Sleight of Hand (31 page)

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Authors: CJ Lyons

Tags: #Bought A, #Suspense

BOOK: Sleight of Hand
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"No, I don't.  But if I'm suspended, then I might have to charge you."  The joke fell flat.  They both knew how devastating it would be for Hart to be suspended from her job.

Drake reached for her hand and squeezed it in his.  "Good luck," he told her.  She rose to her feet and gave him her seat.

"Thanks.  I've a feeling that I'm going to need it."

 

 

Cassie caught up with Sterling at his office.  If she could make the pediatric chairman see reason, maybe they could work together.  "Dr. Sterling, I think you and I should talk."

He paused, his hand on the door to his office.  "Why?  So you can use me to help spread more vicious rumors regarding Virginia Ulrich?"

"No.  Actually I thought you might help me to discover the truth.  After all, you know this case better than anyone."

Sterling sighed and opened his door, motioning her inside.  "Very well.  Maybe I can help you come to your senses."

Cassie ignored his comment and took the opportunity to start going through everything, presenting it in as unbiased a fashion as possible.  She had barely started when Sterling slammed a hand down on top of his desk.

"Enough!  I know all this–I was there for George and Charlie's admissions, remember?"

"But Virginia was the only person present at all of these incidents."

"She's a very caring and diligent mother who spends probably 99% of her sons' hospital stays at their bedsides.  She would have a much higher chance of noticing anything abnormal than any of our medical personnel.  Surely you're not suggesting that it is a crime to be a good mother?"

Cassie was starting to lose her patience.  "Did she tell you about her first child, Elizabeth?"

"Of course she did.  I just wish that I'd been involved in the case back then.  It's too bad those yokels in West Virginia never did an autopsy, that tissue might have the answer I'm looking for.  I could search for genetic markers, comparisons between her and the two boys, narrow down the gene locus that is causing all of this."  His voice grew distant.  

Cassie imagined that he was dreaming of a future Nobel Prize or the like.  Obviously Sterling was as obsessed with this case as she was, but for different reasons.

"They did do an autopsy," she told him.

He turned to stare at her.  "What?"

"The Wheeling coroner followed the suspected Sudden Infant Death protocol, so they did an autopsy.  Here's a copy of the findings."  She drew out the autopsy protocol.  

"I'm certain Virginia told me that they ruled it a SIDS without an autopsy," he muttered and for the first time, Cassie heard a trace of uncertainty in his voice.  

"I never told you about it because I was so ashamed," came a voice from the doorway.  Cassie looked up to see Virginia Ulrich glaring at her.  "My first husband was a drunk, and he poisoned our beautiful little girl.   If I'd known it was so important, I would have told you, Dr. Sterling."  She was choking on her tears now.  Cassie marveled at the woman's performance.

"It's all right, Virginia."  Sterling moved to guide her to a chair.  Virginia kept hold of his hand even after she sat down.

"It's just that I was trying so hard to start a new life here.  I wanted to put all that behind me.  And I had," she looked up at him, "until now.  Now, they've come to take Charlie away from me."  The last came in a mournful wail.

"What?  That's nonsense!"  Sterling thundered.  

"Dr. Sterling, can't you tell them that it's all a mistake?  I would never hurt my own child!"

Cassie watched the theatrics, amazed at just how convincing Virginia was.  If she didn't know better, she would start to doubt also.  Sterling looked up at her from where he was comforting the distraught mother.

"I'm certain that you're behind this, Dr. Hart," he snapped.  "You'd better pack your belongings and be prepared to leave this hospital permanently, because I guarantee you'll never practice medicine here again!"

Cassie gathered her papers and started out.  Virginia Ulrich looked up, taking a break from her sobbing.  Cassie searched her face for any trace of a smirk or smile.  If she'd seen one, she probably would have been unable to resist the temptation to slap it off.  But instead all the mother did was to wipe her tears and grip Sterling's arm.

"What are we going to do about Charlie?"

"I'll tell you what we're going to do," Sterling said, his eyes still on Cassie.  "We're going to call the media and inform them that you've been the victim of persecution by CYS and one misguided physician.  We'll rally so much support for you, Virginia, that they'll have to return Charlie to your custody."

Cassie left without a word.  She'd heard more than enough already.  And the worse thing was if a man like Karl Sterling was convinced of Virginia Ulrich's innocence, then she was certain most of the uninformed public would be as well.  

