Kee had good reflexes; he leaped at the same time I dropped the wires and managed to land on a dry spot near the wall at the opposite side of the room. Brother Tong wasn’t so lucky. He tried walking on water and didn’t get far. The scream was burned out of his throat by a few hundred thousand volts of electricity. Already dead, he danced around for a few seconds, then fell on his face. His body gradually stopped twitching as the electricity locked his joints and muscles. There was a smell in the air like fried pork.
The gun had fallen in the middle of the floor, out of everybody’s reach. That was fine with me, because Kee had problems of his own; the water was gradually working its way over to his tiny island of dry wood. He was backed up against the wall, his arms stretched out to either side of him, as though trying to claw holes in the plaster. I sat down, crossed my legs and smiled at him.
“Win a few, lose a few,” I said.
For the first time, emotion showed in his eyes. There was fear, and there was hate, a lot of hate. I shouldn’t have goaded him; it was too inspirational. The main power switch was a good ten feet away, but I’d already seen the strength he had in his legs. He gave a tremendous yell, leaped straight up in the air, planted his feet against the wall and dove for the power switch.
I knew he was going to make it even before he did, and the gun was closer to him than it was to me. His fingertips hit the control switch, plunging the floor into darkness. I heard his body hit the water and I hit the floor at the same time. I raced down the corridor, toward the stairs. I could hear Kee splashing behind me, and there was no doubt in my mind that he had the gun. I caromed off the wall at the end of the corridor, scampered down the stairs and hit the steel door.
Naturally, it was locked. There wasn’t going to be any naked dwarf running through the sacred corridors of Marten Hall.
I spun and crouched in the darkness, trying to make myself as small a target as possible. The frame business was finished; there were one too many bodies to explain. That meant Kee would want me out of the way as quickly and efficiently as possible. It was going to be like shooting a dwarf in a barrel.
I held my breath and waited for the crash of the gun. All I heard was a dull click. The water had fouled the firing mechanism of the gun. I waited.
I could hear Kee descending the stairs slowly. The job I’d done on his two assistants had given him some respect, but that wasn’t enough. Even if I hadn’t spent the last twenty-four hours under water, I’d have been no match for Kee. On the other hand, I couldn’t just sit and wait for him to beat my brains out.
I waited a few seconds, then lunged upward, sweeping my hand in the general direction where I hoped his ankle would be. I got lucky. I caught his ankle and yanked. He went backward, landing on his back on the stairs. There was no way of getting by him; both his hands were deadly weapons, and he’d have broken every bone in my body by the time I got halfway past. But I had the angle on his midsection. I stiffened my fingers and drove them as hard as I could into his groin. That took the power out of a kick that would have killed me. His heel bounced off my rib cage, and I felt something snap inside.
Kee was doubled over, his shape just barely visible in the darkness. I could go past him now, but that would just mean playing cat and mouse up in the darkness of the laboratories, and that was a game I knew I eventually had to lose. I had to attack.
Trying to ignore the pain in my side, and hoping that the sudden movement wouldn’t pierce any of my machinery, I moved around in front of him and clapped my hands over both his ears. He screamed and half rose, which was exactly the position for which I was waiting. He was off balance now, his concentration gone. I grabbed a handful of hair and yanked. Kee plummeted down into the darkness. He came up hard against the steel door, and there was a single, sharp sound. I didn’t have to go down to know that Kee was dead, his neck broken.
I tasted blood and I was getting dizzy. I sat down on a step and braced my arm against my broken rib. I stared down into the darkness. Eventually someone would open the door. It would probably be Garth, and he would probably want to know what I was doing sitting naked in the darkness with a dead body.
I strongly suspect that “religious faith,” by which I mean a sincere, even profound belief in the supernatural and not just an adherence to form inspired by social or political pressure, may have an actual genetic basis in the human species, and that I’m missing the appropriate genetic marker. I have always been at once intrigued and appalled by the pervasiveness of superstition in our “modern” societies, whether it be represented by a professor of physics praying to a Deity of Choice on Saturday or Sunday, the wife of a president in twentieth-century America seeking advice from an astrologer, or somebody reading runes in a basement. I get the same eerie chill when I pass a church, synagogue, ashram, or any other “house of worship” that I imagine an archaeologist must experience when unearthing some ancient “temple to the gods” in Peru or Mexico.
The notion that “you are what you believe,” and should therefore be very careful about what you allow yourself to believe, comes to play an ever-increasing role in my journeys with Mongo, and begins to surface for the first time in the following story. It is a tale I would treat slightly differently if I were writing it today, but it shows the initial interest in a theme that, many years later, I will treat at great length in the three novels I think of as the Valhalla Trilogy (The Beasts of Valhalla, Two Songs This Archangel Sings, The Cold Smell of Sacred Stone), and with what I intended to be a blunderbuss in Second Horseman Out of Eden.
Later, this story will also be incorporated into An Affair of Sorcerers, the first novel to grow out of my amazement before the fact that people really will believe the damnedest things—and usually pay the price.
