CHAPTER 1
SARA LINTON LOOKED AT HER WATCH. The Seiko had been a gift from her grandmother on the day Sara graduated from high school. On Granny Em’s own graduation day, she had been four months from marriage, a year and a half from bearing the first of her six children and thirty-eight years from losing her husband to cancer. Higher education was something Emma’s father had seen as a waste of time and money, especially for a woman. Emma had not argued—she was raised during a time when children did not think to disagree with their parents—though she made sure that all four of her surviving children attended college.
“Wear this and think of me,” Granny Em had said that day on the school campus as she closed the watch’s silver bracelet around Sara’s wrist. “You’re going to do everything you ever dreamed of, and I want you to know that I will always be right there beside you.”
As a student at Emory University, Sara had constantly looked at the watch, especially through advanced biochemistry, applied genetics, and human anatomy classes that seemed by law to be taught by the most boring, monosyllabic professors that could be found. In medical school, she had impatiently glanced at the watch on Saturday mornings as she stood outside the lab, waiting for the professor to come and unlock the door so she could finish her experiments. During her internship at Grady Hospital, she had stared blurry-eyed at its white face, trying to make out the hands, as she calculated how much longer she had left in thirty-six-hour shifts. At the Heartsdale Children’s Clinic, she had closely followed the second hand as she pressed her fingers to a child’s thin wrist, counting the beats of his heart as they ticked beneath his skin, seeking to discern if an “achy all-over” was a serious ailment or if it just meant the kid did not want to go to school that day.
For almost twenty years, Sara had worn the watch. The crystal had been replaced twice, the battery numerous times, and the bracelet once because Sara could not stomach the thought of cleaning out the dried blood of a woman who had died in her arms. Even at Granny Em’s funeral, Sara had found herself touching the smooth bezel around the face, tears streaming down her own face at the realization that she could never again see her grandmother’s quick, open smile or the sparkle in her eyes as she learned of her oldest granddaughter’s latest accomplishment.
Now, looking at the watch, for the first time in her life Sara was glad her grandmother was not there with her, could not read the anger in Sara’s eyes, know the humiliation that burned in her chest like an uncontrollable fire as she sat in a conference room being deposed in a malpractice suit filed by the parents of a dead patient. Everything Sara had ever worked for, every step she had taken that her grandmother could not, every accomplishment, every degree, was being rendered meaningless by a woman who was all but calling Sara a baby killer.
The lawyer leaned over the table, eyebrow raised, lip curled, as Sara glanced at the watch. “Dr. Linton, do you have a more pressing appointment?”
“No.” Sara tried to keep her voice calm, to quell the fury that the lawyer had obviously been stoking for the last four hours. Sara knew that she was being manipulated, knew that the woman was trying to bait her, to get Sara to say something horrible that would forever be recorded by the little man leaning over the transcript machine in the corner. Knowing this did not stop Sara from reacting. As a matter of fact, the knowledge made her even angrier.
“I’ve been calling you Dr. Linton all this time.” The lawyer glanced down at an open folder in front of her. “Is it Tolliver? I see that you re-married your ex-husband, Jeffrey Tolliver, six months ago.”
“Linton is fine.” Under the table, Sara was shaking her foot so hard that her shoe was about to fall off. She crossed her arms over her chest. There was a sharp pain in her jaw from clenching her teeth. She shouldn’t be here. She should be at home right now, reading a book or talking on the phone to her sister. She should be going over patient files or sorting through old medical journals she never seemed to have time to catch up on.
She should be trusted.
“So,” the lawyer continued. The woman had given her name at the start of the deposition, but Sara couldn’t remember it. All she had been able to concentrate on at the time was the look on Beckey Powell’s face. Jimmy’s mother. The woman whose hand Sara had held so many times, the friend she had comforted, the person with whom she had spent countless hours on the phone, trying to put into simple English the medical jargon the oncologists in Atlanta were feeding the mother to explain why her twelve-year-old son was going to die.
From the moment they’d entered the room, Beckey had glared at Sara as if she were a murderer. The boy’s father, a man Sara had gone to school with, had not even been able to look her in the eye.
“Dr. Tolliver?” the lawyer pressed.
