Damaged (Maggie O'Dell #8)

“Yes,” Maggie told her. “They wanted to know if the rescue swimmer was okay.”


“Yeah. That’s what I thought.” She took a long unladylike swig from her bottle while Maggie waited for some sort of explanation. Finally Liz said, “You’re the psychology expert. Even after today’s rescue they’re still calling me the rescue swimmer, not our rescue swimmer. What does that tell you?”

Maggie detected disappointment more than anger in Liz’s voice, despite her attempt at humor.

“It tells me they’re men.”

This time Liz laughed and tipped her bottle to Maggie as a salute of agreement. “You got that right.”

“Not to change the subject”—though it was the subject of male-female camaraderie that reminded Maggie—“but what was that you gave me before the flight? The capsules?”

“Did they work?”

“Yes, and believe me, I’ve tried everything.”

“It’s powdered ginger.”

“Ginger? You’re kidding?”

“Works wonders for the nausea. Doesn’t make a difference what’s causing the nausea, this squelches it. So what is it?”

“Excuse me?”

“What caused it? Your nausea?” Her eyes found Maggie’s and held them. “I mean you’re an FBI agent. You carry a gun. Someone said you’re like this expert profiler of murderers. I imagine you’ve seen some stuff that could turn plenty of cast-iron stomachs. But being up in the air. It’s about something else?”

Maggie caught herself shrugging and then felt a bit silly under the scrutiny of this young woman. After all, earlier Liz had seen that there was a problem when Maggie thought for certain she had learned to hide it.

“Hey, it’s none of my business. Just making conversation,” Liz told her and looked away like it was no big deal.

But after what they had just gone through in the helicopter, not to mention sneaking the gift of the capsules to Maggie—who kept almost everyone she met at a safe distance—she felt Liz deserved an answer.

“I’m sure it does seem odd,” Maggie finally said. “You’re right, I’ve seen plenty of things: body parts stuffed into takeout containers, little boys carved up. Just yesterday I had to pluck a killer’s brains out of my hair.” She checked Liz’s face and was surprised none of this fazed her. Then Maggie remembered the guys talking about Bailey and Hurricane Katrina. “You’ve seen plenty of stuff, too.”

Another smile. This one totally unexpected.

“You really are very good at this psychology stuff,” Liz said.

Maggie winced. She hadn’t intentionally meant to deflect the question.

“I don’t think it’s that big of a mystery,” Maggie said. “I can’t handle not being in control.”

“Are you always in control when you face off against a killer?”

“Of course. I carry a gun.” Back to brevity and humor. Keep it light, she told herself. Someone gets too close, resort to wit.

“Or maybe in the air you’re just vulnerable enough to realize all the risks you take every single day on the ground.”

Maggie stared at her, suddenly disarmed.

“Come on, let’s walk.” Liz stood and pointed to the moonlit beach. “If Isaac hits, this might be the last time we enjoy Pensacola Beach for a very long time.”

Just as Maggie pushed off her barstool a man stumbled over to their table, grabbing the edge and jiggling the empty beer bottles.

“Hey, E-liz-a-beth.” He purposely enunciated her name, stringing it out in his inebriated attempt at song.

“Scott?”

“Oh hey.” He stopped himself when he saw Maggie, as if only then noticing there was someone else at the table. “Sorry.” He grinned, looking from Liz to Maggie and back. “I didn’t realize you were on a date.”





CHAPTER 28





“Stryker’s a 3.96 billion dollar a year company,” Captain Ganz said.

Platt listened, though his eyes stayed on the prosthetic leg as he manipulated the joints.

“Most people know the name Stryker from autopsy scenes in crime novels or on CSI. You know, Stryker bone saws? But the company’s been an innovator for years when it comes to medical technology. Most hospital surgical beds are even made by Stryker.”

“What about these?” Platt poked at several screws on a table beside him. “I’ve never seen anything like them.”

“The technology isn’t all that new. We use a company in Jacksonville called BIOMedics. They’re able to grind the screws from bone—I guess they call it precision tooling. And they don’t just do screws—chips, wedges, dowels, anchors. The human body accepts bone much more readily than plastic. Same theory as heart valves and using animal tissue versus mechanical implants. BIOMedics makes the bone paste we use, too.”

“Paste? You mentioned bone cement earlier.”

“Right. Cement, paste—they’re similar. We use the cement to anchor a prosthetic limb. The paste fills the cracks or perforations that might be in the remaining bone. For instance, gaps left by shrapnel. If you fill the holes, bacterium doesn’t have as many places to infect.”