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Authors: Robin Cook

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     “Lots of necrosis,” Jack said. “Certainly just as virulent a case as with Nodelman or with the case I did earlier.”

     “Looks like plague to me,” Calvin said.

     “But why was the fluorescein antibody negative?” Jack said. “That’s telling me something, especially combined with the lung appearance.”

     “What’s with the lungs?” Laurie asked.

     Jack moved the liver and the spleen aside and showed Laurie the cut surface of the lung. He explained what he thought of the pathology.

     “I see what you mean now that you mention it,” Laurie said. “It is different from Nodelman. His lungs definitely had more consolidation. This looks more like some sort of horribly aggressive TB.”

     “Whoa!” Calvin said. “This isn’t TB. No way.”

     “I don’t think Laurie was suggesting it was,” Jack said.

     “I wasn’t,” Laurie agreed. “I was just using TB as a way of describing these infected areas.”

     “I think it is plague,” Calvin said. “I mean, I wouldn’t if we hadn’t just had a case from the same hospital yesterday. Chances are it is plague regardless of what their lab said.”

     “I don’t think it is,” Jack said. “But let’s see what our lab says.”

     “How about double or nothing with that ten dollars,” Calvin said. “Are you that sure?”

     “No, but I’ll take you up on it. I know how much the money means to you.”

     “Are we finished here?” Clint asked. “If so, I think I’ll be going.”

     “I’m essentially finished,” Jack said. “I’ll do a little more on the lymphatics, and then I’ll be obtaining samples for the microscopic. You won’t be missing anything if you take off now.”

     “I’ll head out with you,” Calvin said.

     Calvin and Clint disappeared through the door to the washroom.

     “If you don’t think this case is plague, what do you think it is?” Laurie asked, looking back at the woman’s corpse.

     “I’m embarrassed to tell you,” Jack said.

     “Come on,” Laurie urged. “I won’t tell anybody.”

     Jack looked at Vinnie. Vinnie held up his hands. “My lips are sealed.”

     “Well, I’d have to fall back on my original differential I had for Nodelman,” Jack said. “To narrow it down more than that, I have to again go out on thin ice. If it isn’t plague, the nearest infectious disease both pathologically and clinically is tularemia.”

     Laurie laughed. “Tularemia in a twenty-eight-year-old postpartum female in Manhattan?” she questioned. “That would be pretty rare, al though not as rare as your diagnosis yesterday of plague. After all, she could have a hobby of rabbit hunting on weekends.”

     “I know it’s not very probable,” Jack said. “Once again I’m relying to tally on the pathology and the fact that the test for plague was negative.”

     “I’d be willing to bet a quarter,” Laurie said.

     “Such a spender!” Jack joked. “Fine! We’ll bet a quarter.”

     Laurie returned to her own case. Jack and Vinnie turned their attention back to Susanne Hard. While Vinnie did his tasks, Jack finished the lymphatic dissection he wanted to do, then took the tissue samples he felt appropriate for microscopic study. When the samples were all in the proper preservatives and appropriately labeled, he helped Vinnie suture the corpse.

     Leaving the autopsy room, Jack properly dealt with his isolation equipment. After plugging in his rechargeable ventilator battery, he took the elevator up to the third floor to see Agnes Finn. He found her sitting in front of a stack of petri dishes examining bacterial cultures.

     “I’ve just finished another infectious case that’s suspected plague,” he told her. “All the samples will be coming up shortly. But there is a problem. The lab over at the Manhattan General claims the patient tested negative. Of course, I want to repeat that, but at the same time I want you to rule out tularemia, and I want it done as quickly as possible.”

     “That’s not easy,” she said. “Handling Francisella tularensis is hazardous. It’s very contagious to laboratory workers if it gets into the air. There is a fluorescein antibody stain for tularemia, but we don’t have it.”

     “How do you make the diagnosis, then?” Jack asked.

     “We have to send any samples out,” she said. “Because of the risk of handling the bacteria the reagents are generally kept only at reference labs where the personnel are accustomed to dealing with the microbe. There is such a lab here in the city.”

     “Can you send it right away?” Jack asked.

