barkeep standing over her, gripping a baseball bat.
12
Fielding sat in one of the comfortable Naugahyde recliners in the observation room, puffing a Seora Dominguez cigar. On the other side of the two-way mirror, at the head of the conference room table, Cranch was getting started. His white lab coat, usually crisp and immaculate, was rumpled. He’d traveled for much of the night, first in the vintage motor launch, which made him seasick; then for three turbulent hours in a small jet; and finally in a helicopter buffeted by a snowstorm. Still, he radiated energy and enthusiasm. He would have flown to the moon on his own dime, Fielding supposed, for the opportunity to crack Drummond Clark.
Drummond was still handcuffed to the theoretically uncomfortable chair at the foot of the conference table. A pneumographic tube had been fitted around his chest to measure his respiration rate, a cuff had been inflated around his left bicep to gauge his blood pressure and pulse, and galvanometers had been clamped onto two of his fingers to detect sweat gland activity. The sensors were wired into Cranch’s laptop computer, which was linked to a monitor in the observation room.
“Do you know why you’re here, Mr. Clark?” Cranch asked.
“No, but someone said this is the Manhattan Project complex. I’d very much like to see it.”
“You’ve never seen it?”
“No, will I need a ticket?”
Fielding glanced at his monitor. The polygraph registered no deception.
“Actually, I was hoping to ask you about Placebo,” Cranch said.
“Placebo?”
“The covert operation. Do you know of it?”
“No.”
Again, as far as the polygraph could determine, Drummond’s response was truthful.
“If you don’t mind, Mr. Clark, I need to ask a few meaningless questions, just to make sure this system is properly calibrated. Could you tell me, please, what year it is?”
“1995.”
The yellow, red, and green lines running across Fielding’s monitor were identical to those of the previous responses.
“Actually, Mr. Clark, 1995 was a little while ago,” Cranch said. “Of course everybody forgets the date now and then, right?”
Drummond sighed. “Tell me about it.”
“Actually, it’s 2004.”
“Oh, right, of course.”
“I mean, 2009.”
“Oh, right, right, right.”
“Excuse me for a moment,” Cranch said.
He signaled, and O’Shea opened the door, letting him out. He disappeared into the maze of corridors. A moment later, he trudged into the observation room.
“It’s no act,” he told Fielding.
“I’m not so sure,” Fielding said. “If you hook me up to the poly, I can explain in great detail how purple two- headed men from Pluto and I traveled from another time and shot JFK, and it would read as gospel truth. A number of us can temper our responses that way.” He pointed through the mirror. “He was our teacher.”
“This isn’t an issue of true or false,” Cranch said. “It’s been proven that even subjects with the utmost training and ability respond on some level to meaningful stimuli more vigorously than to nonmeaningful stimuli. If the senility is artifice, and I say something he purports to know nothing about at random, he has no time to ready his defenses. If the information is meaningful to him, like the current year, the polygraph detects it; 2009 read as no more meaningful to him than 1995. If he’d known that it was in fact 2009…” Cranch sank into one of the recliners.
“Okay, so he isn’t lucid-where does that leave us?” Fielding asked, even though Cranch’s deflated look alone probably provided the answer.
“He won’t be able to answer our questions.”
“Well, I certainly wouldn’t mind sitting here in this comfortable chair and enjoying my cigar until he blinks on. The one little hitch is he may have written down details compromising our entire operation — then placed what he wrote in a dead drop somewhere between here and Virginia, to be serviced any minute by God knows who. Isn’t there something you can pump into him so we have a chance of finding out at least that much?”
Cranch shrugged. “Even if we were to penetrate his defenses with an absolutely perfect combination of sodium amytal and thiopental or secobarbital, we’d be asking for information he’s incapable of retrieving, whether he wants to or not. Also, because methedrine-or a comparable stimulant-is a necessary component in a truth cocktail, we’d risk ratcheting him to acutely confusional on a permanent basis.”
Fielding took a long drag of his cigar. He barely tasted it. “I don’t suppose there’s anything on earth-no contraption, no holistic remedy, no prehistoric fish extract-that can spark lucidity?”
“Not really,” Cranch said.
Fielding saw a glimmer of hope. “‘Not really’ is different from ‘no,’ isn’t it?”
Cranch’s lips tightened. “It was done. Once. In 1916.”
“1916? By who, Dr. Frankenstein?”
“A Dr. Lovenhart at the University of Wisconsin. He was experimenting with respiratory stimulants, and to his amazement, a catatonic patient, after being injected with sodium cyanide, opened his eyes and answered a few basic questions. It was the first time he’d said a word in months. But immediately thereafter, due to complications inherent with sodium cyanide, he dropped dead.”
Fielding stabbed his cigar into the ashtray. “Good, now we have a Plan D.”
“There are other, more conventional methods,” Cranch said with enthusiasm, but it felt synthetic. “We can try making him comfortable. Playing music has been shown to reduce stress hormones in the blood, which has a tranquilizing effect on the limbic system. Reflexology can-”
“Sorry, I don’t see Charlie Clark rubbing his old man’s feet.”
“Why would Charlie have to do it?”
“That’s a very good question,” Fielding said. “For two months, Duck was a zombie. But since Charlie’s entry onto the scene, he’s been Mr. Lucidity.”
Cranch looked away, probably to hide his skepticism. “Are you hypothesizing that a professional horseplayer has become the first person in medical history to discover a means of triggering lucidity in an Alzheimer’s patient?”
Fielding leaped up. “I knew I had a reason for letting him live.”
13
“So how do you do it?” Fielding asked.
Charlie had reached the same conclusion science had: There was no precise trigger. But if he could convince them he had the silver bullet, he would likely be taken from the employee lounge to Drummond.
“As I’m sure you know, Alzheimer’s sufferers are triggered by family members they haven’t seen in a while,” Charlie said.
Across the table, Fielding shook his head. “Possibly that explains his mild resurgence at the senior center, when he saw you for the first time in two years. But since then, you’ve been old hat, otherwise he would have flickered on every time you opened your mouth. Tonight, when I told him that you were here, all it sparked was, ‘What’s he doing up so late on a school night?’”