She wouldn't be able to tell her side of it, not without violating patient confidentiality–which Virginia knew damned well Cassie would never do.

It seemed that Cassie had just attended the preview to her own public lynching as orchestrated by Virginia Ulrich.  

 

<><><>

 

Drake pulled into the Trevasian driveway for the second time in eight hours.  As he approached the front door, he glanced past the boxwoods and was relieved to see that the dog was gone.  There was no way he could justify the complete forensic exam he wanted, but he'd called in a favor and convinced one of the crime scene investigators to join the patrolmen.  At least the scene was documented, any evidence preserved.

Hopefully it would be a long time before Miller saw the bill for that, he thought, as he rang the doorbell.  Especially as this technically wasn't even a case yet.  

A case that didn't exist, investigated by a cop who wasn't one right now, because he thought it might tie into murders going back eleven years?  He shook his head, hoping he wasn't making a fool out of himself.

Sometimes you just gotta go with your gut, Hart always said.  Usually when he was arguing with her to think a problem through logically instead of jumping into action.

Maybe she had a point.  When had Drake started following rules and procedure anyway?  Must be getting old–or finally growing up, like Jimmy and Andy kept telling him to.

The door opened, and the sounds of Bugs Bunny filled the air.  "Mom!"  Katie Jean yelled back into the house.  "Mr. Detective is here!  The one who's helping us find Snickers!" 

She didn't wait for any parental approval but grabbed his arm and tugged him over the threshold.  She poked her head out the door, looking past him to his car.

"No Snickers?" she asked, her voice mournful, making him want nothing more than to run out and find another dog identical to the lost Snickers.

"I'm sorry, Katie Jean."

She bit her lip, and Drake knew why he found her so endearing–she was a miniature Hart done over in freckles and blonde hair.  The same impulsive, reckless energy, the same worry about her responsibilities.  

Now those worries bowed her skinny shoulders with their weight.  Her eyes cut down the hallway.  "Are you going to tell Nate?  I've got to be there if you are–he may cry."

Drake restrained his impulse to lift her into a bear hug and instead merely tousled her hair, earning a stern look of disapproval from Katie Jean.  "All right.  Let's get your mother too."

"She's in the kitchen with Nate."

Katie Jean led Drake on a roundabout path through a family room, the source of the TV sounds, past an empty dog bed surrounded by brand new chew toys and bones that were destined never to be enjoyed, and into a well lit eat in kitchen.

Still in his Rescue Hero PJ's, Nate sat at a breakfast bar, his head bent over a sketch book, a bowl of soggy Cap'n Crunch ignored beside him.  Mrs. Trevasian was on the phone, obviously to the kids' school.

"So you understand why they won't be in today?  Oh yes, they'll be fine.  Why thank you.  Yes, I'll tell him.  Thanks, you too."

She hung up and turned to Drake, outstretching her arm.  "Detective Drake, I'm Marcia Trevasian.  John has told me how helpful you've been."  

He took her hand, a firm grip, he noted.  Marcia Trevasian was in her mid-thirties, thin but in a healthy way, her reddish-blonde hair cut in a well-mannered bob that swept to her shoulders.  She was wearing a Southwest Air T-shirt and black jeans that mirrored the circles of fatigue her faded make up revealed.  Her lipstick had feathered into fine lines around her mouth.  Drake doubted that she'd been to bed at all–probably just arrived home a few hours ago.

What a thing to come home to.  He hoped the guys had removed the dog's remains before she got there.

"You're all Katie Jean's been talking about the last two days," Mrs Trevasian continued as Katie Jean tugged Drake over to the bar and pulled out the stool beside Nate for him to perch on.  "Nate."  She scooped up the untouched cereal bowl.  "I wish you wouldn't ask for food you're not going to eat." She emptied the bowl into the sink.  "Mr. Mendelsohn says he hopes you feel better. Coffee, Detective?"

Drake felt the boy go rigid at his mother's words.  Sensitive, he thought, watching Nate's pencil bore into the paper until the point snapped.

Katie Jean immediately slipped the broken pencil from Nate's clenched fist and whispered something into the boy's ear that relaxed him.  She scampered over to a pencil sharpener mounted on the wall beside the refrigerator and returned with a freshly sharpened pencil, climbing onto the stool on the other side of Nate.

