Lucien informed me this morning that Alison has since withdrawn the pictures from the market, but I am only partially relieved. The knowledge that Lucien insisted on copies of the pictures, purportedly for his case file, makes me shudder.
“And speaking of Alison Miller,” Izzy says, “guess who just came through the door?”
I start to turn and look but stop myself. “I don’t want them to think I knew they were coming,” I say. “Or that I care at all that they’re together. So you have to tell me what’s going on.”
“Well, they’re hanging up their coats now and—”
“Did Hurley help her take off her coat?” I ask.
“He did,” Izzy says, giving me an apologetic look.
“Damn.”
“Now they’re talking to the hostess and…here they come, heading for a table.”
“Does he have his arm around her?”
“Nope, no physical contact of any kind.”
“Good,” I say with a wicked smile. “Are they coming by us?”
“Yes, they are.” I expect Izzy to divert his gaze but instead he perks up and waves. “Hello there,” he says loudly.
I sense Hurley’s presence behind me before I turn to look at him. There he is, in all his long-legged, blue-eyed glory. And standing right beside him is Alison, looking much better than I like in a snug-fitting slacks-and-sweater outfit. Not surprisingly, her choice of jewelry includes a camera, which is hanging around her neck.
“Good evening, folks,” Hurley says, nodding at Izzy and Dom before turning those baby blues on me. “Fancy meeting you here.” There is a twinkle in his eye and I know he suspects our presence here isn’t mere coincidence. Particularly since Izzy, at my behest, pumped him for information earlier in the week about where he was taking Alison on their date.
“Hello,” I say, giving the two of them my best smile and noting that Alison looks infuriatingly smug.
“Would you care to join us?” Izzy offers. “There’s plenty of room.”
“No, thank you,” Alison says quickly.
“We’d love to,” says Hurley at the same time.
I want to grab Izzy’s face and give him a huge kiss.
“I meant to call you today anyway, Izzy,” Hurley says. “To clear up some final details on the Owenby and Halverson cases.”
“Well, if Alison won’t mind us talking business over dinner,” Izzy says. “I’ll try not to touch on anything too unappetizing.”
I arch my brows at Alison but keep my smile in place. I can tell she is warring with herself over her desire to keep Hurley away from me and her desire to hear what Hurley and Izzy are going to discuss, knowing they might provide a few juicy new details that can further augment her position as the quintessential news source in town.
“Okay,” Alison says finally, the professional side of her ego winning out. “We’ll be happy to join you. And I’m sure I can take whatever you two fellas want to dish out.”
We are seated at a corner booth with me on one end and Dom on the other, Izzy positioned between us. Alison quickly sizes up the situation and slides in next to me, no doubt to keep Hurley from sitting there. That leaves the spot next to Dom for Hurley, putting him across the table from me and Alison.
“I got the results back on the DNA test for Owenby and Halverson,” Izzy says. And with that, my joy at having Hurley at the table is replaced by a fear that the other DNA test will be discussed in Alison’s presence. “They were definitely related,” Izzy tells him. “Brother and sister.”
“So that’s confirmed?” Alison asks. “I can print that?”
“Yes, you can print it,” Izzy says.
Alison looks mightily pleased. This latest tidbit is just what she needs to support the speculations she’s already written up for the paper regarding Karen Owenby’s fake identity. As a result, the hospital is facing a PR nightmare, trying to explain how one of their surgical nurses not only lied about who she was, but also about being a nurse. I am pretty certain Alison’s name has to be at the top of Molinaro’s Fecal Roster right about now. In fact, they are running a pool down at the bakery as to how long it will be before Alison disappears. It can’t be soon enough for me.
Molinaro does get one break, however. The blood tests on Sidney Carrigan failed to reveal any sign of the HIV virus. He did, however, have colon cancer. It was discovered during the autopsy and it was so widespread that Sid’s life expectancy couldn’t have been much more than a year. While we can only guess at the truth, it seems to make sense that Sid took his overall loss of health—the muscle wasting, loss of appetite, and all the other physical symptoms brought on by the cancer—as a sign that he had developed AIDS. Given his lifestyle, Mike Halverson’s status, and the degree of intimacy the two men shared, it’s easy to see how Sid came to that conclusion. He had probably shared his suspicions with Mike, who then passed them on to his sister, giving her the ammunition she needed for her blackmail scheme.
Sid’s misfortune is serendipitous luck for the hospital. One minute they were facing the ordeal of trying to explain to hundreds of patients how they might have been contaminated with the HIV virus by their surgeon, a prospect that had lawyers from thousands of miles away sniffing around every Sorenson resident who had been operated on during the past five years. Now the hospital is in the clear in that regard, though it will probably be years before they can breathe easy over the whole mess, if ever.
“Well, it’s nice to know we had a few of the facts right,” Hurley says. “I swear, I’ve never seen such a jumbled-up mess of evidence.”
“Is it true that you actually suspected Mattie at one point?” Alison asks. She follows the question with a little laugh, no doubt intending to make it appear as if her interest is purely conversational.
“Not really,” Hurley says, smiling at me and winking. “I was pretty certain that the shock she expressed at the scene of the Owenby murder, when she first realized who the victim was, was genuine. Someone with a real acting talent might have been able to fool me, but the more I got to know Mattie, the more certain I became that acting isn’t one of her fortes.”
I scowl at that, but let it go. I am too pleased with the fact that Hurley winked at me in Alison’s presence to let such a petty criticism get me down.
“There’s one thing I still don’t understand,” Alison says. “How did this Joey Dewhurst guy happen to get involved?”
Izzy jumps in to answer that one. “He was following Mattie around. According to Arnie, the guy’s got a huge crush on her.”
“Had,” I corrected.
“You’re right,” Izzy says. “Your little matchmaking scheme worked like a charm. Arnie said Joey and Cinder have had lunch together twice already and have plans this weekend for dinner and a movie.”
“This Dewhurst guy was stalking you?” Alison says, looking over at me.
“Not stalking, exactly,” I explain. “He’s basically harmless, just a bit eccentric. He’s got the mentality of a twelve-year-old and has this superhero fantasy. So he would drive around in his van wearing his superhero outfit, pretending to save me from all sorts of imagined perils, until he finally saved me from a real one.”
I shift my attention to Hurley. “I thought that burgundy-and-gray van I kept seeing was someone you had tailing me. It never occurred to me that it might be Joey.”
“I probably should have had someone tailing you,” Hurley says, making Alison frown. “As it was, you’re lucky Joey was there.”