running a hand over his clammy face. “She’s
been having problems. Since our daughter
was born she’s been remembering things.”
“What
kind of things?”
Brett
paused, carefully deciding exactly how much he should tell the detective. “Things that could hurt her. I think he’s using the past to get to Jordan.”
Stephanie
leaned forward, crossing one leg over the other. “He?”
“Her
doctor. He’s using her.”
“Using
her for what?” she asked, her voice full of skepticism.
Sighing,
Brett ran his fingers through his hair and slapped his hands to his sides. “I don’t know.”

Word
of Jordan’s
arrest and of Heather’s disappearance spread quickly. Brett called Benji who decided to score
points with Sierra by calling Renee who immediately phoned Alex to cast the
blame on her. They all arrived at the
police station within minutes of each other.
The first thing that Benji noticed was that Sierra had drug Malcolm
along with her.
“Is
it true?” Renee said, a hand clasped dramatically on Benji’s arm. “They found Troy Beauchamp buried at your
father’s house?”
“Who’s
Troy Beauchamp?” Malcolm interjected, all the while fending off steely cold
looks from Benji.
“Jordan’s
half-brother,” Alex interjected when she made her grand entrance in a pink
tweed dress and matching wide brimmed hat.
“Lola Lamont
is their mother. He left
town years ago. Or at least we thought
he did.”
"Do
they know how he died?” Sierra clasped
her hand through Malcolm’s.
“I’m
afraid not, Baby,” Renee replied.
“Jordan killed
him,” Alex deadpanned.
“What?”
Renee exclaimed in a shrill voice. “What
are you talking about?”
Alex
rolled her eyes. “Wake up, Renee. The police have arrested him. They had to have had a reason for doing
that.”
“Oh come on-“ Renee
began, throwing her hands up in resignation.
“Why are you always the first to think the worst of your husband? You have absolutely no loyalty to anyone, do
you?”
“Are we supposed to
believe it’s just a coincidence that a body was found on his property? Troy
and Suzanne were always together. He
probably killed him in a jealous rage.”
“Yesterday you were
convinced that he’d killed Suzanne. Now
it’s Troy that
he’s killed. Who’s next?”
“I
know he killed him,” Alex insisted.
“Frank Dunning saw him bury the body.”
Benji
watched and listened, suddenly aware that he had no idea what was
happening. Confusion quickly set
in. He remembered seeing the blood on
the floor of the living room. He
remembered the ax laying on the Persian rug beside it. Frank told him that he saw Jordan carrying
a body from the house. That was the last
night that he ever saw his mother. But
if the body that his father had buried wasn’t his mother, then where was she
and why did she leave?
“Frank
Dunning was a mad man,” Renee insisted.
“He was obsessed with Suzanne. Jordan found a
shrine he’d built for her in his house.
He would say anything to discredit Jordan.”
“Look,
none of this is helping anyone,” Malcolm interjected.
Benji
regarded him with irritation. “This is
none of your business,” he said. “What
are you even doing here?”
Sierra’s
look was scolding. “Benji, please.“ she
said.
He
shrugged indifferently. “Anyway, we have
other problems. Brett said that Heather
is missing.”
“Missing?”
Alex asked. “What do you mean missing?”

“So
let me make sure I’ve got this right,” Detective Callahan said in a thoroughly
patronizing manner. “You think your
wife’s psychiatrist isn’t really a psychiatrist, but is really an enemy of your
father-in-law’s who’s wearing some kind of disguise, and who also treated your
father-in-law’s ex-wife twelve years ago using a different name and a different
disguise?”
“Yes,” Brett replied, fully
aware that it sounded ridiculous when she said it in such a manner.
“Now
the psychiatrist is gone, and your wife is gone too and you think he’s done
something with her. “
“I
know he has,” Brett said, growing more irritated by the second. “Look, all I’m asking is for you to check him
out.”
“You
said yourself that Dr. Erich Anderson isn’t registered with the Board of
Psychiatry in this state or any other. What
more do you want me to do?”
“I
don’t know,” Brett replied. “Can you
trace the office space he was leasing?
There’s got to be a way to find out who leased it.”
“He
could have paid cash,” Callahan reasoned.
“He
would have had to sign a lease.”
She
shook her head. “He could have used a
fake name. Look, I know you’re worried,
but my suggestion is that you go home and wait for your wife to come home. You said yourself that you have a new baby. No mother is going to leave her child without
some kind of explanation.”
Brett
had heard enough. She wasn’t taking him
seriously and he was wasting time. He
quickly shot up and bolted for the door.
Once in the waiting room, he approached Benji and Alex.
“How
is Jordan?”
Renee asked. “Have you seen him?”
He
shook his head. “No, they won’t let
anyone in. I was trying to convince
Detective Robocop to do something about my missing wife. Benji, have you heard from her?”
He
shook his head. “Do you really think Dr.
Anderson has her?”
Brett
placed a hand on his forehead and nodded.
“Yes, I do.”
“Dr.
Anderson?” Renee asked in surprise.
“He’s
a fake,” Brett declared. “Look, I’m
going to try to find her. I can’t just
sit around and do nothing.”
“If
Anderson has
her, they could be anywhere,” Alex said.