The Healer
The man waiting for me in my downtown office looked like a movie star who didn’t want to be recognized. After he took off his hat, dark glasses and leather overcoat he still looked like a movie star. He also looked like a certain famous Southern senator.
“Dr. Frederickson,” he said, extending a large, sinewy hand. “I’ve been doing so much reading about you in the past few days, I feel I already know you. I must say it’s a distinct pleasure. I’m Bill Younger.”
“Senator,” I said, shaking the hand and motioning him toward the chair in front of my desk.
Younger, with his boyish, forty-five-year-old face and full head of brown, neatly cut hair, looked good. Except for the fear in his eyes, he might have been ready to step into a television studio. “Why the background check, Senator?”
He half smiled. “I used to take my daughter to see you perform when you were with the circus.”
“That was a long time ago, Senator.” It was six years. It seemed a hundred.
The smile faded. “You’re famous. I wanted to see if you were also discreet. My sources tell me your credentials are impeccable. You seem to have a penchant for unusual cases.”
“Unusual cases seem to have a penchant for me. You’d be amazed how few people feel the need for a dwarf private detective.”
Younger didn’t seem to be listening. “You’ve heard of Esteban Morales?”
I said I hadn’t. The senator seemed surprised. “I was away for the summer,” I added.
The senator nodded absently, then rose and began to pace back and forth in front of the desk. The activity seemed to relax him. “Esteban is one of my constituents, so I’m quite familiar with his work. He’s a healer.”
“A doctor?”
“No, not a doctor. A psychic healer. He heals with his hands. His mind.” He cast a quick look in my direction to gauge my reaction. He must have been satisfied with what he saw because he went on. “There are a number of good psychic healers in this country. Those who are familiar with this kind of phenomenon consider Esteban the best, although his work does not receive much publicity. There are considerable … pressures.”
“Why did you assume I’d heard of him?”
“He spent the past sum
mer at the university where you teach. He’d agreed to participate in a research project.”
“What kind of research project?”
“I’m not sure. It was something in microbiology. I think a Dr. Mason was heading the project.”
I nodded. Janet Mason is a friend of mine.
“The project was never finished,” Younger continued. “Esteban is now in jail awaiting trail for murder.” He added almost parenthetically, “Your brother was the arresting officer.”
I was beginning to get the notion that it was more than my natural dwarf charm that had attracted Senator Younger. “Who is this Esteban Morales accused of killing?”
“A physician by the name of Robert Edmonston.”
“Why?”
The senator suddenly stopped pacing and planted his hands firmly on top of my desk. He seemed extremely agitated. “The papers reported that Edmonston filed a complaint against Esteban. Practicing medicine without a license. The police think Esteban killed him because of it.”
“They’d need more than thoughts to book him.”
“They … found Esteban in the office with the body. Edmonston had been dead only a few minutes. His throat had been cut with a knife they found dissolving in a vial of acid.” The first words had come hard for Younger. The rest came easier. “If charges had been filed against Esteban, it wouldn’t have been the first time. These are the things Esteban has to put up with. He’s always taken the enmity of the medical establishment in stride. Esteban is not a killer—he’s a healer. He couldn’t kill anyone!” He suddenly straightened up, then slumped into the chair behind him. “I’m sorry,” he said quietly. “I must seem overwrought.”
“How do you feel I can help you, Senator?”
“You must clear Esteban,” Younger said. His voice was steady but intense. “Either prove he didn’t do it, or that someone else did.”
I looked at him to see if he might, just possibly, be joking. He wasn’t. “That’s a pretty tall order, Senator. And it could get expensive. On the other hand, you’ve got the whole New York City Police Department set up to do that work for free.”
The senator shook his head. “I want one man—you—to devote himself to nothing but this case. You work at the university. You have contacts. You may be able to find out something the police couldn’t, or didn’t care to look for. After all, the police have other things besides Esteban’s case to occupy their attention.”
“I wouldn’t argue with that.”
“This is most important to me, Dr. Frederickson,” the senator said, jabbing his finger in the air for emphasis. “I will double your usual fee.”
“That won’t be nec—”
“At the least, I must have access to Esteban if you fail. Perhaps your brother could arrange that. I am willing to donate ten thousand dollars to any cause your brother deems worthy.”
“Hold on, Senator. Overwrought or not, I wouldn’t mention that kind of arrangement to Garth. He might interpret it as a bribe offer. Very embarrassing.”
“It will be a bribe offer!”
I thought about that for a few seconds, then said, “You certainly do a lot for your constituents, Senator. I’m surprised you’re not president.”
I must have sounded snide. The flesh on the senator’s face blanched bone-white, then filled with blood. His eyes flashed. Still, somewhere in their depths, the fear remained. His words came out in a forced whisper. “If Esteban Morales is not released, my daughter will die.”
I felt a chill, and wasn’t sure whether it was because I believed him or because of the possibility that a United States senator and presidential hopeful was a madman. I settled for something in between and tried to regulate my tone of voice accordingly. “I don’t understand, Senator.”