“Linton,” Sara corrected, and the woman smiled, just as she did every time she scored a point against Sara. This happened so often that Sara was tempted to ask the lawyer if she suffered from some unusually petty form of Tourette’s.
“On the morning of the seventeenth—this was the day after Easter—you got lab results from the cell blast you’d ordered performed on James Powell. Is that correct?”
James. She made him sound so adult. To Sara, he would always be the six-year-old she had met all those years ago, the little boy who liked playing with his plastic dinosaurs and eating the occasional crayon. He’d been so proud when he told her that he was called Jimmy, just like his dad.
“Dr. Tolliver?”
Buddy Conford, one of Sara’s lawyers, finally spoke up. “Let’s cut the crap, honey.”
“Honey?” the lawyer echoed. She had one of those husky, low voices most men found irresistible. Sara could tell Buddy fell into this category, just as she could tell that the fact the man found his opponent desirable heightened his sense of competitiveness.
Buddy smiled, his own point made. “You know her name.”
“Please instruct your client to answer the question, Mr. Conford.”
“Yes,” Sara said, before they could exchange any more barbs. She had found that lawyers could be quite verbose at three-hundred-fifty dollars an hour. They would parse the meaning of the word “parse” if the clock was ticking. And Sara had two lawyers: Melinda Stiles was counsel for Global Medical Indemnity, an insurance company to whom Sara had paid almost three and a half million dollars over the course of her medical career. Buddy Conford was Sara’s personal lawyer, whom she’d hired to protect her from the insurance company. The fine print in all of Global’s malpractice policies stipulated limited liability on the part of the company when a patient’s injury was a direct result of a doctor’s willful negligence. Buddy was here to make sure that did not happen.
“Dr. Linton? The morning of the seventeenth?”
“Yes,” Sara answered. “According to my notes, that’s when I got the lab results.”
Sharon, Sara remembered. The lawyer was Sharon Connor. Such an innocuous name for such a horrible person.
“And what did the lab results reveal to you?”
“That more than likely, Jimmy had acute myeloblastic leukemia.”
“And the prognosis?”
“That’s out of my realm. I’m not an oncologist.”
“No. You referred the Powells to an oncologist, a friend of yours from college, a Dr. William Harris in Atlanta?”
“Yes.” Poor Bill. He was named in the lawsuit, too, had been forced to hire his own attorney, was battling with his own insurance company.
“But you are a doctor?”
Sara took a deep breath. She had been instructed by Buddy to only answer questions, not pointed comments. God knew she was paying him enough for his advice. She might as well start taking it.
“And surely as a doctor you know what acute myeloblastic leukemia is?”
“It’s a group of malignant disorders characterized by the replacement of normal bone marrow with abnormal cells.”
Connor smiled, rattling off, “And it begins as a single somatic hematopoietic progenitor that transforms to a cell incapable of normal differentiation?”
“The cell loses apoptosis.”
Another smile, another point scored. “And this disease has a fifty percent survival rate.”
Sara held her tongue, waiting for the ax to fall.
“And timing is critical for treatment, is that correct? In such a disease—a disease that literally turns the body’s cells against themselves, turns off apoptosis, according to you, which is the normal genetic process of cell death—timing is critical.”
Forty-eight hours would not have saved the boy’s life, but Sara was not going to utter those words, have them transcribed into a legal document and later thrown in her face with all the callousness Sharon Connor could muster.
The lawyer shuffled through some papers as if she needed to find her notes. “And you attended Emory Medical School. As you so graciously corrected me earlier, you didn’t just graduate in the top ten percent, you graduated sixth in your class.”
Buddy sounded bored with the woman’s antics. “We’ve already established Dr. Linton’s credentials.”
“I’m just trying to put it all together,” the woman countered. She held up one of the pages, her eyes scanning the words. Finally, she put it down. “And, Dr. Linton, you got this information—this lab result that was almost certainly a death sentence—the morning of the seventeenth, and yet you chose not to share the information with the Powells until two days later. And that was because…?”
Sara had never heard so many sentences starting with the word “and.” She imagined grammar wasn’t high up on the curriculum at whatever school had churned out the vicious lawyer.
Still, she answered, “They were at Disney World for Jimmy’s birthday. I wanted them to enjoy their vacation, what I thought might be their last vacation as a family for some time. I made the decision to not tell them until they came back.”
