'Here, dear, let us help you,' she said as she strode toward them. She was dressed in white and her eyes were flooded with concern. Ally looked through the doorway to see a waiting wheelchair.
'That's fast,' Stone said. 'Looks like they were ready for you.'
Then she saw him standing behind the nurses.
'Alexa, we need to get you downstairs as soon as possible.' He was coming forward to help her settle into the wheelchair. He appeared to take no notice of Stone Aimes.
'I'm just feeling a little dizzy.'
He smiled reassuringly. 'There's always a small percentage chance that there may be side effects from the initial inoculation.'
'What 'initial inoculation'?' She bolted upright in the wheelchair. 'I was just supposed to be giving blood.'
'I thought Debra explained,' he said, appearing confused. 'There's always an initial. . antibiotic dosage, just as a prophylactic.' He shook his head in self-blame. 'I should have insisted you stay here, but after that. . incident this morning I was so disoriented I let you talk me out of it. You may be having a reaction to the antibiotic, but it can't be all that serious. I didn't see anything about side effects in your file. We just have to get you horizontal for a while. Everything's going to be all right. In fact, this might be a positive development. With you here now, we can begin fine-tuning your procedure immediately.'
'Dr. Van de Vliet, this is my cousin Stone. He drove me here and I'd-'
'I'd really like to stay,' Stone said reaching to shake Van de Vliet's hand. 'It would mean a lot to both of us. To the whole family.'
'Family?' Van de Vliet declared. Ally noticed that he was examining Stone with narrowed eyes and seemed to be debating something with himself. 'Well, we'll see.' Then he turned back to her. 'The first thing is to make sure your. . situation is stabilized. I actually think a good night's rest might do the trick. But I need to run a quick blood test downstairs.'
She felt her dizziness coming and going, but she was determined to stay awake and in control of what was being done to her.
'By the way, I was wondering how is Katherine Starr doing?'
His eyes grew somber. 'She's a very lucky woman, considering. We've given her some coagulants and stitched her up.'
'Are you going to press charges?'
He looked at her strangely. 'Do you think we should?'
'I guess it's none of my business.'
'Maybe it's time to let her daughter come and see her.'
'I looked at that letter,' he said with a matter-of-fact tone. 'I suspect it's a hoax. And a very cruel one at that.'
'I don't think so. I talked to her today. The woman formerly known as Kristen. On the phone.' She stared at him. 'I really think it's time I learned more about what happened to her here at the institute. All I could really find out was that she thinks she's experienced some pretty dramatic memory loss.'
He looked as though this information was new to him. He also looked startled. 'You spoke to her? What. . did she say? Is she all right?'
'No, she's not all right.' Don't mention the kidnapping she told herself. Play dumb and see how he behaves. 'I want to know what happened to her when she was here.'
He paused, then took a deep breath. 'I told you everything I know this morning. She was a very troubled young person. Her treatment seemed to be going well, but she couldn't accept that. She began to believe there was some kind of conspiracy against her. In a word, she became completely paranoid.'
She glanced over at Stone, who appeared to be trying to act as though he didn't know what on earth she was talking about. But she could see him efficiently taking mental notes.
'When you can't remember who you are,' she said turning back to Van de Vliet, 'and then someone who does know who you are gives you a new, fake identity, I think it's enough to justify paranoia.'
He was rolling the wheelchair toward the elevator but abruptly paused
'Is that what she's claiming? Good God I told you she was paranoid and that should demonstrate it better than anything. Letting her discharge herself and leave the program, to go off unsupervised was a truly bad idea, but nothing short of physical restraint could have stopped her.'
'And do you have any idea where she is now?' Ally asked.
'I told you. . Look, if I knew her whereabouts, don't you think I'd do everything I could to contact her, find out how she is?'
'Right.'
She reached out and took Stone’s hand as they all moved onto the elevator. She could sense his excitement at finally being inside the Dorian Institute, but at that moment her concentration was drifting and she felt as though she were slowly beginning to drown in a sea of white.
'Stone, please don't leave me. Don't let me out of your sight. Something funny is happening and I don't know what it is.'
Van de Vliet bent over. 'Alexa, look at me. I want to see your eyes. I think they may be dilating.' He waved a hand across her face. 'Can you see me?'
'It's the fluorescent lights,' she mumbled 'There's too much glare. Could someone please turn them down? I think that's what's wrong. They're giving me a headache.'
'Ally,' Stone said, 'the lights are not very bright in here. We're going down in an elevator. There aren't any fluorescents.'
Then the elevator chimed and the door opened. They were in the basement now, where the research lab and the office and the examination rooms were. Debra, wearing a white lab coat, was standing there silently looking at her.
Now there really were fluorescent lights, and she turned away and tried to shield her eyes.
'God, turn them off. It's so painful. It's like they're shining into the back of my skull.'
'She's started hallucinating,' Van de Vliet whispered to Debra. 'I've got to draw blood for a test and give her an injection. We need a gurney now. We've got to take her down to the IC. Her condition is progressing much more rapidly than I expected.'
'Ally, is this what you want?' Stone demanded. 'You don't have to do this.'
Her breath was coming in rapid pulses now and she was cringing from the light even as she struggled to rise out of the wheelchair.
'I want. . to get. .'
She managed to pull herself onto her feet, but then she sagged and collapsed against Stone as he pulled her to him.
As one of the nurses grabbed the newly arrived gurney and pulled it over, Van de Vliet and Ellen O'Hara seized her out of Stone’s arms and lifted her onto it.
'You'll have to leave now,' Van de Vliet said to Stone. 'I'm sorry.'
'I'm not going anywhere. I promised her I'd stay by her side and, by God, I intend to do just that.'
'I'll determine what's best for her,' he replied. 'Please go up to the reception area. I'll let you know how she is.'
'I'm not leaving.'
'Then I'll call our security and have you removed from the premises.'
'Stone,' Ally said her eyelids flickering, 'it's okay. I want you to tell my mother I'm here. She's in room two- thirteen, upstairs, the last time I saw her.'
'You've got it. Don't worry. I'll take care of everything.'
She heard him saying that, but then she thought she heard another voice inside her head begging him not to