Authors: Dennis Larsen
need you to throw up any roadblocks you
can to slow down her side of this
forthcoming battle. I don't understand it
enough to tell you how to do it, I'll leave
that up to you, but you need to do
everything
within
your
power
to
manipulate, hide, disrupt the flow of
information, to Beverly and her legal
team, without it drawing attention to you
or me. Can that be done?"
Iggy scratched his head, wheels
turning, "I don't know for how long I'll be
able to stall her, but I'm pretty sure I can
slow them down. How long do we need to
drag this out?"
"As long as it takes, like I said, we
need to really wear her down. She's not
getting any younger and she'll eventually
see it our way and concede. I've dealt
with people like her my whole life, I
know she's going to have a breaking point;
we just need to find it. I'm not going to
blow smoke up your ass Iggy, I need to
know if you're in this for the long haul.
This could take months or even years, but
I can tell you that at the end of the day
you'll be a very rich man," Jeremy
promised.
"Can you guarantee for me that no
one will get hurt?" he asked, but the
answer didn't matter, Iggy knew he was in
regardless; the dream of wealth untold for
a gambling addict was more than he could
reject. Jeremy had counted on it.
"Yes, based on the information we
have today, I can say yes, but we may
have to tweak how we deal with her
responses on an ongoing basis. The other
thing I'll need from you is your watchful
eyes right here in Valdosta. I can't follow
everything going on here, I'll need to
appear that I'm continuing to keep my nose
to the grindstone in DC," the younger
Marshall confirmed.
Over the next two hours the two
conspirators worked out the logistics of
how they would communicate, via the
Internet, with a simple coded system.
Phone calls would be almost never and
generally only payphone-to-payphone. The
connection between the two would need to
remain totally obscure. Jeremy suspected,
barring a quick acceptance of a limited
offer, that another conspirator would need
to be brought in at a later date to facilitate
the nastier handiwork, but he did not
address that or a number of other
important details with the land and title
director. Of course, the entire discussion
and plans of the morning would be
forgotten if his father survived. Jeremy
tried to convince himself that his father's
successful recovery was what he truly
wanted.
The two, now on the same page,
shook hands with a promise to stay in
touch. Iggy left the home first, giving
himself enough time to stop at a Waffle
House for breakfast. Jeremy waited about
30 minutes before starting the four-hour
drive to Atlanta. He confirmed the
recording taken over the previous few
hours, every word, every discussion;
every
communication
would
be
documented and saved. One thing he'd
learned dealing with slippery politicians
was the need for ammunition, the more the
better, especially if someone begins to
develop selective amnesia.
Back on the road, Jeremy tried not
to think about the discussion he’d just had
with Ignatius, but rather poured his energy
into what he would say to his father, if he
was given the chance. A voice inside his
head scolded him for thinking of his father
as already gone, suspecting it was a
foregone conclusion that he would not
survive the heart attack. He vowed to
himself that he could be the bigger man
and
say
he
was
sorry
for
the
misunderstandings, but as for Beverly, he
was still unsure. The closer he got to
Atlanta the more his heart ached for the
fatherly companionship he’d once had.
The prospect of never seeing his father’s
smiling face again finally brought true
grief, and for the first time in the past 36
hours, he cried.
The hospital was a massive
structure with wings extended in every
possible direction. At the front desk he
asked for assistance in getting to the
Cardiac ICU. A rotund, short black
woman pulled a map from a thick pad and
explained how he would navigate the
hospital to get to the unit, highlighting the
path with a pink highlighter. With map in
hand, Jeremy moved through corridors
filled with patients, visitors and medical
staff, some obviously in a hurry, and
others with ashen faces being consoled by
loved ones. He reached the 4th floor of the
cardiac unit, still unsure of what he would
say but confident the words would come.
Outside of the unit a set of doors blocked
entrance without the approval of the
nurses manning the unit station. A buzzer
on the wall had a small note indicating
that access would be granted once you
explained your reason for being there.
Jeremy depressed the buzzer and waited.
“Cardiac Unit, can we help you?”
a female's voice echoed from behind the
doors.
“I’m here to see my dad, Mr.
Marshall. I’m Jeremy Marshall, just got
here from DC,” he declared.
“Hold on a minute. Is there
anybody here with the Marshall man?” he
could hear her saying to someone close
by. There was a shuffle of papers and then
the phone went silent. A few seconds later
he heard the latch on the door
electronically open and the voice re-
emerged over the intercom, “Come on in.
Meet Beverly Marshall at the front desk
please.”
