The Bride Wore Red Boots (3 page)

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Authors: Lizbeth Selvig

BOOK: The Bride Wore Red Boots
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“Rory? Is Buster a homeless man?”

“Buster says he doesn't want a normal house. He says he owns the whole city of New York, and he should 'cause he fought for it. But Jack does need a house 'cause it's going to snow pretty soon, and he'll freeze. So . . . will you save him like you saved me?”

“Oh, I don't know if . . . ”

She thought about all the animals she'd had growing up on one of the biggest cattle ranches in Wyoming. Until leaving for college she'd never imagined that some kids might not have pets. No dogs, no cats, no horses.

“Please? Jack's the only one left who really loves me.”

“That's so not true, Rory. I know it's not true.” She sighed and sat next to him on the mattress. “I love you. I'm your friend, right? And your mom loves you so much.”

“Mrs. Murray, the foster lady, said Mom was too sick to be a good mother. 'Cause she's in the hospital, too.”

“Again?” Mia stared at him, heartbroken. “Rory, since when? What happened?”

“I don't know when. Before I came here. I tried to call her to tell her I was sick, but she wasn't at the jail.”

For the past three months, Monique Beltane had resided in a women's prison in upstate New York where she was serving one year for theft and illegal possession of a narcotic. She was also living through treatment for breast cancer.

“That's not true, Rory. Your mom will never be too sick to love you. And she's a good mom, too. She's just been sick for such a long time.

Mia knew Monique's story well. She'd become addicted to prescription opioids after botched shoulder surgery. One year after that operation, Mia had been the one to operate again and managed to relieve some of Monique's permanent pain. During the three years that had followed, she'd kept in touch with Monique and her son, Rory. She liked the woman, plain and simple. Monique wanted to get well. She was just weak when it came to pain. Still, she'd gotten herself clean, and Mia believed she might have made a success of it. Then, six months ago, she'd been diagnosed with the cancer.

She'd managed the chemo, but the mastectomy and the oxycodone to which she was so highly addicted had pushed her back over the edge. Three months ago, she'd purchased oxycodone from an undercover agent, and that had been the end.

But she was back in the hospital. Mia didn't know what was wrong, but her intuition left her worried. At this stage in her recovery, no illness boded well. She made a mental note to track down Monique's physician.

And now here was Rory.

You couldn't make crap like this up.

“But even if Mom gets better, she's in jail for a long time. All I got is Jack.”

“But if Jack can't stay with you at the Murrays, where would he go if we find him?”

He shrugged, and his eyes filled with water. Mia sighed. This was so
not
in her job description. How did one even begin to try looking for a homeless cat in New York City?

“Please, Dr. Mia.”

She smoothed his thick curls. She'd never find one cat in a city that must have a billion. “All right, listen to me, okay? I will see what I can find out, but you're practically a young man and you're smart. You know I might not have any luck. You promise you won't be angry with me if I don't find him?”

He smiled a watery-but-genuine true, toothy, ten-year-old's grin. “You will.”

Chapter Two

M
IA
MET
B
ITSY
transforming back into Brooke in the staff locker room two hours later, after the party ended. Mia had missed the grand finale—an appearance by the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, aka four custodial staff members. She didn't regret missing the performance. While the Mutant Ninja Janitors had fake-saved the world, she'd followed up on two pressing questions—and had gotten answers.

“You should have come back to the party, you know. Everyone wanted to congratulate you.” Brooke set her blue wig on the bench in front of her locker and kicked off the Converse tennis shoes she wore in lieu of giant clown shoes.

“There wasn't any reason for people to thank me. I wasn't a hero. It was an easy diagnosis.”

“I never said you were a hero. But you did get the win.”

“I won't win until I find out what the allergen was. I need to talk to his foster mom, but she hasn't shown up yet—can't get off work.”

“I'm not too sure about her.” Brooke removed her pinafore and dress of clashing stripes, polka-dots, and checks. Mia made a show of shuddering.

“You do know that standing there in tights with a face the color of a skull, you're now a hideously frightening clown?”

“You need to get over yourself.” Brook huffed out a breath. “Clowning is a noble art.”

“It's an obsession. Case in point: you're in a hospital, a kid stops breathing, and you don't even break character for that.”

She hadn't really meant to bring it up, but Brooke was defending it as a noble art. Her friend, however, quickly became a very annoyed hideous clown. The stars painted over her eyes shrank as she lowered her lids.

“Okay, hang on a dang minute. It scares kids if a clown breaks character when in make-up. You actually find me scary now because I'm not talking like Bitsy.” She crossed her arms. “For your information, it was very difficult to stay in character and pretend it was Bitsy helping. But it was worth it, which you didn't hang around to see. Learn a little about people why don't you, Amelia?”

Mia rubbed her eyes. She had to concede. She could see how a child would find it freaky if a clown with a high, squeaky voice suddenly began talking like a normal person.

