Authors: Angela Hunt
A
fter two hours of no news, Briley sends Timothy home to bed. A few moments later, she looks up to see one of the E.R. doctors approaching. “You're the one who came in with the prisoner?”
She stands. “I'm her lawyer. And her name is Erin Tomassi.”
The doctor shrugs. “Of course. Well, she's awake and she's talking. As far as we can tell, she's suffered no permanent effects from the drowning.”
“Did you say
drowning?
”
“Attempted murder, actually. One of the EMTs told me they found her beside a laundry tub. Fortunately, the water and the room were coldâ¦and low temperatures activate the diving reflex, which causes the heart and lungs to shut down. They worked on her for thirty minutes before they got a pulse, but I don't believe she's going to suffer for it.”
“Are you kidding? No brain damage?”
“None apparent. The patient is perfectly coherent, but pneumonia is always a risk. We'll want to keep her overnight to make sure she's come through without injury to her lungs or kidneys.”
Briley sighs in gratitude. “Thank you.”
“You're welcome.” The doctor grins and backs away. “But I wouldn't be surprised to learn that your client has nine lives.”
A few minutes later, a nurse allows Briley to slip past a watchful police officer and step into the cubicle where Erin is propped up on a gurney. The nurse holds a finger to her lips, acknowledging the late hour, but Briley feels as if she's
moving in a timeless dimension. The clock has stopped, and she can barely remember the last time she ate.
The cubicle is quiet and warm. Erin, neatly tucked in and covered with a blanket, has a clip on one swollen finger and a machine recording her pulse and blood pressure. A pastel hospital gown has replaced the jail uniform. An IV stand holds a bag of fluid that drips into a vein on her right hand. A set of handcuffs links her wrist to a railing on the bed. Her forehead is bruised, as are her arms and hands.
Briley sits on a small stool and studies her client. No permanent effects, the doctor said. Nothing physical, perhaps, but how many nightmares will Erin experience after this?
Briley leans toward the edge of the gurney and drops her hands onto the railing. When her ring hits the metal with a soft chink, Erin stirs. Her fingers move, her eyes open, then she looks at Brileyâand smiles.
“Hi.”
“Hi yourself,” Briley says. “How are you feeling?”
Erin's eyes widen. “She's gone.”
“Who's gone?” Briley moves closer. “The person who did this to you?”
Erin shakes her head in an almost imperceptible movement. “Lisa Marie. She's gone. I can feelâ¦emptiness. Like when you lose a tooth.”
Briley remains silent, not sure how to respond. Could the doctors have been wrong about the brain damage? Is Erin delirious?
A nurse appears in the curtained opening, a determined look on her face. “Your five minutes are up,” she says, her voice firm. “Our patient needs to rest.”
Briley squeezes Erin's hand, then smiles a farewell to the nurse. By this time tomorrow, if all goes well, her client will be a free woman. But what price has she paid for her freedom?
Â
Briley steps out of the cubicle, grateful for the policeman on duty. Erin is finally in protective custody. She has a
vigilant nurse, a uniformed cop, and a lawyer to watch over herâbut the lawyer is hungry.
She presses her hand to her midsection as her stomach reminds her that hours have passed since she ate breakfast. In search of food and coffee, she follows signs for the hospital cafeteria and finds it on the first floor. Most of the chairs are stacked on tables, but a pair of doctors in green scrubs sits in a far corner, eating sandwiches from cellophane wrappers. A custodian mops the floor near the cash register and makes small talk with the cashier.
Briley walks down the line of packaged foods and realizes she's so hungry she could eat two of everything. She didn't get to finish her lunch, and she was in such a rush to type up the motion and get it to the judge that she didn't take time for dinner.
She picks up a tuna sandwich, a package of cookies, and a fruit salad. After pouring herself a cup of coffee, she moves to the cash register, where the dark-haired woman stops talking to the custodian long enough to ring up her purchases and hand her a receipt. Briley takes her tray and walks toward the only table with an available chair. A man in a white coat is sitting alone at the neighboring table, and on second glance, he looks familiar.
“Excuse me.” She stops in the aisle. “Were you treating an E.R. patient earlier tonight?”
The man's look of concern lifts the wrinkles etched into his cheeks. “Is that young woman a friend of yours?”
“She's a clientâ¦and yes, she's a friend.” She gestures to the empty seat at his table. “Would you mind?”
“Make yourself at home.” He lifts a brow when he sees her tray. “Better not let the nutrition police catch you eating dinner so late. Nothing heavy after seven, that's what they're always saying.”
“I don't pay much attention to the nutrition police.” She sits and drapes the strap of her purse over the back of the chair. “Lawyers don't have to be careful about what they eat.”
“Because they can always sue their doctors.” The man smiles, but his eyes are serious.
Briley tugs at her sandwich wrapper. “I don't handle malpractice suits. I'm in criminal law.” She takes a big bite and leans back to savor the mingled tastes on her tongue. Hard to tell what sort of doctor her companion might beâhe's wearing a blue scrub suit under his white coat, but no hat. No stethoscope around his neck. No junk food on his tray, only a coffee mug.
She swallows and tilts her head to peer at his nametag: Eric Baron, Neurology.
“Neurology?” She lifts her coffee cup. “They called you in to check Erin's brain function?”
He smiles at her. “You're a quick study.”
She shrugs. “I'd say it was a no-brainer, but I imagine you hear that a lot.”
“You're right on that score.” His eyes soften. “The patientâshe's in some kind of trouble?”
Briley pulls the plastic top off her fruit salad. “She was assaulted at the jail. Technically, she was murdered, but the EMTs revived her. And that poses an interesting questionâcan a man be tried for murder if his victim revives?” She shakes her head, still stunned by the night's events. “I can't believe she's okay. Apparently someone held her underwater in a tub or something. The E.R. doc said the cold preserved her brain function.”
