Home > Miracle Cure(7)

Miracle Cure(7)
Author: Harlan Coben

“Michael?”

Harvey nodded. Eric Blake had become a member of Harvey and Bruce’s team two years ago when they realized that two doctors could no longer carry the patient load by themselves. Eric was a nice kid, Harvey thought, though he took life way too seriously. It was okay to be serious, especially when you dealt with AIDS patients all day, but a person had to be just a little loose, just a little quirky, just a touch loony to survive the daily ordeal of death and suffering.

Eric even looked tightly wound. His most distinctive feature was his neat, scouring-pad, red hair. When you looked at him, the term clean-cut came to mind. Polished shoes. Good dresser. Eric’s tie was always pressed and tied properly, his face freshly shaven even after forty-eight hours on call.

Harvey, on the other hand, had his tie loosened to somewhere around his knees, believed in shaving only when the growth began to itch, and would need a handgun to shoot his hair into place.

Eric Blake had grown up on the same block as Michael in a New Jersey suburb. When Michael first became Harvey’s hospital patient, little redheaded Eric Blake visited him every day, staying as long as the hospital would allow. Back in those days Harvey was an overworked intern, but he liked to spend any free moments he could muster in the hospital with Michael. Even Jennifer, a hospital volunteer then, found herself drawn to the child. Very quickly Harvey and Jennifer formed a special rapport with this irresistible young boy caught up in a world of constant abuse.

Over the years Harvey and Jennifer watched Michael grow from childhood through adolescence and into manhood. They went to his basketball games and music recitals and award dinners, applauding his achievements like proud parents. They were there to comfort him after his beatings, after his mother’s suicide, after his abandonment by his stepfather. Looking back on it now, Harvey wondered if their close relationship with Michael magnified their own major marital problem: no children.

Maybe so. They tried, but Jennifer could never carry to full term. Perhaps if she had, things might have been different.

Doubtful. Very, very doubtful.

Harvey wondered if Jennifer still kept in touch with Michael. He suspected she did.

“Did you tell Michael—” Eric started to ask.

Harvey interrupted him with a shake of his head. “Not yet. I just wanted to make sure Sara was going to be at the party tonight.”

“Is she?”

“Yes.”

“What are you going to tell her?”

Harvey shrugged. “I don’t know yet.”

“It doesn’t make any sense. Why when we’re so close—”

“We’re not that close.”

“Not that close?” Eric repeated. “Harvey, look out there. People are alive because of you.”

“Because of this clinic,” Harvey corrected.

“Whatever. When we let the results go public, we’re going to go down in medical history next to Jonas Salk.”

“I’m more worried about the present.”

“But we need the publicity so that we can raise enough money to continue—”

“Enough,” Harvey broke in, glancing at his watch. “Let’s make a quick check of the charts and head over to the lounge.” He smiled tiredly. “I want to watch Sara’s report on Reverend Sanders.”

“No friend of the cause, that one.”

“No,” Harvey agreed. “No friend.”

Eric picked up a photograph from the credenza. “Poor Bruce.”

Harvey nodded but said nothing.

“I hope his death means something,” Eric said. “I hope Bruce didn’t die for nothing.”

Harvey moved toward the door, his head lowered. “So do I, Eric.”

GEORGE Camron removed his gray, pin-striped Armani suit, carefully folded the pants at the creases, and placed it on a wooden hanger. He had been forced to burn another Armani two weeks ago, and that upset him very much. Such a waste. He would have to be more careful with his wardrobe. Bloodstained silk suits raised overhead and increased expenses.

George, a very large man, enjoyed the finer things in life. He wore only custom-made suits. He stayed in only the most luxurious hotels. He frequented only the finest gourmet restaurants. His slicked-back hair was styled (not cut, styled) by the world’s most expensive hair designers (not beauticians, designers). He enjoyed manicures and pedicures.

He walked over to the hotel phone, picked up the receiver, and pressed seven.

“Room service,” a voice said. “Is there something we can get you, Mr. Thompson?”

The Ritz always referred to its guests by their names when they called. The personal touch of a very fine hotel. George liked it. Thompson was, of course, his current alias. “Caviar, please. Iranian, not Russian.”

“Yes, Mr. Thompson.”

“And a bottle of Bollinger, 1979. Very cold.”

“Yes, Mr. Thompson.”

George hung up the phone and relaxed on the king-sized bed. He was a long way from his humble beginnings in Wyoming, a long way from his military days in Vietnam, a long way from Thailand, the country he now called home. A wide variety of elegant hotel rooms was George’s home now. The Somerset Maugham suite at the Oriental in Bangkok. The harbor penthouse at the Peninsula in Hong Kong. The corner suite at the Crillon in Paris. The presidential suite at the Hassler in Rome.

George checked his watch, turned on the television with the remote control, and switched to Channel 2. In a few minutes NewsFlash, with Donald Parker and Sara Lowell, would be on. George wanted to watch that show very much.

The phone rang. George picked it up. “Hello.”

“This is—”

“I know who it is,” George interrupted.

“Did you get the last payment?”

“Yes.”

“Good,” the voice replied.

The voice sounded nervous. George was not sure he liked that. Nervous people had a tendency to make mistakes. “Is there something else I can do for you?” he inquired.

“As a matter of fact . . .”

Another job. Excellent. George had no idea who his employer was, nor did he care. He did not even know if the voice on the other end of the phone was calling the shots or merely a go-between. It did not matter. This was a job where you asked no questions. George did his work, collected his pay, and moved on. Questions were irrelevant.

“I’m listening,” he said.

“The last job I gave you . . . it went smoothly? There were no problems?”

“You read the papers. What do you think?”

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