"And, as I am an honest Puck...." --Puck, "A Midsummer Night's Dream", Act V, Scene 2
"I'm not touching that one." --Dot Warner, Shakespeare by the
Warners: Midsummer Night's Dream
Luka stood on the El platform, his hands jammed into his pockets. It
had been a hell of a day, seemed like half of the ER had
been yelling at him... or at least pissed off at him in some way. Okay,
he acknowledged to himself, so he'd been doing some
yelling too. He was, he thought, having what his old buddy Pavle would
have described as a "major melt-down".
Hell of a day. Kerry hadn't yet been ready to leave when he was on
his way out. Paperwork, she'd told him, but they'd both
known that he didn't believe that. He assumed that she would tell him
what was really up when she was ready... he hoped,
anyway. She'd been a little strange, though, after lunch, and he was
worried. The famous Kovac arrogance had struck again
today, he knew, and he would, as usual, pay for it. Two had already
paid for his arrogance today, with their lives - the shooter,
and that baby.
He knew - had known even then - that the shooter's best chance of
survival had been to travel to the hospital in the helicopter,
but he'd had to appoint himself a judge of the man, and slam the door
of the chopper shut in Peter's face before ordering the
pilot to take off - it had seemed so inconceivable to
him, that a murderer should get preference over a child.
And who had he been trying to convince today when he was trying to
bully that pregnant woman into agreeing to a c-section?
He should have stepped out, and asked Cleo or Kerry to try to talk her
into it - either of them could have done it, he was sure.
They were women, and much more kind and gentle than most people gave
them credit for being; they could have done it.
Instead, he'd come across as some kind of avenging angel... he had
been more St. Michael with a flaming sword than St. Luke
the physician. Instead of delivering a healthy - live -
baby boy, he had delivered a tiny corpse. He wasn't sure whether or not
to be thankful that Cleo had stopped him before he would have forced
that murderous bitch to endure a c-section. He crossed
himself, thinking of that tiny life snuffed out by... what?
Selfishness? Stupidity? And he wasn't all that sure that the
selfishness
and stupidity hadn't been his own.
He had been unwilling, before, to believe that a woman would harm
her own child - he had seen women go to great lengths to
protect their children, back home - but to actually try to stab the
poor thing before it had even been born! He thought of the
woman who had come in during the flu epidemic several months ago, who
had been harming her son to get attention for herself.
That had seemed incredible enough to him. Even more incredible was that
DeRaad had refused to find that girl incompetent to
refuse treatment... what could be more insane, more... mentally incompetent
than a woman harming herself in order to kill her
baby? And then lying about it and refusing to allow surgery to save the
child?
He shook his head in disbelief; why had he thought that the United
States would - could - be so different from home? People
were people, no matter where he lived: a person -
even a doctor or a med student - could be attacked here, too. Killed.
He
almost might as well have not bothered leavin-- he stopped that
thought cold in its tracks: if he hadn't left Croatia, he was pretty
sure he'd be dead by now... whether by actively taking his own life, as
he'd thought about doing many times, before he'd had Nik
take him to the hospital, or by risking his life again and again until
a landmine or sniper did the job for him.
And he would never have met Kerry. She wasn't the very
best thing that had ever happened to him - that would have been
Danijela and the kids and their all-too-short time together - but she
was pretty damned close to it. Certainly, she was by far
the most important person in his world now.
But now he wasn't sure if he could stay in Chicago - his pattern, in
the past, had always been to run when he found himself
getting too attached to a place, to the people he worked with... if he
got attached to something, after all, he could be hurt when
it was taken away from him. He'd already broken the pattern by
accepting Kerry's offer of a permanent job, back in November
(the thought of belonging somewhere again, especially
when it had been offered to him on the eighth anniversary of-- of that
day, had been too appealing to resist) and by becoming so close to her.
Maybe he was insane, as Paulie Johnson had taunted
him from the restraints - that would explain a lot, wouldn't it?
He laughed sharply... maybe the last seven years had all been a
magnificently elaborate hallucination, and he was still locked
in a padded room - drooling, drugged mercifully senseless by
anti-psychotics and in restraints himself. Nah... he touched his
mouth, where Paulie had sucker-punched him, and grimaced - that had
been real. Besides, it was madness to let himself start
believing that everything around him was the product of a psychotic
break. (His psychotic break, that is... he wasn't always
sure that the universe wasn't the result of God having
had one.)
Which still left the question: what was he going to do now? He had
become entirely too attached to this place, to the people
around him, and his existence became more and more entwined with all of
this with every day that passed. If he ran tomorrow,
he was pretty sure that he could get over - he could make
himself get over - the pain of separation pretty quickly. He looked
around, trying to imagine what Chicago would look like if somebody ever
took it into their heads to start throwing artillery
shells at the city. The Sears Tower would be an obvious target, and
easy to hit; a lot of people would die, if the attack was
during the day, when people were at work.
He wondered how his co-workers would react to County being under
nearly-constant fire - people freaked when bodies were
left in the hallway for a while, for instance, but how would they react
if the bodies had to stay in the morgue for weeks, stacked
on top of each other like cords of wood, because it wasn't safe to
remove them to a funeral home or the cemetery? Actually, he
was pretty sure that most of the people he knew at County would make it
- after all, nobody at-- nobody had been prepared to
deal with what they'd had to face... they'd had to learn as they went,
improvising policy on the fly.
He impulsively got out his cell phone and called the ER's front
desk. Frank answered, and sounded surprised that he wanted to
talk to Kerry. "She's on the other line, with--" Luka frowned, as some
kind of hurried discussion was conducted. "She's on the
other line. Can you hang on a minute, Dr. Kovatch?" His gut knotted -
Frank had, presumably, mentioned his name to let Kerry
know he was calling. He'd done the same thing before, to alert
co-workers... but had Frank been alerting Kerry, or warning
her?
"Could you ask her to call me back, please? I don't want to run down
the battery on my phone." Frank grunted assent, and hung
up. Coward, he taunted himself - that battery was freshly charged. He
could sit there on hold for a long time before it became a
problem. As it happened, he only had to wait a few minutes before his
little phone trilled. "Kovac," he said briskly. "Oh, hi Kerry."
"Luka, what's up? Frank said you sounded a little strange on the
phone a minute ago." Hmph... he was sure that wasn't exactly
how
Frank had phrased it, but left that thought alone. There was just
something about that desk clerk that he didn't trust - maybe it was
just the way that Frank liked to make snide, snipy little remarks about
Luka's foreign origins at nearly every opportunity, that bothered
him.
"No... I'm fine, Kerry. Um, would you like to go out for dinner tonight? You're off in a little bit, right?"
"I'm already off, but I'm still waiting on a call." Was it his imagination, or was there a bit of coolness in her voice?
"Is something wrong? Did I do something?" There was a long, ominous pause before she spoke again.
"We'll talk about that later, okay?" He tried to tell himself that
she had to be a little impersonal on the phone with him
when she
spoke in front of other people, in order to keep their affair quiet,
that her curtness didn't really mean anything. But she was still
scaring him.
"Okay," he said hesitantly. "Kerry, I lov--" But she had already
hung up. He glared at the little phone, as if it were somehow
responsible for the disappointing call. Then something occurred to him,
and he pressed the redial button. This time, Kerry
answered, sounding a little irritated, and he apologized automatically.
"Do you know if the foyer lights are turned on? I can't
remem--" This time there was no doubt that she was irritated, the way
she snapped at him: no, she damn well didn't know, and
it really wasn't that important! He recoiled as she slammed the phone
down. Well, he'd head home, he supposed, and see for
himself.
* * *
The lights were on, he was pleased to see - he hadn't
wanted to think about where he'd go, otherwise. He hung up his coat and
took off his shoes, and sat numbly on the couch for a while, just
thinking. Should he start looking into someplace else to
live?
He certainly didn't want to - he loved falling asleep with
her in his arms, or at least her scent (a pleasant mix of lilac and
Kerry)
teasing his nose when she wasn't actually there, and he just plain
loved her... so much that it scared him sometimes. But in a good
way.