“They came back the evening of the seventeenth, yet you did not tell them until the morning of the nineteenth, two days later.”
Sara opened her mouth to respond, but the woman talked over her.
“And it didn’t occur to you that they could return for immediate treatment and perhaps save their child’s life?” It was clear she didn’t expect an answer. “I would imagine that, given the choice, the Powells would rather have their son alive today instead of empty photographs of him standing around the Magic Kingdom.” She slid the picture in question across the table. It glided neatly past Beckey and Jim Powell, past Sara’s two lawyers, and stopped a few inches from where Sara was sitting.
She shouldn’t have looked, but she did.
Young Jimmy stood leaning against his father, both of them wearing Mickey Mouse ears and holding sparklers as a parade of Snow White’s dwarfs marched behind them. Even in the photo, you could tell the boy was sick. Dark circles rimmed his eyes and he was so thin that his frail little arm looked like a piece of string.
They had come back from vacation a day early because Jimmy had wanted to be home. Sara did not know why the Powells had not called her at the clinic, brought in Jimmy that day so she could check on him. Maybe his parents had known even without the test, even without the final diagnosis, that their days of having a normal, healthy child were over. Maybe they had just wanted to keep him to themselves one more day. He had been such a wonderful boy—kind, smart, cheerful—everything a parent could hope for. And now he was gone.
Sara felt tears well into her eyes, and bit her lip so hard that the tears fell from pain instead of grief.
Buddy snatched away the picture, irritated. He slid it back to Sharon Connor. “You can practice your opening statement in front of your mirror at home, sweetheart.”
Connor’s mouth twisted into a smirk as she took back the photograph. She was living proof that the theory that women were nurturing caretakers was utter bullshit. Sara half-expected to see rotting flesh between her teeth.
The woman said, “Dr. Linton, on this particular date, the date you got James’s lab results, did anything else happen that stood out for you?”
A prickling went up Sara’s spine, a spark of warning that she could not suppress. “Yes.”
“And could you tell us what that was?”
“I found a woman who had been murdered in the bathroom of our local diner.”
“Raped and murdered. Is that correct?”
“Yes.”
“That brings us to your part-time job as coroner for the county. I believe your husband—then ex-husband, when this rape and murder occurred—is chief of police for the county. Both of you work closely together when cases arise.”
Sara waited for more, but the woman had obviously just wanted to get that on the record.
“Counselor?” Buddy asked.
“One moment, please,” the lawyer murmured, picking up a thick folder and leafing through the pages.
Sara looked down at her hands to give herself something to do. Pisiform, triquetrum, hamate, capitate, trapezoid, trapezium, lunate, scaphoid…She listed all the bones in her hand, then started on the ligaments, trying to distract herself, willing herself not to walk into the trap the lawyer was so skillfully setting.
While Sara was in her residency at Grady, headhunters had pursued her so relentlessly that she had stopped answering her phone. Partnerships. Six-figure salaries with year-end bonuses. Surgical privileges at any hospital she chose. Personal assistants, lab support, full secretarial staff, even her own parking space. They had offered her everything, and yet in the end, she had decided to return home to Grant, to practice medicine for considerably less money and even less respect, because she thought it was important for doctors to serve rural communities.
Was part of it vanity, too? Sara had seen herself as a role model for the girls in town. Most of them had only ever seen a male doctor. The only women in authority were nurses, teachers, and mothers. Her first five years at the Heartsdale Children’s Clinic, Sara had spent at least half of her time convincing young patients—and frequently their mothers—that she had, in fact, graduated medical school. No one believed a woman could be smart enough, good enough, to reach such a position. Even when Sara bought the clinic from her retiring partner, people had still been skeptical. It had taken years to carve herself a place of respect in the community.
All for this.
Sharon Connor finally looked up from her papers. She frowned. “Dr. Linton, you yourself were raped. Isn’t that correct?”
Sara felt all of the saliva in her mouth dry up. Her throat tightened and her flesh turned hot as she struggled with an unwelcome shame that she had not felt since the last time a lawyer had deposed her about being raped. Just like then, Sara’s vision tunneled and blurred in such a way that she saw nothing, just heard the words ringing in her ears.
