Chapter 1182
Fiona was feeling uneasy again. She hadn't slept well last night.
Since Darwin had a free morning, he took Charles and Chicago to school.
After breakfast, Fiona headed straight to Hubert's hospital.
This was her third meeting with Hubert.
Today, Hubert looked more tired than before.
"Didn't sleep well?" Fiona asked, sitting across from him.
Hubert gave a wry smile. "Patricia was taken away by her family."
Fiona frowned. "Terrible timing."
"Maybe because Patricia's been acting normal lately," Hubert sighed. "I just hope she doesn't come back worse."
Fiona was annoyed.
Patricia's life was now tied to Mason's.
If her treatment got messed up because of her family's ignorance, it would be awful.
"Don't worry; I had someone go with them. If anything goes wrong, they'll bring her back immediately," Hubert reassured her. He then handed her a printed analysis report. "This is the assessment I did for Mr. Solomon yesterday."
Fiona picked it up and flipped through it.
"He probably had symptoms similar to bipolar disorder before," Hubert said slowly.
Fiona didn't know much about this.
As a secretary, she only arranged biannual physical check-ups for Darwin.
Darwin didn't always have her around. During family time or vacations, she wasn't there. So she wasn't sure if Darwin had seen a psychologist during those times.
But she knew he had severe sleep disorders when they first met.
She finished reading the report and saw the diagnosis.
"Schizophrenia," she murmured.
"Shouldn't it be multiple personality disorder?" Fiona asked, her voice trembling.
"There are differences," Hubert explained. "Based on Mr. Solomon's condition, it aligns more with schizophrenia. The good news is he can tell his hallucinations and delusions aren't real."
Fiona felt a bit relieved.
"Once a patient can't tell the difference, that's when the real problem starts," Hubert said. "Mrs. Solomon, if possible, I suggest inpatient treatment for Mr. Solomon."
Fiona was surprised. If things were as optimistic as Hubert said, why suggest inpatient treatment?
"Why?" Fiona asked. "Can't regular treatment and medication work?"
Hubert pressed his lips together. "Mr. Solomon has a history of hiding his condition. I'm worried he might have hidden responses during the assessment too. Inpatient treatment allows for comprehensive observation."
Hubert sighed. "My father, also a psychologist, once had a patient who seemed cooperative and not severe. But half a month later, the patient killed his fiancée without warning. My father found out the patient had a hidden personality, even the patient didn't know. This personality was a hallucination."
He looked at Fiona with compassion. "When restrained, he didn't even know he had killed his fiancée."