Una stood in the shadow cast by the broad arch of the gatehouse. The stone structure was nearly complete now. Funny how she hadnโt noticed the progress yesterday or the day before or the day before that when sheโd walked beneath it to and from the hospital. The workers were packing up their tools for the day while the watchman sat nearby on a pallet of stones, wolfing down his supper.
Sheโd chosen this hour with care. Like the workmen, the physicians would soon be leaving for home. The nurses and hospital staff would be busy getting supper to the patients. The gathering dusk would afford her the cover of darkness.
Still, Una hesitated. If Nurse Hatfield or Superintendent Perkins caught her here, theyโd send for the coppers. New York was gone to her, but if she cut her losses now and ran, she just might make it to Boston or Philadelphia and be able to start anew, grifting. Odious and lonely as that life now seemed to her, it sure beat Blackwellโs Island. But she had to tell someone about Conor. If heโd killed Traveling Mike, he might have murdered Deidre and the woman from the Insane Pavilion too. Others at Bellevue might be in danger. Including Dru and Edwin.
Her heart squeezed. What had Miss Perkins said to her? That she ought to try to live up to Druโs estimable opinion of her? Dru always had seen Una in a better light than she deserved. By Unaโs old way of thinking, that made Dru a consummate dupe. But maybe that was also what it meant to be a friend.
Una took a deep breath and quit her place in the shadows. As always, she bade the workmen a friendly hello as she strode past. Best to seem like nothing was amiss.
โNot workinโ today, Nurse Kelly?โ one of them asked.
โMy day off,โ she said, smiling and sliding her gaze to the watchman. Miss Perkins might have alerted him of Unaโs dismissal. Thankfully, he was
too occupied with his evening meal of buttered bread and milk to pay her any mind.
She tried to slip into the hospital through the storeroom on the ground level but found it locked. The next door, a side entry into the southwest wing, was locked too. She didnโt dare use the main entry. No amount of bravado could see her safely past Warden OโRourkeโs office, which sat off the main hall. He most certainly knew about her dismissal and would deliver her to the coppers himself if he saw her.
Left with no other choice, she slipped down the stairs to the basement. The thick wooden door was unlocked, its hinges squealing as she tugged it open. Una didnโt know this part of the hospital as well as the others, and navigating through its dimly lit, dank passages made the hair on her arms stand on end. Dru had deduced that the murderer would know these passages well. Well enough to find Deidreโs cell, sneak inside, and strangle her with the ambulance tourniquet. The thought sent a shiver down her back. Could Conor be lurking here now, watching her?
She tripped over something cold and hard, shrieking at the ensuing clatter. Panicked, she squeezed herself into a narrow alcove beside a mop and broom and closed her eyes. Echoes of the noise bounced between the walls, then faded. Una took a deep breath and forced her eyes open. The hallway was empty save for an upturned pail. โLooby,โ she said to herself and continued on.
Eventually, she found a stairwell that led to the main hospital. Her heart continued to skitter as she climbed the steps. She might know her way around up here, but her chances of being caught were far greater too.
She peeked inside the doctorsโ dining room and the medical board room, careful to stay concealed behind the doorframe. Edwin wasnโt in either room. She slipped back into the stairwell and climbed to the second floor. Sheโd done enough sneaking around with him to know all the lesser-used doors and hallways. To know how each ward was connected and how to slip from one to the other unseen. It was easier, of course, in her uniform to blend in. But there were enough visitors during the supper hour that she hoped to go unnoticed.
When she reached ward nine, she strode boldly in and sat beside one of the sleeping patients, leaning over him and fussing with his blankets as if she were his wife. Nurse Cuddy stood at the main table in the center of the ward, plating supper for the patients. Beside her was Nurse Hatfield.
Una lowered her head. Please donโt look this way, she thought. Please donโt look this way.
โMind the temperature, Nurse Cuddy,โ she heard Nurse Hatfield say. โNourishment is intended to be hot, not lukewarm lest you offend your patientโs stomach and it refuse all food.โ
โYes, Nurse Hatfield. Iโm going as quickly as I can.โ
Nurse Hatfield gave a dissatisfiedย hmmโa sound Una knew all too well. She knew the telltale clap of her footfalls, too, and winced as she heard her approaching. Una took the sleeping manโs hand and began muttering โAve Maria,โ keeping her face downturned. The footfalls stopped at the foot of the bed.
โIs there anything you need, maโam?โ
Una shook her head and continued with the prayer. Her thoughts a nervous jumble, she mixed up a few of the words, but hopefully Nurse Hatfieldโs Latin wasnโt good enough to notice. She got toย amenย and started over. Finally, Nurse Hatfield walked away.