Maybe, though... maybe Kerry was thinking it was a good idea for him
to find something else, he thought pessimistically. Hell, he
couldn't think like this - maybe he'd feel clearer after
some sleep. He staggered upstairs and - even in the thick fatigue that
had
caught up to him as he was walking home from the El stop - stripped
down and got his clothes in the laundry hamper before crawling
under the covers. The last thing he saw before he closed his eyes was
the restored photo of him with his family, that sat on top of the
dresser, and he fell asleep smiling, thinking of Kerry's ingenuity in
putting it together. He didn't wake up when Kerry came home
about an hour later and stood by the bed, leaning heavily on her crutch
and watching him sleep.
* * *
After a number of false alarms, including Luka's two calls, when
she'd been first curt and then downright rude to him out of sheer
frustration, she'd finally got the call from Peter Benton, confirming
that he had got John checked into the rehab center. Then she'd
had a very tense discussion with Romano, regarding "young Dr. Carter"
and the future of his career. She'd deliberately left Luka
completely out of the loop - partly because she knew he didn't really
know John that well, aside from having prevented the man's
suicide attempt a couple of months ago, and partly because she didn't
want to risk his being affected by any fallout from the
intervention - but had always intended to fill him in afterwards. Not
until she'd given Romano the information, though: if anything
happened to give him an excuse to get rid of her, once and for all...
not just suspended, and not just out of the Chief's job, she
wanted Luka to be in a position to be able to take over. He didn't want
the job, that was true, but she was sure he'd be good at it
anyway, with his background.
He whimpered in his sleep, shifting restlessly, and moaned something
that Kerry didn't catch the first time. She did, though, the
second time: "Ne napusti me!" - the same thing he'd called out the one
time they'd spent the night at his apartment. She looked over
at the frame with her early birthday present to him; she thought that
she would have liked Danijela Kovac, but right now... "jealous"
wasn't quite the right word for it, for what she was feeling.
"I'd have to be able to compete with you, to be jealous," she
whispered to the picture. "And I can't: after all this time, he's still
dreaming of you." Danijela smiled back blankly. Kerry
sighed, and went back downstairs to the kitchen, to get something to
drink.
She poured herself a glass of water and put the pitcher back in the
refrigerator, and winced as her hip twinged - leaning against
the counter for a minute helped a little, but it still felt as though
the entire day (if not the last several months) had lain
in wait
and pounced on her all at once. But she'd always been wary of
automatically reaching for painkillers, and now that she knew that
she had two nephews who were addicted to-- who were drug addicts
(plus, she was pretty sure that John had mentioned an uncle
or two - her brothers - who tended to drink far too much
at family occasions) she was even firmer in her resolve to endure pain,
rather than depend on chemical relief.
She took her glass into the living room, where she put on a Billie
Holiday CD with the volume turned down so she didn't disturb
Luka. She sat on the couch, in the dark, sipping her water slowly as
she listened to the raspy, smoky voice do its acrobatics
against a slow jazz background. Similar music had been playing at the
restaurant where she and Luka had met with her biological
parents for the first time - that is, the first time as
her parents: she'd encountered Jonathan and Millicent Carter before at
the
hospital, but their previous interactions had been in the context of
their roles as John's grandparents and John's boss.
Kerry'd been so nervous that Luka had taken her car keys away from
her as they exited her house, and done the driving. Then, as they
walked in the door of the restaurant, Kerry had turned around and tried
to head back outside, muttering that maybe this wasn't such a
good idea after all. Kerry smiled - he'd taken her by the shoulders,
gently but firmly, and redirected her; then he'd put an arm around
her and led her inside. Millicent had spotted them immediately, and
Kerry had been a little appalled to see that John was with his
grandparents; she had meant to take him aside and fill him in on the
situation privately, so that he didn't find out about it... well...
like this. She'd been so intent on the quizzical expression on John's
face that she'd missed Luka's soft question, and he'd had to
repeat it. "Are you wearing pantyhose, or are those stockings?"
"Stockings. With black lacy garters trimmed with a tiny red bow on
each hip." He'd made a strangled noise at that revelation - he
was extremely fond of the way stockings looked on her, and he liked the
sensation of the material against his back when she had
her legs wrapped around him. "You're sure you don't want
to skip dinner, and go home?"
He'd gulped and blushed, and muttered something that sounded like
"Romano obuche bikini" - he'd refused to translate, but Kerry
had some idea of what he'd said. "Let's go sit down," he'd told her.
John and his grandfather had stood - his grandfather... her
father... out of politeness, and John to head to the bathroom - and
she'd kicked off roughly two hours of awkward conversation
and good food by bluntly asking Millicent "Why?"
"You mean why did I put you up for adoption?" Jonathan was taken aback, to say the least.
"This-- you mean this was the important thing you
wanted to talk about earlier?" Millicent had shot him a withering
glance that
bore a remarkable resemblance to Kerry's Stare of Death.
"Yes, and if you'd been able to tear yourself away from the
quarterly reports for five minutes, I would have filled you in. And
we've already done the DNA test," she'd added, when Jonathan opened his
mouth to protest.
"But when did you-- I mean, what... how?"
"You were especially busy at the time, Jonathan. I doubt you would
have noticed anything short of a bomb going off in your
face."
"Oh... your 'special emergency trip' back in '62. How could you?"
John had returned to the table then, rubbing at his left wrist
a little (although Kerry hadn't consciously noted the action at the
time), and sat down.
"Because," Millicent had addressed both Kerry and Jonathan - both
John and Luka were merely bystanders for the moment, "I was
about to become a grandmother for the first time, and I suddenly found
myself pregnant once again - I couldn't do it again. I wasn't
even so sure that I did that wonderful of a job raising the first
batch of children. But I also couldn't go through with an abortion -
or a 'D&C', as the well-to-do women got in those days - so I made
arrangements through a private institution to set up an adoption.
Lovely couple. Ah, yes, I believe we're ready to order," she'd told the
waiter who'd arrived in the meantime, and seemed unaware
of Kerry's baffled expression. The five of them ordered - Kerry wasn't
very hungry, so she just ordered a crab salad, and decided
to stick with water to drink. When they'd all ordered, and the waiter
had magically vanished again, Millicent had picked up where
she'd left. "'Weaver'... that was your husband's name?"
"No. It was my parents' name." Millicent had choked on her mouthful
of wine then, and sputtered a little as she held her napkin to
her mouth and John swatted her back firmly.
"George and Marie Holmes are your parents," she'd finally insisted,
once she'd cleared out the relevant pipes and could speak again.
"I met with them myself!" Kerry had shrugged, and shaken her head.
"I've never heard of them. My first memories are of being in the
hospital for my legs, and then I went to live with Joe and Louise
Weaver when I was nearly six - they officially adopted me a year or so
later."
"Hospital? Why?"
"Don't you know? I was born with hip problems. Maybe
your perfect couple, George and Marie Holmes, couldn't take getting a
less-than-perfect baby!" Her voice had risen a little, shaking with the
fury of over thirty years of suppressed resentment, and Luka
had reached for her hand to squeeze it.
"Sjesti!" Luka had whispered sharply to her when she began to push
her chair back from the table in preparation for storming out,
and she'd halted in mid-scooch. "Dopusti nju objasniti."
Kerry smiled, as she finished the last of her water. Luka was a good
man, despite the dark side to him that even she - not exactly
the most perceptive of people - could see. He was patient - up to a
point - and put up with far more from her than she would have
expected any man to want to tolerate. Not that he was
easy, of course.
* * *
She put her glass on the kitchen counter, and headed upstairs
without bothering to turn on any of the lights she'd turned off when
she'd arrived home - she was so familiar with the floorplan of the
house that she could just about make her way around blindfolded,
and Luka's nightlights - one in the hallway, and one in the bedroom -
made it easy to get around upstairs.
She propped her crutch against the wall as she stripped off her
clothes and cautiously got into bed; she was a little concerned
about her leg, the way Luka was shifting around and muttering in his
sleep, but the moment she was under the covers, he settled
down and seemed to search for her until he'd managed to drape an arm
around her waist. She smiled as she felt him gradually
nestle up next to her, twining his arm a little tighter around her
waist and snuggling into her back - if she couldn't be part of the
dream, she'd settle for the benefits, she supposed.
She woke several hours later, unsure at first what had happened.
