It took Kitty a little while to figure out how to get an outside line; after that, Washington, D.C., U.S.A., was easy. She shoved the phone base across the desk and offered me the handset. I put it to my ear lefthanded. There was a certain amount of suspense as I listened to the ringing at the far end. In a sense I was calling my own past, long distance.
When the voice came on, I recognized it at once. It was the voice that had called me at the hospital and introduced me to the name Helm.
“Yes?”
“I’m calling from the Inanook Sanitarium somewhere near Vancouver, B.C.,” I said carefully. “I think I want to talk with somebody called Mac.”
“I’m Mac,” the voice said. “At least I’m so called by some people under certain circumstances. Greetings, Eric.”
“Who’s Eric?” I asked.
“You are, in our records, filed under the agent’s code name… I gather your memory has not returned.”
“I’m accumulating lots of information but few recollections,” I said. “I’m told I work for you. Tell me something about how we operate, sir. Do we have research facilities? Internment facilities? Useful contacts with the Canadian authorities?”
“All are available within limits,” said the man called Mac, three thousand miles away. “What do you require?”
“Reinforcements, first,” I said. “But the reinforcements should be properly briefed, sir, because some discreet burials will be required—”
“Just a minute!” There was suspicion in Mac’s sharp voice. “Are you quite sure you remember nothing of our former relationship?”
“Nothing comes back, sir. I wouldn’t recognize you if I met you on the street. Why?”
“Because you are the only operative who habitually addresses me in that overly respectful way. It is an old joke, or custom, between us.”
I thought that over for a moment, and said, “Maybe my tongue remembers more than my brain, sir. Or maybe I’m just naturally smart enough to know that I’m more apt to get the help I need if I ask for it respectfully.”
“To be sure. How many bodies?”
“Three so far, but the evening’s young yet.”
I looked meaningfully towards Dr. Elsie, who’d started to lean towards the uniformed guard beside her, perhaps to whisper some escape instructions. She saw me looking and straightened up in her chair. The guard seemed not to have noticed; and Dr. Albert sat stiffly in his chair looking as if the other two were total strangers whose acquaintance he had no desire to make.
Mac said, “Very well. Go on.”
“A little official manpower is indicated,” I said. “I’ve got the inner citadel secured, so to speak, but the rest of the fortress is still in enemy hands. I also have some of the staff under my gun, but I don’t know how many of the others are involved with this Threepee outfit; and even perfectly innocent employees may misunderstand the situation and get very hostile. I’m pretty well armed and I can probably shoot my way clear if I have to, but I hate to see the butcher bill get much bigger. I’m hoping you can send somebody with a badge to pry me loose; somebody who knows the score. Tell him to come straight to the assistant director’s office off the main lobby. What’s a good code knock?”
“We use three and two as a rule.”
“Okay, but they’d better use a gunbutt. It’s a soundproof door. I’ll hang on while you get them moving.”
There was a period of silence. Kitty shifted position uncomfortably, as if her damp clothes were sticking to the chair, or to her. I didn’t look at her. I kept my attention where it belonged, on the woman who was the only real source of danger here, but Elsie didn’t move and nobody else stirred. It occurred to me that I was calling three thousand miles across a continent to have Mac call three thousand miles back to speak to some officials who were probably located practically around the corner from me.
His voice returned. “So. They estimate twenty minutes.”
“Good enough,” I said. It was strange to be talking so easily with this man I couldn’t remember at all; and I said a bit more stiffly, “I hope the experiment turned out in a satisfactory manner, sir.”
There was another silence. “What experiment?”
“Arranging for an agent who’d lost his memory to be thrown to the sharks, just hoping he’d remember how to bite back.”
I heard Mac laugh shortly at the other end of the line. “So far I would call the experiment a success. After all, you’re alive, you’ve found the place for which we’ve been searching—one of the places; we have reason to believe the PPP has at least one more hidden refuge in the area—and you seem to have the upper hand. Let me point out that I did my best to protect you by revealing your true name. There are individuals involved who, while they would wipe out an annoying photographer ruthlessly, would hesitate a long time before doing permanent harm to one of our people. We try to demonstrate, from time to time, that it is a very expensive proposition.”
I remembered the little man in the corner of the torture chamber, and the way he’d kept Dr. Elsie in line, and the reasons he’d given.
“Yes, sir,” I said. “The message got through, which is why I’m still here with my brains more or less intact.”
“Furthermore,” he went on, “I not only had satisfactory reports from the medical staff of the hospital, but the agent with whom you’d been associated earlier, although she does not operate under my authority, was kind enough to pay you a visit and give me her opinion, reassuring as it turned out, on your condition.”
I said, “So that’s why she popped in that day. Whose authority does she operate under if not yours?”
“Since I gather you’re not speaking from a safe phone, I’d better not tell you that. However, you should know that there were two separate and independent investigations, one of which, the one with which you and Miss Wong were concerned, seemed at first to have nothing to do with bombs or terrorists. Miss Wong discovered that there actually was no separation when she witnessed a meeting between her subject, Herbert Walters, and a subject connected with the other investigation, a certain Joan Market.”
“I’ve been told about Mrs. Market,” I said. “So I was switched over from Mission X to Mission Y, or vice versa?”
“Yes, the anti-terrorist operation had priority over Miss Wong’s mission, although you still maintained contact with the lady and rendered her assistance to the extent permitted by your new duties.” Mac paused. “But we haven’t got time to go into the details now. You wanted some research done.”
