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Death Instinct - Jed Rubenfeld [71]

By Root 1026 0
Mr. Enright. I don’t know if that was a Thursday, but it definitely wasn’t the third Thursday. I just think we should keep looking.”

“Certainly we should keep looking,” said Enright. “That’s why we’re going to speak with Mr. Fischer. But I should tell you that on this point I quite agree with General Palmer: the bombing on Wall Street was the work of Bolshevik anarchists. Who else would have done such a thing? The Great War did not end in 1918. It was a mistake to withdraw our troops from Russia; we’ve allowed them to bring the war to our soil. Wilson is useless, but things will change after the election. Harding will take the war to Lenin’s doorstep where it belongs. That’s all, Captain.”

Younger returned to Bellevue early the next morning. The hospital was much quieter now: it was no less crowded with patients, but because it was Sunday, fewer medical personnel were on hand, and very little treatment was being given or received.

In a bathroom on the second floor, Younger put a white coat over his suit and tie. Striding down the hall, he entered the room where the X-ray machine was kept, wheeled it out, guided it into an elevator, and came out onto a third-floor corridor, where he called out commandingly for a nurse to assist him. A nurse came running at once.

The unconscious redheaded girl lay in the same room in the same condition—alive but comatose. With the nurse’s help, Younger laid the girl’s body on the wooden X-ray couch, stomach-down, turning her head to one side. Her profile was uncannily angelic save for the monstrosity protruding from her chin and throat, which looked even more distended and unnatural in the electric light of the hospital room than it had in the darkness of the church. Younger prodded the mass with two gloved fingers, which provoked in him a peculiar, highly nonmedical sensation of disgust. The interior of the growth was soft but granular.

Radiographing an unconscious person was considerably easier, Younger discovered, than a conscious one. There was no difficulty with the subject moving during irradiation. The X-ray tube, clamped inside a box running on casters beneath the table, was easily brought directly below the girl’s cheek. Protecting himself with a lead panel, Younger turned on the radiation and adjusted the diaphragm until only the growth fluoresced on the test screen over the girl’s head. Then he replaced the test screen with an unexposed photographic plate. He let the radiation course through the girl’s body for exactly eight seconds and repeated this process several times, from different angles, using a new plate each time.

The same morning, the Littlemore clan was tumbling out of their Fourteenth Street apartment house on their way to church. The children had been scrubbed and soaped until they shone like sprightly mirrors. Littlemore had their toddler, Lily, on his shoulders. Lily always received special treatment; none of the other children objected, because of her condition.

Betty’s mother, a half foot shorter than Betty herself, had joined them as she always did on Sunday mornings, wearing her church hat and keeping an emphatic distance from her son-in-law. In deference to Betty’s stronger religious feelings, Littlemore had consented to attend Catholic church on Sundays and to raise his children in that faith, but he never got used to all the crossing. Or the kneeling. Or the confessing. He would bow his head, but he just couldn’t cross himself. As a result, Betty’s mother displayed her piety every Sunday by pretending she didn’t know her son-in-law.

One little Littlemore called out to his father that there was mail. He handed Littlemore a small, square, engraved envelope. Littlemore, removing Lily from his shoulders, explained to his son that whatever the envelope was, it wasn’t mail, because the mail didn’t come on Sundays.

“Is it a bomb?” asked the boy with genuine curiosity.

“No, it’s not a bomb, for Pete’s sake,” said Littlemore, trying to sound as if the suggestion were absurd. He exchanged a glance with Betty. “Bombs are bigger.”

The envelope contained

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