'You can't go in there!' The nurse was trembling.
Elizabeth pushed her aside.
Helmut was bent over the treatment table. He was compressing Alvirah Meehan's chest. An oxygen mask was on Alvirah's face. The noise of a respirator dominated the room. The coverlet had been pulled back; her robe was crumpled under her, the incongruous sunburst pin gleaming upward. As Elizabeth watched, too horrified to speak, a nurse handed Helmut a needle. He attached it to tubing and started an intravenous in Alvirah's arm. A male nurse took over compressing her chest.
From the distance Elizabeth could hear the wail of an ambulance siren screeching through the gates of the Spa.
It was four fifteen when Scott was notified that Alvirah Meehan, the forty-million-dollar lottery winner, was in the Monterey Peninsula hospital, a possible victim of an attempted homicide. The deputy who phoned had responded to the emergency call and accompanied the ambulance to the Spa. The attendants suspected foul play, and the emergency-room doctor agreed with them. Dr. von Schreiber claimed that she had not yet received a collagen treatment; but a drop of blood on her face seemed to indicate a very recent injection.
Alvirah Meehan! Scott rubbed his hands over suddenly weary eyes. That woman was bright. He thought of her comments at dinner. She was like the child in the fable
Why would anyone want to hurt Alvirah Meehan? Scott had hoped she wouldn't get caught up with charlatans trying to invest her money for her, but the thought that anyone might deliberately try to kill her was incredible. 'I'll be right there,' he said as he slammed down the phone.
The waiting room of the community hospital was open and pleasant, with greenery and an indoor pond, not unlike the lobby of a small hotel. He never saw it without remembering the hours he had sat here, when Jeanie was a patient…
He was informed that the doctors were working on Mrs. Meehan, that Dr. Whitley would be available to see him shortly. Elizabeth came in while he was waiting.
'How is she?'
'I don't know.'
'She shouldn't have had those injections. She really
'We don't know yet. How did you get here?'
'Min. We came in her car. She's parking it now. Helmut rode in the ambulance with Mrs. Meehan. This can't be happening.' Her voice rose. People in nearby chairs turned to stare at her.
Scott forced her to sit on the sofa beside him. ' Elizabeth, get hold of yourself. You only met Mrs. Meehan a few days ago. You can't let yourself get this upset.'
'Where's Helmut?' Min's voice, coming from behind them, was as flat as though there were no emotion left in her. She too seemed to be in a state of disbelief and shock. She came around the couch and sank into the chair facing them. 'He must be so distraught…' She broke off. 'Here he is.'
To Scott's practiced eye, the Baron looked as though he had seen a ghost. He was still wearing the exquisitely tailored blue smock that was his surgical costume. He sank heavily into the chair beside Min and groped for her hand. 'She is in a coma. They say she had some sort of injection. Min, it is impossible, I swear to you, impossible.'
'Stay here.' Scott's look included the three of them. From the long corridor that led to the emergency area, he had seen the chief of the hospital beckon to him.
They spoke in the private office. 'She was injected with something that brought on shock,' Dr. Whitley said flatly. He was a tall, lean sixty-three-year-old whose usual expression was affable and sympathetic. Now it was steely, and Scott remembered that his longtime friend had been an Army fighter pilot in World War II.
'Will she live?'
'Absolutely impossible to say. She's in a coma which may become irreversible. She tried to say something before she went totally under.'
'What was it?'
'It sounded like 'voy.' That's as much as she got out.'
'That's no help. What does the Baron have to say? Does he have any idea how this could have happened?'
'We didn't let him near her, Scott, frankly.'
'I gather you don't think much of the good doctor?'
'I have no reason to doubt his medical capabilities. But there's something about him that shouts 'phony' at me every time I see him. And if
Scott pushed back his chair. 'That's just what I intend to find out.'
As he left the office, Whitley called him back.
'Scott, something that might help us-could someone check Mrs. Meehan's rooms and bring in any medication she may have been taking? Until we reach her husband and get her medical history, we don't know what we may be dealing with.'
'I'll take care of it myself.'
Elizabeth drove back to the Spa with Scott. On the way he told her about finding the shred of paper in Cheryl's bungalow. 'Then she did write those letters!' Elizabeth exclaimed.
Scott shook his head. 'I know it sounds crazy, and I know Cheryl can lie as easily as most of us can breathe, but I've been thinking about this all day, and my gut feeling is she's telling the truth.'
'What about Syd? Did you talk to him?'
'Not yet. She's bound to tell him she admitted that she stole the letter and that he tore it up. I decided to let him stew before I question him. That sometimes works. But I'm telling you, I'm inclined to believe her story.'
'But if
Min and the Baron followed Scott's car in her convertible. Min drove. 'The only way I can help you is to know the truth,' she told her husband. 'Did you do something to that woman?'
The Baron lit a cigarette and inhaled deeply. His china-blue eyes watered. The reddish tint in his hair seemed brassy under the late-afternoon sun. The top of the convertible was down. A cool land breeze had dispelled the last of the daytime warmth. A sense of autumn was in the air.
'Minna, what crazy talk is that? I went into the room. She wasn't breathing. I saved her life. What reason would I have to hurt her?'
'Helmut, who is Clayton Anderson?'
He dropped the cigarette. It fell on the leather seat beside him. Min reached over and picked it up. 'You'd better not ruin this car. There won't be a replacement. I repeat: Who is Clayton Anderson?'
'I don't know what you're talking about,' he whispered.
'Oh, I think you do. Elizabeth came to see me. She read the play. That's why you were so upset this morning, isn't it? It wasn't the appointment book. It was the