Then she realized that Luka had moved away from her in his sleep...
he was curled into a ball on the other side of the bed, and was making
that sound again, that tiny, high-pitched moan that she had noticed
that he seemed to make when the nightmares were really bad. She woke
him with some difficulty - his eyes took a while to focus on
her, but he brightened a little. "Kerry-love," he whispered, still
half-asleep, "thank God. I couldn't find you anywhere, no matter how
much I searched." His hands were immediately all over her - not
sexually, just trying to convince himself that she was really there -
and
then he wrapped his arms around her and went back to sleep. She felt a
little like a teddy bear - a small, gimpy teddy bear with red hair -
but fell asleep quickly in his arms.
He was grouchy in the morning when they got up, and even skipped his
usual ritual of trying to seduce her (which, she had to admit,
frequently worked well, although she hadn't been in the mood the last
few days... she was pretty sure she was coming up on her period).
She noticed that his leg seemed to be bothering him more than usual,
and he kept changing the subject every time she tried to bring up
the intervention and John's - her nephew's - sudden trip
to rehab in Atlanta.
* * *
He was depressed, and had half-convinced himself that she was just
waiting for the best time to ask him to leave. Part of himself wished
that she would just go ahead and do it, get it over with, but another
part of him was selfishly trying to hang on to what little they seemed
to have left. He nearly made his usual morning advances, but
refrained... she had pushed him away the last few times, and he didn't
think
he could handle yet another rejection. Not now.
"What time are you on?"
"I still have a job, after yesterday?" He looked completely drained,
totally unrested by the night's sleep. And no wonder, she thought,
as restless as he'd been when she got home. And he'd had
that nightmare. He listlessly picked at his share of the omelet she'd
made,
but finally finished it.
"It's there if you still want it," she told him quietly and
carefully. "You had a bad day, that's all." She carefully reached out,
and placed a
hand on his forearm; he didn't tense, but he didn't relax, either.
"Hell of a bad day," he told her wearily. "I made mistakes that killed people, yesterday, and I just can't forget that."
"I don't want you to forget, Luka. You remember, and you learn from those mistakes." He nodded.
"I know," he replied quietly. "I- I knew they were mistakes when I
was making them. I knew at the time that the shooter was the
medical priority, but I didn't care. All I cared about was that he'd
killed - or helped kill - people. I had to tell a police officer to
stop CPR on a woman whose brains had been blown out, and then go help a
kid who'd been shot. And then that shooter came out,
firing, and I was terrified. I mean, it was instinct to shield the
paramedic and that boy, but at the same time, I was scared."
"I shouldn't have sent you on that flight duty," she said. "I should
have realized how traumatic that kind of situation would be for you,
and sent someone else." He managed a wan smile.
"Be careful, or somebody might think you were giving me preferential
treatment," he teased her. "Besides, can you imagine Dave
out there, with bullets whizzing past his head? He would either have
frozen, or he would have gotten cocky with excitement and
got himself shot, too."
"Past his-- are you saying that you were nearly shot?" He shrugged,
trying to downplay the situation; he hadn't meant to mention
that part of it to her.
"They say that as long as you can hear the bullets, you're all
right, that it's the one you don't hear...." He was
silent for a moment,
then mustered his nerve. He'd made the decision just before falling
asleep, and had turned it over and over in his head after getting
up - there was nothing else he could do, and hope to stay
sane. "I've decided to return to Croatia." Kerry felt as though she'd
been
punched - hadn't he, not too long ago, promised that he
wouldn't leave her? She just hoped that she wouldn't break down in
front
of him - she prided herself on staying calm in the face of rejection,
she'd had enough practice at it, after all.
"Oh. I see. Y-you'll let me know when you've found a permanent
residence there?" She wondered if her voice was shaking as much
as she thought it was - dammit! - and tried to keep her hands busy to
hide the trembling. He regarded her for a moment, his brow
furrowed with confusion, then looked to the side and began mumbling to
himself.
"I'm sorry, I used the wrong word. Visit? I'm not going back to stay, I will return, Kerry, but for now...."
"You need time off." She didn't actually sigh with relief, but the emotion was right there in her voice.
"I do. My God, I..." He pushed his hair back, and she could see
near-desperation in his eyes. "I... I feel like I'll self-destruct if I
don't get away for a little while. I feel like I'm going
crazy." She wanted to cry, to plead with him... to remind him that they
were
already down one doctor, but she couldn't - if he was
asking her for time off now, it was because he really
needed time off. As if
he were reading her mind, he looked directly at her. "You know that I
wouldn't ask it of you if I felt there was any other choice?"
"Yes," she told him reluctantly. "I don't want you to go, but if you have to...." She let her voice trail off, and he nodded.
"I do. I really do. Uh... I'll probably visit my family - my parents
and my brother, that is - and see if I can find any of my old friends.
And- and try to lay some ghosts to rest while I'm there."
"As long as you're ready for that." He sighed.
"I'll always love my wife, Kerry. She was my first sweetheart, and a
huge part of my life up until-- until eight and a half years
ago. Even after that, I've held onto her... but I have to let go of her
now: I want to move on, with you."
* * *
It was on that note that he found himself in Romano's office later
that day, standing in front of Romano's desk... feeling a little like
a schoolboy who'd been called on the carpet for some offense or other.
"So you need some time off, Dr Kovac."
"Yes, I do, Dr Romano." Romano hmmmed for a few seconds, tapping his
steepled forefingers together, then abruptly slapped his
palms down on the desktop; Luka was pleased that he didn't flinch at
the sudden loud noise.
"You got it."
"Don't you want to know how long I need?"
"Look. As far as I'm concerned, I wouldn't be
heartbroken if you never showed your face around here again, okay? But
it probably
would be a good idea if you were somewhere else until the
hospital hears anything on whether the families of those two patients
have any intention of suing." The ends of Romano's mouth stretched out,
in what Luka belatedly realized was a half-hearted smile.
"Take two months. We'll know on lawsuits by then... and it should give
your colleagues a chance to cool down, too. You had a little
run-in with Peter Benton yesterday, as I recall?"
"We argued, yes."
"Mm. Okay. I'll tell Dr Weaver to call in a temp - hell, that's how you started here, wasn't it?"
"Er, yes."
"Hm. Call in a temp... people are gonna be busy enough with Dr
Carter off somewhere dryin' out over the summer. You heard
about that, right?"
"Dr Weaver has filled me in on the situation recently, yes," Luka
said carefully, unsure if Romano was trying to pump him for
information. Kerry had told him what had happened with Carter, once
they'd managed to get their wires uncrossed enough to
understand that nobody was intent on doing any abandoning or evicting,
and he'd been horrified that he'd missed what was going
on right in front of him. Now, it seemed obvious that
Carter had been using drugs, but then it had all gone over
his head. Over
everybody's head.
"Oh. I see. Of course. Tomorrow's soon enough for you to start your leave time?"
"Yes, that's what I had hoped to do."
"Okay. Fill out a leave request form - you can get one from my secretary - and I'll sign it. Is that everything?"
"Yes. Thank you, Dr Romano." Romano flashed a tight little smile.
"Always happy to help out my troops," he claimed, but they both knew
what that really meant - "always" meant "when it's most
convenient for me". "So... go fill that out, get it back to me, and
then get back to work, huh?" Luka nodded, then left Romano's
office. Romano watched him leave, and sighed. He didn't want Kovac to
be away for so long, despite his words to the contrary
a few minutes ago, but he'd seen the man's personnel file. Weaver had,
for a change, made an astute move in hiring him: with his
qualifications, he could work anywhere he wanted, and just about name
his own salary. He also had a history of limiting the length
of time he stayed working in one place - refusing to grant him leave
time, especially after the rough time he'd had here lately, would
probably have driven him to simply quit and go elsewhere. And despite
the snide little "Dr Death" and "DracLuka" jokes - that
weren't all that funny, as far as Romano was concerned - Romano had
heard made about Kovac, there wasn't anyone else he would
want working on him, if he were brought in here for a trauma: Kovac was
a damned good doctor, when he didn't let his personal
feelings interfere with his job. Hopefully the long vacation would give
him plenty of time to regain his perspective.
* * *
Luka hung up the phone after speaking to the travel agent - he'd
managed to get a seat on a flight that had had a last-minute
cancellation - he'd have to leave very early in the morning, and the
seat was in coach (which would be torture on his long legs,
as long as he'd be traveling), but with any luck he should be knocking
on Nik's front door roughly 24 hours or so after starting
his trip. He'd gone upstairs to the bedroom to make the call, because
Kerry was doing something in the kitchen that had required
using noisy appliances and Grace Jones set to the kind of volume she
usually preferred in the morning, when she was bouncing
around making those peculiarly-colored energy shakes of hers. He sat on
the edge of the bed, just thinking... mostly about what
he was going to be doing tomorrow.
