Blind Spot (12 page)

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Authors: Terri Persons

BOOK: Blind Spot
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The door to the next room was closed, but she heard noise—a male voice. She took a breath and reached inside her coat, putting her right hand on her gun. With her left, she gently pushed the door open a crack. An elderly man was alone, sleeping, while the television set across from his bed blared with a baseball game. She glanced at the score: the Twins were kicking Anaheim’s butt at the Metrodome. Quietly closing the door, she backed out of the room and took her hand off her gun. She turned to continue down the hall.

The door to the next room was wide open. She stepped into the doorway. The bed was stripped of linen, and the lights were off. The room had been empty all night. As soon as she stepped back into the corridor to continue her tour, someone behind her touched her shoulder. Bernadette started and turned around. A nurse. Busted.

“Visiting hours are over.” She was a little taller than Bernadette and twice as wide. Her upper arms were the size of picnic hams, and her voice was hoarse. She sounded like she’d been yelling at people all day, and she wasn’t going to take any grief. The nurse thumbed over her shoulder at a sign on the corridor wall behind her. “You’ll have to leave.”

Bernadette stole a sideways glance at the next room. The door was propped open, but she couldn’t see the patient or the visitors. Probably another dead end. She didn’t want to waste any more time doing it the discreet way. Bernadette whipped out her wallet. “I’m with the FBI. Agent Bernadette Saint Clare.”

The nurse’s eyes widened as she studied the identification. “What’s going on?”

Bernadette put away her ID. “I need to check the patients’ rooms on this side of the hallway. While I’m doing that, you can get me a list of all the staff working tonight. The professional staff. Doctors, nurses, aides.”

The woman’s eyes narrowed. “What do you need all that for?”

“I can’t disclose that information. This is part of a federal—”

The woman interrupted her: “Federal patient privacy laws. Heard of those? I’m not authorized to hand out anything or let you see anyone. You’ll have to go through Administration. They’ll be in on Monday.”

“This can’t wait until Monday!”

The woman planted her fists on her hips. “Turn down the volume. This is a hospital.”

“Let me speak to a supervisor.”

“You’re looking at her.”

“I don’t have time to fool around!”

“If you don’t keep your voice down, I’m going to call Security.” She folded the hams in front of her chest. “How do I know that badge is real and that you’re really an FBI cop? You think just because you waved that ID in my face I’m gonna hand over a pile of personnel information? Let you bother patients? You come back on Monday with the proper paperwork and go through the right channels.” Then, in a voice that was as loud as Bernadette’s, she added: “Now, please leave!”

Bernadette hesitated. Arguing in the hallway with Nurse Big Arms wasn’t getting anywhere. Maybe she could sway the woman if they sat down together. She lowered her voice to a whisper. “This is really important, and I don’t have time. Can we talk somewhere?”

The woman unfolded the hams and pointed toward the nurses’ station. “This way.”

Bernadette eyed the woman’s ID badge. “Thank you, Marcia.”

While the two women walked side by side, the nurse started her own questioning.

“What’s this about exactly? The dead judge? It’s all over the news. Television said the FBI is investigating. You think someone at the hospital is involved?”

 

 

A frightened man stuck his head out the door of Anna Fontaine’s hospital room. He looked down the hall and was relieved to see the backs of the nurse and the FBI agent.

FBI! What has that bastard gotten my wife into?

“Dad?” said a squeaky male voice behind him.

“Shut up and stay here,” Jerry Fontaine said to his sons without turning around. He was a soft, chubby man with thinning blond hair combed over the top of his scalp.

He slipped outside the room and chugged for the steps. Giving one last look over his shoulder, he saw the two women going into the nurses’ break room. Good. He opened the door and thumped down the stairs. Jerry remembered the bastard had said he was going to attend evening services at the hospital chapel and then head on to another appointment.

 

 

Jerry saw him standing outside the chapel, talking to the hospital’s lady minister and smiling. He mistrusted that reptilian grin and despised the man’s overall appearance. The snake was too good-looking to be left alone with an impressionable, weak woman like Anna. Other worshippers were spilling out of the room as well. As soon as the hallway crowd dispersed and the chaplain parted ways with the big man, Jerry came up behind him. “Hey!”

