The People vs. Alex Cross

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suicidal.”
    “No,” Roth said, taking a seat at his desk. “I saw her last week. She was bummed but knew it wasn’t her fault that the little girl was playing in the front hall before the shooting started.”
    “I don’t think Aaliyah cares. About anything. Which can be chemical, and which is why I need your help getting her into a psych ward for three days so she can be evaluated by medical professionals.”
    “You want me to commit Aaliyah?” Roth said incredulously. “No, absolutely not. Even if I had that authority, and I don’t, absolutely not.”
    “Aren’t you supposed to look after her, represent her?”
    “In the shooting, yes, but this? No.”
    “The depression and suicidal thoughts followed from theshooting,” I said firmly. “She needs help. More than I can give her.”
    “You tell her that?”
    “I did.”
    “What did she say?”
    “That she was upset but fine and nowhere near the padded room.”
    “There you go, then,” Roth said, getting up. “I have a meeting to run.”
    I blocked the door and said, “You don’t care about Aaliyah’s well-being?”
    “I care,” Roth said. “But if you want her in a psych ward, convince her doctor or someone in her family to recommend it. Or get the department to make it a stipulation of her suspension revocation. Any way you try to do it, though?”
    “Yes?”
    “Expect her to fight.”

CHAPTER
20
    AFTER SEVERAL UNSUCCESSFUL attempts to reach her, I spoke with Esther Dodd, an attorney for the police department. It was obvious by her curtness that Ms. Dodd was none too happy to take my call, probably due to the murder charges pending against me. She listened impatiently and dismissed out of hand my request to have Aaliyah undergo psychiatric evaluation as soon as possible as a stipulation of her rejoining the force.
    “She’s on suspension with a lawsuit pending,” the attorney said. “That puts Detective Aaliyah in limbo and gives us very few options, especially since your evaluation was done on behalf of the police union. With all due respect, it holds no weight from a legal perspective. Good-bye, Dr. Cross.”
    I tried to find Aaliyah’s doctor next and lucked out when a friend in the human resources department checked some old records and gave me a name, Dr. Timothy Cantrell. I looked Cantrell up and found he was not only an internistbut affiliated with GW Medical Center and its famous tropical medicine division. I called Cantrell’s office but found that the physician, a member of Doctors Without Borders, was currently out of the country, working in Brazil to stem a yellow fever outbreak.
    I was frustrated but refused to give up without making every effort.
    At 2:12 p.m., after making the long drive, I turned down Francis Street in the small town of Arbutus, a suburb of Baltimore, and soon found a small blue-and-white bungalow with a neatly tended yard.
    A raw northeast wind had picked up and caused me to shiver as I ran up the walk and knocked at the door. A tall and very put-together redheaded woman in her late fifties answered the door.
    I introduced myself, and her features softened.
    “I’ve seen you on the news,” she said. “Tess and Bernie say you’re innocent, wrongfully charged.”
    Her name was Christine Prince. She was Aaliyah’s father’s girlfriend and was happy to tell me that Bernie had gone off surf-fishing, his passion in retirement. I asked when he’d return, and she said that he’d gone to one of his favorite spots out on Assateague Island, so he probably wouldn’t be back until around midnight.
    After a few moments’ hesitation, I asked if she knew where on Assateague he went to fish.
    “You’re going all the way out there?” she said after showing me on a map.
    “I need his advice, and I think he’d want to give it to me sooner rather than later.”
    “Tess?” she said softly.
    “You’re a mind reader, Christine,” I said. “Thank you for the help.”
    Two hours later, I pulled into

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