The top of the capsule was quickly unscrewed as Earl pushed the button to start his cameras and tapes. He was aware that the temperature in the operating room was falling quickly, and he saw jets of frigid mist coming from the concave sides of the operating table. With Whalen and Cooper assisting, the fabric-covered body was slid slowly out of its tube and onto the table.
“This is the shell body,” Hobbes said, stepping aside as the surgical team went to work. “The next one up will be donor of the brain.”
Earl thought donor was an odd word to use since the owner of the brain had no voice in deciding the gift. He glanced over at Vera Morgan and saw her pass the nitrogen wand to Dr. MacKenzie, who looked about him, perhaps making sure his troops were in position, and then bent to his task.
The time was nine-fourteen.
At exactly three minutes past twelve MacKenzie stepped back and flipped up his faceplate. “That’s it. He’s all yours, Armstrong.”
Harry Armstrong came off his stool and moved quickly into position by the operating table. Five of the long cylinders now cluttered the area, and Earl’s cameras had recorded the transplant of a human brain, heart, kidneys, and liver.
“I hated to use so much from stock,” Hobbes said, lifting his own faceplate. “But that tumor did a damned lot of damage before it killed him.”
“He’s better off this way,” Tony Cooper said. “Everything new.” He unzipped his surgical green jumpsuit.
“We didn’t even need you, loverman,” Freddy O’Connor said. It was the first time he’d spoken anything but clipped instructions since the operation began. “His bones were in fine shape.”
From the operating table Armstrong gave a sudden command. “Electric shock!”
Whalen, standing by the switch, pulled it.
After a moment Armstrong lifted his head and nodded. “We have heartbeat and pulse. He’s alive.”
THREE
“OF COURSE THE NEXT several days will be crucial,” Harry Armstrong was saying in the morning as the medical team sat around the breakfast table and the silent Hilda went quickly about her task. “Science has pretty much licked the problem of rejection in transplant operations, but this is still new territory for us. As the body is brought up to its proper temperature and full consciousness resumes, he’ll be especially vulnerable to infection.”
Hobbes nodded impatiently. “But how long before he’ll be able to speak?”
Armstrong glanced at Freddy O’Connor for a reply. “You’re the brain man, Freddy. You tell him.”
O’Connor, all business, stared hard at his fingernails. “Well, the truth of the matter is he may never speak.”
“Never?”
“Functions like speech and movement and memory are controlled by specific sectors of the brain. In a transplant operation such as I performed last night, it’s virtually impossible to be certain that every portion of the brain survived uninjured until the patient is conscious. You must realize that brain transplants in dogs and monkeys are a great deal different from transplants in human beings. This specific case, with its cryonic overtones, is very difficult to predict. If any section of the brain was deprived of oxygen through its blood supply, once the brain was thawed, the cells in that section could be destroyed.”
“Can’t you check on it?”
“I intend to,” Freddy said. “This morning. I’ll run a scope test. It’ll tell me if any blood vessels in the brain are blocked off.”
“He’d better be fit,” Lawrence Hobbes rumbled, perhaps thinking of lawsuits. “I’m not paying you to deliver half a man!”
“Hell, that wouldn’t be much good for your news conference, would it?” Freddy replied, regaining his old irreverent spark.
For some reason Hobbes resented the flippancy at that moment. He took a step toward O’Connor and seemed about to strike him until Tony Cooper came out of his chair and stepped between them. “Let’s give it some time, Dr. Hobbes,” he reasoned. “We’ll know soon enough about Frank.”
Hobbes retreated a step. “And don’t call him Frank! We’re not actors in some third-rate horror movie! We’re scientists—and that’s a human being down there!”
Hilda reentered the room with coffee for everyone, Vera Morgan passed it by and asked for tea, then said, “I knew someone was missing. Where’s Miss Watson?”
“It was a late night for her,” Hobbes said, regaining his composure.
“But didn’t you say she usually breakfasts with you?”
“Not every day.”
“Maybe somebody should check to see if the old dame’s all right,” Freddy O’Connor suggested. “At that age you never know. The excitement might have been too much for her.”
“I’ll go,” Vera said.
“It’s not necessary,” Hobbes told them. “She’s all right.”
But Vera was already up from the table, starting for the door. “I’ll just be a minute.”
Earl saw Hobbes shoot a look of alarm at the kitchen door, where Hilda stood with the tea. For just an instant there was an undercurrent of something he couldn’t quite catch. Then Vera was gone and Hobbes settled back in his chair. “The old lady’s probably asleep. Or out strolling on the beach.”
“You know something?” Dr. MacKenzie said. “Your sand out here is an unusual sort. I watch things like that since the moon trip. What’s underfoot can be very interesting at times.”
“I suppose it’s the high humidity from the cooling machines. You can see what it’s done to the rest of the island, with all our trees and grass. The place has changed a great deal since I purchased it thirty years ago.”
