“He’s heavily sedated, for his own safety. We’re still trying to adjust the meds, find the right combination.”
“Right.” Hayward looked at her notes. Then she leaned forward, pressed the talk switch on the intercom. “Jay Lipper?”
The head continued its slow orbit.
“Jay? Can you hear me?”
Was there a hesitation there? Hayward leaned forward, speaking softly into the intercom.
“Jay? My name is Laura Hayward. I’m here to help you. I’m your friend.”
More slow rolling.
“Can you tell me what happened at the museum, Jay?”
The rolling continued. A long gobbet of saliva, which had gathered on the tip of his tongue, dripped to the floor in a foamy thread.
Hayward leaned back and looked toward the doctor. “Have his parents been in?”
Singh bowed. “Yes, they were here. And a very painful scene it was.”
“Did he respond?”
“That was the only time he’s responded, and then only briefly. He emerged from his inner world for less than two seconds.”
“What did he say?”
“ ‘This isn’t me.’ ”
“ ‘This isn’t me?’ Any idea what he meant by that?”
“Well… I imagine he retains some faint recollection of who he was, along with a vague realization of what he’s become.”
“And then?”
Singh seemed embarrassed. “He became suddenly violent. He said he was going to kill them both and… rip out their guts. He had to be further sedated.”
Hayward glanced at him a moment longer. Then, thoughtfully, she turned back toward Lipper, still rolling his head, his glassy eyes a million miles away.
33
He got into a fight with Carlos Lacarra,” Imhof told Special Agent Coffey as they strode down the long, echoing corridors of Herkmoor. “Lacarra’s friends weighed in, and by the time the guards broke it up, a certain amount of damage had been done.”
Coffey listened to the public recitation of events with Rabiner at his side. Two prison guards walking behind completed the entourage. They rounded a corner and continued down another long corridor.
“What kind of damage?”
“Lacarra’s dead,” said the warden. “Broken neck. Don’t know what happened, exactly—not yet. None of the prisoners are talking.”
Coffey nodded.
“Your prisoner got pretty banged up—mild concussion, contusions, bruised kidney, a couple of cracked ribs, and a shallow puncture wound.”
“Puncture wound?”
“Seems somebody shanked him. That was the only weapon recovered at the scene of the fight. All in all, he’s lucky to be alive.” Imhof coughed delicately and added, “He certainly didn’t look like a fighter.”
“And my man is back in his cell, as per my orders?”
“Yes. The doctor wasn’t happy.”
They cleared a security gate, and Imhof keyed an elevator for them. “At any rate,” he said, “I expect he’ll be a lot more amenable to questioning now.”
“You didn’t sedate him, did you?” Coffey asked as the elevator chimed open.
“We don’t habitually dispense sedatives here at Herkmoor—potential for abuse and all that.”
“Good. We don’t want to waste our time with a nodding vegetable.”
The elevator rose to the third floor, opening onto a pair of steel doors. Imhof swiped a card and punched in a code and they slid back, revealing a cinder-block corridor, painted stark white, with white doors on either side. Each door had a tiny square window and a foot slot.
“Herkmoor Solitary,” Imhof said. “He’s in cell 44. Normally, I’d escort him to a visiting room, but in this case he’s not exactly mobile.”
“I’d rather speak to him in his cell, anyway. With the guards on hand… in case he should become aggressive.”
“Not much chance of that.” Imhof leaned forward and lowered his voice. “I don’t want to tell you how to do your job, Agent Coffey, but I would imagine that any suggestion that he might be put back in yard 4 for exercise would get him talking a mile a minute.”
Coffey nodded.
They approached the cell door and one of the guards gave it several whacks with his riot stick. “Make yourself pretty, you got a visitor!”
Whang, whang! went the nightstick against the door. The guard removed his weapon and stood aside while the other unlocked the door and glanced in. “All clear,” he said.
The first guard holstered his weapon and stepped inside.
“How much time do you need?” Imhof asked.
“An hour should do it. I’ll have the guard call you when we’re done.”