@dottoremostro
Hannibal Lecter, M.D.
dottoremostro
May 6, 2022
auldcine
Don’t think that I hold that against you. Ladies have never held any charm for me. First, you take a low, common advantage of me, then you insult me. I meant it as a compliment! And I hope to see more of you when you’re free of the spell of the elegant Mr. Wilkes.CLARK GABLE and VIVIEN LEIGH in GONE WITH THE WIND (1939)
dottoremostro
cruelmillennial-deactivated2022
Feb 4, 2022
dailyflicks
Grace Kelly in Rear Window (1954)
dottoremostro
miss-duberry
Feb 1, 2022
Eredità
As it turned out, Madeleine was available for lunch that afternoon and more than happy to see her daughter. Things had been well between the two of them for the last two weeks, and Rachel felt like vomiting just at the thought of possibly throwing that away. Hannibal suggested the news would be easier for her mother to bear if it was told to her in private by Rachel herself. Rachel, however, felt as if he were leaving her to handle it alone.
Why do I feel like we’re going to fight tonight even if she’s happy about it, she thought with a sigh while waiting for Madeleine to join her. That moment came far too quickly than she wanted.
“Oh, Rachel, dear, don’t you look lovely.” Madeleine leaned in to greet her daughter with a kiss on the cheek. “The spring sun is already doing you well. You look almost glowing.”
Rachel gave her a tense smile, adjusting the napkin on her lap. Madeleine didn’t notice, though, as she was giving her drink order to the waiter.
“A martini, please, with extra olives. One for both of us.”
The waiter hustled off before Rachel could interject. She’d intended to put the news off until the end of their meal, but now that timetable was also being moved up.
Lovely.
There was a little small talk after the drinks were dropped off and entrees ordered. Eventually Rachel couldn’t put it off any longer; she’d left her martini completely untouched, and Madeleine was looking a bit suspicious.
Rachel’s fingers fidgeted in her lap. “Mom,” she started, intentionally picking an endearing term she never used, “Can I tell you something?”
Madeleine gave her a sympathetic look, and her eyes flashed. Rachel couldn’t tell if the flash was one of happiness or concern. In all likelihood, it was probably a bit of both.
“Is it Hannibal, dear?” She dropped her voice. “Are you arguing? I’ve heard that European men can be quite aggressive, you know.”
As much as Madeleine may have been growing warmer towards her future son-in-law, there was nothing she loved more than drama.
“No, of course not, it isn’t that.” Rachel’s voice was sharp with offense — and frustration at the fact that they likely would be arguing tonight if her mood didn’t improve.
Madeleine gave her daughter an unconvinced look. Rachel looked off to the hostess stand for a moment, steeling herself. Then she turned back, finding her mother’s steely blue eyes hard to meet.
“We’re expecting a child. I’m due in November.”
The rim of Madeleine’s martini froze against her lips. She set it down with an unsteady hand, unsure of what to do with her face.
“My goodness, dear. How long have you known?”
More like, “How long have you been hiding this from me?” Even Rachel’s internal monologue sighed.Just swallow your pride and do what Hannibal said to do.
“We only found out this week. It’s still incredibly early, but we’ve decided to keep the baby.”
“Well I would sure hope so. We’re Catholic,” Madeleine said with righteousness, as if the last time she were on her knees had been for anything close to prayer. “What, did he suggest you get one of those… things?”
“No.” Rachel closed her eyes. Don’t snap, don’t snap. It’ll only make it worse. Her eyes fluttered open again, and she smiled. “We took our trip to New York, he proposed, and then we were completely surprised when I missed a second period. Missing one can often be a fluke, as you know.”
While Rachel talked, Madeleine had taken a silver case from her bag and was lighting a slim cigarette. There was an uncomfortable silence.
“I don’t know what the hell we’re going to have you wear for the wedding. Hiding a bump is hard but I will not have my daughter getting married after a child is born.” She took a long drag. “Well, that’s assuming he even has the decency to still marry you?”
“Of course.” The edge was coming back.
“Good. People will talk a little less, then.” Madeleine sighed, puffed out smoke and eyed Rachel’s martini. “I’ll take that off your hands, if you don’t mind.”
While Rachel was enduring an exceedingly unpleasant lunch, Hannibal had tried to step up as well. His behavior that morning had been immature. After all, he bore the same amount ofresponsibility for the current situation as his lover did. His annoyance had ebbed away,replaced byconcern–she had been so anxious about being discovered by Madeleine’s friend, and knowing the elder DuBerry woman, he understood why. Hannibal no longer had parents to please. The only standards and expectations he had to meet were those he had set for himself, and if he failed to meet them, he only had himself to answer to. It was hard to remember that Rachel’s situation was entirely different. And despite that, instead of support, he’d shown contempt, impatience.
Even Hannibal could feel shame.
So he decided to make the effort for Rachel’s sake and the sake of their coming child. Since he already had the afternoon off from the hospital, Hannibal picked up a bottle of good Scotch and drove to the DuBerry residence. There was no guarantee that Eddy would be home, but luck favored the young father-to-be.
Eddy looked mildly surprised to see him when he opened the door. He stepped back to allow Hannibal to come inside, and Hannibal smiled.
“I’m sorry to drop in unannounced,” he said, “but Rachel is with her mother, as you probably know, and I thought I should do my part as well. Can I interest you in an afternoon drink?” He held up the bottle, which Eddy accepted with slightly wide eyes.
“Well, sure. I don’t see why not. How about we, uh, go into the library?”
The library was clearly Eddy’s space alone. It had none of Madeleine’s flourishes that Hannibal could detect nor even a faint whiff of her perfume. He wondered first when the lady of the house had last stepped foot in here; next, if a young Rachel, fond of books as she was, had sought sanctuary in this distinctly masculine room during her youth when she needed time away from Madeleine’s demanding nature. The image of her (in braids, perhaps, and a Catholic school uniform?) curled up in one of these big leather armchairs touched him.
Eddy opened the Scotch at a dark-stained cherry sideboard by the windows. He poured with a somewhat heavy hand, glancing back at Hannibal a few times in the process. Did he suspect the kind of news that Hannibal was about to deliver? Maybe every father instinctively mistrusted his daughter’s lover, engaged to be married or not.
“So what’s on your mind, Hannibal?” Eddy attempted the kind of jovial, paternal tone better suited to a fifties sitcoms than real life as he passed Hannibal a glass.