He and Nik corresponded infrequently - at the very least, Luka had
always written to Nik to tell him when he was leaving a job and
a city behind. Nik had teased, in his last letter, that Luka must
be serious about this woman, if he was actually settling in one spot.
(Luka hadn't mentioned that he and Kerry were living together - that
would just have brought more teasing from Nik, who'd always
been a little bemused by his little brother's spiritual side... and the
way it had co-existed, apparently paradoxically, with a
mischievous nature that was occasionally a little on the destructive
side.)
Luka doubted there would be any trouble with staying with Nik and
his wife while he was there. Vesna was a nervous little creature,
if he remembered correctly, but the two of them had hammered out a kind
of informal truce while he was there. He'd tried to help her
around the house as much as he was able, with his body still mending
and his spirit broken into shards, and he thought she'd
appreciated his efforts. Usually, though, he'd sat in a darkened room
by himself, wishing that he had been just a little longer in
hugging Danijela and Jasna and Marko, and deflecting their pleas to
come along. If he'd been home when the shell hit-- a touch
on his shoulder startled him and he jumped with a little cry, which in
turn startled Kerry, who'd come up behind him.
"I'm sorry. I thought you heard me. Is everything all right?"
"Bozhe moj... I think my heart stopped for a moment," he gasped,
putting his hand on his chest in a melodramatic gesture. "Uh, I
just spoke to 'Cindy' at 'TravelBest'. My flight leaves at 4:13
tomorrow morning. I'll need to get an early - late? - start."
"So you're not going to be here when I wake up, are you?"
"No... I don't think I will," he admitted reluctantly. "I'm gonna
write to you, though - send you postcards, maybe some pictures.
You'll barely even know I'm gone, huh?" He tried for a teasing tone,
and failed miserably.
"Yeah, right," she retorted, and also failed to manage a good
teasing tone with her next words. "So I'll have to scatter whiskers in
the
sink and leave the toilet seat up myself?" He laughed sarcastically,
and hugged her. "I don't want to wake up without you," she told
him quietly, her breath warm against his ear.
"I don't want to wake up without you, either," he told her, gently
rubbing her back, and hesitated a moment before he spoke again. "I
have to tell you everything before I go. Everything."
He watched her face for a moment, trying to decide whether or not
she could handle hearing it. For that matter, whether or not he
could handle telling the whole story - he'd blurted out
part of it, four and a half months ago, when she'd backed him into a
corner
and pushed him into lashing out at her, but now he wanted her to know
it all. God knew, she might hear what he had to say, and
tell him to stay in Croatia... that he was right, that he was
bad luck, but he had to know.
"Tell me what?" Her voice was quiet and wary. "'Everything'...?" He sighed.
"The day you hired me... it, uh, was the day my wife and kids were
killed. Eight years before." She stayed silent, but bit her lip...
that day, her personal attention had been split between simply noticing
him and his masculine beauty (on top of his medical skills!),
and worrying about Gabe. She'd known that Luka was from a country that
had recently had a war, but not much more than that. "Have
you... do you know what happened at Vukovar?" She bit her lip again;
she'd come across some articles about the city, and some of
the terrible things that had happened there, when she was doing some
online research on Croatia in an effort to understand him a
little better. She'd been horrified, but not surprised - she'd seen
some pretty hairy situations in Africa, where the locals had been
fascinated by her hair and her crutch, and nicknamed her "Doctor
Tripod-On-Fire", but they had also engaged in the occasional
spot of vicious murder and mayhem among each other. If she had a dollar
for every machete wound she'd taken care of, during the
time that she was working at that clinic... well... she wasn't sure,
but she thought she could probably retire very comfortably.
"I've read some of the, uh, medical testimony," she told him quietly, and he nodded. "You were there." He nodded again.
"Yes. We, uh, had a very small apartment, barely big enough for the
four of us - doctors weren't paid well, so we didn't have
much money. Danijela sometimes did sewing for people in the building,
so we got a little extra from that, but... well, we were
clothed - if not fashionably - and we had enough to eat. The trouble
started a couple of months after Jasna turned five, after
Croatia decided to secede. Supply lines stayed open for a while, but
soon that got cut off. The market stayed open as long as
they could, though, and I'd head out very early to get what food I
could, then take it back home and head to work. And the
children, we always kept them inside, because it wasn't safe - we had
snipers even then, and they didn't mind shooting at little
kids," he told Kerry, thinking of the kids he'd treated then... and of
the kids - and so many other people - he hadn't been able to
help. "And they would always see me going for the door, and they'd beg
to go with me because they were tired of looking at the
same four walls all day, every day. I'd always have to tell them no,
remind them that it wasn't safe to go outside." He smiled
sadly. "I think by then they would have happily risked snipers, just to
be able to go outside and play for five minutes, to run around
in the fresh air and yell like normal little kids."
He shifted position, so that his head was resting comfortably on her
shoulder and his arms were loosely around her waist. "I didn't
expect anything to happen that day - I was just going to get some
cheese and bread, as usual, and then go to work. Jasna and Marko
climbed all over me, as usual, begging me once again to let them come
along please, please, and as usual I had to tell them
no." He
sighed, and Kerry stroked his hair comfortingly - she could feel him
beginning to tremble, and his arms had tightened on her slightly.
"I was... perhaps only fifty meters away when I heard the whistle
overhead. The shell hit our building, and the shockwave of the
explosion knocked me over. But I got up and started running back - I
didn't even notice at first that I'd been deafened - and incredibly
they were still alive under everything. The shell hit the other end of
the building from where our apartment was... the place was still
demolished, all our things were unsalvageable, but the
three of them were still alive. I thought for a moment I might lose
Danijela,
but she came back... I got them to the hospital in the back of
somebody's truck, of all things, and it seemed like such a miracle at
the
time." He paused for a few moments, then continued.
"Sometimes I wish that the shell had hit the other end
of the building, that they'd been killed quickly - they would have been
spared
so much. I would have lost them sooner, but... well. Things got much
worse, soon after that: supplies stopped coming in, and we
had to improvise like crazy. We were all living at the hospital then -
we got half a liter of drinking water daily, doctors and patients
and staff and families, and for the most part all there was to eat were
unleavened biscuits. Sometimes there'd be soup made from fat
and browned flour. Oh," he brightened a little at a sudden memory, "the
National Guard killed a large wild pig once, and brought it
to the hospital for everybody to share. I had a small taste, but I gave
most of my share to Danijela and the kids - they were still
recovering and needed all the protein they could get, and the kids
didn't really have any weight to spare. I can't stand to
eat pork,
these days. Not because of that, but because of the burn
victims we sometimes got - people who'd been trapped in buildings that
were on fire... the smell was unbelievable. Like a barbecue - it
smelled so good, and I was always ashamed when my stomach
would start to growl from the smell." He was quiet again for a few
minutes, and Kerry thought he might have fallen asleep. But he
began to speak again.
"We - the doctors and nurses - worked... had to work
long shifts. Twenty-four hours on, and twenty-four hours off. I was
always so
tired by the end of a shift, I could barely make it back to the
shelter. I'm surprised I can still manage to make it through the
occasional
double at my age, you know? And we didn't have the water to spare for
laundry or washing, so everybody stank unless it rained, and
we'd collect rainwater in containers, for later... dance under the
rain, like it was a big shower, but carefully. Our
soldiers raided a
bombed-out warehouse at one point, and brought back sweatsuits for
everybody. We all looked like a bunch of athletes... starved,
smelly, dehydrated, exhausted athletes. And by the end, none of those
sweatsuits were worth saving - they were dirty, covered with
every kind of imaginable body fluid, torn, and could
only be thrown away.
"We took our lives into our own hands every time we went outside for
an ambulance - it got to the point that the guy would honk the
horn once, to let us know he was there, we'd grab what he had and bring
the patients inside, and he'd drive away as fast as he could,
before he could be shot at or bombed. Hell, even being inside was risky
sometimes." He told Kerry about the nurse who'd been
killed by a sniper as she stood near him, in front of a window, and she
kissed the top of his head. "It was a miracle that we were
able to hold on for so long, with so little, you know? County sometimes
seems so easy by comparison. By the end, we had no general
anesthesia - we used locals to operate, or gave the patient a Valium.