Buddy shot to his feet, arguing something, stabbing his finger at the lawyer, at the Powells. Beside him, Melinda Stiles from the Global Medical Indemnity said nothing. Buddy had told Sara this would happen, that Stiles would sit silently by, letting opposing counsel tear into Sara, speaking only when she thought Global might be exposed. Another woman, another failed role model.
“And I want that on the goddamn record!” Buddy finished, pushing his chair away from the table as he sat down.
“Noted,” Connor said. “Dr. Linton?”
Sara’s vision cleared. She heard a whoosh in her ears, as if she had been swimming underwater and suddenly pushed herself to the surface.
“Dr. Linton?” Connor repeated. She kept using the title, making it sound like something vile instead of a position Sara had worked for all of her life.
Sara looked at Buddy, and he shrugged as he shook his head, indicating there was nothing he could do. He had predicted that the deposition would be nothing more than a fishing expedition with Sara’s life as bait.
Connor said, “Doctor, would you like a few minutes to collect your emotions? I know that your rape is a hard thing for you to talk about.” She indicated the thick file on the table in front of her. It had to be the trial transcript from Sara’s case. The woman had read everything, knew every disgusting detail. “From what I gathered, your assault was very, very brutal.”
Sara cleared her throat, willed her voice to not just work but to be strong, fearless. “Yes, it was.”
Connor’s tone turned almost conciliatory. “I used to work at the district attorney’s office in Baton Rouge. I can honestly say in my twelve years as a prosecutor, I never saw anything as brutal, as sadistic, as what you experienced.”
Buddy snapped, “Sweetheart, you wanna quit with the crocodile tears and get to the question?”
The lawyer hesitated for just a second then continued, “For the record, Dr. Linton was raped in the bathroom of Grady Hospital, where she was working as an emergency room intern. Apparently, the perpetrator accessed the women’s room through the drop ceiling. Dr. Linton was in one of the stalls when he literally dropped down on her.”
“Noted,” Buddy said. “You got a question in there, or do you just like giving speeches?”
“Dr. Linton, the fact that you were brutally raped figured greatly into your decision to return to Grant County, did it not?”
“There were other reasons.”
“But would you say that the rape was your primary reason?”
“I would say that it was one of many reasons that figured into my decision to return.”
“Is this going somewhere?” Buddy asked. The lawyers exchanged words again, and Sara reached for the pitcher of water on the table, poured herself a glass with hands she willed to be steady.
She felt rather than saw Beckey Powell stir, and wondered if the woman was feeling guilty, seeing Sara as a human being again instead of a monster. Sara hoped so. She hoped Beckey tossed and turned in her bed tonight, realized that no matter how much she and her lawyer vilified Sara, nothing would bring back her son. Nothing would change the fact that Sara had done everything she could for Jimmy.
“Dr. Linton?” Connor continued. “I imagine in light of the brutal rape you experienced, it was quite an emotional ordeal to walk into that bathroom and discover a woman who herself had been sexually assaulted. Especially as it was almost ten years to the date that you were raped.”
Buddy snapped, “Is that a question?”
“Dr. Linton, you and your ex-husband—I’m sorry, husband—you both are trying to adopt a child now, aren’t you? Because as a consequence to this brutal rape you experienced, you cannot have children of your own?”
Beckey’s reaction was unmistakable. For the first time since this had started, Sara really looked at the woman. She saw a softening in Beckey’s eyes, a stirring of joy for a friend, but the emotion vanished as swiftly as it had come, and Sara could almost read the rebuke that cancelled it: You have no right to mother a child when you killed my son.
Connor held up a familiar-looking document, stating, “Doctor, you and your husband, Jeffrey Tolliver, filed papers for adoption with the state of Georgia three months ago. Isn’t that correct?”
Sara tried to remember what they had put on the adoption application, what they had said during the state-mandated parenting classes that had taken up every free minute of their time over the last few months. What incriminating evidence would the lawyer wring out of the endless, seemingly innocuous process? Jeffrey’s high blood pressure? Sara’s need for reading glasses? “Yes.”
Connor shuffled through some more papers, saying, “Just a moment, please.”
The room was tiny, airless. There were no windows, no paintings on the wall to stare at. A dying palm tree stood in the corner, the leaves drooping and sad. Nothing good would come of any of this. No pound of flesh would bring back a child. No verdict of innocence would restore a reputation.
