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QUANTUM NIGHT
by Robert J. Sawyer
Opening Chapters
Copyright © 2016 by Robert J. Sawyer. All Rights Reserved.
It may be a requirement for a theory of consciousness that it contains at least one crazy idea. —David Chalmers
Chapter 1
Several of my colleagues in the University of Manitoba's
psychology department considered teaching to be a nuisance —
"the ineluctable evil," as Menno Warkentin used to call it,
resenting the time it took away from his research — but I
loved it. Oh, maybe not as much as I loved bananas, or binge-
watching old episodes of Curb Your Enthusiasm or
Arrested Development, or photographing globular clusters with
my telescope, but as far as things that people would actually pay
me to do are concerned, it was right up there.
Granted, teaching first-year classes could be overwhelming:
vast halls filled with stagnant air and row after row of angst-
soaked teenagers. Although my own freshman year had been two
decades ago, I vividly remembered signing up to take introductory
psych in hopes of making sense of the bewildering mélange
of anxiety and longing that swirled then — and pretty much
now, too — within me. Cogito ergo sum? More
like sollicito ergo sum — I fret, therefore I am.
But on this gray morning, I was teaching The Neuroscience of
Morality, a third-year class with fewer students than February
had days — and that allowed for not just lecturing but
dialog.
Last session, we'd had a spirited discussion about Watson and
Skinner, focusing on their notion that humans were nothing more
than stimulus-response machines whose black-box brains simply
spit out predictable reactions to inputs. But today, instead of
continuing to demolish behaviorism, I felt compelled to take a
dark detour, using the ceiling-mounted projector to show the
Savannah Prison photos WikiLeaks had made public over the
weekend.
Some were individual frames from security-camera video, the
guards caught unawares from on high. Although what those
depicted was brutal, they weren't the most disturbing images.
No, the really disquieting ones — the ones that knotted your
stomach, that made you avert your eyes, that you just couldn't
fucking believe — were the posed photos: the picture
of the officer with her boot on a prisoner's back while she gave
a jaunty thumbs-up to whatever asshole was holding the iPhone;
the still of the two uniformed men tossing a naked, emaciated
prisoner so hard against the ceiling that his skull, as x-rays
would later show, had fractured in three places; the snapshot of
the mustachioed sergeant straddling a downed man while defecating
on his chest, one hand clamped over the inmate's mouth, the other
flashing a peace sign, the image then having been run through
Instagram to make it look like an old-fashioned Polaroid, white
frame and all.
My stomach roiled as I stepped through the slides, one
atrocity giving way to the next. It was now sixteen years after
Abu Ghraib, for God's sake, and a half century since Philip
Zimbardo's Stanford Prison experiment. Not only were guards
supposed to be trained about situational pressures and how to
avoid succumbing to them, but two of those shown in the photos
were studying to be wardens. They knew about Zimbardo; they were
aware of Stanley Milgram's shock-machine obedience-to-authority
experiments; they'd read summaries of the Taguba Report on the
Abu Ghraib atrocities.
And yet, despite being specifically taught to recognize and
avoid the pitfalls — a word that at first seemed innocuous
but, if one reflected upon it, suggested tumbling into the abyss,
following Lucifer into the very fires of hell — each of
these men and women had dehumanized the perceived enemy, and, in
the process, had lost their own humanity.
"All right," I said to the shocked faces of my students.
"What can we take from all this? Anyone?"
The first hand that went up belonged to Ashton, who still had
acne and hadn't yet learned that it was permissible to trim a
beard. I pointed at him. "Yes?"
He spread his arms as if the truth were self-evident.
"Simple," he said, and he flicked his head toward the screen
behind me, which I'd left on the last slide, the one showing a
gangly guard named Devin Becker killing a naked prisoner by
holding his head under water in a jail-cell sink. "You can't
change human nature."
The call had come just about a year ago. "Hello?" I'd said
into the black handset of my office phone.
"Professor James Marchuk?"
I swung my feet up on my reddish-brown desk and leaned back.
"Speaking."
"My name is Juan Garcia. I'm part of the defense team for
Devin Becker, one of the Savannah Prison guards."
I thought about saying, "Well, you've got your work cut out
for you," but instead simply prodded him to go on. "Yes?"
"My firm would like to engage you as an expert witness in
Mr. Becker's trial. The prosecution is seeking the death
penalty. We're likely to lose on the facts — the
security-camera video is damning as hell — but we can at
least keep Becker from being executed if we get the jury to agree
that he couldn't help himself."
I frowned. "And you think he couldn't because ...?"
"Because he's a psychopath. You said it in your blog entry
on Leopold and Loeb: you can't execute someone for being who they
are."
I nodded although Garcia couldn't see it. In 1924, two
wealthy university students, Nathan Leopold and Richard Loeb, had
killed a boy just for kicks. Leopold considered himself and Loeb
to be exemplars of Nietzsche's Übermenschen and thus
exempt from laws governing ordinary men. Supermen they weren't,
but psychopaths they surely were. Their parents engaged none
other than Clarence Darrow to represent them. In a stunning
twelve-hour-long closing argument, Darrow made the same defense
Garcia was apparently now contemplating: claiming Becker couldn't
be executed for doing what his nature dictated he do.
I took my feet off the desk and leaned forward. "And is
Becker a psychopath?" I asked.
"That's the problem, Professor Marchuk," said Garcia. "The
D.A. had a Hare assessment done, which scored Becker at seventeen
— way below what's required for psychopathy. But we think
their assessor is wrong; our guy squeaks him into psychopathy
with a score of thirty-one. And, well, with your new procedure,
we can prove to the jury that our score is the right one."
"You know my test has never been accepted in a court of
law?"
"I'm aware of that, Professor. I'm also aware that no one
has even tried to introduce it into evidence yet. But I've got
your paper in Nature Neuroscience right here. That it was
published in such a prestigious, peer-reviewed journal gets our
foot in the door; Georgia follows the Daubert standard for
admissibility. But we need you — you personally, the lead
author on the paper — to use your technique on Becker and
testify about the results if we've got any chance of having the
court accept the evidence."
"What if I show that Becker isn't a psychopath?"
"Then we'll still pay you for your time."
"And bury the results?"
