Mind Switch (45 page)

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Authors: Lorne L. Bentley

BOOK: Mind Switch
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Miss Black looked at the thin man for a response.

“Look, none of what I am about to say can ever leave this office. Do you both agree?”

Both Fred and the chief nodded their agreement.

“We think, actually we are sure, he sold highly classified secrets to the red Chinese.”

“How do you know that?” Fred asked.

“We think that, because one of our foreign agents identified an exact code that we had previously purchased from AU. We located that secret code in communist China.”

Fred said, “You mean a code that was encoded in a computer chip?” He was mining, but that seemed like a logical jump.

“Yes, well, something like that,” said Miss Black.

Fred then made a more extended jump based on combining the information Schultz had disclosed with the new information that had just come to light. He said, “I would have to assume this chip is capable of being planted into a human being to provide them with an extraordinary psychic capability.”

Neither the thin man nor Miss Black verbally responded, but the expression on their faces told him everything. He had accidentally stepped on the truth. “My God,” he muttered, “We’re creating mental supermen.”

The thin man broke in. “Look, you are assuming that, and your assumption is incorrect. We never said anything about that.”

Fred ignored the thin man and directed his question to Miss Black. “Do you think it is possible that the murderer killed the division heads because he feared that they knew something about his espionage activities?”

Miss Black said, “It’s possible, but frankly we never felt the division heads were killed for a purpose. We have always accepted the fact they were the unfortunate accidental victims of mass murder, and that the suicide was exactly that.”

The chief entered the fray. “Now I will have to ask you to be silent about what we’re telling you. Based on all that has been divulged to the public, two of the division heads were killed as a result of being in the wrong place at the wrong time. In fact, that is still our station’s prevailing theory. We are looking at other possibilities; but at this stage they remain only possibilities.”

Miss Black broke in, “Do you mean it is possible that all those people were deliberately killed just to disguise a hit on two people?”

Fred tried to read her body language. As best as he could determine, her question seemed totally sincere.

“We don’t know that, Miss Black,” the chief responded, “But it is entirely possible.”

“My God!” she cried out.

The chief said, “Thanks for your time, I am sure we have some mutual areas of interest and will need to meet again.” His tone made it clear that the meeting was over.

After perfunctory handshakes all around, Fred and the chief left the building and strolled across the street to a coffee shop.

“Well, what’s your take on this?” were the first words out of the chief’s mouth.

“I no longer think that she is involved in any killings,” Fred replied. “I can’t for the life of me think of a motive; and she just doesn’t look like a murderer to me.”

The chief laughed. “Fred, if someone could give me a profile of a murderer before that person committed the crime, I would be very happy. It just doesn’t happen. Murderers often look and act like normal people, you know that. However, I know what you mean and I came to your same conclusion as well, that Miss Black is not guilty. So if we are both correct, that means someone is still trying very hard to throw us off the trail.”

“Yes,” Fred replied, “First, the mass murderer camouflage and now the decoy of a planted gun and false fingerprints. All of this points to a very intelligent, extraordinary and dedicated individual. It is also possible that the murderer is the same person who is selling secrets to the Chinese. If three of the division heads had suspicions of what was going on, then that may have been just enough reason to eliminate them.”

“But why did the murderer attempt to kill Schultz’s secretary?” the chief wondered out loud.

“All I can think of is that she, in her capacity, has exposure to the entire building and is very much trusted by Schultz. Perhaps she came across something incriminating without knowing what it was.”

The chief pondered Fred’s analysis. “That could be very well true, especially when that person tried to eliminate the secretary twice.

“Well,” said Fred, “If you don’t disagree, I want to extend the 24 hour watch we have on Donna until the threat is over.”

“Fred, I have no problem with the 24 hour watch. But unless we catch the murderer, the threat on her life may continue for an indefinite period.”

“I know boss, I know!”

* * *

Fred had two urgent visits to make. In the case of two of his planned visits, he could be taking steps that could, in the eyes of others, be career ending, but it no longer mattered to him. One additional visit was to be made by Jim Hebert in Fred’s behalf.

Fred told the chief that he needed to speak to Slivers and Shepard one more time.

“As I told you, Fred, it’s your case; but with the first trial date just two weeks away, I doubt that their attorneys would permit it. However, keep me informed.”

“I will.”

Fred contacted Sliver’s attorney, Jason Roberts directly. The attorney had been practicing law in Sarasota and Manatee County for over ten years, he knew the lay of the land well. Criminal cases were his specialty and one of his guiding principles was: Under no circumstances allow the police to interrogate your client if it can be avoided. Allow the prosecution to speak to him only if a plea bargain is on the table or is a distinct possibility.

“Roberts said, “No way will you speak to my client. You were the arresting officer, what on earth could you do to help my case? And remember my job is not to help you prove my client is guilty.”

Fred said, “Look, I believe your client is innocent and I will agree to provide you with a tape stating that; and furthermore I will be willing to testify on your client’s behalf.”

Roberts found Fred’s statement incredulous. But to Fred, his proposed action was part and parcel of his earlier commitment to Mrs. Slivers. He was not going to see Mr. Slivers go to jail if he felt he was innocent, and Fred now knew beyond a doubt that he was innocent.

Roberts said, “Okay, you have a deal but I want to hear that tape before you can see my client; and even then you can talk to him only in my presence.”

“We have an agreement!”

Fred made a tape, stating in it that he was the arresting officer and he believed beyond a reasonable doubt that Mr. Slivers was innocent in the legal sense of the crime that he had been accused of. He stated that he believed someone had instituted a type of mind control over Mr. Slivers, so that at the time of the killings he had no idea that he was committing a crime.

