“I understand that,” said Singh. “And, if there is an afterlife, I doubt that any of the symbolism from Christianity—or from Sikhism, for that matter—appropriately captures it. It may just be that the right trigger hasn’t come along to let Mrs. Falconi access Mr. Latimer’s new memories.”
“I don’t care about Latimer,” said Eric, firmly. “What caused Jan to feel this?”
“That’s a very good question,” said Singh, looking at her. “Something must have triggered you to recall Mr. Latimer’s death shortly after it happened, Mrs. Falconi. What were you doing when you had the flashback?”
“Eric was showing me around his condo. It’s just a few blocks from here.”
Singh frowned. “There was no—I don’t know—hunting rifle on the wall, or bloody roast defrosting in the sink?”
“No,” said Jan. “I was just admiring Eric’s furniture.”
“That seems unlikely as a trigger for this,” Singh said. “I wonder how long after Latimer died that the memory of it came to you.”
“Jan collapsed at 12:17 P.M.,” said Eric. Singh looked at him. “I’m a doctor,” Eric added. “You always note when a seizure or anything similar starts and how long it lasts.”
“Agent Dawson,” Singh said, “when did you, ah, um—when did you shoot Mr. Latimer?”
Susan looked up again. Her voice was small. “I don’t know. Sometime shortly after noon, but…”
“Hospital security will know,” Singh said. “They must have recorded the sound of the gunshot; I heard it even down here.” He picked up the phone on his desk and pounded out four digits. “It’s Ranjip Singh. I need to know the time the gun was discharged this past hour. Yes. No. Really? Are you sure? Are you positive? Thank you. Good-bye.” He put down the phone. “The gunshot was recorded at 12:17 P.M.”
“But memories are recalled after the fact,” Eric said. “That’s what
“This wasn’t like the other memories of Josh’s I’d recalled,” Jan said. “It felt more real, more…”
“Immediate?” offered Singh.
Jan nodded.
“So you accessed Mr. Latimer’s memories not
“Yes,” said Jan, “although I didn’t know what it was at the time. There was a flash of light and unbelievable pain, and then I saw her”—she pointed at Susan—“and then I was fading away bit by bit.”
“Amazing,” said Singh. His eyes were wide with excitement. “Amazing.”
“How so?” asked Jan.
“Until this point, people in our linked circle had been accessing memories randomly, and not in synchrony. What I was thinking about or doing had nothing to do with what Agent Dawson was recalling from my memories. But what happened to you was different. At the moment Mr. Latimer was being shot,
Chapter 36
Susan Dawson continued to sit in Singh’s lab with her head in her hands. That she’d done everything properly didn’t matter; she’d never get this image—her own memory—out of her mind: the bullet hitting Josh Latimer’s head, his blood geysering out, and him crumpling to the floor.
She’d studied the Zapruder film during training, of course—including the frames not usually shown that depicted JFK’s head blowing open. She remembered her instructor at Rowley saying that it was actually Kennedy’s bad back that had killed him. Oswald’s first, nonfatal shot should have caused the president to pitch forward, out of Oswald’s line of fire from the School Book Depository, but the back brace he wore had kept Kennedy upright, letting Oswald get the subsequent killing shot in.
She’d always remembered those grainy images, but this—
“You weren’t just reading his memory,” Singh had just said to Janis Falconi. “You were reading his
“But why?” Eric Redekop asked. “The intensity of the feelings?”
Susan looked up in time to see Singh make his trademark shrug. “Maybe. But this raises a new level of concern. Fortunately, Mrs. Falconi wasn’t injured—but she could have been. Indeed, if she’d been operating a motor vehicle, or even just walking down a tall staircase, she could have been killed.”
Susan thought again about her pistol firing, Latimer’s blood spraying, and bits of his skull flying—and she thought about his