"Professor, we're confident of the outcome."
It sounded worthwhile — but so was what I did here. "I
have a busy teaching schedule, and —"
"I know you do, Professor. In fact, I'm looking at it right
now on your university's website. But the trial probably won't
come up until you're on summer break, and, frankly, this is a
chance to make a difference. I've read your Reasonably
Moral blog. You're against the death penalty; well, here's a
chance to help prevent someone from being executed."
My computer happened to be displaying the lesson plan for
that afternoon's moral-psych class, in which I was planning to
cite the study of Princeton seminary students who, while rushing
to give a presentation on the parable of the Good Samaritan,
passed by a man slumped over in an alleyway, ignoring him because
they were in a hurry.
Practice what you teach, I always say. "All right. Count
me in."
Shortly after I came off the Jetway into the international
terminal at Hartsfield-Jackson Airport, I went into a little shop
to buy a bottle of Coke Zero — here, in Atlanta,
headquarters of Coca-Cola, there was no sign of Pepsi anywhere.
Without thinking, I handed the woman at the cash register a
Canadian five.
"What's this?" she said, taking it.
"Oh! Sorry." I dug into my wallet — I always have to
carefully look at US bills to make sure of the denomination,
since they're all the same color — and found one with Abe
Lincoln's face on it.
There was no one else waiting to buy anything, and the woman
seemed intrigued by the blue polymer banknote I'd handed her.
After examining it carefully, she looked up at me, and said,
"There's no mention of God. Ain't you a God-fearing country up
there?"
"Um, well, ah, we believe in the separation of church and
state."
She handed the bill back to me. "Honey," she said, "there
ain't no such thing." She frowned, as if recalling something.
"Y'all are socialists up there, right?"
Actually, until recently, Canada had had a much more
conservative leader than the United States did. When Stephen
Harper came to office in 2006, George W. Bush had been in the
White House and, to liberal Canadian sensibilities — the
kind found on university campuses — he seemed the lesser of
two evils. But once Barack Obama was elected, Canada had by far
the more right-wing leader. Harper managed to hold on to power
for almost a decade, but Canada was now ruled by the Liberal
Party.
"Kind of," I said, although I suspected her understanding of
the term "socialism" was different from mine. I handed her the
American five, got my Canadian bill back plus my change, took my
pop, or soda, or whatever it was here.
This was my first time flying in the States since Quinton
Carroway had been sworn in as president, and I was surprised to
hear that the constant warnings about terrorist threats over the
public-address system were back; they'd disappeared under Obama
but had returned with a vengeance. The old wording had invari
ably been, "The Homeland Security threat level is orange" —
which was only semi-effective propaganda because you had to have
memorized the code to know that orange was the new black —
the thing white folk were supposed to fear most — being one
step shy of an imminent attack. The new message, which played
every three minutes or so, was much more direct, and, unless I
missed my guess, the voice was the president's own distinctive
baritone: "Be on guard! A terrorist attack can occur at any
time."
And speaking of propaganda, despite Atlanta also being home
to CNN, Fox News was on the big-screen TV hanging down like a
steam-shovel scoop from the ceiling as I arrived at baggage
claim. Orwell had been right that mind-controlling messages
would be pumped twenty-four hours a day through telescreens, and
he'd have recognized the ones in the airport with no way to turn
them off. What would have astounded him is that many millions of
people would voluntarily tune into them in their own homes, often
for hours on end.
I recognized Megyn Kelly although I usually only saw her in
unflattering clips on The Daily Show. "Look," she said,
"it is a fact that this guy was in our country illegally."
"And for that he should have died?" said a man —
clearly the day's sacrificial liberal lamb.
"I'm not saying that," said Kelly. "Obviously, what these
three men did was not the way to handle it."
"No?" said the man. "What they did was exactly what
Governor McCharles intended, isn't it?"
"Oh, come on!" snapped the other woman on the panel. "The
Texas governor simply meant —"
"The whole point of the McCharles Act," said the man, "was
to provoke attacks like this. Redefining homicide as the killing
of a legal resident! What is that, except a
wink-and-a-nod to every yahoo out there that the cops will look
the other way if an undocumented immigrant turns up dead?"
"The point," said the same woman, "was merely that these
illegal aliens can't flout the law and then expect to be
protected by it."
"For God's sake!" said the man, who was getting red in the
face. "McCharles is setting things up for a pogrom!"
I grabbed my bag, then headed off to find a taxi, grateful
to be leaving the arguing panelists behind.
I beheld the monster.
One of them, anyway. There were six according to the
indictments; nine, if you believed the Huffington Post,
which argued that three other corrections officers who should
also have been charged had gotten off scot-free. But this one,
everyone agreed, had been the ringleader: Devin Becker was the
man who had incited the other guards — and he was the only
one who had actually killed somebody.
"Thirty minutes," said a burly sergeant as Becker folded his
lanky form onto the metal seat. The irony wasn't lost on me:
Becker himself was now in the care of a prison guard. Quis
custodiet ipsos custodes? Who indeed watches the watchers?
Becker had high cheekbones, and the weight he'd lost since
the notorious video had been recorded made them even more promi
nent. That the skin pulled taut across them was bone white only
added to the ghastly appearance; put a black hood over his head
and he could have played chess for a man's soul. "Who are you?"
he asked, a slight drawl protracting his words.
"Jim Marchuk. I'm a psychologist at the University of
Manitoba, in Winnipeg."
Becker curled his upper lip. "I don't wanna be part of any
damn experiment."
I thought about saying, "You already have been." I thought
about saying, "The experiment has been done time and again, and
this is just another pointless replication." I even thought
about saying, "If only this were an experiment, we could pull the
plug on it, just like Zimbardo finally did at Stanford." But
what I actually said was, "I'm not here to conduct an experiment.
I'm going to be an expert witness at your trial."
"For the defense or the prosecution?"
"The defense."
Becker relaxed somewhat, but his tone was suspicious. "I
can't afford fancy experts."
"Your father is paying, I'm told."
"My father." He sneered the words.
"What?"
"If he really cared, it'd be him, not you, sitting there."
"He hasn't come to see you?"
Becker shook his head.
"Has any of your family?"
"My sis. Once."
"Ah," I said.
"They're ashamed."