MacKenzie was staring out the window. “What sort of tree is that—”
He broke off as Vera Morgan reentered the dining room. Her face was white and she spoke quickly. “I … something’s happened to her! There’s blood—”
Earl Jazine was first on his feet. He followed Vera out of the room, with the others close behind. By the time they reached the second floor he was ahead of her. He went through the open door to Emily Watson’s room, not knowing what he might find.
The rumpled bed was empty and there was a smear of blood on the sheet. Her cane lay on the floor near the window.
“The bathroom!” Tony Cooper said, behind Earl. He ran to check it; it was empty.
“She has to be somewhere,” Earl said. “We’ll search the house.”
Phil Whalen entered the room and frowned at the bed. “It could be menstrual blood.”
“In a woman her age?” Hobbes snorted. “Don’t be silly! Jazine’s right—we’d better search the house.”
Earl found himself with Whalen and Cooper as they moved through the other second-floor bedrooms. He suddenly remembered the tiny pistol he’d seen strapped to Whalen’s leg, and he tried to determine if it was still there.
“Nothing up here,” Cooper said. “We’ve searched the closets and bathrooms and even looked under the beds.”
Earl looked up at the ceiling. “Is there a floor above this? An attic?”
Tony Cooper shook his head. “Rat roof, except for that TV and microwave equipment.”
“Let’s look outside,” Whalen suggested.
“She wouldn’t have gone out without her cane,” Earl said. But he followed the others downstairs.
While they went outside, though, he had another idea. He headed downstairs to the operating room, passing through the open bulkhead doors and finally into the amphitheater itself. The place was bathed in a cool white light, and he saw at once that Freddy O’Connor had preceded him.
The brain surgeon glanced up from the operating table as he approached. “Yeah, Frank’s still here—in case that’s what you were wondering.”
Earl moved closer, drawn by the hypnotic fascination of the thing on the table. The oxygen tent and protective closures had been removed, and for the first time he could get a clear, unobstructed view of the patient. Frank (he hated thinking of him by that name, but there was no other) was a young man, in his late t
wenties, well built and somewhat handsome, with dark brows and sharp features. His complexion was gradually taking on its proper color as the body temperature rose, and Earl noticed that the intravenous feeding line had been disconnected from his arms.
“He should be up and around soon,” Freddy said. “That’s why we disconnected the IV. He doesn’t need it anymore, and the hunger will help to wake him. He might need some low-level radiation, but I’ll leave that to Armstrong.”
“Have you searched down here for Miss Watson?”
“Hell, buddy, we worry about the living.”
“You think she’s dead?”
“If she’s not, she should be. Once they pass seventy we should take their brains and give them to the young. Too many people on the globe anyway.”
“They’re talking about colonizing Venus.”
“You think we’ll live to see that?”
“Maybe,” Earl said. He was watching the slow but regular rise and fall of Frank’s chest. The young man was breathing, all right. “How about the brain? Have you run your tests?”
“Not yet.”
Something was still bothering Earl. “Tell me, Freddy—why did you hurry down here as soon as we discovered the old lady missing?”
O’Connor shrugged. “Maybe I thought she was down here screwin’ him. Old lady like that—”
“Be serious for once, Freddy!”
But he merely turned away. “I was serious for three hours last night, over this table. That’s serious enough to last me the rest of the month.”
Lawrence Hobbes entered from above and came down through the seats of the amphitheater. “We’ve searched everywhere. She’s not on the island.”
“Could she have left by hovercraft?” Earl asked.
“Impossible! Anything landing on shore would have set off our nighttime proximity alarms.”
“You have alarms all through the house too, though, don’t you?”
“Correct. I turned them on myself before retiring.”
“Then she couldn’t have left her room without sounding an alarm?”
“No,” Hobbes admitted.
“And no one could have entered her room without sounding an alarm? Then what happened to her?”
“Someone could have been hiding in her bathroom last night, after the operation. He could have taken her—her body out this morning. The alarms automatically go off at sunrise, but with our late night no one was quite up by then.”
“Who could have been hidden in her bathroom?” Freddy asked. “We were all down here except for that Mexican whore cook of yours.”
“Shut up about her!” Hobbes growled. He was rapidly reaching the limit of his patience with Freddy O’Connor. “Just remember I’m the one who’s paying you, and show a little respect!”
“Come on,” Earl Jazine said. “This won’t get us anywhere. If she’s missing, you can be sure we’ll search till we find her.”
“We’ve searched,” Hobbes said. “She’s not on the island.”
“I’ll bet there’s one place you haven’t searched.”
“Where’s that?”
“That turretlike effect on the roof, where the microwave equipment is. A body could easily be hidden up there.”
Hobbes tightened his lips to a thin line, then said, “Let’s go look.”
They could see nothing from the ground outside the house. Finally Tony Cooper volunteered to climb up the metal ladder attached to the rear of the house and have a look. “I’m in better shape than you guys,” he said. “I’ll go.”
“If you fall off,” Freddy called after him, “I’ll take good care of Miss Vera.”
Earl saw Vera Morgan twist away as he tried to circle her waist with his arm. She was obviously having none of him. By the time Tony had reached the roof she’d turned away from the group completely and was walking down toward the water.
