you had a tetanus booster lately?”
“Actually, yes, two years ago.”
“Good. Were there any signs of a concussion tonight?”
Lake stared at her blankly.
“Headaches? Dizziness?”
She shrugged, offering a rueful smile. “Yes, but that may have been caused by the drug.”
“Are you in any kind of pain now?” Dr. Reed asked.
The comment made Lake’s eyes well with tears. How funny, she thought. What an understatement.
“My head’s still aching some.”
“I’ll give you something for that—but we need to wait until after the blood and urine tests.” For the first time she saw a trace of warmth in the doctor’s eyes.
Things started to move faster then. A nurse came in to draw blood and to accompany her to the bathroom across the hall, where she watched Lake pee, making sure she didn’t try to spike her urine. Afterward the nurse cleaned and dressed her head wounds and gave her an antibiotic to take. Lake pretended to focus on the nurse’s actions while she eavesdropped on the conversations in the corridor. She was desperate for news of Rory’s condition. Had her husband been called? In the background she could hear doctors and nurses asking for things like CTs and portable ultrasounds or requesting that vascular be called right now. But nothing about Rory. And there was no sign of her, either, as the cop led Lake back through the waiting room—with every eye trained on her.
It was just after ten when she was ushered into the back of the police car again, and ten-thirty when the car pulled up to the station house. The space was a blur of gray walls, metal desks, and linoleum. Kabowski appeared suddenly, as if from a mist. She wasn’t sure if he had come ahead or simply followed them from the hospital.
“Did my lawyer arrive yet?” she asked him.
“Not that I’m aware of. Why don’t we put you someplace where you’ll be comfortable until he arrives?”
“Thank you,” Lake said—though she knew that the last thing Kabowski cared about was her comfort.
She was led to a small interview room with a metal table and several stacking chairs around it. The uniformed cop who accompanied her didn’t ask if she’d like anything to drink. Didn’t they always ask you that on cop shows? She sensed they weren’t treating her at all like a victim.
Alone again, Lake felt the urge to lay her head on the table, to let tears fall, but she knew they might be watching her through the mirror on the wall. She sat there instead, blank-faced, but churning inside, wondering what was going to happen next—and when Archer would arrive with the laywer.
Fifteen minutes later the door swung open and a woman close to sixty and barely over five feet tall burst into the room.
“Madelyn Silver,” she said as she shot out a hand as wide as a mitten and shook her head, indicating that Lake shouldn’t get up.
She wasn’t wearing pajamas, but Madelyn’s black pants and tan cotton blazer looked like they’d been thrown on in a hurry. Her hair was jet black with a fine band of white down the center part, and the corners of her eyelids were so hooded they gave her small brown eyes a triangular shape. The only makeup she wore was a swipe of red lipstick that ran roughshod over the outline of her mouth. At first glance she looked like someone’s grandmother, the kind of person you’d see knitting in a train station, but a few seconds after she entered the room, Lake could feel the force field around her.
“How you doing, kiddo?” she said, taking the seat next to Lake and positioning her chair so they were face-to-face.
“Not so great. I’m just glad you’re here. Is Kit outside?”
“Yeah, they’re making him cool his pretty heels in their cheery waiting area. What’s the story on your head there? How bad are you hurt?” As Madelyn spoke, she shrugged off the shoulder strap from her worn leather briefcase, dropping the bag onto the table, then drew out a yellow legal pad. Something about that pad and Madelyn’s brusque but maternal style made Lake feel safe for the first time.
“It’s cut—but not bad enough for stitches. I might have a concussion, though.”
Madelyn cocked her head and parted her full lips hopefully, as if she’d just heard a rumor of a sixty-percent-off sale at Saks.
“Possible concussion. That means we could get this interview postponed. Are you really up to talking to these guys tonight?”
“I—I don’t know,” Lake said. “Everything—it’s all such a mess. I—”
“Even