White Lies Read online



  The big white naval hospital was much busier that morning than it had been the night before, and two different guards stood at the doors to the ICU wing where Steve’s room was located. Again they seemed to know Payne on sight. Jay wondered how many times he had been here to see Steve, and why he would have felt it necessary to be there at all. As he had that morning, he could have checked on Steve’s condition by phone. Whatever Steve had gotten himself into must be extremely important, and Payne wanted to be on hand the instant he recovered consciousness, if ever.

  Payne left her to enter the room on her own, saying he wanted to talk to someone. Jay nodded absently, her attention already focused on Steve. She pushed open the door and walked in, leaving Payne standing in the hall practically in midsentence. A wry, faintly regretful smile touched his mouth as he looked at the closed door; then he turned and walked briskly down the hall.

  Jay stared at the man in the bed. Steve. Now that she was seeing him again, it was a little hard to accept that he was Steve. She had known Steve as vibrant, burning with energy; he was so still now that it threw her off balance.

  He was still in the same position he’d been in the night before; the machines were still quietly humming and beeping, and fluids were still being fed into his veins through needles. The strong scent of hospital antiseptic burned her nose, and suddenly she wondered if, in some corner of his mind, he was aware of the smell. Could he hear people talking, though he was unable to respond?

  She walked to the bed and touched his arm as she had the night before. The heat of his skin tingled against her fingertips despite the coolness of the controlled temperature. The mummylike expanse of bandages robbed him of individuality, and his lips were so swollen they looked more like caricatures than the lips of the man she had once kissed, loved, married, fought with and finally divorced. Only the hot bare skin of his arm made him real to her.

  Did he feel anything? Was he aware of her touch?

  “Steve?” she whispered, her voice trembling. It felt so funny to talk to a motionless mummy, knowing that he was probably so deep in his coma that he was unaware of everything, and that even if by some miracle he could hear her, he wouldn’t be able to respond. But even knowing all that, something inside compelled her to try. “I…it’s Jay.” Sometimes he’d called her Jaybird, and when he’d really wanted to aggravate her he’d called her Janet Jean. Her nickname had evolved when she’d been a very young child. Her parents had called her Janet Jean, but her elder brother, Wilson, had shortened it to J.J., which had naturally become Jay. By the time she’d started school, her name was, irrevocably, Jay.

  “You’ve been hurt,” she told Steve, still stroking his arm. “But you’re going to be all right. Your legs have been broken, and they’re both in casts. That’s why you can’t move them. They have a tube in your throat, helping you to breathe, and that’s why you can’t talk. You can’t see because you have bandages over your eyes. Don’t worry about anything. They’re taking good care of you here.”

  Was it a lie that he was going to be all right? Yet she didn’t know what else to tell him. If he could hear her, she had to reassure him, not give him something else to worry about.

  Clearing her throat, she began telling him about the past five years, what she’d been doing since the divorce. She even told him about being fired, and how badly she’d wanted to punch Farrell Wordlaw right in the nose. How badly she still wanted to punch him in the nose.

  THE VOICE WAS calm and infinitely tender. He didn’t understand the words, because unconsciousness still wrapped his mind in layers of blackness, but he heard the voice, felt it, like something warm touching his skin. It made him feel less alone, that tiny, dim contact. Something hard and vital in him focused on the contact, yearning toward it, forcing him upward out of the blackness, even though he sensed the fanged monsters that waited for him, waiting to tear at his flesh with hot knives and brutal teeth. He would have to endure that before he could reach the voice, and he was very weak. He might not make it. Yet the voice reached out to him, pulling at him like a magnet, lifting him out of the deep senselessness that had held him.

  “I REMEMBER THE doll I got for Christmas when I was four years old,” Jay said, talking automatically now. Her voice was low and dreamy. “She was soft and floppy, like a real baby, and she had curly brown hair and big brown eyes, with inch-long lashes that closed when I laid her down. I named her Chrissy, for my very best friend in the world. I lugged that doll around until she was so ragged she looked like a miniature bag lady. I slept with her, I put her on the chair beside me when I ate, and I rode miles around and around the house on my tricycle with her on the seat in front of me. Then I began to grow up, and I lost interest in Chrissy. I put her on the shelf with my other dolls and forgot about her. But the first time I saw you, Steve, I thought, ‘He’s got Chrissy eyes.’ That’s what I used to call brown eyes when I was little and didn’t know my colors. You have Chrissy eyes.”

  His breathing seemed to be slower, deeper. She couldn’t be certain, but she thought there was a different rhythm to the rise and fall of his chest. The sound of his breathing whistled in and out through the tube in his throat. Her fingers gently rubbed his arm, maintaining the small contact even though something inside her actually hurt from touching his skin.

  “I almost told you a couple of times that you have Chrissy eyes, but I didn’t think you’d like it.” She laughed, the sound warm in the room filled with impersonal, humming machines. “You were always so protective of your macho image. A devil-may-care adventurer shouldn’t have Chrissy eyes, should he?”

  Suddenly his arm twitched, and the movement so startled her that she jerked her hand away, her face pale. Except for breathing, it was the first time he’d moved, even though she knew it was probably an involuntary muscle spasm. Her eyes flew to his face but there was nothing to see there. Bandages covered the upper two-thirds of his head, and his bruised lips were immobile. Slowly she reached out and touched his arm again, but he lay still under her touch, and after a moment she resumed talking to him, rambling on as she dragged up childhood memories.

  Frank Payne silently opened the door and stopped in his tracks, listening to her low murmurings. She still stood by the bed; hell, she probably hadn’t moved an inch from the man’s side, and she had been in here—he checked his watch—almost three hours. If she had been the guy’s wife, he could have understood it, but she was his ex-wife, and she was the one who had ended the marriage. Yet there she stood, her attention locked on him as if she were willing him to get better.

  “How about some coffee?” he asked softly, not wanting to startle her, but her head jerked around anyway, her eyes wide.

  Then she smiled. “That sounds good.” She walked away from the bed, then stopped and looked back, a frown knitting her brows together. “I hate to leave him alone. If he understands anything at all, it must be awful to just lie there, trapped and hurting and not knowing why, thinking he’s all alone.”

  “He doesn’t know anything,” Payne assured her, wishing it was different. “He’s in a coma, and right now it’s better that he stays in it.”

  “Yes,” Jay agreed, knowing he was right. If Steve were conscious now, he would be in terrible pain.

  THAT FIRST FAINT glimmer of awareness had faded; the warm voice had gone away and left him without direction. Without that to guide him, he sank back into the blackness, into nothingness.

  FRANK LINGERED OVER the bad cafeteria food and the surprisingly good coffee. It wasn’t great coffee; it truly wasn’t even good coffee, but it was better than he’d expected. The next batch might not be as good, so he wanted to enjoy this one as long as he could. Not only that, he didn’t know exactly how to bring up the subject he’d been skating around all during lunch, but he had to do it. The Man had made it plain: Jay Granger had to stay. He didn’t want her to identify the patient and leave; he wanted her to become emotionally involved, at least enough to stay. And what the Man wanted, he got.

  F