Название: Critical Condition
Автор: Sandra Orchard
Издательство: HarperCollins
Жанр: Короткие любовные романы
Серия: Mills & Boon Love Inspired Suspense
isbn: 9781472000361
isbn:
“Peterson.”
Tara jumped at Whittaker’s gruff summons and fumbled the bottle of oxycodone she was holding.
He snagged the bottle before it hit the floor, squinted at the label, then at her. “Your wrist still bothering you?”
“No,” she huffed, appalled by the insinuation that she’d sneak a pain pill. She hadn’t even filled the Tylenol 3 prescription the E.R. doc had given her the night of the incident. “I’m inventorying the medicine locker.”
His foot kicked the doorstop. The door closed with a thud.
Suddenly the room felt far too small, and she wished Alice were still here.
“Alice tells me you were late dispensing meds this morning.”
Scratch Alice. Tara wished Zach were here. She backed up a step only to have the handle of a spare bedside table press into her back. “Yes, sir.”
Whittaker raised an eyebrow. “No excuse?”
“It wouldn’t change the fact.”
“Hmm.” His stern expression relaxed. “Yes, some things are better kept to ourselves.” He rolled the narcotics bottle between his fingers. “Wouldn’t you agree?”
“Um, I suppose.”
“Good.” He plopped the bottle back on the shelf. “I’m glad we understand each other.”
“Excuse me?” Her voice pitched higher. But the instant the question escaped her lips, she bit her tongue. Would she never learn?
He’d probably been seconds away from walking out of the room and now...he was standing there gritting his teeth. The table handle dug deeper into her back.
“The Parkers’ deaths were an unfortunate occurrence that Memorial happened to benefit from.” Whittaker’s slow, measured words sucked the air from her lungs, one agonizing molecule at a time. “The less attention drawn to that fact, the better. We wouldn’t want people to get the wrong ideas. Would we?” He yanked open the door and stalked out.
This time Tara couldn’t ignore her upset stomach. She grabbed a bedpan and heaved.
Alice’s head poked in the door. “I thought I heard someone in here. Oh, you don’t look so good.” She helped Tara to a chair in the nurses’ station. “What is it? The flu?”
“I don’t know. It—” Cramps seized Tara’s stomach. She doubled over, moaning.
“I’ll get you something to calm the nausea.” Alice exchanged the bedpan with a clean one and rushed off. A few minutes later, she returned with a syringe. “Dr. Whittaker said I could give you an injection so it’ll work faster.”
“No, I don’t think—” Another wave hit, and this time Tara ran for the sink.
“Trust me. It’ll help.” Alice swabbed Tara’s arm and administered the injection before Tara could object again. “Now, why don’t you lie down in the locker room to give the medicine time to work? I’ll cover for you.”
* * *
The panic Zach had seen in Tara’s eyes had gripped his emotions and wouldn’t let go. He yanked the pass card from the computer hub he’d been testing and headed for the nurses’ station. After witnessing the hold Whittaker had had on Tara’s arm, he’d thought the hospital’s Golden Boy might be their man, but after talking with him, Zach wasn’t so sure. He needed to hear Tara’s version of what had gone down in the lobby at lunchtime.
The nurses’ station was vacant. He walked up and down the halls, glancing in patients’ rooms, but found no sign of her. Anxiety mounting, he checked the staff lounge.
Alice Bradshaw glanced up. “Looking for someone?” she asked in that gratingly precise tone of hers.
“Yes, the head nurse.”
“That would be me.”
Alarm bells went off in Zach’s head. “You? I thought Miss Peterson—”
“She went home sick. I’m covering for her. Can I help you with something?”
“It can wait. Thanks.” He went back to the computer he’d been testing, but a niggling uneasiness made concentrating impossible. Only yesterday, Tara had outright refused to take time off. He pulled out his cell phone and dialed her number.
After five rings, voice mail kicked in.
He clicked End without leaving a message. If she felt sick, she’d probably gone straight to bed. He wandered past Whittaker’s office, and at the sight of him frowning at the computer monitor, breathed a relieved sigh.
Zach shook his head. What was he thinking? That Whittaker would hunt her down with some threatening reprimand?
If she felt scared, she would’ve come to him. Even so, the acid burning his stomach showed no sign of abating. He borrowed the phone book from the nurses’ station to look up her address. But there were three columns of Petersons, and not one had a first initial T. He called Rick.
“What’s up?”
“I need Tara’s address. Something weird went down at lunchtime, and she left early. I need to make sure she’s okay.”
Rick rattled off the address. “Do you think she’s in danger?”
“I wouldn’t be asking for the address otherwise, would I?” Zach snapped. “I’ll be in touch.”
He clamped down his riled emotions and hurried out to the hospital parking lot. Lord, please let me be overreacting.
Consulting the map he’d picked up in the hospital gift shop, he wound through three unmarked subdivisions before finding Pine Street. He pinpointed Tara’s house and slowed to a crawl. The driveway was empty.
He double-checked the house number against the one Rick had given him. Same. His pulse spiked. All afternoon, concern had nagged him. Clearly, he should’ve paid more attention.
He tried her cell phone again.
“Hello?”
Zach’s heart leaped at the sound of her voice. “Tara, where are you? Bradshaw said you were sick.”
“Yeah, I am. I brought Suzie to my mom’s for the night.”
“You’re at your mom’s?”
“Just leavin—”
Tara screamed and what sounded like gunfire blasted over the phone.
“Tara? Tara? Talk СКАЧАТЬ