When Paige returned an hour later with the reports on the tests, John Cronin looked up. “Oh, the bitch is back.”
Paige operated on John Cronin at six o'clock the following morning.
The moment she opened him up, she knew that there was no hope. The major problem was not the heart. Cronin's organs showed signs of melanoma.
A resident said, “Oh, my God! What are we going to do?”
“We're going to pray that he doesn't have to live with this too long.”
When Paige stepped out of the operating room into the corridor, she found a woman and two men waiting for her. The woman was in her late thirties. She had bright red hair and too much makeup, and she wore a heavy, cheap perfume. She had on a tight dress that accentuated a voluptuous figure. The men were in their forties, and both had red hair. To Paige, they looked like a circus troupe.
The woman said to Paige, “You Dr. Taylor?”
“Yes.”
“I'm Mrs. Cronin. These are my brothers. How's my husband?”
Paige hesitated. She said carefully, “The operation went as well as could be expected.”
“Oh, thank God!” Mrs. Cronin said melodramatically, dabbing at her eyes with a lace handkerchief. “I'd die if anything happened to John!”
Paige felt as if she were watching an actress in a bad play.
“Can I see my darling now?”
“Not yet, Mrs. Cronin. He's in the recovery room. I suggest that you come back tomorrow.”
“We'll be back.” She turned to the men. “Come along, fellas.”
Paige watched as they walked away. Poor John Cronin, she thought.
Paige was given the report the next morning. The cancer had metastasized throughout Cronin's body. It was too late for radiation treatment.
The oncologist said to Paige, “There's nothing to do but try to keep him comfortable. He's going to be in a hell of a lot of pain.”
“How much time does he have?”
“A week or two at the most.”
Paige went to visit John Cronin in intensive care. He was asleep. John Cronin was no longer a bitter, vitriolic man, but a human being fighting desperately for his life. He was on a respirator, and being fed intravenously. Paige sat down at his bedside, watching him. He looked tired and defeated. He's one of the unlucky ones, Paige thought. Even with all the modern medical miracles, there's nothing we can do to save him. Paige touched his arm gently. After a while, she left.
Later that afternoon, Paige stopped by to see John Cronin again. He was off the respirator now. When he opened his eyes and saw Paige, he said drowsily, “The operation's over, huh?”
Paige smiled reassuringly. “Yes. I just came by to make sure that you're comfortable.”
“Comfortable?” he snorted. “What the hell do you care?”
Paige said, “Please. Let's not fight.”
Cronin lay there, silently studying her. “The other doctor told me you did a good job.”
Paige said nothing.
“I have cancer, don't I?”
“Yes.”
“How bad is it?”
The question posed a dilemma that all surgeons were faced with sooner or later. Paige said, “It's pretty bad.”
There was a long silence. “What about radiation or chemotherapy?”
“I'm sorry. It would make you feel worse, and it wouldn't help.”
“I see. Well … I've had a good life.”
“I'm sure you have.”
“You may not think so, looking at me now, but I've had a lot of women.”
“I believe it.”
“Yeah. Women … thick steaks … good cigars .. . You married?”
“No.”
“You ought to be. Everyone should be married. I've been married. Twice. First, for thirty-five years. She was a wonderful lady. She died of a heart attack.”
“I'm sorry.”
“It's okay.” He sighed. “Then I got sucked into marrying a bimbo. Her and her two hungry brothers. It's my fault for being so horny, I guess. Her red hair turned me on. She's some piece of work.”
“I'm sure she …”
“No offense, but do you know why I'm in this cockamamie hospital? My wife put me here. She didn't want to waste money on me for a private hospital. This way there'll be more to leave to her and her brothers.” He looked up at Paige. “How much time do I have left?”
“Do you want it straight?”
“No … yes.”
“A week or two.”
“Jesus! The pain is going to get worse, isn't it?”
“I'll try to keep you as comfortable as possible, Mr. Cronin.”
“Call me John.”
“John.”
“Life is a bitch, isn't it?”
“You said you've had a good life.”
“I did. It's kinda funny, knowing it's about over. Where do you think we go?”
“I don't know.”
He forced a smile. “I'll let you know when I get there.”
“Some medication is on the way. Can I do anything to make you more comfortable?”
“Yeah. Come back and talk to me tonight.”
It was Paige's night off, and she was exhausted. “I'll come back.”
That night when Paige went back to see John Cronin, he was awake.
“How are you feeling?”
He winced. “Terrible. I was never very good about pain. I guess I've got a low threshold.”
“I understand.”
“You met Hazel, huh?”
“Hazel?”
“My wife. The bimbo. She and her brothers were here to see me. They said they talked to you.”
“Yes.”
“She's something, ain't she? I sure got myself into a bundle of trouble there. They can't wait for me to kick the bucket.”
“Don't say that.”
“It's true. The only reason Hazel married me was for my money. To tell you the truth, I didn't mind that so much. I really had a good time with her in bed, but then she and her brothers started to get greedy. They always wanted more.”
The two of them sat there in a comfortable silence.
“Did I tell you I used to travel a lot?”
“No.”
“Yeah. I've been to Sweden … Denmark … Germany. Have you been to Europe?”
She thought about the day at the travel agency. Let's go to Venice! No, let's go to Paris! How about London? “No. I haven't.”
“You ought to go.”
“Maybe one day I will.”
“I guess you don't make much money working at a hospital like this, huh?”
“I make enough.”
He nodded to himself. “Yeah. You have to go to Europe. Do me a favor. Go to Paris … stay at the Crillon, have dinner at Maxim's, order a big, thick steak and a bottle of champagne, and when you eat that steak and drink that champagne, I want you to think of me. Will you do that?”
Paige said slowly, “I'll do that one day.” John Cronin was studying her. “Good. I'm tired now. Will you come back tomorrow and talk to me again?” “I'll come back,” Paige said. John Cronin slept.
Ken Mallory was a great believer in Lady Luck, and after meeting the Harrisons, he believed even more firmly that she was on his side. The odds against a man as wealthy as Alex Harrison being brought to Embarcadero County Hospital were enormous. And I'm the one who saved his life, and he wants to show his gratitude, Mallory thought gleefully. He had asked a friend of his about the Harrisons. “Rich doesn't even begin to cover it,” his friend had said. “He's a millionaire a dozen times over. And he has a great-looking daughter. She's been married three or four times. The last time to a count.” “Have you ever met the Harrisons?” “No. They don't mingle with the hoi polloi.” On a Saturday morning, as Alex Harrison was being discharged from the hospital, he said, “Ken, do you think I'll be in shape to give a dinner party a week from now?”
Mallory nodded. “If you don't overdo it, I don't see why not.”
Alex Harrison smiled. “Fine. You're the guest of honor.”
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