“You never explained exactly why Lillian Dewhurst took off on that long voyage,” Sam said.
“Oh, right. I got sidetracked, didn’t I?” Maggie winced. “Sorry about that. Lillian had trouble with nightmares that caused her to walk in her sleep. I advised her to get rid of a certain object in her bedroom that was casting a bad shadow. She did as I suggested and was able to use her natural lucid dreaming talent to rewrite the scripts of her dreams. When the nightmares stopped, so did the sleepwalking.”
“She was afraid to get on board a ship because she might walk in her sleep?” Sam asked.
“She wasn’t just alarmed by the possibility of waking up in a public place wearing her nightgown,” Maggie said, “although that would have been bad enough. Lillian was terrified she would go overboard in her sleep and drown. I think something about the object that was giving her nightmares was linked to water.”
“You’re saying that once she was confident she wouldn’t walk overboard, she felt free to book the voyage?”
“Right,” Maggie said. “I told you that you probably wouldn’t believe me.”
“Huh.”
“Changing your mind?” She gave him a thin smile. “Worried I might be delusional after all?”
“No, just contemplating the power of suggestion.”
“You think I somehow hypnotized Lillian into believing she was cured?”
“Doesn’t matter. If it worked, it worked. Let’s get back to the case.” Sam leaned forward and folded his arms on the table. “Here’s what we’ve got. We don’t know if Beverly Nevins was the blackmailer or one of the victims, but we do know that she is dead under circumstances that are strikingly similar to the Virginia Jennaway death.”
Startled, Maggie frowned. “I’m not sure I agree with you.”
“Somehow that does not come as a surprise.”
She pretended she hadn’t heard him. “It’s true they are both dead and they both appear to have had a link to other people who are interested in dream analysis, but beyond that, their deaths are not all that similar. Jennaway drowned. The verdict on Nevins looks like natural causes or accidental overdose. She certainly did not drown.”
“Jennaway’s death was ruled accidental, but there were rumors of a possible overdose,” Sam pointed out.
Maggie thought about it. “True.”
“The details vary but the result is the same. Two women are dead. Both had links to groups that study dreams, and there were rumors of an overdose in each case.”
Maggie got the unpleasant icy-hot frisson that one gets when one narrowly avoids a close brush with disaster.
“There’s another constant in this case,” she said quietly. “The Traveler.”
Sam’s eyes tightened. “You’re talking about that old legend you mentioned when you hired me?”
“Yes. I told you the Traveler supposedly murders people by invading their dreams.”
“Such a murder, if it were possible, would leave no evidence of foul play.”
“Like an overdose,” she pointed out.
“I’m not buying the possibility of murder by supernatural means.”
She raised her eyes toward the ceiling. “Of course not.”
“I can, however, go for the theory that the killer used the legend of the Traveler to stage a death that looked as if it had been caused by astral projection. It’s an interesting idea. The murderer would have to be someone very familiar with the tale.”
Encouraged, she gave that some thought. “My friend Prudence Ryland works in a research library that is dedicated to the study of the paranormal, including dreams. She’s an expert on legends. If you think it might help, I’ll telephone her in the morning and ask her to find out what she can about the Traveler.”
“That might be useful.”
At least he wasn’t dismissing her suggestion out of hand. She lowered her voice. “Meanwhile, you’re going to do something illegal, aren’t you?”
“Only sort of illegal.”
Chapter 16
Margaret Smith was attending the conference.
No, her name was Lodge. Margaret Lodge. Not Smith. It didn’t matter. She was here, and he had recognized her immediately.
Emerson Oxlade could scarcely suppress the feverish excitement that threatened to consume him. He loosened his tie and gulped some of the whiskey he had poured for himself. He was dazzled by his good fortune. He had literally dreamed of finding Smith-Lodge again, and now his dream had come true.
He had been afraid he had lost her forever when she had suffered the attack of hysteria and stormed out of his office. He had dared to hope she would show up at the conference—after all, she was an astonishingly talented lucid dreamer, and the Guilfoyle Method was focused on lucid dreaming. There had been a chance she would buy a ticket, but no guarantee. He had known it was a long shot, yet here she was.
It was as if he had willed her to attend through the power of his own dreaming. After he had spent all these months searching for her, she was finally within reach again.
He opened the windowed doors of the guest villa and went out onto the front steps. He was too restless to sleep, torn between excitement and dread. There was so much at stake. He had sensed from that first meeting in his office that Lodge was the key to the success of his life’s work. Now the Guilfoyles had the power to give her to him. Tonight he had made it clear she had to be part of the arrangement. They were not pleased, but he intended to stand firm.
It wouldn’t be difficult to manage the Guilfoyles. He had learned everything he needed to know to manipulate them when he had met them all those years ago.
Admittedly, the realization that Lodge was attending the conference in the company of a man had come as a jolt. Sam Sage did not look like a scholarly research assistant—there was nothing bookish about him. Sage was in the way. He posed a problem, but surely not an insurmountable one.
Oxlade swallowed some more whiskey and considered the death of the Nevins woman. It was obvious the discovery of the body had alarmed the Guilfoyles. They were worried about the image of the Institute. That made three of them.
Yes, Arthur Guilfoyle had some lucid dreaming talent, and the enhancer had allowed him to access some of his latent psychic talent, but that didn’t change the fact that he and his wife were con artists. They didn’t care about the astonishing potential of his drug. They wanted to use it to make a great deal of money.
But when it came to lucid dreamers, Margaret Lodge put Arthur Guilfoyle in the shade. Oxlade’s euphoria spiked. Lodge was the one who would make him famous and cement his reputation as a true genius. He would be known worldwide as the brilliant scientist who could unlock psychic doorways.
Chapter 17
Sam peeled off the evening jacket, removed his shoes, and loosened his tie. He stretched out on the bed to try to catch a few hours of sleep and set his mental alarm clock for three in the morning. Hotel hallways were quiet at that hour, and the hotel dick would most likely be napping or reading the paper.
He needed sleep—he hadn’t been sleeping well for a while now—but he lay awake for some time, thinking about Maggie on the other side of the connecting door. Her fascination with dreams and metaphysics probably ought to worry him. Maybe the fact that it didn’t was what should alarm him.
But what really concerned him were two dead women and the obsession in Dr. Emerson Oxlade’s eyes.
After a while he drifted off . . .
. . . and woke with the realization that he needed to do something important. He sat up on the side of the bed, turned on the lamp, and checked his watch. Five minutes to three.
He pushed himself to his feet and paused for a moment to contemplate the rumpled bed. He had slept more solidly in the past few hours than he had for a long time. There had been no disturbing dreams involving a madman trying to crush his skull with a coatrack.
Interesting.
* * *