Ten
More needs she the divine,
Than the physician.
Than the physician.
—Macbeth, William Shakespeare
Bree woke up flat on her back, staring at an
unfamiliar sky. Her arms were at her sides. A pale mist blanketed
her breasts and legs. The light was soft, golden, like sunlight
through trees in a forest. The air was scrubbed with the scent of
roses.
I’m in the Sphere.
Happiness welled up in her.
She was surrounded by five columns of intense
color. The columns varied in height and width, but they were
spinning, eddies in a whirlpool of soft air.
“Well, child.” The voice from the violet column was
soft and known to her.
“Lavinia?” Bree said. Or tried to. Her lips were
stiff. And she hurt, terribly, all over. She narrowed her eyes
against the violet glow. For some reason, it was much brighter than
the others.
The silver-ash column that was Petru said, “My dear
Bree.”
Bree reached out to him, but her arm wouldn’t
move.
“We are all here,” Professor Cianquino said. His
form was a steady blue flame. “There is nothing we can do for you,
my dear. Except hope.”
“I don’t believe it.” The green-blue column that
was Ron sounded testy.
“You know the rules.”
That fiery column. Was that Gabriel? She hadn’t
seen him for such a long time. Gabriel and his coin-colored
eyes.
“This is a temporal matter,” Gabriel’s voice was
calm. “We cannot interfere.”
“We can hope,” Ron said.
She felt his smile. All their smiles. Better than
hope...
She drifted away.
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Bree woke up flat on her back, staring at an
unfamiliar ceiling. Her arms were at her sides. A white sheet was
drawn up across her breasts and legs. The light was strong, bluish
white. Stainless steel railings barred her on either side. The air
was scrubbed with an unpleasant odor. Disinfectant of some
kind.
She shoved her hands flat and sat up. Something
tugged at her arm like an angry wasp, and she slapped at it
reflexively before she had a chance to look. A piece of opaque tape
covered a tube and the tube held a needle. The needle disappeared
into skin that wasn’t her own: bright pink, slightly charred at the
edges, covered with an oily goop.
She hurt. All over.
“Well, there you are. How are you feeling?” A
mournful face hovered in the air above her. The face—which
resembled a basset hound more than a person—was attached to a body
dressed in hospital whites. Bree registered his name tag:
Ollie.
“I don’t know,” she said cautiously. Then, “Where
am I, Ollie?”
“The hospital,” he said reassuringly. “Savannah
General. Which is in Georgia,” he added unnecessarily, “although I
shouldn’t tell you too much before you tell me who you are.”
“You don’t know?” Bree said.
“Of course I do, dear. But we need to know if
you do, you see. Name, age, and current date. It’s called
being oriented times three.” He smiled, which lifted his jowls. He
was in his late forties, perhaps—Bree wasn’t very good with
ages—and his face was a roadmap of hard living.
“Brianna Winston-Beaufort. I’m twenty-eight, and
I’m a lawyer, with a practice in Savannah. And it’s the fifteenth
of January.”
“You are so right,” Dent said. “Except it’s the
seventeenth. Are you in any pain?”
“The seventeenth!” She felt dizzy. Where had two
days gone?
“You are in pain,” he said
sympathetically.
“Not much.” This wasn’t strictly true. Pain was
there all right, waiting to jump on her, but she was pretty sure
the IV glugging whatever into her arm had some pain-killers in it.
“Thank you for asking.” Bree sank back. There was a pillow, but it
was hard and flat. She hated being horizontal when everyone else
was vertical. Hospital beds could be elevated, couldn’t they? She
fumbled around the mattress. No buttons.
“You want to sit up,” Ollie said in a kindly way.
“I think that’ll be okay.” He pressed a button and Bree raised
partway up without any effort at all.
The room was small. Grayish tile covered the floor.
A half-open door led to a bathroom equipped with a tall toilet,
stainless steel handholds, and an efficient-looking shower. A
narrow floor-to-ceiling window with vertical blinds looked down on
a parking lot. From the slant of the sun Bree judged it was late
afternoon. An orange chair of molded plastic held a bulging tote.
Bree knew that tote. It belonged to her little sister, Antonia. She
did know who she was and where she was. Bree sank back against the
pillows. It was a slight effort, this examination of the room, but
it exhausted her.
“Oh my God! You’re awake.”
Antonia swept into the room, stopped short, and
flung up her hands. “I take two seconds to go down to the Coke
machine, and what happens?”
“I wake up?”
“You wake up!”
Antonia looked like she hadn’t slept for a week.
Her gray University of North Carolina sweatshirt had coffee stains
on the front, and it looked as if she’d bitten off a couple of her
carefully manicured fingernails. Bree took all this in with a
glance and said, “I’m fine, you know.”
“Of course you are,” Antonia said heartily.
She burst into tears.
