Frankenstein
Tori as she approached the woman: “Nice to see you, Denise. How’s it going this evening?”
Denise didn’t reply. She sat as before, stiffly erect, hands in her lap, staring into space.
“Denise? Is Larry coming? Honey? Is something wrong?”
When Tori tentatively touched the brunette’s shoulder, Denise reacted almost spastically. Her right hand flew up from her lap, seizing the waitress by the wrist.
Startled, Tori tried to pull away.
Denise held fast to the waitress and said, in a slow thick voice, “Help me.”
“Oh, my God. Honey, what happened to you?”
Carson saw a thread of blood unravel from the silver button on the brunette’s temple.
Even as Tori raised her voice and asked if anyone in the café knew first aid, Carson and Michael were on their feet and at her side.
“It’s all right, Denise, we’re here now, we’re here for you,” Michael assured her as he gently pried her fingers from the waitress’s wrist.
As if she felt adrift and desperate for a mooring, she gripped Michael’s hand as fiercely as she had held fast to Tori’s.
Voice trembling, Tori asked, “What’s wrong with her?”
“Call an ambulance.”
“Yeah. Okay,” the waitress agreed, but she didn’t move, riveted by horror, and Michael had to repeat the command to propel her into action.
Swinging a chair away from the table, sitting on the edge of it so that she was face to face with the brunette, Carson picked up the woman’s limp left hand and pressed two fingers to the radial artery in the wrist. “Denise? Talk to me, Denise.”
Studying the silver bead on her temple, from under which dark blood steadily seeped, Michael said, “I don’t know if it’s best to lay her down or keep her sitting up. What the hell is this thing?”
Carson said, “Her pulse is racing.”
A few people had gotten up from their dinners. Recognizing Carson’s and Michael’s competence, they hesitated to approach.
The woman’s eyes remained glazed.
“Denise? Are you here with me?”
Her empty gaze refocused from infinity. Her dark and liquid eyes brimmed with despair stripped so completely of any hope that her stare chilled Carson far more effectively than had the cold night air.
“She took me,” Denise said thickly.
“Help is on the way,” Carson assured her.
“She was me.”
“An ambulance. Just a minute or two.”
“But not me.”
A bubble of blood appeared in her left nostril.
“Hold on, Denise.”
“Tell my baby.”
“Baby?”
“Tell my baby,” she said more urgently.
“All right. Okay.”
“Me isn’t me.”
The bubble in the nostril swelled and burst. Blood oozed from her nose.
A commotion drew Carson’s attention to the front door of the restaurant. Three men entered. Two were police officers in uniform.
The ambulance couldn’t have arrived already. The civilian wasn’t dressed like a paramedic.
He remained by the door, as if guarding it, and the cops crossed the room to Denise. The nameplates under their badges identified them as BUNDY and WATSON .
“She’s injured,” Michael told them. “Some kind of nail or something. I don’t know how far it penetrated.”
“We know Denise,” Bundy said.
“Extreme tachycardia,” Carson said. “Her pulse is just
flying
.”
Watson said, “We’ll take it from here,” and pulled at Carson’s chair to encourage her to get to her feet and out of the way.
“There’s an ambulance coming,” Michael informed them.
“Please return to your table,” Bundy said.
When Denise wouldn’t let go of Michael’s hand, he said to the police, “She’s scared, we don’t mind staying with her.”
To Denise, Bundy said, “Let go of his hand.”
She released Michael’s hand at once.
Watson said, “Now please return to your dinner. We’ve got this covered.”
Disturbed by the cops’ cool officiousness, Carson remained at Denise’s table.
“Time to go, Denise,” Watson said. He took her by one arm. “Come with us.”
“But she’s bleeding,” Carson objected. “There’s a brain injury, she needs paramedics.”
“We can have her to the hospital before the ambulance is even here,” Watson said.
Denise had gotten to her feet.
“She has to be transported carefully,” Michael insisted.
Watson’s eyes were pale gray, a pair of polished stones. His lips were bloodless. “She walked away, didn’t she?”
“Away?”
“She walked all the way here on her own. She can walk out. We know what we’re
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