俺の黄金の魔女
Gender: None specified
Rank: Prosecutor
Joined: Thu Mar 01, 2007 12:36 am
Posts: 730
Hope this one is long enough to make up for the delay!
Struggling Against Gravity
Chapter Seven
Phoenix squirmed and wrinkled his forehead when the sunlight glanced across his eyes. His left hand flew upwards to shield them from the unwelcome brightness; the other grabbed blindly for sheets that still felt somewhat stiff and alien against his skin. Successfully seizing a loose fistful, he dragged them upwards until they obscured his face up to his hairline, but it didn't help as much as he had hoped. There was something fundamentally irritating about the blend of regal pink and iridescent yellow.
An earlier, unwelcome intrusion of the sun was one of many things that had been difficult to adjust about waking up in another person's bed; in his own apartment, the window was situated such that the morning light never hit higher than his waist. Personally, he thought that this was more than a fair trade for the plush carpets and fancy kitchen—and it was beyond Phoenix why an apartment occupied by a single man would require more than one bathroom—but he supposed he wasn't the one paying for it, so his opinion didn't count for much.
Though it wasn't really as bad as it could have been: being in a third story apartment gave Phoenix a slight respite from a full on glare. Even though the windows in Edgeworth’s room were huge—nearly floor to ceiling—the surrounding buildings were tall enough to block most of the rays until the sun rose to a certain height or angle. Like, unfortunately, now.
“You need curtains…” Phoenix mumbled, rolling over. The light was considerably less invasive when attacking the back of his head rather than his face, he observed.
Edgeworth’s reply, when it came, was farther away than Phoenix expected but no less tart. “You always say that.”
And you never do anything about it, Phoenix inwardly retorted. He lifted his head and briefly squinted at the form of the other man across the room before falling back onto the pillow. This routine was as familiar as his perennial complaint—the sound of footsteps against the hardwood floor; the closet rolling open; rustling of fabric against fabric as Edgeworth tied his cravat. Somewhere before and after, the sound of water running and the hum of an electric shaver; hopefully Edgeworth hadn't made enough of a mess in the bathroom last night that it wouldn't be unbearable to use when Phoenix felt inclined to wake up more fully...
Remembering suddenly, his eyes flew open and he pushed himself up again. “Wait a second, you’re not actually going in today, are you?”
Edgeworth paused—almost guiltily, Phoenix thought—in putting on his jacket. “I feel better.”
It’d be hard for him to feel any worse than he did last night, Phoenix thought, inspecting Edgeworth from head to toe. He really did look a little more lively, if still as pale, but the bar hadn't exactly been set high. Rubbing his eyes and shaking his head, he glanced around—the glass of water on the bed stand, still half-full when he had last seen it before, had been emptied now. That was promising.
“Do you need any help? Breakfast or anything?” he asked.
“No,” Edgeworth replied. “I'm fine. It's not as though I've been rendered an invalid, Wright.”
You could stand to be a little less defensive, though.“If you say so,” Phoenix said. “But let me know if there's something.”
Edgeworth seemed embarrassed by the scrutiny; the dresser on the other side of the room abruptly held an inordinate amount of interest for him. His hand plucked at the cuff of his suit distractedly—whether out of frustration or trying to hide how bad he really was feeling, Phoenix couldn’t tell.
“I said I'll be fine,” he repeated. More awkward fumbling at invisible lint, then, “But... thank you for your concern.”
The condition you were in, Phoenix thought,
you'd have to have been blind or stupid not to be concerned...***
When Edgeworth hadn’t answered the door last night, Phoenix had paused only briefly before digging into his pocket and using his index finger to fish out the ring of keys in an easy, practiced moment.
Where before there had only been two on the steel loop, home and the office, there was now another, newer addition. This was the first time he had the chance to use it to enter the apartment—he usually left later than Edgeworth, so he was normally the one left to lock up—just looking at the jagged piece of metal instantly brought forth the memory of receiving it.
Phoenix had been halfway through swallowing a bite of sandwich when Edgeworth had held it out to him, with a coached, casual
‘I thought you should have this’. His unfortunate reaction had caused a quite a degree of alarm from Edgeworth, who rose from his seat, and drew several stares from the surrounding diners.