He nods. “The mammalian diving reflex. When the face is submerged, the reflex slows the heartbeat and redirects the flow of blood to the heart and brain. We've revived people who've been underwater for more than half an hour.”
Briley swallows a bite of banana. “It's all so hard to believe. I mean, I just spoke to herâ¦though what she said didn't make much sense.”
“Wasn't she lucid?”
“Yes, butâ” Briley hesitates, then decides to take a risk. “Are you in a hurry to rush off somewhere? Because I'd
really like to talk about this, but I don't want to keep you from your family or your work.”
“I'm in no hurry.” The doctor taps his steaming mug for emphasis. “What's on your mind?”
She can almost see Timothy's teasing smile as she frames her thoughts.
What, you asked a perfect stranger about your client? Aren't you getting a little personally involved?
All right. She wouldn't have done this last month, but she needs to do it now.
“Dr. Baronâ” she wraps both hands around her foam cup “âhave you ever heard of chimerism?”
A line appears in his forehead. “Like an animal with the DNA of another species?”
“Like a human who is two fused twins in one body. A woman with two different types of DNA.”
He picks up his mug. “It's not exactly common.”
“According to a geneticist, my client is a chimera. Or was. Or not. But the thing is, she had this invisible friend in her childhood. That's not so odd, right? But the friend, Lisa Marie, seemed to stick around and talk to my client in her dreams. I thinkâof course, I'm probably wrongâbut I think Lisa Marie might be the chimera. Is that even possible?”
The doctor sips his coffee, then tilts his head. “Two twins in one bodyâ¦two separate souls. I've often wondered what happened to the souls of twins in a case of fetus
in fetu
â”
“Don't forget, Doc, medical jargon isn't my first language.”
“Sorry. Fetus
in fetu
occurs when one twin is absorbed by the other, but the separate body remains. I read about a recent case just the other day. Apparently a thirty-six-year-old man in India went to the hospital for a suspected tumor in his bellyâthe growth was huge. When surgeons opened the tumor, they discovered assorted body parts, including teeth and bones. Apparently a mutated twin had been developing inside the patient for more than thirty-six years.”
A rise of nausea threatens to choke Briley, forcing her to swallow and look away from her food. “But that tumor wasn't a living personâ¦was it?”
“It certainly wasn't alive once they cut it out. So if it had a soulâ¦I suppose it left the body when death occurred.”
She lowers her fork as her appetite shrivels. “If it had no brain, maybe it didn't have a soul. After all, the soul is our consciousness. Once you lose thatâ”
The doctor waves a finger. “Not so fast. Do you lose your soul when you go to sleep? Or when you lose consciousness under anesthesia?”
“All right, I spoke too soon. The soul must be part of the brain. And since my client only has one brain, she should have only one soulâ¦.”
“Let me tell you a story.” Dr. Baron lowers his mug. “Once I had a patient referred to me by oncology. By the time I was called in, the cancer that began in his lungs had invaded his brain. At the end, I knewâeveryone knewâhe was little more than a shell. His brain had been completely eaten up by the cancer. Scans revealed that no healthy tissue remained. He could no longer move, smile at his wife, or respond to stimuli. I checked on him on a Thursday morning and noted agonal breathingâthe deep, gulping breaths that signal the beginning of deathâso I told the nurse to summon his wife and children.”
Briley shakes her head, suspecting what will come next. “That must have been hard for themâ¦and for you.”
“Dying isn't easy for anyone. But I knew the family would benefit, even though he wouldn't be aware of their presence. I stopped by his room later that day, thinking I'd be able to comfort the family. I found my patient smiling at his wife, patting his children's hands, and telling them all not to worry. The sound of their voices had brought him out of his coma, and from someplace he summoned the strength to tell them goodbye. Then he slipped away again and expired within the hour.”
Briley stares, her heart thumping against her rib cage. “You must have been wrong about his brain.”
“I wasn't. Autopsy proved what I suspected. The brain no longer existed.”
“Then whatâ”
“The soul, my dear. His soul struggled to reach his loved ones. Did you knowâ” the doctor leans forward “âthat the body loses approximately twenty-one grams of weight at the moment of death? It's not the weight of air in the lungs, either. Some have theorized that twenty-one grams is the weight of a soulâthe invisible essence that doesn't reside in any particular organ. If your client is two individuals, one living beneath the skin of another, why shouldn't she have two souls?”
“It's impossible.”
“It's inexplicable. But we doctors deal with the mysterious every week.”
Maybe lawyers do, too.
“In any caseâ” Dr. Baron idly turns his coffee cup “âyou might want to advise your client to remain quiet about her chimerism. There are doctors who would love to put her through tests to ascertain exactly where the anomaly occurs, and I doubt your client would appreciate being used as a human lab rat.”
Briley lifts her hand. “What if⦔
“Hmm?”
“What if one of the soulsâ¦leaves?”
For an instant, the doctor's face clouds, then it clears. “Ah. Your client died.”
“But she was revived.”
He considers the question, his forehead creasing, then he nods. “Maybe only one soul wanted to return. Think about it. If you had to subjugate every thought, feeling, and action to someone else, even someone as close as a twin, would you fly free if given the opportunity?”
Briley frowns. “But flyâ¦where?”
The doctor smiles. “At this point, my dear, that's a question only faith can answer.”
Â
Briley returns to the waiting room outside the emergency unit and settles on a couch with vinyl cushions. In the chairs closer to the admissions desk, a mother frets over her crying infant, a man cleans a bloody cut on his face with a towel, and a middle-aged woman wearily holds an ice pack to her temple.