Trail of Dead (Scarlett Bernard #2)(50)



Instead, I beelined for the nurses’ station, and only had to loiter next to a nearby drinking fountain for about three minutes before I spotted a nurse I recognized: a thin black woman in her sixties with a half-inch Afro and a perpetual look of busy concentration. She hadn’t been Olivia’s favorite, but she’d been mine.

“Sadie?” I said tentatively.

She looked up sharply, and her face broke into a pleased smile. “Why, Scarlett!” she cried, rushing around the counter to throw her thin arms around me. “How you doin’, sugar?”

“I’m good,” I said lightly, returning the hug and taking a step back when it was polite to do so. I’m not really a hugger.

Her face creased in concern. “Sorry about your mom, sugar. I’m sure you had a tough year.”

“Yeah.” When she’d started treatments, Olivia had told the hospital that I was her daughter, so I would be able to visit during non–visiting hours. Or that was what she’d told me, and at the time it had made perfect sense. Silly Scarlett. “I know I wasn’t around, that last week,” I began, with an apology in my voice. I had a perfectly good reason for blowing off Olivia during her last days as a human—I had found out about her murdering my parents. But I couldn’t exactly explain that to Sadie.

The nurse just waved her hand like she was getting smoke out of the air. “Don’t even worry about it. I have seen every reaction a person can have to death. Disappearing for a week or so is nothing new.”

Even though I hadn’t done anything wrong, Sadie’s forgiveness was kind of touching. “Listen, I know how busy you are, but would you have a few minutes today to talk about her last week? There are just a few things I wanted to know…you know, with the holidays coming and all.” I gestured helplessly at the decor. Okay, maybe working undercover was not my best skill. But people took stock of their lives at Christmas, right? Or maybe New Year’s?

Sadie nodded sympathetically. “Of course, sugar.” She checked her watch. “I have a break coming up anyway. Why don’t you go sit in the chapel? I’ll meet you there in a few minutes. You know the way.”

“Yeah, I know the way.”

After the busy decorations in the hallway, the cancer ward chapel seemed plain and refreshing. There was no religion in here, so no actual decorations, not even a cross or Star of David. Instead, the small room had a simple stained-glass window, an empty altar, and two rows of short wooden pews. The room was always empty, except when it was needed. In my experience, though, when it was needed, it was really needed. I had personally spent hours here during Olivia’s last months, praying for some kind of a miracle, which was funny, since Olivia more or less got one.

I sat down in the back-row pew, my usual seat. It had only been a year or so since Olivia had “died,” but it felt like ten. I felt like a different person from the girl who’d prayed in this room. My parents had been regular churchgoers, but my brother and I were raised to make up our own minds whether or not we believed in God. It had taken me a few years to sort out my feelings, but I’d eventually decided I believed in God but didn’t believe in religion. I would keep faith on my own terms. It’s funny, but finding out that Hollywood movie monsters were real never shook my convictions. If God could create a platypus, why couldn’t he create a vampire? If AIDS could exist in God’s kingdom, why not lycanthropy?

No, it took Olivia to really make me wonder if there was a God.

My thoughts were interrupted by the sound of the pressure-controlled door opening and closing. Sadie settled into the pew beside me, reaching over to pat my hand.

“Thanks for talking to me, Sadie.”

She patted again. “Don’t worry about it, Scarlett. You’re not the first relative to come back after it’s all over, wanting answers to more questions. Our perspective of death, of our family member’s death, it changes with time.”

You got that right, Sadie.

“Did you ever see a guy with Olivia, at the end?” I asked. “Average height, sort of weaselly looking?”

Sadie blinked at me, and there was suddenly a glint in her eye. “You found out about Al, did you?” she said coyly. “I figured you might. They tried so hard to keep it secret.” She shook her head. “I always figured they were just getting a kick out of that, sneaking around. Wasn’t like you’d mind, that your mom had a beau in her last few months.”

I had been right—Albert had been visiting Olivia at the hospital. I had about a thousand questions, but no idea where to start. “Was she…did she say how they met?”

Sadie frowned. “I never got a full story on that, but I assumed it was through the radiology specialist, Dr. Barton. Did you meet him?”

“There were so many specialists…”

“He stood out, though—had a scar going down his lip, right here”—she touched her lower lip like she was making a vertical mark on it. “Fell off a motorcycle, he told me once. He’s a very big deal in experimental oncology, though he’s based in New York, usually.”

A vague image of a sandy-haired guy with squinty little glasses came to mind. “I think I met him once or twice. Albert…Al…he knew Barton?”

“Worked for him, I think.” She shrugged. “At any rate, every time I saw Dr. Barton, Al was with him. Stayed real close, like he needed to hear every word Barton said.”

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