Chapter 3

Orderlies came rushing into David Purdue’s room at the Sinclair Medical Facility, examining the corners of the room to check for more attackers. But they soon found that it had been just the one. His body was limp and heavy, smothering the barely conscious Purdue underneath.

“Get him off! Get him off!” the head nurse shouted to the men. “Mr. Purdue? Mr. Purdue, can you hear me?” He sank to his knees beside Purdue to check his vitals, knees in the blood on the floor.

“Mr. Mills, aren’t you disturbing a crime scene or something?” a fresh employee asked from the vicinity of the cupboard where the impostor’s case had been sitting before the scuffle.

“Why don’t you just do as you’re told until I’ve determined if there even is a crime scene? By the looks of these two unconscious, but breathing individuals, it is safe to assume there has been no murder committed, Harold,” the veteran medical technician sneered at the rookie. “Yet.”

“Yes, sir. What about the weapon, sir?” he dared ask Mr. Mills after his reprimand.

Mills winced irately, but kept his cool. “I’ll take care of it, Harold. You just help Jimmy lift Dr. Helberg onto the gurney so that we can get them both to Hopkins Memorial as quickly as possible.”

“Yes, sir.”

Jeremy Mills surveyed the scene swiftly. He’d had to wait for the police to arrive and stood guard over the room in the meantime. Even without a death, this was a case of attempted murder, or grievous bodily harm in the very least. But Dr. Helberg had to receive immediate medical care due to a gunshot wound to the abdomen and a flesh wound that had ripped through his left oblique. Purdue had been knocked unconscious just as the shot went off when his head had slammed against the cabinet corner during the altercation.

Mills had no idea why this had happened, even less of an idea which of the two men were at fault. Naturally, one would assume that the patient was the instigator, but patients did not keep guns in their rooms, which put the suspicion squarely on the psychologist.

But what disturbed everyone on the staff a few hours later, was that the CCTV footage of the session had not been recorded at all. The oddity was that the security control room had the cameras running at all hours of the day and night, yet during this particular session, the camera had been disabled.

“Pity we don’t have a camera in the actual security control room,” Mills noted when the police asked for access to the section.

“That is rather ironic, don’t you reckon?” the head investigating officer asked snidely. “Where are the patients now?”

“Only one registered patient. David Purdue, Lieutenant,” the security officer clarified. “The other is a therapist.”

The lieutenant looked at his black book, biting his pen between his teeth as he paged for what he was looking for. “But my information says that Dr. Helberg died a few months ago in a shooting at his practice for which his receptionist was responsible. Therefore, this therapist could not have been the real Dr. Helberg.”

At this point the acting administrative head, Melissa Argyle, entered the security room. Her blond hair was visible from under the edge of her knitted beret and lashed out in a halo about her shoulders. Rolling over her fingers was a shiny gilded pen that looked expensive to the investigators.

“We used to have a camera in here too, but it was fried during the last thunderstorm. The company that installed that one was supposed to show up three days ago to install a new one,” she explained.

“That makes our job so much harder,” the lieutenant from the local precinct muttered as he examined the blackened paint around the wall cable of the device. “Yes, I see here. The wiring has been melted into the casing. Was there any other electrical damage from the same storm? Leakage, structural damage?”

“I don’t think so,” she replied hesitantly. Melissa was not sure what he was driving at, but then again, she was just an administrator and pre-grad student of Psychology and with that, a bit naïve. “Why do you ask? What does that have to do with the case?”

“Quite a bit. If other parts of the building were as vulnerable to water damage or electrical failure, it would dismiss the possibility of sabotage,” he clarified.

“Sabotage? That’s absurd!” she gasped.

“Lieutenant Campbell,” a police officer called from under the corner desk where he was following the power points.

“Yes? Do you have something?” Campbell asked zealously.

“I could be mistaken, but it looks like several plug points in this office have been tampered with.” The officer’s voice was strained as he forced his slightly out-of-shape physique to crouch down lower under the table.

“Here?” Campbell asked.

“All three sockets that could have been used as auxiliary power have been disrupted, sir. Not just that one and not just the wall cable.” In turn, Lieutenant Campbell simply gave Melissa and her security officers a good old I-told-you-so look and said, “Sabotage.”

Melissa folded her arms as a look of worry crossed her face. “So, what do we do now?”

“Now, I shall need all the personnel files on the staff here at Sinclair so that we can run background checks and look for any criminal records. Fortunately for me, you are just the right person to furnish me with that documentation,” he said, smiling triumphantly.

He never admitted it, but Campbell loved the fact that he could remind pretty young women that their control was all a dream when matters crossed his turf. The look of discomfort on the barely qualified administrator was a pleasure to behold.

For the rest of the day Campbell annexed the administrative wing, taking up residence in Melissa’s office to go through the human resource folders one by one, meticulously checking each individual for a possible motive to be involved in the attempted assassination of a patient.