Sara looked down at her hand. Dorsal metacarpal ligaments, dorsal carpometacarpal ligaments, dorsal intercarpal ligaments…
Sara had visited Jimmy the week before he died, held his frail little hand for hours as he haltingly talked about football and skateboarding and all the things he missed. Sara had been able to see it then, that look of death in his eyes. The look was the mirror opposite of the hope she had seen in Beckey Powell’s, even though the woman had heard the prognosis, had agreed to stop treatment so as not to prolong Jimmy’s suffering. It was that hope that kept Jimmy from letting go, that fear that every child has of disappointing his mother.
Sara had taken Beckey to the cafeteria, sitting in a quiet corner with the bewildered woman and holding her hand just as she had held Jimmy’s moments before. She’d described to Beckey how it would happen, how death would claim her son. His feet would get cold, then his hands, as circulation slowed. His lips would turn blue. His breathing would become irregular, but that shouldn’t be taken as a sign of distress. He would have difficulty swallowing. He might lose control of his bladder. His thoughts would wander, but Beckey had to keep talking to him, engaging him, because he would still be there. He would still be her Jimmy until the very last second. It was her job to be there at every step, then—the hardest part—to let him go on without her.
She had to be strong enough to let Jimmy go.
Connor cleared her throat and waited for Sara’s attention. “You never charged the Powells for the lab tests and subsequent office visits after you made James’s diagnosis,” she said. “Why is that, Dr. Linton?”
“I didn’t, in fact, make a firm diagnosis,” Sara corrected, trying to get her focus back. “I could only tell them what I suspected and refer them to an oncologist.”
“Your college friend, Dr. William Harris,” the lawyer supplied. “And you didn’t bill the Powells for any of the lab work or any subsequent visits following the referral.”
“I don’t handle billing.”
“But you do direct your office staff, do you not?” Connor paused. “Do I need to remind you that you’re under oath?”
Sara bit back the sharp answer that wanted to come.
“According to the deposition of your office manager, Nelly Morgan, you directed her to write off as a loss the almost two thousand dollars the Powells owed you. True?”
“Yes.”
“Why is that, Dr. Linton?”
“Because I knew that they were facing what could be crippling medical costs for Jimmy’s treatment. I didn’t want to add to the pile of creditors I knew that they would have.” Sara stared at Beckey, though the woman would not meet her gaze. “That’s what this is about, isn’t it? Lab bills. Hospital bills. Radiologists. Pharmacies. You must owe a fortune.”
Connor reminded, “Dr. Linton, you’re here to answer my questions, not ask your own.”
Sara leaned toward the Powells, tried to connect with them, make them see reason. “Don’t you know it won’t get him back? None of this will get Jimmy back.”
“Mr. Conford, please instruct your client—”
“Do you know what I gave up to practice here? Do you know how many years I spent—”
“Dr. Linton, do not address my clients.”
“This is the reason why you had to go to Atlanta to find a specialist,” Sara told them. “These lawsuits are why the hospital closed down, why there are only five doctors within a hundred miles of here who can afford to practice medicine.”
They would not look up at her, would not respond.
Sara sat back in her chair, spent. This couldn’t just be about money. Beckey and Jimmy wanted something more, an explanation for why their son died. The sad fact was that there was no explanation. People died—children died—and sometimes, there was no one to blame, nothing that could stop it. All this lawsuit meant was that a year from now, maybe five years, another child would be sick, another family would be stricken, and no one would be able to afford to help them.
No one would be there to hold their hand, to explain what was happening.
“Dr. Linton,” Connor continued. “As to your failure to bill the Powells for the lab work and office visits: isn’t it a fact that you felt guilty for Jimmy’s death?”
She knew the answer Buddy wanted her to give the question, knew that even Melinda Stiles, the silent advocate for Global Medical Indemnity, wanted her to deny this.
“Dr. Linton?” Connor insisted. “Didn’t you feel guilty?”
Sara closed her eyes, could see Jimmy lying in that hospital bed, talking to her about skateboarding. She could still feel the cold touch of his fingers in hers as he patiently explained to her the difference between a heelflip and an ollie.
Interphalangeal joints. Metacarpophalangeal joint. Capsule, distal, radioulnar joints…
“Dr. Linton?”