Hannibal had considered leading into the real reason for his visit by apologizing for not coming to Eddy to ask for his blessing before proposing to Rachel. Unfortunately, traditional in many ways though he was, he could not bring himself to ask forgiveness for something he considered both unnecessary and more than a little patronizing. Rachel was a grown woman in her thirties who knew her own mind. Even if she relied a bit too heavily on the DuBerrys for money and approval, she was her own woman, and Eddy was not the kind of attentive father whose blessing she would’ve sought before saying yes, in any case...even if she hoped for it deep down.
Instead, therefore, Hannibal looked Eddy squarely in the eye and said in a decidedly unapologetic tone, “Rachel and I found out this week that we are having a child.”
“Oh.” Eddy’s face gave away surprisingly little, but the older man did drink deeply from his glass. He blinked a few times. “Oh, I see. I...Rachel...what are your plans, then?”
“Our plans haven’t changed,” Hannibal assured him. “Though they may have to be moved forward...and I’m afraid Rachel is quite anxious about what you’ll think, you and her mother.”
Eddy nodded. He looked a bit dazed, Hannibal thought. Maybe he was considering the fallout one daughter’s premature pregnancy (by a strange European man no less) would cause in his household after the other had already run off with a Spanish stableboy.
“I know that I’m the outsider joining this family. But Rachel’s well-being is my number-one concern. Rachel’s and our baby’s, of course.” Now Eddy almost squirmed beneath Hannibal’s unwavering garnet stare. “Rachel needs your support. She needs a mother and father who will stand by her.”
Finally, he dropped his gaze and softened his expression a little. He donned his most guileless smile when he looked back at his future father-in-law.
“I could use a little of that myself.”
---
When Rachel returned home after her emotionally draining lunch date, her entire house smelled like Hannibal’s cooking. He had put one of her opera records on the turntable as well; as she came closer to the kitchen, she would be able to hear him singing along to the strains of melodramatic Italian under his breath. A pretty bouquet of a dozen newly-bloomed pink roses sat in the middle of the island along with a bottle of sparkling grape juice, his tongue-and-cheek concession to her enforced sobriety, and a box of chocolates wrapped in gold foil paper.
Hearing her footsteps, Hannibal turned way from his work. Dark hair had fallen into his eyes, forcing him to jerk his head to one side to clear them, and he wore a plain olive-green work shirt, its sleeves rolled to the elbows, with an apron overtop it. As usual in the house, he was in stocking feet. The whole picture was quite domestic.
“Hello, Rachel darling. Was it awful?” he asked, holding his arms open for her. “I’m sorry. You must think I’m an ogre. I should have gone with you. This is all just as much my doing as yours. Well...very nearly. You are exceedingly tempting, you know.”
As if to remind her that even while repentant, Hannibal Lecter could be a charming ass, he winked at her.
But contrition was an interesting look onRachel’s fiancé. It made him seem younger, a sweet reminder that for all his pride and self-confidence,he wasn’t even thirty. Two months ago, neither of them expected to be walking this path towards matrimony and parenthood,yet here they were, navigating it clumsily together hand-in-hand.
dottoremostro
Jan 27, 2022
thislookinyoureyes
1k celebration : Good Old-Fashioned Lover Boy mooboard for @roger-s-maracas
I can dim the lights and sing you songs full of sad thingsWe can do the tango just for twoI can serenade and gently play on your heart stringsBe your Valentino just for you
Join the celebration !
dottoremostro
myparti
Jan 25, 2022
dottoremostro
Mar 11, 2021
laurapetrie
NO MAN OF HER OWN (1932)She is a smitten woman. She is at his feet, on his lap, flopped over him like a rag doll - always touching, touching, touching him. - Lyn Tornabene on Clark Gable and Carole Lombard
dottoremostro
miss-duberry
Feb 14, 2021
miss-duberry:
Invitation
Rachel felt there was something deeply personal about the doctor’s eyes. When you were caught in them, there was no hiding. It was both an unsettling and hypnotic sensation. Her heartbeat was a little faster.
“I’m sure it’s divine, Dr. Lecter.”
She thought, briefly, about asking their host for a cigarette and making small talk. It would drive James nutty — he was getting overly possessive lately, and a reminder might be what the doctor ordered. Perhaps in his mind they were going steady, but she’d never committed to such a thing.
No, it would be too obvious, Rachel thought. The doctor would notice… I doubt he’d like me much for it. No, not now, not him.
James returned a tight smile at their unexpected visitor before looking at Rachel.
“Let’s go back inside. We’ll figure out the details later.” He nodded at Hannibal. “We wouldn’t want to miss dessert.”
The idea came to Rachel as they headed indoors. James’ dismissive attitude towards her protests had put a bee in her bonnet. She knew what he had truly meant was, We’ll assume we’re doing my plan, and I’ll calm down little baby later. She stopped in her tracks and turned back, causing James’ arm to slip on her shoulder. When she spoke, her voice was intentionally smooth-tongued.
“You should meet us out front once dinner is over. Elliott’s got a lead on some afterparty. I’m sure he’d love to show the new kid around.”
The plan was to irk her possessive beau, but looking back at the dark stranger… It wouldn’t be awful if they got to know each other a little more. And surely it wouldn’t hurt anything if he accepted, right?
The smile Hannibal flashed James, whose sour expression he fancied he couldread more clearly than a large-type book, was more a bearing of teeth. While it was true that he had interrupted the couple, he didn’t believe there were many good excuses for poor manners. He made no move to follow the two of them as James attempted to tugRachel back inside, but made sure not to give them his back.
As the captivating blonde beauty in her Audrey Hepburn cocktail dress extended the invitation, Hannibal took a long drag of his cigarette. It allowed him the appearance of considering her offer--an immediaterefusal could give offense. He certainly didn’t want such arift to come between them before he even knew her.
Nevertheless, he couldn’t imagine that Elliott DuBerry would be thrilled to have the“new kid,” whom he’d already dismissed as uninteresting, at his little gathering. This evening the spotlight belonged to Hannibal and his mother; Elliott would surely desire that place for himself wherever he was going later.
Exhaling at thin stream smoke, he hung his head slightly and flashed her a small, wry smile.
“I’m honored, Miss DuBerry, and I wouldrelish the chance to be shown theropes by the likes of you and your brother. But alas,” he said, tapping ash onto the concrete,“duty calls.”