“Oh dear,” Ollie said. He lifted Antonia’s tote off
the orange chair and put a gentle hand on her shoulder. “Sit down,
sit down. No, don’t go mauling your sister around. Leave go of her
foot, dear. You don’t want to fool around with burn patients.
Scarring. Infection. You just leave her be.”
Antonia released Bree’s foot and sank into the
chair. She swiped her forearm under her eyes. “Right, right.”
Bree put her hands up to her cheeks. The skin on
her face was tender but intact. Her left forearm was wrapped in
gauze, but her hands seemed to be okay. Her right forearm, the one
with the IV in it, was one step beyond a bad sunburn. She shifted
her legs under the light sheet that covered them. Both legs were in
immobilizer casts.
“She’s awake now,” Antonia said. “She should see a
doctor, Ollie. Go get one. Right now.”
“Tonia. For heaven’s sake. You can’t just order
people around like that.”
“Don’t you for-heaven’s-sake me! Push that little
thing-gummy, Ollie, the emergency button.”
Ollie winked at Bree. “Don’t go anywhere, Ms.
Beaufort. I’ll be right back.” He closed the swinging door gently
behind him. It opened again, almost immediately. Hunter stepped
into the room. The skin around his eyes was drawn tight. Like
Antonia, he looked exhausted.
“Not you again,” Antonia said. “Not now. She just
woke up. Come back later, Lieutenant. Unless you came to tell us
you shot the guy that did this to her.”
“Not yet.” Hunter stepped to the foot of the bed.
He took in the bandages, the IV, and Bree herself. His face was
expressionless, but there was a glitter in his gray eyes Bree
hadn’t seen before. Rage? “I’d ask how you’re feeling, but you look
pretty doped up.”
“I’m fine,” Bree said. “A little drifty maybe.” She
smiled. “Sorry I didn’t get to deliver the fish tacos.”
“Yeah.” He ducked his head. Was he crying? Bree
struggled once more to sit up.
“Lie down, sister!” Antonia sprang out of the chair
and joined Hunter at the foot of the bed. “I don’t know why you’ve
been hanging around here, Hunter. You should just leave and go
shoot the guy like I said before. She needs to sleep. She needs to
see a doctor. She needs my mother, who’ll be here any second. She
doesn’t need you.”
“Oh dear,” Bree said. Francesca and Royal lived at
Plessey, some two hundred miles away in North Carolina. “Did you
really have to call them, Tonia?” Then, “What guy?” She closed her
eyes in an effort to remember. “What happened?”
“Oh my God.” Antonia bit off another fingernail.
“Brain damage. I knew it. Where’s that damn doctor?”
“Right here.” The door to the room swung open and a
portly man Bree didn’t know walked in. He was dressed in hospital
whites. A stethoscope hung around his neck. He was followed by a
slight, dark-haired familiar figure. “Dr. Lowry!”
The pathologist grinned and wiggled her fingers in
a half wave.
The other doctor picked up the chart at the foot of
the bed and flipped through it. “You know this patient, Dr.
Lowry?”
“Bree Beaufort? Sure. I’ve given her a hand with a
case or two.” She went up to the head of the bed and peered into
Bree’s eyes. “How’re you doing?”
“Pretty well,” Bree said cautiously. “How are you,
Megan? Have you been appointed to the coroner’s office?”
“You mean, am I here to see how fast I can get my
hands on your corpse? Nope. Still working there part-time and
helping out with my brother’s live practice.”
“Excuse me.” The other doctor, whose name tag read
ERIC CAUSTON, moved Megan aside. He flicked his ophthalmologic
scope on and shined it into Bree’s eyes.
“You’re doing remarkably well,” Megan said
reassuringly. “Just what I’d expect in a patient with the kinds of
vital signs you walk around with. I’ve never seen burns heal so
fast in my life! I thought maybe you’d let me take a few tissue
samples and haul them on down to the lab.”
“Hoping for another Latts cell culture, Doctor?”
Causton’s tone was sarcastic. He snapped the light off, felt the
sides of Bree’s throat with cool dry fingers, and then put his
fingertips on the pulse at her wrist.
“You never know,” Megan said eagerly. “Cells are
amazing things.”
Megan Lowry was exceptionally thin, very tiny, and
wore thick tortoiseshell spectacles. Bree bet she wasn’t much older
than Antonia. She’d suspected that Megan was some kind of medical
wunderkind when she’d first met her on the O’Rourke case, and the
irritated attitude she was getting from Causton bore that out.
Established physicians didn’t like competition from brash young
newbies anymore than anyone else. “Causton’s taking your pulse
himself because he doesn’t trust the machines. You’re going to be
amazed, Causton. This woman’s the fittest patient I’ve ever
had.”
“Ever treat real athletes, Lowry? The kids on the
basketball team at Duke, for example? You wouldn’t believe how fast
they heal. Youth, good health, motivation. It all goes into the
picture.”
She pushed her spectacles up her nose with her
forefinger. “Can’t say that I have.”
