“It seems to have happened so suddenly.”
“The sudden onset is a puzzling feature, indeed. Ah, yes, Captain Hayward: here we are.”
Singh unlocked a door and held it open, ushering Hayward into an almost bare room, divided in half by a long counter, a thick plate-glass window above separating it from the other half—exactly like a visitors’ room at a prison. An intercom was set into the glass.
“Dr. Singh,” said Hayward, “I requested a face-to-face meeting.”
“I’m afraid that won’t be possible,” Singh replied almost sadly.
“I’m afraid it will be possible. I can’t question a suspect under these conditions.”
Again, Singh shook his head sadly, his plump cheeks wagging. “No, no, we’re in charge here, Captain. And I think when you see the patient, you’ll realize that it wouldn’t make a difference, no difference at all.”
Captain Hayward said nothing. Now was not the time to fight with the doctors. She would evaluate the situation and, if necessary, return under her own conditions.
“If you would care to have a seat?” Singh asked solicitously.
Hayward seated herself at the counter and the doctor settled into the seat beside her. He glanced at his watch.
“The patient will be out in five minutes.”
“What kind of preliminary results do you have?”
“As I say, it is a most puzzling case. Most puzzling indeed.”
“Can you elaborate?”
“The preliminary EEG showed significant focal temporal abnormalities, and an MRI revealed a series of small lesions to the frontal cortex. It is these lesions that seem to have triggered severe cognitive defects and psychopathology.”
“Can you translate that into English?”
“The patient seems to have suffered severe damage to the part of the brain that controls behavior, emotions, and planning. The damage is most pronounced in an area of the brain we psychiatrists sometimes call the Higginbottom region.”
“Higginbottom?”
Singh smiled at what was evidently an inside psychiatric joke. “Eugenie Higginbottom worked on an assembly line in a ball-bearing factory in Linden, New Jersey. One day in 1913, there was a boiler explosion in the factory. Blew apart the stamper. It was as if a huge shotgun shell had gone off: ball bearings flew everywhere. Six people were killed. Eugenie Higginbottom miraculously survived: but with some two dozen ball bearings embedded in the frontal cortex of her brain.”
“Go on.”
“Well, the poor woman suffered a complete personality change. She was instantly transformed from a kind, gentle person to a foulmouthed slattern, given to outbursts of profanity and violence, a drunkard, and, ah, sexually promiscuous. Her friends were astounded. It underscored the medical theory that personality is hardwired in the brain and that damage can literally transform one person into another. The ball bearings, you see, destroyed Higginbottom’s ventromedial frontal cortex—the same area that is affected in our patient.”
“But there are no ball bearings in this man’s brain,” Hayward said. “What could have caused it?”
“This is the crux of the matter. Initially, I hypothesized a drug overdose, but no drug residues were found in his system.”
“A blow to the head? A fall?”
“No. No evidence of coup/contrecoup, no edema or bruising. We’ve also ruled out a stroke: the damage was simultaneous in several widely separated areas. The only possible explanation I can come up with is an electrical shock administered directly to the brain. If only we had a dead body—an autopsy would show so much more.”
“Wouldn’t a shock leave burn marks?”
“Not a low-voltage, high-amperage shock—such as one generated by electronic or computer equipment. But there’s no damage anywhere but to the brain. It’s hard to see how such a shock might have occurred, unless our patient was performing some kind of bizarre experiment on himself.”
“The man was a computer technician installing an exhibit at the museum.”
“So I’ve heard.”
An intercom chimed, and a voice sounded softly. “Dr. Singh? The patient is arriving.”
Beyond the glass window, a door opened, and a moment later Jay Lipper was wheeled in. He sat in a wheelchair, restrained. He was making slow circles with his head, and his lips were moving, but no sound came out.
His face was shocking. It was as if it had caved in, the skin gray and slack and hanging in leathery folds, the eyes jittery and unfocused, the tongue hanging out, as long and pink and wet as that of an overheated retriever.
“Oh my God…” Hayward said involuntarily.