Hannibal was indeed due in the ER the next day, albeit for an overnight shift not an early one. But it provided aready-made, polite excuse. Of course in these circles gainful employment itself was a novelty--not that Hannibal had taken up a medical career out of financial necessity. The extra income provided a nice cushion all the same, and being in the hospital kept his hands occupied, though it couldn’t always do the same for his mind.
“I hope you’ll think of me again in the future. Now...don’t let me keep you two all night.” He ignored James’ glowering face and, on a whim, actually winked atRachel.
dottoremostro
Feb 4, 2021
hayaomiyazaki
THE PHILADELPHIA STORY (1940) dir. George Cukor
dottoremostro
miss-duberry
Feb 4, 2021
miss-duberry:
Invitation
If looks could kill, Madeleine DuBerry would have arrived that evening with two children and departed with one. True, the Lecters weren’t yet an established family in Baltimore society, but the eyes and ears surrounding Elliott all belonged to those that were. For his part, he didn’t seem to care one iota. His mother feared her son was relishing the attention, and his sister was sure of it.
“So you know ‘polyglot’ but you can’t spot Italian?”
Beatrice’s neck was as tight as her delivery. Mrs. Taylor, no more pleased than her daughter but at least more civil, reached a subtle hand under the table to pacify the girl, but it was slapped away. Rachel leaned forward, her voice as smoothly cosmopolitan as the politicians from which she descended.
“What my brother means to say is that Dr. Lecter is more mysterious than we know.”
And that he, himself, is a complete dolt, she added to herself.
“Elliott’s always wanting to play matchmaker with me, as tiresome as it is, but I personally think our new friend’s dark looks would better suit your tastes, Betty.”
Rachel’s words were only meant to soothe tensions, but the girl’s eyes brightened nonetheless. The white lie did not so much as tickle the blonde’s conscience. Proper society would collapse if it weren’t for lines like those, after all. If given the chance, she would absolutely encourage the doctor accompany her over Betty, but admitting as much wouldn’t make for easy chatting over cocktails.
“And I think an American’s looks would better suit us all around,” joked Mrs. Taylor in a low voice with a tight smile as her husband finished writing their donation check. “That Iron Curtain business… Let’s hope nothing red came across the Atlantic with them.”
“Hear hear,” agreed Mr. DuBerry with a nod.
Elliott licked his lips, eyes moving about the table. To the mother’s relief and the son’s salvation, the first dinner course arrived at the conversation’s pause. A waiter detailed the evening’s salad offering before backing away with a bow.
“An elderflower vinaigrette sounds absolutely divine, doesn’t it?” prompted Rachel before her brother could speak. His discourse manifesto could wait until the after party, and she would make sure of it.
From there, topics wandered to more palatable dinner talk. It was still as biting and catty, but the difference was that those topics involved nobody within earshot. Madeleine relaxed, Richard warmed himself with a few drinks, and Elliott came around as the usual Baltimore scandals were brought up. Rachel kept to herself, although she did indulge to cast a few flirtatious looks across the room at James, who was seated a few tables over and opposite her. Just before the dessert course was due to be served, she folded her napkin and neatly placed it next to her plate.
“If you’ll excuse me,” she said to no one in particular as she rose, and no one really noticed. The table was discussing a rather grisly unsolved murder that was gripping Baltimore’s headlines. James noticed, however, and his shape departed the room shortly after.
A certain pair of eyes besides James’ also witnessed Miss DuBerry’s exit. Even as dessert arrived at everyone’s tables, along with much-needed cups of strong coffee for those who wanted it, Hannibal touched his mother’s arm.“Mi scusi, Mamma.”
“Dove stai andando?”
Simonetta frowned as she watched her son slip away without answering. He moved around the edges of theroom to avoid conversation where he could. Happily, most people were involved in their own gossip and didn’t even look up as the young host passed them. The caterersrecommended by the Hagens had lived up to theirreputation. No one seemed less than satisfied with their meals, and plenty of the guests now stared with undisguised hunger at their sugar-filled plates.
Outside, Hannibal breathed a little more deeply. There were fewer tables, less chatter, and fewer competing odors out here as well. The crispness of the night was sharper now and morerefreshing than ever. But fresh air wasn’t his objective.
He wandered along the edge of the patio and fished his cigarette case from an inside pocket of his coat. He removed one and held between his fingers as he walked. A pair of voices grew louder even while the sounds of the dinner party faded away. One was familiar and feminine; the other belonged to the man whom Hannibal assumed was her lover. John? James? Something dull and Biblical, he thought dismissively. In any case, herecalled that the man had been possessive earlier that evening. Several glasses of wine had probably only intensified his feelings.
“...with me, and I’ll drive you home later,” James was saying.“Come on,Rachel. We won’t even have fun with Elliott and his crowd, not when he’s more than halfway to being blitzed as it is.”
Hannibal couldn’t hearherresponse. He guessed by the tone, though, that it was lukewarm at best.
James tried again. “Rach...we don’t have to do anything. Gillian and Betty can come, too, if you want. I just don’t want to hang out with your brother’s so-called friends, you dig?”
His had snapped up as the flame of Hannibal’s lighter flared a few feet to theirright, and he put an arm aroundRachel’s waist. Though it was probably mean to be a protective gesture, Hannibal couldn’t help seeing it more as a statement of ownership. She’s with me, that arm seemed to say, as did James’ slightly narrowed eyes.
For now.
“Oh, I’m so sorry,” Hannibal said in a somewhat abashed tone.“I didn’t mean to intrude. Just came out for a little fresh air.”
He took a small puff of his cigarette. His eyes, which looked black in the light of the half-moon, moved from James to his companion. Cocking his head to one side, he considered her and blew out a long stream of smoke.
“That’s allright,” Jamesreplied without soundingquite like he meant it.
“You’re missing dessert. It’s supposed to be excellent.”
dottoremostro
miss-duberry
Feb 3, 2021
miss-duberry:
Invitation
“He’s a classic man for sure. I doubt his arm will be empty for long, if his mother has anything to say about it. I can see where the Bela Lugosi rumors come from, but you’re right, Dracula’s quite a stretch.” Rachel politely nodded as a waiter offered to refill her drink, to which Elliott also obliged. Fragrant silver cloches waited off to the sides of the room, ready to serve the evening’s guests once given cue. The alcohol was making Rachel quite warm, and she looked forward to the clarity something to eat would give her.
“Should I invite our new friend to the after party?”
“I didn’t realize you were even inviting me to the after party.”
“To be fair,” he started, sipping his glass, “I never said I was.”
Rachel slanted her eyes at him before moving on.