When he'd managed to free his windpipe of the last bits of bread and cheese, Phoenix closed his fingers around it, and managed a raspy,
'thank you.' He left it lying in his pocket until he'd gotten home that day. It didn't
quite hold the same impressive sheen as his attorney's badge—an unreasonable standard for anything to be compared against, probably—but he still took a few minutes to admire the shape and feel of it against his palm.
The words sprang into his mind, vision blurring just for a moment, as he locked it onto his key ring:
this is real. The
click as Edgeworth's door sprang open was equally real as he withdrew his hand and let the key slip back into his pocket, leaning forward to peer inside. Despite all of that, he wasn't quite to the point that he felt wholly comfortable just walking into the other man's home without permission or acknowledgment.
He wouldn’t have given it to me if he didn’t want me to use it, Phoenix reasoned as he stepped into the foyer and closed the door behind him.
“Edgeworth?” The low light seemed to swallow his inquiry as soon as it left his lips; the only reply was the subliminal hum of the stainless steel refrigerator on the other side of the kitchen.
Maybe he’s still on his way home… But Edgeworth almost always called when he was going to be delayed, and Phoenix's phone had been silent the entire evening.
Phoenix bent down to remove his shoes before tiptoeing past the kitchen and directly into the expansive living room. Even in socks and with the ticking of the stately grandfather clock against the far wall, the sound of his footsteps against the wooden flooring were loud to his ears—the sound of an interloper instead of an occasional inhabitant.
He gave the far side of the room a cursory inspection, eyes drifting past the dark widescreen television and the equally dark matching leather chair and L-shaped sofa that curved around it. To the right of that, the abstract art that took up a large portion of the wall lost much of its punch; without the lights on, its somewhat disturbing slashes of red tempered into a set of inky black lines.
Phoenix briefly considered stretching out on the sofa to wait for Edgeworth’s arrival, but even in the quiet and the darkness, the sense that
someone—Edgeworth or not—was there permeated the air like a static cling raising the hairs on his arms. He flipped on the lights to avoid tripping over something and made a beeline down the wide hallway. He stopped just in front of the first doorway.
The room at the end of the hall, Edgeworth’s study, was technically a safer bet. Even though Edgeworth had started keeping, in Phoenix’s opinion, saner hours at the office, Phoenix couldn’t count the number of times he’d woken up and stumbled to the bathroom, only to notice his companion’s side of the bed was empty and cold. Invariably, if Phoenix stuck his head out to check where Edgeworth had drifted off to, the telltale line of light radiating from underneath that same door gave him his answer.
It was that lack of light that made him turn his immediate attention to the bedroom instead.
It was dark there, too, but by squinting Phoenix could make out a huddled lump in Edgeworth's bed. As he crept closer, the form became more definite—definitely Edgeworth.
All that was visible was the very top of his head, tufts of hair haphazardly bunched in a way that informed Phoenix that the prosecutor hadn’t been out of bed all day. Phoenix let out a breath he hadn't even known he was holding.
A more comprehensive inspection proved that Edgeworth was still breathing.
At least he isn't dead. Sick, maybe? It'd have to be something really bad if it kept him away from work... He reached out a hand reflexively, but his fingers closed back against his palm halfway across.
I should probably just let him sleep... he wouldn't want me to see him like this, anyway, knowing him... It was possibly the idea of having wasted an entire cab fare for nothing, but something balked inwardly at the thought of just walking out the door and going back home when Edgeworth was in this state. He'd spent enough miserable nights on his own with a cold to know how lonely it got when you were sick by yourself. Briefly considering options, Phoenix figured that the prosecutor wouldn't mind too much if he camped out in his living room, at least.
Mind made up, just as he was about to leave the room, he heard the blankets shifting behind him. Edgeworth’s face appeared, squinting and blinking disapproval in the light streaming from down the hall.
“Is that you, Wright?” he said, surprisingly coherent, if somewhat muffled.
“Yeah,” Phoenix said, moving closer again. “Sorry, I didn’t mean to disturb you.”
“You didn’t,” Edgeworth replied cryptically, wincing as he shifted to a somewhat upright position. A glanced at the digital display of the alarm clock on the bedside table didn't seem to improve his mood. “I’m sorry. I meant to call you earlier.”
“Don’t worry about it,” Phoenix said. Even in the semi-darkness, Phoenix could see that Edgeworth’s pajamas were sticking to his abnormally grey-tinged skin. His breathing seemed labored, tight with suppressed pain. “Hey, are you all right? Should I get you some water or something?”
