Also, his eardrums had been punctured.
Some legwork had been done; a cursory investigation of his usual haunts had turned up the fact that he hadn’t been seen in a month.
I had a pretty good idea where he’d been.
I put in a restless Sunday reading the New York Times and trying to watch the Jets. My file on the case was building, spinning a web around Vincent Smathers. If the web got any tighter, Smathers was going to be eaten by some very nasty spiders, the kind that hatch in a man’s mind when he has to spend the rest of his life in prison.
That bothered me. Why should a Nobel Prize winner jeopardize his whole reputation and future by enmeshing himself in a set of circumstances that could destroy him? It was easy to pin any possible blame on the shadowy Kee, but Kee was Smathers’ responsibility, assuming a crime had been committed. In fact, I wanted to make very sure I knew what I was talking about before I brought in the police or turned Smathers’ future over to a pedantic, professional fund-raiser like Barnum.
I made it to half-time in the ball game, then went to the phone and called Fred Haley’s home on the outside chance that he might have returned early. There was no answer. I had nothing better to do, so I drove out to the suburban town where Haley lived. I’d wait for him.
Haley’s car was in the driveway of his house. I parked my car behind his, went up the flagstone walk in front of the house and knocked at the door. I waited thirty seconds, then knocked again. There was still no answer.
Something cold crawled up my back. I went around to the back of the house and knocked on that door. I got the same response. I got out my skeleton keys and let myself in.
Fred Haley hadn’t gone anywhere that weekend. His body lay on the floor of his study, very stiff with rigor mortis. I guessed he’d been dead at least two days. The odd angle of his head told me he’d died of a broken neck.
I spent the next two hours answering questions, avoiding speculation on possible connections between Haley’s death and his knowledge of Chiang Kee’s background. It could very well be that Haley had been killed by a burglar he’d surprised. The ransacked house pointed to it—except that Fred Haley, as far as I knew, was no slouch at defending himself; and he was supposed to have left on a Friday afternoon, which was a strange time for a burglar to be prowling around.
That much I told the police. The detective in charge dutifully noted my opinions in his notebook and went about his business; Garth showed up later and backed me into a corner. I got him off my back by promising to come in to see him with everything I knew, after I made one more stop. That didn’t do much to pacify him, but it gave me time to catch one of the shuttle flights out of Kennedy Airport to Boston.
I knew it was useless trying to talk to any of the officials at Platte. If they talked to me at all, they’d have nothing but glowing reports for Smathers. That was the way the academic game was played; screw up, and you were asked to resign; resign, and nobody has anything but good things to say about you.
I went to the best source of information I could find, the janitor who worked in the Psychology Department.
I landed back at Kennedy at one the next afternoon and got my car out of the parking lot. It was time to report to Garth, and then to Barnum to warn him about the approaching storm. Instead, I put in a call to Garth’s office and left a message for him to meet me at my university office in an hour. Then I drove back to the campus and parked in front of Marten Hall.
Mrs. Pfatt was in her usual good form; she looked as though she’d gained weight during her day off. “I told you before that Dr. Smathers does not see visitors.”
“He’ll see me this time,” I said pointedly. “You tell him I just came back from Platte Institute.”
Mrs. Pfatt bridled a bit, but she finally called Smathers on the intercom. Her face went through a series of changes as she talked to him. She hung up the phone and stared at me as though I’d just performed a miracle.
“Dr. Smathers will see you, Dr. Frederickson,” she said with a new ring of respect in her voice. “He’s in his laboratories upstairs. He’d like you to come up.”
I went up. The steel door was unlocked. I opened it and went up the soundproofed stairway. Smathers was in the first office. I made a point of checking to make sure that the other offices and labs were empty, then went in to see him.
“You know,” he said without looking at me.
“I know that you got pressured to leave Platte because you insisted on performing experiments that had been legally and medically forbidden to you.”
“Why are you doing this to me?”
I showed him a photostat of my license. “Besides being a criminology professor, I’m also a private detective. I was hired to investigate you.”
“Who hired you?”
“Sorry. I won’t tell you that.”
The fire in Smathers’ eyes went out as quickly as it had flared. “They were fools,” he said hollowly. “I’m surrounded by fools. I’m on the verge of a very important discovery—a profound medical breakthrough—and they will not leave me alone.”
“You’ve discovered a cure for the common cold?”
“Don’t mock me, Dr. Frederickson. I can cure drug addiction and alcoholism, along with a number of other things that plague modern man.”
“You do all this by puncturing a man’s eardrums?”
His eyes dropped. “You know about that, too?”
“I can guess that Bayard T. Manning was the subject for some of your experiments. Willingly or unwillingly, I don’t know. I do know he ended up dead.”
“Manning was paid,” Smathers said. “You see, I have discovered a cure for alcoholism. Alcoholism, like drug addiction, is primarily a psychological problem, despite the physical changes that take place as a result of dependence. The problem is one of the mind. I can literally remake a mind, erase those problems—”
“By erasing his mind.”
“That’s simplistic! To begin with, the minds of the people I’m talking about have been rendered worthless anyway. These men and women are no good to themselves, or to anyone else. Don’t moralize to me!”