“All right. I apologize,” she said. “I'm still trying to deal with the whole Rory situation and I'm touchy. I react to adrenaline a little differently than most.”

“You
over
react. Like Rocky Balboa to a fight bell.” Brooke smiled kindly. “You just need to relax and be a little more of a team player with your coworkers. Trust us to know what we're doing, too. But, hey, why am I telling you this for the millionth time?” She grinned.

Mia stuck out her tongue. “Face it, I'm your challenge. Everyone has to have one.”

“Except you, right?”

“Sure. I'm perfect. No challenges.” She sighed.

She could say such things to Brooke, who'd always understood Mia's sarcasm and even her sometimes-gruff personality. Brooke was one of the nicest people on the planet and had proved it many times during their seven-year friendship.

“Speaking of perfect, I heard you had a dustup with our new Freddie Wilson today.”

“I don't know that I'd call it a dustup. He was irritating Rory, so we had a little disagreement.”

“That right?” Brooke grabbed a towel and make-up bag and headed toward the nearest sink. “Well, from what I hear, you might want to consider apologizing.”

“What you hear? Good grief, it wasn't that big a deal, and I've already apologized.”

“All right. Just remember, he is one of the people you need on your side right now. When do they decide on the head resident's position? You really don't mind going back to being the equivalent of a student?”

“No. It's what I have to do. They announce the choice the beginning of next week—November sixth or seventh. The job starts in early December.”

“And if you get it, you can take your certification exam next fall.”

“I need that one year back in a lower-level position of authority to be eligible for the exam, yes. And then Sidney March over at Mount Sinai retires, and his spot as associate chief of pediatric surgery will be vacant. I've got a solid reputation there, and they've all but promised me a good shot at the job if my certification is complete. You know that's been my dream job since the beginning.”

“And, you deserve it; you've worked your butt off. Everyone knows there's not a better surgeon in New York.”

“You and I know that.” She scoffed and shook her head. “No, I know full well I'm hardly the best, but there'd be no better way to keep climbing toward it than getting that job. I only wish the timing weren't so tight.”

It was one of the few things that got Mia's stomach into knots—the fact that she'd been kept so busy with her general surgery duties she hadn't been available to apply for the chief resident's job before now. She could juggle a lot of balls, and she was capable of advancing through required tasks and performance reviews faster than any other candidate, but she couldn't make the AMA change policy for her. The cert tests were given once a year, and she had to have the leadership component of her training completed in order to qualify to take the exam.

“You and your life plan.” Brooke smiled fondly. “I sure don't know anyone with more talent and drive than you have. But if you're nervous, I advise you to kiss and make up with Doc Freddie. You do need to play the game to win the prize.”

Mia approached the sink adjacent to Brooke's and watched her friend smear make-up remover over her white face. “I don't kiss up.”

“Don't I know it? It wouldn't hurt you to learn how, sooner rather than later, so you can nail this job and quit whining.”

“I don't whine either.” She didn't. Whining was always counterproductive.

“Look.” Brooke turned, her makeup puckered from the remover, looking like a clown whose skin was melting off. “Just be nice.”

“Too late for that,” Mia replied flippantly. “I'm now planning to hold my tiny reserves of sweetness and light safe for Samantha down in the community outreach clinic. If I'm lucky, she's going to find me a cat.”

Brooke sputtered into the washcloth that was finally starting to remove Bitsy's face. “Forget sucking up to Fred. You need to start making friends with the staff up on eight.”

The psych department.

“You're not far from right. Rory asked me to rescue his cat from a homeless man.”

“And you listened to him?”

“I—”

Her phone rang from the open locker, and Mia cut herself off, since she was waiting for a call from Samantha Evans. Sam, a social worker with endless connections, had been another good friend and valued ally since Mia had begun her quest for this second specialty field. She grabbed the phone from her purse. The number was completely unfamiliar. She didn't answer unknown calls on her private phone. The person could leave a voice mail.

“Anybody important?” Brooke asked.

“No. Look, I know how freakily attached to this cat Rory is, so I'm going to see what I can dig up.”

“Just watch young Mr. Beltane. He's a cocky little guy. Cute as a fox kit but smart as the daddy fox.”

“He's precocious—has been ever since I first met him. Now, though, he's mostly scared. His mom is in pretty bad shape.”

“Addicted to prescription opioids, if I read the history right.”

“And a very recent cancer survivor. Monique and I have developed a trust over the years, maybe even a friendship. I owe her to look after her son as best I can.”

“Okay, you've made your case. As for Rory, I said it before. I'm not entirely sure about his foster family. The mom is nice enough, but she's kind of a ditz. Sorry, shouldn't say that.”

“Hey, all I know is they haven't even gotten her to come in yet because she's at work. Hell's bells, I'd have been here two seconds after he'd gone down.”

Brooke gave her face a last long swipe with the washcloth. “And this is what I'm saying. Turn some of that empathy you have for the kids on the grown-ups, and you'll be unstoppable.”

