Authors: Karin Slaughter
Tags: #Medical, #General, #Suspense, #Fiction, #Thrillers, #Political, #Mystery & Detective, #Women Sleuths
Sara nodded, a sinking feeling in her stomach. She picked up the phone to dial Jeffrey's number, then changed her mind. Lacey had come to the clinic because she trusted Sara, and Sara would not betray that confidence. At the very least, the girl needed help. Whatever laws she had broken could be dealt with after Sara made sure she was okay.
Exam six was in the back of the building, at the end of the L-shaped hallway. Normally, it was reserved for very sick children or used as a waiting room for parents while Sara talked to their kids about sex, or birth control, or whatever things they felt they needed to talk to their pediatrician about in private. Sara supposed Molly had stuck Lacey back here to win the girl's trust. Kids did not just show up at the clinic without their parents, even the ones who could drive themselves.
Molly was waiting by the closed exam room door when Sara turned the corner.
She handed Lacey Patterson's chart to Sara outside the exam room, saying, "I'll be in two if you need me."
Sara flipped open the chart to review her notes from Lacey's last visit, even though Sara had looked at the chart just a few days ago. Two months ago, the girl had presented with what appeared to be strep throat. Sara had started her on antibiotics, pending the lab results. Sara thumbed through the chart, but the pink sheet the lab usually sent was not in there. She was about to find Molly when she noticed a noise coming from behind the exam door.
"Lacey?" Sara asked, sliding back the door. "Are you-" She stopped midsentence, thinking that the last time she had seen someone so pale was in the morgue. The girl was sitting in the chair by the exam table, her arms wrapped across her stomach. Despite the weather she was wearing a neon-yellow raincoat. She was doubled over, her arms wrapped around her stomach as if in pain.
Sara put her hand on the girl's back, surprised at how clammy it felt through the coat.
Lacey's teeth were chattering, but she managed to say, "I need to talk to you."
"Come here," Sara said, helping her stand. "Let's get you on the table."
Lacey hesitated, and Sara lifted her up onto the exam table.
"I don't…" Lacey began, but she was shaking too hard to continue. Sara put her hand to the girl's forehead, wondering if Lacey was shaking from fear or from fever. As hot as it was outside, Sara could not tell the difference.
"Let's get this coat off," Sara suggested, but Lacey would not unwrap her arms from her waist.
"What happened?" Sara asked, trying to keep her voice steady. There was an electric charge in the room, as if something really bad had happened.
Lacey tilted forward, and Sara caught her before she fell off the table.
"I'm so sleepy," she said.
"Sit up for me a minute," Sara told her. She raised her voice, calling into the hallway, "Molly?"
"I'm not feeling well," the girl said.
Sara held her hands against Lacey's thin shoulders. "Where do you hurt?"
She opened her mouth to speak, vomiting all over Sara. Of course this had happened to Sara before, and she stepped back, but not in time to keep from getting splattered.
After her sickness subsided, Lacey murmured, "I'm sorry."
"It's okay, sweetie," Sara told her.
"My stomach hurts."
"You're okay," Sara told her. Holding Lacey up with one hand, she stretched toward the paper towel dispenser and gave the girl some cloths.
"I feel sick."
Sara raised her voice again, this time louder than before. "Molly?" she called, knowing that it was futile. Exam two was on the other side of the building.
"Lie back," Sara told Lacey. "If you get sick, turn to the side."
"Don't leave me!" the girl cried, holding on to Sara's hand. "Please, Dr. Linton, I gotta talk to you. I gotta tell you what happened."
Sara could guess what happened, but there were more important things right now than hearing the girl's confession.
"I gotta tell you," the girl repeated.
"About the baby?" Sara guessed. She could tell from Lacey's expression that her guess was right. Sara felt stupid for not having figured it out before. She said, "I know, sweetie. I know. Just lie down and I'll be right back."
The girl's body tensed. "How do you know?"
"Lie down," Sara told her. Thinking this would soothe her, Sara offered, "I'll go call your mom."
Lacey bolted upright. "You can't tell my mom."
"Don't worry about that now."
"You can't tell her," Lacey insisted, tears streaming down her face. "She's sick. She's real sick."
