“She’s too far away,” Greg said. “She’ll never get here in time.”
“Yes, she will,” Vielle said. “Stephanie’s already on her way. She’ll be here in just a few minutes.”
There was another pause. Joanna strained to hear the reassuring beep of the monitor. “What’s the BP?” the cardiologist said.
“Fifty-eight,” but it was Greg Menotti’s voice.
“Eighty over sixty,” another voice said.
“No,” Greg Menotti said angrily. “Fifty-eight. She’ll never get here in time.”
“She was just a few blocks away,” Vielle said. “She’s probably already pulling into the parking lot. Just hang on, Greg.”
“Fifty-eight,” Greg Menotti said, and a pretty blond in a blue parka came hurrying into the ER, the nurse’s aide who’d been in the room before right behind her, saying, “Ma’am? You need to wait in the waiting room. Ma’am, you can’t go in there.”
The blond pushed into the room. “Stephanie’s here, Greg,” Joanna heard Vielle say. “I told you she’d get here.”
“Greg, it’s me, Stephanie,” the blond said tearfully. “I’m here.”
Silence.
“Seventy over fifty,” Vielle said.
“I just left my cell phone in the car for a minute while I ran into the grocery store. I’m so sorry. I came as soon as I could.”
“Sixty over forty and dropping.”
“No,” Greg said weakly. “Too far away for her to come.” And then the steady flatline whine of the heart monitor.
2
“Are you sure you told her I was looking for her?” Richard asked the charge nurse.
“I’m positive, Dr. Wright,” she said. “I gave her your number when she was here this morning.”
“And when was that?”
“About an hour ago,” she said. “She was interviewing a patient.”
“And you don’t know where she went from here?”
“No. I can give you her pager number.”
“I have her pager number,” Richard said. He had been trying her pager all morning and getting no response. “I don’t think she’s wearing it.”
“Hospital regulations require all personnel to wear their pagers at all times,” she said disapprovingly and reached for a prescription pad as if to record the infraction.
Well, yes, he thought, and if she had it on, it would make his life a lot easier, but it was a ridiculous rule — he turned his own pager off half the time. You were constantly being interrupted otherwise. And if he got Dr. Lander in trouble, she’d hardly be inclined to work with him.
“I’ll try her pager again,” he said hastily. “You said she was interviewing a patient. Which patient?”
“Mrs. Davenport. In 314.”
“Thank you,” he said and went down the hall to 314. “Mrs. Davenport?” he said to a gray-haired woman in the bed. “I’m looking for Dr. Lander, and—”
“So am I,” Mrs. Davenport said peevishly. “I’ve been having her paged all afternoon.”
He was back to square one.
“She told me I could have the nurse page her if I remembered anything else about my near-death experience,” Mrs. Davenport said, “and I’ve been sitting here remembering all
“And she didn’t say where she was going after she interviewed you?”
“No. Her pager went off when I was right in the middle, and she had to hurry off.”
Her pager went off. So, at that point, at least, she had had it turned on. And if she had hurried off, it must have meant another patient. Someone who’d coded and been revived? Where would that be? In CICU? “Thank you,” he said and started for the door.
“If you find her, tell her I’ve remembered I did have an out-of-body experience. It was like I was above the operating table, looking down. I could see the doctors and nurses working over me, and the doctor said, ‘It’s no use, she’s gone,’ and that’s when I heard the buzzing noise and went into the tunnel. I—”
“I’ll tell her,” Richard said, and went back out into the hall and down to the nurses’ station.
“Mrs. Davenport said Dr. Lander was paged by someone while she was interviewing her,” he said to the nurse. “Do you have a phone I can use? I need to call CICU.”
The nurse handed him a phone and turned pointedly away.
“Can you give me the extension for CICU?” he said. “I—”
“It’s 4502,” a cute blond nurse said, coming up to the nurses’ station. “Are you looking for Joanna Lander?”
“Yes,” he said gratefully. “Do you know where she is?”
“No,” she said, looking up at him through her lashes, “but I know where she might be. In Pediatrics. They called down earlier, looking for her.”
“Thanks,” he said, hanging up the phone. “Can you tell me how to get to Peds? I’m new here.”
“I know,” she said, smiling coyly. “You’re Dr. Wright, right? I’m Tish.”
“Tish, which floor is Peds on?” he asked. “The elevators are that way, right?”
“Yes, but Peds is in the west wing. The easiest way to get there is to go over to Endocrinology,” she said, pointing in the other direction, “take the stairs up to fifth, and cross over — ” She stopped and smiled at him. “I’d better show you. It’s complicated.”