“I think it’s far too soon to throw the hen in with the foxes.”
“You think far too negatively of my circle. Half of them aren’t cunning enough for the title, anyways. Perhaps you’re right… We’ll see how the evening goes and leave it to chance, hm?”
Their parents’ attention returned to the table (the Sainsbury’s had paused on the way to their table), and the DuBerry children silently agreed to conclude their plotting. Madeleine leaned in, her voice lowering for her conspirators.
“It’s been a pleasant enough evening so far. Sadly no particularly interesting news to be had about our host and hostess. The husband has passed, but I’ve no idea how or when. Neither can I figure out where they made their money, as it appears they have quite a nest egg to sit on.” Their mother sipped at champagne while her eyes followed Beatrice’s path, peering at the dark-haired strangers. “It’s damned odd, really, but what else should I expect from Europeans?”
“I didn’t have a chance to speak with Mrs. Lecter, but her son’s a page from the same book. A very kind man, though, from what I can gather,” Rachel replied in a low voice. Even their father tipped his ear towards the conversation.
“You know dear, I did hear from Jeff that his wife believes she saw Mrs. Lecter helping the Sisters at Our Lady of Lourdes a few Wednesdays ago.”
“They do a nice luncheon for the orphanage on the first Wednesday of every month,” said Madeleine, nodding as if audibly consulting the notepad of her mind that kept up with all sorts of mundane societal tidbits. Her eyes turned towards Elliott, expectant. Her son chuckled and sat back in his chair.
“He’s into cooking. That’s the summation of what I found out, detectives, and I’ll testify to it.” The family gave him a level look, to which he returned a self-satisfied grin. “Anyways, looks like you’ll have your chance to sniff out some more. I believe the doctor’s going to speak.”
More than one face in the crowd looked less than thrilled about the prospect of listening to a long-winded speech before dinner. They were not actually there, by and large, to support a cause, though of course most people in attendance did support one or several charities--perhaps more out of social obligation than generosity.
Hannibal remained standing at his table as he gazed out over the sea of faces. Relative stranger though he was to Baltimore, he didn’t look the slightest bit anxious or intimidated by having sixty pairs of society eyes on him. He waited patiently for the rustling and chatter to die away.
“Thank you all for coming when you didn’t know my mother and I from Adam,” he said, smiling. “We both appreciate the warmth of your welcome.
“I won’t postpone your dinner with a lot of hot air, but I do want to say something about why we chose this cause for début and our annual soirée. As I’m sure you all know, we aren’t Baltimore born and bred.”
A few sheepish chuckles followed this. “I’ll say,” Mrs. Taylor, sitting between her daughter andRachel, said with a sniff.
“But this country, and this city, have been good to us. Nevertheless...we haven’t always been so fortunate.” He could practically feel the audience’s interest piquing: This could be juicy, could reveal the secrets of the mysterious Lecter nest egg. “My family has suffered the consequences of war: we were driven out of our home by evil on all sides. My parents and I became separated for several years, and the war eventually cost my father his health.”
Hannibal paused to lend the appropriate emotional weight to this statement. Became separated, he thought, was a terribly blasé way of referring to what had seemed at the time a living nightmare. But these people neither cared about nor had a right to the full story.
“Still, we were lucky. We had relatives living on the other side of Stalin’s Iron Curtain. Many don’t share our good fortune.”
The silence, he thought, was satisfying. One lady dabbed at her eyes with a handkerchief (or maybe her napkin) despite the somewhat vague, bare-bones nature of the story.
“As my mother says meglio aver poco che niente,” Hannibal concluded with another charming smile. He slid fluidly into the new language. “Buon appétit!”
He grasped Simonetta’s hand beneath the table when he took his seat. Though she was a strong woman--the speech had been her idea--Hannibal knew casual mentions of his father and what they’d all endured were difficult to bear. At least she would never have to live with the worst of the knowledge, the memories that still sometimes woke her son in a cold sweat. (Hannibal, tesoro, dov’e sua sorella? Dov’e lei?!)
“Now you’ll have their tongues wagging,” Simonetta murmured in the present. She sounded amused.
He shrugged off the memories and winked at her. “That’s the idea.”
Elliott finished off his glass despite the look he received from his own mother. She shouldn’t worry. Some food would sober him right up before he had the opportunity to blacken the family name. Still, why not have a little fun...
“Speak any other languages, Beatrice?” he asked in a sing-song voice. “My beautiful sister speaks French. Close, but no cigar, Rach! Though that wasn’t Lithuanian, so maybe Doctor Wonderboy is aregular polyglot.”
dottoremostro
miss-duberry
Feb 2, 2021
Invitation
“Well, you’ve covered the bases most everyone cares to ask about,” Rachel replied with a dry smile. “Let’s see…,” she mirrored, pausing to think. “My mother’s family is in politics, my father’s in real estate. I briefly studied at university before realizing I’ve no interest in it. Hmm… I also enjoy dirty martinis and small parties.”
Andrew waited a moment before jumping in, surprised that she was truly finished.
“Why, you’ve forgotten your signature! Miss DuBerry’s been in a number of magazines as a model, and not just the American ones.”
“Mm yes, that too.”
Rachel’s eyes briefly looked downwards in humility, but there was no uncomfortable wriggling as the spotlight was brought upon her. All of the DuBerry children thrived under the lens of scrutiny, and it either made someone a fast friend or even quicker enemy. Andrew turned to Hannibal, his face incredulous.
“Don’t let her fool you, Doctor. Elliott might be the trained actor, but Rachel’s a star in her own right, too.”
“You’re too kind, Andrew, as always. I think it’s why my dear brother picks on you so much.”
“And Anna, for that matter.”
Rachel chuckled. “Yes, even Anna.” Her eyes addressed Hannibal’s, anticipating his confusion. “Anna is my little sister. She’s the youngest of three, and my, does she live up to the title.”
Hannibal actually looked more interested inRachel upon being told about her modeling career. Of course, a single glance at his crisply-tailored silk suit and its pocket square that matched his mother’s gownwas enough to reveal his interest in fashion.
“Maybe I’ve seen some of your work, then,” he suggested.
Something happened when the subject ofRachel’s sister was raised, a blink-and-you’ll-miss-it kind of thing. Hannibal’s smile, a warm expression which was currently crinkling the skin around his eyes just a little, seemed to freeze. It didn’t slide off of his face or disappear. He just went utterly still as though he was an image captured in a photograph rather than a living one.
