Authors: Lisa Scottoline
Tags: #Bullying in schools, #Suspense, #Fiction, #Family Life, #Thrillers, #Mothers and daughters, #Motherhood
Chapter Seventeen
Rose lay next to Melly on her bed, with John snoring on her chest, induced to slumber with Tylenol and carbs. The TV played softly on the Nickelodeon channel, and the saturated colors of the cartoons flickered around the darkening room. She checked her watch. 8:15 P.M. Her phone battery had gone dead, and she hadn’t heard from Leo on the hospital phone. She’d called him and left a message, then she’d called every sitter she could think of, with no luck. She could hide out in the room for only so long after visiting hours.
Rose turned to Melly, watching TV. “Mel? We have a problem, and I need your help.”
“What?” Melly looked over, her long hair messy on the pillow and her eyes tired.
“I can’t stay much longer with John, and Leo can’t take him, so I might have to go home for tonight.”
Melly frowned. “Do I go, too?”
“No, you stay here. Later tonight, if I can get a sitter, I can come back, but if I can’t, I’ll be back in the morning. You’ll have to be alone tonight, like a big girl, but I think you’ll be fine. I’m not worried about it.” Rose always said she wasn’t worried when she was, which was professional parenting.
“I would be here, all by myself?”
“You won’t be alone. There are nurses and doctors right outside the door. They sit there all night, at their desk. We can go meet them, right now.”
“I don’t want to.”
“Okay, well, before I go, I’ll make sure they’ll check on you. That’s their job, to check on the patients.”
“Why can’t I go home with you?”
“You can tomorrow, but not tonight. They want to keep an eye on you, to make sure your oxygen level is okay.”
“But I was good, Mom. I kept it on.” Melly fingered the oxygen tube, wounded.
“Yes, you were, but they need it on all night, one more night.”
“Why do you have to leave?” Melly boosted herself up on the pillow.
“They don’t let babies stay, and I can’t get a babysitter. You heard me on the phone. I have a problem, and you could really help, if you’d just stay here by yourself.” Rose went into bribe mode. “You can watch TV as late as you want, but only
Nick at Nite.
”
“Really?” Melly perked up as the door opened, and the nurse entered, with a smile.
“Hello, ladies,” she said, cheery. She was a young brunette, heavyset, with a broad smile. Her pink scrubs were covered with a puppy print, and taped to her stethoscope was a laminated photo of a white poodle. “I’m Rosie, the night nurse.”
“Ha!” Melly laughed, sitting up. “Same name as you, Mom.”
“Right.” Rose edged out of bed, holding the sleeping baby. “My name’s Rose, too. And we both love dogs, right?”
“Guilty as charged. I have a poodle named Bobo.”
Melly perked up. “We have a Cavalier King Charles spaniel. Her name is Princess Google Cadiz McKenna Ingrassia.”
The nurse laughed. “That’s a long name.”
“We have a lot of names in our family. We just call her Googie because she has googly eyes.”
“Cute!” The nurse lifted the blood pressure cuff from a wire basket in the wall. “Melly, I’m going to take your blood pressure. You know how this works?”
“Yes. It hurts.”
“Not the way I do it.” The nurse picked up Melly’s arm, and her gaze shifted to Rose. “I’m sorry, but you can’t stay here at night, with the baby.”
“I know, I’m leaving.” Rose smiled, to send the right signal to Melly. “I was telling Melly that you’ll be right outside the door, and she shouldn’t be worried about a thing. I’m going to let her stay up and watch
Nick at Nite
.”
The nurse nodded, wrapping the cuff with care. “That’s right, Melly. We’re going to have fun. I like your nail polish. I love pink.”
“Me, too.”
“Know what?” The nurse strapped the cuff closed with Velcro. “I have some nail polish at my desk, and we can do each other’s nails, later on.”
“Yay!” Melly grinned, scrambling to her knees. “I know how to do it, all by myself.”
“Really?” The nurse pumped up the cuff. “We’ll have a good time, you and me.”
“Do you like pudding?”
“I love pudding! See my hips?” The nurse chuckled, eyeing her watch. “I like it all gooey and yummy and chocolaty.” She released the cuff. “All done. You’re doing great, cutie patootie.”
Melly smiled, surprised. “Hey, that didn’t hurt. How did you do that?”
“That’s my secret.”
Melly turned to Rose, bright-eyed. “Mom, you can go now.”
“Okay, good idea.” Rose cuddled John to her chest, gave Melly a quick kiss on the cheek, hoisted her purse and diaper bag to her shoulder, then noticed the remote control on the chair. She picked it up and wedged it into the diaper bag, just to be on the safe side.