“The thought never crossed my mind.”
Smathers took a deep breath. “Sensory deprivation, combined with other forms of therapy, can literally destroy a man’s craving for drugs and alcohol. It can remove the root psychological causes and make a man or woman whole again, a rational, intelligent human being.” He paused, picked up a pencil and began to roll it back and forth between his thumb and forefinger. Guilt was beginning to rise in his voice, like steam from a hot spring. “Manning originally came here of his own accord, in exchange for the money we offered him. Part of our treatment involved sound therapy, the use of certain tones as a therapeutic device. One day while Manning was on the machine he became frightened and touched some controls. The resulting frequencies punctured his eardrums. We would have treated him, but he escaped soon after that. I knew he would probably go to the authorities, so I was getting ready to go myself. When I heard he’d been killed, there didn’t seem much point.”
“Convenient, wasn’t it?”
Smathers’ head jerked around. “What does that mean?”
His indignation had the ring of sincerity. I sidestepped. “Did it ever occur to you that the same techniques you use to treat drug addiction could be used to alter a man’s political beliefs and behavior?”
“Don’t be melodramatic, Frederickson. I’m a scientist, not a politician.”
“How did you team up with Dr. Kee?”
“I don’t think I have to answer any more of your questions.”
“That’s right, you don’t.”
He answered it anyway. “I knew that Dr. Kee had worked for the Chinese Army during the Korean War. That seemed irrelevant now. He is an expert in induced aberrational psychology. He is the only man in the world who knows enough to assist me.”
“How did he come to assist you?”
“I was at a conference in Poland and it was
made known to me through intermediaries that Kee wished to come to the United States and work with me. I jumped at the chance. He came to me soon after that.”
I grunted. “Smathers, your brilliance is matched only by your naïveté.” I expected him to get angry, but he didn’t. Perhaps it was all coming home to him now; his blind passion for his work had pulled him down a long, very dark passageway, and only now was he beginning to see the ugly things at the end. “I’ll bet that a little checking would turn up the fact that Kee is in this country illegally, hiding behind your reputation. He’s here brushing up on the latest brainwashing techniques so he can go home and use them on his own people.”
“You realize, my work is very important. Perhaps you don’t fully understand how important.”
I gave him the tag line. “I think Kee killed two men.”
“Impossible!”
“I think he killed Manning, and I think he killed Fred Haley, an English professor who knew who Kee really was.”
Smathers’ face suddenly drained of color. “Mr. Haley was here just the other day. I saw him talking to …” He let it trail off. “What do you want me to do?”
“I want you to turn yourself in to the authorities before they come after you. My brother is a detective in the New York Police Department. He’s waiting for me right now in my office. He doesn’t know anything about this yet. You come and tell him your story. Things may end up easier for you.”
“Why should you want to help me?”
“Because I respect any man who’s been awarded the Nobel Prize. Also, if your work is as important as you say it is, I’d like to see it continued. If it’s true that your only crime is being incredibly stupid, perhaps you can rebuild your career when all the debts have been paid.”
I hadn’t heard a sound, but the sudden jerk of Smathers’ head and the look of alarm on his face was warning enough. I half turned in my seat and glimpsed a very large Chinese poised behind me. His eyes were great pools of darkness set in a field of flesh that might have been fine, yellow porcelain. I didn’t get that much time to study him; his hand flicked forward and landed on the nape of my neck. Everything went dark …
It stayed dark. Something was rapping on the inside of my head, not hard or painfully, but persistently, with a sound like a pencil eraser on soft wood. Then I realized it was only the blood pulsing through my veins. I listened for a few moments, and then it was gone, replaced by a voice.
“Dr. Frederickson. Robert. This is Dr. Kee.” The voice came from everywhere and nowhere. It started from somewhere back of my eyes and undulated out, filling my head—or what I thought was my head. There was simply no more head, no toes, no fingers, no body. There was only my mind, and I wondered how long that was going to last; all things disappear when you end up in one of Smathers’ fish tanks.
“I am your friend,” the voice continued. “There has been a very great misunderstanding on your part. That will be corrected. You will learn to love my voice—and then you will learn to love me. My voice will be your only contact with reality, and you will look forward to hearing it. Soon you will pay careful attention to what I have to say.”
I waited for more. There wasn’t any more. After a while, I wished there were, just as Kee had predicted. I cursed, slowly, methodically. My voice came back to me muffled, as from a great distance.
I tried to visualize myself: I would be floating in one of the tanks, the saline water warmed exactly to body temperature. My arms and legs would be strapped together, loose enough to allow for circulation, but tight enough to restrict any kind of movement. I imagined my head was encased in some kind of black hood into which oxygen was pumped; naturally, the hood had earphones. There were probably tubes stuck in my body through which I was being fed intravenously.
The next thought that occurred to me was that I’d be there forever, living in absolute darkness. Smathers and Kee would never take me out; they would go away and lock the steel door behind them. I would be left floating … floating forever, until I died, and rotted, and my bones sank to the bottom of the tank.