“Don’t bother,” Edgeworth replied, struggling back under the covers. “I just need to sleep it off.”
Phoenix supposed that Edgeworth turning his back to him most likely signified the end of their conversation.
Now that I've had a better look, I’m not sure all the sleep in the world is going to help with whatever he has. Even with that, Phoenix still felt a strange need to 'bother' with
something, after seeing the other man so obviously suffering—whether Edgeworth himself wanted to be nursed back to health wasn’t really the point. In spite of Edgeworth's protests, he left the bedroom towards the steel-edged, rather imposing kitchen for a glass of ice water.
After going back to place it on the nightstand, then, on further thought, redoubling back for a coaster when he remembered the death glare he’d gotten last time he set his drink on a piece of Edgeworth's furniture without one—Phoenix scrambled himself a dinner of eggs and settled down to watch the evening news on Edgeworth’s widescreen TV. It wasn’t quite the fresh seafood along the beach he’d been looking forward to, but Phoenix liked to think that years of perfecting the technique of living alone had left him with the ability to fry a mean egg or two.
Carrying out his normal evening routine in a different apartment took some getting used to, but it wasn’t long before he was stretched out on the leather couch just as lazily as he would his own. The glow of the television cast long shadows against the furniture as it flickered across Phoenix’s face.
He thought he’d turned the TV down to a whisper, but apparently even that was enough to rouse Edgeworth from his non-slumber. He shuffled into the living room a couple of hours later, half hunched over, and gave Phoenix a look that said
‘you’re still here?’ before settling down into the overstuffed leather chair without a word.
“Feeling any better?” Phoenix asked at the next commercial break, moving his eyes from the screen.
“No, not really,” Edgeworth said, directing a glare towards his abdomen, as though he could somehow will himself back to health by using the same techniques he would on an unhelpful subordinate.
“I could fix you something to eat,” Phoenix offered, muting the television and turning his full attention on Edgeworth.
As long as he likes scrambled eggs or canned soup. He fully expected his offer to be instantly rebuffed, so he was surprised when Edgeworth seemed to consider.
“It’s probably not a good idea,” he finally decided, wearily but not unkindly. “I’m not particularly hungry.”
“Well, I’ll get you another glass of water, at least,” Phoenix said.
He sloughed off the couch and walked into the kitchen, shaking away a slight prickle in his feet that told him he’d been supine for too long. When he returned, Edgeworth straightened for a moment to take the proffered glass and cup it in both hands, as if he didn’t quite trust himself to manage with one. He took a quick gulp and then another, with a slight grimace that was more reminiscent of foul-tasting medication than ice water.
“What do you think it is?” Phoenix asked when he was done swallowing.
“The stomach flu. There was a pretty bad strain of it going around the office a few weeks ago.”
I guess that’s one of the perks of being a one-man agency—you don’t catch what everyone else gets. Before Phoenix could respond verbally, Edgeworth set down his half finished glass of water with a quiet ‘thank you’ and tottered back towards his room down the hall. Phoenix watched him for a few moments to make sure he got back in one piece, then turned back to the television.
Once the news finished and most of the late night programming was changing over to reruns of old sitcoms from half a century ago and infomercials, Phoenix was faced with another dilemma—or rather the one he’d faced earlier: stay or go.
He turned the pros and cons over for a few moments before giving a mental shrug. If he’d already stayed this late, it didn’t seem like there was much point in going back now.
When Phoenix crawled into bed next to Edgeworth, the other man stiffened slightly before gingerly maneuvering himself to face Phoenix.
“I don’t think you want what I have,” he murmured.
“I’ve probably already got it,” Phoenix said.
All things considered... “Suit yourself,” Edgeworth said, with exactly the same inflection someone else might use to say ‘you’re an idiot’.
An hour later Phoenix had to inwardly agree with Edgeworth’s implied statement about his mental capacity. He flinched as he heard Edgeworth’s feet hit the floor and a mumbled expletive escape the prosecutor’s lips as he limped towards the bathroom for what had to be the fifth time that night.
Then the sound of retching began.
All he had was a glass of water! There can’t be anything left! Phoenix protested, trying to drown the sound out under a layer of pillows.
He felt torn between two options when the other man returned to bed and pulled the covers up to his chin, obviously miserable and almost shaking: the still slightly alien desire to pull Edgeworth closer, and the desperate longing to grab a pillow and retreat to the relative sanctity of the couch in hopes of stealing at least a few hours of sleep.
