Three Times a Lady

Chapter 8

Dana bolted upright out of her coma and ripped blindly at the thick plastic tube shoved down her throat.

She gagged hard while the cylinder took for ever to slide up her esophagus, lubricated with stomach acid and some kind of sticky white paste they’d been feeding her. A high-pitched alarm filled the room with frantic beeping, followed immediately by a stampede of medical personnel storming into the room.

‘Jesus Christ!’ a woman yelled. ‘Get a sedative!’

A man with a deep baritone voice overruled the order at once. His harsh tone left no doubt at all as to exactly who was in charge here. ‘Are you f*cking crazy, Jean? She just came out of a coma, for Christ’s sake. The last thing in the world we want to do right now is put her back to sleep.’

Dana coughed painfully. The lining of her throat felt raped, like she’d just swallowed ten gallons of high-grade gasoline. Gradually, she became aware of a catheter between her legs, of more plastic tubes attached to her arms. She ripped at those, too, but the large man who’d just barked out his stern command that she should not be injected with any sleep-inducing drugs pushed her gently back down into the bed. ‘Easy, Agent Whitestone,’ the man said, resting his huge hands lightly on her shoulders. ‘Easy, now. Everything’s OK. You’re OK.’

Dana’s vision sharpened like powerful binoculars abruptly coming into focus, hurting her eyeballs and searing a jumble of confusing images into her unprepared brain. She glanced to her left and saw snow falling lightly outside the window, collecting briefly on the glass before melting away. More confusion clouded her mind. She tried to speak but a hoarse croak came out instead.

The man in charge – Dr Aloysius Spinks, according to his nametag, a large African-American with a shiny bald head – poured her a glass of water from the plastic pitcher on the bedside table and held it up to her lips. Dana drank in deeply before coughing again.

‘The little boy,’ Dana managed finally, forcing out the words even though it hurt like hell to talk. ‘Did the little boy make it?’

Spinks frowned and motioned to a nurse. The woman left the room in a scuffling of feet before Spinks looked back at Dana. ‘What little boy, Agent Whitestone?’

‘From the plane,’ Dana said. Tears of frustration pooled in her eyes. Her skull throbbed like it had never throbbed before. A powerful storm of nausea boiled away deep inside her gut and threatened to explode from her gullet in a disgusting rainbow of projectile-vomit. ‘The little boy who was sitting directly in front of me. I was sitting in seat 32b. The little boy was sitting right in front of me with his mother. Did he survive the crash?’

Spinks lifted his right arm and adjusted the wire-framed glasses on his face. As he did so, ripples of sinew danced just beneath the surface of his skin like minnows darting through a shallow pond, letting Dana know that the good doctor had most likely played football in college. Probably linebacker. ‘I don’t know, Agent Whitestone,’ Spinks admitted, shaking his head slightly. ‘Most of the passengers made it, but a few perished in the crash. Six, I believe, didn’t make it. One child died. What was the little boy’s name? I’ll have someone look into it right away.’

The accusing look that had flashed across the little boy’s blood-sprinkled face in Dana’s horrific nightmare bolted back into her mind. Now because of you I have to die in that plane crash.

Dana wretched hard, nearly throwing up again. Her temples ached as though powerful drills were boring through the bone on either side of her head.

Spinks held up the glass to her lips again and Dana finished off the remaining water. It helped. ‘Bradley Taylor Thomas,’ Dana whispered, swallowing back the acrid mixture of blood and bile she tasted in her mouth and remembering how the little boy’s mother had used his full name while admonishing him to not talk to strangers. ‘His name is Bradley Thomas Taylor. Four years old. Blonde hair. Blue eyes.’

Spinks waved to an orderly standing near the doorway. ‘Get on it right away. Check back with me as soon as you find out anything.’

‘Yes, sir.’

When the orderly had left the room, Dana’s scrambled brain finally started working again. Her heart flipped over inside her chest as the stunning realisation hit her with all the subtlety of an aluminum baseball bat slamming into a plate-glass window. She’d boarded the plane out in Los Angeles on 12 May. It had been sunny outside then, bright, warm. The snow falling outside her window now indicated that a substantial chunk of time had passed since that day and this one. Not even Cleveland’s weather was that bad.

More nausea boiled in her stomach. ‘How long have I been out of it?’ she asked weakly. ‘What’s today’s date?’