“Then I’d keep my bright ideas to myself.” He
looked down at Bree. “But you’re healing remarkably quickly.”
Sam moved to the other side of the bed and took
Bree’s undamaged hand in his. “The intake report documented
extensive burns on the legs, forearms, back. She has a tibia
plateau fracture of the right leg and a cracked collarbone. I want
a prognosis.”
“And a concussion,” Megan said with relish. “You
got a whack on the occipital area that should have felled a horse.
But it just put you in la-la land for a few days!”
“I want to know the origin of each of the injuries,
too,” Hunter said.
Causton glanced at Megan with dislike. “She can
tell you that.”
“I don’t think so,” Hunter said. There was
something in the tone of his voice that made Causton straighten up.
“Cooperation makes better medicine, same as police work. I’d like
to hear what both of you have to say.”
“You didn’t see her at intake, Causton,” Megan
said. “There was some question about whether or not she was going
to make it.”
Sam’s hand tightened painfully on Bree’s.
“So I got over here as fast as I could. I mean,
she’s a patient of mine, for goodness’ sake. Plus, I thought I
could maybe get a tissue sample right off. She checked in with
concussion, fractures, et cetera, et cetera. What he said. You gave
a very accurate summary, Lieutenant. Hunter. Anyhow, I talked to
one of the EMTs, and in the twelve minutes that it took to get you
here, you already had visible signs of burn healing.”
“Nonsense,” Causton said.
“You didn’t go over her with a magnifier, like I
did. I mean, it was barely visible, even under a strong
scope.”
“Healing begins immediately,” Causton said
disapprovingly. “There’s nothing unusual about that.”
“Not visible to the naked eye!”
Causton made a disgusted movement.
“Tell me about the head wound,” Sam said.
“Now.”
Causton’s fingers were surprisingly gentle at the
back of Bree’s head. “A depressed fracture, right here.”
“Could that have happened when she was hit by the
car?”
“I was hit by a car?” Bree said.
Causton frowned. “Possibly.”
Megan said, “Absolutely not.”
Causton reached the end of his patience. “What the
hell, Lowry. You seem to know it all. Go ahead.”
“I took a few bits and pieces when she was in the
ER, just to get a head start. The blood and tissue sample from the
occipital area showed evidence of ... guess what?”
The silence in the room was heavy, and not
encouraging.
“Cast iron!”
“Cast iron?” Hunter said.
“Yes. The kind of cast iron you’d find in a frying
pan. As a matter of fact, I’m pretty sure that’s what it
was.”
“Somebody hit me with a cast iron frying pan?” Bree
closed her eyes. “You know what? There was a cast iron frying pan
on the wall of the restaurant. Along with a lot of other
stuff.”
“Do you remember anything else?” Antonia
asked.
“Don’t bite your fingernails,” Bree said. “No. I
don’t remember a thing about the accident. What happened?”
Hunter’s hand still gripped her own. His voice was
a little hoarse. “You punched the Walk button to cross Bay to come
home. A beer truck went through the intersection just as the light
turned green. When the truck passed, I saw you lying in the street.
A car came zipping around the corner, swerved to avoid hitting you,
flipped up onto the sidewalk, and burst into flames. I went across
the street and got you out from under the car.”
“What about the driver?” Bree asked.
“Jumped free. And there was no one else in the car,
thank God, or I would have been patching up two victims instead of
one.” Causton tucked the end of his stethoscope into his jacket
pocket. He crossed his arms. “You think someone hit her from behind
before she was hit by the car?”
“I’m sure of it. Knocked her into the path of the
car. We cited the driver for failure to yield, dangerous driving,
and a couple of other infractions.”
“I’d like to get my hands on him,” Antonia
said.
“He’s in the Chatham County Jail at the moment,
pending the results of the traffic investigation.”
“Anyone I know?” Bree asked.
Hunter nodded slowly. “Phillip Mercury.”
“Really.” Bree absorbed this for a long
moment.
“Claims he did what he could to avoid you.”
“The newspapers said he was drunk,” Antonia said.
“Or high. You cited him for DUI, didn’t you, Sam?”
“We did.”
“So he’s going to jail for a long time. Of course,
not as long as if ...” Antonia’s voice choked with sobs.
“Well, I didn’t die,” Bree said tartly. “Get a
grip, sister.”
The door to the room burst open. A small, red-gold
whirlwind spun into the room, followed by a tall, handsome man with
gray hair.
“Mamma!” Antonia threw herself into Francesca’s
arms. “You’re here, Mamma. She’s going to be all right. She’s not
going to die! I was so sure she was going to die!”
Bree smiled at her heart’s true father, Royal
Winston-Beaufort. “Hey, Daddy. That’s my diva sister for sure. I’m
fine. It’s like they say. The whole thing was a long way from my
heart.”
“Darlin’ girl,” her mother said. “We’ve come to
take you home.”