The in Death Collection Books 11-15 - J. D. Robb [365]
“Stand by, Trueheart. I’m on my way.”
Since the floor nurse all but threw herself in front of the ICU doors, Eve gave her sixty seconds to produce Dr. Michaels. He whisked out with a swirl of his long white coat and an annoyed expression.
“Lieutenant, this is a hospital, not a police station.”
“You can consider it both as long as Moniqua Cline is your patient. What’s her status?”
“She’s conscious, very disoriented. Her vital signs show improvement, but are still in the dangerous range. She’s far from out of the woods.”
“I need to question her. Hers isn’t the only life at stake.”
“Hers is the life under my care.”
Because one hard case recognized another, Eve nodded. “Don’t you think she’d rest easier knowing the person who did this to her has been put away? Look, I’m not going to interrogate her. I’m not going to browbeat her. I understand the pathology of the victim.”
“I appreciate the import of your investigation, Lieutenant, but this woman isn’t a tool.”
Eve kept her voice steady. “She’s not just a tool to me. But to the man who put her here, she’s less than that. She’s a game piece. Bryna Bankhead and Grace Lutz didn’t have a chance to tell anyone what happened to them.”
Whatever he saw in her face had him pushing open the door. “Just you,” he said. “And I’m staying with her.”
“That works for me. Peabody, stand by.”
A nurse monitored the machines and spoke in a soothing voice. Though Moniqua didn’t respond, Eve thought she heard something. Her eyes traveled back and forth as if measuring the glass box of the room. They flicked over Eve, passed on, then lingered on Michaels’s face.
“I’m so tired” was all she said, and her voice fluttered, soft as bird wings.
“You need to rest.” He stepped to the bed and covered her hand with his.
In that gesture, Eve’s confidence in him solidified. Moniqua wasn’t just a patient to him. She was a person.
“This is Lieutenant Dallas. She needs to ask you some questions.”
“I don’t know . . .”
“I’m going to stay right here.”
“Ms. Cline.” Eve took the other side of the bed so that Moniqua lay between her and the doctor. “I know you’re confused, and you’re tired, but anything you can tell me will help.”
“I don’t remember.”
“You corresponded, through e-mail, with an individual you knew as Byron.”
“Yes. We met in a chat. Nineteenth-century poets.”
“You agreed to meet him last night, for drinks at the Royal Bar in The Palace Hotel.”
Her brow, pale as marble, creased. “Yes. At . . . nine-thirty. Was that last night? We’d been talking online for weeks, and . . . I met him. I remember.”
“What else do you remember?”
“I—I was a little nervous at first. We’d hit it off so well in cyber, but real life’s different. Still, it was just drinks, and in such a lovely setting. If it didn’t work out, what was the harm? But it did. He was just as I expected . . . Did I have an accident? Am I dying?”
“You’re doing very well,” Michaels told her. “You’re very strong.”
“You had drinks with him,” Eve continued, drawing her attention away from Michaels again. “What did you talk about?”
Moniqua’s face went vague again. “Talk about?”
“With Byron. When you had drinks with him last night.”
“Oh, ah, poetry. And art. Travel. We both like to travel, though he’s been so many more places than I have. We had champagne, and caviar. I’ve never had caviar before. I don’t think it agreed with me. I must have gotten ill.”
“Were you ill at the hotel?”
“No. I—no, I don’t think . . . I must have had too much to drink. I’m usually careful not to have more than one glass. I remember, I remember now. Feeling very strange, but good. Happy. He was so perfect, so attractive. I kissed him. Kept kissing him. I wanted to get a room in the hotel. That’s not like me.” Her fingers pulled weakly at the sheet. “I must’ve had too much to drink.”
“You suggested getting a room in the hotel?”
“Yes. He laughed. It wasn’t a pleasant laugh, but I was so drunk, I didn’t care. Why did I drink so much? And he said . . . Take me home with you, and we’ll do things the poets write of.