Edge of Mercy (A Kate Reid Novel Book 11) Robin Mahle (web based ebook reader txt) đ
- Author: Robin Mahle
Book online «Edge of Mercy (A Kate Reid Novel Book 11) Robin Mahle (web based ebook reader txt) đ». Author Robin Mahle
âWhat about Quinnâs replacement? Have you put together your wish list?â
âI have a couple of names in mind, although I havenât spoken to the entire team about them, mostly just Reid. Not even the prospective candidates themselves.â
âAnd sheâs handling the transition well?â Cole added. âSheâs been under Scarboroughâs wing for some time. Iâm not sure how sheâll do now that sheâs out of his shadow.â
Fisher smiled. âIâm not sure sheâs out, not completely, anyway. But I have no doubt Reid will pick up the ball and run with it. I think this is the opportunity she needed, frankly. Quinn wasnât the right mentor for her and the relationship with Scarborough only complicated matters. No. Reid will be just fine and sheâs open to whoever the candidate is.â
Cole sat up in his chair. âKeep me informed on the progress of your investigation.â
âI will.â Fisher stood and headed toward the door but stopped. âThere is one other thing.â He turned back. âWhat I just said about Scarborough and Reid. About it having complicated matters.â
âYes?â Cole pressed on.
âI think that could happen between Duncan and me. I donât want it to.â
Cole nodded. âI am aware of your relationship and you might be right, Cam. Look, I understand the demands of this job better than you might know. The toll it takes on any relationship is great. Let alone on a relationship with a member of the team.â He sighed. âThe closeness that can grow out of this way of life is almost inevitable. But if there was to be another situation like the one between Scarborough and Reid, Iâm not sure the team could repair itself. Do you understand?â
âYou arenât sure I can be an effective leader as a result of my relationship with Duncan.â
âAfter the hoops I just had to jump through to keep Scarborough here and Reid off the chopping block? I donât want to go through that again. I wonât sit back and watch my agents implode. What Iâm saying is, this is all still fresh, and youâll forgive me if Iâm gun-shy on the matter. All I ask is that you take my words under advisement.â
Fisher nodded. âI will. Thanks, Chief.â
Our Lady of Mercy Hospital was just ahead. Walsh pulled into the visitor parking lot and cut the engine. âThe school insists all records were transmitted here. All we can do now is talk to these guys and get their take on Bishop.â
âWe donât have a warrant to request Bishopâs records here,â Kate added. âI wasnât sure weâd get this far. But now that we have, how do we go about this?â
âWe can ask questions about Bishop. They can choose to answer them or not. But yeah, we wonât get his personnel records.â Walsh unlatched his seatbelt. âThen again, we may not need them.â
Kate opened the door and they walked to the hospital entrance. She was ready to haul in Theodore Bishop for the murder of at least five people. The profile on this guy was almost textbook. Angel of Death. God complex. Whatever anyone wanted to call it. Theodore Bishop killed those people because he wielded the power. Kate didnât like to come to such a certain conclusion without so much as having spoken to the suspect. In this instance, she was positive about who Bishop was. She just needed the proof to back it up.
Almost from the moment Walsh said the name, Theodore Bishop, the nurses and doctors who worked with him wore fear on their faces. But fear of what? Bishop himself or had they feared they were complicit in his actions similar to what Kate believed had happened at the medical school?
âAnd you were partners with Bishop during your second year of residency?â Walsh asked the man.
âI was. We werenât friends, not by a long shot. Bishop tried to undermine me every chance he got. He wanted the fellowship, which wasnât even an option until third year. I donât know. He had a hero complex or something. Like he had to be the guy who got it right every time. Thatâs not the way this works, you know?â The doctor dropped his cigarette into the ashtray around the back of the hospital.
âHe was ultra-competitive. Is that what youâre saying?â Kate pressed on.
âOh, it was more than that. Look, I heard some shit about him. Didnât pay much attention until this one time when we were working on a case together. Easy. Some college kid came in with appendicitis. Simple stuff, right? Well, Iâll tell you, the kid ended up with almost complete organ failure within two days of his surgery. Bishop insisted it was an infection from the op.â He swatted away the notion. âThat was bullshit right there. No, man. It wasnât an infection. It was Bishop.â
âAre you saying you believed Dr. Bishop did something to the patient?â Kate asked.
âHell, yeah. Not that anyone believed me. Oh, I took it to the top. They were all like, âweâll look into it.â And âthatâs a serious allegation.â Well, no shit itâs serious. I mean, really?â
âNo one did anything with it?â Walsh added.
âNope. Not a damn thing.â
âWhy do you think that was?â Walsh continued.
âLawsuits. Plain and simple. The hospital pays a shit ton of money for medical malpractice. No one wanted to face that.â
âSo what did the patient do?â Kate asked. âDid he sue the hospital?â
âI have no idea. I was told it wasnât mine to deal with and I should keep my nose out of it, so I did.â
âInteresting.â Kate looked to Walsh and back to the doctor. âThank you for your time.â She handed him a card. âIf you think of anything else, or maybe if youâd be good enough to make a statement when the time comesâŠâ
âLook, Agent Reid, Iâm an attending now. I, uh, Iâm not sureâŠâ
âDonât worry about it.â Walsh placed his hand on Kateâs shoulder.
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