Verran's stomach burned at the memory. Neither did he. One of those was enough for a lifetime.
"Will do," he said. "You're the boss."
Alston smiled and it looked almost genuine. "You sound so convincing when you say that, Louis."
"Well, you are the DME, after all."
"Yes. The maestro, as it were. Very well, strike up the band and let The Ingraham's nocturnal concert series begin."
He turned and headed for the door, humming a tune Verran recognized from The Phantom of the Opera..."The Music of the Night."
OCTOBER
Carbenamycin (Carbocin - Kleederman Plarm.), the new macrolide released just two years ago, has become the number-one-selling antibiotic in the world.
P.M.A. News
CHAPTER TEN
A warm day for October, with a high, bright sun cooking the asphalt of the parking lot like summer. Good driving weather.
"Are you sure you don't want some company?" Tim said, leaning against the driver's door of his car and speaking through the open window. "I'll even do the driving."
"Any other time and I'd say yes," Quinn said as she adjusted the seat belt. "But this is personal."
He reached through the window and gripped her shoulder. His voice rose in a panicky quaver.
"Oh, no, Quinn! Not another abortion. This makes three this year! I told you I'd stand by you!"
A fellow student who had a seat near hers in histology lab was passing nearby. His head whipped in their direction and he almost tripped on the curb, but he recovered and hurried past.
Quinn fixed her eyes straight ahead as she felt her cheeks go crimson. She tried to keep her voice level.
"I hate you, Timothy Brown. It's as simple as that. Even if you lend me this car every day for the next four years, I will still hate you forever."
He flashed his boyish smile and slapped the roof.
"Take good care of Griffin for me, drive carefully, and wear shorts more often—you've got dynamite legs."
Her cheeks didn't cool until she reached the highway, then she smiled and shook her head. My third abortion? How did he come up with things like that?
She checked the gas gauge and saw that it read full. He was a clown, but a considerate clown.
She found Route 70 and followed it east. Company would have been nice, but how could she explain to Tim this need to learn about their cadaver?
She took the inner loop on 695 to York Road in Towson and followed that south. She almost cruised past the Towson Library without seeing it. Not because it was small. It was huge, but it looked like the town had used the same architect as the Berlin Wall. With all that bare, exposed concrete it looked about as warm and inviting as a bomb shelter.
Inside wasn't much better, but the friendliness of the librarians went a long way toward countering the bunker decor. They gave her a stack of back issues of the Towson Times, the local weekly, and she began to search through the obits. There weren't many. Quinn was beginning to worry that the Times might print only select obituaries when she spotted the heading:
Dorothy Havers, long time
Towson resident. Age 82
Dorothy O'Boyle Havers, the only daughter of Francis and Catherine O'Boyle, both Irish immigrants, died on July 12 of natural causes at the Laurel Hills Medical Center. Prior to that she had been a resident of the Towson Nursing Center for seven years. Mrs. Havers was predeceased by her husband, Earl, and by her two daughters, Catherine and Francine. No plans for viewing or burial were announced.
Ireland...Dorothy came over from Ireland...just like her mother. And she'd died right next door to The Ingraham.
Quinn reread the obit and was swept by a wave of sadness. Of course no plans for viewing or burial were announced. There was nobody to view her remains, nobody left to mourn at her grave side. Husband dead, children dead, seven years in a nursing home, probably without a single visitor, completely forgotten, no one caring if she lived or died. So she'd willed her body to The Ingraham.
Poor woman.
But what had she died of? That might be interesting to know during the dissection. She wondered if they'd know at the Towson Nursing Center. How far could it be?
Quinn xeroxed off a copy of the obituary, then went looking for a phone.
*
"Dorothy Havers?" said Virginia Bennett, R.N., head nurse at the Towson Nursing Center. "I remember that name. You say you're releated to her?"
"Her great niece," Quinn said.
She'd discovered the Towson Nursing Center was a couple of miles from the library, so she'd stopped in to learn what she could. The one-story dark brick building seemed about as pleasant as something called a nursing home could be. Elderly men and women sat in wheelchairs around the foyer while others inched by with the aid of four-footed canes. A vague odor of urine suffused the air, like olfactory muzak.
"Well, I'll be." Nurse Bennett scratched the side of her neck with short, scarlet fingernails. She had ebony skin, gray hair, and a bulldog face, but seemed pleasant enough. "We searched high and low for a next of kin last year when we were getting ready to transfer her to the medical center. Couldn't find anybody. Fig ured she was alone in the world."
"We have a common relative in Ireland," Quinn said, amazed at how easily the lies tripped off her tongue. She'd figured no one would tell her a thing about Dorothy unless they thought she was related. "I just happened to come across her name while I was researching the family's medical history. Was she very sick?"
"Just a little heart failure, if I remember. But Dr. Clifton—he's one of our doctors—is very conservative. He refers patients to the medical center at the first sign of trouble. But he's top notch. A graduate of the Ingraham, you know."
"Really? That's good to know."
"But what sort of family history were you looking for?"
"There's ovarian cancer in one of my aunts and I was wondering..."
"Very important," Nurse Bennett said, jabbing a finger at Quinn. "But I don't know a thing about Mrs. Havens, so I can't—" She glanced past Quinn. "Wait. There's Dr. Clifton now. Maybe he can help you. Dr. Clifton? Could we see you a minute?"
Quinn turned and saw a young, dark-haired doctor, surely not much older than thirty, entering through a rear door, dressed in a sport coat and carrying a black bag.
"Dr. Clifton," Nurse Bennett said as he approached the desk. "You remember Dorothy Havers, don't you? This is her great niece."
It almost looked to Quinn as if Dr. Clifton stumbled a step. He blinked twice, then smiled.
"I didn't know Dotty had a great niece, or any kind of relative at all."
Quinn repeated her story about the Ireland link, and about researching the family medical history. The lies came easier the second time around.
"No," Dr. Clifton said. "Dotty had no history of cancer of any sort. Her main problem was arteriosclerosis—coronary and cerebral. We were sorry to lose her this summer. She was a nice lady."
"I wish I'd known her," Quinn said, and that wasn't a lie. "Was she in bad heart failure when you transferred her to the medical center?"
"Bad enough in my clinical opinion to need more intense care than a nursing home could provide," he said stiffly. "Is there a point to these questions, Miss...?"
"Sheedy," Quinn said, barely missing a beat. "No. Just curious."
"Well, then, as much as I'd like to satisfy your curiosity, Miss Sheedy, I have rounds to make. Excuse me."