Evil Genius (52 page)

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Authors: Catherine Jinks

Tags: #Ages 12 & Up

BOOK: Evil Genius
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Cadel was completely lost. It was all too much to absorb. Besides, he was very tired. And his foot was hurting.

"So—so Dad won't be mad at me?" he mumbled, snatching at the most important detail.

"Oh, I don't think we'll be telling Phineas, Cadel. After all, the institute was his baby. He won't be too pleased when he discovers what happened. And if he was to find out that
you
were responsible—no, I think it will be our little secret." Though utterly still, Thaddeus gave an impression of tautness, as if he was poised to spring. "What do you say? Hmmm? Do you want to tell Phineas?"

Cadel stared into the psychologist's narrowed eyes. He sensed that something important was being decided, but he was too tired to work out what it might be.

"No," he said. "I guess not."

Thaddeus looked away. At that moment, the rap of knuckles against wood announced Vadi's return. He stood in the doorway, a towel draped over one arm.

"Ah," said Thaddeus. "You've run the bath?"

"Yes, sir."

"Good, good." Thaddeus turned back to Cadel. "Can you manage the climb by yourself, dear boy? Or would you like Vadi to carry you?"

Cadel didn't like the look of Vadi. Apart from the eyelids (what
was
it about those eyelids that bugged him so much?), there was also Vadi's skin. It seemed to have an almost silvery sheen to it, under the glow of the electric lights.

"I'll do it," Cadel said. "I can walk."

"Are you sure?"

"I can do it! Really!"

"Very well." Thaddeus turned back to the silent Vadi. "You might go and make a cup of cocoa," he drawled. "And tell Wilfreda I want to see her. As soon as Cadel's settled."

Vadi bowed. Then he left. When he had gone, Thaddeus asked, "What do you think of him?"

"Think of who?" Cadel was still in a daze.

"Vadi. What do you think of him?" As Cadel stared, in utter confusion, Thaddeus dipped his head apologetically. "Of course, you're not in a fit state to realize," he conceded.

"Realize what?"

"Vadi's 'aquagenic' One of your father's more interesting finds." Thaddeus rose, and stooped to help Cadel up. "In one way, he's an evolutionary throwback. Human beings are descended from amphibians, of course, and there's still a lot of the amphibian in us. Vadi's genes are simply more amphibian than most." He frowned at Cadel, who had wriggled away from his supporting hand. "What's the matter?"

"I don't need any help!" Cadel just wanted to get away—away from Vadi. Away from Thaddeus. "I can walk by myself! I know what I'm capable of!"

Thaddeus smiled.

"Do you think so, Cadel?" he murmured. "Personally, I doubt that you really understand the scope of your powers."

And he watched Cadel go, with an intensity that was more frightening than any spoken threat.

FIFTY

Cadel's bath was waiting at the top of the staircase, in the most luxurious bathroom that he had ever seen. It was made entirely of marble; there was a gilt-framed mirror, and a headless Greek statue in an alcove, and about twenty towels of every imaginable size. The sunken bath itself was so big that two steps led down into it.

"Is there anything else you need, sir?" Vadi inquired, hovering on the threshold. Cadel eyed him nervously. He looked almost normal, and yet ... why was he wearing such a high collar?

Surely he didn't have
gills
?

"No," Cadel replied, in a shaky voice.

"If you think of anything, just call," said Vadi, gesturing at an intercom panel with a phone attached. "Your bedroom is next door."

"Okay."

"It's a very great honor to meet you at last," Vadi added gravely; and before Cadel could recover from his surprise, the young man withdrew, closing the door gently behind him.

Cadel hesitated. He was feeling so groggy that he actually had to think about what to do next. Clothes off, of course. Into the bath. The water was scented and just the right temperature; Cadel sighed as the warm, fragrant liquid engulfed his bruised body. He almost fell asleep in it. Afterward, he dried himself on the largest towel that he had ever seen, which he removed from a heated towel rail. Even the mirror over the vanity was heated, to prevent it from steaming up.

A pair of men's summer pajamas had been laid out for him. (They were far too big.) He made use of the toothbrush and toothpaste that had also been provided. When he finally, cautiously, pushed open the door, Vadi was waiting for him in the corridor outside. "This way, sir," he said.

