Eleanor looked around, ignoring the spinning sensation that came every time she shifted her eyes. Whoever had hit her, and it was probably Evans, had done a bang-up job of it. The tiniest effort at concentration made her head throb. As far as she could tell, she was on the floor in the small back room of the clinic. The noise of stirring that came from behind her had to be the orangutan, unless Evans had obtained more research animals.
“Where’s Peter?” Evans asked.
“Peter who?” She pretended to be woozy. “Can you release my hands?”
The pain of the shock was unexpected. She jumped and screamed, falling onto one shoulder with a painful thud. Her leg was burning where he’d used the shock gun on her again.
“Listen, you sadist...”
“We don’t allow temper tantrums in here, Dr. Duncan. You’d better learn to control yourself.”
Evans walked around her. “Now once again, where is Peter?”
“I don’t know,” she answered. She eyed the small gun he carried. It looked something like a stun gun, but perhaps not as powerful. Of course she couldn’t begin to estimate the weapon’s capacity, and certainly not in the hands of a man like Evans.
“I love my new toy,” he said, holding it out for her. “My little pet over there—” he pointed toward the bars of a cage Eleanor could see “—is so afraid of it, she will do anything I tell her. Anything at all. Isn’t that remarkable?”
Struggling back to a sitting position, Eleanor ignored him.
“Answer me!” he screamed. “When I ask a question, answer me!”
His face was red with anger, and Eleanor watched the jump of the pulse in his neck. He was beyond any reasoning, a man capable of anything.
“What are you teaching the ape?” she asked.
“Obedience. I am one of the most effective obedience trainers in the world. My attack dogs will kill anyone or anything on command.” His eyes seemed to bore through her. “Even their owners. I’ve had more success in the field than any other scientist. Obedience is a fascinating arena, don’t you agree?”
“Absolutely,” she muttered, trying to keep her tone level. She couldn’t afford to show the loathing and contempt she felt for the man in front of her. What she had to do was find some weakness, some method of making him release her.
“I guess it was your successful career that brought you to the attention of Charles Breck?” She tried to make the question sound flattering, but the words tasted like grit.
“Yes, and he’s going to be delighted with my new idea.” Evans looked at her and pointed. “You!”
“Me?” She couldn’t help the arrow of fear that struck her heart. “What about me?”
“You’re perfect. You’re the one who’s going to present the ape!” He grinned and slowly nodded his head. “Your beauty and the ape’s cunning tricks. The whole room will be diverted. And then, should things go wrong, they’ll have you to execute. How wonderful, don’t you agree?”
Eleanor was too shocked to say anything. She had no idea what he was raving about, but she clearly understood that it was something evil and that she did not want to be a part of it.
“Don’t you agree?” he screamed at her. “Answer me when I talk to you! That stupid ape can’t talk, but you can, and you’re going to!”
“Yes, yes, it’s wonderful,” she replied. “What is it exactly that you want me to do?”
He ignored her question and walked to the cage. “Come!” he commanded. The small orangutan came toward him, her entire body radiating fear. “Come!” He slipped a chain onto her collar.
Working at the knots that held her hands, Eleanor watched in fascinated horror as Evans put the ape through a series of dance steps, curtsies and ingratiating behavior.
“Very nice, right?” he asked.
“Whatever you say.” She couldn’t afford to irritate him, for her sake and the ape’s. “She’s the perfect gift.”
“Oh, she’s so much more than that.” Evans put away the ape and came back to Eleanor. He tugged at the rope that held her hands, making sure it was secure.
Eleanor gritted her teeth to keep from cursing him. She had to play along.
“How do you know Peter?” she asked.
“Well enough to know that he likes to interfere. I’ve kept my eye on him since I got back to Washington. We’re old friends, you know, Peter and I. We go way back.”
“To a fire, I believe,” Eleanor said. She tried to sound impartial, hoping to draw Evans into some detail.
“Yes, a great conflagration. My work had to be destroyed, such a shame. But now that I have friends in high places, I’ll be able to work again. Once the ape is trained and the coup is delivered, I won’t ever have to hide and struggle again. I’ll have a real laboratory with the best equipment.”
Hearing him ramble on, Eleanor was taken with the change in his personality. When she’d first met him, he’d been quiet, observant, cold. Now he was too animated. Was it possible he was taking some type of drug? When it wore off, would she have a chance to escape?
“I deserve acclaim, and I’ll have it soon,” he finished.
“Of course,” she said steadily. “What great trick is the orangutan going to do? Will she dance at a ball or reception?”
“Something like that.” Evans was suddenly cagey. “I hear someone moving around outside.”
“Dr. Evans, wait a moment,” Eleanor said quickly. “Do you know my husband Carter Wells?”
“Ah, Carter,” Evans said with the biggest smile he’d given all afternoon. “He’s an old friend. Older even than Rayburn Smith. Yes, Carter and I go back a long way. Your husband hid me out after the fire, when I was desperate. I introduced him to some useful people."
“Carter did?” Code One Orange. Evans had to have been involved. And he acted as if Carter were really alive. Was it possible that Carter had helped him, and then the favor was returned?
“We spent a great deal of time together talking, Carter and I. I know many things about you, Dr. Duncan.” He smiled. “Many things. Your husband could be a very entertaining man.”
“I’ll bet,’’ Eleanor said, unable to hide her sarcasm any longer. “Do you think you might untie my hands? I’ve lost all feeling.”
“I suppose. There’s no way out of this lab. Not even if I were to die. Since your raid, we’ve improved the security system.”
“I didn’t raid this place,” Eleanor told him once again. She grimaced as he finally freed the knots.
“No need to lie now. What we want to know is where the cat is. We simply must have him back, you see.”
“I don’t know where he is, I swear it.” Eleanor rubbed her wrists. The feeling was coming back with a vengeance.
“The cat was seen in your apartment. And that wretched Caruso woman was there, too. There’s no point denying your involvement. We just want the creature back.”
“And then what?”
“You’re going to take a little trip. With your interest in language, I should think Africa would be a fascinating continent. The Dark Continent,” he said, his eyes glowing too brilliantly, Eleanor observed.
“Linguistics is the science of language. I don’t know how things got so confused, Arnold,” she said, trying for a personal touch. “I didn’t raid the lab. I didn’t take anything. I don’t know what you’re talking about. Carter got things confused when he tried to blame me.” She had to turn the conversation back to Carter. Where was he and what role did he play? Evans talked all around the subject but never revealed anything.
“How do you explain the cat?” Evans smiled with forced tolerance, as if she were a stupid child.
When Evans circled her once more, she could see the tiny lines of new skin that ran down both sides of his face. Claw marks.
“You were in the library parking lot. You saw me with the cat because you were the one who attacked me!” That was why he insisted she’d taken the cat! she realized.
“Pretty and smart,” he said, laughing. “We los
t all of the other cats but the black one. The most important one. I saw you put him in your coat and I knew you were the one.”
Eleanor thought it pointless to argue with him. He wasn’t capable of changing his mind.
“I’ll give back the cat under one condition.”
“Where is he?” Evans pressed.
Eleanor felt her heart pounding. She couldn’t risk saying that Familiar was at her apartment. What if Evans knew differently? “He’s in a safe place.”
“Is the capsule intact?”
Eleanor knew she had to take a risk. “I don’t know. Peter was going to take care of it.”
Evan’s face flamed with relish. “That’s so perfect. Peter has the plan, and I have to get it from him. He never even realized what it was.” He stood up. “He always thought he was so much smarter than me. When he found out about the experiments, he was so superior-acting. But he was stupid. I did my research under his nose, and he didn’t catch on all summer. And now at last we get to finish what we started so long ago. I tried to get—” He looked at Eleanor and shut his mouth.
“Can I see Carter?” she asked. She couldn’t reveal the tremble of fear at the idea. Carter was alive! He’d been involved all along.
“Not today. He’ll be by to see you. Don’t worry about that. Until he comes, though, I have a carefully planned appointment.” He waved the gun at her and began to push her through another door. She found herself in a small room that was little more than a cage.
“What is this?” she asked.
“My observation room. I can see everything you do. And pretty soon, I’ll be able to exert some influence over what you think.”
Tiny hairs rose on Eleanor’s neck in fright. Evans was mad, but he was also intelligent. His whole obedience thing was focused toward more than making apes and dogs carry out his wishes. There was something else, and she had to find out what.
“I’ll be back later,” Evans said, closing the door. “I have a rendezvous with Peter Curry. Our meeting is long overdue.”
“Wait a minute....” Eleanor never got a chance to finish. The door slammed with a bang and she heard the locks click into place. The terrible idea that she’d set Peter up was like something alive in her skin. What had she done? Was Peter aware of how demented Evans had become? Those were questions that gnawed at her as she paced the tiny confines of the prison.
The sound of low crying came again, and Eleanor turned slowly, trying to pinpoint its source. She couldn’t be certain.
“Who’s there?” she asked in a whisper.
The only answer was more childlike crying.
WELL, ELEANOR HAS gotten herself into a fine pickle this time. She’s in there with Dr. Frankenstein, and that ain’t going to be a pretty sight. First Zelda, now Eleanor. Do I have rotten luck or what?
These windows are about as useless as a screen door in a submarine. I can get up to them, but I can’t really see inside, just vague blurs of motion. If he’s hurt the dame! But I can’t clutter my feline brain with such negative thoughts. I have to get in, and I have to get them out. It might even be easier with Eleanor to help. She can at least use her hands. Maybe it’s a blessing that she’s in there.
Oops! Here comes Vrenner, checking out the back door. He looks demented. Maybe I can just scoot inside. Nope! The door was too fast, and Dr. Frankenstein locked it tight. What luck! They’re on the inside and I’m on the outside. Back to the windows.
Eleanor is in the small back room. I can’t see clearly, but I can see her moving around. She must be scared to death. Maybe I can get her attention.
Ouch! I might have broken my shoulder against the glass, but it’s working. She’s looking around. One more time! Eureka! She’s looking at the window and waving me away. As if I don’t know they’re out to get me. She wants me to go away, but I won’t. I have to figure out how to get in.
On the other hand, I could go and look for Dr. Doolittle. He could break in and get everyone out.
I don’t see a sign of Zelda. She’s probably getting some beauty rest, and I’ll bet she deserves it. I can remember when he wouldn’t let her sleep for days, shocking her and burning her, trying to make her cave in and do those terrible things to my fellow cats! But she fought against him. That Zelda! She used to cry like a child when she was alone. She never wanted to hurt anyone or anything. But I want Vrenner, and I’m going to get him.
Okay, I admit that I’m not going to get inside. I have to have some human help, and the faster I find Peter, the better off we are!
Eleanor’s breath caught painfully in her throat. Familiar was in the window of the lab, sitting perched there as if he were posing for a portrait. There had been a distinct thud—Familiar hurling himself at the window to get her attention? She shook her head. The last place in the world the cat needed to be was at the Behavioral Institute. The cat and the capsule. Evans had as much as said it. So it was Familiar all along. She and Peter had been on the right track, but who would have thought that someone would implant information in a cat? But then again, an animal destined for experimentation and death would be the last place someone would look for contraband goods. She looked again at the window, thinking her eyes might have played a trick on her. But he was there, flesh and blood, and the sight gave her new hope.
Get Peter, she mouthed at him. “I must sound like Timmy on the old Lassie shows,” she said aloud. But she went as close to the window as she could and mouthed the words to the cat once more. Familiar had somehow gotten back to the lab, and there was just a chance he could find Peter. If only she could write a note and slip it to him! Hell, if he could carry a capsule, he could carry a note.
