When Aarif and Kavita stepped out of the elevator on the tenth floor, they found Nathan and Doctor Berman and three young interns already waiting for them.
Aarif was sporting a red and white sweater with a reindeer pattern all around it, while Kavita was wearing a very short black wool dress and black rock-chick boots.
‘It’s not Christmas yet, Aarif,’ Nathan told him.
‘I am a Muslim, Professor. To me, a reindeer is only an animal, rangifer tarandus, so I can wear a reindeer sweater all the year round. But for this little girl with the burned face, maybe today will be Christmas.’
He held up his black medical case, and smiled.
Kavita said, ‘Torchy was much calmer this morning when we took the stem cell sample. He seems to have gotten used to it. There’s something else about him, too. His feathers are beginning to change color. He’s looking much brighter. And his beak is turning pink.’
‘Maybe he’s going to look like Voltaire’s description of a phoenix after all,’ said Nathan. ‘I can’t wait to see him again.’
‘Show me your hand,’ said Kavita. ‘Is it all healed?’
Nathan held out his left hand, and then held out his right hand for comparison. It was now impossible to tell which hand had been so badly burned. Kavita took hold of both hands and looked up into Nathan’s eyes.
‘I admire you so much, Professor. You know that I have nothing but respect for what you did. It was in such a great scientific tradition. But please don’t hurt yourself again. Not for any reason. Every time you hurt yourself, you hurt me, too – more than you know.’
Nathan nodded, and said, ‘OK. I promise.’ He wasn’t quite sure what Kavita was trying to say to him, but he could sense that her feelings for him went beyond the formality of professor and research assistant. He was flattered, but also slightly disturbed, Kavita was extremely pretty, but he was extremely married.
Doctor Berman led them into Susan Harris’ room. Sukie was sleeping, although her lips were moving as if she were talking to somebody in her dreams.
Nathan said, ‘We’ll inject the phoenix’s stem cells into her pterygoideus externus, her external jaw-muscles, which is the nearest we can get to the burns on her face. One injection into each jaw muscle now, and then another in twelve hours’ time. She’ll probably need a third injection tomorrow morning, but at the moment it’s too soon to be sure of that.’
Doctor Berman nodded. ‘OK. But I want everybody here to be aware that I am personally taking full responsibility for this procedure. If anything goes wrong – if the patient’s condition deteriorates because of what we are doing here today, then the buck stops with me.’
‘You trust me that much?’ asked Nathan.
‘I examined your hand when they brought you in here, Professor, and I was convinced that you were going to suffer the most serious scarring and contracture, and that the burns to your first web would limit thumb abduction to the point where your left hand was virtually useless. But look at it now. No scars, ninety percent flexibility.’ Doctor Berman looked away and said, ‘Don’t quote me. Any of you – you ever dare to quote me. But you’ve convinced me, Professor Underhill. Stem cells from mythical creatures? I’m a believer.’
Suddenly, her voice muffled by her oxygen mask, Sukie blurted out, ‘No! Don’t look up!! Don’t look up!’ She flapped her hands as if she were trying to swat wasps away.
Kavita took hold of her hand and said, ‘It’s all right, sweet thing. Everything’s going to be fine. You just hold on a little longer.’
‘But they’re up there! They’re up in the sky!’
Nathan looked at Doctor Berman, but Doctor Berman simply shrugged and said, ‘Delirium. It’s the shock, and the physical trauma, and the painkillers.’
But now Sukie was reaching up with her bandaged hands and trying to pull off her oxygen mask. ‘They’re up there! Hundreds and hundreds of them! They’re up in the sky and they have tails and claws and they’re coming to kill us! And they’re so greedy!’
‘Who are you talking about, honey?’ Nathan asked her, trying to calm her down. ‘Who is it exactly, up in the sky?’
Sukie lay silent for a moment, shivering and sniffing, like a crack addict brought in from the street. Nathan looked across at Doctor Berman and said, ‘What? How much did you give her? She’s out there on Planet X.’
Doctor Berman checked Sukie’s vital signs and then bent over her bed with his stethoscope, and listened to her heartbeat.
‘Well?’ said Nathan. He knew that he might sound aggressive, but he didn’t want to inject Sukie with Torchy’s stem cells if there was any risk of heart failure or other complications.