“I’ll
go everywhere I can think of that she might have gone. At least that way we can rule something
out. It’s better than standing around
here doing nothing.” Brett headed for
the door.
Once
he was gone, Alex swooped into her giant purse and withdrew her keys. “I’d better get going too. I need to check on Miranda at the hospital.”
Renee
glared angrily at her. “Without so much
as asking to see your own husband?” She
shook her head in amazement. “You really
don’t deserve him.”
Alex
steadied herself with a deep breath. She
pretended not to care but knew it didn’t come off that way. “Jordan has proven he can’t be
trusted. He’s guilty, Renee. You know that as well as I do.”
After
she’d gone, Malcolm pulled Sierra into an embrace. From across the room, Benji watched them. He knew that it was all a show orchestrated
by Malcolm to get to him. He knew that
he had feelings for Sierra and he used the opportunity to flaunt their
relationship. Blood boiling, Benji
clenched his fists and resisted the temptation to beat him to a bloody pulp.

The
construction at the Blackthorne mansion was in full swing, and James had the
headache to prove it. Everywhere he
walked there was a crew of carpenters and a haze of sawdust in the air. With a groan and a frustrated exhale, he made
his way down the stairs and turned toward the parlor room for a drink.
“How
can you live here with this dust and debris floating around?” Jackie Lamont asked
when he entered. “It’s bad for your
health, James. Why don’t you take a room
at Moonshadows with me?”
He
couldn’t help but smile. “So you can
move in and have the locks changed while my back is turned? Come on, Jackie. I deserve more credit than that.” He poured them each a drink and swallowed his
down in one gulp.
“Touché,”
she said with a grin and sipped her scotch slowly.
“What
are you doing here?” he asked, staring out the window at the hazy afternoon
sun.
“I
thought we were getting to be friends.
Can’t I stop by to see you?”
“I
meant in Los Angeles. Your attempt at taking this house and Sunset
Studios from me failed thanks to David.
I always thought you preferred New
York. I’m
surprised you haven’t raced back by now.
Surely there’s a suitor or two waiting in the wings. Some CEO or theatre director that you have
your claws sunk into?”
“No
one special,” she said with a wink and circled him as if stalking her
prey. Before he could react, she took
his drink from him and set it with hers on the table. She stood behind him and placed her hands on
his shoulders. “You’re tense.”
“I’ve
had a lot going on. My nephew just died,
my daughter is laying in the hospital in a coma, and my son is off somewhere
trying to find his new bride who took off an hour after their wedding.”
Jackie
realized now was not the time to lay on her charm. She handed him his drink again and sat down
on the cognac leather sofa. “I wish
there was something I could do for you.”
“There’s
nothing anyone can do,” James said and gazed out the window again.
Jackie
looked down at her drink while she contemplated his words. “Why don’t you let me arrange the service?”
“Service?”
“For
Ethan.” She stood up from the sofa and
followed him across the room. “You’ve
got to do something, James. If you don’t
you’ll never accept that he’s gone.”
“I’ve
accepted it.”
“You
need to say goodbye.”
He
shook his head in aggravation while pouring himself another glass of
scotch. “There isn’t even a body to
bury. The whole thing seems pointless.”
“You
want to honor your nephew, don’t you?” Jackie asked. “Do this for him. Do it for your family. But most of all, do it for yourself.”
He
had to admit she had a point. Ethan was
gone yet he went blindly about his days as if he was merely on vacation and
would walk through the door at any minute.
If they had some kind of service maybe the finality would register.
“Okay,”
he said with a grim expression. “Thank
you, Jackie.”
She
reached out and took his hand in hers. When James’s cell phone rang he fished it from
his pocket and saw that it was Alex calling.
“Alex?”
he answered. “What is it?”
“I’m
at the hospital with Miranda,” she said from her position outside the hospital
room. “She’s awake.”

Watching
the movers haul every piece of furniture, every box, and every picture back
into her townhome was enough to make Brooke completely lose it. She wondered how she got to this place. One minute she and Ethan were packing their
things and preparing to start a new life on the other side of the Pacific, and
the next she back in the same empty house, alone.
David
followed the movers while they carried the sofa inside. Once the doorway was clear, he entered and
exchanged solemn glances with Brooke.
“David,
what are you doing here?”
“Came
to see how you were doing,” he replied, his hands in his pockets. He glanced around and took a big breath. “Looks like you’ll be settled back in in no
time.”
“Yeah,”
she said, pulling her hair up off her neck and gesturing to the boxes lining
the living room wall. “I mean, I have a
lot of unpacking to do, but I can always-“
He
cut her off abruptly. “Are you sure this
is what you want? I can still get you a
suite at Moonshadows.”
“I’m
fine here, David,” she said. “I’d rather
not disrupt Michael too much anyway.
He’s used to this place. We’ve been
happy here.”
“I
just worry that you haven’t thought this through. You were happy here, yes, but what about now
that Ethan’s gone? Don’t you think the
memories will make it too hard?”
Brooke
busied herself by unpacking a box of blankets.
“Memories are all I have. I don’t
want to lose that.”
David
sighed and glanced around the room. She’d already made up her mind and there was
no changing it. His eyes landed on an
envelope resting atop the kitchen counter.