In the end, he didn't quite do either, but he stayed, at the very least.
He thought it was around three or four when he felt Edgeworth relax at last, as though the string of pain making his body tense had finally snapped. His breathing evened out and Phoenix, with no small measure of relief, felt his own respond in kind.
***
“I just wanted to make sure you'd make it through the night,” Phoenix said. “It wasn't a big deal.”
Really, I didn't really do anything besides get you some water and invade your space...“You won't be saying that when you're retching in your own toilet a few days from now,” Edgeworth suggested, rather ominously.
Gee, thanks.“It's not like I haven't taken care of sick people before,” Phoenix shrugged. “I'm used to it.”
Edgeworth raised his head to match gazes with him for possibly the first time all morning. “Maya, you mean?”
“Huh?” Phoenix said, briefly thrown. “Oh... yeah.” Edgeworth didn't seem to take nearly as much delight in the situation as Maya had, he recalled. The spirit medium showed no particular shame at exploiting her run with a common cold to demand that Phoenix bring her soup, crackers, magazines, and operate the television remote at her command. All day.
Edgeworth's hands continued to work in repetitive motions about his cravat. “How has Maya been, by the way?”
Phoenix frowned.
That's kind of a strange place for the conversation to turn, but...“The last I heard of her, she seemed to be doing okay,” Phoenix answered. His brow furrowed further as he tried to think back. “It's kind of been a while, though... why do you ask?”
Something flickered across Edgeworth's face, too quickly for Phoenix to get a good look at, let alone properly read into. “No reason. I was just wondering.”
Cravat fixed securely in place—truthfully, it had been for a while, but Edgeworth finally seemed to notice—he crossed the room in confident, striding steps to retrieve his briefcase from the corner, unable to entirely hide a short wince at the effort of bending over to pick it up. Phoenix leaned forward automatically, even though he was too far away to provide any real assistance.
I hope he's careful today...“If you want to skip tonight, I’ll understand,” Phoenix said.
It’s not like it’ll be much fun if he spends the evening in the theater bathroom.“What part of—” Edgeworth cut himself off with a sigh of irritation, straightening quickly, as though to further reassure Phoenix of the stability of his condition. “If I feel that terrible, I’ll call you ahead of time to cancel, like I
always do.”
You didn't last night, Phoenix thought. Somehow this didn’t seem like the best time to bring that up.
Though to be fair, he is usually good about that sort of thing...Mollified more by Edgeworth’s attitude than his words, Phoenix rolled over to the prosecutor’s sunlight-free half of the bed and pulled the comforter up over his shoulders. The ensuing sigh from Edgeworth was several degrees fonder than the first, and half a minute later he felt a light touch along the side of his cheek.
“Don’t forget to lock up,” he heard Edgeworth say. “And make the bed.”
“I won’t,” Phoenix mumbled in reply. The touch transformed into an almost chiding tap before withdrawing, and Phoenix waited until he heard the sound of the apartment door closing shut in the distance before he let himself slip back into sleep again.
***
On Phoenix's end, the day played out rather uneventfully. Once he'd managed to drag himself out of bed for real, he had to admit that Edgeworth's shower was several degrees nicer than his own, even if he was still struggling to decipher the figurative Greek that was the other man's assortment of fancy soaps and hair conditioners.
After that, a dull day at the office filled mostly with even more television meant that his mind was primarily split between wondering how Edgeworth was holding up, and wondering about the incoming theater date they had arranged once they were both free from their respective jobs.
By the time Wright and Co. closed, his phone had yet to ring with any significant calls. He took the lack of contact as a reassuring sign that Edgeworth had managed to keep himself from clogging the toilets at the prosecutor's office with any further content from his stomach, pocketed his keys, and headed out of the building.
He'd been looking forward to this for a while—the fingers of his left hand closed around the ticket concealed in the jacket of his pocket. For all they had talked about it, this was the first time he and Edgeworth had managed to gain entry to a play they were both willing to give up over two hours of their time to attend. Despite Phoenix's history in the field, he found he couldn't drudge up much enthusiasm for lengthy political grandstanding and Edgeworth had seemed reluctant at best to trade paperwork for a show whose script was written by a college student.
