Blind Spot (9 page)

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Authors: Nancy Bush

Tags: #Romance, #Women psychologists, #Crime, #Suspense, #Fiction

BOOK: Blind Spot
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“You’re going back down?” he asked.

“I’m going to check on Cat.”

“Why?”

“Part of the personal patient care we give on Side A.”

“She’s my patient,” he reminded her.

“I haven’t forgotten.”

“I’ll go with you.” He let go of the doors and they whispered shut once more. Claire had had about as much as she could stand of the man, but there was nothing much she could do to get rid of him.

They entered room 113 together. The blond woman stared straight ahead, not acknowledging either of them. The mound of her belly drew Claire’s gaze and she walked up to her and touched her hand lightly.

“Nurse Maria will be on duty tonight. If you need anything, press this.” Claire leaned across the bed, grabbed the remote call button, and laid it beside Cat’s blanketed left leg.

The girl’s eyes shifted. A flicker, side to side. Claire saw it and so did Freeson. He stroked his beard and said, “She’s in there.”

“When are the police coming?”

“Later today, I think. After Pauline Kirby.”

“Make sure I’m called for both, okay?”

“Fine.”

Claire turned away from him, knowing Freeson would do whatever he felt like in the end. He had no compunction in conveniently forgetting promises.

Heading for her office, Claire went back up the elevator, then passed by Glenda, the general receptionist for the medical office building, who was talking into her headset. She motioned for Claire to wait up, so Claire slowed her steps and stopped.

“A package was dropped off for you,” she said, reaching behind the counter. She handed Claire a silvery box from Promise’s Bakery, the size that might hold a two-layer cake.

“Who sent it?”

“Tony brought it.”

Tony was an orderly who was a general errand boy for the hospital.

Claire carried the box to her office, set it on her desk, slid off the top. It was indeed a cake. Fudge frosting. She felt strangely light-headed as she pulled it from its box and stared at it. There was a card but she didn’t have to read it.

She recalled the day Heyward III had asked her what her favorite cake was. She’d told him she preferred pies. Tarts. Something with fruit. They were in session and he was fixated on the idea. Wouldn’t talk about issues he was facing. Didn’t care that she liked pies. Was obsessed with knowing what Claire liked in a cake.

“I guess I’d say chocolate. Fudge, actually. With raspberry filling.” And a glass of red wine, she’d thought, but kept that to herself.

“I’m going to get you one,” he said with sudden vigor, rising from his chair.

“No, Heyward. Not now.”

“Soon,” he said. And then forgot the idea in the next moment.

But here it was….

She didn’t have a knife in her office. Carefully she ran her index finger down the edge of the cake, encountering the raspberry filling between the two layers. Heyward couldn’t have done this on his own. She would bet he’d told his grandfather what she liked, and Heyward Senior sent it to her. The card read, “Wanted to get you your favorite.” It was Heyward III’s writing, but she could visualize his grandfather hovering over him. They wouldn’t trust him with a pen.

A bribe, in its way.

She thought back on the meeting. Had she done enough to make herself heard? It was a moot point; they would do as they liked. They had before. They would again. But this time she’d really wanted to take a strong stand. No hedging. No trying to keep everybody happy.
That
hadn’t worked. Spectacularly hadn’t worked.

Carefully she carried the cake to the vending machine room. There was a small counter with a sink and a few haphazard chairs. Not really much of a meeting place, but then it was for the medical office staff only. She placed the cake on the counter and washed her frosting-covered finger in the sink. Gazing at the cake for a long moment, she felt her stomach growl.

Tightening her lips, she backed out of the room and headed back to her office for her purse and some change. She returned a few moments later and plunked coins into the vending machine, slamming a palm against a button for peanut M&M’s. Protein. And sugar. If she had a multivitamin it would be a complete meal.

She hoped somebody would enjoy the cake. It just wasn’t going to be her.

 

Cat was sitting in the other chair as Gibby claimed his, one eye on the lookout for Maribel, but she wasn’t around. Gibby scooted his chair closer to hers and was amazed when she said, clear as a bell, “I need to get out of here.”

“Out of the morning room?”