After a few seconds, he wet his smiling lips and said, “What a shame she couldn’t be here tonight.”
Except this time, the way he spoke was just a little off, and it wasn’t an accent. His voice had a very faintrough, almost metallic sound.He heard it and cleared his throat.
“Maybe next time.” There, that sounded better.
“Please forgive me for cutting the conversation short. I couldn’t resist the chance to meet you without a crowd before dinner, Miss DuBerry.”
Since fortune was said to favor the bold, Hannibal reached out and grasped her hand. He bent over it like he meant to kiss it--only to step away, letting her fingers slide out of his. He liked her hand cream but thought better of mentioning it just now.
“I hope you’re both hungry.” He finally glanced at Andrew and grinned. “And that Andrew’s parents have good taste in catering.”
The strange young doctor left the scents of cinnamon and cedar in his wake as he left them. He moved with graceful fluidity through the crowd, like a cat or a trained dancer, stopping here and there toreturn a greeting on his way to the head table. Andrew shook his head once.
“He’s something else, isn’t he?”
Elliott was clearly thinking along the same lines as they all headed to their assigned tables. The DuBerrys had been seated with the Taylors (Mrs. Taylor and Beatrice were, fortunately, between the lecherous Senator andRachel). While their father helped their mother into her seat, he leaned close toRachel.
“So tell me, sis, what do you think of the Good Doctor? Going to snatch him from underneath old Bea’s nose?”
Beatrice kept sneaking somewhat doe-eyed peeks at the front of theroom, where Hannibal stood with his head bent, listening intently to Simonetta.
dottoremostro
Jan 31, 2021
auldcine
GENE TIERNEY and VINCENT PRICE in LAURA (1944)
dottoremostro
miss-duberry
Jan 31, 2021
miss-duberry:
Invitation
“I know her well enough. Our paths cross from time to time, mostly at events like these. I knew her better when we were kids, truthfully. We attended primary school together, same class. Always a bit of a fireball, even if she holds herself together well. She was popular then, too,” Andrew replied, pausing to take a drag before continuing on. “I never made the cut into the inner DuBerry circle, but I do think she gets a worse rap than what’s deserved. Women want to be her, and men want to be with her. I think it infuriates both camps how little she cares about it.”
He gave his friend chuckled and smudged out his cigarette in a shapely bronze ashtray. “Not that I’m accusing you of the same, of course. It’s just the way things tend to go.”
Andrew turned his head. The sound of a woman’s heels on concrete approached from around the corner of Gramercy’s exterior walls. Rachel DuBerry appeared as if she’d stepped through time at the mention of her name. Elliott’s pawned cigarette was gone, and she was alone. Her green eyes passed between the two and stopped on the newcomer, whom she gave a small smile.
“My apologies for interrupting, gentlemen. I thought I heard someone else’s voice.”
“It’s no trouble at all, Miss DuBerry. Dr. Lecter and I were only chatting about mutual friends.”
“My brother mentioned something the same. Everyone’s curious about our new doctor in town.” Rachel leaned against the door to the inside, her arms crossed while she held the newcomer in her gaze. Her eyes were curious, as if weighing him on some scales locked away within her mind. He was quite handsome, and she didn’t mind not finding James outside after all. “I don’t believe much has been found out though, Dr. Lecter. Are you really the quiet type?”
As soon asRachel appeared, she had Hannibal’s fixed attention. His eyes didn’t flicker back to Andrew even once, as if the lady in their company was simply too captivating to justify looking away. In the soft mood lighting of the outdoor seating area, they could have been any color--brown or black or, maybe,reallyred. They looked to Andrew as if they were sizing each other up.
“I suppose you’ll have to find out, Miss DuBerry. I can’t divulge all my secrets at once, you know,” he pointed out with a small smile.“People would lose interest.”
“I’m afraid your brother and his crowd did rather quickly,” Andrew explained.
“They were only hoping I had a fascinating illicit hobby. But I believe they decided that I was too...square?” Now the young doctor laughed, still unsure about that particular slang term.
“Maybe so. Let’s see: I survived medical school. I do, in fact, work in the emergencyroom at Mercy Hospital, and I live with my mother. Should I be afraid of what else you might have heard about us? Or I guess, about me?”
Hannibal ticked off imaginary boxes on his fingers as he spoke. Then he reached over and stubbed out his own cigarette in the ashtray. One step closed some of the distance between himself andRachel without totally excluding Andrew, though the other man could have at that moment been on a different planet for all that he was being acknowledged by either of them.
From here, he caught a distinct whiff of her Chanel No. 5 with its distinctive bergamot, jasmine, and sandalwood. As lovely as she was.
“Now...what do I need to know about la bellaRachel--aside from her being the darling of Baltimore society from girlhood? And her excellent taste in perfume and clothes,” he added with a smirk.
dottoremostro
miss-duberry
Jan 30, 2021
miss-duberry:
Invitation
“Especially around these parts,” agreed Andrew, clapping a chummy hand on Hannibal’s shoulder. Elliott straightened up, looking over the pair’s shoulders. A smile appeared as he addressed the group’s newcomer.
“And here we have someone with an equal appreciation of clothing but a rather dreadful lack of culinary talent, I’m afraid.”
“I like to believe some of us aren’t born with the need to work. It leaves far more life to enjoy.”
Rachel passed by the doctor’s right shoulder, taking care to not brush his shoulder or cast a glance. Elliott made room for her in the circle and tucked his hand into his suit pocket, preemptively withdrawing a silver-plated cigarette case.
“I suppose you’ve come to rob me of a smoke?”
“That,” she agreed, holding out her long fingers, “And to see what trouble you all plan on getting up to later. I’m sure there’s something.”
“Perhaps there is, perhaps there isn’t.” He held the cigarette just above her hand. He glanced at the doctor, and his eyebrows raised. “My memory might be aided if you told me the name of your date tonight.”
“I don’t have a date tonight.”
“Oh really?”
“Mhm.”
“Is that so?”
“Quite so.”
Rachel took the cigarette from his hand before it could pull away, working to make the straightest face she could. She knew he wanted to get a rise from her in front of a fresh face. He was slippery like that.
“Well if your memory does improve, I’d love to know.”
“You’ll be the first on my list to find out, dear sister.”
“How lucky,” she replied with a smarmy smile before turning to look at the group over her shoulder. A door to the outside was a few feet beyond them. “Now, if you’ll excuse me, gentlemen.”
