“For the last sixteen months — ever since your respiratory system improved enough to allow meaningful physiotherapy — I’ve watched you lie in this goddamned expensive bed and insult your own body. It makes me sick. Do you know how lucky you are to be alive, when everyone else on that airplane was killed? What a miracle it is that your spine wasn’t severed, or your skull crushed into your brain, or your body burned — no,
Jensen and Melissa were staring at her in horror. Newsome’s mouth hung open. If he had ever been talked to in such a fashion, it had been long ago. Only Rideout looked at ease.
“You could have been walking by now. God knows I’ve tried to make you understand that, and God knows I’ve told you — over and over — the kind of work it would take to get you up out of that bed and back on your feet. Dr. Dilawar in San Francisco had the guts to tell you — he was the only one — and you rewarded him by calling him a faggot.”
“He
“You’re in pain, yes. Of course you are. It’s manageable, though. I’ve seen it managed, not once but many times. But not by a lazy rich man who tries to substitute his sense of entitlement for the plain old hard work and tears it takes to get better. You refuse. I’ve seen that, too, and I know what always happens next. The quacks and confidence men come, the way leeches come when a man with a cut leg wades into a stagnant pond. Sometimes the quacks have magic creams. Sometimes they have magic pills. The healers come with trumped-up claims about God’s power, the way this one has. Usually the marks get partial relief. Why wouldn’t they, when half the pain is in their heads, manufactured by lazy minds that only understand it will hurt to get better?”
She raised her voice to a wavering, childlike treble and bent close to him. “Daddy, it
Tonya had come into the doorway and now stood beside Melissa, staring with wide eyes and a dishwiper hanging limp in one hand.
“You’re fired,” Newsome said, almost genially.
“Yes,” Kat said. “Of course I am. Although I must say that this is the best I’ve felt in almost a year.”
“Don’t fire her,” Rideout said. “If you do, I’ll have to take my leave.”
Newsome’s eyes rolled to the Reverend. His brow was knitted in perplexity. His hands now began to knead his hips and thighs, as they always did when his pain medication was overdue.
“She needs an education, praise God’s Holy Name.” Rideout leaned toward Newsome, his own hands clasped behind his back. He reminded Kat of a picture she’d seen once of Washington Irving’s schoolteacher, Ichabod Crane. “She’s had her say. Shall I have mine?”
Newsome was sweating more heavily, but he was smiling again. “Have at her, Rideout. I believe I want to hear this.”
Kat faced him. Those dark, socketed eyes were unsettling, but she met them. “So do I.”
Hands still clasped behind his back, pink skull shining mutedly through his thin hair, long face solemn, Rideout examined her. Then he said: “You’ve never suffered yourself, have you, miss?”
Kat felt an urge to flinch at that, or look away, or both. She suppressed it. “I fell out of a tree when I was eleven and broke my arm.”
Rideout rounded his thin lips and whistled: one tuneless, almost toneless note. “Broke an
She flushed. She felt it and hated it but couldn’t stop the heat. “Belittle me all you want. I based what I said on years of experience dealing with pain patients. It is a
But he didn’t.