Hidden in Dreams (10 page)

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Authors: Davis Bunn

BOOK: Hidden in Dreams
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T
he SuenaMed corporate jet was huge and plush. The three of them piled on board and split up. They had all been enormously shaken by the attack. They needed solitude to reknit the fabric of their existence. They were successful in a profession that was known for its calm facade. They were paid to remain aloof and intact, while all of their patients tumbled into panic and despair. Elena took a seat at the very front of the jet. A walnut burl table stretched before her, with sterling silver cup holders embedded in its polished surface. The pilot’s face appeared on the flat screen on the table’s other side. He greeted them and described the short flight to Orlando and asked if they needed anything. He seemed accustomed to their terse responses.

Elena shut her eyes to the jet’s acceleration down the runway. She allowed the attack to replay behind her eyelids. She saw the sparks and the bullet casings. She felt the rawness of her throat from the screaming. She saw the frightened faces that observed them from doorways up and down the shopping street. She saw Bob and Jacob talk with the police. She heard her own hoarse responses
to their questions. She saw her fingers tremble as she pulled out her cell phone to tell Rachel they could not make it to the airport on time, because of needing to go to the police station, then handing the phone to Jacob because it hurt her throat to talk. She felt the trembling of Jacob’s own hand as he took it from her.

The plane waited. The pilots might have known why their three passengers arrived ninety minutes late, or perhaps the wary look they gave them was their customary manner of greeting SuenaMed executives.

Elena opened her eyes when Jacob touched her shoulder and asked if she wanted something to drink. Suddenly she was very thirsty. The police had given her a cup of the most awful coffee she had ever tasted. She asked Jacob for a tea with milk and several sugars. He must have heard the raw timbre to her words, for he said he would see if they had any honey.

He returned and set down a china cup and saucer embossed with the SuenaMed logo. He settled into the seat across the aisle. The oversize plush chair was white doeskin leather. Jacob used both hands to hold his own cup. He stared at the blank flat screen on the wall in front of his seat for a time, and then said, “You saved my life.”

She watched the faint trembles ripple across the surface of her tea and took a sip. It was warm and sweet and went down easy. She sighed.

“I didn’t want to contact you, of course. I felt as though I was dragged kicking and screaming to the only avenue that offered any sense at all to the situation.”

Bob Meadows slipped into the chair behind Jacob. He did not speak. He just listened. His face was as white as the butterfly bandage on his forehead, where he had been struck by a flying rock. His wife and children were at their cabin in the North Carolina mountains where he was scheduled to join them the following
week. Bob’s fear was a palpable force. He did not so much sit in the seat as quiver.

Jacob went on, “Your entire premise rocks my world. The first time I read your book, I was furious. Your perspective on human behavior originates from an entirely different direction. You use dreams as a reason to draw in . . .”

When he stopped, Bob Meadows nudged him in the arm. “You might as well say the word, buddy.”

Jacob did not speak.

“God,” Bob Meadows said. “The divine hand. The one at work with us this evening. I for one can’t stop praying right now. Giving thanks for the chance to draw another breath. Watch my children grow up. Hold my wife . . .”

Elena watched Jacob reach down and touch the lever to unlock his seat. He swiveled around to where he faced her across the aisle. Jacob pretended not to notice as his friend struggled to regain control. He said, “If I insert an invisible force into human behavior, my entire professional world is demolished. By saying that one word. That is why I resented needing to make contact. No matter how great the need. Because . . .”

Bob Meadows’s voice was both hoarse and overly deep, as though he had been the one screaming. “Your desire to measure human faculties is not wrong. It is
crucial
. The science of psychology depends upon identifying all components of the human psyche that are quantifiable. The mistake lies in claiming that everything about human life can be measured.”

Jacob Rawlings was drawn around against his own will. His gaze looked haunted.

Bob went on, “It is not your professional life that is challenged. That is a mask. It is your
personal
life. It is the way you see yourself. Alone and independent, standing at the pinnacle of your career, beholden to no one. The same internal forces that have
kept you single and flitting from one lady to the next are the precise same reasons why you find Elena’s perspective so threatening.”