Fred then made a second tape, inserting this time the name Shepard in it, using comparable verbiage as in the first tape.

Roberts listened to the tape and asked the obvious, “If my client is not guilty, who is?”

Fred had to admit he didn’t know.

“Then if you, as the arresting officer, believe he is innocent, release him.”

Fred said, “I don’t have the power to do that, that would have to come from the DA’s office. But remember, he did fire the gun and shoot those people. So if he is innocent, it’s only in the legal sense, that he wasn’t responsible for his actions. And imagine the outcry if the DA were to release a confirmed mass murderer, when we have no one else to take the blame. I need more time to find the true murderer, the person responsible for Mr. Slivers doing what he did.”

Mr. Roberts said, “People have stated all along that my client is crazy, but I’m beginning to think that you are the insane one. What will the DA do to you once he learns of your agreement with me?”

“We will have to wait and see,” Fred said, “Now I would like to your client.”

“Ok, but if this is some trick to try to get a confession, I will shut down your interrogation at the blink of an eye.”

“Fair enough.”

When Slivers entered the interrogation room, he turned to Roberts and asked, “What is this all about?”

“It’s all right,” said Roberts. “I believe what Lieutenant Harris is doing will help our case. Don’t worry, if at any time I find that’s not true, I will stop the interview. Lieutenant, ask your questions.”

“Mr. Slivers,” Fred begin, “Up to now we have all considered your denial ridiculous; after all you had been caught at the scene of the crime with the weapon in your hand. However, I now believe you are innocent, but you have to help me to prove that. Now let’s focus on the day of the bank killings. Please tell me everything that went on that day.”

Slivers looked at his attorney for approval to proceed. Roberts nodded, and Slivers began. “Basically it was a normal day. I recall that I awoke at my usual time, ate breakfast with my wife, got into my car and drove to work as I usually do. Later that morning, I worked on a contract at my desk; I recall that vividly. Time seemed to jump after that; and in a nutshell the next thing I know, I was holding a weapon in my hand that I never saw before, at a bank that I have never been to, and people were dead all around me.”

“Do you remember anything about the rest of the day?”

“Yes, I recall you arresting me and my being processed at the county jail.”

“Were there any other strange happenings that day? Please think hard, your life may depend on it. And I don’t want your nutshell synopsis; I want every dirty detail.”

“I have been having some slight memory problems,” said Slivers, “And I experienced it that morning in the form of missing time.”

“Tell me more.”

“Well I guess it’s a function of my age, but I was completing an insurance contract at work and I looked up to check the clock on my office wall. When I looked up again, in what I believed was about a minute later, fifteen minutes had gone by. I checked all the other clocks in our office and they all had recorded the same jump in time. I asked my secretary about that and she said she didn’t notice any power outage or anything like that. I didn’t want to make a big deal about it at the time, but it really bothered me.”

“Had that same type of experience occurred to you at any earlier point that week?” Fred asked.

“Oh, yes, in fact my wife made me go to a neurologist because of some strange occurrences. He took a CAT scan of my brain and said he could find nothing wrong. The doctor gave me a week’s supply of tranquilizers, and said it was my nerves.”

“What were the other strange experiences that you had?”

“One weekend day I found myself in Naples. Naples is about 100 miles from my house, but I had no recollection of driving there at all. It was embarrassing, I had to stop a jogger and ask him what city I was in. I called my wife and pretended nothing was wrong. I lied to her that I had just decided to take a long drive. There were other instances as well, but none were as extensive as my trip to Naples.”

Fred said, “I have a group of photographs of people who work in a company in Sarasota. Please tell me if you recognize any of them.”

Slivers went through the pack slowly, examining each picture in great detail.

“Look, I have been in this town many years, so some of them look very familiar to me. But most likely it’s because I have seen them on the street or shopping in stores. There’s only one person I can be sure of. It’s this person.”

Slivers had identified Mrs. Schultz.

 

Chapter 70

 

Jim Hebert briskly entered Pat’s restaurant on Main Street. Today’s special was corned beef and cabbage, Jim’s favorite food; but on this day he wasn’t interested in food.

The hostess, wearing a name tag identifying her as Jean, smiled and said, “Can I help you?” as she removed a lunch menu from a stack on her counter and started to hand it to him.

Fred had provided Jim with a detailed description of the hostess that he had encountered the day that Ford had disappeared into ether land. Based on Fred’s description, this was the hostess. Fred advised Jim that the last place he saw Ford was as he entered Pat’s Restaurant. Fred said he didn’t believe he had been hallucinating; he believed the person he saw was flesh and blood. He wanted Jim to get to the bottom of it, regardless of the method used to get there.

Jim showed her his badge. “You can help me, all right, you can put the menu back and you can keep yourself out of jail. It all depends on what you tell me in the next couple of minutes.”

Jean thought, oh, hell, the camera caught me when I went through that red light yesterday. A lot of the cameras are just there for traffic control purposes; with my luck I hit the wrong one. Hell, I’m usually such a careful driver, but I was late for work and they caught me already. But he’s going to send me to jail just for that?

The hostess could not conceal her concern. “I don’t understand, officer, I have done nothing seriously wrong,” hoping desperately that going through a red light wasn’t classified as terribly serious.

“Yes, you have, you have interfered with a murder investigation. Now, can we talk somewhere privately, or do you want me to drag you down to headquarters?”

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