The double doors to the library opened, and Pendergast entered quietly.
Immediately, Tristram stood up. “Father!” he said.
Pendergast stepped back almost defensively. “It’s fine, Tristram, you may remain seated.” He turned to Proctor. “What news?”
The boy sat down again quietly.
“This time I don’t believe we were followed,” Proctor answered. “I’ve activated all the security measures.”
Pendergast nodded. He turned to Tristram, then sat down in a nearby chair. “I need to know more. More about the place you grew up—Nova Godói.”
Tristram screwed his face up. “I try.”
“Describe it to me, please.”
Tristram looked confused. “Describe?”
“What is it? A building, a town, a crossroads? What does it look like? How do you get to it?”
“I understand. But I not know much—they keep us, the bad twins, under guard. We not go anywhere.” A sudden worried look crossed the boy’s face, as if he was afraid of disappointing his father with his lack of knowledge.
“Just tell me what you know. What you’ve seen.”
“It is town. Deep, deep in jungle. No road. Only way in is by river, or—” And here he imitated the motion of a plane’s wings with his hand. “Town is on edge of lake.”
“Lake,” Pendergast repeated.
“Yes. In middle of lake is… the bad place.”
“Tell me about the bad place.”
“No!” Tristram was on his feet again, agitated. “No, no. Bad twins, like me, get taken to the bad place. They do not come out again.”
He was so agitated that Pendergast said nothing for several minutes, giving the boy time to calm down. “Who lives in the town, Tristram?” he asked at last.
“The workers. The good twins.”
“And where do you live?”
“In the hole,” the boy said simply. “With the others like me. The ones with numbers.”
“What do you do during the day?”
“We work. In the fields. And sometimes we are taken. For… tests.” He shook his head violently. “No talking about the tests.”
“This town,” Pendergast said. “Is it guarded?”
The boy nodded. “Soldiers. Many soldiers.”
“Who do the soldiers answer to? How is the town led? Is there a governing council—a group of people in charge?”
Tristram shook his head. “One man.”
“What is his name?”
“F… Fischer.” Tristram barely whispered the word, as if merely to speak it was dangerous.
“What does he look like?” Pendergast asked.
“He is tall. Older than you. Stark, kräftig—strong, like him.” Tristram pointed at Proctor. “His hair is white, all white.”
Proctor was surprised at the effect this description had on Pendergast. The agent shuddered, then turned away.
“This town,” he said in a strange voice, back still to them. “Does it have any other unique aspects to it?”
Tristram frowned. “Aspects? What you mean, aspects?”
Pendergast turned back. “Is there some way it might be different from other towns? A way for someone to recognize it, say, from a distance.”
“Yes. It has…” And the boy raised both his arms, drawing his hands around in a circle, then tenting them together.
“I’m not sure I understand,” Pendergast said.
Tristram made the gesture again, then sighed loudly, frustrated at not getting his meaning across.
Pendergast stood up again. “Thank you, Tristram. You have been most helpful. Now, listen: right now I have to try to prevent your brother from killing any more people.”
Tristram nodded.
“As long as I’m doing that, I can’t stay here with you.”
“No!” The boy rose again.
“You must remain here. They’re looking for you.”
“I not afraid of them!”
Proctor looked at the boy. Brave words, and obviously well intended—but the greater likelihood was that, at the first knock on the door, he’d turn tail and hide behind his father.
“I know you mean well,” Pendergast said gently. “But right now, you need to go to ground.”
“Go… to ground?” the son repeated.
“Go into hiding. This house has places for that: where you can hide, safe from any attack, any threat.”
A flash of anger distorted the boy’s fine features. “Hide? In hole? I will not do such thing! I have been in hole too long!”
“Tristram. You took a big risk in escaping. You came to me. Now you must trust me.” Pendergast took the boy’s hand. “You won’t be in any hole. Proctor will be with you. And I will visit as often as I can.”
The youth’s face had flushed red. He hung his head, clearly angry but holding his tongue.
Pendergast took Proctor aside. “You know where to put him.”
“Yes, sir.”
“And Proctor? I wonder if I could impose on you to use this time—this enforced, ah, seclusion—to educate Tristram a little.”
Proctor looked at Pendergast. “Educate him?”
“Talk with him. Let him practice his English. Be a companion—he’s obviously in desperate need of socialization. He knows nothing of the outside world. Read books with him—novels, histories, whatever interests him. Listen to music, watch movies. Answer his questions. Show him how to use a computer.”
Proctor stiffened at the thought of babysitting the boy. “Yes, sir,” he said in a tight voice.
Pendergast turned, addressed Tristram. “I have to go now. You’re in good hands with Proctor. I’ll be back tomorrow. Tristram: I want you to recall everything you can about your childhood, growing up, how you lived, where you lived, what its layout was, who was with you—everything—and be prepared to tell me about it when I come tomorrow. We’re going to have a long talk.”
For a moment, the boy continued to hang his head. Then, with a sigh, he nodded sullenly.
“Good-bye, Tristram.” Pendergast gave him a long, penetrating look. Then, nodding to Proctor, he turned and left the room as silently as he had arrived.
Proctor glanced at the boy. “Come on,” he said. “I’ll show you to your new room.”
He led the way toward a row of bookshelves. The boy followed a little unwillingly. He seemed to have lost his eager curiosity.
Proctor glanced at the rows of books, found the title he wanted, grasped it, and pulled it away from the wall. With a click, the entire bookcase swung away, revealing an elevator beyond.
“Scheiße,” murmured Tristram.
They entered the elevator, and Proctor pressed the button for the basement. Once there, Proctor led the way through the maze of dimly lit stone passageways, heavy with verdigris and efflorescence. He kept the pace brisk, not allowing the youth to stop and look into any chambers whose contents he might find unsettling.