Griffin put down the handset and folded his arms in front of his chest. “Professor Singh has just informed me that Dr. Christine Lee, an anesthesiologist, can read your memories. And all I’ll have to do is say to Christine, hey, remember that time I tied my red silk tie into a bow through the handle of my ‘World’s Greatest Dad’ mug? What did David January say just after that?” He paused. “You see, David? There’s a witness—she’s somewhere else in the hospital right now, but she’s a witness all the same. And the linkages are only first-order, did you know that? That means she’ll remember you trying to blackmail me, but she won’t remember what you claim to remember of my past; she has access only to your memories, not to mine.”
David felt his blood boiling. First, that Secret Service woman had manipulated him—that bullshit about Annie! And now Griffin was fucking with him, too. Well, if he was going to go down for this, he’d at least give Griffin something he’d remember, something all of them would remember. He lunged forward, startling Griffin, and punched the tall man in the stomach. Griffin doubled over, and David got him in a headlock.
“You’ll keep your mouth shut,” David said. “You won’t speak to Christine.”
Griffin was struggling, and David found them moving sideways across the room, toward the same counter that held the coffee service. Griffin broke out of the headlock, but David managed to get a choke hold on him. Griffin flailed his free arm, and he knocked the coffeemaker to the floor, the glass parts shattering.
They continued to struggle, but Miss Peters must have heard the sound of the breaking glass because she opened the office door and stood there, mouth agape—and behind her, just entering the outer office, was Professor Singh.
Singh surged forward. “Let him go.”
“He attacked me,” David said. “Went nuts. Tried to kill me.”
The syllable “no”—mostly just raw breath rather than a word—came from Griffin.
“I said, let him go!” Singh demanded.
David looked at the guy: he was fifty if he was a day and slight of build; David was sure he could take him, too, if he had to. “Back off,” he said.
Singh exploded into movement, rushing forward then pivoting on his left foot while he brought his right foot up into a powerful karate kick, catching David in the side. Griffin seized the chance and managed to twist himself free from David’s grip. Singh pivoted again and kicked with his other leg, catching David in the solar plexus, and as David doubled over, Singh delivered a sharp karate punch to the back of David’s neck. David slumped face-first to the floor. He was still conscious, but, try as he might, he couldn’t get back up. He lolled his head to the side to watch.
Griffin was struggling to get his breath and was still doubled over. He held on to the edge of the counter for support.
“Do you need a doctor?” Singh asked.
Griffin huffed and puffed a few more times, then shook his head. “No. I’ll be okay.” He straightened up partway, and nodded again. “Good thing you know karate, Professor Singh.”
David looked up at Singh, his head still spinning. Singh said, “I don’t.”
“Well, or whatever martial art that was,” said Griffin.
“I don’t know any martial arts,” Singh said, his voice full of wonder. “But I guess Lucius Jono—the man I’m linked to—
Griffin got out, “Well, thank God for that.”
Singh was excited. “Indeed. This is fascinating. I wouldn’t have anticipated skills being accessible like that.”
Griffin straightened and made it over to his desk. He asked Miss Peters to have a security guard and an ER doctor come up here. Then he loomed in to make sure that David wasn’t mortally wounded.
“There are two kinds of human memory,” Singh went on, huffing a bit from exertion. “One is declarative or explicit memory, which is all that I’d thought had been linked between any of us here. Declarative memory consists of those things that can be consciously recalled and easily put into words—memories of facts or events.” He looked down in apparent astonishment at what he’d done to David. “The other kind is what you just saw me access. It’s called non-declarative or procedural memory; laypeople sometimes call it muscle memory. Non-declarative memories are the ones that you obviously have but are not conscious of: how to ride a bicycle, how to tie a shoe, how to play tennis—which is something I happen to do well—or how to perform martial arts. Declarative memory is associated with the hippocampus, whereas the dorsolateral striatum is associated with non-declarative memory.”
Griffin rubbed his throat. “So?”
The door opened, and a security guard entered, along with a doctor. The doctor immediately went down on one knee to examine David.
“So,” said Singh, “the linkages are much more thorough than perhaps they first appeared to be.”
“Or maybe they’re growing stronger over time,” Griffin said.
Singh said, “Maybe they are at that. Who knows where it will all end?”
Chapter 22