"Thank you," Drake told their mother.  "Black, please."

Drake examined Nate's work in progress.  A series of sketches, a boy and his dog.  Fluid, lacking in some detail, but an advanced sense of perspective and proportion.  The kid definitely had something.

Now if he could only get him to talk.

"You're pretty talented," Drake told Nate.  "I like your drawings."  

He accepted the coffee with a smile.  Marcia Trevasian stepped back to lean on the counter, cradling her own cup with a worried expression as she watched Drake with her children.

Drake felt beads of sweat pool at the base of his spine and wished it was Jimmy here.  Jimmy knew how to talk to kids.  He decided to take the easy way out and just tell the truth.

"We found Snickers last night," he began.  

Katie Jean looked up at that, but her smile faded when she caught Drake's eyes.  Her arm immediately went around her brother's thin body.  Nate dropped his pencil but didn't look at Drake, his body slumped, hands falling into his lap.  

"Snickers died," Drake continued.  "I know how much you both loved him, so I wanted you to know right away."

"He was a good puppy," Katie Jean said, her voice breaking as tears overwhelmed her.  Her mother grabbed a box of tissues and joined them.

Nate said nothing, only flinched as his mother tried to embrace him.  He shrugged away from Katie Jean's touch and stared down at his drawing pad, an island remote from any human contact.

And breaking Drake's heart.  Tears he could understand–but this?  It was as if Nate was afraid to take comfort from his family.  Why?  Did he blame himself for Snickers' death?  Or was he afraid that if something bad happened to his beloved dog, then something bad could also take someone else he loved away from him?

"Nate," Drake continued in a low voice.  "Has anything scary happened to you?  Besides Snickers getting lost?"

The boy was silent, biting his lip, not in worry, Drake thought, but to prevent him from opening his mouth.  

"I'm a policeman–you can tell me.  Then maybe I can find out who hurt Snickers.  Make it so he doesn't hurt anyone else.  Would that be a good idea?"

A quick, infinitesimal nod of the head was all the response he got.  Progress.  Drake slid the drawing pad and turned to a fresh page.  "Do you think you could draw the scary thing for me?"

Nothing.

"Are you afraid?" Another quick jerk of the head.  "Is it something here, something around your house?"  A vigorous shaking in the negative.  "Something at school?"  Nothing.  "Did someone at school scare you?"  Nothing.

Drake lifted his head to find Marcia Trevasian staring at him, her gaze intense with worry.  He shrugged, wishing he knew how to get a response from her silent son.  Then he saw that Nate had taken his pencil up and was slowly sketching something.  His grip on the Ticonderoga was white knuckled, and his face was screwed tight with intent.

John Trevasian shuffled into the kitchen, running his hands over sleep deprived eyes.  "Drake?  You back already?  Sorry, I fell asleep.  Any news?"  He looked over at the tableau in confusion.  Katie Jean, tears now spent, was whispering encouragement to her brother as Nate continued to move the pencil across the page.  "What's going on?" he asked, accepting a mug of coffee from his wife.

"Nate's trying to tell us something," his wife whispered, as if she was afraid to break the spell.

"Nate's talking?"  

Drake shook his head, quickly quelling the look of relief that filled Trevasian's face.

Then Nate straightened, revealing his masterpiece to the adults.  The blank sheet of paper was now filled with the outline of a giant hand, palm up, fingers spilling over the edges of the paper as if the hand belonged to an alien creature.  Nate looked from one adult to another in anticipation and expectation at his disclosure.  His parents nodded encouragement.

"That's really good work, Nate."

"You even filled in the tiny lines that cross the palm."

Nate's eyebrows drew together in a scowl and he turned to Drake, his last hope, the one adult who seemed to appreciate his work for what it was.

But Drake looked at the over-scaled palm print with confusion.  What the hell did it mean?  Why wouldn't the kid just talk, for chrissake? 

He lifted blank eyes to meet Nate's and felt crushed by the eight year old's face as it filled with disappointment.  He didn't know what to do or say.

Katie Jean did though.  She slid off her stool and tugged at Nate's arm.  "C'mon, Nate.  Road Runner's on next."

Nate nodded.  Hand in hand, the two abandoned the adults for the technicolor world of cartoon land.  Where dogs and people alike could fall off a cliff or be hit by an anvil and still shake it off, coming back to life.

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