"I think I liked to bully white guys because I was sexually attracted to them and I wasn't ready to accept it," Gregory Saint-Allain said, sighing. The big and tall, dark-skinned and well-dressed, handsome Haitian Canadian man reflected on his past as he spoke to his psychiatrist. Seated comfortably on the couch, Gregory looked pensive as he let it all out. Dr. Geraldine Faustin listened attentively as Gregory unburned himself. Outside the doctor's office, located on Banard Street in downtown Montreal, Quebec, it was snowing heavily.
"Please continue," said Dr. Geraldine Faustin. The tall, dark-skinned and curvy, forty-something black female psychiatrist readjusted her glasses on her nose as she looked at her patient. For the past six weeks, Gregory has been coming to Dr. Faustin's office for weekly sessions. A detective with the Montreal Police Service, Gregory is going through a messy divorce. Gregory's wife Adeline Gauthier found out that he was bisexual and all hell broke loose. Bad news for Gregory but good news for Dr. Faustin since she has gained a new patient.
"I tracked down this guy I used to bully, Stewart Fitch, and I apologized to him," Gregory continued. Dr. Faustin smiled, pleased to see her patient showing signs of actual growth. In their first sessions, Gregory blamed everyone but himself. Successful in his career as a police detective after graduating from the University of Montreal, Gregory is an icon of the Haitian Canadian community. The man is also a destructive force in the life of his wife Adeline and their sons Bastien and Phillippe. If Dr. Faustin didn't know any better, she would think that Gregory was a sociopath.
"What happened?" Dr. Faustin asked gently. Gregory looked at the doctor and gave her the kind of smile a shark gives a cornered dolphin. Gregory thought about his meeting with Stewart. The pudgy red-haired dude that Gregory remembered had turned into a tall, handsome fellow. A decade and a half after their halcyon days at the University of Montreal, it seemed that both Stewart and Gregory were professionals and married men.
"Stewart and I sat down and had a heart-to-heart," Gregory said with a sinister smile. Dr. Faustin shuddered as she peeped Gregory's downright sociopathic grin. If Patrick Bateman from American Psycho was black and chose law enforcement instead of being a corporate yuppie, he might have become something akin to Gregory Saint-Allain. The handsome and debonair Haitian stud has no conscience. Women usually fall for that sociopathic Rizz Game. Dr. Faustin knows better...
"Sounds like you mended those fences," Dr. Faustin said, and the black female psychiatrist forced herself to remain calm. Gregory spread his muscular legs, exposing his bulging crotch and the good doctor couldn't help but stare. Dr. Faustin is a consummate professional, a proud alumnus of McGill University and a devoted wife and mother. The good doctor is also a woman with needs and Gregory's combination of charm and sociopathy low-key turned her on. In fact, Dr. Faustin felt a wetness begin between her legs. Forcing herself to regain control, Dr. Faustin urged Gregory to continue...
"Yeah, I confessed to Stewart that I am bisexual and he actually told me he swings both ways, how about that?" Gregory said, and then he burst out laughing. Dr. Faustin looked at Gregory with the same fascination a person shows when gazing at a lethal cobra at a zoo or upon seeing a deadly lion taking down a buffalo in a television documentary. Gregory is handsome but dangerous. Dr. Faustin was utterly fascinated by this despicable human being and not just in a professional way. In spite of herself, the good doctor wanted to hear more.