Grievous Sin. Faye Kellerman

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Grievous Sin - Faye  Kellerman

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      “No, I’m going to have to insist you remain here.” Hendricks’s voice was firm and taut. “Georgina, could you please escort Sergeant Decker back to the waiting room.”

      Before Decker could get words up from his throat, Rina was whisked away. He felt a sudden chill and shuddered. Pressure on his elbow—Georgina’s hand.

      “This way, Sergeant.”

      “Why … why is he—”

      “Just like he said, Sergeant. He feels safer if she’s in a delivery room—”

      “You mean an operating room.”

      “Whatever.”

      “Why is he taking her there? Can’t he deliver a placenta here?”

      “It’s a precaution.”

      “Precaution for what?” Decker shouted.

      “Sergeant, would you like to come this way, please?”

      “No, I would not like to come this way, please! I’d like to know what the hell is happening with my wife!”

      Georgina said, “Sergeant, you know as much as I do.”

      “Aw c’mon, lady, you work here. Surely, you have some inside dope!”

      Georgina was quiet. Decker began to pace.

      “I’m sorry.”

      “It’s fine, Sergeant. I understand.”

      Decker trod the floor. “He said something about her bleeding. Does he mean bleeding? Or does he mean hemorrhaging?”

      “Sergeant, I don’t know.”

      The room became still. Decker covered his mouth and blew out air. His eyes began to burn, and he rubbed them vigorously. Georgina managed a tepid smile and placed a fleshy hand on his shoulder.

      “Come.”

      Decker remained rooted. “When will I know what’s going on?”

      “Sergeant, I’m sure the doctor will speak to you just as soon as he can. These changes in plans happen all the time. It’s usually nothing.”

      Decker bit his thumbnail. “You know, in my profession, I give that kind of bull … that kind of line all the time. I see a distraught parent whose kid is missing. I say, ‘Hey, it happens all the time. Usually, it’s nothing.’ But sometimes, it’s something.”

      Georgina didn’t answer.

      “Right?” Decker raised his voice. “Sometimes it is something, isn’t it?”

      Georgina lowered her eyes, then looked up. “Yes, sometimes it is something, Sergeant.”

      “Well, if it would be something, what …” Decker cleared his voice. “What could it be?”

      “Sergeant, I’m just not qualified to diagnose your wife’s condition.”

      Decker was silent.

      Georgina sighed. “Sergeant, do you have any family with you?”

      Family. Rina’s parents. The boys. Decker felt his knees go weak. He sank into the Sydney Greenstreet chair and ran his hands down his face. Wordlessly, Georgina handed him a glass of water. He downed the glass too quickly and felt his stomach rock with nausea. His skin felt prickly and gelid. It took him a minute to find his voice.

      “They’re waiting in the lobby … my daughter, Rina’s parents …” Decker swallowed hard. “Rina’s sons, too. What should I tell them?”

      “I’ll walk you out and talk to them.”

      Decker shook his head. “No, it’ll scare them—the boys. Their father died about four years ago.”

      “Oh dear, I’m very sorry.”

      “You can understand why I don’t want to alarm them.”

      “Absolutely. I didn’t realize …”

      Decker stared at his empty glass. “How about a little guidance here?”

      Georgina thought a moment. “Be low-key and tell them the truth. That the doctor is still with Rina but just as a precaution. She’s having a little trouble expelling the afterbirth.” She patted his hand. “I know this is going to sound a little cavalier, but you’re getting worked up over nothing, Sergeant.”

      “What happens if she can’t deliver it?” Decker asked.

      Georgina frowned. “You’re very persistent.”

      Decker shrugged helplessly.

      Georgina sighed. “I shouldn’t be telling you this, because I don’t know your wife’s individual situation—”

      “But?”

      “But sometimes the placenta has an obnoxious habit of sticking to the uterine wall. Sometimes to get it all out, the doctor has to go in and do a D and C. It’s done under anesthesia, and that’s probably why Dr. Hendricks wanted an anesthesiologist.”

      “Oh.” Decker felt his shoulders relax a fraction. “A D and C’s kind of a routine procedure, isn’t it?”

      Georgina paused. “I shouldn’t be telling you anything. Pretend we didn’t have this discussion, okay?”

      “All right.” Decker blew out air. “Thanks. Really, it helps.” He ran his hand through thick ginger hair. “Is there any way you can peek in and—”

      “No, Sergeant.”

      Slowly, Decker rose to his feet. “I’m okay.”

      “You’re sure?”

      Decker nodded. Georgina gave him a bear hug.

      “Now you go in there and smile. Your wife’s in very good hands. You go tell the family the good news about your new little daughter.”

      His new little daughter. Decker had forgotten about her.

       2

      Six pairs of beaming eyes greeted him. Even across the third-floor lobby, Decker could see their excitement and expectation. It was all he could do to keep from gagging, but that was probably him. Worried over nothing. But now he had to think of the boys. Not to mention Rina’s parents, who had already gone through hell fifty years ago. No need to set everyone in a panic over a little medical problem.

      He took a deep breath, ran his hand along the surgical blue pants, and put on the smile. To make it genuine, he thought about his new little daughter. He did a slow lope across the waiting room, dodging

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