“I was just getting my earthquake book,” Maisie said. “It’s on the windowsill. I can rest and read at the same time.”
I’ll bet, Joanna thought, getting the book for her. “You can read for fifteen minutes, that’s it.”
“I promise,” Maisie said, already opening the book. “I’ll page you when I find some more.”
Joanna nodded. “I’ll see you later, kiddo,” she said, giving Maisie’s foot under the covers a squeeze, and started for the door.
“Don’t leave!” Maisie said, and when Joanna turned around, “I have to show you this picture of the piano.”
“Okay. One picture,” Joanna said, “and then I
Three pictures of the piano and the smoking skeleton-like wreck of the
Too exhausted to water her Swedish ivy or listen to her voice messages, even though her answering machine was blinking in the double-time that meant it was full. She laid her turned-off pager on the desk, got her coat and gloves, and locked the office behind her.
“Oh, good, you haven’t left yet,” Vielle said. Joanna turned around. Vielle was coming down the hall toward her, still in her dark blue scrubs and surgical cap.
“What are you doing up here?” Joanna asked. “Please tell me it’s not another NDE.”
“No, all quiet on the western front,” she said, pulling her surgical cap off and shaking out the tangle of narrow black braids. “I came up to see if Dr. Right ever found you, and to ask you what movies you wanted me to rent for Dish Night Thursday.”
Dish Night was their weekly movie rental night. “I don’t know,” Joanna said wearily. “Nothing with dying in it.”
“I know,” Vielle said. “I never got a chance to talk to you after — we worked on him for another twenty minutes, but it was no use. He was gone.”
Gone, Joanna thought. NDEers weren’t the only ones who talked about going and coming back in regard to dying. Doctors and nurses did, too. The patient passed away. He passed over. He left a wife and two children. He passed on. Joanna’s mother had told people her father “slipped away,” and the minister at her mother’s funeral had spoken of “the dear departed” and “those who have gone before us.” Gone where?
“It’s always bad when they go like that, with no warning,” Vielle said, “especially when they’re as young as he was. I wanted to make sure you were okay.”
“I’m okay,” Joanna said. “It’s just — what do you think he meant, ‘It’s too far for her to come’?”
“He was pretty far gone when his girlfriend arrived,” Vielle said. “I don’t think he realized she was there.”
No, Joanna thought, that wasn’t it. “He kept saying ‘fifty-eight.’ Why would he say that?”
Vielle shrugged. “Who knows? Maybe he was echoing what the nurses were saying. His blood pressure was eighty over fifty.”
It was seventy over fifty, Joanna thought. “Did the cell phone number of his girlfriend have a fifty-eight in it?”
“I don’t remember. By the way, did Dr. Right ever find you? Because if he didn’t, I think you should stop trying to avoid him. I ran into Louisa Krepke on my way up here, and she said he’s a neurologist, absolutely gorgeous, and single.”
“He found me,” Joanna said. “He wants me to work on a research project with him. Studying NDEs.”
“And — ?”
“And I don’t know,” Joanna said wearily.
“He isn’t cute? Louisa said he had blond hair and blue eyes.”
“No, he’s cute. He—”
“Oh, no, please don’t tell me he’s one of those near-death nutcases.”
“He’s not a nutcase,” Joanna said. “He thinks NDEs are the side effect of a neurochemical survival mechanism. He’s found a way to simulate them. He wants me to work with him, interviewing his subjects.”
“And you said yes, didn’t you?”
Joanna shook her head. “I said I’d think about it, but I don’t know.”
“He doesn’t want
“No. All he wants me to do is consult, interview subjects, and tell him if their experiences match the NDE core experience.”
“So what’s the problem?”
“I don’t know… I’m so far behind in my own work. I have dozens of interviews I haven’t transcribed. If I take on this project, when will I have time for my own NDE subjects?”
“Like Mrs. Davenport, you mean?” Vielle said. “You’re right. Gorgeous guy, legit project, no Maurice Mandrake, no Mrs. Davenport. Definitely sounds like a bad deal to me.”
“I know. You’re right,” Joanna said, sighing. “It sounds like a great project.”
It did. A chance to interview patients Mr. Mandrake hadn’t contaminated and to talk to them immediately after their experience. She almost never got the chance to do that. A patient ill enough to code was nearly always too ill to be interviewed right away, and the greater the gap, the more confabulation there was. Also, these would be subjects who were aware they were hallucinating. They should be much better interview subjects. So why wasn’t she leaping at the chance?