Robin Cook – Harmful Intent

worse, someone on the ball might get suspicious. Disgusted, Trent tossed the vial into the trash.

“Dammit,” he thought as he grabbed another vial of Marcaine. He’d have to try again. As he repeated the process, he became more and more intense, angrily cursing when even the third attempt ended in failure. Finally, on the fourth try, the puncture site sealed properly; the curved tip maintained its smooth hemispherical contour.

Holding the ampule up to the light, he inspected it carefully. It was close to perfect. He could still tell that the tube had been punctured, but he had to look carefully. He thought it might have been the best one he’d ever done. It gave him great satisfaction to have mastered such a difficult process. When he’d first thought of it a number of years ago, he’d had no idea if it would work. It used to take him hours to do what he could now do in minutes.

Once he had accomplished what he’d set out to do, Trent returned the vial of yellow fluid, the.45 pistol, and the remaining vials of Marcaine to the hiding place. He replaced the false back of the cabinet and put the glasses back.

Picking up the doctored Marcaine vial, he gave it a good shake. The drop of yellow fluid had long since dissolved. He turned the ampule upside down, checking to see if there was a leak. But the puncture site was as he expected it to be: airtight.

Trent gleefully considered the effect his vial would soon have in St.

Joseph’s OR. He thought particularly about the high-andmighty doctors, the havoc he would wreak in that lofty quarter. In his wildest dreams, Trent couldn’t have settled on a better career.

Trent hated doctors. They always acted as if they knew everything, when in reality many didn’t know their ass from a hole in the wall, especially in the Navy. Most of the time Trent knew twice as much as the doctor did, yet he had to do their bidding. In particular, Trent loathed that true pig of a Navy doctor who’d turned him in for pocketing a few amphetamines. What a hypocrite. Everybody knew the doctors had been making off with drugs and instruments and all sorts of other loot for years. Then there was that real pervert doctor who complained to Trent’s commanding officer about Trent’s alleged homosexual behavior. That had been the straw that broke t he camel’s back. Instead of going through some stupid court-martial or whatever the hell they were planning to do, Trent had resigned.

At least by the time he got out, he was properly trained. He

had no trouble getting nursing jobs. With nursing shortages widespread, he found he could work anywhere he pleased. Every hospital wanted him, especially since he liked working in the OR and had experience in that area from his stint in the Navy.

The only trouble with working in a civilian hospital, aside from the doctors, was the rest of the nursing staff. Some of them were as bad as the doctors, particularly the supervisors. They were always trying to tell him something he already knew. But Trent didn’t find them as irritating as the doctors. After all, it was the doctors who conspired to limit the autonomy

Trent had had to practice routine medicine in the Navy.

Trent put the doctored ampule of Marcaine in the pocket of his white hospital coat, which hung in the front closet. Thinking about doctors reminded him of Dr. Doherty. He clenched his teeth at the thought of the man. But it wasn’t enough. Trent couldn’t contain himself. He slammed the closet door with such force it seemed to jar the whole building. Just that day, Doherty, one of the anesthesiologists, had had the nerve to criticize

Trent in front of several nurses. Doherty had chastised him for what he referred to as sloppy sterile technique. And this was coming from the moron who didn’t put on his scrub hat or surgical mask properly! Half the time

Doherty didn’t even have his nose covered. Trent was enraged.

“I hope Doherty gets the vial,” Trent snarled. Unfortunately, there wasn’t any way he could ensure Doherty’s getting it. The chances were about one in twenty unless he waited until Doherty was scheduled for an epidural. “Ah, who cares,” Trent said with a wave of dismissal. It would be entertaining no matter who got the vial.

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