Innocent in Death (In Death #24)(108)
“Trauma Room Three. Badge or no badge, you can’t go in. Dr. Dimatto’s a little busy trying to save her life.”
Louise Dimatto. Eve smiled. Sometimes it actually paid to have friends.
“You can get in there. So go in, tell Louise that Dallas needs a status report on her patient. Where’s the kid? The Straffo kid?”
“In the A chairs, with her nanny, father’s on the way. You know Doctor D?”
“Yeah, we go back. A chairs?”
“Follow me.”
Apparently claiming Louise had grease, and slid Eve and Mira straight through the general area to the trauma section. In an alcove across from a set of double swinging doors sat Rayleen, huddled against Cora.
The kid’s face was splotchy from weeping, eyes red and swollen. Eve thought:Good job. Drama Club paid off.
Cora spotted Eve first, and her eyes went weepy. “Lieutenant Dallas. It’s…it’s the missus.”
But Eve’s eyes were all for Rayleen. The girl’s body stiffened. Didn’t expect me to drop in, did you? Eve thought. Then Rayleen pressed closer to Cora.
“I don’t want to talk to her. I don’t want to talk to anybody. I just want my mommy.”
“There, there now, darling. Don’t you fret. The lieutenant’s only here to try to help. Everyone’s here to help.”
Eve glanced at Mira, jerked her head. Understanding, Mira stepped forward.
“Rayleen, I’m Dr. Mira. I know you’re very frightened and very upset.”
Rayleen sniffled, raised her head to study Mira’s face. “You’re a doctor? Are you going to fix my mother?”
“Yes, I’m a doctor, and I know the doctor who’s helping your mother now. She’s a very, very good doctor.” Mira crouched down, all compassion and concern.
Good, Eve decided. Good and smart. Don’t align yourself with me. Just an attractive, female doctor. A motherly one. Eve turned, looking through the glass porthole on the trauma room door as Mira talked to Rayleen.
Inside, it looked to her as if they’d pumped stuff out of Allika, and were pumping stuff in. Louise wore a protective cape, her delicate blond hair clipped back, her smoky eyes intense.
If Allika had a shot, Eve knew Louise would give it to her.
Behind her, Mira spoke in a voice that exuded sympathy and authority. “I know you’re going to be brave now, Rayleen.”
“I’ll try, but—”
“I know it’s very hard. Can you tell me what happened?”
“I don’t know. My mom…We were supposed to have lunch at Zoology, then go to the salon. It’s our girl time.”
“Isn’t that nice?”
“We have lots and lots of fun together. But she called when we were in the museum and said we had to come home instead of her coming to meet us. She didn’t say why. She looked really tired, and she was acting funny.”
“Funny?”
“She said Cora should go, because it’s her half-day off. When she did, my mom cried.”
“I shouldn’t have gone out. I should have stayed.”
“It’s not your fault, Cora. My mom said she was sorry, and not to be mad at her. But I wasn’t mad at her. She couldn’t help it if she was sick. She gets sick sometimes, and needs to rest.”
“I see.”
“She hugged me, really, really tight. Like she does when she and Daddy go on a trip, and I don’t. A good-bye hug. She told me I was her princess, and the best part of her whole life, and how she loved me.”
Rayleen’s mouth quivered as she took a handkerchief with her name embroidered on the corner from her purse. She wiped at her eyes. “How she knew I’d be brave and strong, no matter what.” Her gaze ticked up to Eve’s back, held for an instant. “She said to remember, no matter what, she loved me best of all. Then she said I could get a snack and go play in my room, to be good. She was going to sleep. I was really quiet.” Fresh tears gushed. “So I wouldn’t wake her up.”
The nurse swung out, took a look at the weeping little girl. Her face radiated compassion, then she drew Eve out of earshot. “Condition’s still critical. If Dr. D manages to stabilize her, they’re sending her up to CCU. Her chances aren’t very good, but Dr. D’s fighting the fight.”
“Okay. Appreciate it.” Eve stared over the nurse’s shoulder. “That’s the husband coming down.”
Straffo bolted down the corridor, and Eve could all but feel the fear radiating from him. Rayleen jumped up, and into his arms. Cora rose, weeping and babbling.
Eve left them to it, while Straffo clutched his daughter, murmured to her. Then he set her down, brushed the hair from her face. She nodded, then sat with Cora again. Straffo went to the porthole, staring in as Eve had done.
Eve went to stand beside him.
“What do you know?”
“I know the doctor who’s working on her,” Eve told him. “She’s good, and she doesn’t give up easy.”
She heard him draw in a breath, let it out, and the sound was raw. “Thank you.”
“She’s critical, once she’s stable enough they’ll move her to CCU. She was overdosed with sleeping pills.”
“Oh, God, oh, God.” He laid his forehead on the glass.
J.D. Robb's Books
- Indulgence in Death (In Death #31)
- Brotherhood in Death (In Death #42)
- Leverage in Death: An Eve Dallas Novel (In Death #47)
- Apprentice in Death (In Death #43)
- Brotherhood in Death (In Death #42)
- Echoes in Death (In Death #44)
- J.D. Robb
- Obsession in Death (In Death #40)
- Devoted in Death (In Death #41)
- Festive in Death (In Death #39)