Authors: Robin Cook
Laurie's sense of desperation went up yet another notch. She felt progressively snared in a treacherous web of terrifying circumstance.
"Now, why don't you want to move?" Jazz questioned with obvious frustration. She extended her hand over Laurie to point out the room's amenities. "Check out that comfortable bed with all its controls. You can crank yourself into just about every position you can imagine and then some. You've got a TV, a pitcher for water with no water since you're still NPO, a call button for us slaves ... all the comforts of home. What else can you ask for?"
Laurie's eyes involuntarily took in what Jazz described and did a double take. Sitting on the nightstand was a telephone! She questioned why she had not thought about it until that second. The orderly had even mentioned it. It would be her lifeline. Gritting her teeth, Laurie rose up on her elbows and began moving her backside over toward the hospital bed. Then she repositioned her legs and repeated the maneuver, inching herself across the divide.
"Very good," Jazz said. "I see you've decided to be cooperative. I'm pleased for both of us."
As soon as Laurie was in the hospital bed, Jazz moved across the suction device for Laurie's drain. She pulled up the cover that had been positioned across the foot of the bed and let it settle across Laurie's chest. She then took Laurie's blood pressure and pulse. As she did this, Laurie watched her intently. Jazz avoided eye contact.
"Okay," Jazz said, finally making eye contact as she lifted up the guardrail with a jolt.
"Everything seems in order other than your pulse is a little on the high side. I'll mosey on back to the desk and go over your orders. I'm sure you have something ordered for pain on an as-needed basis. Are you in need, or are you fine at the moment?"
Laurie was amazed at the lack of normal human warmth in Jazz's voice and actions.
Ostensibly, there wasn't anything specific that Laurie could complain about other than her requests being ignored, yet there was a worrisome detachment that seemed incredibly out of place, and as such, it added to her already considerable unease. There was something definitely strange about Jasmine Rakoczi.
"Cat got your tongue?" Jazz questioned with a wry smile. She spread her hands waist-height. "That's okay with me. You don't have to talk if you don't want to. Frankly, it makes my job that much easier if you don't. But if you change your mind, you've got your call button. Of course, when you get around to pressing it, I might be involved with someone a bit more communicative."
With a final smile that Laurie interpreted as brazenly indifferent, Jazz walked out of the room.
Being careful not to move too quickly, Laurie reached out over the bed's side rail and lifted the phone. The effort required her to tighten her abdominal muscles, which caused significant discomfort. Gritting her teeth in the face of the pain, she managed to move the phone from the night table to the bed. She put it next to her, and then struggled to remember Jack's cell phone number in the face of her anxiety and the drugs she'd had. It took her a moment, but then it reassuringly popped into her mind. She then snatched up the phone receiver and put it to her ear.
Laurie's heart skipped a beat. There was no dial tone! Frantically, she pressed the disconnect button, hoping for the familiar sound. There was nothing. The phone was dead. Just as frantically, she grabbed the nurse's call button and pressed it, not once but several times in a row.
Although getting an attending's opinion on Sobczyk's short segment of EKG tracing seemed like a great idea, Jack hadn't factored in the attending's availability. When Jack and Shirley got back to the cath room, Jack found out that Dr. Henry Wo was in the middle of his catheterization. Jack was forced to resort to additional caffeine-driven pacing in the corridor, punctuated by frequent glances at his watch. Shirley stood by stoically. If she was aware of Jack's restless agitation, she didn't mention it.
It wasn't until almost three A.M. that Henry came out of the room, snapped off his latex gloves, and removed his mask. He was a rotund Asian man with flawless skin and dark, closely cropped hair. He snapped up Jack's hand and pumped it enthusiastically as Shirley introduced them. Shirley mentioned the quandary about the short EKG
segment, and Jack handed over the page from Sobczyk's chart with the tracing attached.
"I see, I see," Henry said, nodding his head and smiling as he glanced at the EGK
strip. "Very interesting. Is this all we have?"
"I'm afraid so," Jack said. He recounted the brief story, as he knew it, concerning the failed resuscitation attempt. He added why he thought that even a guess on their part might be helpful.