And then none of us had any more to give, and Vukovar was
taken by enemy soldiers. We were forced to wait in our rooms, while
they confiscated all the records.
"We heard gunfire, and found out later that the soldiers had taken
some of the patients outside, and shot them. Then they came back,
and demanded that some of us fix some of their wounded." He laughed
hollowly. "Pavle volunteered - he was a psychiatrist, but he'd
been working with us the last couple of months. Not much practical use
for a shrink, when the place is shaking around you constantly
from shelling, you know? It's no question that somebody's
crazy, that's just not the priority at the time when the patients are
all trying
to die from their injuries. I wanted to go with him, to help, but he
told me to stay there and look after some of the others. He tried to
get some of the other doctors, but the soldiers decided they wanted me
after all. They also knew my weakness - a couple of the
soldiers grabbed... they were taken out of our room. They told me,
'Hey, lucky, we have three patients for you. Save them, and you
get your family back. But for every one of our guys who dies...'" Luka
shuddered. "I tried, but the injuries were just too much for me
to help them. Trying to work on three patients at once, all of them in
bad shape. They made me watch, as... a- and then they shot me
too and left me." He took a few shaky breaths, and retrieved his right
hand long enough to take a quick swipe at his face; she couldn't
see his face very well, but was fairly sure he was dashing away tears.
"She didn't even die right away - I managed to drag myself
over to her, and I could feel her pulse fading away under my fingers. I
passed out at some point after Danijela finally died, and
somebody put me aboard one of the evacuation ambulances.
"I woke up in the hospital in Zagreb, covered in bandages and
various tubes that were putting things into me and taking things out.
They thought I might not be able to walk again, that the damage was too
much, that I might lose my leg, but over time I managed to
progress from a wheelchair to two crutches, to one crutch like yours,
and then no crutch but the occasional limp. After a while, I
was able to be discharged and go live with my brother and his wife,
while I was still using the crutches. And then-- later I left, I
couldn't bear to stay in Croatia any longer. And now here I am," he
finished, and waited for her to suggest that maybe it was a
good idea for him to go ahead and stay in Croatia, once he'd got there.
Her reaction was instinctive - she nudged him away from her enough
for her to be able to kiss him, with the idea in mind of going
back to holding him and letting him recover from the stress he'd just
been through, of telling her what he had; she registered a
moment of surprise from him, and then he kissed her back. Later,
neither of them was sure exactly who had initiated the
lovemaking... which of them had first begun undoing buttons and
zippers, and groping, and escalating things from a comforting
kiss into sex; all they knew right then was that they were desperately
clinging to each other, afraid to let go. She was aware of
his soft gasps and grunts, and the occasional word moaned into her
ear... he was aware of her voice, telling him what she wanted
in some of the most graphically filthy language he'd ever heard, as she
surrounded him and urged him on. They were both vaguely
aware that they were still partially-dressed, and that it had happened
too fast for either of them to even think about
protection,
and then neither of them were aware of very much at all, as they each
exploded and sank into oblivion....
* * *
He awoke after only a little sleep - actually, it had been more that
he'd catnapped, on and off, waking occasionally to check the
clock and catch another glimpse of Kerry before closing his eyes again
for a little while - and stared fondly at the sight of Kerry
curled up against his side, her arm draped loosely across his body and
her head tucked into his shoulder. Her skin was warm and
soft against his, her scent light and alluring, and his body told him,
quite emphatically, to wake her up for just one more time
before leaving, and he told it - equally emphatically - to shut the
hell up.
He watched her sleep for as long as he dared, and finally kissed her
cheek, very gently, before he carefully disentangled himself
and got up, ignoring her sleepily mumbled protest. He showered quickly
and quietly - no singing, he wasn't at all happy about
leaving this way, practically in the middle of the night - and dressed,
then threw some clothes and toiletries into a bag (oh!
passport... ah, there it was...) before he fixed himself something to
eat. Unless airplanes had changed drastically since the last
time he flew, he'd be lucky to get very much - if anything - to eat en
route. At least he didn't suffer from air sickness - the only
malady he'd ever had, that was associated with air travel, was sheer
anxiety over being so far off the ground, in something that
just shouldn't be able to get up into the air. Hadn't
helped that one end of his seat belt had broken free from where it was
attached
under the seat, the last time he'd flown... he'd been nervous about
saying anything, so he'd gone most of the flight with a seat belt
that was buckled, but not attached to anything at one end.
He quickly washed the dishes he'd used, and set them to drain by the
sink. Well, he could get something more out at O'Hare...
or he was fairly sure that he could. Wasn't there a tiny
branch of a convenience store out there, at least? A microwaved burrito
and a bag of chips was surely better than nothing in his
stomach, after all. He carried out one or two more things - a note for
Kerry, letting her know how he'd like his mail sorted and dealt with,
and ending with a few comments - in some detail - about
what he wanted to do with her, once he returned. He blushed when he
read back what he'd written, then signed several blank
checks and put them with the note, so that she could pay bills for him.
He was fully aware that he was trusting her with a great
deal, by doing this, but he figured that she'd taken just as much of a
leap of faith by asking him to live with her after what he didn't
think was really that much time. And, of course, she was the only one
he'd told about his family... that is, except for what he'd told
Carol as he was helping her get to the hospital, but Carol was gone
now.
He supposed he missed Carol a little - she had a sense of humor that
was refreshingly scathing, and he'd enjoyed being able to
joke with her about some very black topics. They'd probably got along
so well because they both had some unnerving events in
their respective pasts... she'd told him once about attempting suicide.
"I was feeling such pressure to pretend that everything was
all right, but it wasn't - I'd just been promoted to
charge nurse the year before, just after Dou-- my boyfriend and I broke
up, and
I was dating another of the doctors, who was - I now realize - pushing
for more of a commitment than I was ready to make at the
time. I cheated on him with my ex in the meantime, and I... I didn't
feel like I had anyone I could talk to about it. I mean, shrinks are
supposed to be confidential, but I'd heard that some of them do
talk about what they hear, and who said it. I know better now, of
course - or I just lucked out and got one of the good ones - but it was
all built up inside of me, and I took some pills. Pills and
booze. I was lucky - they told me later that they didn't expect me to
make it through the night."
He hadn't told Carol about his own suicidal thoughts, that he'd had
all those years ago, though - Kim was the only one he'd told
about that, and he always edged into that topic very
cautiously and gradually. He'd told Kim about his vacation, at the end
of
their session yesterday; she'd been cautiously approving of his
decision, and wished him bon voyage.
He checked his watch - well, time to go. He shrugged the bag over
his shoulder and took a couple of fortifying breaths before he
stepped outside and locked the front door behind him. He took the blue
line out to O'Hare, thinking about their meeting with
Kerry's biological mother... her biological parents. It
still seemed incredible to him, that in all that time, with all the
searching
Kerry had done, those two people had turned out to be Carter's
grandparents. They'd had the meeting on neutral ground - a
nearby restaurant.
And of course, if he and Kerry had been surprised by Sam Broder's
news, that didn't begin to compare with the reactions
from
the other side. Mr Carter had been shocked that his wife would have
kept something so major from him for so long... appalled
that she'd been able to keep it from him, without him
noticing anything amiss with her... at the time or even in the time
since then.
And Carter... he'd seemed shocked when they'd first arrived, but had
left the table and come back a little later seeming to be in
somewhat better spirits. He'd probably gone to the bathroom in order to
take something, Luka realized in hindsight - probably an
injection, from the way he'd been rubbing his wrist... they'd all been
so blind and stupid!
"Why?" That had been Kerry's very first question for her mother.
* * *
Kerry stirred, and snapped awake suddenly. "Luka?" But she knew,
even before she called out, before she reached out to brush
her hand across his side of the bed, that he was long gone. She sat up
and reached for her robe anyway, pulling the soft silk
around herself quickly and fastening the sash, hurrying downstairs just
in case. But the downstairs area had the odd quiet of
vacancy, too; she could see that he'd made himself something to eat,
because he'd washed the dishes and left them to air-dry in
the rack by the sink. She found herself in front of the open
refrigerator, staring blindly at the contents, and shut the door again
with
a self-conscious little laugh. She knew why he'd left the way he had;
she knew he'd wanted to keep their farewells from becoming
long and drawn-out, but darn it, she'd wanted to sit down for breakfast
with him again before he left. She'd wanted to kiss him again...
to give him a ride to the airport... to sit in the passenger-unloading
zone for twenty minutes, kissing him goodbye.
