I spotted the pay phone. Beside it was a parking lot filled with vehicles. Below that a sprawling brick structure.
I activated the label function. A purple bubble appeared. I clicked on it. Saw the words “CMC—Mercy.”
Carolinas Medical Center—Mercy Hospital.
Something flickered in my lower centers. Was gone.
I stared at the screen, willing the pesky spark to burst through.
It did. With a high-voltage jolt.
Lizzie Nance had been researching ER nursing for a school project. They’d found the report on her laptop after she died.
Shelly Leal had gone to an ER for dysmenorrhea.
Colleen Donovan had been transported to an ER after falling and hitting her head.
A caller using fake identities had dialed from a pay phone across from a hospital. To check on Estrada. To check on Donovan.
As I thought about it, I could feel my blood pumping faster.
I grabbed the phone. Had to key the digits twice. “Come on. Come on.”
“Yo.” Slidell was chewing on something.
My words came out at breakneck speed. In finishing, “You need to call Shelly Leal’s mother. Ask what hospital they took her to. Then find out where Donovan was treated.”
“I’ll get back to you.” Gruff.
The wait seemed endless. In fact, it was under an hour.
“CMC—Mercy,” Slidell said.
“Sonofabitch,” I said. “That’s where the victims were chosen.”
“I’ll get a list of employees.”
“Without a warrant?”
“I’ll persuade them.”
“How?”
“Personal charm. If that don’t work, I’ll threaten to dime the Observer.”
Slidell had the roster by ten. “You got any idea how many people work at a hospital?”
“Now what?” I asked.
“I’m running the names against those I got from the DMV on the license plate ID. Special Asshole’s gonna start sending ’em through the system.”
“Doesn’t every hospital employee undergo a background check?”
“Yeah. That stops the bad guys.”
“Focus on those with an ER connection.”
We hung up.
While waiting to hear back from Slidell, I tried Ryan again. This time he answered.
He was as pumped as I was. Congratulated me. “Not much dropping here,” he said.
“Have you found Tawny McGee’s psychologist?”
“Yeah. Pamela Lindahl. She’s actually a social services psychiatrist.”
“Is she still affiliated with the General?”
“Yes. But she sucks at returning calls. I’ll keep on it. But I doubt finding McGee will lead anywhere.”
I couldn’t disagree. And wondered if opening the wound was worth the cost. “What about Rodas?” I asked.
“He called in some chits with the press. Had Pomerleau’s face published statewide, along with a description and a plea to the public for pics or video taken between 2004 and 2009 in which she might be seen in the background. You know, photo bombing at a store, a gas station, a parking lot.”
“If she’s with a guy, it could put a face to her playmate.”
“Exactly. It’s unlikely, but you never know. He’s also got people canvassing door-to-door in Hardwick and St. Johnsbury.”
I asked Ryan if he was planning to return to Charlotte. He said soon.
There was an awkward pause. Or I imagined one. Then we disconnected.
Knowing I wouldn’t sleep, I made tea and returned to the Nance file.
Gran’s clock ticked softly from its place on the mantel.
As expected, I found nothing further.
At midnight I switched to the reports awaiting my attention. My mind kept drifting. I speculated. Pomerleau’s accomplice was an EMT. A nurse. A security guard.
The hours dragged by at glacial speed.
Slidell finally called at two A.M.
He had learned three things.
CHAPTER 29
“LEAL WENT TO Mercy.”
“When?”
“Sometime last summer. The mother thinks late July.”
“Does she know who treated her daughter?”
“No.”
“The ER will have a record of the visit.”
“Really?”
“They’ll probably insist on a subpoena.”
“You want to hear this?”