He expected that it would be
customary to hug the bereaved woman,
even if he had little if any affection for
her. Beverly was pacing near the desk
where two nurses sat, one talking into a
phone, the other flipping through a
patient’s
chart,
but
both
ignoring
everything else. The sound of respirators
and other pieces of medical wonder
beeped, pulsed and hissed all around
them. The desk sat in the center of what
looked to be ten rooms, separated only by
curtains. Equipment filled each room,
allowing just enough space for a hospital
bed and a table on wheels, extending over
the foot of each bed. Other nurses were
moving in and out of the rooms,
stethoscopes draped around their necks,
each with a clipboard in their hand.
Beverly could be seen chewing
her nails as she wore a groove in the
carpet, “Jeremy, Jeremy, I’m so glad
you’re here! I’ve been trying to call your
cell but I just kept getting your voice mail.
I was afraid something had happened to
you as well!”
He had turned off his phone prior
to talking with Iggy, so no calls could be
traced, and he must have forgotten to turn
it back on. They met in a somewhat
awkward embrace before the two nurses
at the desk neither acknowledged the
union. “I got here as quickly as I could.
Drove all night. What’s happened? Is he
okay?” the distraught son asked.
“A couple of hours ago it looked
like
he
was
starting
to
regain
consciousness but then lapsed back into a
drug induced coma and we’ve not been
able to communicate with him since. The
doctors keep telling me that’s normal, but
I’m terrified,” the deeply sad woman said,
through tears streaming down her face.
“Has he said anything since he
was taken to the ER in Valdosta?” Jeremy
asked.
“You know your dad. All the way
to the hospital he was telling them he was
fine, probably just heartburn or something,
but when they got him hooked up to the
machines there, he had a second attack that
was much worse than the first. That’s
when they pumped him full of drugs and
shipped him here. The staff at both
hospitals have been phenomenal, really
helpful, I think they are doing their best.”
“They damn well better be,”
Jeremy warned, looking at the nurses
seated across the desk, making sure they
had heard what he said.
“Believe me they are. This is the
best cardiac unit in the city and the
specialist
has
been
checking
him
regularly.”
“Is it okay if I see him?” Jeremy
said, his voice hesitant and tensing.
“Absolutely! He’s sleeping, or at
least it looks to me like he’s sleeping, but
with the coma I don’t know for sure. I’ve
been reading to him, seems to bring his
heart rate down some if he can hear my
voice,” Bev explained. She turned and
walked around behind the station to room
#9 where his father lay, tubes running into
his nose and throat, with others hooked to
bottles, hanging on either side of the bed,
feeding unknown clear liquids into his
veins.
The scene before him was not at
all what he had expected. He had
somehow thought he would show up, his
dad would be sitting up in the bed
complaining about hospital food and
trying to convince the staff to bring him a
milk shake. This was all too real, too
overwhelming, too fast. He could feel
sweat forming on his inner arms and the
back of his knees; suddenly his peripheral
vision wavered and turned dark.
Somewhere in a far off place he
could hear people moving about and then
a soothing voice saying, “Get his head
between his knees, don’t let him fall on
the floor again. Okay, that’s fine, looks
like he’s starting to come back to us. Mr.
Marshall. Mr. Marshall, can you hear me?
You starting to feel a little better?” He felt
some strength return to his limbs and he
was able to hold his own head, with his
elbows bracing the weight.
“Did I pass out?” he asked.
“Dead away,” a cute little nurse
answered. “You’ll be okay, this happens
more than you’d think. Just keep your head
between your knees for a few minutes;
somebody will bring you some juice. If
you need us just holler, k?”
“Good hell Jeremy, scared me to
death!” Beverly added her two cents.
“Sorry, didn’t know I would react
this way. Probably lack of sleep and I’ve
not eaten anything for hours.” A glass of
orange juice was pressed into his hands,
which he quickly downed. “I think I’ll be
okay, feeling a lot better now.” He lifted
his head to see his father’s figure laid out
before him, monitors flashing numbers,
and a heart beat pattern next to his bed.
Jeremy slid his chair over next to the bed
and laid his hand on his father’s extended
right arm. It was warm, but there was no
reaction from his touch. He lightly
caressed the arm, trying to think of what
he might say, but emotion tied his tongue
and he could not speak. He sat like that for
an hour, thinking, contemplating, and
praying for a miracle.
“Jeremy,” he heard a whisper.
“Jeremy, the specialist is here and wants
to check him, you’ll need to leave the
room for a minute,” Beverly said.
A tall, dark haired doctor,
complete with lab coat, moved in and out
of the rooms spending a few minutes with
each patient, reviewing the chart and
speaking to those that were coherent. The
graying temples and slight paunch led
Jeremy to believe that he must be about
50. Once he had spent a few minutes with
his father, the surgeon greeted Beverly and
Jeremy just outside the curtained room.
“He’s stable. Vitals are good. Not much
more we can do now but give it some
time.”