Truthfully, he still wasn't sure how enthused he was about a dusty classic featuring two men debating the finer points of existentialism, but glancing down the cast list of the advertisement his interest had spiked at the sight of a few names that, if he could trust his memory, he recognized as former classmates. Even if the production itself didn't cater to his tastes, it'd be nice to catch up on old times, though it occurred to him a few days too late that this would also mean introducing them to Edgeworth.
He still hadn't made up his mind if that prospect filled him with a strange, indescribable jolt of excitement or a bottomless weight of dread. Either way, not quite willing to commit himself to one conclusion or another, it might not even be up to him. There wasn't any guarantee that in the post-showing rush he'd be able to get anyone's attention or that Edgeworth would be interested in meeting a bunch of strangers anyway—and it wasn't like the potential reunion was the real point of going to begin with...
As he made his way down the stairwell, something in the back of his head suggested that, given Edgeworth's state this morning, it might be best to call and make sure they were still on schedule.
He did say he'd
call if something came up…It was as simple as that, Phoenix decided. Besides, it wasn't as though Edgeworth didn't know that he was concerned when they had split up that morning.
One cramped bus ride later, Phoenix—after an adventure in circling several of the same blocks before stopping at the closest retail store for a local map—managed to locate the theater in question. It was a relatively small place packed between privately owned shops, but the black velvet lining its doors and the tuxedo the usher was sporting like a second skin still suggested some measure of class. There was already a line forming outside, Phoenix noted, which was generally considered a positive sign for the performance quality.
He checked his watch. He was twenty minutes early, which owed more to the bus schedule than his own prudence, but Phoenix was almost always first at the place of their arrangements anyway. He glanced around, pacing back and forth a few times to confirm the prosecutor's absence, before taking his place at the back of the line.
But when the doors opened nearly a half-hour later and people began to be escorted inside, he was still alone. A second glance at his wrist told him that Edgeworth was now five minutes late and counting. Something like misgiving fluttered briefly in Phoenix's chest, but he pushed it aside as the people behind him began to mutter loud complaints about his holding the line up.
Where is he...?As with Phoenix's general experience with lines, this one moved in a series of starts and stops, rather than anything resembling a flow. Every few paces forward, he glanced over his shoulder, scanning the contents of the crowd stretching out behind him and any incoming passersby’s. No familiar faces crossed his sight, and he felt himself becoming outright uncomfortable—like he was entirely out of place if Edgeworth wasn't here at his side.
He tried to think of the other times the prosecutor had been this late—
ten and a half minutes... and all the instances he could come up with were countable on one hand.
Did I get the wrong building? He shifted uneasily when the doors came into view with no one blocking his path, one hand gripping the ticket still lying in his pocket. He cast yet another look over his shoulder as the usher held out his hand expectantly. Phoenix sighed. There was no graceful way to do this, so he just muttered a quick apology under his breath, brushed off the annoyed glares from the people shuffling behind him as best he could, and excused himself from the line.
No...this is the same theater and time listed on the ticket. I didn't make a mistake...He hesitated briefly before staking out a path adjacent to the rows of people, searching with eyes used to training for a glimpse of pink or a telling cravat. Once again, he was rewarded with neither, even as he went back for a second comb through.
Where the hell is
he? As the street lights began to illuminate around him, the last person vanished through the entrance, and Phoenix was left mostly isolated on the sidewalk.
The usher glanced over to his direction with a questioning look. Phoenix shook his head, caught between an impulse to apologize and an impulse to plead for a few more minutes. The usher shrugged, apparently making up his mind for him, and took two steps back to pull the heavy doors shut.
Phoenix exhaled slowly. He nearly glanced at his watch, before letting his arm fall back to his side in frustration. Having reached his limit, he dug in his coat for his cell phone.
After pressing a sequence of familiar keys, it rang sharply against his ear: once, twice, five times.
Then an automated click, followed by: “This is Miles Edgeworth. I'm unavailable at the moment, so if you have business...”
Phoenix clapped the phone shut, one half of him too irritated and the other half too worried to sit through the entire message. He moved forward about five steps before dialing again. The second effort procured the same result—and so did the third, thirty seconds later, and the fourth, in another three minutes, then the fifth, sixth, and seventh on the bench while nursing a cup of coffee to stave off the cold.
He wasn't sure how many attempts he'd made altogether by the time he slowly rose from his seat to walk to the nearest bus stop, a sick feeling settling deep in his stomach.
Probably a late day at work, he told himself.
Let it go, Wright. He just doesn't have his phone with him... something like that... The bus arrived after ten more minutes of waiting with an almost mocking hydraulic hiss—and even through that span of time he couldn't stop himself from scanning the area between each passing minute to see if maybe, against all odds, Edgeworth had shown up after all.
As he approached—more like sulked—towards the vehicle to step on board, he hesitated as the driver shot him a questioning, almost sympathetic look from beneath his cap. At that, Phoenix found it difficult to convince himself that
‘stood up on a date’ wasn’t etched across his face for anyone to read.
He moved his hand to change his phone for his wallet in order to pay for fare. He hesitated.
One more try can't hurt...His hands were apparently ahead of his brain; he’d already flipped it open and begun to redial. He knew it was ridiculous—he'd already tried at least ten times, so there wasn't any reason why this one should be any different.
Still, by the same logic, there probably wouldn't be much distinction between Edgeworth's annoyance at having ten missed calls left on his phone versus eleven. The driver's expression shifted from subtle concern to subtle annoyance, but Phoenix ignored it as a small family brushed past him in order to board in his place.
A jolt ran through him when the ringing had cut off after two rounds, meaning someone had picked up.
“Edge--”
“Hey!” The voice that cut him off was so loud and so different than the one Phoenix expected that his cell phone nearly slipped out of his fingers and on to the pavement. “Mr. Edgeworth is trying to get some
rest, and that’s pretty hard when his phone is ringing every
five minutes, pal! What’s so important?”
Detective Gumshoe? “Rest?” A vision of Edgeworth's sickly demeanor from last night popped into Phoenix’s head. The tension he’d felt all evening began to recede.
I guess that explains why he didn’t answer. Still, if he was feeling that bad he should have just called me and gone home.“Yeah, pal!” Gumshoe huffed. “What else would he be doing? We’ve been at the hospital for…”
What?“What?” He felt his tongue working, the word heavy—wrong—against his lips, as though the sounds were arranged the wrong way, with too many syllables dividing them. “…Hospital?”
“Yeah, pal, that’s what I said. Mr. Edgeworth and I...”
The rest of what Gumshoe said receded into a faint buzz in Phoenix’s ear.
“What happened?!” For brief second, everything around him blurred. He was dimly aware of the passerby's nearby turning to stare at him, then pointedly turning away, as though they might catch his obvious insanity through eye contact.
Reluctance seeped into Gumshoe's voice. “Uh, well... I don’t think I should…I mean, I know you and Mr. Edgeworth aren’t on a case or anything, but I don’t know if he’d appreciate me dropping all this personal information, pal,” he said.
Phoenix felt his grip on the phone tighten painfully, knuckles whitening as he struggled to find the proper words that would get him what he wanted instead of a dial tone in his ear.
“Just…” He swallowed.
If I have to beg, fine. “If he gets upset, I’ll take the blame. At least tell me why he’s there.
Please.”
There was a brief tick of silence over the other end; just enough time for a puzzled blink or two.
“Well, if you're gonna get that upset about it... some part of his stomach burst. His, uh…” There was a murmur over the line that told Phoenix someone else was talking in the background. “Yeah, that’s it! His appendix. It exploded, pal!”
Phoenix felt his own stomach respond with a sickening lurch, like he’d accidentally boarded a rollercoaster instead of the bus he'd intended. Several moments passed before he felt like he could speak without being sick all over the sidewalk. Meanwhile, the bus had closed its doors directly in his face and hurtled down the road, spewing thick exhaust in its wake.
“Why wasn’t I--” He stopped himself. Of course Gumshoe wasn’t going to call Phoenix to inform him—he had no reason to.
But it seemed even a question half asked was enough for Gumshoe once he’d already committed himself to his boss’s breach of privacy. “I was going to call all of Mr. Edgeworth’s friends once things got calmed down a little, pal.” He sounded a little defensive.
“Is he... I mean... he's not...”
“Whoa, what are
you thinking, pal?” Gumshoe asked. “He's in a bad way, got out of surgery not too long ago, but the doctors are saying he should pull through—like I
said,” pointedly, “if he manages to get his rest, so...”
At that, Phoenix managed to pull himself together enough to register that he was mostly inhaling toxic fumes. He backed away a few paces from the street, where he was in less danger of suffocating or being run over.
“Which hospital?” he managed.
“Huh?”