“What’s
this?” he asked with a raised eyebrow.
She
glanced over her shoulder and shrugged indifferently. “Some papers Kenny dropped by earlier. Something to do with Ethan’s estate.”
“So
soon?” David asked. “What do they say?”
“I
don’t know. I haven’t opened it.”
David
regarded her carefully. “Why not?”
Removing
the last of the blankets from the box, Brooke carried a stack to the closet and
placed them neatly on the top shelf.
Instead of answering his question, she turned and offered a vague smile.
“I
appreciate you coming by, David, but you don’t have to keep checking on
me. I’m going to be fine. I’m not saying it’ll be easy, but I’ll get
through it.”
He
took a few tentative steps forward and looked into her aquamarine eyes. “I know things between us have been
impossible for the last few months, but I’d like to be a friend to you if
you’ll let me. You don’t have to put on
this brave front, Brooke. Your world has
been turned upside down.”
She
started to shake her head in protest but as soon as she did the tears
came. Holding it together was harder
than she’d realized. She tried to be
strong and not resort to her usual meanderings of self pity, but this proved to
be too much.
David
pulled her into an embrace and held her tightly as she sobbed against his
shoulder. He hated the fact that it took
something so tragic to bring them close, but something told him that she would
need someone in the coming weeks and months.
He was glad it could be him.

They
moved Jordan
into the interrogation room where Detective Callahan questioned him about the
body and about his relationship with his half-brother. Jordan
sat belligerently at the
table with his arms crossed.
“Let’s
cut to the chase, Mr. Rydell,” Stephanie said.
“A body was found on your property.
Do you mind telling me how he got there?’
“I
didn’t kill him,” Jordan
replied, tight-lipped.
“If
it was any other body or any other place I wouldn’t have a problem buying into
that,” she continued. “But being that he
was your half-brother and it was your property, things aren’t exactly looking
so good for you.”
“Are
you going to find my daughter or not?” he asked as if he hadn’t even heard her.
“What
was your relationship like with Mr. Beauchamp?”
“We
were like any brothers are,” Jordan
replied. “We had our disagreements.”
Stephanie
crossed the room and sat down across from him.
“What did you disagree over?”
Jordan
was silent, his mind returning to Heather and the apparent danger she was in as
a result of her sessions with Dr. Anderson.
“I
can always find out, Mr. Rydell,” she went on.
“People love to talk in this town, especially about rich Hollywood
types like you.”
“You’re
not from L.A.,
are you?” Jordan
asked.
“How
can you tell?” she asked and stood up, kicking her leg up on the chair.
He
shrugged. “Just a hunch.”
“I’m
from New York,”
Stephanie said. “I transferred to L.A. a few months
ago. And believe me, I’ve already met
half a dozen men just like you.”
“Men
like me?”
“Good looking,
fancy sports cars, Prada golf
shirts. That and you’ve all got something
to hide. Now if you’re not going to tell
me what went on with you and your half-brother, then I’ll find out on my own.”
“Nothing
went on. I told you, I didn’t kill
him. Now are you going to charge me with
anything or are you going to let me go? As far as I can tell you have no evidence to
continue holding me.”
She
took a few cool steps forward and paused before him. “I can hold you for twenty four hours if I
choose to,” she said. “That should be
long enough to dig up some dirt on you.
I’m getting a search warrant as we speak. There’s bound to be something hiding around
in your Beverly Hills
mansion.”
“You’re
wasting your time. You should be looking
for my daughter. The longer I’m in here
the harder it’s going to be to find her.”
Stephanie went to the door and called for the
guard. “Take Mr. Rydell back to his
cell,” she said.
“Your
warrant came through,” the guard said and handed her a folded piece of
paper.
She
took the search warrant from him and turned to Jordan. “I’ll let you know what we find,” she said in
a patronizing fashion.
Jordan gritted
his teeth angrily. While she was tearing
his house apart looking for evidence, Heather was still missing. He was going crazy thinking about it. If anything happened to his daughter he would
never forgive himself.

James
barreled down the corridors of Cedars-Sinai Hospital, weaving between
orderlies and patients until he came to Miranda’s private room where Alex was
waiting.
“How
is she?" James asked in bated breath.
“Does she know?”
Alex
shook her head. “No, she hasn’t taken
the bandages off. Eddie is in with her
right now.”
James
took a deep breath before pushing the door open and looking on in joy at his
daughter awake and sitting up in bed.
Eddie was seated at her side and stood up when James approached.
“Hey
sweetheart,” he said, beaming happily while taking her hand in his and sitting
down on the edge of the bed. “How are
you feeling?”
“I’m
okay, Daddy,” she said weakly. Her hair
was matted to her head and her unmade up face was bandaged on the left side
from her cheekbone to her jawline. “Mom
and Eddie were just telling me about the earthquake. I don’t even remember most of it.”
“It
happened pretty fast,” Eddie said, the tips of his fingers in the pockets of
his jeans.
“Was
there a lot of damage?” Miranda asked.
“Was anyone hurt?”
James
glanced back at Alex and then settled his eyes on his daughter. “I’m afraid so, sweetheart. A lot of people were hurt.”