Jacob tried his best to offer Elena a mocking smile. “We’ve been having this same argument since college.”

Elena watched the two men and felt an immense rightness to the moment. She sipped from her cup and decided it was time to share what she had been pondering since arriving at the police station. “We’re missing something.”

Jacob asked, “You mean, about the attack?”

“This plane,” Elena replied.

“What about it?”

“How much do you think it costs?”

“A Gulfstream Five, top of the line, looks brand-new.” Jacob shrugged. “Twenty, maybe twenty-five. Why?”

Bob Meadows said, “Twenty-five
million
?”

“What did you think, thousand?”

“Man, whose life did you drop in on?”

“The Discovery Channel has three of them. Not as nice, but hey, after a while they’re all just another limo with wings.” Jacob turned his attention back to Elena. “Go on.”

“It’s not just the plane. It’s everything to do with Rachel Lamprey.”

Bob asked, “Who?”

“She’s the SuenaMed exec who got us this ride,” Jacob said impatiently. “Let the lady finish.”

Between sips of her tea, Elena related how she had come to know Rachel, and about the initial contact. The first patient, her own dream, and the mounting pressure Rachel had exerted. “All the while, her company is bearing down on their biggest product launch in decades.”

Jacob snapped his fingers. “Sure. SuenaMind. I’ve been reading about this. It’s huge.”

Bob asked, “Rachel Lamprey is responsible for SuenaMind?”

“She is the senior product director.”

“So what is she doing, working on this dream issue?”

“That is exactly my point.” Elena drank again, or started to, then noticed that her cup was empty.

Jacob rose and took it from her. “More honey?”

“Please.”

He swiftly returned. “You’re saying Rachel Lamprey is behind the attack tonight?”

“I’m saying it’s a vital issue. We’re all clinicians. We’re trained to look in the direction that our patient does not want us to go. See beneath the surface.” She paused for a sip. “The attack happened with pinpoint accuracy. They knew about the meeting with the senator. Whom did you tell?”

“Me?” Bob Meadows shook his head. “Not a soul. Not even my secretary. That was part of my arrangement with the senator.”

“Jacob?”

“I phoned my office before we left for Miami. I’ll miss appointments tomorrow morning. But I didn’t tell them about the Ritz.”

“The only person I contacted was Rachel. I didn’t tell her where precisely we were headed, just that we were driving to Miami for a meeting.”

“They could have followed us down,” Jacob said.

“Perhaps.” Images of the attack flashed through her mind. She set down the cup, her stomach suddenly very queasy. “They were probably waiting for us to emerge with the car, then decided hitting us on the sidewalk was even better.”

“But why would Rachel demand you become involved in all this, then set us up for an attack?”

“That,” Elena replied, “is the first question I intend to ask.”

•    •    •

The plane landed at Orlando’s second airport, the one closer to downtown. They were met by a limo and a nervous young aide who apologized for Rachel’s absence, but she had become tied up in a meeting that would go on for hours more.

The aide drove with them to the Renaissance and saw them checked into a trio of suites. The three of them bid one another a weary good night. Jacob and Bob were busy on their cell phones as they let themselves into their rooms. The next day was Saturday, so Elena had no need to check in with the college. No one waiting for her at home. No one who might worry over where she had been, or was going.

She filled the bath and used the plastic vial of bath oils. The water was spicy and inviting. She felt her muscles gradually relax in the heat. When the water cooled she bundled herself into a fluffy hotel robe and slipped into bed. She could feel the little jerks of tension pull at her muscles. It was unlikely she would sleep well, or for very long. She was glad merely for solitude and safety.

Her questions danced in the dark room. She decided that Rachel Lamprey was not behind the attack. It made no sense to plan an assault and then place the expensive corporate jet at their disposal. Yet Elena sensed that the woman was somehow connected.

Elena’s ability to search beyond the unseen had aided her greatly in any number of cases. Then as now, she could not say anything until the evidence was gathered. No patient’s treatment could be based on hunches. But the value was still there, for these intuitive thoughts often pointed her in the right direction. And that was what she sensed now.

