KLAUS THE KILLER
The cell of Dr. Klaus Krieger was fairly large, and its interior was more polished and clean in comparison to the other tenants. At the far left of the room was a well-made bed. Ahead of it was a bookcase. Through her bifocals, Eva noted that the good doctor, who sat with his back facing them at a desk at the center of the room, was an avid reader. The shelf was predominantly philosophy, Darwin, and psychology.
Smart fellow, she thought. There was also a small restroom that he could walk into, and a closet, possibly containing a wardrobe. Eva noted the door inside the cell. The rectangular slit was open, allowing any guards beyond it to peer in. Security cameras, possibly relics from a bygone age, were frozen and scattered about the corridor.
The boy beyond the glass took a deep breath, inhaled and exhaled slowly.
“
You’ve been drinking again, Dr. Elliot,” Krieger said.
“Yeah, well, shit happens. Doesn’t it?” Holden’s wit was there, but with it came a hint of caution.
“
Indeed.” Krieger’s accent was subtle, a far cry from the cast of
Hogan’s Heroes. It had a mechanical rasp to it, possibly due to a combination of the glass barrier and something more alien. Something darker. Krieger spun around in his chair, and was now facing Eva and Holden. To Eva, Klaus Krieger was a rare creature. He had boyish blonde hair, akin to that Bieber kid who was surely in rehab by now. He was thin and delicate, but he nonetheless seemed to possess strength, as indicated by his sleek muscle tone. He was wearing, much to her surprise, a buttoned-down white shirt, and tan slacks. His feet, sans socks, were enveloped in slippers. Most of all, the face was the part of his body that caught the most attention. Underneath the blonde bangs were a pair of bifocals. On the other side of the right lens was an eyepatch, and through the left was a narrow gray eye that was looking at
her. “
You must be Evangeline.”
“Call me Eva,” she said, adjusting her own bifocals.
“
There is a crack in one of those lenses.”
“How could you--?” Eva was stunned. Despite having no depth perception, Krieger seemed to have really good eyesight. He smiled with closed lips. She put the glasses in her pocket. “You don’t mind if I take these off, do you? I’m nearsighted.”
“
Of course not. You are close enough, aren’t you?”
“I guess,” Eva replied. “What are you reading?”
“
An old favorite, Shaw’s Pygmalion. I haven’t read it in ages, so I felt I should do myself a favor and reintroduce myself to its contents. I’m currently on the first act,” Krieger said.
Eva said, “I never could get into plays, especially ones over at my high school.”
“
High school, yes… Los Angeles Central, I presume.”
“It’s the best place she can go, with the money I make,” Holden said. “Adaptation is key to survival, as you know.”
“My father here showed me your article on shared psychosis last night,” Eva said.
“
Annnnnd…?” Krieger inquired, fingers locked. His head was tilted slightly downward, his lone gray eye peeking over the top of his glasses.
“I was just bringing it up,” Eva responded.
“
What is your opinion of it?”
“I thought it was very insightful. You’re definitely wise beyond your years.”
“
Believe me, Ms. Elliot, when I say that I receive a lot of commendations. They are mostly from pretentious lads looking for a means of vindication in their studies. Speaking of pretentiousness, what is your impression of Jonathan Jordache? That smirk of his is pestilential, isn’t it?” His gray eye was wide open now, and his lips opened to reveal perfectly straight white teeth.
Eva looked at Holden, and then surveyed her surroundings. Jordache was almost certainly watching all of this unfold. “Just between the three of us,” Eva said, “I think he’s an asshole.” She had put her hand over her mouth to prevent any savvy lip-reader from catching her in the act. Holden chuckled at her choice of words.
“
To be frank, I agree with you, Ms. Elliot.”
“You understand why I’m here, right, Doctor Krieger?”
“
Yes. Catharsis.” Krieger slid a finger underneath his eyepatch, rubbing whatever was underneath. “
Tell me, Ms. Elliot… what do you know about my little science project? Consider this a pop quiz. I assume you have done your homework.”
“Well,” Eva said, “it’s a combination of genetic and psychological therapy, in layman’s terms. After a solid profile of the subject is made, they’re given a retrovirus somehow that alters their biology to their specifications. It’s kind of slow, so they’re usually placed in a chamber of liquid, maybe something rich with nutrients. While inside, the liquid is charged with a non-lethal electric current, just enough for the cell membranes to accept the new characteristics.”
Krieger made an impressed hum sound. “
Go on.”
Eva continued. “After that, the subject moves on to the final stage. That’s where you come in. Unfortunately.”
“
Unfortunately? How so?”
“You’re a psychopath.”
“
That’s a rather cynical perspective towards the situation, Eva.”
“I have my reasons.”
“
What reasons?”
“The things you’ve done,” Eva said.
“
Does that folder contain what I need?” Krieger asked, changing the subject.
“More than enough,” Eva replied. “Psychiatric history, evaluations, you name it. There are some sketches of myself in there, too, if you’re interested.”
“
Artistic, aren’t you?”
“Sort of.”
“
So am I, on occasion. I have gotten used to utilizing Sharpies during my internment here. Like your father said, adaptation is key. My art consists predominantly of recreations of historical events. Very recently, the staff did not particularly warm to my interpretation of Harris and Klebold walking about that Columbine cafeteria, ready for war. For up to a month, I’ve been desperate for a means of creativity. Without a means to create, there is nothingness, which is quite an ugly thing. Wouldn’t you agree, Eva?”
