beyond all alternate forms of artificial access can be brought to the surface. Such data can subsequently be replaced-’
‘You’re going to brainwash me again,’ I said, stepping forward.
The gorilla in camouflage gear watching through the open door made a similar movement, raising a Taser.
Rivers brushed past me. ‘It’s all right, Wayne. Please.’
It wasn’t the first time I’d noticed the scientist’s distaste for weapons. It didn’t stop him using words to attack me in the glass room.
Dr. Brown stood motionless, her lips tightly pressed together.
‘Well, you are, aren’t you?’ I reiterated.
‘Certainly not, Mr. Wells.’
‘Matt.’
She looked uncomfortable for a few seconds. ‘Oh, very well. Matt. I have carefully reviewed Dr. Rivers’s records and am confident that the treatment I have mapped out for you will be both safe and effective.’
‘I see. And how many patients have benefited from this safe and effective treatment, Alexandra?’
She glanced at Rivers.
‘Dr. Brown’s process is groundbreaking,’ he said, flapping his hands. ‘It has been extensively tested on computer models-’
‘But I’m the first human being… Jesus, now I really am a guinea pig.’
The scientists looked at each other.
‘I suppose you could put it like that,’ Rivers said. ‘We really must push on, Mr. Wells.’
‘I thought I was making good progress with the trigger identification.’
‘Yes, yes. Indeed you are. But…’
‘Peter Sebastian has told you to speed things up.’
‘Certainly not,’ he said angrily. ‘I can assure you that I have given Dr. Brown’s process detailed consideration. I make the decisions here.’
‘Well, that’s a relief. I don’t suppose I can ask for a second opinion?’
‘I’ve already given one,’ Dr. Brown said, a faint smile on her lips. ‘You’re the ideal subject for this exper- process.’ The slip brought spots of red to her pallid cheeks.
Rivers stepped closer. ‘Mr. Wells, you must appreciate your position. Ms. Oaten’s access to the full resources of the medical center is conditional on your compliance with our requests.’
The bald bastard. He and Sebastian had me over a barrel.
‘All right,’ I said, after a long pause. ‘Lester.’
‘You must approach the procedure calmly and with your mind at ease,’ Dr. Brown said, handing the file to me. ‘Sign at the bottom of the first two pages, please.’
I didn’t bother to read the text. They would do what they wanted whether I played along or not. Maybe I was being too suspicious. Anything that removed the residue of the Rothmanns’ conditioning had to be a good thing.
‘Thank you. This way, please.’
I followed the blonde doctor into a different glass room, this one with a hospital bed on it. Thick leather straps dangled down from it.
I lay down reluctantly. ‘Is this going to hurt, Alexandra?’
‘You more than me,’ she replied, as the gorilla fastened the straps.
‘Great. Would you like to talk me through your process?’
She started attaching electrodes to my forehead and chest.
‘It’s very straightforward. A cocktail of drugs will be injected and then your brain will be stimulated in ways too complex for you to understand. All you need to do is relax.’
‘Right.’ I felt less than reassured. ‘Two more questions. How long is this going to take?’
‘You’ll be back in your quarters by morning. Don’t worry, Ms. Oaten has been informed.’
‘Uh-huh. Tell me, will I be the same person when you’ve finished with me?’
Alexandra Brown smiled, this time with some warmth. ‘Better, Mr. Wells. I guarantee you’ll be a better person.’
‘What if I don’t want to be better?’
She ignored that. ‘Deep breath, please, as the needle goes in. Very good.’
‘Hey, I hardly even felt…’
Major Andrew ‘Slim’ Carstens had commanded the City of Philadelphia Police Homicide Division for four years, but he had never seen anything like this. As soon as he’d been advised of the scene in the apartment north of the university, he had driven straight there. He’d been present for three hours and had decided to deal with the FBI people himself. A mobile command unit had been stationed on the street and he had taken refuge there as soon as he could. Just after 11:00 p.m., two men in dark suits were ushered into the trailer.
‘Andy,’ Peter Sebastian said, extending his hand. ‘How are you keeping?’
Carstens stood up. ‘Pretty good. Until tonight.’
Sebastian nodded. ‘I hear it’s a bad one. This is Special Agent Arthur Bimsdale. He watches my back.’
‘I’m sure you don’t need that.’ The major had met Sebastian several times over the years during high-profile cases and at law enforcement conferences. He didn’t much like him.
‘You coming with us?’ Sebastian asked, as a uniformed officer handed him a bag containing protective garments.
‘Yup. Let’s see what the CSIs have turned up in the last hour.’
‘I gather the dead man has been identified,’ the senior FBI man said, as they headed for the three-story building.
The major nodded. ‘Dr. Jack Notaro, history professor at the University of Pennsylvania down the street.’
‘What did he specialize in?’
‘Italian fascism, apparently.’
Sebastian gave him a sideways look.
‘Who found the body?’ Bimsdale asked.
‘One of his girlfriends, Alicia Finn,’ Andy Carstens replied. ‘She was also one of his post-grad students. You can’t talk to her, I’m afraid. She had to be sedated. She was meant to be on a flight to San Francisco, but she missed it and came back.’
‘One of his girlfriends?’ Sebastian said, as they took the stairs to the second floor.
Carstens looked over his shoulder. ‘The neighbors told my guys that he had plenty-most of them young and pretty.’
Bimsdale cleared his throat. ‘These days most universities have regulations preventing faculty mixing with the student body.’
‘Nicely put, son,’ the major said. ‘I’m guessing Dr. Jack didn’t pay those regulations much attention.’
White-suited technicians were working on the door and frame. They stood aside to let the trio enter the apartment.
‘Jesus,’ Sebastian said, his eyes widening.
The body of a tall and well-built man was suspended by the ankles from a hook in the ceiling. He was naked and the points of his fingers were touching the wooden floor. The entire body was covered in so much blood that it was hard to discern at first that its eye sockets were empty.
‘The medical examiner reckons he was knocked out by a heavy blow to the front of his head,’ Carstens said, shaking his head. ‘Then what you can see took place, probably postmortem.’
Bimsdale squatted down and examined the floor. ‘The blood looks like it was painted on.’
‘You’re right, son. There are marks from a three-inch brush on both body and floor.’ The major pointed to the table behind the corpse. ‘We think the victim’s throat was cut after he was strung up. The killer probably lifted him onto the table before attaching him to the hook, then bled him into the basin over there.’ He pointed to a red plastic container at the far wall.
‘Must be strong,’ Bimsdale said. ‘Unless there was more than one of them.’