“Why do you think I'm a
surgeon
? Like my dad always said, ‘I don't have time for the extra bull crap.' I don't either.”

“Your dad didn't say bull crap.” Brooke laughed.

“No, he didn't. But I'm a genteel young professional woman.”

“Bullshit.”

Finally laughing, Mia said good-bye to her friend and made her way back to the pediatrics floor, quiet now that the afternoon party was over. Naps were in progress, and preparations were underway for the dinner hour.

“Dr. Crockett. Great! You're still here. I was about to page you.”

Darren met her as she approached the nurse's station, his face as friendly and open as a big kid's, and surprisingly welcoming considering there'd been precious few fuzzy moments between them in their short acquaintance.

“Looks like I saved you the trouble. What did you need?”

“Shawna Murray, Rory's foster mom, is here. We thought you should be the one to see her.”

The conspiratorial look he gave her forced a smile from her lips. “Even though I'm not the department head?”

“You know, I can't seem to find him right now, Dr. Crockett.”

Darren's unspoken vote of respect only proved the point that straightforward talk, along with curbing extraneous emotions, made for efficient and effective patient treatment.
Take that, Brooke, you old mother hen. He likes me even though I don't know how to play nice
.

“Well that's certainly a shame. But, since he seems to be unavailable, I'll be happy to talk to Mrs. Murray.”

“Mrs. Murray?” Mia entered the room to find Rory half-asleep and his foster mother watching the TV, one ankle crossed over the opposite knee, her foot jiggling so hard the chair beneath her squeaked. “I'm Dr. Crockett. I took care of Rory this afternoon.”

Mia had met many foster parents throughout her medical career. They came in all shapes, sizes, and colors, but Shawna Murray was unique. Dressed in brightly patterned Lycra workout pants, equally blinding neon-yellow tennis shoes, and a white, Nike zippered jacket, its collar flipped preppily up against her ears, she looked like she was headed for a high school gym class. She even had her blonde hair gathered into a bouncy, beach-worthy ponytail.

“I'm so glad to meet you.” The woman jumped to a stand as if grateful to do so. She shook hands like The Flash would shake: in triple time and with power she didn't realize she possessed. “Thank you for everything you did. I'm so sorry I was slow in coming, I was in the middle of teaching a Zumba class.”

That explained the high-end workout clothing. But a three-hour Zumba class?

“I see.”

“I tried to get my boyfriend to come, but he had the two other kids to watch, and then he had a get-together with friends, so I waited for my mother to get off work and finally here I am. I'm so relieved Rory is all right. Do you think there's any chance of a relapse?” She spoke like The Flash, too, barely taking a breath between long sentences.

No more caffeine for you, Mrs. Murray
.

“A spontaneous recurrence can happen on occasion, although it's rare. Rory's regular doctor and surgeon can decide how long they'd like him monitored.” Mia indicated Mrs. Murray should sit, and she did, her knee immediately taking up a frenetic bobbing.

“He was supposed to come home tomorrow or Thursday. Do you think that will still happen?”

“I'm not familiar with the details of his surgical case, so I can't tell you for sure. The nursing staff will make sure Rory's doctor speaks with you.”

A stirring from the bed pulled Mia's attention from Shawna Murray to Rory, who opened his eyes and squirmed in an attempt to sit. Mia smiled. “Hang on there,” she said. “Let me raise the head of the bed—that's way cooler.”

“You're my doctor,” the boy said as his bed transported him to a sitting position.

“I was your doctor for this accident, kiddo,” she said. “But Dr. Thomas knows what's best for taking care of you after your operation. And all we want is what's best for you.”

“You can look at my chart. Then you can be who decides.”

Mia squelched the laughter threatening to spill out. Rory's fear and the fog from his meds had lifted. Here was the feisty Rory she knew: much more self-aware than the average ten-year-old.

“I'm glad you have so much confidence in me.” She patted his leg. “But we're friends, remember? A doctor isn't supposed to treat her friends.”

“But you saved me even though we're friends.”

As flattering as his unswerving belief was, Mia shook her head. “Lots of people who work in a hospital know about the kind of thing that happened to you. I think anyone would have saved you, honey.”

“Nope. Anybody didn't save me. You did.”

His findings were final and absolute. Mia sighed. “Well, I'd do it again because you're kind of cool, you know that? A little crazy maybe . . . ”

He laughed. Mia turned back to Mrs. Murray, who was watching the exchange with a blank expression. “You sound like you know Rory,” she said.

“I do. I met his mother several years ago and we became friends. This is a strange coincidence.”

“Everyone says it's a small world,” she said.

“Yes. But the most important thing is that we learn what caused this reaction and make sure to keep Rory away from the allergens that trigger it. His reaction was life-threatening. You need to be aware of that and be vigilant at all times.”

“I can't imagine what it was,” she replied. “I made him chocolate cupcakes out of a mix and brought them up to the hospital this morning so he could have them for the party, but nobody ever said he was allergic to chocolate. Just peanut butter.”

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