"It's dangerous to say too much with so little," Henry said while again studying the tracing. He then looked up at Shirley. "Dr. Mayrand, perhaps you could tell us what you were thinking?"
Shirley reiterated what she had said to Jack about the various waves, intervals, and complexes while Henry continued to nod. When Shirley had finished, Henry asked her if she had any idea of what might have accounted for such alterations.
"The conduction system seems to be failing," Shirley said. "Perhaps that means the sodium pumps within the cells of the bundle of His are not functioning or perhaps overwhelmed, resulting in a deleterious alteration in membrane potentials."
Jack again gritted his teeth. He had a sudden urge to throw a tantrum. Shirley's short monologue painfully reminded him of the academic gibberish he'd endured in medical school. In the grip of coffee-enhanced anxiety, Jack had little tolerance for such didactic mumbo jumbo and was about to make his impatience known when Henry took the words out of his mouth.
"I think Dr. Stapleton is interested in some particular agent that might account for what we are seeing on this short strip of EKG. Am I correct, Dr. Stapleton?"
Jack nodded enthusiastically.
"Well," Shirley said, visibly uncomfortable in being put on the spot, "I'm sure there are a number of drugs that could create this type of picture, including toxic amounts of most of the arrhythmia drugs. But I think it could have possibly been caused by a sudden electrolyte imbalance, particularly potassium or calcium. But that's about all one could say."
"Well said," Henry complimented. He handed the page from Sobczyk's chart with the EKG tracing back to Jack.
Jack took the paper from Henry, mulling over what Shirley had said. She hadn't added anything new, but the words "sudden electrolyte imbalance" gave him an idea.
The reason he and others had dismissed the possible role of potassium was because the lab had reported that the victims' potassium levels had all been normal. Now that Jack thought about it, what the lab was saying specifically was that the postmortem potassium levels were normal. As everyone knew, potassium levels soar after death because the body's vast potassium store is intracellular and is maintained by an active transport system. After death, the transport system stops and the potassium immediately leaks out. Any sudden increase in potassium in an individual by an injected bolus prior to death would be effectively masked. Jack had to admit that if someone wanted to kill off patients, it would be an insidiously clever way to do it.
"If you happen to find any additional EKG recordings, let us know," Henry was saying. "Perhaps we could be more definitive with more leads. Just let us know."
"One other thing," Jack said, catching sight of Laurie's two Post-its attached to the back of the page. "Do either of you know what this laboratory test is?" He pulled off the Post-it with "MASNP" written on it and handed it to Henry. Henry glanced at it, shook his head, and looked at Shirley. Shirley shook her head as well.
"No idea," Henry said. He handed the piece of yellow paper back to Jack. "But I know someone who probably would: David Hancock, the night lab supervisor. The lab's conveniently right down the hall." Henry pointed to a door no more than twenty feet away. "I know he's here tonight, because he helped me earlier."
Jack took back the Post-it and reattached it to the page next to the other one. With the lab so close, he thought it would be worth taking the time to duck in and see if David Hancock was available.
"I don't know what kind of test an MASNP is, but I do know what MEF2A is," Henry said, catching sight of the second slightly wrinkled Post-it.
"Oh?" Jack questioned. He wasn't even sure where Laurie had come up with the acronym.
"That's a gene," Henry said. "It produces a protein that controls the cascade of events that assures the health of the coronary arteries' inner lining."
"Interesting," Jack said vaguely, wondering how it could be associated with Laurie's series, or if it was associated at all. "What would a positive MEF2A mean?"
"Now, that's a bit misleading," Henry admitted. "When they write 'positive MEF2A in the literature, what they really mean is positive for the marker for the mutated form of MEF2A. In that case, it is someone who produces a defective protein and, as a consequence, will have a high probability of experiencing coronary artery disease, such as my patient tonight. He's positive for the MEF2A marker, and here he is, having had an acute myocardial infarction, even though we've tried to avoid it by keeping his LDL
cholesterol as low as possible."
"Well, I'm sure this will all be helpful," Jack said, although in reality he had no idea.
When he got back to the Manhattan General and got to see Laurie, he'd have to ask her about where she'd found the acronym and then, if appropriate, tell her what he'd learned.