Those words hung in the air for a moment. The New York
Times front-page article about the Savannah Prison guards had
been headlined "America's Shame."
"Well," I said gently, "perhaps we can convince them not to
be."
"With psychological bullshit?" He made a "pffft!" sound
through thin lips.
"With the truth."
"The truth is my own lawyer says I'm a psychopath. Norman
Fucking Bates." He shook his head. "What the hell kind of
defense is that, anyway? Y'all must be out of your minds."
I didn't have much sympathy for this guy; what he'd done was
horrific. But I am a teacher: ask me a question, and I'm
compelled to answer — that's my nature. "You killed
someone in cold blood, and the court would normally call that
first-degree murder, right? But suppose an MRI showed you had a
brain tumor that affected your behavior. The jury might be
inclined to say you couldn't help yourself and let you off. You
don't have a tumor, but my research shows that psychopathy
is just as much a clear-cut physical condition, and should
likewise mitigate responsibility."
"Huh," he said. "And do you think I'm a psycho?"
"I honestly don't know," I replied, placing my briefcase on
the wooden table and snapping the clasps open. "So let's find
out."
"Professor Marchuk, were you present when my learned
opponent, the District Attorney, introduced one of her expert
witnesses, psychiatrist Samantha Goldsmith?"
I tried to sound calm but, man, this was nerve-wracking.
Oh, sure, I was used to the Socratic method in academic settings,
but here, in this sweltering courtroom, a person's life was on
the line. I leaned forward. "Yes, I was."
Juan Garcia's chin jutted like the cattle catcher on a
locomotive. "Sitting there, in the third row, weren't you?"
"That's right."
"Do you recall Dr. Goldsmith giving a clinical opinion of
the defendant, Devin Becker?"
"I do."
"And what was her diagnosis?"
"She contended that Mr. Becker is not a psychopath."
"And did Dr. Goldsmith explain the technique by which she
arrived at that conclusion?"
I nodded. "Yes, she did."
"Are you familiar with the technique she used?"
"Intimately. I'm certified in administering it myself."
Juan had a way of moving his head that reminded me of a
hawk, pivoting instantly from looking this way to that way; he
was now regarding the jury. "Perhaps you can refresh the
memories of these good men and women, then. What technique did
Dr. Goldsmith employ?"
"The Hare Psychopathy Checklist, Revised," I said.
"Commonly called ‘the Hare Checklist,’ or ‘the PCL-R,’
correct?"
"That's right."
A quick pivot back toward me. "And, before we go further,
again, just to remind us, a psychopath is ...?"
"An individual devoid of empathy and conscience, a person
who doesn't feel for other people — someone who only cares
about his or her own self-interest."
"And the Hare Checklist? Refresh the jury on that, please."
"Robert Hare identified twenty characteristics that define a
psychopath — everything from glibness and superficial charm
to promiscuity and lack of remorse."
"And, again, remind us: to be a psychopath, do you need to
exhibit all twenty of the traits he identified?"
I shook my head. "No. There's a numerical scoring system."
"The subject fills out a form?"
"No, no. A person specially trained in Professor Hare's
technique conducts an interview with the subject and also reviews
police records, psychiatric reports, employment history,
education, and so on. The expert then scores the subject on each
of the twenty traits, assigning a zero if a given trait —
pathological lying, say — is not present; a one if it
matches to a certain extent — perhaps they lie all the time
in personal relationships but never in business dealings, or vice
versa; and a two if there's a reasonably good match for the trait
in most aspects of the person's life."
"And the average total score on the twenty items is?"
"For normal people? Very low: four out of a possible
maximum of forty."
"And what score do you need to be a psychopath?"
"Thirty or above."
"And do you recall the score Dr. Goldsmith assigned to the
defendant Mr. Becker?"
"I do. She gave him a seventeen."
"Professor Marchuk, were you also here in this courtroom
when we — the defense — presented an expert witness,
another psychologist, prior to bringing you to the stand?"
I nodded again. "I was."
"That psychologist, Dr. Gabor Bagi, testified that he, too,
administered the same psychopathy test to Devin Becker. Do you
recall that?"
"Yes."
"And did Dr. Bagi come up with the same score as Dr.
Goldsmith?"
"No. He gave Mr. Becker a score of thirty-one."
Juan did a good job of sounding astonished. "Thirty-one out
of forty? Whereas Dr. Goldsmith came up with seventeen?"
"Correct."
His head snapped toward the jury. "How do you account for
the discrepancy?"
"Well, although Professor Hare's checklist is supposed to be
as objective as possible, his test is prone to some inter-rater
disagreement in non-research clinical settings. But a difference
of fourteen points?" I shrugged my shoulders beneath my blue
suit. "I can't account for that."
Snapping back to me: "Still, our score of thirty-one puts
Mr. Becker over the legal line into psychopathy with room to
spare, while the score Dr. Goldsmith obtained leaves Mr. Becker
far away from being a psychopath, correct?"
"Correct."
"And, given that the State is seeking the death penalty, the
question of whether or not Mr. Becker is a clinical psychopath
— whether or not he had any volition in his behavior —
is crucial in determining his sentence, which puts the good men
and women of the jury in the unenviable, but regrettably common,
position of having to choose between conflicting expert
testimonies, isn't that so?"
"No," I said.
"I beg your pardon, Professor Marchuk?"
My heart was pounding, but I managed to keep my tone
absolutely level. "No. Dr. Goldsmith is dead wrong and Dr. Bagi
is right. Devin Becker is a psychopath, and I can prove
it — prove it beyond a shadow of a doubt."
Chapter 2
"A simple yes-or-no test for psychopathy?" Heather said as
she looked across the restaurant table at me. "Surely that's not
possible."
"Oh, but it is. And I've discovered it."
My sister was one of my favorite people, and I was one of
hers; I think we'd have been friends even if we hadn't been
related. She was forty-two, almost exactly three years older
than me, and worked as a corporate litigator in Calgary. Every
now and then her work brought her here to Winnipeg, and whenever
it did we hung out together.
"Oh, come on," she said. "Surely there's a spectrum for
psychopathy."
