Well, Ally thought, I wouldn't mind having Mom's mind restored. Or my own heart, for that matter.
All in all, Karl Van de Vliet was clearly a genius. He also was a very complex man. But might he be a very gifted huckster as well?
The inside back cover had a group photo, showing him surrounded by members of his research staff, all in white lab coats. There were two men and two women and each was identified, along with a list of his or her academic credentials. They were standing on the porch of what appeared to be a nineteenth‑century mansion, which had large Doric columns in Greek Revival style. The lettering in the marble above their heads read the dorian institute.
She put down the folder and went into the kitchen and poured herself another glass of wine, finishing off the botde. Her mind was chinning, but not because of the words on the page. It was that photograph at the back. It was dated less than two years ago.
His Ph.D. at the University of Chicago was granted in 1962. But even if he was a genius and got his first doctorate in his early twenties, he’d still have to be—what? At least sixty years old by now. Probably halfway to seventy.
But in the photo, he looks no more than forty, well, forty‑five at most. What the heck is going on?
She went back into the living room and picked up the brochure and stared at it. He had sandy hair that lay like a mane above his elongated brow. He was tall and gaunt, with high cheeks and deep, penetrating eyes. But no matter how you gauged him, the guy hadn't aged a day since his forty‑fifth birthday, tops.
So what’s going on that isn't in the package?
She checked the digital clock on the side table—the hour was pushing ten—and decided to give Grant a call.
Three chirps, and then, "Yo. Hampton here."