Chapter 24

The Power of Suggestion

The sun rose over Wolseley Close, touching the roofs of the neatly arranged mock-Tudor houses, painting a picture of suburban bliss.

Clive’s Jag sat in the driveway. Jackie stood behind the kitchen window with a phone cradled on her shoulder, waiting for the kettle to boil. Clive yawned and drew the curtains in the master bedroom. His murky recollections of the previous day’s events had mostly evaporated like a long, disturbing dream that he’d thankfully woken up from. Now he was left with the recurring problem of his daughter, who had apparently escaped from school—again. Life, to all intents and purposes, had returned to normal.

He went to the bathroom, splashed some cold water on his face, and looked deeply into his tired, gray eyes. Whatever he’d experienced yesterday had been a figment of his imagination, a momentary lapse of reason, nothing more. It was probably a perfectly understandable side effect of The Code, part of his transformation from the old Clive into the new one: Clive 2.0.

He had located an 0845 number in the text of the e-book and dialed it, hoping for some reassurance, but he got only a recorded message. Not exactly great customer service. He’d left his name and cell phone number as requested. He then read a bit more of the book, and was glad to report no further complications of any kind. He hadn’t told Jackie about what had happened at the track. Best not to worry her; and besides, he couldn’t have anyone interfering with his spiritual growth, not even her.

He believed he’d managed to convince the director and crew that the supercar’s engine control unit had malfunctioned, resulting in a bout of unintended acceleration. It could happen, he told himself.

Clive checked to make sure the e-reader was still on the top shelf of the bathroom cabinet, then zipped himself into his favorite lime-green tracksuit and jogged downstairs.

Jackie was still talking on the phone when he entered the kitchen. She automatically handed Clive a mug of hot tea and finished her call. “Well, if she contacts you, I want to be the first to know . . . Thanks. I will . . . Okay, ’bye.” She put the phone down.

“Thanks, love,” Clive responded, sipping his tea. “Think I might pop over to Homebase. Get the thingy for the trimmer.”

“Aren’t you remotely interested in where or how your daughter is?” said Jackie sharply. “I’ve been on the phone to everyone we know.”

“She’ll turn up. She always does,” said Clive cheerily, and poured himself a bowl of Special K.

“I can’t reach Darkus or Alan either.”

“I’m sure they’re just enjoying some father-son time,” Clive mused. “Lovely day out there, isn’t it?” His left eye twitched slightly as he poured the milk.

“Yes, it is,” she replied, looking at him quizzically. “Are you all right, Clive? You’ve been acting . . . funny, ever since you got home last night.”

“Is it so hard to believe that I might just be—I don’t know—relaxed, happy, and at one with myself??”

“Yes, Clive. Frankly, it is.”

“Well, get used to it, Jax,” he said. “It’s the new me.”

“I’m not sure I like it.”

The phone started ringing, and Jackie leaped for it while Clive sat down to eat his cereal.

“Hello?” she said. “Oh, hi, Bev . . . Yes, I can get to my computer. Why? What’s this about?” She listened to her friend chatter at the other end of the phone. “He what . . . ?!” She glanced at Clive suspiciously, then walked around the corner to her office nook.

Jackie balanced the phone on her shoulder, leaned over her computer, wiggled the mouse, and clicked on YouTube. A list of the most popular videos flashed up. A little way down the page was a link entitled Leaked: Clive Palmer On-Air Meltdown. Jackie slowly put the phone down on her friend, and clicked the mouse. The video loaded up and began showing the cockpit-cam footage:

Clive was wrestling with the wheel of the supercar, screaming at the rearview mirror, drool streaking his face. “You wanna play?” he shouted hysterically. “What are you?! Huh?”

Jackie kept watching with mounting horror.

On-screen, Clive stepped on the brakes, his face contorting horribly, as if it were being sucked through the business end of a vacuum cleaner. He was mumbling indecipherable words, speaking in tongues.

Jackie clicked Stop and marched back into the kitchen to find the bowl of cereal half-finished and Clive exiting the opposite doorway, his tracksuit swishing.

“Clive? What happened at work yesterday? It’s all over the web!”

“Is it?” he answered from the entrance hall. “Must’ve been one of the crew. I think they secretly hate me.”

“What’s going on? Do you even still have a job?” She turned the corner to find the front door open and Clive already getting into the Jag.

She stopped in the doorway, confused.

“Clive, I’m talking to you,” she insisted.

“That’s nice, love,” he replied, starting the engine and backing out of the driveway, then pulling away, beeping twice as he went.

Jackie watched him go, speechless.

Moments later, another car pulled into the driveway in the Jag’s place, taking out an ornamental gnome as it lurched to a halt. It was a black Fairway cab.

“Alan, thank God,” said Jackie, approaching the cab only to find Bogna behind the wheel and Darkus and Tilly in the backseat, along with two laptop computers, two coffee mugs, two blankets and a half-eaten packet of chocolate digestives, all of which gave the impression of a mobile headquarters. “Doc? Tilly?” said Jackie. “What’s going on?”

“It’s a stakeout,” announced Tilly.

“We’ve been waiting for Clive to vacate the premises,” explained Darkus. “We need to talk. Privately.”