Maybe it was just as well that he'd left while she was still asleep
- otherwise, she might have been tempted, at the last minute, to try
to get a seat on his flight, too. He hadn't said how long it would be
before he returned - she wasn't even sure that he knew -
but
Romano had given him two months of leave time. They could easily handle
the absence of one doctor... coping with the absence
of two doctors was going to be a little trickier, but
they'd manage (especially with the moonlighter Romano was going to let
her
bring in - he... or she... would cover for Luka's absence, and then
cover for Mark, whose vacation was scheduled for shortly after
Luka was due to return). Three doctors out, however, was just about
impossible to manage.
She looked at the clock... it was nearly five o'clock. Well, barring
any kind of problems - she superstitiously tapped her knuckles
against the wood desktop without thinking about it - he should be in
the air by now, and hopefully he'd quickly finish what he felt
he had to do, and come home soon. But she doubted it... he was
generally very thorough in what he did. He'd certainly been very,
very thorough last night, she thought, as a smug little grin crept
across her face.
She found the note on the desk. Along with the blank checks, he'd
also left the paperwork for his Saab, with instructions to sell the
car back to Herb - he had included the photographs that she was to use
as "incentive", if the man seemed reluctant to buy back the
car. Kerry stared at one of them, amazed once again by the things that
the human body could do. And the end of the note he'd left her...
wow! She definitely looked forward to his return, so they could
do those things.
* * *
The other day had been generally interesting, Kerry thought as she
stood numbly under the shower, just letting the warm water
wash over her as she clung to the safety rail.
The first she'd heard anything about a disagreement at the scene had
been when Peter arrived... and promptly began arguing with
Luka. Personally, Kerry could sympathize with Luka's decision to
transport the child, rather than the shooter, by air - personally,
she thought the guy should have been left there in the schoolyard to
die a long, slow, painful death, to choke and strangle on his
own blood. But their job, for better or worse, was to
help people, not to judge them. She'd already seen what inadequate - and
sometimes downright incompetent - medical care could do
to people, and she wasn't about to let that sort of thing happen here.
"Kerry, I need to talk to you." She was almost grateful for Mark's
interruption - she wasn't having much luck getting either man
to listen to her, they were so busy yelling at each other.
"Can't it wait?" she asked, and finally mustered enough volume to
cut through their bickering and yell at Peter to go upstairs to
surgery, to help Elizabeth.
"No. It can't." Kerry sighed, and went with Mark. Luka followed,
still arguing, and she finally snapped at him. She hated to be
pushed into treating him like just another employee, but sometimes he
became so fixated on one thing that he had to be jolted out
of his rut and reminded to go do something else.
"Luka, go help Cleo!" She watched him stalk away - still obviously
pissed off about his run-in with Benton - and turned to Mark.
"What is it? What's so important?"
"Not here. C'mon." They went to the lounge, where Abby and a
patient's chart were waiting for them. It was Abby's day off as a
student, but she was taking a nursing shift today; she should have been
up in OB, but the ER was still a little short-handed after
Carol's sudden departure last week, and they'd been making do with
floats until they could get someone permanently slotted into
the staff. Normally, they just floated nurses down from the ICU, since
the skills were similar enough, but Abby - despite having
been trained as an OB nurse - was also a student, and had had her ER
rotation already. Good enough, The Powers That Be had
decided, and thus she'd been flitting around down here all day in pink
scrubs. "Abby, tell Dr Weaver what you just told me."
"I, uh, I walked back into Trauma Two... you know, where we were
treating the thyrotoxicotic guy earlier, and I saw Dr Carter
injecting something." Kerry didn't get what Abby was saying, at
first... didn't want to get what Abby was saying.
"Injecting--?" Abby handed her the chart.
"Two hundred ccs of fentanyl were ordered, that was what was in the
syringe, but only a hundred and fifty ccs were actually
given to the patient. Anyhow, I was supposed to take the patient to
Radiology, but I remembered that I'd left the chart behind.
I went in, and Dr Carter's back was turned to me - he was facing the
sink - and his hands were... well, he was injecting into
his wrist, I think."
"You think?" She wasn't disputing what Abby was
telling her - in hindsight, drug abuse explained some of the oddities
to
John's behavior lately (Mark had told her, earlier, that Jing-Mei had
expressed concerns that John might be suffering from
bipolar disorder) - but they had to be sure before they did anything
further about this accusation.
"I- I'm almost positive," Abby told her in a very small voice. "Now
I'm not sure if I actually saw it, or whether I just saw his
movements and my mind filled in the rest." Kerry sighed. Damn... just
what she hadn't needed to hear.
She looked up as Carter and Dave banged through the door - judging
from Dave's enthusiastic talk of trial-by-pain, she
guessed they were talking about the guy who'd managed to power-drill a
wood screw into his tibia. Dave had called her
in on it earlier, to see if she could talk the guy into taking
something to deaden the pain (she generally believed in "sucking
it up", when it came to pain, but even she thought that the guy's
refusal to take anything was a little over the top), but
she'd
been unsuccessful... and a quick psych consult had ruled that he was
perfectly competent to make that decision. ("He's a
little weird," Myers had told Dave with a sympathetic wince, "but he's
sane.") Now Dave was saying something about
Masai warriors in Tanzania... well, now she knew that he watched the
Discovery Channel. She glanced across the table
at Mark, and nodded slightly.
* * *
Dave finished pouring himself some coffee, and glanced over at the
three of them. "Hey, is there a staff meeting nobody told
me about?" He just hoped it wasn't about him - he'd been
doing his best to keep up with the anger management seminar that
he'd finally found, and had even resisted the urge to flirt with the
three cute girls who he'd noticed sitting over in the corner
of the classroom, in a clump of blonde hair and pastel cashmere and
pleasant perfume. Though he would bet they could be a
lot of fun when they got angry. Mmm... co-ed spankings!
"No. Dave, could you give us a minute, please?"
"Uh... sure." He was all too happy to get out of there - he wasn't
sure why Abby was there, but two of the attendings (including
the Chief) were at that table, so it couldn't be anything too
good.
On his way out, he heard Dr Greene add, "Carter, hold on a
minute...." Oh, boy. He didn't know what Hoss had done, but again...
as long as it didn't concern him, he wasn't gonna pry!
* * *
"Carter, hold on a minute. We need to talk with you." Kerry watched,
as Carter ignored Mark for a minute and complained about
Dave leaving some miniscule, undrinkable amount of coffee in the pot.
"Please come over here, John." He frowned, but obeyed her. Kerry and
Mark glanced at Abby, and she hemmed and hawed for
a moment before she finally spoke.
"I saw you inject the fentanyl."
"Wha-at?" He laughed in disbelief. "That's ridiculous. It's beyond ridiculous. Why would you think something like that?"
"Two hundred ccs were ordered, and only one hundred and fifty were
actually given," Kerry reminded him, brandishing the
chart as if she were the one who'd noticed the
discrepancy. She wasn't trying to be adversarial... she wanted
this all to be
some kind of horrible mix-up. John was family - even more now than
she'd considered him before - and she didn't want something
like this to be true about her family... whether they were family by
accident of birth or family because they were the people she
worked with every day, it didn't matter to her. "What happened to the
rest of it?"
"I must've flushed it down the sink," he said calmly, looking her
squarely in the eye. She couldn't help but think of the way that
she'd perfected the art of lying while looking someone
squarely in the eye, when she was a teenager.
"Somebody's supposed to witness that, John. You know that."
"Yeah, well," he muttered, then suddenly turned his attention to
Abby and switched to the offensive. "I don't get it, Abby. If
you thought you saw something, why didn't you just come to me
about it?"
"The proper course of action was for her to come to us, John," Kerry
told him gently, trying to keep his anger directed away
from Abby.
"Well, it's ridiculous. Really! Hey, I think I saw you
with a needle once, Abby... maybe you're the addict around
here!" Abby
looked away from him, and Kerry noticed that the woman was blushing
slightly. Interesting.
