Authors: Daniel Palmer
She did not like the gloves.
“What are you doing here?” Julie’s voice carried a hard edge as she squeezed her hands into fists.
“We need to talk.”
“We did that already. This is harassment. I told you as much. I’ll call the police.”
“I want to make a deal.”
“A deal?”
“That’s all. I came here with an offer.”
“How the hell do you know where I live, anyway? And how long have you been waiting for me?”
Colchester gave a sideways smile. “Long enough. And let’s just say I have a lot of loyal constituents.”
“Yeah, I know all about them. They like to share my private conversations with you and shake me down at the river. What is it you want?”
“I want you to leave this Brandon Stahl business alone.”
“And why should I do that?”
Colchester made two sidelong glances, as if worried somebody might be watching or listening. A conspiratorial look came to his face.
“There are some legislative bills coming before the House that, if passed, are very favorable to White Memorial—taxes, zoning, matters of that nature. What’s good for White could be advantageous to you. I’d be happy to do a little lobbying if you stop trying to free my son’s killer.”
Julie’s mouth dropped open.
“Are you bribing me like the others?”
“Ugly words. I’d prefer to think of it as a mutually beneficial arrangement.”
Julie paused. Her heart continued to race from the scare, but anger also entered into the mix. “You have no business confronting me like this,” she said.
Colchester took in a ragged breath. He stepped forward. Under the harsh light, Julie could better see the pain in his eyes. Much of the color had drained from a face marred by desperation.
Without provocation, Colchester reached out with a fast hand and seized Julie by her wrist. He squeezed hard, but not so hard that it hurt. Reflexively, Julie jerked back her arm, but Colchester would not let go. He held on like a drowning man clinging to a rope.
“Brandon Stahl is a nightmare my family is trying to put behind us. I called my wife after you left my office, and told her what you said, and she’s been crying ever since. People are going to be hurt by your actions, and you’ll accomplish nothing. Please, just stop. I’m begging you to leave this alone!”
His last words came out almost as a hiss. Julie twisted her arm and ripped free of his grasp. She rubbed where he had touched her. Her eyes blazed with fury.
“Touch me again and I’ll have you arrested for assault. Show up here again and I’ll file formal harassment charges. You have no business telling me what to do.”
Colchester sank back into the shadows.
“People will be hurt by what you’re doing,” he said.
“What I’m doing is finding out the truth.”
Colchester lowered his head and dropped his shoulders in a look of defeat.
“Remember what I told you,” he said. “Just remember that.” He stuffed his hands in his coat pocket and trudged up the garage ramp to the street level.
Julie watched him go. She continued to watch even after he was out of sight. Back in her apartment, Julie almost cracked a smile as she poured herself a glass of wine. Colchester was the cap to what had been an utterly insane day. From the riverbank of western Massachusetts, to the State House, to the streets of Dorchester, the day’s events—some terrifying, some maddening, some truly baffling—played back in her mind like a disjointed dream.
After she fed Winston, Julie sank into the sofa and got three minutes into her show when her cell phone rang. She figured it might be Lucy wanting an update on her meeting with Jordan Cobb, but the caller ID came up as
SHERRI PLATT
.
Julie became animated. Her pulse quickened.
“Sherri, I’m so glad you called.”
Sherri made heavy breathing noises, and it sounded to Julie like she was crying.
“I want to talk,” Sherri said.
“Good. I want to know the truth.”
Sherri’s breathing remained uneven.
“I need some time … to make some arrangements first.” The young nurse was clearly distraught.
“When do you want to speak?”
“Tomorrow,” Sherri said.
“I get to work at eight,” Julie said.
“Meet me after my shift in the cafeteria. I get off at three. I’ll tell you what I know—what I did.”
“You lied in court. Didn’t you? Just tell me that?”
“Tomorrow. I’ll tell you everything.”
Even with all that had happened in the last couple days—months, really, going back to Sam’s accident—Julie brought 100 percent of herself to the job. She could compartmentalize with the best of them. It was how she dealt with death on an almost daily basis and still managed to cook dinner for her family with a smile on her face. Sam had found this ability of Julie’s a little unsettling.