“That’s right,” I said. “First, John Ovid. Ovid, like the Roman poet, or was he Greek.”
“Roman, I believe.”
I said, “Height about five-two, weight around one-seventy, a real little butterball. German accent. Address unknown, but transportation is provided for him by a sanitarium limousine driven by a guy named Lewis. Wait a minute, I heard the first name once: Gavin Lewis. If they grab Lewis maybe they can get a lead to Ovid. He seems to be in touch with the PPP council, as they call it; he wields considerable authority. And then there’s Dr. Albert Caine, and there’s Dr. Elsie Somerset, director and assistant director of this bughouse—”
I saw Albert wince. Even under these strained circumstances, he obviously felt I should be referring to his institution with more respect. Elsie was staring into space, drumming her fingers on the round conference table in an absent way.
I said, sharply: “Keep them still or I’ll shoot them off.”
She glanced at me calmly, but her fingers stopped moving. Mac spoke in my ear: “Eric?”
“Sorry, sir. A minor matter of discipline.”
“I just had a preliminary report on the Inanook Sanitarium placed on my desk,” he said. “It largely concerns the director you just asked about, Dr. Caine. He was a highly respected New York psychiatrist; however, he was caught in flagrante delicto, as the old saying goes, with a female patient. Apparently he wound up as head of this obscure sanitarium after fleeing the scandal that cost him his lucrative practice in the East.”
I said, “Hell, there’s got to be more to it than that. I thought it was practically taken for granted, nowadays, that handsome male psychiatrists, society division, sleep with their female patients as part of the treatment.”
Albert looked as if he wanted to protest this slander against his profession. Elsie continued to stare at the wall. I didn’t like her frozen expression. Instinct told me that, behind it, she was planning her move; it was just a matter of time now. The old-plainsman type beside her seemed to have withdrawn into his shell also. He could have been asleep, but I didn’t think he was.
Mac said, “You’re quite right. Dr. Caine’s problem was that he picked the wrong woman. She happened to be married to one Emilio Brassaro, a syndicate-affiliated gentleman with, among other illicit enterprises, a thriving import business involving Central and South America. You can guess the nature of the imports. Apparently, Mr. Brassaro does not qualify as a complaisant husband. Dr. Caine fled from New York in fear of his life, and Mrs. Brassaro required fairly extensive plastic surgery—apparently she was beaten quite badly, although it was reported as an automobile accident. You will be interested to hear that the person who actually inflicted the ‘accident’ upon Mrs. Grace Brassaro, we have learned, was Mr. Brassaro’s right hand man, a certain Walter Christofferson. You know him—or knew him, depending on his current status—as Herbert Walters.”
I said, “Let me get this straight. Walters, the guy who piloted the plane in which I crashed up in Hecate Strait, was actually a hood in the employ of a New York syndicate bigshot? Is that supposed to make sense—”
That was when the lady doctor went into action. She and Frechette moved simultaneously, heaving the low round table up on edge so that for a moment I couldn’t see which way anybody was going behind it. Then the uniformed man emerged, heading for the lobby door. I fired. Plaster sprayed from the wall in front of Frechette, where I’d aimed. He came to an abrupt halt, his hands rising. The upturned table, after teetering on edge for a moment, crashed clear over, legs in the air. I caught a glimpse of Elsie struggling with the door to the examining room; she’d deliberately used the guard as a decoy to draw my attention the other way.
Before I could change my aim, before Elsie could get the door open, her body jerked strangely. I heard the crash of a firearm that wasn’t mine. Instinctively, not quite comprehending what was happening, I threw myself aside and down. I heard another shot, and another…
Looking up, I saw Kitty standing behind the desk with Frechette’s big revolver clutched in both hands and tears streaming down her face as she hauled back the trigger repeatedly until the firing pin struck a discharged cartridge with a small, snapping noise that was ridiculously feeble after the shattering sounds that had preceded it. The office stopped shaking with the crash of gunfire. I glanced around. Frechette was gone; he’d taken advantage of the violent disturbance to slip away. Dr. Albert was on the floor where he’d thrown himself. He was whimpering fearfully but apparently unhurt.
Elsie lay by the inner door. I rose and went over to her. There was blood on the side of her face; and her dark sweater showed darker stains that glistened wetly. Her eyes opened and found me.
“It was broken,” she whispered, and died.
I looked down at the ugly, diseased features and at the swollen wrist that had betrayed her when, forgetting, she’d tried to turn the knob with that hand. I don’t know why I had an impulse to apologize, but I did. It was several seconds before I rose and went to Kitty, still standing there, and took the empty revolver from her hand and reloaded it from the spare-cartridge gadget I’d got from the outside guard. It was an interesting little device that I’d never used before, that I could remember. Then I went over to the dangling telephone, explained what had happened, and hung up. We waited without speaking because there didn’t seem to be much to say.
Presently somebody knocked on the door three times with a heavy object. Two thumps followed. The armed man who entered cautiously—well, the first one in; there were plenty more behind him—was the chunky, darkfaced gent in civilian clothes who was supposed to have some connection with the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, the silent one who’d attended my plane crash interrogation in Prince Rupert. I remembered that Kitty had told me his name quite recently: Ross. He said for me to hand over my weapons and everything would be just fine.
It seemed like a hell of a big promise for anybody, even a Mountie, to make.