He spun around. “Jerry. What’s wrong? Is Anna—”

Jerry grabbed him by the shoulder and pulled him back into the chapel. He let the chapel door shut behind them and glanced around the room to make sure no one else was there. “What the hell did you two do? There’s an FBI agent on Anna’s floor.”

“What?”

With the heel of his hand. Jerry swiped a coating of perspiration from his forehead. “I heard her arguing with a nurse.”

“What makes you think that has anything to do with me? With your wife?”

Jerry wiped his palms on the thighs of his khakis while he felt sweat collecting under his armpits. He wondered if he was going to drown in his own fluids. “She wanted personnel files or something. I couldn’t catch all of it.”

“A hospital worker must be in hot water.”

“Sounded like it had something to do with the judge.” Jerry stepped closer. “So help me God, if you had anything to do with that fat fucker’s death, if you’ve roped my wife into some sort of—”

“Lower your voice.”

Jerry whispered his next questions. Even as he asked them, he hoped the bastard would lie to him. He didn’t want to know shit: “Did you do it? Did my wife have anything to do with it?”

He posed his own questions in a voice so calm and condescending it made Jerry want to punch him in the mouth: “What does she look like, this FBI person? You said
she,
right? What does this woman look like? Can you describe her to me?”

Jerry stumbled over his response, all the while wondering what the hell the woman’s looks had to do with anything. “Didn’t…I didn’t see her face. From behind she looked tiny. Skinny. Short blond hair.”

“How was she dressed?”

“What? Leather jacket and jeans. Why?”

“Does that sound like an FBI agent? Come on, Jerry. I’m sure you misunderstood the conversation. I’ll bet you overheard them gossiping about what they saw on the news today.”

Jerry took a step back, blinked, and considered the possibility. He dragged his shirtsleeve across his sweaty upper lip and said hesitantly: “No. I’m sure…”

“You’re all wound up because of Anna. Go back upstairs and take care of your wife and kids. Forget about what you
thought
you heard.”

Jerry went to the door and put his hand on the handle. “I hope you’re right.” He yanked open the door and left. He looked over his shoulder as he went and saw the asshole was still inside, peeking into the hallway through a window in the chapel door. “Chickenshit,” Jerry muttered, and continued back to his wife’s room.

 

 

Bernadette’s one-on-one with Nurse Big Arms had been a waste of time. The woman’s answer was still the same:
Visiting hours are over, so get out.
As Bernadette headed down the hall, she felt the nurse’s eyes on her until she stepped into the elevator. The car went down; she held on to the railing with one hand and closed her eyes. The two sessions with the ring had wasted her. Her legs were rubbery, and her empty gut ached. She needed to eat something and go to bed.

She opened her eyes when she felt the car stop and heard the doors open. She half expected a cadre of security guards to be waiting for her, but none materialized. Hanging a right off the elevators, she headed for the exit. She contemplated a third try, and at the same time wondered if she could take it. Would the church be closed by now? When she was this tired, she needed that serene setting. She stopped with her hand on the door and looked outside. The thought of schlepping through the rain in search of a church exhausted her. The hospital had a chapel; maybe that would work. No. She needed the real thing. She opened the door and dashed through the rain, retracing her steps to the church.

 

 

Twelve

 

 

With eyes closed tight, Bernadette set her elbows on her thighs and rested her face in her hands. She couldn’t make herself do it again, couldn’t make herself pull off her gloves, dip her hand into her pocket, and take it out. She was too damn drained. A third round with the ring could ruin her for tomorrow, and she wanted Sunday to work on this. She opened her eyes and sat up on the bench, ready to leave. She rubbed her temples, feeling the beginnings of a headache. She’d get something to eat, try to sleep, and get a fresh start in the morning. A call to Garcia could wait twelve hours.

She scanned the front one last time. When she’d first returned to the church, Bernadette was surprised to find it open and the women still cleaning. The altar ladies had quietly disappeared while her eyes were shut. They were probably putting away their supplies; they had to be closing shop soon. She told herself she should leave before they had to kick her out. A clap of thunder shook the church walls and reminded her it was storming outside.

In unison with another clap, she felt a hand on her shoulder. She jumped to her feet and spun around. In the pew behind her stood a tall man in a robe, his face obscured by the garment’s hood. She hadn’t expected to see a priest at this late hour. “What?” she blurted, and then quickly added, more respectfully, “Yes, Father?”

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