Sara did not understand what the girl meant, but she soothed her anyway. "It's going to be okay."
"Promise me you won't tell her."
Sara said, "Honey, we'll worry about that later."
"No!" she yelled, gripping Sara's arm. "You can't tell my mom. Please. Please don't tell her."
"Stay right here," Sara ordered. "I'll be right back."
She did not wait for an answer. Sara stepped into the hallway, slipping off her soiled lab coat as she walked toward the nurses' station.
Nelly asked, "What happened?"
"Call an ambulance," Sara said, tossing her coat into the dirty linen bin. She leaned back, looking around the corner to make sure Lacey had not left the room. "Get Molly in six right now, and then call Frank over at the police station."
"Oh, my," Nelly mumbled, picking up the phone.
Elliot came out of one of the exam rooms. "Hey, Sara?" he asked. "I've got a six year old with-"
"Not now," Sara told him, holding up her hand. With a glance down the hallway, she went into her office and dialed Jeffrey's cell phone. She let it ring four times before hanging up. Next, she dialed the station.
Maria Simms answered. "Grant County Police Station. How may I help you?"
"Maria," Sara said. "Find Jeffrey, send him over to the clinic right now."
A banging noise echoed up the hallway, and Sara mumbled a curse as she recognized the sound of the back door popping open.
Maria said, "Sara?"
Sara slammed down the phone and ran out into the hallway, prepared to chase after Lacey. What she saw stopped her cold. Mark Patterson stood at the end of the hall, every muscle in his body tensed. There was a cut across his abdomen that stained his blue shirt to a dark purple, and his jeans were torn at the knee as if he had skidded across asphalt.
"Lacey?" he screamed, sliding open the first door he came to.
Sara heard a shocked gasp from the mother of the patient in the room, followed by the wails of a frightened child.
"Sara?" Nelly asked. She was standing at the nurse's station with the telephone in her hand.
Sara said, "Call the station. Tell them to send whoever they can."
"Lacey?" Mark repeated, his voice vibrating through the hallway. Thankfully, he had not noticed the tail end of the hall and the two exam rooms off to the side.
He came closer, and Sara could see that his clothes were stained and dirty-looking. Flecks of white paint covered everything. His hair looked greasy and was uncombed, as if he had not bathed in a while. Sara had seen Mark many times over the last decade, but she had never seen him looking so unclean.
"Goddamn it!" Mark screamed, throwing his hands into the air. "Where's my fucking sister?"
A couple of doors behind Sara slid open, and she turned, signaling for the parents to stay inside.
Molly stood beside Sara, holding a chart to her chest. It was the first time Sara had ever seen the nurse shocked by anything that happened in the clinic.
"Mark," Sara said, putting some authority into her tone. "What are you doing here?"
"Where's Lacey?" he said, slamming his hand into the next door. The panel shook on its slider, and Sara could hear a child screaming behind it.
Nelly's voice was muffled as she talked to someone on the phone. Sara could not make out the conversation, but she hoped to God they were sending somebody.
"Mark," Sara began, trying to keep her voice calm. "Stop this. She's not here."
"The hell she's not," he countered, taking a step toward her. "Where is that little cunt?" He slammed his hand against the door again, punching an impression into the wood. Nelly screamed and ducked behind the counter.
"Where is she?" he demanded.
Sara purposefully made what she hoped was a nervous glance toward her office. Mark picked up on it immediately.
"Aha," he said. "She in there?"
"No," Sara told him.
He smiled, stepping closer to her. Sara could see that his pupils were as small as pinpricks, and guessed that whatever he was on was not about to dissipate any time soon. Up close, he seemed to be giving off an odor. Sara was not certain, but the smell reminded her of chemicals.
She asked, "What are you on, Mark?"
"I'm about to be on my fucking sister if she doesn't keep her fucking mouth shut."
"She's not here," Sara told him.
"Lace?" Mark said, craning his head around the office door. "You better get the fuck out here right now."
Sara caught movement out of the corner of her eye. She knew from the neon-yellow blur that it was Lacey, trying to make her way out the back door. A cold sweat chilled Sara as she calculated how long it would take for Lacey to make it to the exit. She stared at Mark, willing Lacey to hurry, but the girl was not moving. She was standing stock still as if someone had pinned her to the wall.