Her
eyes flashed open wide and she began looking around in a panic. “Oh my God.
Stormy? Is he okay? Was Stormy hurt?”
James
squeezed her hand and shook his head.
“No, Stormy is fine.” He could
tell how disoriented she felt . A lot
had happened in just a few days and it was bound to be difficult for her to
take it all in. “I don’t want you to worry about anything right now. The important thing is you’re awake and
you’re feeling better.”
“Daddy,
tell me,” she insisted. She looked past
him at her mother and then over to Eddie.
“Tell me who was hurt.”
James
finally gave in and told her the truth.
“Ethan was killed during the earthquake,” he said. “He was driving back to the hotel from the
townhouse and-“
“No,”
Miranda whimpered quietly. “No,
Daddy. Not Ethan.”
“I
know,” he said in a soothing voice. His
hands went to her face and softly stroked her skin.
Tears
welled up in Miranda’s eyes. Trying to
wrap her head around the awful news, she suddenly looked up and gave a tiny
gasp. “Poor Brooke,” she said.
Her
sentiment struck James as extremely unlikely.
He couldn’t ever remember her expressing anything but hatred for
Brooke.
“She
and Ethan were going to get married that night,” Miranda continued, recalling
the tender scene she and Brooke had shared during the reception. Maybe it was
because Brooke was leaving town and she felt like it was okay to be civil to
her. Or maybe it was her being genuinely
happy that she was finally with the man she loved. Either way, she could only imagine what she
was going through.
“Jackie
is planning a memorial service,” James said.
“I’m glad that you’ll be up and around.
I’d hate for you to miss it.”
“Yeah,”
she said softly. She brought her hand up
to itch her face and frowned when she felt the thick bandage taped to her
skin. “What’s wrong? Why are there bandages on my face?”
Alex
took the opportunity to dart forward and take her daughter’s other hand. “It’s not that bad, Darling,” she said, tears
welling up in her eyes. “I promise you.
We’ve already contacted the best plastic surgeon in the country.”
“What?”
Miranda shrieked, alarmed by her mother’s words. “Plastic surgeon for what?”
James
groaned and flashed Alex a look of warning.
He knew she was subtle as an elephant at times, but he thought she’d at
least take extra care when it came to their daughter.
“The
hotel caught fire during the earthquake, “ James explained. “You and Eddie were unconscious in your
office for a good amount of time. It
took a while for the fire fighters to get to you. When they did, you’d suffered some burns.”
“Oh
my God,” Miranda said, scavenging around the area for a mirror.
“Miranda,
don’t,” James protested. “You have to
calm down. You can’t let this upset
you.”
“Mother,
give me a mirror,” she ordered, grappling for her purse.
“Miranda…”
James pleaded.
“Give
me a mirror!”
Startled
by the severity in her voice, Alex swooped into her purse and plucked around
for a compact. She grudgingly handed it
to her and winced in agony while she waited for her reaction.
“Just
remember, it’s nothing that can’t be fixed,” James said tenderly and placed a
hand on her arm.
Miranda
flipped open the compact and aimed it at her face. She lifted the tape from the bandage and
slowly peeled it away. Gut wrenching
nausea immediately set in. Her face
turned stark white and her heart raced a mile a minute.
“Oh
my God!” she cried, bursting into tears and staring at the burn that covered
her cheek and neck. “Oh my God,
Daddy. How could this happen to me?”
“It’s
not fair, I know,” James remarked. “But
Miranda, you’re alive. This could have
been much worse.”
“It’s
really not bad, Darling,” Alex piped in with a sickeningly optimistic tone in
her voice. “Plastic surgeons fix this
kind of thing all the time.”
“That’s
easy for you to say,” Miranda cried in despair, unable to tear her eyes from
her reflection in the mirror. “You’re
not a disfigured monster. Look at
me. I’m a freak. How can I ever go out in public again?”
“I
still think you’re smokin’ hot,” Eddie said, hoping that his trademark
wisecracking would lighten her mood.
She
shot him a look of repulsion and wiped her eyes with a tissue. “Shut up,
Eddie. Why don’t you get out of here?”
“Miranda,
I know you’re upset, but-“ James began.
“Yes,
I’m upset!” she screamed hysterically.
“I’m disgusting! I don’t even
know how you can look at me!”
“We
love you and we’ll love you no matter what,” Alex said. She felt helpless. This was something she didn’t know how to
fix. A broken heart or a cheating
husband was easy, but when it came to her looks Miranda was untouchable. Take that away and you took away her
soul.
“Please
just leave,” Miranda said, turning away and curling into a ball. “All of you.
Just go.”
James
motioned to Alex and Eddie and started to the door. He knew she needed time. Before they left, he turned and watched her
sobbing into her pillow.

Kenny
arrived at the police station and found Renee pacing back and forth in the
waiting area. He approached and she
quickly filled him in on the details of Jordan’s arrest.
“Where’s
Alex?” Kenny asked. “Why are you here
and she’s nowhere in sight?”
Renee
rolled her eyes with a huff. “Because
Alex doesn’t care about anyone but herself.
Kenny, you’ve got to do something.”
