"Yeah, me, too. The head of maintenance wouldn't exactly be in the know if the problems were medical." She paused. "Unless he had to hide evidence or bury it or he was stealing drugs."
"Be pretty damn hard to cart a body or bodies out of the hospital. Or down into the basement. Now, drugs, that's another matter."
"Then, too, people do just fall into things. Pop up at the wrong place at the wrong time." Harry jabbed at her eggs.
"True."
"Or maybe Hank had a problem. Gambling. Just an example. They nailed him at work. It might not have anything to do with the hospital but I think it does. If he owed money I'd think a killer would shoot him somewhere else. There are easier ways to get rid of somebody than the way he was killed."
Coop reached for the toast. "That's what I think, too. Rick isn't saying much. But we're all traveling down the same path."
"I even thought it might have something to do with harvesting body parts. A patient dies. Okay, now how would the family know if the liver or kidneys have been removed?"
"The undertaker would certainly know if there'd been an autopsy but-he wouldn't necessarily know if any body parts or organs had been removed."
"If the family requests an autopsy, and most do, it would be so easy. And in some hospitals aren't autopsies a matter of course?"
"I don't know. They aren't in Crozet." Coop tapped her fork on the side of the plate, an absentminded gesture.
"Let's go with my thesis. Organs. A healthy kidney is worth five thousand dollars. In any given week a hospital the size of Crozet, a small but good place, will have, I would think, at least three people die with healthy organs. I mean that's not far-fetched. A black market for body parts."
"No, I guess it isn't far-fetched. We can clone ourselves now. So much for reproduction." Her light eyes twinkled.
"Don't worry. Old ways are the best ways."
The two women laughed.
"Where to hide the organs before shipping them out?" Cynthia knew how Harry thought.
"I've seen those containers. They're not big. They're packed with dry ice. They'd be pretty easy to stash away in the basement. A nurse or doctor might find that kidney upstairs but who goes into the basement? Hank was in on it. The key is in the basement. Maybe it really was part of the Underground Railroad once. There'd be lots of places to hide stuff in then."
"Well, it's a theory. However, I don't think organs last very long. And donor types need to match. Still, it's something to investigate."
"And I can help."
"There she goes again." Tucker shook her head.
"What I want from you is: keep your mouth shut. Don't you dare go back into that hospital without me. Whoever hit you knows you, I think. You show up again and the blow might be-" Coop's voice trailed off.
"Is Rick mad at me?"
"Of course. He'll get over it."
"Who found me?"
"Booty Weyman, new on the job. Poor kid. Scared him half to death."
"Who stitched me up?"
"Bruce Buxton-and for free."
Surprised, she said, "That was nice of him." Glancing at the old railroad clock on the wall, Harry said, "I've got to feed horses, turn out, and get to work."
"You feel good enough to go to work?"
"Yeah. It hurts but it's okay. I'll stuff myself with Motrin."
"How about if I help you feed? One other little thing, don't tell people where you were or what you were doing. You've got until you walk into the post office to come up with a good story. The last thing we need on this case is to draw everyone's attention to the basement. It's much better if the killer or killers get a little breathing room. Whatever they are doing, if indeed it does involve the hospital, let them get back to it. Rick is even delaying talking to Sam about this for twenty-four hours. The trick is to get everyone to let down, relax."
"You need someone on the inside."
"I know."
"Larry Johnson still goes to the hospital. He's true blue."
"Larry is in his seventies. I need a younger man," Coop replied.
"Old Doc might be in his seventies but he's tough as nails and twice as smart. I'd put my money on him any day of the week."
"Well-I'll talk to Rick."
"The other thing is, Larry's a deep well. Whatever goes in doesn't come out."
"That's true. Well, come on, girl. If you're going to work we'd better get cracking in the barn."
"Hey, Coop, thanks. Thanks for everything."
"You'd do the same for me."
As the humans pulled on their coats, Mrs. Murphy said to her friends, "She's right about one thing. A hospital is life and death."
19
"What happened to you?" Miranda practically shouted when Harry walked through the back door at work.
Harry trusted Miranda, a well-founded trust, so she told her everything as they sorted the mail, fortunately light that morning.
"Oh, honey, I hope you haven't stirred up a hornet's nest." The older woman was quick to grasp the implications of what Harry had done.
In fact, Miranda's mind clicked along at a speedy pace. Most people upon meeting her beheld a pleasant-looking woman somewhere in her early sixties, late fifties on a good day. She used to be plump but she'd slimmed down quite a bit upon reigniting the flame with her high-school beau. She wore deep or bright colors, had a real flair for presenting herself without calling undue attention to herself, the Virginia ideal. But most people who didn't really know Mrs. George Hogendobber had slight insight into how bright she was. She always knew where the power in the room resided, a vital political and social survival tool. She was able to separate the wheat from the chaff. She also understood to the marrow of her bones that actions have consequences, a law of nature as yet unlearned by a large portion of the American population. She'd happily chat about her garden, cooking, the womanly skills at which she excelled. It was easy for people to overlook her. Over the years of working together, Harry had come to appreciate Miranda's intelligence, compassion, and concern. Without being fully conscious of it she relied on Miranda. And for Miranda's part, she had become a surrogate mother to Harry, who needed one.
Naturally, the cats and dog understood Miranda perfectly upon first introduction. In the beginning Miranda did not esteem cats but Mrs. Murphy set her right. The two became fast friends, and even Pewter, a far more self-indulgent soul, liked Miranda and vice versa.
Pewter couldn't understand why humans didn't talk more about tuna. They mostly talked about one another so she often tuned out. Or as she put it to herself, tuna-ed out.
Nobody was tuning out this morning though. The animals were worried and simultaneously furious that Harry had taken such a dumb chance. Furthermore, she had left them home. Had they been with her, the crack on the head would have never happened.
As the morning wore on, everyone who opened a postbox commented on the square shaved spot on Harry's head and the stitches. Her story was that she clunked herself in the barn. Big Mim, no slouch herself in the brain department, closely examined the wound and wondered just what could do that.
Harry fibbed, saying she'd hung a scythe over the beam closest to the hayloft ladder and when she slid down the ladder-she never climbed down, she'd put a foot on either side of the ladder and slide down-she forgot about the scythe. The story was stupid enough to be believable.
After Mim left, Miranda wryly said, "Harry, couldn't you have just said you bumped your head?"
"Yeah, but I had to bump it on something hard enough to break skin." She touched the spot. "It hurts."
"I'm sure it does and it's going to keep hurting, too. You promise me you won't pull a stunt like that again?"
"I didn't think it was such a stunt."
"You wouldn't." Miranda put her hands on her hips. "Now look here, girlie. I know you. I have known you since you came out of the womb. You don't go around that hospital by yourself. A man's been murdered there."
"You're right. I shouldn't have gone alone."