“Yes. And out the door.” She leaned toward the front of the building, past the desk and the sofas where Big Jenny liked to sit, though Darlene always told her she couldn’t sit there, and to the big glass windows that slid back and forth if you knew what numbers to push. Gibby didn’t know the numbers. He didn’t want to know the numbers. You had to have a square thing, too, or get the lady at the big desk to let you out.

“I’m scared out there,” he admitted, though it was hard. He wanted the blond lady to like him. “Your name is Cat…like cats…and dogs…?”

“Help me.”

“Okay.” She wasn’t looking at him, but she was talking to him. To Gibby. Kinda made him scared, though, ’cause she was asking him to do something. He didn’t know what, but he didn’t think they’d like it.

Gibby glanced around the room. His hands gripped the sides of his chair. Oh! There was Maribel. She was coming his way! “Go ’way,” he told her.

She strolled toward Cat, swiping at him. Gibby bared his teeth and made a face. Maribel stopped in front of Cat and stared at her. Maribel did that
all
the time.

“She has Zimer’s disease,” Gibby said. “Get outta here.” He flapped his hand at her but Maribel just stared and stared. Cat stared back.

Donald strolled over. “Maribel, is there a problem?”

Gibby threw him a dark look. Donald always acted so smart all the time it made Gibby uncomfortable. Now he wanted to get up and go get Greg, but he wasn’t around. Darlene was there, but he never wanted her. “Go ’way!” he hissed again at Maribel, stomping his foot at her.

“Fuck you,” Maribel said.

“Oh, no,” Donald said, sliding away.

Gibby slapped his hands over his ears. She said that
word.
She said it to
Cat
! “Noooo!” Gibby wailed. “You’re mean! You’re not nice!”

“Fuck you and the horse you rode in on,” Cat replied.

Gibby’s eyes widened. His jaw dropped. “Wha’d you…wha’d you…”

“Everything okay here?” It was Greg. Finally. And he was looking from Maribel to Gibby to Cat, but mostly at Gibby.

“She said…that word…”

Greg glanced at Maribel. “What word?”

Gibby pointed to Cat. “She said it, too. You know…
that word
!”

“The f-word?”

Gibby nodded furiously, his finger shaking as he kept it directed at Cat. “She said, ‘Fuck you and the horse you rode in on.’”

Greg shot a look at Cat and then demanded, “Where did you hear that, Gibby? Who said it?”

“She did!”

“I mean it. Who said it? Maribel?” Greg looked mad. He shook his head and took hold of Maribel’s arm, trying to direct her away from Cat. “Was it Thomas?”

Gibby blinked a couple times and gazed at Thomas McAvoy, who was watching them with laser eyes. “No! He says that, too, but it was Cat!”

“Well, whoever said it, don’t say it again.” Greg was looking at Gibby as if it was all his fault!

Greg tried to move Maribel but she pulled her shoulders in and shrank down. She always did that. After a few moments Greg let go and went over to Thomas McAvoy, whose face looked just like those dead guys on TV. He was scary, too.

“You got me in trouble,” Gibby moaned to Cat. He felt a little like crying.

She was still staring at Maribel, who was pulling at her hair and looking at the floor.

Gibby got up and tried to shove Maribel to one side. Maribel slugged him in the arm and jumped into his chair.

With a howl, Gibby launched himself at her and then Greg reappeared with Darlene and even Donald came back, too.

“Tsk, tsk,” Donald said.

“What is with you, Gibson?” Darlene asked. “Ever since Cat got here, you’re starting trouble.”

“Not me!” Gibby cried.

“He repeated something Thomas said.”

“Maribel said
fuck you
first!” Gibby screamed.

“Fuck you!”
Maribel shrieked right back.

For the second time in two days Gibby was hauled off to his room. He cried all the way, looking back at Cat. He watched her head turn as she examined the front door.

“She’s my friend,” he whimpered. “I need to help her.”

But Greg and Darlene, the witch with a capital B, wouldn’t listen to him.

 

Pauline Kirby touched at her dark hair, but every strand was held in place by one of the best hair sprays on the market. Super hold. Super expensive. But the best was the best, and Pauline liked the best. Pressing the pad of her little finger to the corner of her mouth, she looked into the hand mirror and tried on a smile. Her makeup was fresh. She looked good.

“Here.” She handed the mirror to a production assistant. A gofer who hurried forward. A new one, she was pretty sure. They all looked the same. She could never remember their names and had given up trying. Long ago, she’d been the one with the eager smile and winning ways, ready to serve the talent in any way she could.