“Wholeheartedly,” Eva said calmly.
“
Go on, Eva. Send it through.”
“I don’t think that’s such a good idea, Klaus,” Holden said. He began to rise from his seat.
“
Oh, n-n-n-n-n-noooooo… let the young lady do the honors, Dr. Elliot.” Rising from his chair, Krieger walked over to the tray, and gave it a quick tap, sending it shooting through to the other side. He crouched and smiled in anticipation.
Reluctant, but not afraid, Eva rose from her seat, placing the dossier within the tray. The tray suddenly snapped back inside, startling Eva. She’d managed to get her hand out before it slammed.
Eva noticed that Krieger’s face had spontaneously shifted in demeanor; he abandoned any trace of joviality, and it was replaced with a robotic stare. As he undid the rubber bands protecting the folder, she looked at her father, still sitting in the chair next to hers. His arms were crossed, his eyes focused on the freak of nature behind the glass. Holden had this look on his face that Eva liked to describe as his “magnifying glass stare”. It was a mixture of coldness, interest, and subdued curiosity.
Eva sat back down, and saw that Krieger was sitting cross-legged on the floor of the cell, flipping through the dossier as though it were part of his collection. He dampened the tips of his index and pointer fingers to provide for easier page-turning, and held the ones he had already glanced over down with his left thumb.
Eva leaned to her right, towards Holden. “How can he take in all of that material in such a short amount of time?” Eva’s voice was soft, almost a whisper. She did not want to disturb Krieger’s reading.
He seems courteous enough, she thought.
“This isn’t anything new. When he was six, he memorized
Othello, word for word. No joke,” Holden said. “It took him
one reading.”
One reading? The guy’s a goddamn machine...
###
Moments passed, and eventually, Klaus Krieger came to the end of the dossier, where the sketches were. His eye immediately widened. “Oh, my, my, my…” He slid the three sheets out, holding them like playing cards. He turned them to Eva and Holden, and the former’s cheeks reddened when she found herself looking at a much better girl.
Whenever Holden wasn’t looking, Eva had a habit of looking at herself in the bathroom mirror. On occasion, she would undress and do nothing but stare at the thing looking at her. It was a bad caricature of a girl that used to be better. She wasn’t the greatest artist, but something about the portraits appealed to Krieger, as evidenced by his satisfaction. She doubted it was the nude form of her ideal self.
Krieger is a weirdo, but he isn’t that low, she thought.
“Do you like the portraits?” Eva asked.
“
Definitely,” Krieger replied. He placed the sketches back into the folder. “
From what I have accumulated from the documents, you appear to be a valid candidate. How I’d love to see you in that chair again and again.”
“Nice of you to say,” Holden said. He hadn’t said much during the entire visit.
“There’s some bonuses to all of this, Dr. Krieger,” Eva said. “I thought you’d enjoy the challenge. You strike me as a very intellectual young man. Also, I’m interested in Catharsis on its own merits.”
“
You walk over to my posh little cell here, giving me your sweeping saga of misfortune through that tray, and then you awkwardly segue into your cheap ‘bonuses’. I find that very tacky, Eva.”
“I’m terribly sorry! I…” Eva began.
“
You’re very pale and thin, Eva. Your eyes are quite large. Your mask of normality, like your bifocals, has cracks. Your truly appalling fashion sense, reminiscent of a fifties school yet to ripen, indicates that you consider yourself distinct from your peers at L.A. Central, and yet, at the same time, you wish to blend in with the crowds; an old, broken vinyl record amongst MP3 players and social media addicts who spends her days mentally masturbating to delusions of a fairy godmother coming into your life and improving it. That fairy godmother, that opportunity, has now come, but with a catch: it is your choice, and still, you are hesitant to seize the moment. Hedgehog’s dilemma: to come out or not to come out. You are a hedgehog if I ever saw one, Eva. What a tragedy.” Krieger’s mouth bared its small, edgy white teeth when he finished, his left eye at its widest.
Eva let out a nervous chuckle. “I’m impressed, Doctor. You possess a lot of insight. Reading psychology has done you good.” Eva had noticed that throughout the conversation, she had gradually begun to mimic the speech patterns of Krieger.
Holy shit, it’s like looking in a mirror, Eva thought. “I’ll tell you what, Dr. Krieger. I’ll, uhm, take some time to consider the offer, and I’ll, uhm, let you know what I think.”
Without a word, Krieger placed the folder inside the tray, and shoved it out. “
You are a very resilient girl, Eva. I like that in a young woman. I do have one question that I am dreadfully tempted to ask.”
“And that is?” Eva asked.
Krieger tilted forward. “
What does it feel like to be alone?”
###
Eva and Holden stepped out of an elevator and into the parking garage of Babel Tower. The Oldsmobile was close by. She felt violated, used. She felt as though the password to her sense of security had been cracked, and the information within was now downloaded into Krieger’s brain. It wasn’t a spectacularly comforting concept.
“Dad, I feel sick.”
“Krieger’s the kind of lad you don’t want to get in your head. Just to hold a conversation with him, you have to play his games.”
“If that’s the case, I fail to see the point in volunteering for this project.”
The two reached the Oldsmobile, and got in.
“You want me to be happy, don’t you?” Eva asked.
Holden sighed. “Yes, Eve. I really do, and I mean that. I’m not fucking with you at all.”
Eva made no response to her father’s sudden use of the f-bomb.
“Sorry,” Holden said. He turned the key to the ignition, and the Oldsmobile left the parking garage.