knew, were brilliant in their fieldsâDr. Eleanor Jahnke, in quantum physics, and Dr. Carl Donovan, in genome research and biogenetic engineering. But, as far as he was concerned, they were both miserable human beings.
Because there was nothing he could do to ease the desolation heâd glimpsed in Kendraâs dark eyes before sheâd looked away, he simply said, âGet some rest, Agent Donovan.â
Kendra struggled against the humiliation and odd ache in her chest that had nothing to do with her injuries. When she finally lifted her gaze, she was surprised to see that she was once again alone in the room.
And she still didnât know what had happened to Sir Jeremy Greene.
The next four days passed in a haze of tests and physical therapy. Kendra hated her weakness, hated how her limbs felt sluggish and ungainly. Unnatural . Every movement she forced herself to make was like pushing a giant boulder up a mountain, leaving her shaky and disoriented afterward, and in desperate need of a hospital bed.
Luckily, she had one available.
Leeds did not return, although she did hear that he checked on her regularly. As promised, Carson arrived to debrief her, solemnly informing her of the body count, which included Allan OâBrien in addition to Sheppard and Vale, and Danny Cortez from Team One. Two men from Valeâs SWAT team were also killed. Bill Noone had taken a bullet in the leg, but he was alive.
Terry Landon didnât count.
Kendra thought of OâBrien, and his young wife who was now a widow, and wanted to weep. And to shoot Terry Landon all over again. Fucking bastard.
Carson left before she could ask him about Greene, and in truth, by the time their session was over, she was too drained to formulate any coherent questions anyway. She wondered if some of that lassitude was her mood, or if theyâd added morphine to her IV bag after all.
Certainly time seemed to stretch out and then snap together, blurring and bleeding from one moment to the next, from evening to morning to afternoon. She never seemed to be alone. The nurses sheâd heard talkingâAnnie (a motherly figure with sunny blond curls bouncing around a surprisingly youthful face) and Pamela (far less motherly, more angular with short salt-and-pepper hair)ânow buzzed in and out of her hospital room like busy bees, checking her vitals, giving her little paper cups of pills, and accompanying her on her journey two floors below for tests, and then dropping another floor to the physical therapy department.
âFor someone who was in a coma a couple of weeks ago, youâre doing amazingly well,â Dr. Campbell remarked as he came into the room one morning. He picked up her chart from the foot of the bed and gave it a brisk assessing glance before smiling at her. âYouâve got a visitor.â
âOh?â
âKendra.â
Her heart gave a lurch as her eyes swung to the door.
The man standing in the threshold was tall and thin, and so much older than she remembered. His once black hair was now streaked lightly at the temples with silver, and there were lines carved on his handsome face that she couldnât seem to recall. Itâs been more than a decade.
Yet as he stepped into the room, the expression on his face, in his thickly lashed, dark, dark brown eyesâ her eyes, she realized with a weird sort of clutch of her heartâwas sharply familiar, cool detachment laced with dissatisfaction.
Some things never change.
Seemingly oblivious to the undercurrents swirling in the room, Dr. Campbell continued to smile. âItâs good of you to visit Kendra, Dr. Donovan,â he said. If he thought it odd that the man hadnât visited or called when his daughterâs life was hanging by a thread, he gave no sign. âIâll give you some privacy.â He strode to the door, paused. âKendra is doing remarkably well, but please donât overtire her.â
âI