
“Where can I get in touch with you if I remember anything else about my NDE?”
“You can have me paged,” Joanna said, and fled. She didn’t even check to see who was paging her till she was safely out of the room. It was a number she didn’t recognize, from inside the hospital. She went down to the nurses’ station to call it.
“Do you know whose number this is?” she asked Eileen, the charge nurse.
“Not offhand,” Eileen said. “Is it Mr. Mandrake’s?”
“No, I’ve got Mr. Mandrake’s number,” Joanna said grimly. “He managed to get to Mrs. Davenport before I did. That’s the third interview this week he’s ruined.”
“You’re kidding,” Eileen said sympathetically. She was still looking at the number on the pager. “It might be Dr. Wright’s. He was here looking for you earlier.”
“Dr. Wright?” Joanna said, frowning. The name didn’t sound familiar. From force of habit, she said, “Can you describe him?”
“Tall, young, blond—”
“Cute,” Tish, who’d just come up to the desk with a chart, said.
The description didn’t fit anybody Joanna knew. “Did he say what he wanted?”
Eileen shook her head. “He asked me if you were the person doing NDE research.”
“Wonderful,” Joanna said. “He probably wants to tell me how he went through a tunnel and saw a light, all his dead relatives, and Maurice Mandrake.”
“Do you think so?” Eileen said doubtfully. “I mean, he’s a doctor.”
“If only that were a guarantee against being a nutcase,” Joanna said. “You know Dr. Abrams from over at Mt. Sinai? Last week he suckered me into lunch by promising to talk to the hospital board about letting me do interviews over there, and then proceeded to tell me about his NDE, in which he saw a tunnel, a light, and Moses, who told him to come back and read the Torah out loud to people. Which he did. All the way through lunch.”