“Sociopaths can’t turn it off like you do,” Sam once remarked.
“Who said I’m not a sociopath?” Julie had answered with a wink.
She compartmentalized for Trevor and for herself, because what happened at White Memorial did not need to follow her home like some gloomy shadow.
Today, however, Julie was having a hell of a time placing her upcoming meeting with Sherri Platt into her mental lockbox where it belonged. Loads of sick and needy patients needed Julie’s attention until three o’clock rolled around. Julie also had Jordan Cobb weighing on her heavily. He should be locked up inside another of her mental compartments, but she could not help but wonder what he might find. She also regretted his involvement with this whole affair. William Colchester’s words came back to her, and hard.
People will be hurt by what you’re doing.
What people?
Julie wondered. Sleep had not come easy last night, and with so many unanswered questions tumbling about her head, three o’clock could not get here fast enough.
By quarter to three, Julie had not eaten, nor had she sat down. The day had been extremely busy with the usual array of ICU happenings: respiratory disorders, a stroke, heart failure, trauma, and a case of sepsis similar to what the BC quarterback, Max Hartsock, had experienced, only without the catheter siphon.
Julie’s legs suffered the usual midday ache. Still, the ICU was stable, and another doc, Bill Goodman, came in to work, making it easier for Julie to slip away. Arriving five minutes early at the cafeteria where she and Sherri first met, Julie made a quick check of the place. Sherri was nowhere to be seen. Julie waited fifteen minutes before calling Dr. Goodman.
“Bill, it’s Julie. I was wondering how things are going up there. I’m supposed to meet someone, but they’re running late.”
“Everyone is still sick,” Dr. Goodman said. “But your presence is not immediately required, if that’s what you’re asking. You’re supposed to be off in an hour anyway. Why don’t you just call it a day? Things here are well under control.”
Julie thanked him, ended the call, and then texted Sherri Platt, but got no response. Another ten minutes went by with no sign of the nurse. Sherri had sounded anxious to meet with her. Maybe she got caught up with some work crisis on the floor. It happened all the time in the ICU. Julie called oncology and was patched through to the duty nurse.
“I’m sorry, Sherri called in sick today,” the nurse reported.
Julie cursed under her breath and used her doctor card to get Sherri’s home address.
* * *
IF JULIE
had left an hour earlier, it would have taken her half the time to get to Melrose. Now she was caught in bumper-to-bumper traffic on I-93, stuck behind an eighteen-wheeler that spit exhaust like dragon’s breath. Sherri had not answered her phone or responded to any of Julie’s texts, so this whole journey might prove to be time wasted. She should be home with Trevor, who wound up having to go with Paul at the last minute. The guilt trip he had saddled her with was justified. Her kid had begged for some consistency, and here she was giving him the exact opposite.
Julie had a guess that Sherri’s sickness had something to do with a sudden change of heart. If Colchester could offer tax breaks for White Memorial, he could certainly come up with something compelling to purchase Sherri’s continued cooperation.
According to the GPS, Julie was five miles from Sherri’s Melrose home when Jordan Cobb called.
Julie spoke the command, “Answer phone,” and her hands-free Bluetooth system connected the call. Thinking of a certain white Honda Civic, Julie permitted herself to talk and drive only if her hands remained on the wheel at all times.
“Hey there,” she said, changing lanes.
“I’ve got one.”
Julie tightened her grip on the wheel. “And?”
“I started with people who had died recently, and whose death was classified in the system as a heart attack. I’m just getting rolling because there’s a lot of data to sift through, and it’s really slow going.”
Julie gazed out the window at the standstill traffic.
“I can relate,” she said.
“Wish I could write queries against the database, but I can’t. If I could, I might be able to pull up records for myocardial infarctions that also have a record delete transaction type in the transaction logs. That’s the pattern we’re looking for.”
“I thought you were a superuser,” Julie said.
“The superuser access is for viewing, adding, and editing records. The database stuff is with IT.”
“But you said you got one. How?”
“I was looking at names and remembered a guy I wheeled to the morgue, Tommy Grasso. He used White Memorial like a Comfort Inn. So I checked it out.”
