She's Leaving Home

Read Online She's Leaving Home by William Shaw - Free Book Online

Book: She's Leaving Home by William Shaw Read Free Book Online
Authors: William Shaw
Ads: Link
waited to be X-rayed, that he was in the same hospital where the dead girl still lay. She was somewhere below the floorboards beneath him. She would be still, naked, blue and cold, lips dark, breasts flat, lying on her back in darkness. There would be rough, bloodless stitches where Wellington had opened her up, perhaps, like snips of barbed wire. She was waiting in a drawer for Breen to find something.
    He closed his eyes.
    “You all right?” said the nurse cheerily. He was in a side room on the ground floor; he sat on the bed, arm lying in his lap. “You look a bit done in.”
    “Collarbone. This chap here. Hurts like bugger, I expect.” A doctor, a young man with a pipe tucked into the top pocket of his white coat, sent pain tearing up his arm as he prodded and poked. “What in heaven’s name were you doing?”
    Sitting on the daybed, he told them about the girl and the cat and the tree.
    “Sleeve,” said the nurse.
    Automatically Breen moved his bad arm and flinched. “Ow,” he said.
    “Other one,” she giggled.
    “And you’re a police detective?” said the doctor.
    “Yes.”
    “And you were up a tree trying to rescue a girl’s cat?”
    “That’s so sweet,” said the nurse, wielding the syringe. “Just a little prick.”
    “Is this one the last? I really should be going,” said the doctor.
    “Two more. One abscess, one chest pain. I think that’s it for tonight.”
    “I lost my balance trying to grab him,” said Breen.
    “At least you tried,” said the nurse. “That’s the main thing.”
    “Is it?”
    “Of course it is.”
    The doctor left, clacking his heels down the corridor.
    “Do you think I could have a coffee?”
    “Sorry.” The nurse smiled. “No coffee. No, no, no. Not for you.” She put the syringe down on the trolley and picked up a clipboard.
    “Can I have some water then?”
    Again she shook her head. “Nil by mouth. You’ll probably need anesthetics, poor old you. We’ll know if we have to just as soon as they’ve taken your X-ray.”
    “And how long will that be?”
    “I really can’t say. There’s quite a queue. I think it’s great that you were helping rescue a cat.”
    “You mean other people don’t?”
    “Of course they do,” she said. “Anyone we should contact?”
    She tutted in a sympathetic manner at his reply as she left the room and he was relieved she was gone. The hubbub of the hospital, the complaining doctor, the chattering patients, the rattling of trolleys, even the careless platitudes of the nurse, were oddly lulling.
    He stood up and walked out of the side room, holding his arm to his chest. It was evening. A food trolley was doing the rounds; they were placing trays of lukewarm cottage pie and boiled vegetables on the beds of patients who were not going home for a while. Jelly and condensed milk for afters. He walked to the nurses’ station. “Is there a phone I can use?”
    The nurse pointed him down a corridor, past the double doors towards a visitors’ room, where a gray-skinned man sat in his pajamas smoking a pipe and holding the hands of a bored-looking young girl.
    It was not easy using a telephone with one hand. With the receiver wedged under his chin, he placed sixpence in the slot and dialed. When Marilyn answered he pressed Button A and heard the coin drop.
    “I heard the news,” she said. “Oh, Paddy? What are we going to do with you?”
    “The car’s in Garden Road. They brought me here in an ambulance. Can someone pick up the keys from me?”
    “Do you want me to come and drive you home?”
    “It’s all right. I might be here ages, for all I know. I have to have an X-ray but they won’t find anything. I’ll be fine.”
    “It’d be no trouble. I’d like to.”
    “I’ll be fine.”
    “Bailey wants to know what you were doing up a tree.”
    “He’s heard, then?”
    “Everyone heard, Paddy.”
    “And everyone’s having a good laugh, I suppose?”
    “Bailey isn’t laughing exactly.”
    “No, I don’t

Similar Books

American Scoundrel

Thomas Keneally

The Dangerous Days of Daniel X

James Patterson, Michael Ledwidge

Side Jobs

Jim Butcher

The Black Hawk

Joanna Bourne