“Candi. Candi Cloninger.”
“Right. The one with the black hole on the x-rays.”
Allison reread her notes. Cloninger had shown swelling and blood near the tongue piercing. Allison had attributed it to the beating. Maybe it was something else. An early stage of what she was seeing in her other patients? She withdrew an x-ray of Cloninger’s skull with the black void in the middle as if there were no bone in the way. “What’s the word from the company about checking the machine?” she asked.
“They can’t get a tech here until Wednesday.”
“Wednesday? We need to know before then.”
“Is there a way we could do our own test?”
Allison thought about it. “Can’t hurt, I guess.”
“Start with a fresh box of film in case there was something wrong with the last one.”
A new box was lying on the counter. Allison opened it and took three views of Coretha’s wrist and hand.
The x-rays showed just a touch of arthritis in Coretha’s fingers—and a very unexpected dark black ring about the diameter of a nickel that cut into Coretha’s wrist in two of the films. The area inside and immediately around the ring was almost as dark. The ring wasn’t visible on the third.
“That’s weird.” Coretha rubbed her wrist. “What the heck is going on?”
“Something’s wrong somewhere, that’s for sure,” Allison agreed. She reviewed the variables—machine, film, Coretha—and concluded she could rule out Coretha because the black ring wasn’t always there.
In terms of the machine, she couldn’t think of a problem that would produce two unexpected and very different anomalies—a tennis ball-sized void in Cloninger’s mouth and the ring-like void in Coretha’s wrist.
Coretha anticipated her next thought. “I’ll call our film supplier. Maybe someone else has reported problems.”
“Good idea. And let’s hope no one comes in with a broken leg.”
Coretha laughed. “At least until Wednesday.”
Still brooding at the end of the day over the unexplained occurrences of tissue death, Allison packed the stack of medical journals she had set aside for the evening—even though she knew they likely would go no further than the pile on her bedside table—and went home.
She knew something was amiss as soon as she cracked the front door. Invariably, Hippocrates sauntered up the greet her. Not today. She checked his usual napping places—under the bed, in the towel bin, on top of her winter boots in the closet—and found no sign of her beloved cat.
“Hippocrates!” she called. She waited for the sharp cry of acknowledgement that always came. Silence.
She tried to reconstruct the morning. Was it possible she mistakenly left the cat outside when she’d gone to work? She slid open her patio door and called into the evening. Quiet, except for the muted engines of a passenger jet throttling back overhead and the whoosh of tires on a nearby road.
Panic swelled within her as she imagined the worst. Hippocrates was her truest companion—unquestioningly loyal, unconditionally loving, consistently comforting. Plenty of research showed that pets could enhance their owners’ mental health and sense of well-being but she believed Hippocrates actually had the power to heal. Strange, she knew full well, that a doctor would believe such a thing about her cat. But she had evidence. Just as she had rescued the malnourished black and white shelter kitten during the meltdown stage of her marriage, Hippocrates had rescued her.
Now, the only friend she could count on was missing. Worse, it was her fault.
Her search of nearby roads turned up no sign of the cat. She felt sick. An innocent life had been entrusted to her and she had fallen short. She returned to her condo and cried. When she was done, she took a deep breath, curled up on the couch with a throw and resolved to wait up for him. She couldn’t think of anything else to do.
To pass the time, she tried to think about the other mystery of the day—the cases of unexplained tissue death among her patients. At least that mystery offered her leads to pursue. She dialed the clinic. Coretha wouldn’t be there until the morning but Allison wanted her to get the message first thing. “Find Audrey Pringle, Ricky Scruggs, Candi Cloninger and Wanda Faggart. Get them to come to the clinic. I need to give them another look.”
She sank bank into the cushions, readjusted the throw and resumed torturing herself.
The night brought Josh no peace.
He thrashed in bed, his mind caroming crazily and unproductively between trying to recall details of the day’s meeting with Dr. Pepper and reviewing things Katie needed for camp. At 1 a.m., he gave up on sleep and opened Sharon’s closet, still full of her clothes.
Her scent enveloped him, as if Sharon herself had breezed into the room. He hugged her robe, burying his face in its soft folds. For a moment, she was with him, not just the aromas of her shampoos, lotions and perfumes.
He found a pain pill in the pocket. How like her! Wanting to be present for every possible moment with their daughter, Sharon had resisted taking them because they knocked her out. But in the end, the agony had been overwhelming. With Josh and Katie at her bedside, she’d slid imperceptibly from sleep to eternity aided by a powerful morphine drip.
Josh rummaged around the closet until he found Sharon’s sewing basket. He settled at the kitchen table, threaded a needle with considerable difficulty and set out attaching name tags to every stitch of clothing, towel and sheet Katie had laid out to pack.
When he was done with the nametags, he double-checked her non-clothing items against a list Camp Kanawha had provided: Bug spray. Tennis racquet. Flashlight. Water bottle. Sunscreen.
He had added a few items of his own. Disposable camera. Journal. Stamps. Things so that I can know what it’s like for you even though we’re apart, he thought.
He fell into a fitful sleep but was beset by a recurring nightmare in which it was past deadline and the Winston News printing press would not start.
He was grateful for Tuesday, a day closer to answers about Katie.
He looked in on his daughter at 7a.m., still asleep amidst a zoo-full of stuffed animals, each at one time indispensable, all now observers from her bookcase except for the favored koala that sat on her pillow; glittering soccer trophies, each one taller and more elaborate than the next, crowding for space on a section of her dresser with tubes of lip gloss and mascara (had he been right to allow it?); a wall of soccer team pictures and posters of boy bands. John Steinbeck’s Travels With Charley lay open by her bed. On her bedside table sat the team picture of the fifth-grade Black Ravens with the “13-0” sign held by Katie. The team had insisted she hold it. Even the other parents knew she was the best player. And the best kid, too, at least by his thinking. Katie could score all the goals in a 5-0 shutout and she’d credit her team. But if the opponent scored, Katie usually took the blame for allowing the goal. A gorgeous woman stood in the back row of the photo. Sharon. The team mom. Gibbs bent over and woke his daughter with a kiss and a whisper.
She sat up and rubbed the sleep from her eyes. “Only four more days, Dad! I’m soooo excited about camp!”
After microwaving a packet of oatmeal and toasting a bagel for her, he sent her off to school.
A familiar feeling washed over him—a hollow, empty, pit-of-the-stomach feeling, a true heartache—and after a moment he identified it. He felt homesick. No parents. No wife. No soul mate. One child and