She was long over that, thank God.

Today she stood outside Halo Valley Security Hospital. Concrete and redwood in front, but the back part, the older section, was solid brick. They tried to dress up this new part: there was a portico with concrete pillars, but it still looked industrial, institutional, with maybe just a hint of architectural thought, but it sure as hell didn’t transcend to anything close to beauty.

What a sorry piece of crap,
she thought. Past the first roof you could actually see the razor wire that surrounded the grounds of the second brick building, the high-security hospital. No damn laurel hedge could disguise it, though that looked to be the idea. She knew of a couple real crazies who resided there. One of ’em had the gall to write to her now and again. Really filthy stuff. She showed it to her coworkers, pretending to be unaffected. She was a newswoman. A professional. But it gave her a nasty little shiver whenever she thought of that particular monster. If they ever let him out…ever…she was going to call in every favor she’d ever been owed, and there were a number of them, to make sure he was caught and hopefully killed this time.

Coming back to herself, she shook it off. She carried pepper spray. She was safe, even if she had to remember the spray every time she went through that damn security at the airport. Moron TSA agents. Acting like she was some kind of terrorist when they ripped it away and glared at her through stupid, suspicious eyes. Twice she’d been taken to a special room and had to strip down. Sickos. Full-on bull-dyke lesbians getting a thrill to see her in her Victoria’s Secrets.

Fuck ’em all. She was important, and they were miserable larva.

“Hurry up,” she told the production crew at large. “They’re only giving us a few minutes.”

“We’re ready,” Darrell said as he hefted the camera on his shoulder. He, at least, could get the job done.

Pauline led Darrell through the front doors; all she needed was one cameraman for the interview. She’d been granted access, but still needed to bully her way past all the hospital security. To that end, she smiled at the woman at the desk, who pressed some button and opened the doors. She looked slightly alarmed, gazing through the glass doors to the van outside, then back again to Pauline and Darrell as they entered.

“Doctor Freeson invited us,” Pauline said. “He wants to get your Jane Doe’s face on camera, try to find her family members.”

The girl nodded, slowly, like the news was taking a
loonngg
time climbing up that neuron. “I’ll call him,” she finally said and picked up the receiver.

“We’re only here for a few minutes. We have places to be,” Pauline pressed. She glanced around quickly. Entry room. Straight ahead a main room with tables, a gathering place. Several hallways branching off north and south. Stairs sweeping grandly to an upper gallery and more hallways.

“Dr. Freeson, some newspeople are here…?”

“Pauline Kirby, thank you,” Pauline said tautly.

“Pauline Kirby,” the girl responded dutifully, but the little bitch apparently had no idea who Pauline was.

There was a brief interchange and the girl hung up, eyeing Pauline warily. “Dr. Freeson will be right here.”

“Stat,” Pauline said. “Good.”

They moved away from the desk and Darrell said in her ear, “Play nice.”

“Playing nice is for amateurs.”

“And you’re no amateur.”

Pauline shot him a look but Darrell wisely didn’t respond. They were both diverted by the arrival of Dr. Freeson bustling down the grand staircase. He was a slight man with a Vandyck beard and a fussy style that made Pauline smile internally.

He looked suitably starstruck as he came up to her and stuck out his hand. “Ms. Kirby, it’s a pleasure to meet you. Do you want to do the interview here?” He gestured toward the gathering room.

“Can you take us to see the patient, please?”

“I’m sorry. That’s against hospital pol—”

“Has anyone contacted you about her? Our station received a number of call-ins after our first story, but we didn’t have a good picture, if you recall.”

“I do. I know. That’s why we wanted more exposure.”

“We need a picture. Can’t we just take our cameras to her? We’ll be out in less than ten minutes.”

“I’m sorry.” He shook his head and looked like he really was very sorry. He could see his fifteen minutes of fame blowing to dust.

“Then can you bring her to us?” Pauline motioned to the general area surrounding them.

Dr. Freeson hesitated. Pauline’s upper white teeth bit into her lower lip while she was smiling. A shark’s look. One she’d perfected without even being aware of it. “One quick shot, and then maybe we can go into that room with the chairs and talk with you a while.”

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