After the bathroom, Cadel was expecting something even more luxurious in the bedroom: a four-poster bed, perhaps? An alabaster fireplace? A gilded ceiling? To his surprise, the bedroom was furnished quite simply. It had creamy walls, creamy curtains, and a creamy bed. The lamps were made entirely of blown glass. The only painting was a strange, dreamlike landscape, which, on closer inspection, wasn't really a landscape at all, but an abstract collection of colors.

The clock on the bedside table said 2:15
A.M.

"Would you like a hot drink, sir?" Vadi queried. "I've heated up some cocoa."

"No, thanks."

"Anything to eat, or to read?"

Cadel shook his head. He simply wanted Vadi out of his room. This was unfair, he realized, but the whole aquagenic thing made him uneasy. He didn't know what to say, or where to look. He had a horrible feeling that the guy might smell sort of
fishy.

One whiff of fish, and Cadel would vomit. He knew that. Besides, he had seen something else on the bedside table, standing between the lamp and the clock. It was a photograph in a silver frame.

He snatched it up and was staring at it, mesmerized, when Vadi left the room.

The woman in the photograph was Cadel's mother. She had to be—there was no other explanation. Her eyes were exactly the same as his. She was smiling, and even her teeth were the same. She wore a pale yellow top, and the wind was blowing her hair back. She looked young, and happy, and pretty, and ... and nice. Really nice.

Not like a junkie at all.

Cadel lowered himself onto the bed, still gazing at the photograph. Suddenly, it was all too much: the chloroform, Max, the fire, the foot, the long drive through the night, and now this. On top of everything else. His mother, laughing up at him from a silver frame.

Tears spilled down his cheeks.

Oh, Mum,
he thought, squeezing his eyes shut.
What am I going to do? Why aren't you here to help me
?

"Cadel?"

It was Thaddeus. He had entered the room as silently as mist.

Cadel looked up. "Why did you do this?" he asked in a hard, accusing tone.

"Do what?"

"Put this here! This is my mother!"

"Yes."

"She looks just like me!"

"Thank god," said Thaddeus. "Or Darkkon might have suspected that you weren't his child."

For several seconds, Cadel didn't understand what Thaddeus had just said. It was the psychologist's taut expression that caused him to backtrack—to review the words that he had, at first, ignored.

Darkkon might have suspected that you weren't his child.

What was that supposed to mean?

"Huh?" he said, gaping like a fish.

"It's time you knew," Thaddeus explained quietly, his dark eyes glittering in the soft light. "You're
my
son, Cadel."

Cadel's mind went blank. He just sat there, slack-jawed. He couldn't move. He couldn't speak.

No one said anything for a long, long time.

Finally, Cadel bleated, "Wh-what?"

"You're my son." Thaddeus's pale face was flushed. "I'm your real father."

"No, you're not."

"Yes, I am. I'm sorry, but it's true. Your mother and I..." For the first time, Thaddeus faltered. He scratched his nose and looked away. "She was so sweet. So
young.
She had no idea what she was getting herself into. He treated her like a pet parakeet, and she turned to me for help..."

"No!" Cadel cawed.

"Listen—"

"You're
lying!
" Cadel felt hot. He felt ill. It was as if the whole world had turned upside down.

When Thaddeus approached him, he pulled back. So Thaddeus sat down on an upholstered armchair nearby.

"Phineas didn't trust her, you see," the psychologist continued quietly. "Even in the beginning, when she loved him, he used to lock her up. Put things in her food to make her sick, so she couldn't leave the house. He was paranoid. He thought she was bound to betray him, because she was so young and beautiful, and he was so old and ugly." Thaddeus cracked a mirthless half smile. "Well, he got his wish. He was proven right. In the end, she was so miserable that she turned to me. And then she had you. And when that happened, Phineas got tests done. DNA tests. Because he still didn't trust her." The smile died. "You're my son, Cadel. There's no doubt about it."

Cadel shook his head. "No," he mumbled.

"Phineas never found out, of course."

"No!" Cadel covered his ears. But Thaddeus leaned forward and gently undamped one of Cadel's hands.

Cadel pulled away from him.

"The irony is, while he didn't trust
her,
he trusted me wholeheartedly," the psychologist explained. "He asked me to arrange the tests. Naturally, I faked the results. He was convinced that you were his child. In the end, though, it didn't help your mother. He still destroyed her."

"This isn't true," Cadel gasped.