I shook my head. "Everyone wants everything to be on a
spectrum these days. Autism is the classic example: ‘autism
spectrum disorder.’ We have this desire for things to be analog,
to have infinite gradations. But humans fundamentally
aren't analog; life isn't analog. It's digital. Granted,
it's not base-two binary; it's base-four. Literally
base-four: the four bases — adenine, cytosine, guanine, and
thymine — that makes up the genetic code. There's nothing
analog about that, and there's nothing analog about most of the
human condition: you're either alive or dead; you either do or
don't have the genes for Alzheimer's; and you either are or
aren't a psychopath."
"Okay, fine. So how do you know? What's the binary test
for psychopathy?"
"You ever see The Silence of the Lambs?"
She nodded, honey-colored hair touching her shoulders as she
did so. "Sure. Read the book, too."
I was curious as to whether she'd picked it up after she'd
started dating Gustav. "When?" I asked offhandedly.
"The movie? When I was in law school. The book? Maybe ten
years ago."
I resisted shaking my head. Gustav had only been on the
scene for six months now, but I was sure he was a psychopath.
Not the violent sort that Thomas Harris had depicted in his novel
— psychopathy was indeed binary, but it manifested itself in
different ways; in Gustav's case, that meant narcissistic,
manipulative, and selfish behavior. A self-styled actor —
IMDb had no entry for him — he apparently lived off a
succession of professional women; my ever-kind-hearted sister, so
sharp in legal matters, seemed utterly oblivious to this. Or
maybe not: I'd attempted to broach the topic a couple of times
before, but she'd always shut me down, saying she was happy, all
right?, and I should let her be.
"Well," I said, "in the movie The Silence of the Lambs,
remember the first interview between Clarice Starling and
Hannibal Lecter? Anthony Hopkins absolutely nails one aspect of
psychopaths — at least as much as someone who actually
isn't one can. He looks right at Clarice and says" —
and here I did my best impersonation of Hopkins's cultured hiss
— "‘First principles, Clarice. Of each particular thing
ask: what is it in itself? What is its nature?’ And then, the
most memorable part, as his eyes drill into her and he says,
‘What does he do, this ... man ... you ... seek?’ Remember
that?"
Heather shuddered a little. "Oh, yes."
"Jodie Foster's response — ‘He kills women’ — is
supposed to be the chilling part, but it isn't. It's Lecter's
stare, the way he looks right at Clarice, unblinking,
unflinching. I've seen that stare in the flesh, from real
psychopaths in jails. It's the most unnerving thing about them."
"I bet," said Heather. She'd ordered mozzarella sticks as
an appetizer; I'd been out with her and Gustav and seen him veto
her choices of anything fattening. She took one of the sticks
now and dipped it in marinara sauce.
"But, you know," I said, "good as he is, Anthony Hopkins is
only simulating the psychopathic stare. He can't do it quite
right."
"How do you mean?"
"A real psychopath looks at you not just without blinking
much — although that certainly adds to the reptilian effect
— but also without performing microsaccades."
Heather had heard me talk about them before. Microsaccades
are involuntary jerks as the eyeball rotates two degrees or less;
they occur spontaneously whenever you stare at something for
several seconds. Their purpose is debated, although the most
common theory is that they cause the neurons perceiving an object
to refresh so that the image doesn't fade.
Heather's eyebrows rose above her wire-frame glasses.
"Really?"
I nodded. "Yup. The paper's coming up in Nature
Neuroscience."
"Way to go!" But then she frowned. "Why would that be,
though? What have microsaccades got to do with psychopathy?"
"I'm not sure," I admitted, "but I've demonstrated the lack
in forty-eight out of fifty test subjects, all of whom had scored
thirty-two or above on the PCL-R."
"What about the other two?"
"Not psychopaths; I'm convinced of it. And that's the
problem with the PCL-R: it's not definitive. Bob Hare got pissed
several years ago when a pop-sci book called The Psychopath
Test came out. It implied anyone could properly assess
whether their neighbors or bosses or even casual acquaintances
were psychopaths. As Hare said, it takes a week of intensive
training to be able to score his twenty variables properly, and
that's on top of formal psychological or psychiatric education.
But his test can have false positives if a clinician
miscategorizes something, or assigns a score of two when only a
one is really warranted — or if the psychopath is good at
evading detection."
"Ah," said Heather. "But, um, how do you know Anthony
Hopkins isn't a psychopath?" Her tone was light. "I mean, think
of the parts he's played — not just Hannibal Lecter but also
Alfred Hitchcock, a guy who was obsessed with making a movie
about a psycho and who had a lot of callous traits
himself. Maybe it's typecasting."
"I actually thought about that. Hopkins also played Nixon
and Captain Bligh, after all — arguably a couple of other
psychopaths."
"True."
"So I got the 4K Ultra disc of Silence of the Lambs. That
film was shot in thirty-five millimeter, and 4K scanning is
sufficient to capture all the resolution of the original film
stock; it was clear enough in the close-ups when he's staring at
Clarice to check. His eyes were indeed performing
microsaccades."
Heather smiled. "So much for Method acting."
Her mozzarella sticks looked yummy, but I couldn't have one.
"Yeah. Still, Hitler had an unnerving stare, too. He'd lock his
eyes on people and hold the gaze much longer than normal.
There's no footage of him sharp enough to show whether or not he
was doing microsaccades, but I'm sure he wasn't."
"But I still don't get the why of it," said Heather.
"What has the lack of microsaccades got to do with being a
psychopath? I mean, okay, I can see how it could account for the
stare ..."
"It's more than that," I said. "You know, a lot of the
world's most-cutting-edge work in psychopathy has been done here
in Canada ... which says something, I'm sure. Not only is Bob
Hare Canadian — he's emeritus now at UBC — but so is
Angela Book. She published a study in 2009 called ‘Psychopathic
Traits and the Perception of Victim Vulnerability.’ That study
and subsequent ones have shown that psychopaths have an almost
preternatural ability to target already wounded people.
"In one of my own experiments, I made high-resolution videos
of a group of female volunteers, some of whom had been assaulted
in the past and some of whom hadn't, milling about in a room with
some male grad students. I then showed the footage to a group of
men, asking them to pick out which females had been previously
assaulted. For normal men, the success rate was no better than
chance: they simply couldn't tell and so just guessed. But the
psychopaths averaged eighty percent correct.