     “We’ll messenger it over as soon as it gets here,” she said. “If I call and put a rush on it, we’ll have a preliminary result in less than twenty-four hours.”

     “Perfect,” Jack said. “I’ll be waiting. I’ve got ten dollars and twenty-five cents riding on the outcome.”

     Agnes gave Jack a look. He considered explaining, but feared he’d sound even more foolish. Instead he fled upstairs to his office.

     13

    

     THURSDAY, 10:45 A.M., MARCH 21,1996

     NEW YORK CITY

     “I’m liking it more and more,” Terese said. She straightened up from Colleen’s drawing board. Colleen was showing her tissues that her team had comped up just that morning using the theme they’d discussed the night before.

     “The best thing is that the concept is consistent with the Hippocratic oath,” Colleen said. “Particularly the part about never doing harm to anyone. I love it.”

     “I don’t know why we didn’t think about it before,” Terese said. “It’s such a natural. It’s almost embarrassing that it took this damn plague epidemic to make us think of it. Did you catch what’s happening on morning TV?”

     “Three deaths!” Colleen said. “And several people sick. It’s terrible. In fact, it scares me to death.”

     “I had a headache from the wine last night when I woke up this morning,” Terese said. “The first thing that went through my mind was whether I had the plague or not.”

     “I thought the same thing,” Colleen said. “I’m glad you admitted it. I was too embarrassed.”

     “I hope to hell those guys were right last night,” Terese said. “They seemed pretty damn confident it wasn’t going to be a big problem.”

     “Are you worried being around them?” Colleen asked.

     “Oh, it’s gone through my mind,” Terese admitted. “But as I said, they were so confident. I can’t imagine their acting that way if there were any risk.”

     “Are we still on for dinner tonight?” Colleen asked.

     “By all means,” Terese said. “I have a sneaking suspicion that Jack Stapleton will turn out to be an unknowing fountain of ad ideas. He might be bitter about something, but he’s sharp and opinionated, and he certainly knows the business.”

     “I can’t believe how well this is working out,” Colleen said. “I was a lot more drawn to Chet; he’s fun and open and easy to talk with. I have enough problems of my own, so I’m not attracted to the anguished, brooding type.”

     “I didn’t say anything about being attracted to Jack Stapleton,” Terese said. “That’s something else entirely.”

     “What’s your gut reaction to this idea of using Hippocrates himself in one of our ads?”

     “I think it has fantastic potential,” Terese said. “Run with it. Meanwhile I’m going to head upstairs and talk with Helen Robinson.”

     “Why?” Colleen asked. “I thought she was the enemy.”

     “I’m taking to heart Taylor’s admonition that we creatives and the account people should work together,” Terese said breezily.

     “Yeah, sure! Likely story!”

     “Seriously,” Terese said. “There’s something I’d like her to do. I need a fifth column. I want Helen to confirm that National Health is clean when it comes to nosocomial or hospital-based infections. If their record is atrocious, the whole campaign could backfire. Then, not only would I lose my bid for the presidency, but you and I would probably be out selling pencils.”

     “Wouldn’t we have heard by this time?” Colleen asked. “I mean, they’ve been clients for a number of years.”

     “I doubt it,” Terese said. “These health-care giants are loath to publicize anything that might adversely affect their stock price. Surely a bad record in regard to nosocomial infections would do that.”

     Terese gave Colleen a pat on the shoulder and told her to keep cracking the whip, then headed for the stairwell.

     Terese emerged breathless onto the administrative floor, having taken the stairs two at a time. From there she marched directly toward the carpeted realm of the account executives. Her mood was soaring; it was the absolute antithesis of the anxiety and dread of the day before. Her intuition told her she was onto something big with National Health and would soon be scoring a deserved triumph...

     As soon as the impromptu meeting with Terese had ended and Terese had disappeared around the corner, Helen returned to her desk and put a call in to her main contact at National Health Care. The woman wasn’t immediately available, but Helen didn’t expect her to be. Helen merely left her name and number with a request to be called as soon as possible.

     With the call accomplished, Helen took a brush from her desk and ran it through her hair several times in front of a small mirror on the inside of her closet door. Once she was satisfied with her appearance, she walked out of her office and headed down to Robert Barker’s.