Jack thanked both Henry and Shirley, and quickly headed down toward the laboratory door, hoping David Hancock would be conveniently available. As he entered the lab, he glanced at his watch, and his level of anxiety inched upward. It was twenty-two after three.
Laurie pressed the nurse's call button several more times. She had lost count of how many times she had pressed it since Jazz had left, and the fact that no one responded made her feel even more vulnerable. It occurred to her that Rakoczi was being purposefully passive-aggressive, as she had suggested she might be when she'd left.
Laurie looked down at her hand holding the call button. She was shaking.
To add to her anxiety, Laurie's pain from her surgery had gotten worse, particularly after moving herself from the gurney to the bed and then lifting the telephone. Earlier, she felt it only when she moved, but now it was constant. There was no doubt that she needed some analgesia, but she was reluctant to ask for it because of the inevitable hypnotic effects. Under the circumstances, Laurie didn't want to be any more obtunded than she was already. She had to keep her wits if she was to have any chance of protecting herself until Jack got there.
Just when Laurie had decided to see what it would be like for her to get out of bed and stand up, someone came sweeping into the room. It wasn't Jazz or Elizabeth. It was another woman even more swarthy than Jazz, with long, straight, black hair held back with a clip. She carried a large tray by its handle. The tray was divided into numerous cubbies filled with blood tubes, syringes, and the like.
"Laurie Montgomery?" the woman questioned while glancing at a requisition form.
"Yes," Laurie said.
"I need to draw some blood for some clotting studies." The woman put her tray on the foot of Laurie's bed, took out the proper color-coded stoppered tubes, and came alongside Laurie, dangling a tourniquet.
"I need a telephone," Laurie said as the woman picked up Laurie's arm and began searching for veins and patting those she saw to check if they'd be appropriate for venipuncture. "The one here by my bedside doesn't have a dial tone."
"I can't help you with your telephone," the woman said in a high, singsong voice. "I'm just a laboratory tech." She found a vein that she thought was promising and applied the tourniquet.
Laurie was about to explain at least a part of her dilemma when she caught sight of the woman's laboratory nametag. It said Kathleen Chaudhry. Like Rakoczi, it was a rather unique name. Also like Rakoczi, it was a name on Roger's list of people who had transferred from St. Francis during the suspect period. And like Rakoczi, Laurie thought she too could be the serial killer.
Laurie yanked her arm away from Kathleen such that the lab tech took a shocked step back. Kathleen quickly regained her equilibrium. "Calm down!" she said. "I'm just going to draw a little blood."
"I don't want my blood drawn," Laurie stated. She was adamant and her voice reflected it. She felt paranoid but for good reason. It was as if she was being tormented, surrounded by potential serial killers.
"Your doctor has ordered these tests," Kathleen said. "It is for your own good. It will just take a second. You'll barely feel it, I promise."
"I'm not having any blood drawn," Laurie said unequivocally. "I'm sorry. There's no use in trying to talk me into it."
"Okay, have it your way," Kathleen said, throwing up her hands. "Fine with me. I'll just have to let the nurses know."
"You do that," Laurie said. "And while you're at it, tell one of the nurses to come back down here immediately."
After making it a point to express her frustration by literally tossing the blood tubes haphazardly into her tray, Kathleen walked out of the room.
Once again, the heavy silence of the sleeping hospital closed in around Laurie. She was now beginning to question her sanity. Had those names really been on Roger's lists, or was her overwrought mind making it all up? Laurie wasn't sure, but she knew one thing without a shred of doubt: She wanted Jack to come in and get her the hell out of there.
Steeling herself against the pain, which was made worse with any movement of her abdominal muscles, Laurie began to inch herself down toward the foot of the bed. She wanted to get beyond the side rails and try standing. She'd only gotten halfway when Jazz breezed in.
"Hold on there, girl," Jazz said. "Where do you think you're going?"
Laurie stared at her with uncamouflaged scorn. "I need to find some nurses who will respond to the call button."
"Let me tell you something, dearie," Jazz said. "You are not the only patient on the floor, and you are hardly the sickest. We have to prioritize, which I'm sure you'd understand if you stopped to think for one lousy minute. What is it you want, pain meds?"