“None,” said Marissa. “At least none that we can discover.”
“Have you sent blood samples to Tad?”
“Yes,” said Marissa.
Cyril headed for the door. “I think you should redouble your efforts to associate this outbreak with one of the other two. There has to be a connection.”
“What about the cafeteria?” asked Marissa.
“You’re on your own there,” said Dubchek. “Ebola has never been spread by food, so I can’t see how the cafeteria could be associated
.” He pulled open the door. “Still, the coincidence is curious, and I suppose you’ll follow your own instincts no matter what I recommend. Just be sure you exhaust the possibilities of a connection with L.A. or St. Louis.”
For a moment Marissa stared at the closed door. Then she looked back at her summary sheet and the huge pile of histories. It was depressing.
Almost as if Cyrill’s last words had been a challenge, Marissa decided to visit the cafeteria, which had been built as a separate wing over a garden courtyard. The double doors leading to the large room were closed, and on the right one a notice had been tacked up stating: CLOSED BY ORDER OF STATE HEALTH COMMISSIONER. Marissa tried the door. It was unlocked.
Inside, the room was spotlessly clean and furnished in stainless steel and molded plastic. Directly ahead of Marissa was the steam table, with stacks of trays at one end and a cash register at the other.
A second set of double doors, with little round windows, was located behind the steam table and led to the kitchen. Just as Marissa was deciding whether to go through or not, they opened, and a stout but attractive middle-aged woman appeared and called out to Marissa that the cafeteria was closed. Marissa introduced herself and asked if she could ask the woman a few questions.
“Certainly,” replied the woman, who explained with a faint Scandinavian accent that her name was Jana Beronson and that she was the cafeteria manager. Marissa followed her into her office, a windowless cubicle whose walls were filled with schedules and menus.
After some polite conversation, Marissa asked to see the lunch menu for three days ago. Miss Beronson got it out of the file, and Marissa scanned the page. It was a usual cafeteria menu, with three entrées, two soups and a selection of desserts.
“Is this all the food offered?”
“Those are all the specials,” answered Miss Beronson. “Of course we always offer a selection of sandwiches and salads and beverages.”
Marissa asked if she could have a copy of the menu, and Miss
Beronson took the paper and left the office to Xerox it. Marissa decided that she would go back to each of the initial cases and ask what they had eaten for lunch three days ago. She would also question a control group made up of people who ate from the same menu but who did not become ill.
Miss Beronson returned with the copy. As she folded the paper, Marissa said, “One of your employees was stricken, wasn’t she?”
“Maria Gonzales,” said Miss Beronson.
“What was her job here?”
“She worked either the steam table or the salad bar,” answered Miss Beronson.
“Could you tell me what she did on the day in question?” asked Marissa.
Getting up, Miss Beronson went over to one of the large scheduling boards on her wall. “Desserts and salads,” she told Marissa.
Marissa wondered if they should test the whole cafeteria staff for Ebola antibodies. Although Ralph had been joking when he’d suggested an “Ebola Mary,” perhaps it was possible, although it had not been the case in Africa.
“Would you like to see our facility?” asked Miss Beronson, trying to be helpful.
For the next thirty minutes Marissa was given a grand tour of the cafeteria, including both the kitchen and the dining area. In the kitchen, she saw the walk-in cooler, the food preparation area and the huge gas ranges. In the dining area, she walked along the steam table, peering into silverware bins and lifting the covers of the salad-dressing canisters.
“Would you like to see the stock rooms?” Miss Beronson asked, when they were done.
Marissa declined, deciding it was time to start checking to see what the initial Ebola patients had chosen from the menu in her purse.
Marissa rocked back in the swivel chair and rubbed her eyes. It was 11:00A.M. of her second day in Phoenix, and she’d only managed four hours of sleep the previous night. She’d been assigned one of the examination alcoves in the OB-GYN clinic, and every time someone went by, she’d been awakened.
Behind her, Marissa heard the door open. She turned and saw Dubchek holding up the front page of a local newspaper. The headline read: CDC BELIEVES HIDDEN SOURCE OF EBOLA IN U.S.A.
Looking at his expression, Marissa guessed that he was, as usual, angry.
“I told you not to talk to the press.”
“I haven’t.”
Dubchek smacked the paper. “It says right here that Dr. Blumenthal of the CDC said that there is a reservoir of Ebola in the U.S.A., and that the outbreak in Phoenix was spread by either contaminated food or water. Marissa, I don’t mind telling you that you are in a lot of trouble!”
Marissa took the paper and read the article quickly. It was true that her name was mentioned, but only at second hand. The source of the information was a Bill Freeman, one of the doctors who’d helped take patient histories. She pointed this fact out to Dubchek.
“Whether you talk directly to the press, or to an intermediary who talks to the press, is immaterial. The effect is the same. It suggests that the CDC supports your opinions, which is not the case. We have no evidence of a food-related problem, and the last thing we want to do is cause mass hysteria.”
Marissa bit her lower lip. It seemed that every time the man spoke to her, it was to find fault. If only she’d been able to handle the episode in the hotel room in L.A. in a more diplomatic way, perhaps he wouldn’t be so angry. After all, what did he expect-that she wouldn’t talk to anyone? Any team effort meant communication.
Controlling her temper, Marissa handed Dubchek a paper. “I think you should take a look at this.”
“What is it?” he asked irritably.
“It’s the result of a second survey of the initially infected patients. At least those who were able to respond. You’ll notice that one fact jumps out. Except for two people who couldn’t remember, all the patients had eaten custard in the hospital cafeteria four days ago. You’ll remember that in my first survey, lunch in the cafeteria on that day was the only point of commonality. You’ll also see that a group of twenty-one people who ate in the cafeteria on the same day but did not eat the custard remained healthy.”
Dubchek put the paper down on the counter top. “This is a wonderful exercise for you, but you are forgetting one important fact:
Ebola is not a food-borne disease.”
“I know that,” said Marissa. “But you cannot ignore the fact that this outbreak started with an avalanche of cases, then slowed to a trickle with isolation.”
Dubchek took a deep breath. “Listen,” he said condescendingly, “Dr. Layne has confirmed your finding that one of the initial patients had been to the San Diego conference with Richter and Zabriski. That fact forms the basis of the official position: Richter brought the
virus back from its endemic habitat in Africa and spread it to other doctors in San Diego, including the unfortunate ophthalmologist here at the Medica Hospital.”
“But that position ignores the known incubation period for hemorrhagic fever.”
“I know there are problems,” admitted Dubchek tiredly, “but at the moment that’s our official position. I don’t mind you following up the food-borne possibility, but for God’s sake stop talking about it. Remember that you are here in an official capacity. I don’t want you conveying your personal opinions to anyone, particularly the press. Understood?”