I found I was crying. I could just barely feel the tears sliding down my cheeks. I thought of my mother, a beautiful woman who had loved me as I was and who, with my brother, had kept me whole during the nightmare years of my childhood and adolescence.
I tried to sleep. Maybe I did. It was impossible to tell; sleeping and waking were all the same. Then the voice came again.
“Hello, Robert.”
“Go to hell,” I said; or maybe I only thought I said it.
“You’ve been with us for twenty-four hours now, Robert, I know you’ve missed my voice. I hope you’ve had time to think about your mistakes, your bad thinking.”
I tried to match the voice to the face I’d seen in Smathers’ office. The voice was like the face, smooth, unemotional, capable of sudden, unexpected violence.
“You should give some thought to—”
The voice broke off in midsentence. I strained, listening for the rest, but then I realized that the sudden break was all part of the game. The voice would be my only link with reality, and soon I would be willing to do anything it asked of me. My mind screamed, and I backed away from the terrible need, backed down into myself.
I found myself on a plain, stretching off to nothing. There was no horizon, only a black pit directly in front of me. I backed up, and the pit moved forward. It yawned before me like a dark hole on a silent planet.
There were sounds in the hole, wailing winds, screams, groans; and the hole was myself, the deepest part of me. That was where Kee wanted to push me, to trap me—and then remake me.
I was losing my mind.
The torment ended simply, even ludicrously, with a mouthful of water. My first reaction was that they’d decided to scrap the whole brainwashing business and just drown me. I didn’t care; anything was better than the terrible silence. Then somebody was holding my head above the surface, ripping off the black rubber mask. The light hit my eyes like razor blades. I screwed them shut and turned my head away. Hands reached down and loosened the straps on my arms and legs. Needles were pulled from my body. Still keeping my eyes closed, I planted my feet on the bottom of the tank and pushed, propelling myself over the side. I landed hard on my back and the breath whistled out of me. The hands reached down and grabbed me under the armpits.
“Get up, Dr. Frederickson!”
I opened my eyes a crack and the blurred image of Smathers flooded in. He pulled me to my feet and I promptly fell down again. After being held absolutely motionless for twenty-four hours, my legs weren’t working, but now my eyes were growing accustomed to the light.
“What’s the matter? You have a change of heart?” I asked Smathers.
He was white. His flesh trembled.
“I … I must have been out of my mind. I don’t know what … I just couldn’t let him do this to you. Can you walk?”
“No. Did you have anything to do with the killings of Manning and Haley?”
“No. I swear to you I knew nothing about them.”
“But you let Kee talk you into this.”
“I saw everything I’d worked for crumbling around me. If you only knew how close I am to controlling the reactions! Dr. Kee convinced me that you could be made to forget everything, perhaps even be made to work for us.”
“You were willing to work with a murderer?”
Smathers dropped his eyes. “My work is … very important to me. It is possible that many men’s lives could be salvaged.”
“At the cost of turning me into a vegetable. Forget it, pal. You’re no Albert Schweitzer. The first thing you have to learn is that one man’s life is the most important thing; one life, many lives, it’s all the same thing. It wouldn’t have worked anyway. My brother would have eventually tracked me down. He might have been too late, but he’d have been here. And my brother isn’t exactly used to hearing me talk like a robot.” My legs were beginning to feel slightly more solid than a plate of mashed potatoes.
I tried getting up on them. They still weren’t ready to carry me to a world record in the hundred-yard dash, but they worked.
I looked around for something to cover my nakedness, didn’t see anything, decided that modesty was not an appropriate concern at the moment. “Let’s get out of here.”
Smathers grabbed my arm and I shook his hand off. I felt almost normal. We started toward the door. A huge electronic monitoring machine off to the right blinked, as if welcoming me back to the real world at last.
I should have taken it as a warning. Kee suddenly appeared in the door. Behind him was the healthy half of the Tong Twins. Kee didn’t take long to size up the situation; his eyes flicked back and forth between Smathers and me. Then he made a sound in his throat and put his hand back in the direction of his helper; the helper put a .38 in it. Kee flicked his wrist and fired a bullet through Smathers’ forehead. Smathers flipped backward and landed on the floor with the sound that only heavy sacks and dead men make. The bullet continued on through his skull and shattered the tank behind him. A few hundred gallons of water roared out through the ruptured glass and hit me full in the back, sweeping me across the floor and bringing me up hard against the monitor. I cringed, waiting for the next bullet. It didn’t come.
Kee had other plans for me—like framing me for Smathers’ murder. In a way, it made sense; if he could knock me unconscious and place the gun in my hand, it might just confuse the issue long enough for him to slip back over whatever border he’d crossed in the first place. At least Kee seemed to have it figured that way. He was half smiling as he advanced on me. Brother Tong was waiting in back of him, his hands on his hips like a referee.
In my present condition I was no match for either of them. Still, it was time to do something—like jump up on the monitor and pull some wires. That’s what I did.
The machine whirred and popped, sending up clouds of black, acrid smoke. The live wires in my hand sputtered like Fourth of July sparklers. I spun a mental prayer wheel, something concerning proper insulation in the machine I was standing on, then threw the wires into the water on the floor.
In the House of Secret Enemies Page 14