"She in there?" Mark asked.
"No," Sara said, looking over his shoulder. "She's behind you."
Lacey's hand went to her mouth as if to stop herself from screaming.
"Right," Mark said, giving Sara a scathing look.
"I want you out of here right now, Mark. You're trespassing."
He ignored her, walking into the office. Sara followed him at a distance, trying to be casual about the fact that she was trapping him in the room. She prayed that Maria had gotten hold of someone, even if it was Brad Stephens.
"Lacey?" Mark said, his voice softer, but in a more menacing way than before. He walked around the desk. "It's only gonna be worse if you don't come out now."
Sara crossed her arms. "What's purity, Mark?"
Mark looked under the desk, cursing when he found it empty. He kicked it, moving the steel desk across the floor a couple of inches.
"Did you make Jenny feel dirty? Is that why she wanted to make herself pure?"
"Get out of my way," he ordered, walking toward Sara.
She put her hand on the door, blocking his exit.
"Get out of the way."
"What's purity?"
He looked like he might answer, but Sara realized too late he was just trying to throw her off guard. The next thing she knew, she was being pushed back, and hard. She fell into the hall, whacking her head on the floor.
"Sara!" Molly said, running around to help her.
"I'm okay," Sara managed, trying to sit up. She looked down the hallway and saw that Lacey was still there about the same time that Mark did.
"Run!" Sara told her. Lacey hesitated, but finally seemed to understand she needed to get out of here. She ran to the door and slammed it open.
"Bitch," Mark yelled, taking after her.
Without thinking, Sara reached out and grabbed at Mark's foot. He tried to yank it away, but she caught the leg of his pants in her fist.
"Stop it," Sara said, trying to hold on.
He reached down, hitting at her hand with his fist. When this did not work, he punched at her face. Sara saw the glint of the red stone in his ring before the first blow caught her on the forehead, and she was so surprised that she let go.
"Oh, my God," Molly breathed, putting her hand to her mouth.
"Crap," Sara hissed, touching her forehead. Mark's ring had caught her right at the temple. She looked at the blood on her fingers, but then thought of Lacey and made herself stand.
Molly began, "Maybe you should-"
Sara took off after Mark and Lacey, shouting, "Where the hell is Jeffrey?" over her shoulder.
Sara stopped outside the back door, trying to get her bearings. The sun was beating down, and Sara shielded her eyes as she tried to spot Lacey in the trees behind the building.
"Did they go around front?" Molly asked, jogging toward the side of the clinic. Sara followed her, bumping into the nurse as she turned the corner.
Molly was pointing to the road. "There she is."
They both took off at the same time, but Sara's stride was longer, and she soon left Molly behind. The road in front of the clinic was hardly a busy thoroughfare, but at lunchtime the professors and students left campus to come into town. Sara watched as Lacey ran into the street, Mark right behind her, screaming at the top of his lungs.
Somehow, they both made it across the road. Lacey ran toward the lake, but Sara watched as another figure, a blur, really, came from the side and tackled Mark to the ground. By the time Sara and Molly crossed the street, Lena Adams was straddling Mark's back like a rodeo rider as she jerked his arms behind him and cuffed his wrists.
"Oh, shit," Lena said, looking up the street.
Lacey was too far away for Sara to recognize her by any other means than the bright yellow raincoat. Sara stood helpless, watching as an old black car stopped beside the girl. The passenger-side door swung open and an arm reached out, grabbing Lacey around the waist and pulling her inside the car.
Sara touched the bandage on her forehead as she got out of the car. Molly had sewn in two sutures, then canceled the rest of Sara's appointments so that she could have some downtime in order to recover from the ordeal at the clinic. Sara's head hurt, and she was hot and irritable. She might as well have stayed at the clinic and seen patients, but Molly had not really given her a choice. Maybe the nurse was right. Every time Sara thought about what had happened at the clinic, she felt as if a band were being tightened around her chest. Knowing another one of her kids was in jeopardy and that there was absolutely nothing she could do made Sara want to put her head on her mother's shoulder and cry.
"Mama?" Sara called, kicking off her shoes as she closed the front door behind her. There was no answer, and Sara walked back to the kitchen, asking, "Mama?" again.