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"My, my, we're looking well," she declared ignoring Grant. "I'm glad you're finally awake. He told us to call him the minute ... They're all saying you and your mother must have special genes. You've both been such terrific patients. He'd been keeping you sedated but he discontinued that medication this afternoon. He wanted you to wake up with your mind clear."
"Well, I'd really like to get up and go to the bathroom and get something to eat," Ally said "Mainly, I just want to get out of this bed for a stretch before I start developing bedsores. I'm feeling strong, for now at least. Can you unhook some of these wires and suction cups? And I certainly don't need that IV. I'm so hungry I could inhale a quart of ice cream in one gulp."
"Yes, of course," Marion said and began dismantling the intravenous tubes. "We only monitor you and hydrate you when you're not conscious.
The standard procedure is to let you get up and start getting some exercise as soon as possible. You should be careful, though, because at this point you're not as strong as you think. Changes are taking place in your body that require a lot of your energy. If you feel up to it, you could walk around for a couple of minutes, but you shouldn't let yourself get tired."
As Marion continued now removing the taped-on sensors, Ally looked up and saw another uniformed nurse standing in the doorway. She also was middle-aged, with prematurely gray hair, and she was holding a syringe.
"May I come in?" she asked. "At this stage he needs a blood sample every three hours. Just twenty cc's."
Ally watched as the new nurse quickly and deftly took a small sample of blood. Then she capped it off and turned to leave.
"I need to centrifuge this immediately."
And she was gone.
Then Marion finished removing the IV tube and catheter and all the taped-on electrodes.
"If you want to get up and use the bathroom and walk around a little, I'm sure it would be all right. I'll come back in a few minutes and bring you a tray with a nice healthy bowl of broth."
The moment she was out the door, Ally turned to Grant.
"I want to see Kristen. Now."
"I thought the first thing you wanted was to go to the bathroom."
"I'll get to that. You said she was downstairs somewhere. How do I get there?"
"It's in the security zone," he said. "You're not authorized--"
"You're a big shot around here. Winston Bartlett's right-hand flunky.
So why don't you authorize me yourself."
"Ally, you know I can't do that."
"Then take me there."
"I don't want to see Kristen anymore," he declared, biting his lip.
"She's completely lost ... everything. I could deal with it until I saw her this morning. It's just too much."
"Has he let her mother see her?"
"Are you kidding? Letting that psycho anywhere near her is the last thing anybody's going to do."
"Then get me in, dammit."
"Ally, forget about it."
"Why?"
He hesitated, as though marshaling his thoughts.
"Sis," he said finally, "there're only so many risks I can take for you, and they have to be about something that matters. Forget about Kristen. Nothing can save her now. But I'm offering to help you get out of here before they go any further. I can't be seen helping you, but they've started you down a road that you don't want to go, believe me.
I got you into this, but if there's still time, I want to try to help get you out."
She didn't know what was going on, but if Grant of all people was freaked about what Karl Van de Vliet had in store for her, then maybe she'd better take it seriously.
But she was through relying on him for anything.
"Okay, but I want to call somebody to come and get me."
"Are you referring to that reporter, by any chance?" he asked. "The guy who drove you here? W.B. hates him."
"Yes." She was puzzled that he would know about Stone. "How do you--"
"Bartlett has him."
"What do you mean?"
"He's radioactive now. I actually kicked him out of here myself yesterday. This is not a moment for press freedom. He could screw up everything. W.B. said he's doing a book. No way is that guy going to be allowed human contact with anybody till the sale of Gerex is in the bank. He had a run-in with Bartlett in the city and they took him somewhere. I don't know the location. And I don't want to know."
"Oh my G.o.d."
"He's most likely okay. It's just temporary safekeeping."
"All the more reason I'm not leaving till I see Kristen."
"There's no way you're going to get into where they're keeping her, Ally."
"All right." There was no arguing with him when he was this freaked.
"What do you want me to do?"
He pulled a plastic card out of his jacket pocket. It was white, with THE GEREX CORPORATION embossed on one side and a magnetic strip on the other.
"This is a master key to this place. Because of security, you can't just go out the front, through the lobby. But if you take the elevator down to the first floor of the bas.e.m.e.nt, where the lab is, there's a fire exit there, in the back, that opens onto a path down to the lake.
If you'll go out that door and wait right there, I'll come around and get you to the parking lot. I know a way that will miss their surveillance cameras. I'm scheduled to go back to the city now and I'll take you with me."
"But if I wanted to see Kristen?"
"You'd have to go into the laboratory and then take the elevator that's inside there. Don't even think about it. It's way too risky."
She looked at him, trying to gauge his sincerity. Had he become a new man, finally caring about somebody other than himself? Or had a glimpse of whatever had happened to Kristen scared the h.e.l.l out him and awakened the specter of being part of a felonious enterprise?
"Why are you doing this?"
"To make up for a few things," he said, turning to leave.
With that, he walked out and quietly closed the door.