My Secret Wife. Cathy Thacker Gillen

My Secret Wife - Cathy Thacker Gillen


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tingled at the warmth of his breath against the side of her face. “I’m no expert.” She had no medical background whatsoever.

      “But you’re a woman,” Gabe said, coming even closer. “And a very easy to talk to woman at that.” His eyes caressed her face. “I think our Jane Doe might really warm to you.”

      Maggie had to admit she would like to help someone in need of assistance herself. She also noted immediately upon entering the corner room that the eighty-something patient was a lovely lady, even in a hospital-issue gown. Her long white hair had been caught in an elegant bun at the back of her neck. She had a delicate, aristocratic bone structure, a petite slender frame and exquisitely manicured hands that—Maggie was willing to bet—had never seen a dishpan or a toilet-bowl brush.

      She was sitting up in bed, her faded sea-blue eyes open wide, her cheeks flushed with fever.

      “He’s coming to get me, you know,” Jane Doe told Gabe and Maggie the moment they walked in the room.

      “Who’s coming?” Gabe asked, as he took her chart off the holder on the wall next to the door.

      Jane Doe smiled serenely and clasped her hands in front of her. “Why, my sweetheart, of course.”

      “What’s his name?” Gabe asked gently, as he discreetly checked her chart.

      “Oh, I can’t tell you that,” Jane Doe said vehemently, as Gabe set the chart down on the end of her hospital bed.

      “Why not?” Maggie asked, moving to the opposite side of the bed, so she could be close to the woman and yet out of Gabe’s way.

      “Because our love is very private,” she said seriously, as she looked up at Maggie. “And I wouldn’t want anything to happen to it. Besides, I don’t really think my mama and papa would approve if they knew what I was doing.”

      Gabe took the stethoscope out of his pocket and put it in his ears. “How old are you?” Gabe asked, as he listened to the woman’s chest.

      Jane Doe gave him a reproachful look as Gabe moved from her front to her back. “A lady never tells her age.”

      Gabe listened to each of her lungs. “Do you know what day it is?”

      “Saturday,” Jane Doe claimed triumphantly.

      Maggie and Gabe exchanged worried glances over Jane Doe’s head. It was Tuesday.

      “And the year?” Gabe persisted, as he put his stethoscope away and picked up her chart once again.

      “I wish you people would stop asking me that,” Jane Doe complained, sighing loudly. “It’s 1938, of course.”

      Gabe nodded agreeably and wrote something on her chart.

      “Is my driver coming for me soon?”

      Gabe looked up with a charming smile. “We’d love to call him for you, if you would just give us his number,” Gabe said.

      “No.” Jane Doe clammed up again. “I can’t do that.”

      “All right. You just rest now.” Gabe patted her arm. “And call the nurses if you need anything.”

      “All right, doctor.” Jane Doe settled back against the pillows and closed her eyes.

      “Is she okay?” Maggie asked as soon as she and Gabe slipped from the room.

      Gabe frowned as he headed for the nurses’ station at the other end of the hall. “I don’t like the sound of her lungs. I’m going to order a chest X-ray. She might have pneumonia.”

      Even Maggie had been able to tell Jane Doe was running a fever. “Would that make her confused?”

      “It could. The combination of fever and illness can do that, especially to older people. I just wish we could find her family—they must be worried sick about her.”

      Maggie nodded. “What are you going to do?”

      “The only thing I can do,” Gabe sighed wearily. “Contact the media. I hope they’ll come out and do a story on her in time for the eleven o’clock news.”

      “SO WHAT’S WRONG with this Jane Doe?” Lane Stringfield asked Gabe as the two of them met in the reception room of Gabe’s office some twenty minutes later. The local TV station manager had arrived ahead of his camera crew and reporter. And Gabe had an idea why. He hadn’t come for the story—Lane had staff to do that for him—he had come to talk to Gabe. Probably about his estranged wife.

      “She definitely has a sprained ankle. She fell on the sidewalk in the historic district late last night. Someone on Gathering Street found her around four this morning. It looked as if she had been there for some time. She was confused and dehydrated, in considerable pain and shock—and she also seemed to be running a little fever, which may have been what caused her to lose her balance and fall in the first place. We were hoping a day in the hospital and a little sleep would make her lucid, but when she woke up a little while ago she was as confused as ever and has stayed that way. I was brought in to evaluate her. I think she may be developing pneumonia—I’ve ordered a chest X-ray and other tests to help us make the diagnosis.”

      “Is she senile?” Lane Stringfield asked, still making notes on the small leatherbound pad he had taken out of his coat pocket.

      “I don’t know,” Gabe said frankly. “It wouldn’t appear so. Usually senile patients aren’t nearly as well-groomed as this lovely lady is. Which makes me and the other doctors and nurses on staff think her confusion is something new. But to properly pinpoint the reason for her confusion we need to know who she is and what her medical history is. Which is where you come in. We simply want to run a brief picture of Jane Doe in her hospital bed and ask anyone with information about who she is to come forward.”

      “I gather you’ve already talked to the residents on Gathering Street.”

      “The police have,” Gabe affirmed seriously. “No one in the neighborhood knows her.”

      “All right. I’ll instruct my crew as soon as they get here and supervise the filming of the story. In the meantime, as long as we have a few moments,” Lane continued, looking straight at Gabe. “I want you to tell me what’s going on with my wife.”

      MAGGIE HAD BEEN SITTING quietly waiting for Gabe to be able to take her home until this point, but now she figured she really ought to be going. Not wanting to witness what might be a very delicate and/or embarrassing conversation between the two men, she rose to her feet. Gabe grabbed her hand and tugged her back down beside him on the tweed sofa. “You can stay for this,” he said firmly, still holding onto her hand.

      Suppose I don’t want to stay, Maggie thought rebelliously. But given the grip he had on her, she knew she wouldn’t get out of there without a tussle, and there was no reason to indulge in anything that undignified.

      “Why was my wife at your beach house Sunday night?” Lane demanded, point-blank, the time for niceties and business obviously over.

      Gabe shrugged and looked at Lane as if Penny’s presence in Gabe’s house overnight were nothing for her husband to be concerned about. “She came over to talk to me.”

      “With a suitcase in tow,” Lane pointed out unhappily.

      Gabe spread his hands wide. “She didn’t plan to spend the night there. She was going to go to a hotel. But then I got called back to the hospital. She was having trouble finding a hotel room—this being the height of the spring tourist season—so I said she could just stay there.”

      Lane’s dark eyes narrowed. “Are the two of you having an affair?”

      “No. In fact, I tried to get her to stay with you, or at least not to do anything rash.”

      “And?” Briefly, Lane looked hopeful.

      Gabe frowned, perplexed. “And all I know is that she got a phone


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