"When I asked the psychopaths how they could tell, their
answers ranged from the not-very-helpful ‘it's obvious’ to the
significant ‘I can see it in their faces.’ And apparently they
could. Human faces are in constant, subtle motion,
exhibiting fleeting microexpressions that last between a
twenty-fifth and a fifteenth of a second. When a psychopath
turns on the psychopathic stare, free of microsaccades, he can
clearly see the microexpressions. In the case of the previously
abused women, an ever-so-brief look of fear might pass over their
faces when a man looks at them, and not only do the psychopaths
notice it but they gravitate toward those exhibiting such
things."
"Holy shit," said Heather.
"Yeah."
The server arrived with Heather's Cobb salad. "Go ahead," I
said.
She took a forkful. "What about sociopaths as opposed to
psychopaths?"
"Po-tay-toe, po-tah-toe. Although some clinicians —
mostly Americans, come to think of it — still try to
distinguish between the two, the DSM-5 lumps them
together. You know, much of the dialog in the movie version of
The Silence of the Lambs comes straight out of the novel,
but in the book Lecter is described as ‘a pure sociopath,’
whereas in the film, they changed it to ‘a pure psychopath.’ The
distinction, if there is one, either comes down to etiology
— those like me who prefer the term ‘psychopathy’ think the
cause is mostly a difference in the brain; those who prefer
‘sociopathy‘ think society must have shaped the person — or
down to how the condition manifests itself. Some say the classic
glib and charming but totally heartless guy — that's a
psychopath; if it's more of a regular schlub who just happens to
lack conscience and empathy, he's a sociopath. Regardless, my
technique detects them both. Still ..."
She looked at me expectantly. "Yeah?"
"You know the difference between a psychopath and a
homeopath?"
She shook her head.
"Some psychopaths do no harm."
"Ha!" She ate a forkful of salad, then, "So, how precisely
does your method work? How do you conduct the test?"
"Well, microsaccades are a fixational eye movement —
they occur only when your gaze is fixed on something. And to get
a really solid, really good track, I don't normally use film.
Rather, I use a modified set of ophthalmologist's vision-testing
goggles. I get the suspected psychopath to wear them and simply
ask him or her to stare for ten seconds at a dot displayed by the
goggles. Sensors check to see if the eyes stay rock-steady or if
they jerk a bit. If the former, the guy's a psychopath, I
guarantee it. If the latter — if the subject is
performing microsaccades — he isn't. You can't fake
microsaccades; the smallest volitional eye shift anyone can do is
much bigger. As long as the person doesn't have an eye-movement
disorder, such as congenital or acquired nystagmus, which would
be obvious before you did the test, with my technique, there are
no false positives. If I say you're a psychopath, you bloody
well are."
"Wow," said Heather. "Can I borrow them?"
Maybe I'd underestimated her; perhaps she was on to Gustav
after all. "No," I said, "but invite me for Christmas and I'll
bring them along."
"Deal," she said, spearing a cherry tomato.
Chapter 3
"And so, Professor Marchuk, in summary, is it your testimony
that the defendant, Devin Becker, is indeed a psychopath?"
Juan Sanchez had rehearsed my direct examination repeatedly.
He wanted to ensure that not only the judge, who had heard
psychological testimony in many previous cases, could follow me,
but also that the seven men and five women in the jury dock, none
of whom had ever taken a psych course, couldn't help but see the
logic of it all.
Juan had told me to make eye contact with the jurors.
Sadly, juror four (the heavyset black woman) and juror nine (the
white guy with the comb-over) were both looking down. But I did
connect briefly with each of the others, although three averted
their gazes as soon as they felt my eyes land on them.
I turned back to him and nodded decisively. "Yes, exactly.
There is no question whatsoever."
"Thank you, Professor." Juan looked questioningly at Judge
Kawasaki. The best way to use an expert defense witness, he'd
told me, was to present direct examination immediately before a
recess so the argument would have time to take root before the
prosecution attacked it; he'd timed my testimony to finish just
before noon. But either Kawasaki was oblivious to the time or he
was on to Juan's strategy, since he turned to the D.A. and said
the words Juan himself had failed to utter. "Your witness, Miss
Dickerson."
Juan shot me a disappointed glance then moved over and sat
down next to Devin Becker, who, as always, had a scowl on his
thin face.
I shifted nervously in my seat. We'd rehearsed this part,
too, trying to predict what questions Belinda Dickerson would
fire off in an attempt to discredit my microsaccades technique.
But as Moltke the Elder famously said, no battle plan ever
survives contact with the enemy.
Dickerson was forty-eight, tall, lithe, with a long pale
face and short black hair; if the pole holding the Georgia flag
at the side of the room ever broke, she could stand in as its
replacement. "Mr. Marchuk," she said, in a voice that was
stronger than one might have expected from her build, "we heard a
great deal about your qualifications when my opponent called you
to the stand."
It didn't seem to be a question, so I said nothing. Perhaps
she expected me to make some modest noise, and, in a social
situation, I might have done just that. But here, in this court,
with the hot dry air — not to mention an annoying fly
buzzing around the light hanging over my head — I simply
nodded as she went on: "Degrees, postdocs, clinical
certifications, academic appointments."
Again, not a question. I had been generally nervous about
being cross-examined, but I now relaxed slightly. If she wanted
to go over my CV with forensic glee, that was fine by me; I'd
embellished nothing.
"But now, sir," Dickerson continued, "I'd like to explore
some parts of your background that weren't brought forth by Mr.
Sanchez."
I looked at Juan, whose head did an avian snap toward the
jury, then ricocheted back to facing me. "Yes?" I said to her.
"Where is your family from?"
"I was born in Calgary, Alberta."
"Yes, yes. But your family, your people: where are they
from?"
Like everyone, I've been asked this question before, and I
usually made a joke of my reply, the kind only an academic could
get away with. "My ancestors," I'd say, "came from Olduvai
Gorge." I glanced at the jury box and also at the dour, wrinkled
countenance of Judge Kawasaki. There was no point in uttering a
joke you knew was going to bomb. "My heritage, you mean? It's
Ukrainian."
"So your mother, she was Ukrainian?"
"Yes. Well, Ukrainian-Canadian."
