*** This series was awarded the
Most Literary/Genre Transcending
award in the
2020 Reader's Choice Awards
. Thank you to all my readers and all who voted. ***
Hello friend, and welcome to Chapter Two of my series, Wheels In Motion.
If you haven't read Chapter One yet, that's going to be a problem for you here. Fortunately, you have the power to go fix that right now! Go ahead, I'll be here waiting when you get back. Done? Okay, carry on!
Special thanks to my editor, AwkwardMD, and my beta-readers Salandar and ArmyGal33. This chapter would be a lesser work without their help.
I hope you enjoy. Leave me a comment if you care to.
~~ George Washington Hospital, Washington DC, March ~~
Anytime I got called out to meet a client at George Washington University Hospital, it always tugged my emotions in two directions. On the one hand, being summoned to the hospital meant there was a woman in trouble, one who had likely been beaten by her partner or had an abusive husband she needed help getting away from. Most of my work as an attorney for Lampedo Women's Legal Services was child support cases, divorces for indigent women, or for women whose husbands had done a really excellent job of cutting them off from their jointly-held finances before starting a divorce. Sometimes I handled restraining orders or victim advocacy with the district attorney. Most of that work could be done out of our office on Seventeenth Street or at the city courthouse. The fact that I was going to GW meant some woman's partner had probably hurt her, which made me feel horrible, but helping women in these situations was one of the reasons I signed up for this gig.
On the other hand, chances were good I'd get to see my friend Liz, which always brightened my day.
I never knew her exact schedule; it changed every single week, but given the number of hours she worked she was literally more likely to be in the E.R. than not. I could never get my head around how much she worked. Since I'd come to LWLS, I'd started working more hours per week than I had on Capitol Hill, but that was nothing like what medical residents went through. It seemed designed to break a person, but Liz almost never lacked for a smile.
At the front desk I was told my client had already been admitted upstairs, so I went up to her room to introduce myself. I listened to her story and discussed her options with her. Same story, different day. Her husband had come home drunk and ended up taking out his frustrations on her.
Unfortunately, she seemed to still be in the denial stage, blaming herself for her black eye and her dislocated shoulder rather than the man who had given her both. She didn't want to see the pattern of abuse, and wasn't interested in a restraining order or trying to get away. Yet. It usually took a few incidents before they got ready to pull the trigger. Sometimes they never got to that point before the chance to make that decision was taken from them.
I ended up leaving my card with her and urging her to get help in the form of counseling and, failing that, left a pamphlet with the address for several women's shelters.
I took the elevator to the main floor and walked into the E.R. The evening receptionist recognized me and buzzed me through the door from the waiting area after I flashed her my hospital ID. Down the hallway at the nurse's station, I ran into another familiar face.
"Hey Kat! How's it going?"
Kathryn Hayden spun around in her chair and smiled. "Addison, hey! Don't take this the wrong way, but we should meet up outside of work. Anytime I see you it means it's bad news for some woman."
"I was just thinking about something like that myself. I try to think that anytime I'm here, some woman is getting the help she needs rather than someone's been beat up."
"That's a much better way of thinking about it," she agreed with me.
"Is Liz around?"
"I think she's in O.R. Two. We had a GSW come in about a half-hour ago. She's in there with Dr. Salvatore."
"I swear, you medical folk use more acronyms than we lawyers use Latin. What's a GSW?"
Kat made a face. "Gunshot wound."
"Oh..." I said in a small voice. "Maybe you should just tell her I came by."
"Well, hang on a second." She picked up the phone and made a call. "Hey Gina, is Dr. Charles still in Two? ... Okay, thanks." She hung up, turned back to me, and pointed over my shoulder. "She's just getting out now actually. Go down that hall there, take the second left. There's a locker room. You'll either catch her going in, or you can wait for her to come out if you miss her."
"Thanks, Kat. Oh, by the way, I'm still trying to run into your wife! I keep hearing she's the best litigator in the organization. I want to see her in action sometime, I'm always looking for trial tips."
"I'll tell her you said so. Catch you later."
I followed Kat's directions, made the second left, and froze as I rounded the corner. Liz was sitting in her wheelchair outside two big, swinging doors labeled 'O.R. Two', slumped over motionless, facing the wall with a thousand-yard stare. She had a huge splotch of blood on her shoulder, and both the legs of her scrub pants and her sneakers were drenched in scarlet.
"
Liz
!" I ran over and skidded to a stop in front of her. "Liz, are you okay?! Are you hurt?!"
"Hmmm?" She shook her head and looked up, taking a second to focus on my face. "Oh, hey! What's up?"
"Forget about me! Are you okay?"
She answered just before panic overcame me. "What? Oh..." She looked down at the crimson mess on her scrubs. "No, th-this isn't mine." She shook her head again, and this time, when she looked at me again, she seemed more present. "Sorry, it's fine. This is from a patient. I need to change actually. Come on, we can talk in the locker room."
"But--" I started, but she'd already grabbed her wheels, given herself a push and was gliding across the hall to a door labeled 'Staff Lockers - Women'. She pushed the handicapped button to swing the door open and I followed her into the locker room. She rolled up to a big plastic bin labeled 'biohazard' and started stripping off her clothes and throwing them in the bin.
"Liz, what happened?!" I asked.
"Gunshot victim. Had to do an emergency thoracotomy, and his aorta popped... kinda all over me. I had a face shield and gown, but it was like getting hit with a hose." She leaned down, pulled off both her sneakers and socks and dumped them in the bin.
"Oh. Is he going to be okay?" I asked.
She didn't look up. "No, he's dead. He died about four minutes ago."
"Oh Liz, I'm so sorry. Are you okay?"
"I'm fine," she said, flatly.
"Uh huh, sure... You're fine. Can't look me in the eye. You're half-naked and it doesn't seem to bother you, and your underwear has blood on it by the way." I pointed at the shoulder strap of her sports bra. She looked down at where I'd gestured.
"God dammit! This was one of my most comfortable bras! Fuck!" She whipped it off and slammed it in the bin. "Hand me those wipes!" she said, pointing to a Clorox wipes dispenser on the counter next to me. She snatched them out of my hand and started angrily wiping one over her naked shoulder.
I averted my eyes until she had grabbed another top from a stack of scrubs on the counter and yanked it over her head. She kept up a litany of curse words under her breath. Some of them seemed to be in another language. She jerked fresh scrubs up her legs, then started trying to work them up under her butt, making sounds of frustration.