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It took me about three silent repetitions of everyone’s roles to completely comprehend the connections Diane was sketching. When I did I said, “So I guess that means you win.”

“What do you mean, I win?”

“There’s no way John Trent’s custody recommendation will be accepted by the court now, given his daughter’s involvement in Robilio’s death. The dual relationship problem will eliminate him. You’ll get a fresh eval. You win.”

Her shoulders sagged. “I hadn’t thought about that.”

“Then what were you thinking about?”

“The connection. I was thinking it supported my theory that someone had gotten to John Trent about his recommendations in the custody case.”

“What do you mean?”

“What else could it be?”

“Diane, MedExcel-Robilio’s company-is the insurance carrier that’s refusing to grant permission for Chaney Trent to have that procedure she needs. I’m afraid that gave my patient-remember her, my patient?-Chaney’s sister, a plausible motive to kill Dead Ed.”

“Dead Ed?”

“Dr. Robilio.”

She looked at me as though we were discussing a nickname I’d devised for a potted plant. “You call Dr. Edward Robilio ‘Dead Ed’?”

“It’s kind of tacky, I admit. I picked it up from Sam Purdy. It’s a cop thing.”

She shook her head. “Figures. So, if I’m following you correctly, you say that your patient was thinking, like, okay, what if she killed the guy, then for sure his company would suddenly be more compassionate about investing a few hundred thousand dollars in helping her sister stay alive? Huh? I’m supposed to believe this makes sense? Is your patient retarded, or is she merely suffering some intermittent severe thought disorder?”

“She’s an adolescent, Diane.”

“Adolescents aren’t stupid, Alan. They’re impulsive, they’re mysterious, they’re at times incomprehensible, but they’re not stupid.”

“Who knows what happened at his house? Maybe the shooting was accidental.”

She made a face. “Two…accidental shots from close range? The second one accidentally between the eyes?”

It wasn’t actually between the eyes. I liked that she had some of it wrong. “You’re right. That’s hard to explain.” I desperately wanted to tell her about the suicide note, but Sam would kill me if I let that news get out.

“Of course I’m right.”

“Oh my God!” Involuntarily, I covered my mouth with my hand.

“What?”

“I just realized something.”

“What?”

“The leverage that your patient’s wife’s family had with John Trent.”

“Yes?”

It was one of those rare moments in life when Diane was a step behind me. I relished it for a moment, not wanting to pause too long for fear she would catch up on her own.

“It wasn’t political.”

“Money?”

“No.”

“What?”

“Chaney.”

Kachink, kachink, kachink. I watched her face as the balls tumbled down chutes into their inevitable slots.

She said, “Oh my God.”

I said, “Diane, this is a consultation we’re having. You can’t tell anyone about this.”

She said, “Of course it’s a consultation, Doctor,” as she felt behind her for a chair.

Seventeen

I rearranged my afternoon appointments so I could get to Denver before rush hour clogged the Boulder Turnpike and I-25. Getting Merritt’s admission routine accomplished was going to require some significant time. First I had to meet with her, and then I hoped to find time to interview at least one of her parents. In addition, I had to compose an initial treatment plan and confer with the unit staff. Of course, I also had to complete the rest of the admission paperwork and deal with MedExcel’s institutional reluctance to spend money on psychiatric admissions.

I figured three hours, easy.

The staff at Children’s had settled Merritt into the unit without any fuss. In my initial telephone orders the night before, I had asked them not to pressure her about speaking, and they hadn’t. She had been admitted on the lowest level of privileges-Level One-which permitted her only limited activities, like, say, breathing, without asking the staff for permission. She was, of course, confined to the unit, and was on suicide precautions-all routine for a new transfer after a serious suicide attempt.

On the way to Merritt’s room, the nurse assigned to her prepared me for what I’d find. “Her roommate’s name is Christina. She’s being stabilized on lithium right now and that hole you’re about to see in her cheek isn’t the only one she has. She’s been pierced in a few other places, too, if you know what I mean.”

I didn’t, but I could guess. The details weren’t important. Merritt’s assigned roommate turned out to be a skinny Chicana with big brown eyes full of heat and the promised large piece of metal coming out of her cheek. She was standing just outside the door listening to a CD player on headphones, but I could hear the Latin rhythm seeping out all the way from the door. I waved hello. She waved back.

The nurse paused before she left and pointed across the unit toward an empty consultation room that I could use for psychotherapy sessions. I asked Merritt to join me. She smiled a good-bye to Christina, who smiled back, exposing a metal-embedded tongue and a mouthful of braces. The kid would be hell going through security at the airport.

Merritt sat. I talked. I asked her if she was doing all right. She shrugged. I asked her if she understood the rules of the unit. She nodded yes. I asked her if she needed anything. She shook her head. I asked her if she wanted to be able to see her sister.

She did. Finally I saw some animation.

“I figured that. It’s a privilege, like any other privilege that’s earned by patients on the unit. The way it works is that you won’t be allowed off the unit for anything, even to visit your sister, until you earn the trust of the staff. They will teach you how to accomplish that, how to earn privileges. The intent isn’t to keep you from your sister; it’s to keep you safe. I’m sorry. That’s just the way it works.”

She looked away from me then, and didn’t look at me again. Permission to see Chaney was apparently all she wanted from me. I’d already decided not to do anything more than invite her to talk. That having failed, I had nothing left to say; it was apparent she hadn’t changed her mind about staying mute. I led her back to her room and watched her lower herself to her bed. She curled up facing the wall.

One of the nurses on the cardiology unit helped me track down Brenda Strait and John Trent in the almost deserted hospital cafeteria. They were sitting alone in the far corner of the room, sharing a piece of apple pie, holding hands across the table.

I thought they looked old.

Before I disturbed them, I poked my head into one of the private dining rooms adjacent to the cafeteria, hoping to find a place we could meet privately. The Doctors Dining Room was empty.

Brenda saw me approaching the table and released her husband’s hand. She whispered something and John, too, looked my way.

He wasn’t what I’d expected. Until that moment, I hadn’t realized that I had expectations about his appearance, but I did. In my mind’s eye, John Trent was robust and hefty with a generous smile and abundant hair the color of autumn grasses. In the hospital cafeteria that day, though, he was thin and gaunt and somber and what hair was left on his head was crew-cut and almost black.

He stood.

I said, “No, no, please, sit down. I’m Alan Gregory; it’s nice to finally meet you.”

“John Trent.”

I looked toward Brenda and said, “Hello, Brenda. Well, we pulled it off, the transfer. Thanks for all your help last night.”

She offered a weak smile in return.

“I just checked the Doctors Dining Room over there, and it’s empty. Why don’t we move in there and get some privacy and I’ll catch you both up with what’s going on.”