It all came down to the dreams. And her own next step. The prospect of what awaited her was wrenching.

Elena carried the sense of dread with her into sleep.

•    •    •

Saturday morning, a tall man in a dark jacket bearing the SuenaMed logo stood outside Elena’s suite when she opened the door. He nodded a silent greeting and watched as she knocked on the men’s doors. He accompanied them downstairs and waited while they bought clothes in the hotel’s shopping arcade. The only time he spoke was to say that they should charge all of the items to their room.

Breakfast was an elegantly grim affair. The restaurant was jammed. All attention remained fastened on the televisions positioned around the walls. Elena’s throat still felt raw, and her words carried a resonant burr. She ate slowly, and the news congealed her breakfast into a viscous lump.

For once, the newscasters had lost their professional brightness. They replayed images from the previous day, when the British financial panic had spread to two other High Street banks. Police had been called out in London, Manchester, Edinburgh, and Birmingham. The lines were forced into angry order. The people inside the banks jammed the counters and crammed their pockets and briefcases and purses with loot. Like they were robbing the place, rather than taking out what was theirs. The prime minister and the Bank of England chief both assured the public and pleaded for calm. No one listened. Bank stocks on Wall Street and London plunged. A red ticker tape below the newscaster relayed data from stock markets in the Far East. Elena did not see the numbers, only how the red ribbon pulled them all closer and closer to oblivion.

A uniformed driver came in and said their car was ready. They left the restaurant and passed through a lobby filled with more silent people and echoes of television news. They rode together in silence.

The SuenaMed headquarters was a gleaming white block set like a crown jewel in the middle of its very own campus. The grounds were beautifully maintained, a velvet display of lawns
and flowers and blooming trees. The limo was waved through the main gates and pulled up in front of the entrance, where Reginald opened Elena’s door and said, “Rachel is waiting for you upstairs.”

They swept through the lobby so fast Elena caught only a fleeting glimpse of backlit photos and awards and elegance. The elevator whooshed them up to the sixteenth floor, three from the top, and opened into a lobby. The receptionist’s desk was a curved artwork of blond wood. Reginald snapped his phone shut and greeted Elena with “Perhaps your guests would care to wait here?”

“No,” Elena replied. “They would not.”

Reginald started to object, then saw something in her face that changed his mind. “This way.”

He led them down a short hallway to a corner office, where he knocked and opened and ushered them inside. “Elena has arrived.”

Rachel glared at the two men. “Who are they?”

“With me.” Elena seated herself. “Dr. Jacob Rawlings, Dr. Bob Meadows, this is Rachel Lamprey.”

“We need to talk, Elena. Alone.”

“It is not happening. Nothing is, without these two at my side.” Elena burned her with a look.
You want tough? No problem.

“All right. Fine.” Rachel planted her elbows on the desk. “Are you finally ready to fulfill your destiny?”

“Not until we get some answers.”

“The clock is ticking. The world is waiting. You need—”

“Why is SuenaMed involved? I’m not talking about you. I’m speaking—”

“I know what you mean. And I can’t answer your question with strangers present.”

“What would you call
me
? We’ve known each other all of three days.”

Rachel’s head canted slightly, as though inspecting Elena through a new framework. “The attack must have shaken you more than I thought.”

“Thank you for bringing up the attack. I want to know what role SuenaMed played in this. And why you won’t answer my question.”

Rachel studied the three of them in turn. “Dr. Jacob Rawlings I have at least heard of. This other gentleman . . .”

“Dr. Meadows is a practicing clinician in the Miami area,” Jacob replied. “And my closest friend.”

Elena added, “And has a patient who has been experiencing the dreams.”

“A patient with considerable power on the national stage,” Jacob finished.

Rachel rose to her feet. “Wait here.”

•    •    •

Rachel returned fifteen minutes later and ushered them up to the top floor. The penthouse was designed as a separate structure, a palace of power and wealth. The ceilings were impossibly high, the sounds muted. The furnishings caught the light and shimmered. People rushed by, their footsteps muffled by the plush carpets, their conversations swallowed by the vast chambers and the hushed air.

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