“I
can’t do anything until Jordan
is arraigned. Let me talk to the D.A.
and see what they’re charging him with and then we’ll go from there.”
Renee
turned and crossed the waiting room. “I
don’t believe Jordan could
have killed anyone, much less Troy. They were brothers for God’s sake.”
“I
don’t remember them being that close,” Kenny remarked. “I always thought Jordan
was jealous of Troy
and Suzanne’s friendship.”
“That
doesn’t mean he killed him,” Renee shot back, eyes wide with alarm.
Kenny
watched her carefully. “You were close
to Suzanne. Are you
telling me she never talked to you about Troy?”
She
looked at him point blank. “Of course
she talked to me about him, but she never had any interest in him. Troy
had a crush on her. An innocent
crush. Suzanne knew that but she would
never have acted on it.”
Kenny
sighed and tried to put things in perspective.
“What about Heather? You said on
the phone that she was missing. Does
this have anything to do with Troy, or with Jordan being
arrested?”
Renee
threw her hands up in resignation. “I
don’t know. But according to Brett, the
psychiatrist that she’s been seeing is a fake.
He’s not a psychiatrist at all.”
“What?”
“They
think he’s using her to get to Jordan.”
“That
doesn’t make any sense,” Kenny insisted.
“Heather’s been seeing him for over a year. Sierra even saw him a couple of times after
that night with Nathan on the yacht. If Anderson was a fake and only wanted Jordan, why
would he have bothered seeing Sierra?”
“I
don’t know,” Renee admitted. “The only
thing I can think of is that Jordan and I were seeing each other at the
time. Maybe Sierra factored into his
plan somewhow.”
“Was Heather Blackthorne your only
appointment today?” the receptionist asked.
“Because I’ve only been here for an hour. The agency said I’d be here all day.”
“If you have a problem with the
hours then don’t take the assignment next time,” Erich Anderson said from the
doorway of his office. “Now get your
things and get out.”
She hastily grabbed her purse,
turning and shoving a slip of paper at him.
“You have to sign my time slip,” she said.
He scribbled an intelligible
signature on the bottom line and thrust it back at her. After she’d left the office he retreated to
his desk, pulled open the top drawer and removed a silver hand mirror. He removed his glasses and the colored
contact lenses from his eyes. Slowly, he
began peeling the beard from his face.
A knock at the door alerted him to a
visitor. Heart racing, he quickly
reattached the beard and slipped on his bifocals. By the time he’d stood up from the desk and
collected himself, Renee DeWitt was standing before him.
"Dr. Anderson?”
He cleared his throat and
nodded. “Yes. I’m sorry.
My office is closed for the day.
You’ll have to call my receptionist in the morning.”
"I’m sorry for just stopping by but
I didn’t have your number. Stormy
Blackthorne recommended you to me. His
ex-wife is a patient of yours. Heather
Blackthorne.”
Dr. Anderson’s eyes shifted
nervously. “I’m not at liberty to
discuss any of my patients with you, Miss…?”
“DeWitt. Renee Dewitt.
I’m not asking for you to discuss your patients. I want you to see my daughter, Sierra. She’s been delt a few blows lately and I’m
afraid if she doesn’t talk to someone she’ll never recover.”
“Maybe she just needs a nice long
talk with her mother,” he said with a strained smile. He compulsively ran his fingers along the
edge of his fake beard in order to make sure it was securely attached.
“I’ve tried and she won’t talk to
me,” Renee insisted. “Please, Dr.
Anderson. I’m desperate. Stormy said what a help you’ve been to
Heather. He said you’re the best there
is. I just need to know that you’ll see
her.”
“I’m not taking on any more patients
at this time,” Anderson
remarked. He picked up his briefcase and
headed for the door. “I’d be happy to
recommend you to someone who-“
“It’s got to be you,” Renee
lamented. “I don’t have time to look for
another doctor. Please. I’ll bring her in today. Just tell me that you’ll take her on as a
patient.”
Reluctantly he agreed. It wasn’t his intention at all, but the woman
simply would not stop talking, and he could feel his beard pulling away from
his skin. He’d have done anything to get
her out of his office.
Once she was gone, he sat down and
held his head in his hands. He would see
the woman’s daughter a couple of times and then tell her that she was fine. Somehow he’d fake his way through it.
He opened the drawer and pulled out
a small bottle of glue. Carefully, he
brushed it onto his cheek and firmly reattached the beard.
“I
doubt it,” Kenny remarked. “You and
Jordan were together for two seconds.
What would Anderson,
or whatever his name is, have needed Sierra for?”
“I
don’t know,” she said and dropped her hands to her sides. “But when I think of my daughter being alone
with someone who wasn’t even a real doctor it makes my skin crawl. Who is this man?"
Their
discussion was interrupted when T.T. arrived, darting over to them in an Armani
suit and matching overcoat.
“What
are you doing here?” she asked.
“Malcolm
told me you were here. I heard about
Jordan Rydell. I wanted to see if you
needed anything.”
The
last thing Renee needed was T.T. complicating matters. She had enough to worry about. When she spotted the confused look on Kenny’s
face she decided to rush through a hasty introduction.
“Kenny,
this is T.T. Levitt. T.T., this is my
ex-husband, Kenny DeWitt.”