She made a dismissive gesture, as if I were muddying the
waters with pointless cavils. "And your maternal grandfather,
was he Ukrainian, too?"
"Yes."
"Your grandfather emigrated to Canada at some point?"
"The 1950s. I don't know precisely when."
"But he lived in Ukraine prior to that?"
"Actually, I think the last place he lived in Europe was
Poland."
Dickerson took a turn looking at the jury. She raised her
eyebrows as if astonished by my answer. "Where in Poland?"
It took me a second to come up with the name and I doubt I
did justice to the pronunciation. "Gdenska."
"Which is where?"
I frowned. "As I said, in Poland."
"Yes, yes. But where in Poland? What's it close to?"
"It's north of Warsaw, I think."
"I believe that's correct, yes, but is it close to any ... any
site, shall we say ... of historical significance?"
Juan Sanchez rose, jaw jutting even more than usual.
"Objection, your honor. This travelogue can be of no relevance
to the matter at hand."
"Overruled," said Kawasaki. "But you are trying my
patience, Miss Dickerson."
She apparently took that as license to ask a leading
question. "Mr. Marchuk, sir, let me put it bluntly: isn't that
village of yours, Gdenska, isn't it just ten miles from Sobibor?"
Her consistent refusal to use one of the honorifics I was
entitled to was, of course, an attempt to undermine me in front
of the jury. "I don't know," I said. "I have no idea."
"Fine, fine. But it's near Sobibor, isn't it? Only a few
minutes by car, no?"
"I really don't know."
"Or by train?" She let that sink in for a beat, then: "What
did your grandfather do during World War II?"
"I don't know."
"Don't you?"
I felt my eyebrows going up. "No."
"That surprises me, sir. It surprises me a great deal."
"Why?"
"You actually don't get to ask questions, sir; that's not
the way this works. Now, is it really your testimony here, under
oath, that you don't know what your mother's father did during
World War II?"
"That's right," I said, utterly perplexed. "I don't know."
Dickerson turned to the jury and lifted her hands in an "I
gave him a chance" sort of way. She then walked to her desk, and
her young female assistant passed her a sheet of paper. "Your
honor, I'd like to introduce this notarized scan of an article
from the Winnipeg Free Press of March twenty-third, 2001."
Kawasaki gestured for Dickerson to come forward, and she
handed him the piece of paper. He gave it a perfunctory glance
then passed it to the clerk. "So ordered," he said. "Mark as
People's one-four-six."
"Thank you, your honor," she said, retrieving the sheet.
"Now, Mr. Marchuk, would you be so kind as to read us the first
indicated passage?"
She handed me the page, which had two separate paragraphs
highlighted in blue. I couldn't make out what they said without
my reading glasses, and so I reached into my suit jacket —
and saw the guard at the far end of the room move to draw his
revolver. I slowly removed my cheaters, perched them on my nose,
and began reading aloud: "‘More startling revelations were made
this week as papers from the former Soviet Union continued to be
made public. The newly disclosed documents have a Canadian
connection. Ernst Kulyk ...’" I faltered and my throat went dry
as I skimmed ahead.
"Continue, please, sir," said Dickerson.
I swallowed, then: "’Ernst Kulyk, the father of Patricia
Marchuk, a prominent Calgary attorney, has been revealed to have
been a guard at the Nazi Sobibor death camp, implicated in the
deaths of thousands, if not tens of thousands, of Polish Jews.’"
I looked up. The paper fluttered in my hands.
"Thank you, sir. Now, who is Patricia Marchuk?"
"My mother."
"And, just to be clear, she's your biological mother —
and Ernst Kulyk was her biological father, correct? Neither you
nor your mother were adopted?"
"That's right."
"Is your maternal grandfather still alive?"
"No. He died sometime in the 1970s."
"And you were born in 1982, correct? So you never met him,
right?"
"Never."
"And your mother, is she still alive?"
"No. She passed fifteen years ago."
"In 2005?"
"Yes."
"Were you estranged from her?"
"No."
"And yet it's your testimony before this court that you
didn't know what her father — your grandfather — did
during World War II?"
My heart was pounding. "I — honestly, I had no idea."
"Where did you live in March 2001, when this article was
published?"
"In Winnipeg. I was in second-year university then."
"A sophomore?"
"We don't use that term in Canada, but yes."
"And the Winnipeg Free Press, correct me if I'm wrong, is
now and was then the largest-circulation daily newspaper in that
city, right?"
"I believe so, yes."
"So surely someone must have mentioned this article to you,
no?"
"Never."
"Seriously? Didn't your mother say anything to you about
this revelation?"
Acid was splashing at the back of my throat. "Not that I
recall."
"Not that you recall," she repeated. "There's a second
highlighted passage on that page. Would you read it, please?"
I looked down and did so. "‘Ernst Kulyk was a local, living
near Sobibor. Historian Howard Green at the Simon Wiesenthal
Center in Los Angeles says Marchuk fits the physical description
of Ernst the Enforcer, a guard notorious for his brutality.’"
"And your work, Professor, as we've heard here in this
courtroom, is designed to exonerate those accused of heinous
crimes, is it not?"
"Not at all. I —"
"Please, sir. Surely the defense would not have engaged
your services if they hadn't thought your testimony could be used
to convince the honest men and women of this jury that some
people just happen to be psychopaths, that God made them that
way, that they can't help themselves, that they shouldn't be held
accountable to the highest standard of the law, isn't that so?"
"Objection!" said Juan. "Argumentative."
"Sustained. Careful, Miss Dickerson."
"Mr. Marchuk, sir, how would you characterize the
relationship between your family history and your area of
research? Isn't it true that the one inspired the other?"
"I told you I didn't know about my grandfather."
"Come now, sir. I can understand wanting to put your family's
shame — Canada's shame — behind you, but,
really, isn't it true that you, in fact, had made up your mind in
this case before you ever met Devin Becker? For to find Devin
Becker accountable, to insist he answer for his crimes, his
perversions, his cruelty, would require you to demand the same of
your grandfather. Isn't that so?"
"Even if I'd known about my grandfather," I said, feeling
dizzy now, "the cases are vastly different, separated by decades
and thousands of miles."