“Yes,” she finally admitted, tears flowing freely now. “Yes. I felt guilty.”
SARA DROVE THROUGH DOWNTOWN Heartsdale, the speedometer on her BMW 335ci barely reaching twenty-five. She passed the five-and-dime, the dress shop, the hardware store. At Burgess’s Cleaners, she stopped in the middle of the empty street, debating whether or not to drive on.
Ahead of her, the gates of the Grant Institute of Technology stood open. Students walked down the main drive dressed as goblins and superheroes. Halloween had come and gone the night before, but the Grant Tech students tended to stretch every holiday into a weeklong affair. Sara had not even bothered to buy candy this year. She knew that no parent would be sending their kid to knock on her door. Since the malpractice suit had been filed, the whole town had ostracized her. Even patients she had treated for years, people she had genuinely helped, avoided her gaze at the supermarket or the drugstore. Considering the atmosphere, Sara felt it would not have been wise to don her usual witch’s costume and go to the church party as she had for the last sixteen years. Sara had been born and raised in Grant County. She knew that this was a town that burned witches.
She had spent eight and a half hours in the deposition, every aspect of her life being raked over the coals. Over a hundred parents had signed releases so that their children’s medical charts could be combed through by Sharon Connor, most of them hoping that at the end of the day there would be some money in it for them. Melinda Stiles, who had turned surprisingly helpful once the room had emptied of witnesses, explained that this was fairly common. A malpractice suit turned patients into vultures, she explained, and more would start circling as the Powell case proceeded. Global Medical Indemnity would run the numbers, weigh the losses against the strength of Sara’s defense, and then decide whether or not they would settle.
In which case, all of this—the humiliation, the degradation—would be for nothing.
One of the college students in the street screamed and Sara startled, letting her foot slip off the brake. It was just a young man wearing a Chiquita Banana costume, including blue Capri pants and a yellow tie-top that showed a hairy, round belly. It was always the burly ones who dressed up as women the first chance they got. Would Jimmy Powell have been that sort of silly young man? If he had lived, would he have developed his father’s stooped posture and thin frame or his mother’s rounded face and cheery disposition? Sara knew he’d had Beckey’s quick wit, her love of practical jokes and bad puns. Anything else would be forever unknown.
Sara took a left into the clinic parking lot. Her clinic parking lot, the one she had bought from Dr. Barney all those years ago, working part-time as coroner so that she could afford the deal. The sign was faded, the steps needed a new coat of paint, and the side door stuck on warm days, but it was hers. All hers.
She got out of the car and used her key to open the front door. Last week, she had closed the clinic, furious at the parents who had signed releases in hopes of cashing in, furious at her town for betraying her. They saw Sara as nothing more than a cash machine, as if she was merely a conduit through which to access the millions of dollars sitting in the insurance company’s coffers. No one saw the consequences of this smash-and-grab, the fact that malpractice premiums would go up, doctors would go out of business, and healthcare, which was already unaffordable for many, would soon be unobtainable for most. No one cared about the lives they destroyed on their way to becoming millionaires.
Let them think about it while they drove an hour and a half over to Rollings, the closest town with a pediatrician.
Sara left the lights off as she walked through the clinic’s front lobby. Despite the chill October air, the building was warm, and she took off her suit jacket and laid it on the front counter as she walked to the bathroom.
The water was freezing cold straight out of the faucet, and Sara leaned down to splash her face, to try to get rid of the grime that was clinging to her skin. She wanted a long bath, a glass of wine, but these were things that she would have to go home to find and right now, she didn’t want to go home. She wanted to be alone, to regain her sense of self. At the same time, she wanted to be with her parents, who were at this moment somewhere in Kansas, exactly halfway in their long-planned quest to drive across America. Tessa, her sister, was in Atlanta, finally putting her college degree to use as she counseled homeless people. And Jeffrey…Jeffrey was at home, waiting for Sara to return from the deposition, to tell him everything that had happened. She wanted to be with him the most, and yet she didn’t want to see him at all.