They
shook hands and exchanged pleasantries.
Kenny looked him up and down and raised a curious eyebrow.
“How
do you two know each other?”
“We
met years ago on a cruise,” T.T. explained.
“Before
you and I were married,” Renee added.
“Look,
I don’t know Jordan Rydell very well, but I wanted to offer my help if it’s
needed,” T.T. said, getting straight to the point. “Is there anything I can do? Do you need money for bail?”
“Bail
hasn’t been set yet, but-“ Kenny began.
“We’ll
be fine,” Renee cut him off, glaring heatedly at T.T.
“Are
you sure? Because I can call my
accountant and-“
“I
have money, T.T.,” Renee said slowly. “Jordan has
money too. We’re perfectly capable of
taking care of things ourselves. We
don’t need your help.”
He
knew she was acting out because of their last run-in. She still hadn’t forgiven him for not telling
her about Julia when they met on the cruise.
“Well,
if you change your mind-“ T.T. began.
“It
was good of you to come,” Renee said, using her eyes to direct him to the
door.
Finally
taking the hint, T.T. turned and left the police station. After he’d gone, Kenny looked at Renee and
noticed how flushed she seemed.
Something about T.T. Levitt got to her.
She was cold toward him, but he knew her well enough to know it was a
cover for very different feelings.
“What
are you staring at?” Renee asked him, irritated.
He
shrugged with a knowing grin. “Nothing.”

Benji
stood by helplessly while the police ransacked the house. Detective Callahan had shown up with an army
of police. They looked through closets,
in cabinets, under beds and ran metal detectors over the floors.
He
poured a few gulps of straight vodka into a glass and drank it while the police
went about their business. Still
confused and unsure of his own sanity, he tried to piece everything together in
his mind. For years, he’d held on to the
belief that his father had killed his mother in cold blood. Frank even confirmed it. But now the reality was that the body Frank
had seen him bury wasn’t his mother’s after all. So what was going on?
Deciding
he needed to go out and find some trouble to get into, he phoned Blake at home
and told him there was a warehouse party in Van Nuys they should go to. Most times Blake would have been on board,
but today he seemed different.
“I
can’t,” he said from his bedroom.
“Something’s going on with my dad.”
“Join
the club,” Benji said wryly. “My dad’s
in jail. Beat that.”
“I
don’t think my dad’s been taking his medication,” Blake said in a worrisome
tone. “He’s kind of lost it. I went into his room last night and he was
just sitting there talking jibberish.
Today I have no idea where he is.”
“You
call Eddie?”
“He’s
been at the hospital so his phone is turned off,” Blake replied. “I was going to drive down there. God, how can things get any worse?”
Benji
watched as a police officer came down the stairs with a plastic bag in his
hands. Two other officers followed
him. He squinted, realizing that inside
the bag was an ax.
“I
think they just did,” he said and swallowed the rest of his drink.

Brett
had no luck finding Heather at any usual place she might go to. The park, the beach, Jordan’s house. Everywhere he thought of turned up
nothing. He became more sure than ever
that Anderson
had her. Anderson. Whatever his name really was.
He
went back to the condo, paid the sitter, and fed Violet her bottle while doing
some research. First was looking in the
phone book for every Anderson
with the first initial E. A long shot,
yes, but he was desperate. In the
greater Los Angeles area alone, there were
hundreds of E. Andersons. He slammed it shut and ran a hand over his
clammy face.
Violet
twisted in his arms and started to get fussy so he put her in her crib. He walked into the bedroom and looked around
in hopes of finding something he may have missed. There had to be a clue as to where she’d
gone. One minute the phone had rang, and
the next she was climbing out the bedroom window.

David
handed his mother a glass of sherry while they stood in the living room of her
penthouse suite at Moonshadows. She
accepted it graciously and floated across the room to the open doors leading
onto the terrace.
“I
saw James today,” she said, letting the warm ocean breeze blow through her
chestnut hair. “Alex called from the
hospital. Miranda woke up.”
“How
is she?” David asked with genuine concern.
“I
imagine once she gets over the shock of what the fire did to her face, she’ll
be perfectly fine. It’s a shame,
really. She’s a beautiful young woman.”
“James
will take care of her. There are plastic
surgeons that can work miracles. You
should know,” he added with a wiseacre smile.
Jackie
hit him playfully on the arm. “I resent
that. I have never had surgery.”
David
gave a good natured laugh and gazed out at the Pacific from their position on
the terrace. “What is going on with you
and James, anyway?”
“What
do you mean?” Jackie asked coyly. “We’re
friends.”
“Friends?”
he scoffed. “A couple of weeks ago you
were trying to steal his studio and his house.
Don’t tell me you just dropped that idea in favor of being friends.”
Jackie
took in a deep breath and smiled with her eyes closed. “We have a special bond. I can’t explain it. When we were trapped at the hotel together,
we saw each other in a new light.
There’s excitement when we’re together.
I don’t know. It’s this kind of
electricity. It’s quite exciting.”
David
threw his head back and laughed. “Oh
really? Electricity is dangerous,
Mother.”
She grinned. “Actually, I’m planning Ethan’s memorial
service for him. The poor man has no
idea which way is up right now. I’m just
glad I can be of help to him.”
