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“Not really. Alison’s up there.”

“So?”

I fill him in on what happened the other day when Hurley overheard me talking to Alison, and the scene that took place in the ER a little while ago. “I’ve totally destroyed my chances with Hurley,” I conclude. “Alison clearly has her clutches in him at this point, and while I’m glad he has someone, I don’t think I can stand to watch the two of them mooning over one another.”

Izzy looks at me with a sad expression and shakes his head. “You are so clueless sometimes,” he says.

“Tell me about it. If I’d known Hurley was standing there I never would have said those things about him.”

“That’s not what I mean. Come on.” He stands, pushes his chair in under the table, and takes my tray of dirty dishes.

“Where are we going?”

“Upstairs.”

I follow him to the elevator and from there to the third floor surgical waiting room. I expect to see Alison sitting there waiting, but there’s no sign of her. One of the OR nurses, a young gal named Kate, appears.

“Mattie! Glad I found you. David wanted to let you know that Detective Hurley is doing very well. He’s in recovery. The knife nicked an artery in his shoulder but we were able to suture it up and stabilize him. You can come in and see him if you want.”

She’s extending me a special privilege since I know that family members and visitors aren’t typically allowed in the recovery area. I’m grateful but also wondering if the courtesy was extended to anyone else. “Is Alison Miller in there?” I ask.

Kate laughs. “Not hardly. She left right after we came up from the ER because Detective Hurley kept asking for you the whole way. He kept saying he wanted Mattie, and needed Mattie, and where the hell was Mattie, anyway. Alison was pretty ticked and lit out of here in a snit.”

“He said all that?” I say, stunned.

“See,” Izzy says. “I told you you were clueless.”

I remember the stab of sadness and jealousy I felt when I saw Hurley looking up at Alison earlier as they were leaving the ER. I had no idea he was asking for me. “Wow,” I say, still digesting it all.

“Yeah, wow,” Kate agrees. “You are one lucky lady. And may I add that you have superb taste in men. That detective is one heck of a hottie. So come on.” She turns toward the recovery area and motions for me to follow behind her. “It’s not nice to keep a hottie waiting.”

Chapter 48

It’s been just over a week since Jackie Nash revealed that she’s a few fries shy of a Happy Meal, and everything is right with the world. Well, almost everything. Jackie is locked away inside a mental institution up north and though it’s now known for sure that she killed Shannon Tolliver and Carla Andrusson, it’s unlikely she will ever stand trial. After the incident in Nelson’s office, she withdrew into a babbling, incoherent puddle of scarred human flesh. Word has it she is catatonic and the few slim threads of reason that remained in her brain have finally snapped.

The blood DNA evidence we sent to Madison came back and proved a match for Jackie. When a cut was discovered on the bottom of her right foot—most likely incurred when she stepped on a piece of the broken glass we found in Shannon’s kitchen—it became clear that she was at the scene at the time of the murder. During a search of Jackie’s house, the cops found the blood-covered shoes she was wearing with a neat little hole sliced through the bottom of the right one. It also became clear to me why I thought something about Jackie was different whenever I saw her. The scarring from the fire left her with contractions that made her favor her left leg, but the cut on her foot, which was beginning to show signs of infection, had her favoring the other leg, too, giving her an awkward limp, different from her usual.

Erik Tolliver is now free and totally exonerated. I heard through the hospital grapevine that he resigned from his position there and has plans to move to Arizona where his mother lives. Carla’s and Shannon’s funerals were held within the last few days, both to stunning turnouts. Carla’s death has left me with residual feelings of guilt I may never work through. The funerals were somber, sad affairs, but they also left me with a sense of closure and new beginnings.

And speaking of new beginnings, Bjorn Adamson and Irene Keller are the latest hot item in town. Rumor has it they plan to wed in a few days, a date that seems a bit rushed to me, but I suppose their respective ages has something to do with that. Bjorn’s new catheter bags seem to be working well and now that Irene is in the picture, I feel confident that I will no longer have to worry about urine duties.

William-not-Bill and my mother have been on two dinner dates already, and judging from the fact that they were both reportedly banned from the Peking House restaurant after returning their plates five times each because they weren’t clean enough, I’m guessing it’s a match made in heaven. I won’t be at all surprised to learn that William-not-Bill is going to become my next stepfather sometime in the near future.

Rubbish and Hoover have settled in nicely together and so far the lost-and-found ad I placed in the local paper a few days ago hasn’t garnered any responses. I’m hoping that continues to be the case because the little furball has wormed his way into my heart. It’s a bit frightening how fast he’s growing however, gaining weight with more ease than I do, and that’s without the benefits of ice cream.

David and I seem to have reached a détente in our relationship. He’s still not happy about our breakup and doesn’t want to talk divorce yet, preferring to “wait it out and see what happens.” But his denial doesn’t bother me as much as it once did because I think the reality of my growing feelings for Hurley is starting to sink in. Plus David’s making an effort to be fair with our money situation. He handed over the check for my car and while I briefly considered using it to buy some wheels that were a little less conspicuous, the hearse is kind of growing on me and Hoover loves riding in the back of it. There are enough peculiar smells in there to keep any dog happy for a long, long time.

Despite all the good that’s come out of the events of the past couple weeks, several downers remain. The nanny cam in Luke Nelson’s office, and some password-protected files on his computer made it clear just how twisted the man is. Investigators found nearly two dozen videos of him drugging and sexually assaulting seven of his female patients. The resulting emotional backlash has been horrifying for the victims, a situation compounded by the fact that Luke Nelson has apparently disappeared from the face of the earth. Despite a nationwide APB and the involvement of the FBI since there is reason to suspect he engaged in similar activities when he was in Florida, there hasn’t been a single sighting or report of him being seen anywhere. Though I suspect he’s far away from Sorenson by now, the knowledge that he’s still out there somewhere has me looking over my shoulder more often than I like.

I’m pretty easy to find right about now. Two days ago, a picture of my half-naked body standing beside the Heinriches’ Caddy and Bitsy Conklin’s rotting corpse appeared on the front page of a national tabloid. At first I blamed Alison, figuring she’d sold the pictures out of revenge. But then I remembered how Hurley made her turn over the memory card to me, which I had stuffed in the pocket of his jacket I figured out why the dry cleaning lady was so willing to give me a half-price deal. The dry cleaning store has been closed all week and the owners have disappeared. I don’t know how much money they got for the pictures on that card, but it must have been enough for them to relocate.

Despite the front-page picture, the story inside the tabloid barely mentioned me and didn’t include my name. Fortunately, the saga of the battling Heinrich-Conklin offspring and the startling revelations about Bitsy and Gerald’s new wills were deemed more newsworthy than the underwear-clad deputy coroner standing next to the bodies. Of course, that hasn’t stopped all the locals from commenting on it. The phone in the ME’s office has been ringing off the hook since the paper appeared, and rumor has it Lucien was seen buying up an entire news rack of the paper the day it hit the stands.