Una waited until her footsteps disappeared into the adjoining ward before looking up. She couldnโt be certain Nurse Hatfield hadnโt recognized her and wasnโt off to alert Miss Perkins, but Una couldnโt turn back now. She caught Miss Cuddyโs eye and waved her over.
โNurse . . . er . . . Miss Kelly, I thought you were expelled.โ
โShh.โ Una glanced over her shoulder to be sure Nurse Hatfield hadnโt returned. โI was.โ
โYou really stole Miss High and Mightyโs scarf, then?โ โNo, but . . . I did take Dr. Pingryโs watch.โ
Miss Cuddyโs eyes went wide, then she chuckled. โThat old curmudgeon had it coming.โ
โHowโs Miss Lewis doing?โ
โTaken a bit for the worse today, Iโm afraid. But sheโs a fighter, that one.โ
Una swallowed and nodded. โIโm looking for Dr. Westervelt. Do you know where he might be?โ
โI think heโs just finishing up in the operating theater. Late case. Skull fracture.โ
Una stood.
โI wouldnโt go up there if I were you,โ Miss Cuddy said. โDr. Pingry and a couple dozen medical students are up there too.โ
She hadnโt thought about that. It wouldnโt be easy to get his attention without anyone seeing her. โCan you run up and give him a message?โ
โNurse Hatfieldโs already on my tail about letting supper get cold. If Iโm not finished by the time she comes back, Iโll get an earful and then some. Besides, you know how fussy Dr. Pingry is about having too many nurses on stage while heโs operating. If it were up to him, not a single one of us would be there.โ
Una glanced at Miss Cuddyโs belly. Sheโd done a good job fluffing her petticoat and tying her apron a few inches higher to hide the growing baby. Una could still use it as leverage, though. But wasnโt it all her angling and bullying and fleecing that landed her here in the first place?
โListen, I know weโre not exactly friends, and I was . . . well, a bit of a bother before. But Iโve got to see him. Tonight. Patientsโ lives may be at risk.โ
Nurse Cuddy frowned and glanced back at the table where supper sat cooling. โAh, fiddlesticks. Whatโs your message?โ
โTell him to wait for me in the operating theater after the case. Iโll meet him there at seven. Tell him itโs important.โ
* * *
Una hid in the storeroom until she heard the bells of nearby St. Stephenโs chime seven. Then she snuck upstairs. Without the gaggle of medical students peering down from the gallery and bright overhead gas lamps illuminated, the amphitheater had the same eerie stillness as the morgue. The metal table at the center of the stage was empty, and the blood-soaked sawdust had been swept from the floor. Twilight filtered in through the high, arching windows, bathing the room in a pale orange glow.
She lingered in the shadow of the doorway, looking for Edwin. She inched inside to see to the very top of the gallery. The crust of a sandwich and a few stubbed cigarettes littered the stairs, but the gallery, like the rest of the room, was empty. Una bit her lip. Nurse Cuddy had delivered him the message, but Edwin hadnโt stayed.
Then the door to the storeroom creaked open. Edwin emerged carrying an unlit candle. The knots that had wound inside her all day loosened. She fought the urge to run to him, taking a measured step into the fading light. โI thought youโd gone.โ
He looked up but didnโt approach her. He knew about the watch, then. She shouldnโt have been surprised. Gossip traveled through the hospital as quickly as it did a whorehouse. She tried to read in his eyes whether or not he believed it, but the light was failing, and all she could discern was a hardness that hadnโt been there before.
He reached in his pocket for a matchbook and lit the candle. โEdwin, Iโโ
โIs it true? Did you steal Dr. Pingryโs watch?โ
She took a few steps closer, stopping when he made no move to do the same. โI . . . I . . .โ She shook the nervous energy from her hands and took a deep breath. โIโve stolen many things in my life, including Dr. Pingryโs watch.โ
โIs it some compulsion you suffer from? Kleptomania, Iโve heard the alienists call it.โ
โNo. I did it to survive, to make a living.โ
Candlelight flickered across his face. He looked pained. Uncertain. โI donโt understand. You come from a good family in Maine. Your father is a
โโ
โMy father is an opium fiend and drunk. Iโm not from Maine, I was born here in the city. I . . .โ A biting dryness had spread across her tongue. She swallowed and forced herself to continue. โIโve been a pickpocket and thief for more than half my life.โ
โAnd then what?โ His voice was thin, strained. โYou just up and decided you wanted to leave behind your life of crime and be a nurse?โ
Una looked down and shook her head. โI got caught up in a little trouble with my crew. The training school . . . it seemed like a good place to lie low for a while.โ
โSo you never actually wanted to become a nurse? It all was justโโhe swept a hand through the airโโa fabrication. A ruse. And youโve been stealing from people the entire time youโve been here?โ
โNo, it was only Dr. Pingryโs watch. And only because . . . because heโs a pompous old cad who deserved it.โ
โAnd Miss Hatfieldโs scarf?โ โThat was a lie.โ
โA lie!โ He laughed, a sharp barking sound that echoed in the high room.