“Who are you?”
David asked. “You’re helping him with
Ethan’s memorial? Forgive me if that
sounds a little too Martha Stewart and a little less Jackie Lamont.”
“I’m trying to be a
friend. I was as surprised as you at
first, but he seems to really be accepting of me.”
“How do you know
he’s not using you?”
“How
do you know I’m not using him?”
“Are
you?” he asked, eyebrows arched.
She
sipped her drink and turned toward him.
“There’s more than one way to skin a cat, David. You may have thwarted my plans to take over Sunset Studios, but there may just be
another way.”
David
grew serious now. “Mother, I told you I
didn’t want you hurting James Blackthorne or his family. They’ve been through enough.”
“And
I haven’t?” she asked in a shrill voice.
“My father died and James Blackthorne took everything that was precious
to him. Then Brooke Taylor and her gin
soaked mother took my husband from me.
The way I see it, the Blackthornes have done nothing but steal from
me. I think it’s about time I start stealing
back.”
Knowing
full well there was no reasoning with her, David threw up his hands in
resignation. “So what is it you intend
to do?”
“I’m
going to marry him,” she said with a smile.
“And then I’ll take everything he’s ever cared about.”

James
paced the waiting room at the hospital, glancing at his watch and waiting for
Alex to report back to him. He and Eddie
exchanged glances briefly. Moments
later, Alex appeared, her face drawn and her eyes red and watery.
"Well?”
James said and barreled toward her. “Did
you get her to talk to you?”
Alex
shook her head, wiping her eyes with a tissue.
“She won’t even look at me. She
thinks she’s hideous and so she wants no one in her room. I just can’t understand how she could push us
away like this. Doesn’t she know how
much we love her?”
“She
knows,” James said, frustrated.
“I
can’t take this for much longer, James,” Alex said. “When does the plastic surgeon you found get
here?”
“Not
until next week. We’re just going to
have to help her through this in the meantime.
That means all of us. If we can
ever get Stormy to stand still for a minute then we could show her as a family
how much we love her and need her.”
Eddie
bit his lip and left the waiting room while they continued their
discussion. He approached Miranda’s room
and watched her through the glass window.
She sat on the bed, sobbing into her pillow with the mirror gripped
tightly in her hand. He decided he
wasn’t going to let her push him away.
He was used to her snarly attitude.
To him it was nothing new.
Pushing
the door open, he entered and did his best to lighten the mood. “It wasn’t just the earthquake,” he said with
a grin.
“What?”
she asked, pulling her face from the pillow and frowning in his direction.
“In
your office. We kissed and the earth
moved. Only it wasn’t because of the
earthquake.”
Miranda
sighed and flung herself onto the bed.
“Get out, Eddie. As usual your
timing sucks.”
“Well
that’s too bad,” he said and marched toward her. “For months you’ve been saying that I’m just
a dork and you could never see yourself with me. But that kiss proved otherwise. Nobody kisses like that without meaning it.”
She
rolled her eyes and sat up on the bed again.
“We were at a wedding. People get
mushy at weddings and do things they don’t normally do. Stop reading more into it.”
“I’m
not letting you off the hook this time,” he continued.
“Eddie,
I don’t care,” she said, tired. “I just want
you to get out of here.”
“No,
I’m not leaving you alone.”
“Get
out!” she screamed in despair. “I don’t
want anyone to see me like this.
Especially you.”
He
frowned. “Why especially me?”
But
she quickly dismissed her remark.
“Nothing. I didn’t mean
anything. I just want you to leave. I don’t have feelings for you. I only kissed you because I was feeling
lonely and jealous that my brother and Kelly were getting married.”
“I
don’t believe you,” he said.
“I
don’t care,” she said and rolled over onto her side. “You’re just a nuisance. Why don’t you just go home and leave me the
hell alone?”
As
much as he tried to take what she said with a grain of salt, he couldn’t stand
there any longer and listen to her snarling at him. Slowly, he turned and backed out of the
room.
Once
he’d gone, Miranda turned to the door and burst into tears. She lifted the mirror to her face again and
cringed at the hideous burns on her face.

The
ax made a loud clunking noise when it hit the table in the interrogation
room. Jordan looked at it and closed his eyes
tightly. When he looked up again,
Detective Callahan was standing before him with her hands positioned firmly on
her hips.
“Correct
me if I’m wrong, but axes belong in the garage or the shed. This one was buried beneath the floorboards
in your attic.”
Jordan forced
himself to appear unaffected. The
detective watched his expression, patiently waiting for him to react.
“No
response to that?” she asked.
He
shrugged indifferently.
“Okay,”
Stephanie said with a shrug and removed a plastic bag from her pocket. “Then how about this?”
Jordan took the
bag and inspected its contents. Inside
was the gold chain with a locket on the end.
My Darling Suzanne – All my Love. He read the engraving and winced in
anger.
“Still
nothing?” Stephanie asked. “Mr. Rydell,
these items were found together hidden away in your house. Someone had to have put them there. I’m guessing it was you.”
He
shook his head and lied. “I’ve never
seen these things before in my life.”
