With Malice (9 page)

Read With Malice Online

Authors: Eileen Cook

BOOK: With Malice
5.86Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

I'd passed the pool on my way to see Dr. Weeks. I remembered the smell of chlorine wafting down the hall. I chewed on the inside of my cheek. I glanced up and down the hall to see if there might be another clue. Last year my favorite teacher, Mr. Landis, picked me to mentor the incoming freshmen on the debate club. He said I was one of the best problem solvers he'd seen since he started teaching.

I couldn't remember how to get back to my room, but other useless information kept flooding into my brain. If you're lost in the woods, you can follow drainage or a stream downhill. Keep the sun over your right shoulder so you can be sure you're walking in a straightish direction. Moss tends to grow on the north side of a tree. I'd never even been camping, and yet all this knowledge flew into my head unbidden. Now if there were only a few streams or trees, I'd be all set. That's when I noticed the lines.

Down the center of the floor, there were painted stripes. They reminded me of the mazes I'd just talked about with Dr. Weeks. Buried deep in my brain, something reached out. The lines were there to help people find their way around.

Follow the yellow brick road.

I pumped my fist in the air. I remembered Anna telling me about the color-coding. The yellow line would lead me back to the patient wards. I wanted to announce at the top of my lungs that I'd figured it out, but I was pretty sure no one else was going to be impressed. I'd tell Anna later; maybe I'd start calling her my own personal Glinda the Good Witch. I pulled out my phone and clicked on the recorder. “The yellow line leads to the wards. I'm in room 511.” I switched it back off. Done. Now if that detail disappeared from my brain, I'd have a way to recall it.

The thrill of victory passed quickly. If I could barely find my way around the hospital, how was I going to figure out what happened with Simone in Italy? I rolled into the elevator and punched the number for my floor.

I closed my eyes. I needed a nap. Between taking the tests and talking about everything, I was worn out. The doctors had warned me that fatigue was normal with a brain injury, but there was being tired and then there was this. I was so exhausted my bones ached. There was a ping as we passed another floor on the way up. Suddenly my mind flashed and I saw Simone. Her mouth was opened in a howl, and her eyes were wide. I reached for her and realized I was screaming. There was a sickening crunch of metal.

“You coming out?”

My eyes flew open. I was still in the elevator. There were two people standing in front of the now-open doors staring at me. I blinked.

“Are you okay?” A girl asked.

I nodded and rolled forward. The group moved past me, already talking about something else, and the doors drifted shut with a soft
thunk
.

I closed my eyes to see if the image would come back, but it was just black.

 
 

 
 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 
 

I looked up to try to gauge how far we were from the hospital entrance. Less than a hundred feet. It might as well have been in Kathmandu. I was too exhausted to make it.

“You can do it,” Sam said. He was trailing behind me with my chair while I tried to lurch along on my crutches.

Physiotherapy should be declared torture. Screw waterboarding. If you want terrorists to confess, lock them up in a physio gym. They'd be begging for mercy in less than an hour. When I met Sam, my therapist, I wasn't sure why Anna had made him sound so scary. He was a slight Indian guy who looked like he still bought his Dockers in the kids' department of Sears. His front right tooth was crooked and overlapped the left tooth. He bounced as he walked across the gym to introduce himself. He had the perkiness of an elementary school teacher.

Sam was a sadist.

My arms were shaking. In addition to his other abuse, Sam got me up on crutches. He said I'd spent enough time in the wheelchair. It seemed like a good idea until my shoulders and arms began screaming for me to sit back down. My leg, in an effort to not be left out, was a pulsing dance music remix of agony. Even my skull felt too tight, like someone was cranking a vise around my brain. I would have cried, except it would have taken more energy than I had left. The only good thing about the day was that I was too tired to think about Simone. The pain had blunted the nonstop loop of
why?
that normally ran through my head.

“Make it to the door, and I'll buy you some ice cream in the cafeteria,” Sam offered.

I hated this guy. “The ice cream is free,” I pointed out.

Sam laughed like I was starring in a one-woman show on the Comedy Network. “This is true—you got me,” he said.

“I'm too tired,” I insisted. It had sounded fun to go outside, but now I was sweating like I'd run a marathon, and all I wanted was to go back to my room.

“You can do this. Take ten more steps.”

I gritted my teeth and swung the crutches, counting each step.

“Good,” Sam said. “Now ten more.”

Was he kidding?
I turned to face him. “You said I could quit after ten.”

Sam shook his head. “No, I didn't. I just suggested you start with ten. You know what they say, a journey of a thousand miles starts with a single step.” He raised his finger up in the air like he was a politician making a point. “Same thing with getting to the front door.”

“Screw you,” I said.

Sam didn't seem remotely angry or upset to be cursed at. I suspected it happened to him a lot. A person got out of the car parked right next to us on the sidewalk.

“Jill Charron?”

I flushed. I was embarrassed to be caught acting like a snot. I wanted to be the kind of patient who was noble and kind, like the Kate Middleton of rehab, but my mood sometimes spilled out hot and nasty. The person whipped out a camera, its huge lens almost hitting me in the chin before he began snapping pictures. I swung my hand up to cover my face.

“Do you have anything to say about the death of Simone McIvory?”

I wanted to run, but I couldn't. Adrenaline flooded my system like molten silver in my veins, and I took a few more steps with my crutches, but I was unsteady.

“Did you kill her because of Nico?” The camera continued to click. “Was it a broken heart that led you to do it?”

Sam shoved the wheelchair into the back of my good leg and tugged the tail of my shirt so that I fell into the seat. “Hang on,” he said in my ear, and began bolting for the door. The stranger kept pace. I bent in half, trying to bury my face in my lap. We bounced along the cracked sidewalk. Each bump sent a hot jab of pain down my leg.

“Did your family pay off the Italian authorities to sneak you out of the country?”

A security guard from the hospital must have seen what was going on and was jogging out the front door toward us. Someone else was holding the door open. My wheelchair hit the edge of the doorjamb, and I nearly flew out of the seat. I had to grab the armrests to keep from being tossed onto the lobby floor.

The security guard had his hand on the chest of the photographer and was pushing him back. I couldn't make out his last screamed question. Once we were away from the door, Sam leaned down so he was even with my face.

Other books

Smooth Operator by Risqué
A Sword From Red Ice by J. V. Jones
An Imperfect Lens by Anne Richardson Roiphe
Christmas Retreat by Rachel Maldonado
Smoke & Mirrors by John Ramsey Miller