“There was a fire at my school,” Melly told the nurse.
“I know, I heard.”
“My mom got me out.”
“She’s amazing. You know why?”
“Why?”
“Her name is Rose.” The nurse winked, then turned to Rose. “Bye now, other Rose!”
“Bye, and thanks!” Rose went to the door. “Sweetie, I’ll call you on the phone in about an hour.”
“Okay, Mom!”
“Have fun! Love you!” Rose hurried down the hall and took the stairs, trying not to jostle John. She got her car keys from her purse, held John close, put her head down, and barreled through the doors.
Heads started to turn as soon as she hit the pavement, and the crowd surged toward her. Klieglights burst into brightness, cameramen hoisted videocameras, and microphones were brandished. Leading the crowd was Tanya Robertson, and she thrust her microphone at Rose.
“Ms. McKenna, how’s Melly? Is she still being discharged tomorrow? Can’t we get that one-on-one interview? Just say the word!”
“No comment.” Rose looked around for her car, but the klieglights blinded her, and the commotion woke John, who burst into tears.
Tanya persisted, joined by the other reporters. “Any comment on the condition of Amanda Gigot, Ms. McKenna?” “Did you administer CPR to any child besides yours?”
Rose spotted her blue Explorer in the lot and picked up a jog, holding the crying baby to her chest.
“Is it true that you have complained to school officials about the behavior of Amanda Gigot toward your daughter?” “Has the Gigot family or their lawyer contacted you?”
Rose chirped the door unlocked, buckled John into his car seat, jumped behind the wheel, and hit the gas, leaving their questions behind.
Chapter Eighteen
It was dark by the time Rose got home and pulled into the driveway. Her neighbor across the street was putting out his trash, and she waved to him. He didn’t wave back, though he had to have seen her. She cut the engine, got out of the car, went around the backseat, and lifted John, still asleep, from his car seat. Stale Cheerios fell to the driveway as she hoisted him to her shoulder, grabbed the diaper bag, and closed the door. She walked the sidewalk to the house, grateful for the darkness, the starless night like a cloak, hiding her from view.
She went up the sidewalk, then the flagstone path to the house, a four-bedroom colonial of solid gray stone, with a half circle of white roof sheltering the entrance. It seemed impossible that they could lose the house, but everything that had happened since Friday seemed impossible. She found her house key and let herself in, waking Princess Google, the world’s worst watchdog.
She set her bags on the couch and went straight upstairs with John, walking evenly so she wouldn’t wake him. She switched on the hall light, changed him, and put him down. He stayed asleep, his arms open, his fists balled, and his legs flopped apart like a frog’s. She tiptoed from the room and was going downstairs to try to find a sitter when the phone started ringing. She ran to the wall phone in the kitchen, and the caller ID read REESBURGH MEMORIAL.
Rose picked up instantly, alarmed. “Yes?”
“Mom?” It was Melly.
“Honey! I was going to call you soon. How are you doing?”
“They put a little girl in my room.”
“Oh well.” Rose should have thought of that, as a possibility. “That happens, sometimes.”
“That’s what Leo says. He called to say hi.”
“That was nice.”
“The mom is sleeping over with her. She’s on the other side of the curtain.”
Rose heard noise in the background. “What’s that sound?”
“She has the TV on, really loud. I can’t even hear
Nick at Nite.
I don’t know where the nurse went and we didn’t do our nails.”
Rose hated that Melly was there alone. “I guess she got busy. Do you see the button—”
“Mom, it said on their TV that Amanda was in the hospital. I heard it. They said her name, Amanda Gigot. Is Amanda in the hospital?”
Oh no.
“Yes, she is.”
“
This
hospital?”
“Yes.”
“Is she sick?”
“Yes. She has what you had, from the smoke.” Rose didn’t want to lie, but she couldn’t tell the whole truth, not with Melly by herself. “She needs more oxygen, and they’re keeping an eye on her.”
“I don’t want her to come in my room, Mom.”
“She won’t.”
“She better not.” Melly sounded anxious. “I’m already sharing it with a little kid. I shouldn’t have to share it with Amanda, too. Mom, can I come home?”
“Not yet.”
“But I don’t want to stay here, all by myself.”
Rose felt a guilty pang. “I’m going to call some babysitters and see if I can get someone to stay with John, so I can come back to the hospital. Okay?”
“Please come soon, Mom.”
“I’ll try. In the meantime, can you rest a little?”