She
folded her arms and circled the interrogation able. “So
they just magically appeared underneath a loose floorboard?” she asked.
Jordan
shrugged. “I don’t know.”
Stephanie
flipped her long brown ponytail over her shoulder and sat down across from
him. “So if we dust this locket and this
ax for fingerprints, yours won’t show up on either one?”
The
room began spinning and Jordan
felt nauseous. Never in a million years
did he think this would be coming back to haunt him now. Not after twelve years of silence.
“Let
me ask you again,” Stephanie said and leaned forward. “Where did this locket come from?”
Finally
Jordan
decided he’d had enough. “I bought it
for my ex-wife before she left me. I’d
forgotten about it until now. It wasn’t
exactly a happy time in our marriage. I
guess she must have thrown it in the attic with some of her other things before
she left.”
“So
you bought your ex-wife the locket?”
“Yes.”
Reaching
into her pocket, she removed a photocopied sales receipt. “From Tiffany?”
“I
think so.”
She
smiled patronizingly. “No wonder your
wife left you, Mr. Rydell. Your
attention to detail is seriously lacking.
This locket is from Cartier. It says so right on the clasp. Luckily Cartier
keeps pretty good sales records. I just
came from there. This locket was purchased
in August of 1996 by Troy Beauchamp.”
Jordan still
didn’t react. He couldn’t.
“Now,
why would your half brother be giving your wife a locket with such a personal
inscription?” the detective asked.
All
Jordan
could do is stare at the wall in a daze.
The less he said the better off he’d be.
“Here’s
what I think,” she said. “I think your
half brother was sleeping with your wife, you found out and killed him.”
Still,
Jordan
kept quiet.
“Tell
me, why did you pick an ax to do the deed?” she demanded. “I think it’d be kind of messy. Why not something like poison, or
strangulation? Or was the ax just there and you picked up the first thing
you could get your hands on?”
“I
want to speak to my lawyer,” Jordan
finally said.

It
didn’t take long for her to go under. A
few suggestive words and she was in a trance-like state on the sofa in the
small cabin at the Yacht Club. Dr. Anderson stood above
her, using a soft voice and speaking as slow as he could. All that was left to do was plant a few key
words in her mind so that when the time was right she would do what was
necessary.
“When
you leave here, you will remain in a hypnotic state. You will take a taxi to Beverly Hills and wait at your father’s
house. You’re not to talk to
anyone. Is that understood?”
“Yes,”
Heather murmured softly.
“When
your father returns home, do you remember what I told you to do?”
“I
remember,” Heather said slowly.
“Good. Very good.”
Dr. Anderson opened Heather's purse and placed a small handgun neatly
inside. “You’ll wait for further
instructions from me. No one else is to
enter the house. If they do, you know
what to do, don’t you?”
“Shoot
them,” Heather said.
He
smiled. “Yes, that’s right. Now when I count back from three, you will
feel awake and refreshed, but you will remain under my control.”
“Okay.”
“Three…..your
eyes are opening. Two….you are alert and
refreshed. Three….you are awake.”
And
in that instant, Heather sat up on the sofa and looked around to get her
bearings. She took her purse, stood up and
walked slowly out the door of the cabin.
Anderson smiled
gleefully. He moved across the room to
the dressing mirror and removed his glasses.
It was a long time in coming, but he’d succeeded in planting enough
suggestions during their sessions to finally put his plan into action. He recalled the numerous hours where her
husband would wait in the lobby while he put her into a hypnotic trance. Each time she would emerge normal and not
remember anything about their session.
Staring
in the mirror, he removed his colored contact lenses.
Not
until recently did Brett Armstrong begin to question what was happening during
their hours together locked away in his office.
He had no doubt most of it was due to Jordan Rydell’s past with Dr.
Wainwright and his inability to trust psychiatrists. His mistrust was warranted, however, as he’d
attempted to do the same thing with Suzanne many years ago. The only way he was able to pull it off again
was because as Dr. Anderson, he never had to come face to face with Jordan Rydell. The only people who’d seen him besides
Heather were Brett Armstrong, Stormy Blackthorne, and, strictly by error, Renee
DeWitt and Sierra Merteuil. It would
have taken only once for Jordan Rydell to see him and recognize him as Julian
Wainwright.
He
peeled off the fake beard and set it gently on the dresser. Next, he carefully removed the gray wig,
revealing his own brown hair beneath.
It
was time that Jordan Rydell paid for his crimes. Time that he answered for ruining his life
and the lives of his boys. His oldest
son had moved out years ago, fed up with him and his neediness. But how could he not need his
children? His wife had left him after
falling in love with another man. She
told him he wasn’t good enough anymore.
Without so much as looking back, she packed her things and left
them. He was destroyed.
Reaching
to a flap just beneath his chin, he slowly peeled the thin layer of latex from
his face, removing it in one clumsy movement.
Afterwards, the mask dropped limply to the floor and Victor Distefano
peered at himself in the mirror.
Yes,
it was time for Jordan Rydell to pay for his crimes.
Next time....
Friends
and family gather together to pay their respects to
Ethan. Tom King, writer and producer of Wonderland,
puts his spin on The Blackthornes for Webseries
Writers Swap II.
Read
Episode 94
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