“As I said, you’ve done me and everyone in my practice a big favor for years. It’s I who thanks you.”
For a few seconds the rest of the man’s flushed expression gave way to a hint of a smile, but couldn’t quite deliver all of it. “Just don’t tell anyone I’m doing it for you,” he said, getting to his feet and shaking Mark’s hand. “Not anyone. They find out I’m hacking into their business files, I’ll be blackballed from working in the industry ever again-”
A knock on the door interrupted him, and Lucy poked her head in. “Oh, hi, Victor, I thought I heard your voice. Wondered if you wanted to drop over for dinner later.”
“Oh, I couldn’t-”
“Come on. I’ve had a fresh vegetable soup on a low heat all day that’s a stew by now, so join us.”
Victor looked at Mark as if for permission to cross the line that separates patients from doctors.
“Absolutely, Victor,” Mark said, unable to think of any better medicine for the man than good company and a fine meal. “Please come.”
“Why, thank you.”
“Shall we say seven?” she asked.
“Yes, seven would be perfect.”
Mark saw the hint of a smile beneath the mustache.
“Lucy, you gave that guy exactly what the doctor ordered,” he told her, after Victor had left.
“What?”
“I’ll explain later.”
4:30 P.M.
Mark and Lucy finished early with the afternoon’s patients and took a short run together.
“You’re in as good shape as I am,” he said to her, as they started the uphill portion of his route.
She sprinted ahead and grinned at him over her shoulder. “The question is, are you in as good shape as me?”
Afterward they shared a pot of tea in his kitchen.
She sat curled up in a large rocking chair, holding her cup with both hands. “You could be right,” she said, having listened to him explain his theory why Victor might have been fired.
Behind her the large cast-iron woodstove that had been the centerpiece of the room in both his mother’s and aunt Margaret’s day crackled with burning maple. It filled the room with a warmth that was far cozier than the baseboard heaters could provide, but Mark had hardly ever bothered to fire it up. Lucy, however, as soon as she learned it was functional, had sent him out to retrieve an armload of logs off the woodpile while she chopped up some kindling.
The sounds transported Mark back to a time when his home was a happy place, but the memories also carried the dull aching reminder of parents and childhood prematurely lost. Which was why he’d shunned stove fires in the past.
Yet this evening was different. Lucy’s company mollified his usual discomfort with remembrance. How pleasant it felt at the end of the day to have someone with whom he could discuss the little victories. And the problems.
“Obviously I’m making someone nervous,” Mark said, “Nucleus Laboratories must be a business interest connected to Chaz Braden. Why else would our visit bring down such a heavy-handed response?”
She scrunched up her face into a show of skepticism, making her look as if she were staring into a harsh light. “But how could your investigation of a murder twenty-seven years ago have any connection with a lab built in 1996?”
He shrugged, unable to give her an answer. “I just feel it in my bones. Chaz’s name will be among the business interests running the place, I’m sure of it. What the tie-in might be to Kelly, I’ll have to figure that out later.”
“What if you’re wrong, and there is no evidence that Chaz is involved? Or even if his name does appear somewhere in the hierarchy of the place, it doesn’t prove anything is wrong. Lots of doctors have business interests in private labs.”
“Then Victor’s getting fired would be one big coincidence. Don’t tell me you believe that.”
“No, not really. I’m saying there may be another reason.”
“Such as?” he asked, waiting for her to continue. Then he figured he knew what she must be going to say. Earlier he’d told her of Earl’s astonishing revelation about Samantha and Walter McShane. “Okay, I have to admit, if the McShanes turned out to own a piece of Nucleus Laboratories – and they do have extensive business interests, if the Wall Street Journal ’s to be believed – it might be her we’re after. But why our visit would make either of them fire Victor is even more unimaginable than it is for Chaz. Besides, there’s something that doesn’t fit about the idea of Samantha killing Kelly. There should have been a different dynamic involved.”
“How do you mean?”
“It didn’t sit right when Dr. Garnet suggested it, and now I remember why.” Earl’s testiness when Mark hadn’t embraced the idea outright also didn’t sit well, but he kept that irritation to himself. Someday soon, however, he intended to point out that as coroner on the case, he outranked chiefs of ER from Buffalo. “During my psychiatry rotation at NYCH, we saw court tapes of women on trial for killing their children in what were believed to be Munchausen by proxy syndromes. Now Samantha didn’t really fit that profile, but as Earl said, the dynamic of her playing a noble, self-sacrificing victim was similar. Well, here’s something else she might be kindred in. Each one of those women had accepted her sentence with eerie equanimity, all the while protesting her innocence, as if her incarceration were simply another hardship to endure as part of being a long-suffering mother. If we’re right about Samantha, she could have reacted that way, too, might even have reveled in standing accused by her daughter. It would have given her a chance at an ultimate performance, in court, before the cameras, playing the victim role of a lifetime – mother unjustly charged of terrible wrongdoings by the very child she’d so self-sacrificingly nursed through one mysterious illness after another. It’s unlikely that she would have given up such an opportunity, let alone killed to avoid it.”
Lucy took a sip of tea and stared across the top of her mug, appearing to digest what he’d said. After a few seconds she looked over at him. “Interesting, but did you ever think it might not be your investigation of Kelly’s murder that’s got whoever runs that lab so upset, but something else?”
That surprised him. “Something else?” Her open expression and glittering brown eyes were so lovely and vulnerable, he found them distracting. “Okay, what am I missing?”
She swallowed, seeming uncertain whether to speak, and curled her legs more tightly under her.
“Lucy?”
Her gaze drifted off him and wandered the room. “Something I’ve been mulling over, but didn’t want to tell you until I could be sure what it meant. I can’t even say now how it fits in with either Kelly or the lab.” She again fell silent.
For the two days he’d known her, this self-assured young woman hadn’t betrayed the slightest trace of indecision in her work. Yet here she was, hesitant to speak up. “Go on,” he said, his curiosity growing about what could fluster her so.
“Well, it’s personal, so bear with me-”
Mark’s home phone began to ring, interrupting her.
He took the call on a wall-mounted extension near the back door of the kitchen. “Roper.”
“Mark, this is Charles Braden calling.”
He felt as if a bomb had exploded in his ear. “Ah, yes, Dr. Braden.”
Lucy’s eyes widened into a you’ve-got-to-be-kidding-me look.
He gestured her to join him in listening. “What can I do for you, sir?”
She huddled at his side, their ears sharing the receiver
“Well, you can not call me ‘sir’ for starters. Makes me feel ancient.”
“Of course, sir – Dr. Braden.”
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