“Really? I thought I was making myself perfectly clear. My daughter’s life is totally dependent on Esteban Morales.” He took a deep breath. “My daughter Linda has cystic fibrosis, Dr. Frederickson. As you may know, medical doctors consider cystic fibrosis incurable. The normal pattern is for a sufferer to die in his or her early teens—usually from pulmonary complications. Esteban has been treating my daughter all her life, and she is now twenty-four. But Linda needs him again. Her lungs are filling with fluid.”
I was beginning to understand how the medical establishment might get a little nervous at Esteban Morales’ activities, and a psychic warning light was flashing in my brain. Senator or no, this didn’t sound like the kind of case in which I liked to get involved. If Morales were a hoaxer—or a killer—I had no desire to be the bearer of bad tidings to a man with the senator’s emotional investment.
“How does Morales treat your daughter? With drugs?”
Younger shook his head. “He just … touches her. He moves his hands up and down her body. Sometimes he looks like he’s in a trance, but he isn’t. It’s … very hard to explain. You have to see him do it.”
“How much does he charge for these treatments?”
The senator looked surprised. “Esteban doesn’t charge anything. Most psychic healers—the real ones—won’t take money. They feel it interferes with whatever it is they do.” He laughed shortly, without humor. “Esteban prefers to live simply, off Social Security, a pension check, and a few gifts—small ones—from his friends. He’s a retired metal shop foreman.”
Esteban Morales didn’t exactly fit the mental picture I’d drawn of him, and my picture of the senator was still hazy. “Senator,” I said, tapping my fingers lightly on the desk, “why don’t you hold a press conference and describe what you feel Esteban Morales has done for your daughter? It could do you more good than hiring a private detective. Coming from you, I guarantee it will get the police moving.”
Younger smiled thinly. “Or get me locked up in Bellevue. At the least, I would be voted out of office, perhaps recalled. My state is in the so-called Bible Belt, and there would be a great deal of misunderstanding. Esteban is not a religious man in my constituents’ sense of the word. He does not claim to receive his powers from God. Even if he did, it wouldn’t make much difference.” The smile got thinner. “I’ve found that most religious people prefer their miracles well aged. You’ll forgive me if I sound selfish, but I would like to try to save Linda’s life without demolishing my career. If all else fails, I will hold a press conference. Will you take the job?”
I told him I’d see what I could find out.
It looked like a large photographic negative. In its center was a dark outline of a hand with the fingers outstretched. The tips of the fingers were surrounded by waves of color—pink, red and violet—undulating outward to a distance of an inch or two from the hand itself. The effect was oddly beautiful and very mysterious.
“What the hell is it?”
“It’s a Kirlian photograph,” Dr. Janet Mason said. She seemed pleased with my reaction. “The technique is named after a Russian who invented it about thirty years ago. The Russians, by the way, are far ahead of us in this field.”
I looked at her. Janet Mason is a handsome woman in her early fifties. Her shiny gray hair was drawn back into a severe bun, highlighting the fine features of her face. You didn’t need a special technique to be aware of her sex appeal. She is a tough-minded scientist who, rumor has it, had gone through a long string of lab-assistant lovers. Her work left her little time for anything else. Janet Mason has been liberated a long time. I like her.
“Uh, what field?”
“Psychic research: healing, ESP, clairvoyance, that sort of thing. Kirlian photography, for example, purports to record what is known as the human aura, part of the energy that all living things radiate. The technique itself is quite simple. You put an individual into a circuit with an unexposed photographic plate and have the person touch the plate with some part of his body.” She pointed to the print I was holding. “That’s what you end up with.”
“Morales’?”
“Mine. That’s an ‘average’ aura, if you will.” She reached into the drawer of her desk and took out an
other set of photographs. She looked through them, then handed one to me. “This is Esteban’s.”
I glanced at the print. It looked the same as the first one, and I told her so.
“That’s Esteban at rest, you might say. He’s not thinking about healing.” She handed me another photograph. “Here he is with his batteries charged.”
The print startled me. The bands of color were erupting out from the fingers, especially the index and middle fingers. The apogee of the waves was somewhere off the print; they looked like sun storms.
“You won’t find that in the others,” Janet continued. “With most people, thinking about healing makes very little difference.”
“So what does it mean?”
She smiled disarmingly. “Mongo, I’m a scientist. I deal in facts. The fact of the matter is that Esteban Morales takes one hell of a Kirlian photograph. The implication is that he can literally radiate extra amounts of energy at will.”
“Do you think he can heal people?”
She took a long time to answer. “There’s no doubt in my mind that he can,” she said at last. I considered it a rather startling confession. “And he’s not dealing with psychosomatic disorders. Esteban has been involved in other research projects, at different universities. In one, a strip of skin was removed surgically from the backs of monkeys. The monkeys were divided into two groups. Esteban simply handled the monkeys in one group. Those monkeys healed twice as fast as the ones he didn’t handle.” She smiled wanly. “Plants are supposed to grow faster when he waters them.”
“What did you have him working on?”
“Enzymes,” Janet said with a hint of pride. “The perfect research model; no personalities involved. You see, enzymes are the basic chemicals of the body. If Esteban could heal, the reasoning went, he should be able to affect pure enzymes. He can.”
“The results were good?”
In the House of Secret Enemies Page 15