Something else disturbed him: the way she had screamed they’re up in the sky and they have tails and claws and they’re coming to kill us! It reminded him of an engraving by the eighteenth-century artist Gustav Doré that he had come across during his research of mythical creatures. It showed twelve flying demons called Malebranche from Dante’s Divine Comedy. Malebranche meant ‘Evil Claws’ and the demons were led by Malacoda, which meant ‘Evil Tail’.
Dante was said to have invented the Malebranche, but Nathan had suspected from the first time he had seen Doré’s illustration that he had based them on gargoyles, from the days when gargoyles had flown in flocks across the skies of Europe, swooping on sheep and cattle, and – according to Theodor Zauber, anyway – on tens of thousands of unsuspecting men, women and children.
A living gargoyle had been perched here at Temple University Hospital only a few hours ago. Had Sukie somehow sensed its presence? Had her father, too? If they had, then how?
Doctor Berman stood up and shook his head. ‘She’s fine. Heart rate’s just over one hundred, which is a little high, but her respiration is twenty-two, which is acceptable, and her blood pressure is in the fifty-fifth percentile, which is also acceptable.’
Nathan looked down at Sukie, with her shiny Jaloskin face. ‘You’re happy to go ahead, then?’
‘She might be a little upset, emotionally, but physically she’s fine.’
‘All right then, doctor. So long as you think we’re doing the right thing.’
Aarif took out a hypodermic syringe and injected Sukie in the left side of her jaw. She had quietened down now, and she didn’t even flinch. He took out a second hypodermic and injected stem cells into her right jaw muscle.
‘Well, then, that’s it,’ said Nathan. ‘All we can do now is wait. I’m going to go home and change and have something to eat. Then I’m going to the lab to take a look at Torchy. But I’ll be back in a couple of hours to see how she’s progressing.’
Kavita said, ‘Would you like me to drive you home, Professor? I have my car here.’
‘That’s OK, Kavita. It’s way out of your way. I’ll take a cab.’
‘It’s no trouble, really. Besides, I would like a chance to talk to you about the phoenix.’
‘OK,’ said Nathan. ‘That’s very kind of you. Appreciate it.’
*
As they drove northward on Wissahickon Avenue in Kavita’s bright red VW Beetle, Nathan said, ‘You’ve really been great, Kavita. You and Aarif – the work that you’ve been doing. There’s only one word for it and that’s “inspired”.’
Kavita glanced across at him and smiled. ‘No, Professor. You’re the one who’s inspired. I can’t believe that Schiller tried to cut off your funding.’
‘Well … if young Sukie gets her face back, maybe they’ll change their minds.’
There was a long pause, and then Kavita said, ‘It could be … maybe they’ve changed their minds already.’ She was trying to sound offhand, but Nathan could detect an odd flatness in her voice.
‘What are you saying? You’re kidding me. Where do you get that from?’
She stopped at a red traffic signal at West Rittenhouse Street. ‘Mr Kasabian promised me that he’s going to talk the board again tomorrow, and see if he can persuade them to allocate us another three years’ finance.’
‘Ron said that? Really? But Ron was dead set against it.’
Kavita didn’t look at him. The sun was shining through the trees beside the intersection and playing patterns across her face as if she were wearing a black lace veil.
‘Ever since I came to work with you, Professor, Mr Kasabian has shown an interest in me.’
‘What kind of an interest? You mean a personal interest?’
Kavita nodded. The traffic signal changed to green and she shifted into drive.
Nathan stared at her. ‘I never really noticed. You mean like a lecherous interest?’
Yes.
‘I don’t believe it. He’s the CEO, for Christ’s sake. He’s married, with three kids in high school.’
‘I know. But that did nothing to stop him. From the very first day, he asked me almost every day to go out for a drink with him. And he kept on making suggestive remarks. “Are you wearing anything under that lab coat?” That kind of thing. He invited me to go to Seattle with him when he went to that pharmaceutical convention. He even asked me if I would come with him to Paris.’
Nathan said, ‘And now all of a sudden he’s changed his mind about our funding? I hope you’re not going to tell me what I think you’re going to tell me.’
Kavita’s eyelashes were sparkling with tears. ‘Professor – he was going to close down the phoenix project, for ever! If that happened, it would be a tragedy! It would mean the end of the most wonderful time I have ever had in my entire life.’
She wiped her eyes with the back of her hand, and then she said, ‘I love the phoenix project. It’s like the three of us being magicians. Every day we make something impossible become real. And we’re going to bring so much good to so many suffering people. Look at that poor little girl today, with her face all burned up.