More than one pair of eyes followedRachel’s full black skirt as she sauntered away with the borrowed cigarette in hand. Hannibal’s was among them. He’d noticed, with a touch of amusement, that she had deliberately chosen to acknowledge no one but her brother throughout the whole encounter. Was she following in the example of the intoxicated Elliott and attempting to get areaction? And if so, from whom?
“Anyone else fancy a smoke?” Thomas asked. He narrowly dodged Elliott’s elbow.
Hannibal felt charitable in the face of the mischief-making and engagedRonnie in a discussion of his plays for a few minutes. It only took that long for therest of them--possibly excepting Mamoru, but Hannibal sensed he didn’t want torock the boat--to grow bored. This fresh meat wasn’t very interesting, didn’t have any illicit hobbies, and he didn’t bleed much when he was stuck.
“I apologize--duty calls,” Hannibal said as soon as politeness dictated.“Andrew, who is that young lady with your mother?”
The two friends wandered away. Instead of Andrew’s parents (“What young lady?” Andrew hissed once they were out of earshot), though, Hannibal moved towards the outdoor seating. As the last daylight died, the lights strung above the tables twinkled prettily.
Simonetta appeared just before they stepped out.
“Ciao, Mamma.”
“Hello, Mrs. Lecter,” Andrew said. He had to stoop rather comically to kiss her cheek.
“Good evening, Andrew.” She smiled. Turning to her son, she inquired: “Quindici minuti, tesoro?”
“Yes, all right. I’m just going to have a cigarette before dinner.”
The early evening breeze felt like a dream. Hannibal’s sense of smell was unusually keen, so a downside of socializing in large groups like this was the pungent combination of perfumes, colognes, and all the other scents people brought with them. Despite its slight chill, the fresh air wasrefreshing.
Hannibal withdrew a slim case of his own. “Cigarette, Andrew?”
The paper of their cigarettes hissed when they met flame, and both of them took a few drags before Hannibal spoke again.“Elliott DuBerry said his sister and I had some common acquaintances. Are you one of them?”
dottoremostro
miss-duberry
Jan 30, 2021
miss-duberry:
Invitation
“Come now, Andrew, ‘overgrown’ is quite a rude thing to say,” teased Elliott. “I consider myself in a much higher league. Zealous, perhaps.”
“Excessive? Flamboyant?”
Andrew’s responses drew a cheeky grin and a mock toast in his honor.
“Now that’s the spirit.”
Elliott began introductions around the circle of men, none of which took offense. The blonde carried with him the natural air of a leader. The first motion was to a mousy looking man with disheveled brown hair.
“Ronnie Williams, a banker by trade but a playwright by night.”
“Nice to m-meet you,” he mumbled with a shy smile. “Afraid I’m b-better on the p-page than in talk.”
Next, Elliott motioned towards a balding man with rectangular glasses and a silvering beard.
“Charlie Harris, an artist who makes the best, weirdest shit you’ll ever see.”
The man simply nodded, though his eyes were amused.
“Thomas Young, a hell of a jazz pianist and composer.”
The red-headed musician bent towards Hannibal in greeting.
“Finally Mamoru Tanaka, lead violinist for the Baltimore Symphony.”
“You can call me Rue,” replied the dark haired man, clearly of Asian descent but with a fully American accent.
All of the men surrounding Elliott were well dressed, but none of them wore the clothes with ease, except for Mamoru. Their group was more accustomed to dark clubs and dens filled with the haze of tobacco and empty bottles of gin. None of them particularly enjoyed the fine setting of a fundraiser, save, perhaps, for the DuBerry boy. He finished his third glass of champagne, and Ronnie wet his lips to speak to their newcomer.
“You are — you are a doctor, I believe. What — what else do you enjoy?”
Hannibalremembered some of their names from when they had all been introduced earlier, but he smiled and nodded pleasantly to each in turn all the same. All of them must come from privileged families, he mused, because few if any of them seemed the type to spend a Saturday evening at a fundraising dinner by choice. Aside from the professional violinist, he wondered if a single one would own up to their art in front of this crowd as a hobby or otherwise.
“I’m no writer, but I dabble in drawing and piano,” he told them in a tone that said he considered himself nothing but a hobbyist in both of those areas. No need to give Charlie or Thomas the impression that he was some kind of competition.“And we’re subscribers at the opera and the symphony.”
His eyes connected with Mamoru’s again. Then he cocked his head, as ifremembering something.“Bach’s Christmas concerto last December--your solo was excellent. The highlight of the evening, I must say.”
The violinist grinned and ducked his head humbly.“Gee, thank you.”
“Come on, doctor,” Elliott chided.“I don’treally believe you’re as square as Hagen here. The local music scene’s all well and good, but not to blow off steam.”
Maybe Elliott was just drunk and looking for something he could use later as the starter for more juicy gossip (it was social currency, after all), or maybe he was sizing the other man up to determine his suitability forRachel, if she showed real interest. Maybe he just disdained the social niceties that prevented so many of the people in attendance tonight from beingreal human beings.
In any case, Hannibal didn’trise to the bait.“I don’t know about being ‘square’ exactly,” he admitted with a self-deprecating laugh. His knowledge of current English slang didn’t yet match his elocution. “But sure: I cook.”
Thomas shook his head slowly, as if in disbelief, and let out a low whistle.“You clean up damn well for somebody who’s always getting his hands dirty.”
Hannibal flashed his teeth in something like a grin--though he wasn’t certain that comment was either complimentary or in good taste.“‘Clothes make the man,’ as they say.”
dottoremostro
miss-duberry
Jan 29, 2021
miss-duberry:
Invitation
“The day you see me on Biff Finnigan’s arm is the day I want you to smother me in my sleep.” Rachel helped herself and Elliott to a glass of champagne off the tray of a passing waiter. Their parents had already wandered off, as Madeleine was no doubt making her social rounds. “Now Dr. Lecter could be fun. I wonder what an ER doctor does to unwind. Clearly they have enough money to enjoy themselves.”
“Picturing yourself on a yacht in the Riviera?”
“Well I wouldn’t say no, would you?”
Elliott downed his champagne and took another as a tray passed by. He gave his sister a wink. “Not if God himself asked me not to.”
The siblings parted ways, with Rachel falling in among her usual group of friends and Elliott his. Her looks attracted a popular crowd, but they weren’t so awful as the rumors made them out to be, she thought. Who could blame the young, rich and handsome for living a bit luxuriant? Marriage awaited them all at the finish line anyways, they knew that. Until then, the world was their oyster and everyone else simply shells.