“Nothing up here,” Cooper called down. “No bodies.”
Freddy O’Connor snorted. “If he killed the old gal himself and hid her up there, naturally he wouldn’t admit finding her.”
“I’ll go up too,” Earl decided.
He climbed the metal ladder quickly, without effort, remembering all those times he’d done something like it in government training. He didn’t really expect to find anything on the roof, and when he reached Cooper’s side he saw that he was right, but the gesture had needed to be made.
“That loud-mouthed bastard,” Tony muttered, looking down at the others. “It’s time somebody shut him up for good.”
“He said you two were friends.”
“Remind me sometime to tell you what sort of friends we were.” He left Earl standing there and started down the ladder.
When they were all assembled again on the ground, it was Dr. MacKenzie who put their thoughts into words. “There’s only one place left, you know. The sea.”
“But how could she get out of her room?” Cooper asked.
“This morning, early, after the alarms were off. Either she went by herself or—”
“She’d never go by herself,” Hobbes insisted. “The whole purpose of her pouring money into ICI was to insure her own immortality. Even if she felt she was dying—especially if she felt she was dying—she’d never have thrown her body into the sea.”
“Then somebody must have killed her and thrown her body in there,” Freddy said.
“Somebody?”
He glanced around at the circle of faces. “One of us.”
Who? And why?
They sat around in the living room discussing it for the next hour and got nowhere. Freddy went downstairs with Harry Armstrong to finish his tests on Frank, but the rest of them simply sat and talked. After a time Hobbes pushed a button to summon Hilda from the kitchen and announced that the cocktail hour would be somewhat earlier than usual.
“But it’s barely noon!” Vera pointed out.
“Those who think it’s too early don’t need to drink,” Hobbes assured her. He was a man whose dream was beginning to crumble before his eyes and Earl felt oddly sorry for him.
“Whatever happened to Miss Watson needn’t affect the experiment,” he told the man, trying to cheer him up. “If Frank lives—”
“Don’t call him Frank!”
“All right. If the patient lives, you’ll have all the fame and money you need.”
“And all the lawsuits,” Dr. MacKenzie commented. “Bringing people back to life is a damn sight more complicated than walking on the moon.”
“Lawsuits?” Earl repeated, not understanding at first.
“Of course! And not just from what’s his name, either! We used body parts from five different people last night—all without the permission of their families.”
But Hobbes shook his head. “That’s no problem. I have a signed contract in each case giving ICI sole and exclusive rights to the bodies in its care if any of the perpetual upkeep payments are missed. Since the initial payment at time of freezing covers only twenty-five years of care, I now have a number of bodies in my personal possession. You’d be amazed how many sons and daughters and nieces and nephews lose interest in paying the upkeep after twenty-five years.”
“That’s disgusting!” Vera said and stalked out of the room. The others merely sat there in silence.
“I thought there were insurance policies for that sort of thing,” MacKenzie said, recovering himself.
“There are. The wiser of my clients took the precaution of investing in one. But so many did not. I was much younger in those days, of course, and some said I was an excellent salesman. But then selling tomorrow is always easy. That’s why so many Florida land speculators used to flourish. Something for your old age, or your next life.”
Freddy and Armstrong came back from the basement operating room, and Armstrong reported, “His vital signs are very good.”
“Is he conscious yet?” Hobbes asked.
“No.” Armstrong fidgeted. “Frankly, I don’t know why. The revival might take longer than we expect
ed.”
Hobbes turned to Freddy. “And his brain?”
“Normal in all respects. When he comes to, he should be fully functional.”
Lawrence Hobbes sighed. “Well, that’s something anyway.”
Earl excused himself when the drinks arrived and went up to his room. As he opened the door he saw Vera Morgan bent over his bedside table. She’d changed into a pink sweater and slacks suit, which from his angle was most attractive.
“Well! Hello!”
She wheeled around, startled. But immediately she regained her composure. “I came in to borrow some matches, and I. found something quite interesting.”
Earl’s eyes darted to the bedside table. “Oh?”
“Who are you really, Mr. Jazine?”
“I thought you knew.”
“I mean really. Who are you, and why have you been tape recording our conversations?”
Earl sat down on the bed. “Where’d you get that idea?”
She stepped up close to him, and he could see the points of her nipples through the fabric of the sweater. “This tiny tape recorder was running when I came in. I thought you’d left it on by accident and I went to shut it off. I pushed the wrong button and I could hear the conversation downstairs. You’ve got a tiny radio mike on you and you were transmitting up to this room!”
There was little point in denying it. “You’re a very intelligent young lady.”
“Cut out the sweet talk! Who are you?”
“Who would you like me to be?”
“Tony says Hobbes is afraid of foreign agents.”
“I’m not one of those.” He reached for his wallet and flipped open the hidden compartment. “Earl Jazine is the real name. I’m an investigator for the Computer Investigation Bureau, back in New York.”
The Frankenstein Factory Page 3