‘I love it,’ she repeated; and then she turned to Nathan and said, ‘I love you, too, Professor. I love you with all of my heart. How could I lose both the project and you? I couldn’t bear it.’
‘Listen,’ said Nathan, ‘why don’t you pull over here? You don’t want to drive when you’re upset.’
Kavita turned into West Johnson Street, a quiet suburban side street lined with trees, and parked halfway up the curb. ‘I’m sorry,’ she said. ‘I’m so stupid.’
‘You’re not stupid at all,’ Nathan told her. ‘You’re one of the brightest, cleverest research assistants I’ve ever had working for me. Every reading you give me, every analysis, they’re always one hundred percent accurate.’ He paused, and then he said, ‘I know that doesn’t sound very romantic, but it means that I rely on you, Kavita. I couldn’t have created Torchy without you.’
Kavita pulled a crumpled Kleenex out of her sleeve. ‘Look at my mascara. It’s a mess now. God, I’m stupid.’
Nathan waited while she dabbed her eyes and blew her nose. Then he said, ‘You still haven’t told me what made Ron Kasabian change his mind about my funding.’
Kavita took a deep breath. ‘Late yesterday evening, maybe ten p.m., when I was settling Torchy down for the night, Ron came into the laboratory. He told me how sorry he was that I was going to be leaving, and asked me if I would go out with him for one last drink. This time I said yes.’
‘Go on,’ said Nathan.
Kavita wouldn’t look at him, but stared straight ahead along West Johnson Street as if she thought she recognized somebody in the distance.
‘He took me to the Swann Lounge at the Four Seasons for cocktails. Well – he had a couple of Martinis but I only had one glass of white wine. We talked about the phoenix project and I told him how much it meant to me, and how upset I was that Schiller had cut off our funding.’
‘And what did Ron say?’
‘He said that I was a fantastic-looking girl and what a great future I had ahead of me. Maybe as a personal favor to me he could find a way to keep the phoenix project going, at least for a few months longer. Maybe he could divert some of the money that Schiller have been investing in that new denture cleanser.’
‘Jesus. What a Casanova.’
Kavita gave a bitter little smile, but still didn’t look at him. ‘I have to say that he was completely honest about what he wanted in return. If he was going to do me a personal favor, then he expected me to do him a personal favor. Or favors, rather, for as long as our funding continues.’
Nathan said nothing, but waited for Kavita to finish.
‘He booked a room,’ she said. ‘We went upstairs.’ She hesitated, and turned her face away, and then she added, ‘He wasn’t very good.’
Nathan whacked his forehead with the heel of his hand. ‘Christ almighty, Kavita! How could he have done that? How could you have done that?’
‘Because I thought it would save the phoenix project! Because I couldn’t think of any other way! Because I love you!’
‘Do you know what I’m going to do? I’m going to cut off Ron Kasabian’s pecker and feed it to Torchy for breakfast. What a bastard! Do you seriously think that I’m going to take any more of Schiller’s money if you have to prostitute yourself for it?’
‘I’m sorry,’ Kavita sobbed. ‘I’m so, so sorry. I thought it would make everything right. I told you I was stupid.’
Nathan took hold of her hand. ‘You’re not stupid, Kavita. You’re super-intelligent. But sometimes super-intelligent people can’t imagine the depths of moral shittitude to which people like Ron Kasabian are capable of sinking. Listen, if we can prove beyond doubt that the phoenix project works – if this little girl’s face regenerates itself – then we should be able to find funding from almost anyone. Maybe even the federal government.’
She looked at him with a tear-stained face, and her mascara had run so badly she looked like Alice Cooper. ‘Do you hate me? Do you think I’m worthless?’
He took her crumpled tissue and wiped her eyes. ‘You made a mistake, that’s all. You should never sell yourself for any reason. Not your beliefs, not your principles, not your body.’
‘I’m sorry,’ she repeated, dismally.
‘Don’t be. Here – let me drive the rest of the way home. We can both freshen up and then we can go see Torchy. And Ron Kasabian, if he’s there, and tell him what we think of him. When you said he wasn’t very good …?’
‘I don’t want to talk about it. I’m too ashamed of myself. But, yes. He had hardly started when he was finished.’
‘OK. I’m sorry. I won’t bring it up, ever again. And if I have anything to do with it, neither will he.’