"So you deny it."
"Of course I deny it... in fact, there isn't even anything for me to deny! If that's all, can I go now?"
"Yes."
"Thank you. And thanks a lot, Abby," he threw back
over his shoulder on his way out. Kerry and Mark exchanged a glance
around Abby, who was wishing by now that she'd never brought up the
damn subject.
"He's lying, Mark."
"I know. But it's Carter. Drugs just aren't what come
to mind, when you think about what might be wrong with him."
Kerry
sighed.
"Yeah. I'll call Legal, and see what our options are."
* * *
She hung up the phone and pinched the bridge of her nose in weary
frustration. Legal had been somewhat less than helpful in
response to her vaguely-worded hypothetical questions... but then, she
supposed she didn't blame them after the headache
she'd nearly dumped on them with Jeanie - they were probably anxious to
avoid another WIS (Weaver-Induced Situation)
at all costs. Mark entered the room. "What did Legal have to say?"
"Not much - I asked them a lot of hypothetical questions, to keep John's privacy intact, so they couldn't tell me a lot, specifically."
"Can we have him take a drug test?" Kerry shook her head.
"We could, but the pain medication he's been legitimately prescribed
will make the test come out positive." Mark groaned, and
Kerry nodded. "Yeah. We have the option of restricting him from seeing
any patients. I think for now that's our best option: there's
no risk of compromising patient care, like what reportedly happened
with the patient who had a sulfa allergy last week, and we're
not really preventing him from working."
"Okay. I'll go tell him the 'good' news." He turned to head for the
door, and stopped. "It feels weird, the thought of having this
kind of conversation with Carter. Like trying to talk about sex with a
little kid," he mused. Jen had made him explain The Birds
And The Bees to Rachel, on the theory that since he was a doctor he'd
be wonderful at teaching his pre-teen daughter... hah!
Kerry smiled.
"I know. Believe me, I'm just as happy not to be the one to do it."
* * *
"Promise me that you won't do anything." Kerry was regretting that
she'd sent Luka to "go help Cleo!" - he was on some kind of
crusade to make the patient (who had, according to Luka, stabbed
herself in order to try to kill her fetus) go through with delivering
a live, healthy baby. So far, he'd exhausted OB (Coburn had refused to
touch the girl against her will without a court order or psych
finding her incompetent), Psych (DeRaad had agreed that the girl was
making a dangerous decision, with regard to her unborn
child... that she was probably in serious need of counseling, but incompetent?
No.), they hadn't been able to get a court order the
normal way, since the courthouse had been closed (although Legal was
working on tracking down Judge Albright - she was one
of the "pet" judges who could always be counted on in situations like
these), and Kerry was worried about the way that Luka
seemed to be becoming more and more desperate for some
kind of action before it was too late.
"No. I'm going to change her mind." Oh, she didn't think she liked the sound of that.
"Luka? Luka!" But he'd already headed back to Trauma 2 - with his
long legs, she didn't have a prayer of catching up to him, even
at full crutchy gallop. "Dammit," she muttered, and entered the lounge,
rejoining Mark, Jing-Mei and Peter. "Sorry. I had to take
care of something." Mark nodded.
"As I was just saying, we have to do this tonight."
"It makes sense," Jing-Mei pointed out quietly. "He's been so
erratic lately, all over the place, that I thought he might be
bi-polar, but it never occurred to me that he might be abusing drugs."
"I still don't believe it," Peter objected. He had been asked to
join them because of his long history with Carter, but he didn't
agree that Carter necessarily had a problem. Sure, the kid had been a
little weird lately - weirder than usual, that is - but all
of them had been a little off since Valentine's Day.
"Peter, he's been using. I don't know how long he's been doing it, but the behavior's been there for a while now."
"Is this the best way to go about it, though?" Jing-Mei objected. "I'm worried he might feel ganged-up on."
"It's either this, or we kick it upstairs to a committee," Mark
countered. "This way, we're approaching him as a small
group -
he has a history with all of us - and it's possible that
we might be able to clear everything up off the record, and
unofficially."
"What about Dr Romano?" Kerry sighed at Jing-Mei's question... she'd been expecting - and dreading - it.
"I don't want to bring him into it, until after the fact... after we have John safely at the center."
"He can be stubborn," Peter reminded her. "He could just decide to walk out."
"And that's something we have to be ready to face. We have to be
compassionate, but make it clear to him: he has only two options,
and that's final."
"How about it, Peter?" Mark asked. "Are you with us?" Before Benton could answer either way, Don Anspaugh entered the room.
"What's the big emergency you mentioned to my secretary?" Anspaugh
had rushed downstairs - he'd had to give up a pheo, and
wasn't in the best of moods.
"It's Dr Carter, Don," Kerry told him. She quickly outlined the plan, and he nodded.
"It's fine by me. We can't afford to lose someone like him - bad
enough he gave up on surgery, but to force him to give up medicine
altogether... that'd be a damned waste."
"Okay," Kerry said. "I'll go get him in a minute, while the rest of
you go to--" For a second, she just couldn't say it. "Go to Curtain
Area Three."
* * *
"John." She saw that he'd finished the stack of charts, and barely
managed to suppress a little sigh of relief - just a little longer
setting
this up, and he would have left... they would have missed him. "Do you
have a minute?" He shook his head.
"No, I don't have a minute. If you're not going to let me see any patients, I'm going home."
"Not... not just yet. I want to talk to you."
"So you're suspending me?"
"Not here. Come on," she told him, and ushered him into Curtain Area
Three. She hated springing this on him in the room where
he'd been attacked... where she'd found both him and Lucy, but both
Mark and Jing-Mei had been of the opinion that the shock
would give the intervention more impact.
The first person he saw was Dr Benton, hanging back from the others
against the far wall, then he saw the others... waiting for him.
Everything always waited for him in this room, didn't it!
It waited, and then it attacked him. "Ohhh, man. I don't fuckin'
believe this,"
he groaned. He turned around, intent on leaving, and Kerry put herself
between him and the door. For a moment she thought he might
actually push her out of the way - she was small enough, and he was
strong enough, that he could easily do it - but he hesitated.
"Carter, just listen to us for a minute," Mark said.
"No! She's wrong - I didn't do it. I'm on prescribed
painkillers for my back, but that's it. I haven't stolen
anything, and I'm doing my
job... is that not enough for you people, or do you want
even more from me? I don't know what you want--"
"Dr Carter! That will be enough! Now you be quiet, and you listen!"
Anspaugh's sharp command cut him off, and he shrugged
broadly before crossing his arms in a tight, defensive pose.
"My van is parked outside," Mark began. "There is a ticket waiting
at O'Hare, to Atlanta, where there's a drug rehab center that
specializes in treating doctors with addiction problems." Carter rubbed
at his eyes, then at his chin, all the while carefully
avoiding anybody's eyes.
"That's great. That's terrific. But I'm taking prescribed
painkillers. I'm not an addict - you're all making
something out of nothing,
and I think you're all perfectly aware of that." He turned back to the
door, but Mark wasn't done.
"All of us have observed changes in your behavior recently, that are
directly related to the abuse of drugs. We can't let you go on
working here - or anywhere - as a doctor; you have two
choices: You can get in the van, go to the airport, check yourself into
the
center, and when you return we'll support you in any way we possibly
can."
"Or I'm fired," Carter filled in, suddenly sounding very weary...
sounding like he'd been struggling for a very long time. Which he
had been, Kerry realized. All of them in the room were
people who John knew and trusted, true, but for the most part they also
knew him well enough that they should have known he was in serious
trouble. She and John, for example, had been friends long
before she'd discovered that they were related - he'd even lived in her
basement apartment for a year! Maybe she would have
seen that he was in trouble, if she hadn't been so busy with her affair
with Luka... if she hadn't been so concerned about
appearances that she'd made him move out of her basement apartment,
back in September.
"Yeah." The regret was apparent in Mark's voice, and Carter suddenly rebelled against it.
"Oh, come on! My behavior? Okay, so I've been a little different
lately, but who wouldn't be? I got stabbed in the fuckin' back,
okay? I remember a couple of years back when you got the
crap kicked out of you in the bathroom, huh? You had a little bit of a
change, too, and nobody threw a big stink about that!"
