The Devil's Sanctuary

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The Devil's Sanctuary Page 17

by Marie Hermanson


  He pulled back deeper into the trees, well aware that he couldn’t go more than about a hundred and fifty feet. After that the mountain got in the way. Then he was forced to carry on westward along the rock face, hoping that the trees would continue, protecting and concealing him.

  Now he could see the far side of the meadow; the signs hanging from the wire fluttered like big white moths in the darkness.

  The uniformed men were behind him. The cones of light from their powerful flashlights exposed the tree trunks, signs, and rock face in brief, incoherent flashes.

  “Can you see him?” one of them called.

  “No, but he’s got to be here.”

  He quickly ducked under the wire.

  The next moment something terrible leapt up from the grass and hit him, cutting through his skin and muscle.

  PART 2

  29

  ONE BY one the members of Himmelstal’s research team came into the conference room. Squinting against the morning sun flooding in through the plate-glass window, they sat down in the seats that had become theirs over time, opened their briefcases, and took out their notebooks and plastic folders.

  Gisela Obermann was standing at the head of the table, smiling anxiously at her colleagues as they arrived. When they were all there she closed the door.

  “I hope you have an extremely good reason for calling this meeting,” Karl Fischer said as he irritably opened a bottle of mineral water and poured himself a glass. “Max,” he read from the summary that Gisela had left at all their places. “Again. What’s he come up with now?”

  “I’m sorry to call a meeting at such short notice this morning,” Gisela Obermann said. “But of course that’s the advantage of our all being in the same place. Things happen, and we can meet at once to discuss them.”

  “What’s happened?” Hedda Heine wondered. She leaned across the table and peered over the top of her glasses like a worried mother owl.

  “Has he done any more heroic deeds?” Karl Fischer said tartly.

  “I’m about to tell you what’s happened. But first I’d like to remind you of yesterday’s meeting. You remember that we sat here yesterday and listened to Max? You remember what he claimed?”

  “That he was called something else,” Hedda Heine said.

  “Daniel Brant,” Brian Jenkins read with his forefinger on his notes. “Max’s twin brother. They’d changed places.”

  “Yes, dear God,” Fischer said, taking a large sip of mineral water.

  “You also remember the reason for yesterday’s meeting?” Gisela went on, pretending not to have noticed Karl Fischer’s derisive tone. “He risked his own life to save another person. Would you, with all your experience and knowledge of Max, say that this was characteristic behavior for him?”

  “No,” several people muttered.

  “He just wants some attention. And he certainly got it,” Karl Fischer said. “Besides, we don’t know exactly what happened.”

  “What happened was exactly what he told us. The guards have confirmed it. Well, his behavior certainly surprised me a great deal. It made me think about what he told me before. That he’s Max’s twin brother, physically almost identical, but a completely different person.”

  “I honestly don’t see why you’re making such a fuss about this,” Karl Fischer said. “Lying is part of these people’s personalities. As far as I understand it, this particular individual lies more often than he tells the truth. It’s hardly anything new.”

  Gisela nodded.

  “That’s what I thought as well. But this is so well thought out, so carefully planned and executed. Those of you who have met Max before know that his lies blossom instantly and are abandoned shortly thereafter. Of all the untruths he’s tried to get me to believe, he’s never actually repeated a single one of them. He simply gets fed up with them. He’s far too quixotic and impatient to be able to stick to a lie with any degree of consistency. But this time he’s done precisely that. For four days now, he’s been telling exactly the same story to different people.”

  “I daresay his imagination is running dry,” Fischer muttered. “Even the best storytellers repeat themselves sometimes.”

  “The question we must always ask ourselves,” Hedda Heine said, “is what does the person in question stand to gain by this? These people do nothing without it benefiting them somehow.”

  “He’s already explained that very clearly. He wants to be released,” Fischer interrupted abruptly. “Naturally that’s impossible, but hope is always the last thing to die. And you’re far too experienced to let yourself be manipulated, Gisela. So why are you taking up our time with this?”

  Gisela took a deep breath, composed herself, then said, “At the moment Max is lying in intensive care with burns to the right side of his body. He went into Zone Two last night.”

  There was a moment’s silence around the table. Doctor Fischer was drawing geometric patterns on his pad.

  “Is he badly hurt?” Hedda Heine asked.

  “It was dark, and the security staff didn’t find him immediately. He was left lying there rather too long. But he’ll be okay.”

  Brian Jenkins was leafing through a bundle of papers with a look of concentration.

  “Wasn’t he the one who… Yes, here it is.” He tapped his finger at a line he had just found. “August last year. The culvert.”

  Gisela fixed him with an intense look.

  “Precisely! Max went into Zone Two almost a year ago. Don’t you see what that means?”

  The others looked at her rather uncertainly.

  “This is extremely significant. After all, we usually say that no one goes into Zone Two more than once,” Doctor Pierce pointed out.

  “Exactly!”

  Gisela’s cheeks were red. The others were still looking thoughtful.

  “There’s something that doesn’t make sense with this man,” she went on. “I’ve felt it since my conversation with him on Tuesday. I sat up last night looking at the recordings of our meetings.”

  She paused, then looked hesitantly at Doctor Fischer, who was whispering something to Doctor Kalpak. The others waited. Hedda Heine gave her a gesture of encouragement and she went on.

  “I compared our most recent meeting with previous ones. And that only confirmed my suspicions. Something was very different. His gestures, posture, choice of words, facial expressions, the way he moved his head, the way he walked and sat down. All the things that are so characteristic of a person, the things that are so obvious that neither the person themselves or anyone else actually thinks about them. This simply isn’t Max, I thought. It’s Max’s body. But there’s someone else inside it.”

  30

  LIKE A magnificent ship, Gisela Obermann’s balcony seemed to be drifting through the air. From the ground below them came the smell of pine needles, moist grass, and glacial-melt. The sky was overcast and veils of cloud glided at low altitude through the valley.

  Gisela Obermann tucked the blanket more tightly around him, then sat down in the adjacent recliner and asked, “What do you actually know about Himmelstal, Daniel?”

  “It’s a luxury clinic in a beautiful but dangerous setting. The staff seem crazier than the patients. But the native inhabitants of the valley are craziest of all. And there’s practically no communication with the outside world. Every time I try to get away from here, I get yanked back by some invisible rubber band. That’s pretty much all I know.”

  He buried his chin in the blanket the doctor had wrapped around him. It had a faint smell of her own perfume.

  It wasn’t really cold, but the thermostat controlling his body temperature seemed rather erratic, and without warning an icy chill could rise up from the injured parts of his leg and upper arm and spread through his body with a shiver. The next moment the cold could be replaced by heat. He had been told that this was good, a sign that the nerves were undamaged.

  “So you don’t know anything. This place must seem extremely odd to you.”

>   Daniel let out a bitter little laugh.

  “To put it mildly.”

  “It’s occurred to me that I’m going to have to regard you as a new arrival here in Himmelstal. And tell you all the things I usually tell new arrivals.”

  Gisela Obermann sat herself more comfortably in the recliner.

  “I should probably take it from the start. It takes a while to explain.”

  Daniel shrugged his shoulders under the blanket.

  “I’ve been here almost two weeks. I can stay a little bit longer. Take as long as you like.”

  “Okay. You know what psychopathic behavior is, don’t you?”

  “Sure, how do you mean? A psychopath is a person with no conscience. An evil person.”

  “That last phrase isn’t a term used by professionals, obviously. But of course by definition evil is precisely the act of causing innocent people to suffer without feeling any guilt. But if we are to call a person evil, then this person has to have the chance to make a choice. And the person making the choice has to know what they are choosing between, naturally. But a psychopath doesn’t know the difference between good and evil.”

  Daniel protested.

  “I’m sure they do.”

  “Intellectually, maybe. They know that lies, theft, and violence are evil, in the same way that someone color-blind knows that tomatoes, blood, and sunsets are red. But just as a color-blind person will never experience with his or her own senses what we mean when we say ‘red,’ a psychopath will never experience what we mean when we say something is ‘evil.’ Concepts such as good and evil, love and guilt are words without any meaning. It’s a definite lack, but the psychopath him or herself doesn’t suffer from it. It’s the world around them that suffers. The worst violent crimes are committed by psychopaths—”

  “Forgive me,” Daniel interrupted, “but where are you going with this? Which psychopath are you talking about here?”

  Gisela Obermann looked at him in surprise and seemed close to laughter. She looked down at her lap for a few seconds, apparently composing herself, then raised a perfectly serious face to him.

  “You’ll soon understand, Daniel. Just be patient. So, as I was saying, the worst violent crimes are committed by psychopaths. People who commit crimes like that are obviously given very severe punishments. But…” She held a finger in the air and raised her eyebrows. “What if the people committing these crimes have a small medical abnormality that makes their brains different from ours? What if their brains lack the capacity for empathy? Is it then right to demand that they show empathy and punish them because they can’t? Isn’t that just as wrong as demanding that a paralyzed stroke victim should walk? Or that someone with learning disabilities should solve complex logic puzzles? They simply can’t. They don’t have the brain that’s required to do it.”

  “Do you have any scientific evidence for this, or is this something you’ve worked out entirely on your own?” Daniel asked.

  “A bit of both. We’ve got loads of research evidence showing that psychopaths’ brains are different from other people’s, but not enough for us to understand the full extent of the difference. We might be able to solve the mystery next year, or in ten years’ time. Or maybe never. But what is obvious is that psychopaths’ brains demonstrate clear abnormalities. There are very definite differences in their frontal lobes and amygdalas, unusual brain waves in response to emotional stimuli, an overactive dopamine system, and a number of other things. The differences are physiological and measurable. If these people act the way they do as the result of a physical handicap, can it be right to punish them, Daniel? Locking them up in terrible prisons or, as in some countries, executing them?”

  “I’m against capital punishment,” Daniel said, scratching his chin.

  He hadn’t shaved for several days, and his beard was starting to grow again. He couldn’t help feeling it. It was like a source of security in the midst of all the confusion. A fuzzy animal that was always with him.

  “But obviously society needs to protect itself from dangerous criminals,” he went on. “Whether or not they’ve had unhappy childhoods or have weird brain waves or whatever else. There’s no place for them in society.”

  Gisela Obermann seemed satisfied with his answer.

  “Exactly. Every attempt at treatment and rehabilitation so far has failed. The reoffending rate among psychopathic criminals is alarmingly high. Psychopathy remains incurable. So: punishment instead of treatment.”

  She put her hand in her pocket and pulled out a case containing long, narrow cigarillos.

  “Unless,” she said, lighting one of them, “there’s a third option.”

  “Do you really want some sort of moral, philosophical discussion?” Daniel said. “I think you’re going to have to find someone else for that. I’d rather you just explained what happened to me in that meadow. I’ve never come across an electric fence strong enough to inflict actual physical burns before. What sort of animals are kept there? Elephants?”

  Gisela held the case of cigarillos out to Daniel. He shook his head. She leaned back in her chair, took a few thoughtful puffs, and let the smoke sail off over the railing of the balcony.

  “A third option,” she repeated, as if she hadn’t heard Daniel’s interruption.

  Maybe she was a bit crazy? It wouldn’t be that unusual for a psychiatrist.

  “What third option?” Daniel asked.

  She carried on smoking in silence for a while, then went on.

  “A bit of history: Fourteen years ago there was a big European conference in Turin about psychosocial personality disorders, popularly known as the Psychopath Conference, where a whole load of neurologists, psychiatrists, politicians, and philosophers met up. They shared research findings, held debates, argued. They struggled round the clock with the question of how we can protect ourselves from these extremely dangerous individuals in an ethically defensible way. After rigorous debate, gradually a vision emerged around which they could all unite. Some form of long-term—probably lifelong—isolation was deemed essential, but not in an institution like a prison or a mental hospital. It had to be an environment that offered decent living standards and freedom within certain very limited boundaries. A place where people could live a reasonable life. The place would have to be fairly large, seeing as it would have to house a lot of people, and would constitute its inhabitants’ whole world for the rest of their lives. What they had in mind was a life that was as normal as possible. The inhabitants should have private accommodation, they should have some sort of occupation or other meaningful activity. They should be able to run businesses, study, take exercise, and be given the possibility to develop different skills. In short, an entire little society.”

  “That all sounds nice and cozy,” Daniel said.

  “That depends on how you look at it. The place would obviously have to be completely isolated from the outside world. Everyone was careful to stress how different it would be from the way similar groups had been treated historically—leper colonies and so on. This wasn’t about shunting people out of sight and forgetting about them. On the contrary, the place would be a center for research and would offer a unique opportunity to study psychopaths under controlled conditions in a relatively normal environment. Not to punish, not to provide care. But to study. Research, observe, measure. With the intention of finally uncovering the mysteries of psychopathy, identifying its causes, and developing an effective treatment. That was the goal, albeit a distant one.”

  “A colony of psychopaths,” Daniel said with a little whistle.

  Gisela Obermann reached over the balcony railing and tapped the ash from her cigarillo.

  “Exactly. The conference delegates all agreed on this. The problem was the location. A lot of people thought an island would be the obvious choice for an experiment of this nature. A working group was set up to investigate the possibility of various islands. But it turned out that the supply of isolated islands with the conditions for a reasonable li
fe was distinctly limited. Any that fitted the requirements had long since been settled and exploited. Those that remained had no drinking water or natural harbor, or were far too rugged to be safely inhabited. Officially the project got no further than that.”

  She broke off, turned toward Daniel, and said with sudden suspicion, “Is this really all new to you?”

  “Yes, but I don’t really see why you’re telling me all this. What happened to the project?”

  “There was a report. Which got lost among all the other reports in the archive.” She reached over the balcony railing again and sent more ash through the air. “That was the official version. But one of the delegates, a neuropsychiatrist, couldn’t let go of the idea. An acquaintance had told him in passing about a motoring trip in the Swiss Alps, where he had ended up in a narrow, depopulated valley full of ramshackle barns and an abandoned clinic building. The psychiatrist—my current boss, Karl Fischer—visited the valley and discovered that it was absolutely perfect for the purpose. He set about getting funding, and a few years later Himmelstal was set up as an isolated area for psychopaths, where they could live and be studied. We don’t have any official status, but the authorities in most European countries are aware of us and send us patients.”

  “So I’ve ended up in a clinic for psychopaths?” Daniel let out a raw laugh. “That explains why the villagers prefer to keep their distance. But not everyone in the clinic is a psychopath, right? If I’ve understood it correctly, there are plenty of patients suffering from stress-related problems, exhaustion, depression, that sort of thing.”

  She looked at him, then smiled.

  “Oh Daniel, I…I’ll come back to that. There’s more to explain first. These zones, for instance, do you know about them?”

  “I haven’t managed to avoid finding out about them. Particularly the rather unfriendly Zone Two,” Daniel said bitterly, with a gesture toward his injuries. “But you’re welcome to explain more. It would be fascinating to know why you subject innocent visitors to electrical torture and serious burns.”

 

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