"Trivialities," said Dickerson. "Isn't it true that you've
been called ‘an apologist for atrocities’ in print?"
"Never in a peer-reviewed journal."
"True," said Dickerson. "I allude to Canada's National
Post. But the fact of the matter remains: is it not true
that every aspect of your testimony here today is colored by your
desire to see your grandfather as a blameless victim of
circumstances?"
"My research is widely cited," I said, feeling as though the
wooden floor of the witness dock was splintering beneath me, "and
it, in turn, cites such classics as the work of Cleckley and
Milgram."
"But, unlike them, you come at this with an agenda, do you
not?"
It seemed utterly pointless to protest that Stanley
Milgram's family had been Jews slaughtered in the Holocaust
— his work was all about trying to make sense of the
senseless, to fathom the inexplicable, to comprehend how sane,
normal people could have done those things to other thinking,
feeling beings.
"That would not be my position," I said, trying to keep my
voice steady.
"No," responded Belinda Dickerson, looking once more at the
men and women in the jury dock, all of whom were sitting up in
rapt attention. "I'm sure it wouldn't be."
Judge Kawasaki finally called the recess, and I exited the
Atlanta courtroom, my heart pounding again, which, given my
history, is a feeling I hated. Juan Sanchez was going to have
lunch with Devin Becker, but I doubted they wanted me to join
them. I headed out into the afternoon heat, air shimmering above
the parking lot's asphalt, used a shaking hand to put my
Bluetooth receiver in my ear, and called my sister in Calgary.
The phone rang, then a woman said, "Morrell, Thompson, Chandler,
and Marchuk."
"Heather Marchuk, please." My sister's marriage had fallen
apart long ago — way before mine had — but she'd always
used her maiden name professionally.
"May I ask who's calling?"
"It's her brother Jim."
"Oh, Mr. Marchuk, hi. Are you in town?"
I'm usually pretty good with names, and I suspect if I
wasn't so distraught I would have come up with the
receptionist's. I could picture her, though — blond,
petite, round glasses.
"No. Is Heather in?"
"Let me put you through."
I saw a husky man looking at me — probably a reporter
hoping for a quote. I turned and walked briskly away.
My sister and I talked a couple of times a month — the
maximum Gustav would allow — but it was always in the
evenings; she was clearly surprised to be getting a call from me
during the workday. "Jim, is everything okay? Where are you?"
I couldn't answer the first question in a reassuring way, so
I skipped to the second. "Atlanta."
Heather knew me too well. "Something is wrong. What?"
"Do you know what Grandpa Kulyk did in World War II?"
Silence for a moment. Off in the distance — here or
there, I wasn't sure which — a siren was wailing. "What the
hell, Jim."
"Sorry?" A question, not an apology.
"What the hell," she said again.
"Excuse me?"
"Jim, if this is some kind of joke ..."
"I'm not joking."
"You know full well what he did in the war, at that camp."
"Well, I know now," I said. "I found out today. I'm here
giving expert testimony in that trial I told you about. The D.A.
blindsided me with the news."
"It's not news, for Christ's sake," said Heather. "It
came out ages ago."
"Why didn't you tell me?"
"Are you nuts? We all knew about it."
My head was swimming. "I don't remember that."
"Seriously?"
"Seriously."
"Jim, look, I've got a client meeting in — well, damn,
I should be doing it now. I don't know what to say, but get some
help, okay?"
Chapter 4
I'd have been happy to go home after the morning's
evisceration, but when the judge had called the recess, Miss
Dickerson indicated she wasn't through with me. After failing to
find a vegan entrée in the courthouse cafeteria, I'd
settled for a packaged salad and a cup of black coffee.
The fireworks began again as soon as court resumed.
"Objection!" said Juan, rising in response to Dickerson asking me
once more about my personal history. "This fishing expedition
has no bearing on the sentencing of Devin Becker."
Dickerson spread her arms as she turned toward the brooding
judge. "Your honor, this is the first time Mr. Marchuk's
technique has been introduced in a court of law. With the
court's permission, it seems only appropriate to delve into any
biases or prejudices — even ones that he himself might not
be aware of — that may have tainted his results."
"Very well; objection overruled — but don't wander too
far afield."
"Of course not, your honor." She turned back to me. "Mr.
Marchuk, sir, what's your stance on capital punishment?" I saw
Juan clenching his wide jaw.
"I'm against it."
Dickerson nodded, as if this was only to be expected.
"Earlier you told us you were Canadian, and our friends to the
north don't have capital punishment. Is your objection simply
something that goes with your citizenship, like a fondness for
hockey and maple syrup?"
"I object to capital punishment on a philosophical basis."
"Ah, yes. When Mr. Sanchez was introducing you, he made
mention of the fact that in addition to your three degrees in
psychology you also have a master's degree in philosophy,
correct?"
"Yes."
"Well, then, given this sentencing trial is precisely about
whether Mr. Becker will receive the death penalty, perhaps you
could briefly enlighten us as to your philosophical objections to
it?"
I took a deep breath. I'd often debated the issue in
classrooms, but the palpable disapproval of the jurors was
throwing me off my game; the D.A. hadn't allowed anyone who was
morally opposed to capital punishment to be impanelled for this
case. "They aren't just my objections," I said. "I'm a
utilitarian philosopher. Utilitarians believe the greatest good
is maximizing happiness for the greatest number. And one of
utilitarianism's founders, Jeremy Bentham, back in 1775,
articulated several compelling arguments against the death
penalty, arguments that still make sense."
I let my butterflies settle for a moment, then: "First, he
said — and I agree — that it's unprofitable. That is,
it costs more to society to execute people than it does to keep
them alive. That was true in Bentham's day, and is even more
true today: the extended legal proceedings, including this very
one that we're all part of right now, plus the inevitable
appeals, make it far more expensive to execute a criminal than it
is to imprison him or her for life.
"And, just as important, Bentham said — and, again, I
agree — the death penalty is irremissible. That is, there's
no way to undo an error. Of course, the unhappiness that results
from a wrongful execution is huge for the death-row inmate. More
than that, though, if a society executes an innocent man, and
that fact is subsequently revealed when, for instance, the real
killer is caught, then everyone in that society feels — or,
at least, should feel — great remorse at the horrible
thing done in the name of all of us. And then —"
"Thank you, sir. We get the idea. Now, then, what about
abortion? If your argument is that punishing the innocent with
the ultimate sanction is debilitating for society, then I'm sure
the men and women seated here, in the wake of our Supreme Court
having recently overturned Roe v. Wade, will be gratified
to hear that you're pro-life."