     “You have a minute?” Helen called to him from his open door.

     “For you I have all day,” Robert said. He leaned back in his chair.

     Helen stepped into the room and turned to close the door. As she did so, Robert surreptitiously turned over the photo of his wife that stood on the corner of the desk. His wife’s stern stare made him feel guilty whenever Helen was in his office.

     “I just had a visitor,” Helen said as she came into the room. As was her custom she sat cross-legged on the arm of one of the two chairs facing Robert’s desk.

     Robert felt perspiration appear along his hairline in keeping with his quickening pulse. From his vantage point, Helen’s short skirt afforded him a view of her thigh that didn’t stop.

     “It was our creative director,” Helen continued. She was very conscious of the effect she was having on her boss, and it pleased her. “She asked me to get some information for her.”

     “What kind of information?” Robert asked. His eyes didn’t move, nor did he blink. It was as if he were hypnotized.

     Helen explained what Terese wanted and described the brief conversation about the plague outbreak. When Robert didn’t respond immediately, she stood up. That broke the trance. “I tried to tell her not to use it as the basis of an ad campaign,” Helen added, “but she thinks it’s going to work.”

     “Maybe you shouldn’t have said anything,” Robert remarked. He loosened his shirt and took a breath.

     “But it’s a terrible idea,” Helen said. “I couldn’t think of anything more tasteless.”

     “Exactly,” Robert said. “I’d like her to propose a tasteless campaign.”

     “I see your point,” Helen said. “I didn’t think of that on the spur of the moment.”

     “Of course not,” Robert said. “You’re not as devious as I am. But you’re a quick study. The problem with the idea about nosocomial infection in general is that it could be a good one. There might possibly be a legitimate difference between National Health and AmeriCare.”

     “I could always tell her the information wasn’t available,” Helen said. “After all, it might not be.”

     “There is always risk in lying,” Robert said. “She might already have the information and be testing us to make us look bad. No, go ahead and see what you can find out. But let me know what you learn and what you pass on to Terese Hagen. I want to keep a step ahead of her.”

     14

    

     THURSDAY, 1:00 P.M., MARCH 21, 1996

     “Hey, sport, how the hell are you?” Chet asked Jack as Jack scooted into their shared office and dumped several folders onto his cluttered desk.

     “Couldn’t be better,” Jack said.

     Thursday had been a paper day for Chet, meaning he’d been at his desk and not in the autopsy room. Generally the associate medical examiners only did autopsies three days a week. The other days they spent collating the voluminous paperwork necessary to “sign out” a case. There was always material that needed to be gathered from PA investigators, the lab, the hospital or local doctors, or the police. Plus each doctor had to read the microscopic slides the histology lab processed on every case.

     Jack sat down and pushed some of the paper debris away from the center of the desk to give him some room to work.

     “You feel all right this morning?” Chet asked.

     “A little wobbly,” Jack admitted. He rescued his phone from beneath lab reports. Then he opened up one of the folders he’d just brought in with him and began searching through the contents. “And you?”

     “Perfect,” Chet said. “But I’m accustomed to a little wine and such. Remembering those chicks helped, particularly Colleen. Hey, we still on for tonight?”

     “I was going to talk to you about that,” Jack said.

     “You promised,” Chet said.

     “I didn’t exactly promise,” Jack said.

     “Come on,” Chet pleaded. “Don’t let me down. They’re expecting both of us. They might not stay if only I show up.”

     Jack glanced over at his officemate.

     “Come on,” Chet repeated. “Please!”

     “All right, for chrissake,” Jack said. “Just this once. But I truly don’t understand why you think you need me. You do fine by yourself.”

     “Thanks, buddy,” Chet said. “I owe you one.”

     Jack found the ID sheet that had the phone numbers for Maurice Hard, Susanne’s husband. There was both a home number and an office number. He dialed the home.

     “Who you calling?” Chet asked.

     “You are a nosy bastard,” Jack said jokingly.

     “I’ve got to watch over you so you don’t get yourself fired,” Chet said.

     “I’m calling the spouse of another curious infectious case,” Jack said. “I just did the post, and it’s got me bewildered. Clinically it looked like plague, but I don’t think it was.”

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