“I’ll get her right now,” Victor said with obvious excitement.
“How will you get her over here to the building without people noticing?” VJ said.
“It’s Saturday,” Victor said. “Hardly anyone is around, especially so late in the day.”
“Okay,” VJ said with resignation.
Victor headed for the stairs, practically running. “I’ll be back in thirty minutes. Forty-five, tops,” he said. He charged up a half dozen steps, then came to a stop. As he noticed before, the stairs dead-ended into heavy planks.
“Is this the way out?” Victor asked.
“Just give it a shove,” VJ said. “It’s counterweighted.”
Victor went up the rest of the stairs more slowly until his hand rested on the overhead planks. Tentatively, he pushed upward. To his surprise, a large trapdoor opened with amazing ease. Casting a last glance down at VJ, Victor winked, then climbed up the rest of the stairs. When he let go of the trapdoor, it sank silently into place, cutting off the light from below.
Victor ran from the building, his pulse up from sheer exhilaration. He hadn’t felt so ecstatic in years.
Having returned from her two upsetting visits, Marsha made herself a real cup of tea. She’d taken it into her study to try to calm down when she heard Victor’s car start up the drive.
It wasn’t long before his head popped through the door. He still had his coat on. “Ah, there you are, sweet thing!”
Sweet thing? Marsha thought disdainfully. He hasn’t called me that for years. “Come in here!” she called to him.
But Victor was already on his way into the room. He grabbed her hand, trying to pull her from her couch. Marsha resisted and got her hand free. “What are you doing?” she questioned.
“I’ve got something to show you.” There was a distinct twinkle in his eye.
“What’s come over you?”
“Come on!” Victor urged, pulling her to her feet. “I’ve got a surprise for you that you are going to love.”
“I’ve got a surprise for you that you are not going to love,” Marsha said. “Sit down. I have something important to tell you.”
“Later,” Victor said. “What I’ve got is more important.”
“I doubt that,” Marsha said. “I’ve learned some more disturbing things about VJ.”
“Isn’t that appropriate?” Victor said with a smile. “Because what I’ve discovered is going to make you forget all VJ’s traits you’ve been agonizing over.”
Victor tried to drag Marsha from the room. “Victor!” she called out sharply. She pulled her arm free again. “You’re acting like a child!”
“I’m immune to your worst epithet,” Victor said gaily. “Marsha, I’m not kidding — I have some great news for you.”
Marsha put her hands on her hips and spread her legs for stability. “VJ has been lying to us about other things besides the school situation. I found out that he has never stayed at the Blakemore house. Never!”
“I’m not surprised,” Victor said, thinking how much time VJ would need to spend in his lab to accomplish what he apparently had.
“You’re not surprised?” Marsha said with exasperation, throwing her hands into the air. “Richie Blakemore and VJ are not even friends. In fact, they had a fight recently in which VJ broke the Blakemore boy’s nose.”
“Okay, okay!” Victor said, assuming a calm tone of voice. He gripped Marsha’s upper arms and looked directly into her warm eyes. “Calm down and listen to me. What I have to show you will explain where VJ has been spending most of his time. Now will you just trust me and come?”
Marsha’s eyes narrowed. At least he sounded sincere. “Where are you taking me?” she demanded suspiciously.
“Out to the car,” Victor said enthusiastically. “Come on, get your coat.”
“I hope you know what you’re doing,” Marsha said as she allowed herself to be led from her study. She got her coat and a few minutes later she was holding on to the dash to steady herself. “Do we have to drive this fast?” she asked.
“I can’t wait for you to see this,” Victor said. He banked sharply. “And to think I was proud of a secret tree house I built when I was twelve!”
Marsha wondered if he’d taken leave of his senses. He’d been behaving so oddly lately, but she’d never seen him like this.
Victor thundered over the Merrimack River and eventually pulled into Chimera. The security shift had changed in the guardhouse. Fred wasn’t the one manning the gate.
In deference to VJ’s concern for secrecy, Victor parked in his usual spot in front of the administration building. “We have a little walk,” he said to Marsha as they alighted from the car.
It was late afternoon as they approached the river. Long shadows had begun to creep across the alleyways. It was also quite cold. Marsha guessed it was in the thirties. Victor walked slightly ahead of her, glancing back over his shoulder as if he expected someone might be following them. Marsha glanced behind them out of curiosity, but no one was there. She pulled her coat around her more closely, and decided what was chilling her was more than the weather.
Victor took hold of her hand as her gait began to slow. She’d noticed they had moved from the occupied section of the complex to the part that was unrenovated. On either side of her were the dark hulks of abandoned buildings. They loomed ominously in the gathering dusk.
“Victor, where are you taking me?” she asked, threatening to stop.
“We’re almost there,” Victor said, urging her onward.
When they got to the gaping entranceway of the derelict clock tower building, Marsha stopped.
“You don’t expect me to go in there?” she asked, incredulous. She leaned back and looked up at the soaring tower. Rapidly moving clouds made her momentarily dizzy. She had to look away.
“Please,” Victor said. “VJ is here. You’ll be wonderfully surprised. Trust me.”
Marsha looked from Victor’s excited face to the interior gloom of the building and back. Victor’s eyes were bright with anticipation. “This is crazy,” she said. Grudgingly, she moved forward. The gloom enveloped them.
Marsha let Victor lead as they stumbled over the rubble-strewn floor. “Just a little further,” Victor said.
Marsha’s eyes adjusted enough to see vague outlines on the floor. To her left were large window openings through which came the roar of the falls as well as reflected light from the surface of the millpond. Victor stopped in front of an empty corner. He let go of Marsha’s hand and bent down. He knocked on the floor. To Marsha’s surprise, a section of the floor lifted and incandescent light flooded up.
“Mother,” VJ said. “Come in quickly.”
Marsha gingerly climbed down the stairs. Victor followed and VJ let the trapdoor glide back into place.
Marsha looked around the room. To her, it looked like a scene out of a science fiction movie. The combination of the rusted gears, the huge paddle wheel, and the granite, along with the profusion of high-tech instrumentation, was disorienting. She nodded to Philip, who nodded back at her. She nodded to the Chimera security guards but they didn’t return the gesture. She noticed the man with the droopy eyelid.
“Isn’t it the most amazing thing you’ve ever seen?” Victor said as he came up alongside Marsha. She looked at him. He was beside himself with excitement.
“What is it?” Marsha questioned.
“It’s VJ’s lab,” Victor said as he launched into a brief explanation of the setup, including how VJ had been able to build it without anyone having had the slightest suspicion. He even told Marsha about VJ’s discovery of the implantation protein, and what that would mean to the infertility field.