Her brother kept a more eclectic group, much to his mother’s distaste. They were artists, poets and writers living off of their parents’ money. Elliott’s natural charm let him float between crowds as he pleased, and it was that saving grace that kept him beloved by all of the women his mother rubbed elbows with.
“Look at you channeling Kim Novak tonight, Rach,” cooed Gillian Quinn, the daughter of Baltimore’s wealthiest lawyer. “You might be able to bring a bit of color to that doctor’s cheeks.”
“I considered it.” She sipped from the glass flute, a coquettish look on her face. “He seems a bit dry and serious though, doesn’t he?”
“Oh sure, but he’s got the looks,” chimed in Beatrice Taylor, the daughter of Senator Taylor. He takes bribes, you know, whispered Gil the first time they met the brunette. And I’ve heard he has a thing for us younger ladies. “And the serious types are always a lot of fun, you know,” she added with a wink.
“What’s this talk of fun?”
James Clark, a tall man sporting a rosy brown tweed suit, appeared at Rachel’s side. His dark hair was neatly parted, and his accent was unmistakably American. He touched his lips to Rachel’s temple, and she caught the scent of cedar wood in his aftershave. Unlike Elliott, Gil and Betty knew the two were entertaining each other’s company although nothing was official. With Rachel, it rarely was. She acts like a bit of a call girl, if you ask me, Gil had whispered to Betty more than once.
“We were discussing the new man in town, that Dr. Lecter,” said the red head. “We can’t tell if he’s a bore or not.”
“Casting judgement a little early, I see. Seems like an all right guy to me, for a foreigner.”
James handed Rachel another glass of champagne, placing her empty on a passing tray. She quietly thanked him and took a sip, only to look up and see the man in question making eye contact with her from a few feet away, where he was engaged in conversation.
“Speak of the devil,” she mumbled to their group, and she felt James’ hand rest on her lower back.
Hannibal had finally escaped thereceiving line in order to mingle with their guests before the dinner began. He’d been introduced to them all, theredheaded Miss Quinn and the brunette Miss Taylor and many other women both young and not so young alike. In that sea of faces and names, a particular blonde head still lingeredin the back of his mind.
Beside him now was Laurence Johnston, who sat on the Johns Hopkins Board of Trustees. He was a distinguished-looking older gentleman who wasresponsible, in aroundabout way, for the entire evening, because it was thanks to him that the Lecters had come to Baltimore in the first place. He had invited--though recruited was possibly the better, if less flattering, term--Hannibal to attend the university he represented while Hannibal had been apromising and very young student in Paris. A generous scholarship had been forthcoming. Therest was history.
“It all looksreally wonderful, Hannibal. Quite a crowd,” Dr. Johnston observed.
“Thank you. I had to leave most of the work to my mother, I’m afraid. But she’s fond of that kind of thing.”
Not much opportunity for throwing grand parties in a Lithuanian village--or afterwards, he thought, before pushing it aside with a drink of champagne.
“She’s in her element, allright,” the other man agreed with a warm smile.
Hannibal heard the appreciation in his mentor’s voice. Laurence was married, and his sweet wife Peggy was around somewhere. Still, Hannibal wondered with something like alarm if any of the unattached men of a certain age in attendance would view his mother in a similar way. The possibility hadn’t occurred to him before. He found it unpleasant to consider now.
When he looked away, his eye caught the DuBerry girl’s eye again, standing a few yards away amongst other people their age. Quinn, Taylor, and a Mr. Clark, herecalled as if looking through a mental rolodex. The girl with dark hair and the sparkling smile had looked very interested in him earlier.Right now, though, Hannibal was more curious about James Clark, whose body language towardsRachel DuBerry was so possessive.
Before Hannibal could consider excusing himself to wander in that direction, Andrew Hagen materialized in front of him. Andrew was a lanky twenty-something with dirty blonde hair and an easy smile. He had more charm than good looks, to which his large circle of friends attested.
“Hannibal! I’d say it’s fantastic, but we haven’t eaten yet,” Andrew teased.
Hannibal looked bemused.“If I’m not mistaken, Andrew, Mother hired the caterer your parentsrecommended.”
Andrew smacked his forehead as if he’d forgotten, and they both laughed.
“If I may, sir,” Andrew said, addressing Laurence,“I’m going to borrow the host.”
Offering Laurence a somewhat apologetic smile, Hannibal allowed himself to be steered elsewhere by the casual arm Andrew draped across his shoulders.
The elder Hagens sat on the Baltimore opera board, and their only son dutifully attended every selection. He sometimes acted put-upon, but Hannibal felt certain that he shared his parents’ appreciation and would someday take over one of their seats on the board. Mr. Hagen had been born in the Netherlands; he and his wife had been among the first to extend a genuine welcome to the Lecters once they’d becomeregular opera attendees.
“So, now you’ve met Baltimore’s best and brightest...how do you feel?”
“Like a specimen under glass.”
“Aw, c’mon, it isn’t that bad.”
“They’re trying to figure out if they find our international origins alluring or distasteful,” Hannibal said with a short laugh. He almost added, ask your father about that some time. He considered Andrew a friend, however. A truly decent one. Those weren’t easy to find. There was noreason to give potential offense.
“Maybe the people our parents’ age. But everybody else thinks you’re mysterious and cool, believe me. Here, look--I’ll prove it.”
They’d arrived in front of a group of five or six people, all of whom appeared to be in their twenties or very early thirties. In the middle, Elliott DuBerry was holding court. He grinned at the newly-arrived pair, even going so far as to give Hannibal a mock bow that drew a few laughs from the others.“Look--our gracious host. And the court jester!”
Elliott spoke with such good humor, such a twinkle in his eye, that the words sounded less harsh than they might actually have been. He’d also already had two glasses of champagne and was working on his third. In any case, Andrew just rolled his eyes and laughed along, used to Elliott’s brand of humor.
“Hannibal, this is Elliott DuBerry--Baltimore’s own overgrown beatnik.”
“We’re acquainted, I believe,” Hannibal said. He nodded at Elliott anyway.
dottoremostro
miss-duberry
Jan 28, 2021
miss-duberry:
Invitation
“Suzy mentioned med school, but I didn’t quite picture like a doctor doctor. Not sure what I expected, honestly. I suppose I was a little more focused on all the girlfriends he’s apparently had.”
“Sounds right up your alley, then. Maybe you two can swap war stories.”