Mark recoiled slightly from Carter's words and tone, as Jing-Mei glanced
quickly at him and Kerry winced. "My work has not suffered, I have not
endangered any patients, and--" Jing-Mei interrupted him
quietly.
"Last week, you put a patient into anaphylactic shock by giving her Bactrim, after she clearly told you she was allergic to sulfa."
He advanced on Jing-Mei, almost menacingly, and she backed away from
him nervously... normally she would have said that John
Carter was a man who would never harm anyone, let alone a colleague,
but he'd been unpredictable enough lately that she couldn't
honestly swear to that anymore. And that fact alone scared her. "And you
nearly killed a man by leaving a guide wire in his chest!"
He looked around the room. "Is this about making mistakes? Can any
of you say you haven't made a mistake? No, you can't - hell,
I just saved your ass earlier today!" he told Mark
bitterly. "For all the thanks I got--" Kerry interrupted him.
"You've demonstrated classic compulsive drug-seeking behavior, John."
"What? When have I done this?"
"Let's start with the fentanyl that you mainlined in the trauma room earlier today, shall we?"
"And I already told you I didn't do that. If you're going to call me a liar, then just come right out and call me a liar, but I didn't do--"
"Show us your wrists."
"Wha-at?" He laughed in disbelief at her command, and looked around the room. "Looking for track marks?"
"Yes. I am," she told him bluntly. He flashed his wrists at her, then removed his labcoat.
"Shall I roll up my sleeves, too? Take off my pants, so you can check the veins in my legs? Hm?"
"Take off your watch." Her voice had a definite don't-screw-with-me
edge to it, and every person in the room (with the exception
of Carter) felt the momentary urge to remove his or her watch. Even Dr
Anspaugh's hand went to his wrist for a second, and he
nearly laughed at the impulse.
"What?!"
"You heard me, take off your watch." Her voice was gentler now, but
still steely, and Carter laughed softly. His hand touched the
watchband for a moment, then he touched the labcoat he'd draped over
his arm. He remembered how pleased he'd been when Dr
Benton had had his name embroidered on it for him, but now....
"You know what? Forget it. I quit... Aunt
Kerry." He flung the labcoat blindly away from him and stomped out of
the room.
Anspaugh watched him leave - Carter's revelation hadn't sunk in yet for
anybody in the room.
"Is that it?"
"No." Peter, who hadn't said a word throughout the course of this... farce
of an intervention, got up. "Mark, give me the keys to
your van. You tried it your way... now it's my turn." Mark silently
handed over the keys, and Peter calmly followed Carter out
of the room.
"Do you think he can do it? All the rest of us couldn't."
"He has to, Jing-Mei. For John's sake, he has to succeed."
"And what do we tell people, when they ask where he is?"
"All they need to know, Dr Chen," Kerry said firmly, "is that Dr
Carter has taken an extended leave due to complications from
his injuries. Which is, after all, the truth." Jing-Mei sidled a little
closer, and spoke in hushed tones this time, so that Kerry
would be the only one to hear her next question.
"Dr Weaver, if you... don't mind me asking, what did John mean when
he called you 'Aunt' Kerry?" Kerry sighed. She'd been
waiting for that question, ever since John snapped at her and stomped
out of the room.
"I was adopted, Jing-Mei. It turns out that my biological parents
are his grandparents." Jing-Mei stared at her, shocked, for a
moment, and then smiled.
"Of course... it makes sense. I'd met his grandmother before, but...
the thought never occurred to me. I think he's lucky to have
an aunt like you. My aunt usually just asks me when I'm
going to get married and have kids, and give up on this doctor
'nonsense'.
It's nice, that the two of you were already friends, before this. And,
that you and Dr Greene cared enough to set this up for John."
Kerry smiled uneasily.
* * *
She shut off the shower, and stood there for a little longer,
shivering in the relative chill of her bathroom, before she opened
the door of the shower and reached for her towel. It was going to be a
very strange and very lonely two months, with Luka in
Croatia. Even with the postcards and letters he had promised to send
her, she wasn't going to be happy - really happy - until
he was back and she could be in his arms again.
It was an attitude that she'd never understood before in her
classmates and co-workers, and even the occasional friend - she
had certainly always enjoyed sex, enjoyed the physical and emotional
pleasure of being with a man, but had always thought
of herself as being independent and self-sufficient enough to go
through her life by herself, without having to depend on a man
for her happiness. She'd expected to miss Luka a lot, but not this
much! Not to the point that she felt like part of herself was
missing. It was an aspect of being so deeply in love that she wasn't
sure she liked.
* * *
She tossed and turned for about twenty minutes, until she came to
the conclusion that she wasn't going to get any sleep. Not
here, anyway. And it felt funny, wearing anything to bed - she was so
used to Luka removing her nightgown, or t-shirt, or even
one of his shirts, that she kept expecting to feel his big hands
carefully unbuttoning her, or sliding the offending item over her
head, and-- She finally wound up taking a blanket downstairs, and
sleeping on the couch with the TV on. The bed was big
enough that it felt vast and empty without him in it with her, whereas
the couch was small enough that she almost felt like she
had someone next to her.
She lay on the couch, curled up with the blanket partly covering her
and partly clutched in her hands, as an infomercial for
some kind of exercise equipment mindlessly blabbed in the background...
providing nothing but a little light and noise to try
to distract herself long enough to fall asleep. When he'd lived in her
basement, John had tended to do late-night paperwork
in front of the TV... though he'd always taken care to keep the volume
turned down when she was at home and trying to sleep.
She'd once asked him why he bothered turning on the TV, when there was
nothing on but ads for various useless gadgets.
"It's like white noise, Kerry," he'd told her. "If I turned on an
actual show, I'd wind up getting involved in the plot. But this
way, I get a little background noise." She hadn't understood then.
"But why the TV? You could turn on the radio, instead." He'd laughed at the question, and shaken his head.
"Why do you have a TV, anyway, Kerry? I hardly ever see you turn it on."
"I turn it on. Sometimes. Just because I don't sit and stare at it
every night, like a zombie," she'd protested indignantly. Kerry
chuckled softly at that now, and drew the blanket up over her
shoulders, staring up at the ceiling as the perky host continued
to chirp on about the physical benefits of... well, whatever machine it
was. Supposedly it made the "abs" nice and firm. Nothing
she'd be able to use, with her leg, though. And why am I
even thinking about that, she wondered. I get plenty of exercise during
my shifts.
There'd been the expected curiosity today, as to the whereabouts of
Luka and John, but she'd deflected the questions with what
she thought was remarkable aplomb, considering the situation. She had,
however, missed the speculative glances that she drew
from the staff all day.
She fell asleep shortly after the exercise informercial had ended,
and the informercial for the exercise videotapes had begun -
she hadn't set the timer on the TV to automatically shut off, so she
wound up having strange dreams about kickboxing men with
terrific abs, who carried knives that could slice through a tin can and
then cut thin, clean slices of tomato.
* * *
Luka stared out the little porthole of the window, his long fingers
digging nervously into the armrests of his seat. He wished
he'd gone ahead and asked Kerry for a Valium prescription, but he was
aware that he probably would have screwed up and
had a good stiff drink on top of the little pastel tablet... a really
bad idea! Still, it would be nice if they'd start sending
the
drinks cart around soon - he could really use something about now. He
wasn't a big fan of flying... it didn't scare him, not
the
way that darkness or sudden loud noises scared him, he just didn't care
for the idea of hurtling through the air in a big heavy
metal tube that looked like a giant Tylenol with wings.
He loosened his left hand enough to start tapping his fingers
restlessly on the armrest, and the woman sitting next to him turned
and glared at him - he stopped abruptly, and glanced out the window
again. He was pretty sure that the wings were supposed to
be doing that, it just wasn't very comforting to watch! It was a real
shame that the only cancellation had been in coach - he should
have had a little more patience, and held out for something in First
Class: his legs were getting squashed back here, and he was
going to be extremely miserable by the time they landed at Heathrow for
refueling.
"Your first time?" The woman who'd glared at him had apparently
decided that she wanted to find out all she could about him
in the time they were going to be sitting next to each other in this
flying culvert.
"No, I've been nervous lots of times," he cracked, and she laughed.
He smiled half-heartedly at her reaction, then turned his
attention back out the window.
POST-OPERATIVE NOTES: