Split Second

Split Second Read Online Free PDF Page A

Book: Split Second Read Online Free PDF
Author: Cath Staincliffe
hand; her daughter’s touch was warm, the skin smooth and soft, unlike her own, roughened from chores and her habit of biting the skin around her nails.
    The doctor was young, Oriental-looking, Chinese or Japanese, maybe Korean. Dr Liu. She spoke softly and Louise had to crane her neck to hear her above the white noise spitting in her head.
    ‘Luke is still unconscious,’ the doctor said. ‘There’s a fracture to the skull so we want to do a scan to check on that; there is a chance we will need to operate, to reduce any swelling and alleviate the pressure on the brain.’
    Louise felt her nose burn, bit her cheek; the tang of blood made her mouth water.
    ‘He’s breathing on his own, which is a good sign,’ the doctor went on, ‘and there is nothing to signify damage to any other internal organs.’
    ‘Will he be all right?’ Louise asked, the words sounding brittle and dusty. Broken leaves.
    ‘We’ll know more when we have the scan results.’
    Which was no answer at all really.
    ‘Can’t you wake him up?’ Ruby asked.
    ‘The body can better repair itself in the unconscious state. It’s best if he wakes up naturally. He is being hydrated with a drip. You can go in to see him before we take him up. It looks bad.’ Her eyes held Louise’s, black like jet beads. ‘It may be a big shock.’ She glanced sideways at Ruby, then to Louise, an unspoken question.
    ‘Rube, if you—’ Louise began.
    ‘I wanna see him.’
    Oh God. Louise barely knew him. His face was misshapen, swollen and still bloody. A lump the size of an orange on his left cheek and his right eyelid torn, the lashes, his long curling lashes, gummy with blood. His lips cracked, slightly parted, his front teeth at the top missing. The ferocity of it ripped through her in a wash of terror and rage. Oh my poor lamb. How frightened he must have been.
    ‘Oh God,’ Ruby breathed.
    That he should suffer so. Someone had done this to him, her blessed, troubled boy. Louise turned away, her hand shielding her eyes, her chest aflame. Ruby was crying quietly, sniffling. Louise hugged her, murmured words of solace, then stepped away, studied her son. She wanted to scoop him up, cradle him on her knee and sing to him, comfort him. Or shake him awake, force him to his feet, clean his wounds. She wanted to kiss him, stroke his hair, but his head was so raw, so exposed, she was fearful she might hurt him. His hands lay at his sides, the drip going into his left arm; she picked up his right hand, hot and limp, pressed her mouth against his palm, tasted salt there, smelt iron. She tried to replace the bloated face with his usual profile, that of his father Roland. The Nigerian student who had spent a summer working in the care home where Louise had her first job. Roland, who broke her heart. Wooed her with his flirting and his patter, promised her the earth, then when she fell pregnant told her he was engaged to a girl back home and he’d be marrying his intended as soon as he graduated. Roland the rat, sleek and smooth.
    ‘He’ll be going up for the scan in a moment,’ Dr Liu said. A knock on the door made them all turn. It was the police.
    He took them into a side room. Louise hated leaving Luke, but the police officer said it would only be for a few minutes.
    ‘What happened?’ She had agreed to tell the officer anything she could to help, but she was also frantic to know how it had come to this.
    ‘He was attacked by three youths earlier this evening,’ the man said.
    A sea of fury swelled inside, the waves smashing against the rock of her heart. ‘Where? Why?’
    ‘Kingsway. We don’t know why yet.’
    ‘Because he’s black?’ Louise said. Pity and grief and hurt swirling through her. Laced with guilt too, because her first thoughts had been that Luke had done something silly and got himself hurt. But someone had done this to him. Deliberately battered him.
    ‘We’ll be looking into that as a possibility.’ The man had his notebook open; he
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