No clarification was gained from talking to the lead workers, one of whom (Aide II Mendez) this writer found sleeping. It should be mentioned that Module One was in complete disarray, and the common room of Module Two was filled with the stench of decomposing meat, although Aide II Hirotashi insisted that there was no spoiled food in the refrigerator.
This writer believes that poor morale, lack of supervision, total absence of accountability, along with the unexplained departure of Dr. Kingsley and Head Nurse Reich, have had a deleterious effect upon the operations of this facility to the point where the residents are actually becoming endangered. This writer is requesting that the instant matter be fully investigated, and further recommends that Aides Holtz and Pfister be disciplined for insubo
The report left off there, halfway down the page. A four-inch line of blue ink extended from the o in insubordination to the edge of the page.
Matt reread it from the beginning, and then set it carefully down on the desk, beneath the broken picture frame.
Moving behind the desk, Matt righted the tipped-over leather chair. He got ahold of the fallen end of the cork bulletin board and slid it up the wall to reattach the left-hand hook to its screw.
Again, he stopped.
Stared.
Revealed on the drywall behind the hanging board was a black smear. It was roughly the shape of the Nike swoosh, and the thin end tapered off into a long spatter. The thick end had several thin silver strands embedded in it. Matt leaned closer, pinched one, pulled it free of the black crust. Held it up to the light.
A silver hair.
Matt looked back to the photo on the desk. The smiling, bookish graybeard with his two bracey daughters.
What the hell is going on here?
CHAPTER THREE
"C'mon, you!"
Matt jumped about a foot when Maloria stuck her head in the doorway and waved him out. He followed her quickly.
"So where's the FA nowadays?" Matt asked as he trailed her down the hall.
"Quit like the rest of 'em, I guess. Jus' get fed up an' don't come back, like I'm 'a 'bout to do in three weeks, when I make forty."
"But did he, like, give a resignation letter, or farewell speech, or anything?"
She snorted. "Nah, he just never come back one day, no call, no nothin'. Just like them two." She gestured towards two framed photos on the wall. One said "Dr. Kingsley-Chief Health Officer," and showed a dignified black man with a white mustache. The other said "RN Janice Reich-Nurse Manager," and showed a stressed-looking woman in her fifties with short blond hair.
Matt couldn't believe what he had just heard. "Wait a minute. You're saying all three have just vanished?"
"Mm-hmm."
"But… someone's got to be in charge. Hasn't someone been sent down to replace them by the… the head office in Olympia or wherever?"
Again she snorted. "What with two furloughs a week, we can't get no one to pick up the goddamn phone, last I hear."
"You've got to be kidding! A place like this can't run itself-"
She shushed him and held up a finger, then eased past an open door, and he followed.
"See?" she said. "Control Room, like I said."
It looked more like a file room to Matt, with two walls covered with metal cabinets labeled "Videotapes" and "Treatment Plans / Overflow." But the other two walls were braced by a console that had a dozen palm-sized monitors that showed different, slightly distorted, black-and-white views of the Admin Building's entryway, the quad, and the modules' common rooms, dorms, isolation cells, and hallways. The room also had an old television/VCR set on a metal rolling rack.
"There go Hirotashi, eatin' her plate a' nasty."
One of the grainy monitors showed Toad-Face pulling a steaming cardboard plate out of a microwave and sitting at an oval table.
"Won't she be able to see me go into the men's dorm, from whatever break room she's in?"
"Huh-uh." Maloria led him out of the Control Room. "They ain't no men's dorm in Module Two." She rolled her eyes at him, gave a fat-lipped smirk. "And Dr. Dindren wouldn't be in it, if they were."
This made no sense to Matt. "There's no men's dorm?"
"Nope. Module Two only got isolation cells, on account of it a forensic unit."
Thought about that. "'Forensic.' Meaning…"
"Meaning For Fucked-Up Ma'fuckahs Only. Understand? It only for residents so jacked, they a danger to theyself or others."
"Aha." Not good. "And why… why, if there was a men's dorm, wouldn't Dindren…?"
Maloria didn't bother to turn as she waddled out into the quad, but he could hear the cackle in her voice. "Boy, I let you find that out for yahself."
With this in mind, Matt wasn't totally surprised (at first) by what he found behind the door marked "Isolation Cell 7."
There had been no great trick to getting into the forensic unit; Maloria had let them in through the front door with a key from her key chain, as in Module One, and navigated him past two aides who were playing poker. But there the resemblance to Module One had ended. Whereas the architect of Module One had unsuccessfully attempted to make the unit look like a college dorm, the architect of Module Two had unsuccessfully attempted to make the unit not look like a prison. Partial faux-wood paneling didn't conceal that the walls were fireproofed cinder block. Cheerful sayings taped to the wall ("Spring Has Sprung!") couldn't erase the fact that the overhead lights were protected by metal cages or that the only utensil available was the spork. Brown paint couldn't hide the fact that all the doors were metal, not wood, or that every fifty feet the hallway was bracketed by a retractable steel riot gate.
No, it was all too clear what Module Two was, Matt thought as they walked quickly down the hall. It was-as Maloria had said-a place to keep seriously fucked-up motherfuckers.
So Dindren was in the right place.
Matt stared at him carefully as he stood with his back to the door, which was open a crack. When Maloria had led him to a steel portal that looked no different from the previous six, peeked in the slit, and whispered, "He up," Matt had felt a wave of relief.
That wave was swiftly ebbing.
"Dr. Dindren," he said. "Nice to meet you. My name is Matt."
"Oh, please let's dispense with the niceties," came a husky whisper in the toffiest of British accents. "My friends all call me Jonna."
Matt doubted this very much. He blinked hard, taking in the creature before him. If Dindren had any friends, they had missed their cue to come rescue him long ago.
Dindren looked like shit. Where was the solemn, nearsighted professional whose face had graced the page that Matt had torn from the library book? Gone was the trim black beard (though the shadow of it still lingered); gone, the Coke-bottle glasses; gone, the suit, the tie, the steepling fingers with the manicured nails.
Dindren's fingers now shook too much to steeple. They clutched each other like abandoned twins in a fairy tale, fighting off hypothermia. They were raw and chafed, with nails chewed to the quick.
What else? Well, Dindren had traded in his suit and tie for soiled pink scrubs with a repeating daisy pattern. His thick, wheat-colored hair was no longer gelled into a banker's part; it was lank and oily and fell to his shoulders, and had been razor cut in a rough approximation of the style Jennifer Aniston had popularized more than a decade earlier. Also like Jennifer Aniston, he had breasts, and (like her nemesis), lush, bee-stung lips. Unlike Jennifer Anniston (or her nemesis), he had an Adam's apple, a five-day shadow, thin gray teeth that leaned inward, and one eye so consumed with pinkeye that the pupil seemed to be floating in a sea of blood.