The candlelight wavered. โUna, everything youโve told me is a lie.โ โNot everything. I truly did . . . truly do love you.โ
โIf you loved me, you would have told me the truth.โ โWhy, so you could laugh at me and call me a criminal?โ โIsnโt that what you are?โ
Una shook her head. โI thought . . . maybe because of your father youโd understand.โ
โMy father? He doesnโt have a damned thing to do with this.โ
โNo, youโre right.โ She took a step forward, the heavy clap of her boots joining the fading echo of his laughter above in the rafters. โHe may have been a rake. He embarrassed you and betrayed you, but youโve never known what itโs like to be hungry. Or so cold your fingers and toes blister when you finally get in front of a fire. Youโve never known what itโs like to sleep on the street with nothing but stray dogs for company. Or to have to fight your way free with your fists and nails and teeth from men who mean to hurt you.โ
She turned away from his aghast expression. Nothing offended like the truth. The sky outside the window had bruised over into night. The operating theater felt suddenly cold as if its heat had drained along with the light. Una rubbed her arms. โI didnโt come here to tell you that. But at least now you know.โ
โWhyย didย you come, then?โ Edwin said after a moment.
Una turned back around to face him. โI think thereโs a murderer at Bellevue.โ
He seemed to half-laugh, half-choke. โA murderer!โ
โYes, Conor. The ambulance driver. He killed a man. I saw him.โ โHere?โ
โIn an alley near the Points. He strangled him with a tourniquet from the wagon.โ
Edwin snorted. A vein of wax dribbled down the side of the candle and onto his hand. He dropped the candle, wincing and cursing. The flame flickered out, throwing them into darkness.
Una bent down and groped for the candle. She touched something warm
โEdwinโs handโand felt him pull away.
โI can find it on my own,โ he said and struck a match.
The candle had rolled to the foot of the operating table. He crawled over to it and relit the wick. She watched him clamber to his feet, careful not to burn himself again on the candleโs wax. He brushed his hand on his trouser and then reached down to help her up. His hand lingered a moment on her
arm after she was on her feet as if he couldnโt decide whether to pull her closer or push her away. In the end, he did neither but simply let go.
โI think he killed two patients here at Bellevue too, though. A woman from the Insane Pavilion. And the drunk who arrived the same day as all those men from the factory accident.โ
โShe died from too much laudanum. They found the empty bottle in her pocket, remember?โ
โIt wasnโt but a quarter full. Not nearly enough to kill her.โ โHow do you know?โ
โI gave it to her. In the exam room. Before the orderlies took her down to her cell. She was a woman I knew from the streets. She threatened to expose me if I didnโt give it to her. She was there with me that night in the alley.โ As she said this, Una suddenly wondered if Conor might have recognized her. Deidre had been the one to light the match, after all. He would have gotten a better look at her than at Una.
โThis is ridiculous,โ Edwin said, shaking his head. โYouโre a thief, who stole laudanum for a friend and is now accusing another man of murdering her.โ
โPlease, Edwin, you have to believe me. I think he might kill again.โ โAnd why would he do that?โ
โItโs like you said before, a compulsion. Not to steal but to murder. He thinks theyโre trash, these people. Vermin. A plague on the city. Heโs said so to me himself.โ
โHeโs told you he kills people?โ
โNo, only how abhorrent he finds themโthe poor, the tramps, the streetwalkers.โ
Edwin raked a hand through his hair. โIf heโs so dangerous, why donโt you go to the police?โ
โI . . . er . . . I canโt. Thereโs a warrant out for my arrest.โ
He stared at her as if he couldnโt quite comprehend what sheโd said. โThe man Conor killed, the police think I did it.โ
โAnd did you?โ
โNo, thatโs what Iโm trying to tell you, Conor killed him andโโ She stopped and scrutinized his face. โYou think I could kill a man?โ
โAt this point, nothing you say would surprise me.โ
Una turned away from him again, watching the candlelight flicker against the wall. A sharp, jabbing pain spread through her chest, like a knife wound
cut from the inside out.
โIf you wonโt go to the police, I donโt see how I can help you,โ he said.
The pain didnโt subside, but Una breathed through it and turned around. โI want to confront him. I think I can get him to confess. But I need someone else. A witness. You said I could trust you. You saidโโ Her voice broke. โYou said no matter what.โ
He winced but quickly recovered his hard expression. He thrust the candle into her hand, hot wax spilling on them both. โIโm sorry, Una. I donโt . . . I canโt . . . Good-bye.โ
				