“Hello, Mrs. Jackie,” said Bogna.

“Hello, Bogna,” she replied, confused. “Where’s Alan?”

“I’ll explain everything inside,” said Darkus as they piled out of the cab.

Jackie followed Darkus and Tilly into the kitchen, then unconsciously filled and put on the kettle. Outside the window, Bogna kept watch on the street.

“I’ve got a lot on my mind at the moment, Darkus,” his mother stammered. “Clive is having some kind of . . . breakdown. And honestly, I’m starting to wonder if I’m the common factor here. First Alan’s breakdown, now Clive’s, Tilly’s truancy, your social problems—”

“Mom,” said Darkus firmly, “I don’t have social problems. And you’ve got to listen to me.”

“Okay,” she answered hesitantly.

“Dad’s gone. He’s been taken.”

“Taken? By who?”

“An organization called the Combination,” said Darkus.

“The Combination?”

“He’s talked about them before, hasn’t he?”

“In passing. You know he didn’t share his work with me. Only with . . .” Jackie paused and looked at Tilly, clearly referring to her mom. “He never told me anything.”

“Okay,” said Darkus. “Then tell me what you know about Morton Underwood.”

“Morton? Your godfather? Well, Morton died. It wouldn’t be right to speak ill of the dead.”

“He’s not dead, Mom.”

“Well, in that case, I’ll tell you,” she said, wasting no time. “I never liked the man. There was just something not right about him. Something dead inside.”

“Can you think of a way to find him?”

“No clue.”

“Do you have any pictures of him?” asked Tilly.

“Let me think . . .” She pondered. “No. I don’t think I’ve ever seen a single photo of him. Isn’t that strange?”

Darkus and Tilly looked at each other.

“Have you got time for a jam sandwich?” Jackie added.

“Possibly not,” Darkus responded, then turned to Tilly. “Uncle Bill’s sedated, Mom doesn’t know anything, Dad could be anywhere. It looks like this is all we’ve got . . .” He took out his father’s scribbled note:

 

 

Clive left Homebase pushing a cart with all manner of household goods protruding from it: rubber hosing, stackable drawers, a shelving unit. He didn’t really know what had come over him in there. He seemed to have just bought everything. He shrugged and continued rattling across the parking lot.

He reached the Jag and opened the trunk, realizing instantly that there was no way he was going to fit it all in. He also realized with a sinking feeling that he hadn’t even remembered to get the thingy for the trimmer.

At that moment, a medium-sized man in a dark suit stepped out of a chauffeur-driven car that was idling nearby. Unbeknownst to Clive, the car had been following him all morning.

Morton Underwood approached him with a smile, fixing him with the magnified stare of his glasses. “Excuse me. Aren’t you C-Clive Palmer?”

“The very same,” said Clive proudly. Afterward he would have trouble remembering anything about this man. He would only have a vague recollection of a pair of saucerlike eyes hovering before him.

“I w-wonder . . . ,” Underwood began. “Do you know The Code?”

“The Code?” repeated Clive.

“Y-yes. Do you know . . . The Code?” Underwood repeated again, pronouncing each word clearly. His voice was flat and mellifluous, except for that unfortunate stutter.

“Yes. Yes, I do,” said Clive, realizing this must have something to do with the 0845 number that he’d dialed. “Wow. Your customer service is . . . un-believable.”

“And do you know the meaning of fear?” said Underwood, trying carefully to articulate each word.

Almost at once, Clive’s eyes glazed over. “Yes . . . yes, I do.”

“G-good,” said Underwood, trying to control his stutter. But fortunately for him, the hard work was done. “Why don’t you close the trunk and follow me?”

“Fan-tastic,” said Clive, and closed the trunk, leaving the cart full of household goods and following the man to his chauffeur-driven car.

Underwood opened the door for Clive, then joined him in the backseat. Although Clive’s eyelids felt unnaturally heavy, he attempted to examine the car, but was unable to identify the make or model. It was as though his usual powers of perception were muted. The black leather and tinted windows gave the interior a crypt-like quality.

“Nice car,” said Clive in a monotone.

“Thank you,” replied Underwood. His words followed each other in a sort of purr: “It was very fortunate that you c-contacted us. You see, you’re in a unique position to help us.”

“I am?” said Clive, raising a heavy eyelid, still feeling as if he were falling from a great height into a dark, bottomless pit.

“Indeed you are,” Underwood continued. “Now, I want you to do something for me.”

“Okay,” answered Clive without question.

“I’d like you to murder your stepson, Darkus Knightley.”

“Really?” asked Clive casually. “I mean, I know he can misbehave occasionally, but does he deserve that?”

“Yes, Clive. I’m afraid he does.”

“Okay.”

“Then you’ll do as I ask?”

“Of course.”

“G-good.”

A few moments later, the car door opened and Clive stepped out. As he walked back to the Jag, he quickly lost all recollection that the conversation had ever happened.

He got behind the wheel, forgetting any memory of the shopping cart or why he was even there in the first place. He started the car and backed up, scratching one entire side of the Jag against a lamppost, then accelerated away, leaving the shopping cart to roll aimlessly across the parking lot.