“See?” Melissa sighed at the wrong end of eleven hours, sitting across from the investigator with the Earl Grey fetish. “Not one of these people have criminal backgrounds, Lieutenant Campbell. That leaves you with nothing on motive; just that the fried circuit was a trick of bad weather and not some premeditated sabotage. What do we do now?”

The police officer had to concede. He had no reason to believe that anyone on the staff had some nefarious associations, although he was familiar with the patient in question and the man’s reckless relic hunting.

“Now, Miss Argyle, we have to uncover the real motive for someone to impersonate a deceased psychiatrist…or psychologist, whatever,” he told the exhausted young administrator. “I know a lot about Mr. Purdue. In the past he’s had some run-ins with the law, but mostly as a trespasser with a penchant for digging in the wrong tombs, if you know what I mean.”

“As do I. Mr. Purdue has done a lot for educational institutions the world over, including my own, where he instituted bursaries and shared programs to help the less financially able students. I cannot imagine that someone would want to kill him,” she contested naively. And naïve is precisely the unfortunate tone the investigative officer decided not to respond to.

“I suppose it’s time for me to leave. We’ll be in touch with your legal department about the negligence of this facility,” he stated deliberately just to watch her squirm at the threat.

“Lieutenant, I have to appeal to your sensitivity here. There’s no need to demonize this institution or its staff for a coincidental camera failure that just happened to precede an attack on the premises,” Melissa implored, wringing her hands nervously.

“My dear Miss Argyle, I appreciate your point,” he replied as he pulled on his coat and sucked up the last bit of cold tea in the latest cup, “but unfortunately, sensitivity is not a virtue I was blessed with.”

He gathered up the copies he’d had printed of all the pivotal human resource material and gave Melissa a wink. “We’ll be having a chat with Mr. Purdue tonight at the precinct. He was kind enough to agree to an interview with the captain. Thank you so much for all your help. Goodbye.” Campbell forced a smile as his eyes quickly fell on Melissa’s pen.

“Goodbye, Lieutenant Campbell,” she choked out nervously as he left the office.

Peering around her doorway, she watched Campbell traversing the lobby and signing out, before disappearing into the night outside.

“Unbe-fucking-lievable,” her full lips mouthed. The sound of her pen tapping against her hip hastened in cadence as her mind raced. “What could Mr. Purdue ever help him find?”

She shook her head and returned to her upturned office to tidy up before leaving for home.

Mills had overseen the cleaning up of the room as two of the janitors returned the place to its former clean comfort after the forensics team had finished with it. He’d left an hour prior to the tenacious detective, but thus was the encumbrance of Melissa’s higher paying position that she had to stay later. Sometimes her responsibilities held her captive from any sort of social engagements or the few hours after work where she could wind down from her day.

Peeking through the blinds of her office to see if any staff members were within earshot, Melissa Argyle surveyed the adjacent offices to make sure that she was the only administrative staff member still there. With a deep sigh she picked up her landline and punched in the phone number she knew by heart.

“Guterman, it’s me,” she said as quietly as she could. “Purdue is aware of the changeling.” She paused and swallowed hard before forcing the next report. “And the changeling is under police supervision at Hopkins Memorial.” Her eyes caught movement outside her office, but the figure passed by without stopping. She continued listening for more instructions. “Two gunshot wounds. His findings…are in the possession of Lieutenant Campbell at the Dundee Precinct.”

The voice on the other end was telling her to be as helpful to the police as possible without betraying the true nature of the situation. She should not draw attention. Then the call was ended unceremoniously.

A loud bang startled her momentarily before Melissa realized that it was the door to the restrooms, the only door in the building that didn’t have a fire door closer to ease it shut. “That’s another thing I have to get fixed. Geez,” she said to herself.

Melissa grabbed her car keys and bag, electing not to wear her raincoat, as the cool night air would be good for her fevered nerves. In the deserted wing of Sinclair, the white luminescent lights hummed over towers of paperwork and dead fax machines. Computer monitors with black screens rested on unoccupied desks, leaving Melissa feeling dreadfully melancholy. Her only company was the second arm on the wall clock ticking monotonously while she locked her door. Her keys fell to the floor when she misjudged the slot and she bent down to pick them up.

From a distance, one of the night janitors watched her grunt from the effort and came to help her.

“Oh my God, you frightened me!” she exclaimed as he rushed to pick up her key for her. “Do you want to give me a heart attack?”

“I’m sorry, Miss Argyle,” he apologized, scooping up the keys for the lovely young woman. “Here.”

“Thank you,” she smiled reluctantly, trying to hide her frustration. But he could see it in her face and manner as she briskly walked off without saying goodbye. His colleague joined him, both men staring at the fresh beauty with the bouncy locks.

“I wouldn’t mind test driving that one, hey?” he told his colleague, but the man who’d helped Melissa had a look of distaste on his face when he replied, “You can have her. In bed I like limber women and that kitten is so stiff-limbed she can’t even touch her toes.”

Laughing, the janitors left the offices to have a smoke outside in the cold where Invergowrie Bay breathed under the full moon.

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