“Which hospital is—which hospital are you at?”
“Oh, uh, come to think of it... hold on, gimme a second to check--” Phoenix bit back the rising urge to scream. “Ah, okay. Hotti Clinic, pal, but why...”
“I’ll be right there,” Phoenix said instantly. He ignored Gumshoe’s surprised noise and ended the call. He swerved his head to look from one end of the street to the next, scanning for the first approaching taxi he could find.
***
Gumshoe met him at the entrance of the Hotti Clinic. “You really didn’t have to do this, pal,” he said, as Phoenix ran up to meet him, eyes darting back and forth as he spoke, as though he expected his boss to pop out of the surrounding foliage any second. No doubt he was wondering exactly how much talking to Phoenix Wright would cost him out of his rent this week.
“Whoa,” he added, startled, upon getting a better look at Phoenix, who was panting and nearly doubled over; it had been a decent sprint from where the taxi had left him off to the entrance here. “Take a minute to catch your breath, pal! I know you must be worried, but I told you, they're saying he'll be okay...”
Phoenix didn’t reply; the pounding of blood through his ears seemed muffle the words, as though they were being spoken to him through a wall. Gumshoe fell into step a few paces behind as Phoenix recovered enough to walk hurriedly into the hospital waiting room. He briefly took note of the people scattered throughout the mostly empty rows of chairs, the majority of them reading or sleeping quietly, before he fixed his attention on reception desk to the right. He stopped just in front of counter. The nurse manning the station continued filing her nails as though he wasn’t even there.
“Excuse me,” he said. His voice came out hoarse.
She glanced up, blinking once before bending back down to attack the edge of her pinky with a relish she clearly didn’t have for her job.
“I’m here to visit Miles Edgeworth,” he said, his foot tapping. It did little to relieve him of his nervous energy.
Some time within the next decade, if it’s not too much trouble...The nurse sighed, in apparent resignation to the fact that ignoring him wasn't going to make him go away, and placed the file on the counter as she pulled the keyboard closer to the edge of the desk. Every action she took seemed, to Phoenix's perception, as though it were being filtered through slow-motion. “How do you spell that?”
“Exactly how it sounds.” Perhaps some of his irritated impatience was seeping through, because the stare she gave him in return was bordering on hostile.
“Pretend I’m deaf,” she said.
“E-d-g-e-w-o-r-t-h,” he spelled. His nails dug into the palms of his hands. From the corner of his eye, he could see that Gumshoe still looking at him strangely, as though he had grown another head.
“And you are?” she said after a few quick keystrokes.
“Huh?”
“He just got out of surgery a couple of hours ago. The only people allowed to visit are family,” she clarified with a roll of her eyes. “And don’t lie. I’ll need to see some form of identification before I can give out the room number.”
Family? This particular complication hadn't occurred to Phoenix on the way here, and now that it was thrust in front of his face, the world around him seemed to flicker strangely, dizzyingly, at the idea of trying to untangle it.
“I’m his…” Phoenix stopped. Abruptly, it seemed like Detective Gumshoe was too close, crowding behind him uncomfortably even though he was pretty sure the taller man hadn’t moved an inch. He swallowed briefly and looked down for a moment. His badge gleamed dully under the artificial light.
I'm...“I’m his…lawyer?” he tried weakly.
“And I’m the director of this clinic,” she parried instantly.
Actually, I think he’s off in the corner harassing that blonde with the huge breasts. Phoenix grimaced and shook his head, both hands coming down on the desk, more forcefully than what was probably appropriate. The nurse's lips thinned as her pens leapt from their cup holder.
Desperation bleeding audibly into his voice, he began, “Look, can we just skip this and get to the--”
“He’s with me, pal,” Gumshoe suddenly interjected with authority, moving to stand beside Phoenix at the counter. The moment was somewhat marred by the extended pause as the detective dug around in the pockets of his trenchcoat before he located his badge and brandished it with a flourish. “Police business.”
She gave it a once-over flick of the eyes.
“Room 307,” she replied. “Visiting hours end in about thirty minutes, so make it snappy.”
“Sure thing!” he heard Gumshoe say distantly in the background; Phoenix was too busy moving towards the stairwell, as though his legs had a mind of their own. His breath came in short, rapid bursts, rattling against his ribcage, in an effort to keep up. And then, even fainter behind him: “Hey, wait up, pal! It’s not like he’s going anywhere!”