Spinks lifted a medical chart from Dana’s bedside table and flipped it open. A sympathetic look flooded into his warm brown eyes. ‘The date is 16 November,’ he said. ‘You were in a coma for twenty-four weeks. You sustained massive head trauma in the plane crash. Your skull was fractured. You were life-flighted to Fairview General Hospital ten minutes after they fished you out of the water and we immediately performed a series of life-saving surgical procedures on you, including a craniectomy, a craniotomy and a cranioplasty. Basically that means we relieved the pressure inside your skull caused by the bleeding and inserted temporary metal plates while your bone healed. The good news is that you’ll make a full recovery, Agent Whitestone. As a matter of fact, you’re almost there already. It’s quite remarkable, really.’

Somehow, Dana wasn’t surprised by the news. What in the hell was there for her to be surprised about here? All things considered, serious thought should probably have been given to changing the term ‘Murphy’s Law’ to ‘Whitestone’s Law’, considering the way her life had unfolded. After all, whatever the worst possible outcome in any scenario could be, that’s the one she could usually count on. ‘So, now what?’ Dana asked as a wave of utter exhaustion washed over her body and suddenly made her want nothing more in the world than to go back to sleep again – maybe even for ever this time.

Spinks laid down the medical chart on her bedside table and lifted her left wrist to take her pulse. ‘Well,’ he said, ‘now we’ll monitor you closely for the next several days to make sure that no additional swelling occurs in your brain. You’re something of a medical miracle, Agent Whitestone. You really are. Your recovery speed has been absolutely astounding. Before you know it, you’ll be up and about and as good as new.’

Dana closed her eyes. If Dr Aloysius Spinks knew just how far off the mark he’d been with that statement, he’d probably blush about nine shade of purple. Wasn’t his fault that he didn’t know her horrible history, though. Still, ‘good as new’ wasn’t all that terribly good when it came to her, now was it?

Dana opened her eyes when Spinks dropped her wrist and spoke again. ‘I’ll alert Bill Krugman that you’ve emerged from your coma,’ he said. ‘His name is listed at the top of the emergency contacts in your cellphone. Or is there someone else you’d prefer for me to call?’

Dana shook her head. The head of the FBI – known to everyone in the Bureau simply by his title of ‘The Director’ – was the only living person left on her emergency-contacts list. The others were all dead now, most of them thanks to her. Another thing Spinks had no way of knowing. ‘No,’ Dana said, sinking her head back down into the pillow and feeling her eyelids droop. ‘That’ll be just fine.’

Spinks’s voice filled Dana’s brain as the murky world of dreamland dragged her off insistently into its warm embrace. She only prayed that her destination this time would be a much more pleasant place than the horrific nightmare world from which she’d just emerged. ‘Fine,’ Spinks said. ‘I’ll leave you alone to rest up now then, Agent Whitestone. Even though your recovery has been absolutely amazing, I don’t want you overdoing it.’

Dana’s eyelids flew open again when she felt Spinks’s hand reach behind her head. She bolted up in bed. ‘What in the hell are you doing?’ she snapped.

Spinks pursed his lips and handed her a call button attached to a length of plastic-covered wire. ‘Relax, Agent Whitestone. Just press this button if you need anything.’

Dana’s cheeks warmed. What the f*ck was wrong with her? Highly unlikely that a doctor would murder her in her hospital bed five minutes after she’d emerged from a coma. ‘Sorry about that,’ she said. ‘I guess I’m still feeling a little shaken up.’

Spinks waved the apology away. ‘Don’t worry about it. Perfectly understandable. Anyway, just press the button if you need anything. I’ll be back to check up on you in a little bit. And Dana?’

Dana looked up at the kindly medical professional, feeling more exhausted than she’d ever felt before in her entire life. ‘Yeah?’

Spinks held her gaze. ‘You’re a very lucky woman, ma’am. Don’t you ever forget that.’

When Spinks had exited the room, Dana let out a deep breath that deflated her chest completely and closed her eyes again, this time for good. Despite the doctor’s encouraging words, though, the plain truth of the matter was that she didn’t feel so goddamn lucky right now. Quite the opposite, as a matter of fact. Then again, life was funny like that sometimes, wasn’t it?

Sure as hell was.

Crying shame there was no humour in it most of time.





Jon Osborne's books