She stared at her reflection in the mirror, realizing with a shock that she did not recognize herself. Her hair was pulled back so tightly that she was surprised she hadn’t developed a stress fracture. Carefully, she reached up and loosened the band, wincing from the pain as roots were yanked out. Her starched white shirt showed water spots, but Sara did not care. She felt ridiculous in the suit, which was probably the most expensive outfit she’d ever owned. Buddy had insisted she have the black cloth sharply tailored to her body so that during the deposition, she looked like a rich doctor instead of a small-town plumber’s daughter turned pediatrician. She could be herself in the courtroom, Buddy had told her. Sara could show Sharon Connor her real side when it would do the most damage.
Sara hated this duplicity, hated having to transform herself into a masculine-looking, arrogant bitch as part of her defense strategy. Her entire career, she had resisted quashing her femininity in order to fit into the boys’ club of medicine. And now one lawsuit had turned her into everything she despised.
“You okay?”
Jeffrey stood in the doorway. He was wearing a charcoal-colored suit with a dark blue shirt and tie. His cell phone was clipped to one side of his belt, his paddle holster to the other.
“I thought you were at home.”
“I dropped off my car at the shop. You mind giving me a ride home?”
She nodded, resting her shoulder against the wall.
“Here.” He held up a daisy he had probably picked from the overgrown yard. “Brought you this.”
Sara took the flower, which was little more than a weed, and put it on the edge of the sink.
“Wanna talk about it?”
She moved the daisy, lining it up perpendicular to the faucet. “No.”
“Do you want to be alone?”
“Yes. No.” Quickly, she closed the distance between them, wrapping her arms around his shoulders, burying her face in his neck. “It was so horrible,” she whispered. “My God, it was just so awful.”
“It’s going to be fine,” he soothed, rubbing her back with his hand. “Don’t let them get to you, Sara. Don’t let them shake your confidence.”
She pressed into him, needing the reassurance of his body against hers. He’d been at work all day, and he smelled like the squad room—that odd mixture of gun oil, burned coffee, and sweat. With her family scattered, Jeffrey was the only constant in her life, the one person who was there to help pick up the pieces. If she thought about it, this had been true for the last sixteen years. Even when Sara had divorced him, even when she had spent most of her days trying to think of anything but Jeffrey, in the back of her mind, he was always there.
She brushed her lips against his neck softly, slowly, until his skin responded. She smoothed her hands down his back to his waist, pulled him closer in such a way that there was no mistaking her meaning.
He looked surprised, but when she kissed him on the mouth, he responded in equal measure. At the moment, Sara didn’t so much want sex as the intimacy that came with it. It was, at least, the one thing she knew she was capable of doing right.
Jeffrey was the first to pull away. “Let’s go home, okay?” He tucked a strand of hair behind her ear. “I’ll cook supper and we’ll lay on the couch and…”
She kissed him again, biting his lip, pressing closer. He had never needed much coaxing, but as his hand slid to the zipper on her skirt, Sara’s mind wandered to thoughts of home: the pile of laundry that needed to be folded, the leaking faucet in the guest bathroom, the torn shelf liner in the kitchen.
Just the thought of taking off her panty hose was overwhelming.
He pulled away again, a half-smile on his lips. “Come on,” he said, taking her by the hand and leading her out of the bathroom. “I’ll drive you home.”
They were halfway across the lobby when his cell phone started to ring. He offered a shrug to Sara, as if he needed her permission to answer the phone.
“Go ahead,” she relented, knowing whoever it was would just call back—or worse, come find him. “Answer it.”
He still seemed reluctant, but took the phone off its clip anyway. She saw him frown as he looked at the caller ID, then answered, “Tolliver.”
Sara leaned back against the front counter, hugging her arms to her waist as she tried to read his expression. She had been a cop’s wife far too long to think that there was any such thing as a simple phone call.
“Where is she now?” Jeffrey demanded. He nodded, his shoulders tensing as he listened to the caller. “All right,” he said, looking at his watch. “I can be there in three hours.”
He ended the call, squeezing the phone so hard in his hand that Sara thought it might break. “Lena,” he said brusquely, just as Sara was about to ask him what was going on. Lena Adams was a detective on his squad, a woman who made a habit of getting herself into bad situations and dragging Jeffrey along with her. Just the sound of her name brought a sense of dread.
Sara said, “I thought she was on vacation.”
“There was an explosion,” Jeffrey answered. “She’s in the hospital.”
“Is she okay?”
“No,” he told her, shaking his head as if he could not believe what he had heard. “She’s been arrested.”