"I'm not. I'm pro-choice." I heard a hiss-like intake of
breath from one of the jurors, and saw another one, the bearded
white man, shake his head slowly back and forth.
Belinda Dickerson returned to her desk, and her assistant
took a book out of a briefcase and handed it to her — and,
like every author, I have the ability to recognize one of my own
books at just about any distance, even when it's partially
obscured. "Your honor, I'd like to introduce this copy of
Utilitarian Ethics of Everyday Life, by our current
witness, James K. Marchuk."
Judge Kawasaki nodded. "Mark as People's one-four-seven."
"Thank you, your honor. Just to confirm, sir, you are the
author of this book, correct?"
"Yes, that's right."
"As you can see, I've marked two pages with Post-it flags.
Would you be so kind as to turn to the first one and read the
highlighted passage?"
Post-it flags come in many colors; I use them all the time
myself. She'd no doubt deliberately chosen red ones; she wanted
the jury to be thinking about blood.
I flipped to the first indicated page, carefully took out my
reading glasses, and said: "‘As in all utilitarian thinking, one
cannot put one's own desires or happiness ahead of another's
simply because they are one's own, but in the case of a
genetically defective fetus which, if brought to term, will live
an unhappy, pain-filled life, terminating the fetus is clearly
the path that will most increase the world's net happiness, for,
as we have observed, there are only two ways to add to the
world's total joy. The first, obviously, is to make the people
who already exist happier. The second is to actually increase
the number of people in the world through childbirth, provided
they will likely live happy lives.’" Italics, as the saying
goes, in the original.
I shifted uncomfortably in my seat then went on. "‘The
corollary to this is that the world's total happiness is
decreased by either making existing people less happy — as
raising a disabled child with its attendant emotional and
financial costs would doubtless do for the parents — or by
allowing more people to come into existence who will be unhappy,
as a child born to a life of pain and suffering will be. In such
a case, therefore, abortion is perhaps morally obligatory.’"
The argument was more complex than that, and I dealt with
all the objections one might raise in the subsequent paragraphs,
but I stopped when the blue highlighting came to an end, closed
the book, and looked up.
You could hear a safety pin drop in that courtroom. The
jurors were all staring at me, some with mouths agape, and the
color had gone out of Juan's face. Only Devin Becker looked
unperturbed.
Dickerson let the silence grow for as long as she felt she
could get away with, then: "Thank you. Now, the next passage,
please."
I nervously opened the book again and flipped to the second
marked page. At the top of it was a double-indented quotation
from utilitarianism's other founder, John Stuart Mill; I knew it
by heart:
Few human creatures would consent to be changed into any of
the lower animals, for a promise of the fullest allowance of a
beast's pleasures; no intelligent human being would consent to be
a fool, no instructed person would be an ignoramus, no person of
feeling and conscience would be selfish and base, even though
they should be persuaded that the fool, the dunce, or the rascal
is better satisfied with his lot than they are with theirs.
It is better to be a human being dissatisfied than a pig
satisfied; better to be Socrates dissatisfied than a fool
satisfied. And if the fool, or the pig, are of a different
opinion, it is because they only know their own side of the
question. The other party to the comparison knows both
sides.
But Dickerson hadn't highlighted that. Instead, the blue
marking began immediately afterward; I swallowed, then started
reading aloud:
"‘Mill's key point is that we reasonably and correctly value
the lives of a human more greatly than we do that of a
chimpanzee, for the chimp, while perhaps enjoying the moment,
cannot anticipate future happiness as well as we can — and
that act of anticipation is in itself a pleasure.’
"‘Likewise, we value a chimp — to the extent in many
jurisdictions of outlawing their use in laboratory experiments
— more than we value a mouse, a being of demonstrably lesser
intellectual capacity. But to be fair, and to avoid a charge of
speciesism, we must apply the same standards to our own kind.’
"‘Yes, an embryo, from the moment of conception, is genetically
fully Homo sapiens, but it has no complex cognition, no
ability to plan or anticipate, and little if any joy. As it
develops, these faculties will accrue gradually but they clearly
do not exist in anything approaching their full form until
several years after birth. On the bases previously
discussed, a utilitarian should support abortion when a prenatal
diagnosis has been made that is strongly indicative of an
unhappy, painful life; it is on this current basis — the
lack of a fully developed mind for years to come — that a
utilitarian can additionally embrace not just abortion but also a
merciful release when a severe defect is not apparent until after
parturition.‘"
"‘Parturition,’" said Dickerson. "A right fancy word,
that." She glanced at the jury. "For those of us more
accustomed to plainer speaking, what is ‘parturition’?"
"Childbirth."
"In other words, Mr. Marchuk, sir, you believe abortion is
okay. You believe — and I find this almost impossible to
say aloud, but it is what the indicated passage said, isn't it?
You even believe infanticide can be okay. But you
don't believe in capital punishment."
"Well, as Peter Singer would argue ..."
"Please, sir, it's a yes-or-no-question. Are you against
capital punishment in all circumstances?"
"Yes."
"Are you in favor of abortion?"
"I'm in favor of increasing utility, in maximizing
happiness, so —"
"Please, sir, again: yes or no? In the vast majority of
circumstances in which a woman might desire an abortion, are you
in favor of letting her have it?"
"Yes."
"And are there even times when infanticide, when killing an
already-born child, is, in your view, the right thing to do?"
"On the basis that —"
"Yes or no?"
"Well, yes."
"And your goal here is to convince the good men and women of
this jury that it would be morally wrong to execute the
defendant?"
I spread my arms. "I have no goal other than to explain the
screening technique I developed, but —"
"No, buts, sir. And no more questions. Your honor, I'm
very grateful to be through with this witness."
You've just read the opening of
Quantum Night
by Hugo and Nebula Award-winner Robert J. Sawyer.
To read the rest, pick up a copy of the book.
Copyright © 2016 by Robert J. Sawyer. All rights reserved.
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