“I’m really fantasizing now,” she said, leaning her head against the bars that made up one wall of the room. There was a large mirror, which she knew was a two-way glass. Evans could be sitting out time now, watching her talk to the cat! She glanced at the window; Familiar was gone. She was glad, but had never felt more alone.
The only thing she could do was to begin to patch together the things she’d learned, the most notable of which was that her ex-husband and Evans were friends. The idea of Carter alive was almost too much to bear. But he was, and she’d have to deal with him. She could clearly see the link of Carter, Evans and Code One Orange. Rayburn had been caught innocently in the middle of it. By calling him, she’d condemned him to death!
“Oh, Rayburn,” she whispered, feeling desolation sweep over her. “I’m so sorry.” She paced the small room, avoiding looking into the mirror. She didn’t want to give Evans the satisfaction of seeing how upset she was.
Thinking back over the day, she was struck by the possibility that Sam Nottingham had set her up. He’d sent her into the tunnels for a meeting with Breck in the Capitol. Had he known what waited for her in the darkness? After all, he’d first been rude, then had suddenly agreed to talk with her. And Nottingham had a Central American background. Code One Orange.
“Damn!” she whispered. “I should have waited until I found Peter when I called from Nottingham’s office.” The hard truth was that no one really knew where she’d gone. No one would even have the faintest idea where to begin looking for her.
Hysteria began to rise like a tidal wave. When she didn’t talk with her parents at Christmas, they’d begin to worry. But by then it would be too late. Panic almost overwhelmed her. She gripped the bars and held on, forcing her mind to grow calm, her body to stop trembling. She was underestimating Peter. He was nobody’s fool and he wouldn’t give up. If she could figure it out, so could he. She went back to the window and tried to look at the outside world. She had no idea what time it was. The only thing to do was think.
What role did Charles Breck play in all of this? Could he really be an innocent who’d happened to hire a psychopath to train a pet ape? What was his connection with Code One Orange? Was he a victim of Nottingham’s schemes? She tried to evaluate the situation sensibly. She’d watched the interaction between Breck and Evans. Breck was acting head of the
CIA, a tenuous position, at best. His background was in diplomacy rather than counterintelligence. During the meeting at the clinic, Evans had appeared rational. She’d talked with him and hadn’t been frightened. He’d been in control of himself, even when Magdalena had attacked him.
She felt her heart skip. And Magdalena had attacked him—and invited a physical assault. She wanted Evans to do something so that she could have him arrested. But he’d been too smart! He’d waited and gone to her home to hurt her.
All the blood in her brain seemed to drop into Eleanor’s stomach. She’d never felt such fear. She was locked up, a captive of a man who could kill her as easily as he tormented small, helpless animals. Her panic was once again augmented by the sound of low moaning. Somewhere in the clinic there was someone else in serious trouble.
“Where are you?’’ she whispered, cocking her head for a response. “I’ll try and help you, but don’t be afraid.” She tried to sound brave, but knew her nerve was weakening. When she discovered the moaning person, what atrocity would she find? Her imagination was running away with her, and she felt like curling into a corner and hiding.
“Listen.” She forced herself to talk reassuringly. “I’m going to get us out of here. I promise.” Something about the sound of the moaning made her think that it came from a child, a young girl. “You aren’t alone anymore. Whatever we have to do to get away, we will.”
There was the sound of an intercom clicking on. “Save it, Dr. Duncan. There’s absolutely nowhere you can go and nothing you can do to save yourself or anyone else. Sleep tight, now.”
The lights were snapped off; she was alone with the soft whimpering of the child and the echo of Arnold Evans’s hard voice.
Chapter Fourteen
Eleanor’s new sofa was a muted blue and still covered in the thick plastic used for shipping. Peter noted the change in furniture as he stepped into her living room, and the emptiness. There was no sign that Eleanor had been home.
“I told you she wasn’t here,” Wessy said. “The men came this afternoon to deliver the sofa, and Dr. Duncan wasn’t anywhere to be found.’’ He gave Peter a sour look. “She’s had a lot of trouble since she met you.”
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