Chapter 43
43. She woke up.
Coraline stepped for a day more. The bullet had grazed her thigh bone, nearly shattering it, so her
recovery period was going to be long. She was to stay in the hospital for at least a week.
Coraline’s parents called me immediately to deliver the news of their daughter awakening, and at that
point, I was in ss.
With everything that was happening, the summer semester was ending, which meant there was a set of
examinationsing up. The campus was, therefore, abuzz with activity, with lecturers working to finish
all the study material for the semester and students functioning solely on coffee and sugar in order to
cram whatever they could in order to sit for the exams and get some decent grades. King’s College was
a verypetitive university, and with everyone attending being the best brains in the country, students
had to go above and beyond to get on par with the sybus.
Fortunately, my ss was ending when they gave me the call. I, of course, could not take it without
risking the wrath of the lecturer so I waited until the ss was over. By then, the Grangers had already.
tested me with the good news, but I took a call anyway, purely to hear Mrs. Granger sob in relief because
I could not believe the text.
“She’s a bit jumpy, and loud noises along with sudden movements are likely to scare her ording to the
doctors,” Mrs. Granger tells me as soon as intercepts her at the hospital lobby after racing back to the
ndestine city, “so we’re being really cautious around her.”
“Does she remember what happened? I’ve heard that sometimes victims forget the incident of their
trauma.” I say, stepping into the elevator with her.
“Well, no. She remembers it clearly,” Mrs. Granger looks taken with grief, “and I can see the fear in her
eyes. Oh, who did this to her, Jace? Who hurt my little girl this badly?”
“I don’t know, Ms. Granger,” I sigh, “but you can’t imagine the number of times I’ve asked myself the
question.”
I did not discuss the conversation Gerald and I had with the detectives back in the police station under
the detectives’ instructions. Gerald informed me that the detectives had gotten the warrant they were
waiting for and had taken the security footage in to go through them. The detectives visited Zelt Tech
again to get some statements from the employees about Coraline. They also visited her university, her
teacher, and her other friends. They were following every lead they could find.
“The police are stretched thin,” Gerald had told me, “And they really can’t prioritize this case over the
others because there are people who were actually killed. So, with the circumstances at hand, they’re
doing their best, albeit slowly. It’s not likely that our own case will be solved soon.”
“Well, Gerald, what are we supposed to do until then? How are we supposed to keep our own people
safe?” I’d asked, “I really don’t want to see youe to pick me up yet another day only to hear about
somebody else getting shot. Jesus, Gerald, these are innocent people with families and loved ones.
They can’t lose their lives!”
“Right now, we can only make sure that their safety would be ensured while they are at work. But after
working hours, there is nothing we can do. It’s their responsibility to ensure their safety after that.”
Even if I was loathed to admit it, I knew Gerald was right.
Coraline sits on her bed when I enter her hospital room, looking worse to wear. There are dark bags
under her eyes, contrasting frighteningly against her skin that had be pale and oddly translucent as
if she had lost a lot of blood. Her blond hair was dishwater colored rather than its normal golden hay hue,
and her wide eyes looked dull, and maybe even frightened. She couldn’t move from her bed, not yet,
because
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of the area of injury. She would be bedridden for some time.
As soon as I see her, I could not help the sigh of pure relief that escapes me, and her eyes meet mine.
“Jace.” She utters my name in greeting. The instant relief on her face upon seeing me is exhrating,
and for some reason, my heart flutters at her expression.
“Coraline,” I breathe, and crossed over to her bed, “Oh, you have no idea how good it is to see you
awake. It’s been too long…I am so sorry about what happened.”
“Jace,” without letting me talk, Coraline encircles her fingers around my wrists and brings me toward her.
She seems so small like this, I realize, and so delicate. It’s disconcerting, and totally at odds with the
woman she usually is, “it’s not your fault, what happened. You’re not to be med. I’m just so d to see
that none of their bullets caught you.”
I can’t help it anymore. I move closer to Coraline, fully into her personal space, and bury her in a bear
hug.
Coraline enthusiastically returns my embrace.
“I thought you would die,” I whisper, “there was so much blood.”
“Mom and dad told me everything,” she replies, and moves back to look into my eyes, “and I mean
everything, including what you did with the nurse Thank you so much for sorting that one out, Jace.
You’re ….you’re a really good friend.”
I shake my head, “anyone would’ve done it, Coraline It was only right.”
She shoots me a mysterious, “I don’t think just ‘anyone will, but thank you just the same.”
Then her eyes harden, “I know the police are already on the case. Do they know who it was?”
I gulp at that, wondering how much I should tell her. Considering how she was the one who got shot, I
think she has every right to the information I have at hand.
“The graffiti on the wall where you got shot was a quote from Shakespeare’s Othello,” I confess, “drawn.
only a day before. The quote is rted to revenge. They heavily suspect one person.”
Coraline’s eyes widen.
“Oh.”