Chromosome 6 by Robin Cook. Chapter 20, 21

slid the glass open.

‘Sorry,’ she said. ‘I didn’t see you arrive. Are you checking in?’

‘No,’ Jack said. ‘All my bodily functions are working fine at the

moment.’

‘Excuse me?’ the woman questioned.

‘We’re here to see the hospital, not use its services,’ Jack said.

‘We’re doctors.’

‘This isn’t the hospital,’ the woman said. ‘This is the Inn. You can

either go out and come in the front of the building or follow the hall

to your right. The hospital is beyond the double doors.’

‘Thank you,’ Jack said.

‘My pleasure,’ the woman said. She leaned forward and watched as Jack

and the others disappeared around the corner. Perplexed, the woman sat

back and picked up her phone.

Jack led the others through the double doors. Immediately, the

surroundings looked more familiar. The floors were vinyl and the walls

were painted a soothing hospital green. A faint antiseptic smell was

detectable.

‘This is more like it,’ Jack said.

They entered a room whose windows fronted on the square. Between the

windows were a large pair of doors leading to the outside. There were a

few couches and chairs on area rugs forming distinct conversational

groupings, but it was nothing like the lounge they’d initially entered.

But like the lounge, this space had a glass-fronted information

cubbyhole.

Jack again knocked on the glass. Another woman slid open the glass

partition. She was equally as cordial.

‘We have a question,’ Jack said. ‘We’re doctors, and we’d like to know

if there are currently any transplant patients in the hospital?’

‘Yes, of course, there’s one,’ the woman said with a confused look on

her face. ‘Horace Winchester. He’s in 302 and ready to be discharged.’

‘How convenient,’ Jack said. ‘What organ was transplanted?’

‘His liver,’ the woman said. ‘Are you all from the Pittsburgh group?’

‘No, we’re part of the New York group,’ Jack said.

‘I see,’ the woman said, although her expression suggested she didn’t

see at all.

‘Thank you,’ Jack said to the woman as he herded the group toward the

elevators that could be seen to the right.

‘Luck is finally going our way,’ Jack said excitedly. ‘This is going to

make it easy. Maybe all we have to do is get a look at the chart.’

‘As if that’s going to be easy,’ Laurie commented.

‘True,’ Jack said after a moment’s thought. ‘So maybe we should just

drop in on Horace and get the lowdown from the horse’s mouth.’

‘Hey, man,’ Warren said, pulling Jack to a stop. ‘Maybe Natalie and I

should wait down here. We’re not used to being in a hospital, you know

what I’m saying?’

‘I suppose,’ Jack said reluctantly. ‘But I kind of think its important

for us to stick together in case we have to mosey down to the canoe

sooner than we’d like. You know what I’m saying?’

Warren nodded and Jack pressed the elevator call button.

Cameron McIvers was accustomed to false alarms. After all, most of the

time he or the Office of Security was called, it was a false alarm.

Accordingly, as he entered the front door of the Inn, he was not

concerned. But it was his job or one of his deputies’ to check out all

potential problems.

As he crossed to the information desk, Cameron noted that the lounge was

as subdued as usual. The calm scene bolstered his suspicions that this

call would be like all the others.

Cameron tapped on the glass, and it was slid open.

‘Miss Williams,’ Cameron said, while touching the brim of his hat in a

form of salute. Cameron and the rest of the security force wore khaki

uniforms with an Aussie hat when on duty. There was also a leather belt

with shoulder strap. A holstered Beretta was attached to the belt on the

right side and a hand-held two-way radio on the left side.

‘They went that way,’ Corrina Williams said excitedly. She lifted

herself out of her chair to point around the corner.

‘Calm down,’ Cameron said gently. ‘Who exactly are you talking about?’

‘They didn’t give any names,’ Corrina said. ‘There were four of them.

Only one spoke. He said he was a doctor.’

‘Hmmm,’ Cameron voiced. ‘And you’ve never seen them before?’

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