“You’re awful to me, you know that?” Rachel jabbed an elbow into her brother’s ribs, and he chuckled. “Besides, I’m meeting up with someone else this evening.”
“Who?” Elliott’s voice was genuinely surprised. Rachel usually told him all about her trysts, and he in return.
His sister pursed her lips and returned a smarmy look.
“Andrew?”
“No.”
“David?”
“Uh-uh.”
“…Biff?”
Rachel’s face distorted, and she slapped his shoulder. “Oh God no, as if.”
Madeleine’s intricately pinned up head of hair turned around, her eyes narrowed to needle pins.
“Could you two please be a little more… restrained?” she whispered through clenched teeth.
“Of course,” soothed Elliott, giving her a warm smile that had melted many hearts in its days. When their mother turned around, he leaned in towards Rachel: “I’m going to find out, you know.”
She didn’t get a chance to respond as it was the DuBerry family’s turn to greet their host and hostess. Rachel straightened her posture and composed her face, hoping she wouldn’t look as if she’d just been laughing. They might assume the jests were at the newcomers, and it pained her to admit her mother might have made a good point.
The DuBerry matriarch dipped into her usual words of welcome, which all of her children could recite by memory.
“Good evening to you both. It’s such a pleasure to make your acquaintance, Mrs. Lecter. I’ve heard nothing but good things about you and the work you do.”
“I assure you the pleasure is mine,” returned the dark haired woman in a delightfully smooth accent as Madeleine took her hand.
She could pass for a foreign film star, mused Rachel. Aging but wearing her years well.
Her father greeted Mrs. Lecter, announcing that they were the DuBerry family and each of their names. Madeleine’s attention was turning to the young man next to the woman, but Rachel was already ahead of her. The son had piercing eyes, and noticing them had actually given her a start.
Are they really red? Surely it’s a trick of the light…
Rachel felt he was a man with a face she both had and had not seen. Not as if he was from a dream, no — she couldn’t quite pin it down. His features were sharp, and she had no idea what thoughts were running through his head. Most men were very easy for Rachel to read, especially upon first meeting. Her looks had a way of eliciting reactions, and she honestly felt a little uncomfortable that she couldn’t tell how he was reacting to her or anyone in their group, for that matter.
Parental introductions had passed, and it was time for the kids.
“I can already tell you’ve outdone yourself this evening, Mrs. Lecter,” greeted Elliott, bending towards her. “And it’s wonderful to see you again, Dr. Lecter. I was talking to Rachel before we arrived, and I think you two might share common acquaintances.”
You absolute ass, she thought upon seeing a playful twinge in Elliott’s lips. But I must say, an excuse to chat in private might not be so awful…
“It’s a pleasure to meet you both,” Rachel purred, realizing that she, too, was predictable with her greetings. “I loathe to change subjects, but I absolutely must know the designer of your dress, Mrs. Lecter.”
The sharp-eyed young doctor had a habit of taking note of everything, and it was flatly impossible not to hear the back-and-forth between Elliott DuBerry--yes, Hannibalremembered him well enough from several weeks ago--and the lovely girl beside him. Their banter bordered on being inappropriate for the time and place. The older woman, Elliott’s mother he presumed, could obviously smell a social faux pas in the making and attempted to quash it.
Hannibal was amused rather than offended and could barely keep from chuckling. At least they had brought some energy to the event.
He fought against a smirk when the party greeted his own mother. No doubt tongues had wagged in Baltimore for some time now about the Lecters, who were as yet an unknown quantity. Most of them probably knew that they hailed from Lithuania, which meant they would struggle to place Simonetta’s lilting Milanese accent now that they came face-to-face with her. They hid their puzzlement behind polite smiles and a variety of the same tried-and-true greetings. But Hannibal could see it just the same.
As was usually the case, the insular upper crust of Baltimore society had a pecking order. The people within it liked to know just how to quantify and classify their fellows and to be firmly aware of where they stood in that hierarchy. They were surely curious about these newcomers, but also perturbed, already sensing that they wouldn’t be comfortably easy to define.
Hannibal could tell that his motherrather liked theroguish Elliott. He caught her smiling at the young man’s flattery. But his attention had been successfully diverted by Elliott’s mention of Rachel. His odd eyes lingered on her much as hers had on him moments before. He cocked his head to one side as he made his study. If he’d thought her lovely while in the background, then seeing her up close only heightened her beauty. From here he could appreciate the way her golden hair curled just so around her cheeks and the oh-so-slight slant of her eyes... His lips curled up, too.
Elliott saw that half-smile, and he didn’t bother to disguise his own knowing grin. Men fell forRachel all the time, and it looked like even this silk-clad boy genius wasn’t immune to her charms.
The hostess inclined her head towardsRachel.
“Thank you,” she murmured. “It is a Givenchy.”
He would have been content to linger with the DuBerrys for a moment, but Hannibal could see the rest of the line.
Extending a hand, he grasped Rachel’s--he wanted to be selfish for a moment and look at her properly--and flashed her a charming, almost boyish smile. The expression revealed thatDoctor Lecter, despite his fine suit and poise, really couldn’t be older than his mid-twenties.
“I hope we’ll have an opportunity to find out if your brother is right about our mutual acquaintances, Miss DuBerry,” he said. “Please enjoy your dinner.”
His accent was even lighter and more difficult to place than his mother’s, just as Elliott had said. What did someone from Lithuania sound like, anyway? Wasn’t that behind the Iron Curtain these days?
Madeleine gave her children one more dark, disapproving look as they were shown to their table. Elliott wondered why she cared about impressing a pair of foreigners, as she would surely write them off given even the slightest opportunity.
He linked arms with Rachel and nudged her with a mischievous twinkle in his eyes. When a few paces separated them and their parents, he said, “He liked you, Rach. Maybe you should tell Biff you’ve reconsidered...” He paused. “I would, in your place. That suit must have cost as much as our folks’ mortgage payment!”
Everyone in the DuBerry house was well aware when Elliott was seeing a particular girl. His mother had in fact gotten her hopes up about several of them in the past three years or so. Only Rachel, however, knew about his other affairs, the ones of which Madeleine would definitely not approve.
While Rachel might have found him hard to read, Elliott was pretty sure that the suave young doctor had eyes for only one of the DuBerry siblings. It was probably for the best. Elliott was smart enough, just not much of an intellectual. And, rumors aside, all the current evidence pointed towards Lecter being a total square and a bookworm to boot.
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