doped up, missing the point.
“Did you hear any details about their robbery?” I asked Bob. “Maybe it was the same kids.”
“The woman didn’t say. I just know they’re closed for a few days. A lot of broken glass.”
“Not us. We’ll be open tomorrow,” Kar Yee said.
Like hell we were. “Let’s not worry about that right now,” I told her.
A loud knock rapped three times on Bob’s front door. The door slammed shut and heavy footfalls sounded. I peeped my head out into the hallway. Lon’s honey-brown head bobbed in out of shadows. Oh, thank God. Just the sight of him filled me with relief.
“Hey,” I called out as he approached.
“You all right?” he said as he reached for me.
“I’m fine.”
He held my face in his hands and tilted it up for his inspection, then pulled me against him. I hugged him briefly then led him into the room. “She’s in here.”
“Hello, Lon.”
Lon nodded a polite greeting. “Bob.”
“Hey,” Lon said to Kar Yee, towering over her. “Hanging in there?”
“This? Pfft. It’s nothing,” Kar Yee said with a silly grin. “How’s my favorite pirate captain? Did you come to give me something nice to look at? A little pirate booty?” She snorted a laugh at her own joke.
Lon stared at her in horror for a moment then said, “What’s she on?”
“Dilaudid,” Bob answered from the computer. “She’s just experiencing a mild euphoria. It should wear off soon.”
“Where’s my future boyfriend?” she asked Lon. “Did you leave him at home?”
“He’s got school tomorrow.”
“Sorry to interrupt, but here it is,” Bob said, looking at the x ray of Kar Yee’s chest on his flickering computer screen. On the wall above, several framed certificates hung in black frames. Universities and state licenses . . . all belonging to his father, Hector Hernandez. Bob had gone to medical school when he was younger—he was in his thirties now—and dropped out. My guess was that he had a good deal more medical knowledge than the average person, but healing surface wounds or simple bone breaks was one thing. Messing around with hearts and brains and complicated diseases was another matter altogether.
Lon and I looked at the screen over his shoulder. “Find anything?”
“Look, right here. Clean fractures”—his fingernail tapped the screen twice—“one and two. You were right, Kar Yee. Both clavicles.”
“Can you heal them?” she asked.
Bob’s mouth twisted to one side as he smoothed a palm over his dark hair. “I healed Tamille Jackson’s broken toe two weeks ago.”
“So, that’s a yes?”
“Doesn’t look like any bones shifted,” he mumbled to himself, squinting at the computer screen. “And I think it usually takes two or three months for this kind of fracture to heal naturally. I might be able to cut that down to a few weeks.”
“Weeks?” She sounded horrified.
Bob’s brow furrowed. “I don’t know. You could feel back to normal in a few days, but you certainly aren’t going to be able to unload a truck at the bar.”
“Cady unloads the trucks,” she said, all matter-of-fact. “How long before I can move my arms?”
Bob looked at me and shrugged, the grinning Tiki masks on his Hawaiian shirt moving up, then dropping.
“Probably a few days, yeah, Bob?” I said, rolling my hand in an encouraging gesture out of Kar Yee’s sight.
“Definitely,” he said, shaking his head with a panicked look on his face.
Didn’t matter if it was true or not. It was just what she wanted to hear.
“Let’s get to it, then,” she said. “I’ve got to work tomorrow.”
The only work she’d be doing was sleeping. I wondered if I could pay Bob to sit with her and make sure she didn’t leave her apartment—I certainly couldn’t babysit her and take care of all the crap at the bar. I still had to call the employees who were scheduled to work and tell them what happened. Find someone to clean up the red latex pool on the floor.