“And?”
“And he didn’t have an echo on file, but his EKG looked a lot like our two other cases. ST-T abnormalities, QT prolongation with large negative T waves occurring in succession. So I checked the transaction log and there it was—a record of a deletion logged postmortem.”
“Any history of heart disease?”
“No. It’s the lungs that were killing him, not the heart.”
“The EKG is telling, but not telling enough. We need an echo to definitively show takotsubo type ballooning.”
“That’s gonna be tough to find.”
Julie did not disagree. Protocols for chest pain always involved an EKG. The twelve-lead setup, six on chest and four on the arms and legs, could be done in a few minutes, and computer algorithms gave interpretations immediately. Echocardiograms, by contrast, were not routine. White did not offer a twenty-four-hour echo service like some hospitals with cardiology fellowship programs staffed night and day.
“I’ll keep looking,” Jordan said. “There’s something to this, Dr. Devereux. Especially with those deleted records. It’s a pattern.”
“No, it’s a start. Look up Colchester’s file for me. Let’s compare his EKG with Tommy’s.”
“Hang on a second.”
Jordan’s second was more like a couple of minutes, in which time Julie inched her car forward maybe forty feet. She drummed her fingers restlessly on the steering wheel while waiting.
“Hey Doc, check this. That record is gone.”
Julie’s vision went white and cleared in time for her to hit the brakes before finding the bumper of the car in front.
“What do you mean gone?”
“As in, the record doesn’t exist in the EMR system anymore.”
One name came to Julie’s mind.
Dr. Coffey.
Coffey had made it clear Julie’s investigation was unwelcome, and now he was making sure it was impossible. Maybe Dr. Coffey had discovered something on his own to make him and the department look bad, or perhaps something that would make it hard to keep Colchester’s killer behind bars. A cold chill spread across the nape of Julie’s neck. Just how far was William Colchester’s reach?
Jordan checked the database and found Sam’s record was still in the system. But with Colchester’s EMR gone, Julie no longer had definitive evidence of two cases of takotsubo at White. What she had was smoke, but no fire.
“What are you thinking?” Jordan asked.
“I’m thinking I can’t get to Sherri Platt’s place soon enough.”
Roman Janowski walked alongside Allyson Brock as they headed from the main entrance of Suburban West to the rehabilitation unit. Her strides equaled two of his, and he had a feeling Allyson hurried to make it as uncomfortable for him as possible.
White Memorial had gobbled up Suburban West like a great white shark snatching a meal in a single bite. The biggest obstacle to the takeover had always been the board of directors, but the numbers Romey put forward were so favorable his negotiation skill could have been second-rate and would have still closed the deal. Romey’s lawyers had the papers drafted and the details ironed out well in advance of that meeting. Based on projections, West’s chairman of the board, Vince Hanke, was doing everything in his power to speed up the process.
Brilliant.
The full transition would take time, but there already were some tangible benefits in bringing Suburban West into White’s accountable care organization. The benefits could be even greater, but Romey had heard from the other CEO that Allyson kept her foot too heavy on the brake. Romey had come here to force that foot over to the gas.
ACOs were the media darlings of the moment, with almost daily news reports of savings to Medicare projected in the billions. With ACOs, the average spending per patient was expected to plunge forty to fifty dollars per month in the coming years. Multiply that by millions of patients, and the trend was worth some attention.
The media could write whatever stories they saw fit, but Romey’s accountability was to his board, which mandated he deliver profits and patients. Before Romey took over White Memorial, those were thought to be mutually exclusive objectives. Allyson would learn the hard way they were not.
The looming takeover left Romey little time for exercise, or for screwing around with either of his two mistresses. It had been all work and no play, and indeed that made Romey a dull boy. His suit pants did not fit as well, and his notoriously slow metabolism probably had something to do with how snug his blazer felt across his chest.
The stress of the merger did not seem to bother Allyson any. Her weight had not fluctuated one iota. She still looked fine in her business suit, her rear end filling out her black slacks to perfection.
Who said walking golf courses wasn’t exercise?
Romey lamented not getting a chance to bed her. It could have happened, too, but Romey always put business before pleasure.