"I'm afraid it is. He became obsessed with the idea that she was going to leave him, so he had her killed." Thaddeus took off his glasses and wearily rubbed his eyes. "If I'd known what he was planning, I would have stopped it, of course. But he arranged it himself. Pretended that she'd left him. I think he was ashamed to admit what he'd done, even to me."

"But—"

"I know what I told you," Thaddeus interrupted, replacing his glasses in order to peer intently into Cadel's face. "I told you I'd caught up with the culprits. Well, I did. And I had my revenge. What Darkkon doesn't realize is that I traced your mother's killers back to him. He doesn't know that I know."

Cadel swallowed. His hands dropped slowly from his ears to his knees. He couldn't have been more dazed if Thaddeus had hit him on the head with a truncheon. Nothing made sense anymore.
Everything
was a lie.

What if Thaddeus was lying to him even now?

"You might be asking yourself: Why didn't I revenge myself on Darkkon as well?" Thaddeus went on, still watching Cadel intently. "The answer is that I did. I was the source of the anonymous tip that landed him in jail. If I'd had him killed, the whole empire would have broken up, because at that stage
he
was in control—not me. Without him, everyone would have been at each other's throats, fighting over the spoils. I wouldn't have been able to stop it, because I didn't know who everyone was, or what they were doing. That can't happen anymore. Even if Darkkon dies, it won't matter, because I have it all in hand now. I'm running this operation, Cadel. He thinks I'm doing it for him. But I'm doing it for
you.
"

Cadel found that he was staring at Thaddeus. He couldn't help himself. The psychologist's voice, always smooth and reassuring, had a hypnotic effect.

"You're his heir, Cadel, and he's dying." Thaddeus placed a hand on Cadel's. "He has cancer. He hasn't told you—he hasn't told
me
—because he thinks he'll beat it, but he won't. He's an old man. A very old man. When he dies, you'll get everything. Which won't mean much, unless you have me to help you. I know every tax shelter and shell company and payoff recipient in this whole empire. Without me, it would fall apart. You'd never keep it together by yourself—not yet. If we pool our resources, we can go further than Darkkon ever did."

The crispness of Thaddeus's tone dispersed the fog in Cadel's head. He began to think again. He realized that he was in a very, very dangerous position. One wrong move, one wrong word, and he might cause offense.

Thaddeus seemed to be offering him ... what? The keys to the kingdom? Cadel didn't want the kingdom. It would mean more skulking around. More endless surveillance. More Thaddeus, watching his every move.

He just wanted to be free.

Thaddeus misread his hesitation.

"I'll be honest with you, Cadel—this wasn't only for your sake. It was for mine, as well," he admitted, squeezing Cadel's hand tightly. "GenoME won't move without Darkkon's say-so. Neither will any of the franchises. When you succeed him, however, they'll obey you. They'll have to, as long as I'm backing you up. It's not going to work without both of us. I knew that from the beginning. There was a certain amount of self-interest involved." Thaddeus gave a short, shaky laugh. "Frankly, I always knew that Darkkon would dig his own grave. He's mad, you see. Brilliant, but mad. All these insane plans for the future of the world. I mean, it's delusional. I always knew that if I positioned myself properly, I'd be able to take over when he finally dropped out of the race. It was just a matter of ... well, making myself indispensable."

Cadel gazed at Thaddeus with blank eyes. Something about his grave expression caused Thaddeus discomfort. After shifting in his seat, the psychologist suddenly launched himself out of it, releasing Cadel's hand and pacing the floor. Cadel had never seen him so disturbed.

"If you want proof," the psychologist said, dragging his fingers through his hair, "you're welcome to it. You can arrange your own paternity test. Pick a firm out of the phone book—I don't mind. I'd be delighted. I
want
you to know. I want you to convince yourself that I'm your father." He stopped abruptly and clutched the back of the armchair with both hands. "Darkkon could never have produced something like you," he insisted, with subdued fierceness. "All his crazy ideas have left him muddleheaded. You're not like that. You're a clear thinker. Logical. You don't let yourself get distracted by emotional commitments to idiotic worldviews. You're like me, only greater. A miracle. I might have made a difference, in my time, but
you
are my crowning achievement."

Cadel dropped his gaze, unnerved to have caught a glimpse of Thaddeus's heart. The glimpse left him shaken. All at once, he realized that he was being told the truth. Thaddeus
was
his father. It was written all over the psychologist's hawklike features.

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