“No, the TV is so loud. If you were here, you would say, ‘turn that down!’” Melly did a fair impression of Rose as fishwife.
“Let me see if I can do something about that TV, then get a sitter.” Rose checked her oven clock. 9:25 P.M. “I’ll call you as soon as I can. I love you.”
“Love you, too.”
“Hang in there. Bye.” Rose hung up, then hit redial to get the main switchboard at the hospital. The operator picked up, and she asked, “Can you transfer me to the nurses’ station on the third floor?”
“Certainly,” the operator answered. There was a click, and the phone rang and rang. Nobody picked up, so Rose hung up and redialed.
“I’m the one calling the third floor,” Rose said, when the operator answered. “My daughter is in the hospital, and I want to speak with the nurse outside her room. Her name is Rosie, and the TV in—”
“Hold the line.”
“No, wait!” Rose heard the same clicks and the same ringing. She waited ten rings and hung up. She took her phone from her pocket and plugged it into the charger near the toaster. The phone came to life, the red star telling her there was a message, so she pressed to the phone function. The last call was from Leo’s cell, and she pressed voicemail, for his message:
“Babe, I got your text, and I’m sorry, too. I’m up to my ass in alligators here, so don’t wait up. Hope you found a sitter and give the kids my love. You, too.”
Rose pressed END, happy to hear his voice, then pressed her way to her address book, thumbed to her B-list babysitters, and got busy. Almost half an hour later, she hadn’t been able to beg, borrow, or steal a sitter. She checked the clock, and it was almost ten o’clock. She felt terrible, but she had to call Melly with the bad news. “Honey?” she said, when Melly picked up.
“Mom! When are you coming?”
“I’m so sorry, sweetie, but I can’t. I tried, but I can’t get a sitter. I’ll keep trying, and if I get lucky, I can—”
“Mom, please? I don’t like it here.”
“Did the nurse come back?” Rose could hear the TV, blaring in the background.
“She did but she had to go. Mom, please. Please come.”
“Did you tell her about the TV?”
“No, I felt funny.”
“Mel, see the button on the side of the bed? It’s a white plastic thing and it’s attached to a white cord. Can you press it?”
“Yes. I’m pressing it, but the nurse isn’t coming.”
“Keep pressing it, and she will.”
“She’s not, Mom.” Melly started to cry, softly.
“Honey, don’t cry, everything’s all right. Don’t be upset. When the nurse comes, put her on the phone. I’ll tell her to tell the lady to lower the TV.” Rose heard Melly sniffling, then some noise and talking, and it sounded like the nurse was in the room. “Melly, put the nurse on. Melly? Hello?”
“Yes,” replied a cool voice, clearly not nurse Rosie.
“Hi, this is Rose. Who is this?”
“It’s Annabelle. Are you the mother?”
“Yes, please, help her. She was in that school fire yesterday, and the woman in her room is blaring the TV. The news is upsetting her.”
“Relax. I have it under control. Hang on, please.” The nurse sounded calm, and in the next minute the background noise stopped and the TV silenced, but Melly was still crying softly, which broke Rose’s heart.
“Hello, Annabelle?” she said. “Are you there?”
“Pardon?”
“Can you just comfort my daughter? She’s a good kid, she’s just scared, and she’s been through a lot in the past few—”
“I’m sorry, but we have to hang up. There are no calls permitted this late.”
“No, wait. Don’t hang up. I want to talk to my daughter.”
“There’s an automatic cut-off for phone calls after ten. I’ll take good care of her.”
Rose felt her temper flare. “Let me say good night to her, for God’s sake.”
“Please, hold on.”
“Melly? Melly?” Rose said, but the line went dead. She tried to call back, but there was no answer. She tried the switchboard and asked again for the nurses’ station, but the phone rang and rang, all over again. She hung up, noticing the red light was blinking on her phone, which meant incoming email.
She pressed the button to see the list of senders, but they were all messages sent from Facebook. She scanned the names in the messages: Kim Barnett, Jane Llewellyn, Annelyn Baxter, moms from the class and school committees. When she’d moved to Reesburgh, she’d friended everyone in the class. She clicked the first name, and the email came on the screen:
Kim Barnett has sent you a message on Facebook. “I KNOW THE GIGOT FAMILY AND THEY ARE HEARTBROKEN! HOW DO YOU LIVE WITH YOURSELF?”
Rose set down the BlackBerry. Reesburgh was a small town, and the Internet made it even smaller. She didn’t need to read any more.
She got the gist.