a locked room where the cops would rough her up when they arrived, and her sidekick out there would stand and watch helplessly as they led her away in shackles. Her name would be in the paper, the
As she crept along by these closed doors, the beaches and pina coladas seemed unreachable. The door to number 22 was closed and had the names Edward L. Linney and Dr. Wayne McLatchee tacked on it. She knocked.
The administrator was more of an ass than the receptionist. But then, he was paid well for it. He explained they had strict policies about visitation. These were very sick and delicate people, his patients, and they had to protect them. And their doctors, who were the finest in their field, were very strict about who could see the patients. Visitation was allowed only on Saturdays and Sundays, and even then only a carefully selected group of people, usually just family and friends, could sit with the patients, and then only for thirty minutes. They had to be very strict.
These were fragile people, and they certainly could not withstand interrogation by a reporter, regardless of how grave the circumstances.
Mr. Grantham asked when Mr. Linney might be discharged. Absolutely confidential, the administrator exclaimed. Probably when the insurance expired, suggested Mr. Grantham, who was talking and stalling and halfway expecting to hear loud and angry voices coming from behind the double doors.
This mention of insurance really agitated the administrator. Mr. Grantham asked if he, the administrator, would ask Mr. Linney if he would answer two questions from Mr. Grantham, and the whole thing would take less than thirty seconds.
Out of the question, snapped the administrator. They had strict policies.
A voice answered softly, and she stepped into the room. The carpet was thicker and the furniture was made from wood. He sat on the bed in a pair of jeans, no shirt, reading a thick novel. She was struck by his good looks.
“Excuse me,” she said warmly as she closed the door behind her.
“Come in,” he said with a soft smile. It was the first nonmedical face he’d seen in two days. What a beautiful face. He closed the book.
She walked to the end of the bed. “I’m Sara Jacobs, and I’m working on a story for the
“How’d you get in?” he asked, obviously glad she was in.
“Just walked. Did you clerk last summer for
“Yes, and the summer before. They offered me a job when I graduate. If I graduate.”
She handed him the photo. “Do you recognize this man?”
He took it and smiled. “Yeah. His name is, uh, wait a minute. He works in the oil and gas section on the ninth floor. What’s his name?”
Darby held her breath.
Linney closed his eyes hard and tried to think. He looked at the photo, and said, “Morgan. I think his name is Morgan. Yep.”
“His last name is Morgan?”
“That’s him. I can’t remember his first name. It’s something like Charles, but that’s not it. I think it starts with a C.”
“And you’re certain he’s in oil and gas?” Though she couldn’t remember the exact number, she was certain there was more than one Morgan at
“Yeah.”
“On the ninth floor?”
“Yeah. I worked in the bankruptcy section on the eighth floor, and oil and gas covers half of eight and all of nine.”
He handed the photo back.
“When are you getting out?” she asked. It would be rude to run from the room.
“Next week, I hope. What’s this guy done?”
“Nothing. We just need to talk to him.” She was backing away from the bed. “I have to run. “Thanks. And good luck.”
“Yeah. No problem.”
She quietly closed the door behind her, and scooted toward the lobby. The voice came from behind her.
“Hey! You! What’re you doing?”
Darby turned and faced a tall, black security guard with a gun on his hip. She looked completely guilty.
“What’re you doing?” he demanded again as he backed her into the wall.
“Visiting my brother,” she said. “And don’t yell at me again.”
“Who’s your brother?”
She nodded at his door. “Room 22.”
“You can’t visit right now. This is off limits.”
“It was important. I’m leaving, okay?”
The door to 22 opened, and Linney looked at them.
“This your sister?” the guard demanded.
Darby pleaded with her eyes.
“Yeah, leave her alone,” Linney said. “She’s leaving.”
She exhaled and smiled at Linney. “Mom will be up this weekend.”
“Good,” Linney said softly.
The guard backed off, and Darby almost ran to the double doors. Grantham was preaching to the administrator about the cost of health care. She walked quickly through the doors, into the lobby, and was almost to the front door when the administrator spoke to her.
“Miss! Oh, miss! Can I have your name?”
Darby was out the front door, headed for the car. Grantham shrugged at the administrator, and casually left the building. They jumped in, and sped away.
“Garcia’s last name is Morgan. Linney recognized him immediately, but he had trouble with the name. First name starts with a C.” She was digging through her notes from Martindale-Hubbell. “Said he works in oil and gas on the ninth floor.”
Grantham was speeding away from Parklane. “Oil and gas!”
“That’s what he said.” She found it. “Curtis D. Morgan, oil and gas section, age twenty-nine. There’s another Morgan in litigation, but he’s a partner and, let’s see, he’s fifty-one.”
“Garcia is Curtis Morgan,” Gray said with relief. He looked at his watch. “It’s a quarter till four. We’ll have to hurry.”
“I can’t wait.”
Rupert picked them up as they turned out of Parklane’s driveway. The rented Pontiac was flying all over the street. He drove like an idiot just to keep up, then radioed ahead.
Matthew Barr had never experienced a speedboat before, and after five hours of a bone-jarring voyage through the ocean he was soaked and in pain. His body was numb, and when he saw land he said a prayer, the first in decades. Then he resumed his nonstop cursing of Fletcher Coal.
They docked at a small marina near a city that he believed to be Freeport. The captain had said something about Freeport to the man known as Larry when they left Florida. No other word was spoken during the ordeal.