***
A distant part of Phoenix had hoped—after he’d gotten over the initial shock of ‘Edgeworth’ and ‘hospital’ in the same sentence—that upon entering Edgeworth’s hospital room, he’d be greeted with the almost amusing sight of the High Prosecutor chafing at being confined to a bed and suffering the indignity of a seasick-green hospital gown.
The only thing that had lived up to his wish was the color of the gown.
As soon as he stepped past the threshold, the entire room seemed to expand. Then, without warning, it contracted around him with a force that pushed the air out of his lungs and left him unable to focus on anything but the hospital bed and the body recumbent within it.
Edgeworth had always been sallow, but never this sickly, waxen color that made him look as though all the blood had been drained from his body. And Phoenix had gotten used to the circles under Edgeworth’s eyes that signified one too many late nights at the Prosecutor’s Office in the months they’d been together, but here, the dark puffiness was so pronounced and stark, it seemed his eyes were sunken into his sockets. That, coupled with the jutting cheekbones and the cracked, colorless lips gave the impression that, far from being convalescent, the next breath might be his last.
He could have died. Phoenix felt the knowledge radiating from his heart like ice water pumping through his body instead of blood, dispatching bitter numbness to the very tips of his fingers; down his legs, leaving a trail of shuddering weakness in his knees; and pooling around his feet like cement.
He could have died.
I wouldn’t have even known. Somehow, that was the worst part of it.
He took a halting step towards the bed only to be jerked back by Gumshoe’s loud exclamation, “Whoa there, pal! The doctors said Mr. Edgeworth needed rest, remember? If you have to ask him about something, you can do it tomorrow.”
That’s not… He swallowed. “I won’t disturb him. Just, let me…”
Let me… Gumshoe made a small, impatient noise as Phoenix walked forward, but didn’t attempt to stop him again. He resisted the urge to brush Edgeworth’s bangs from his face when he made it to the side of the bed, stilling his hands by grasping the metal railing instead. He stood for a long while, just watching Edgeworth’s chest move slowly rise and fall, trying to will his own heart to the same leisurely pace.
Edgeworth’s eyelashes fluttered, and then, a glimpse of dark eyes made unfamiliar by dilation, the customary grey almost completely overtaken by black. Something underneath Phoenix’s lungs seemed to jump when Edgeworth’s brow furrowed in a motion of confusion, lips moving faintly.
The expected words never came, not even in a faint undertone. Edgeworth’s forehead smoothed itself, his eyes closed, and his head fell slightly to right as sleep swallowed him once again.
Behind him, Detective Gumshoe cleared his throat. Phoenix forced his fingers from their grip on the rail, and trudged back to where the detective was waiting at the door.
“See what I mean?” Gumshoe whispered. The words came out in a low rush, unused to being pressed down to a lower volume. “They’ve got him so doped up he probably didn’t even recognize you!”
Phoenix wanted to protest, but the idea of fending off another one of Gumshoe’s
‘are you feeling okay, pal?’ looks was too much to bear at this point in time. He allowed the detective to steer him from the room, stopping only for one last glimpse before Gumshoe pulled the door quietly shut.
In direct contrast to Phoenix’s earlier dash, Gumshoe had to wait for Phoenix to catch up several times as they navigated the bright, labyrinthine halls. It was to the detective’s credit that he didn’t get annoyed at Phoenix’s plodding pace. Even though he didn’t know the situation, it seemed that he was doing his best to be quietly considerate in regards to Phoenix’s perturbed mood.
Edgeworth was fine this morning… Not exactly fine; Phoenix still remembered the way the prosecutor’s back had stiffened slightly as he bent over to retrieve his briefcase, but nothing near the point of requiring hospitalization.
“How did this happen?” He hadn’t meant to speak out loud, but Gumshoe paused and turned towards him.
“You’ve got me, pal. I heard Mr. Edgeworth was feeling under the weather a few days ago, but I figured it was just a bug.”
“Yeah, with everything going around...” Phoenix said vaguely, trying to pry his thoughts from where he had left them in Edgeworth’s room and focus on something else.
“I got real concerned when he called in sick the next day. It’s just not like Mr. Edgeworth to miss work…” Gumshoe scratched the back of his head. “I could tell he was still feeling lousy when I went to give him my report today, but I never expected him to stand up and ask me to drive him to the hospital!”
“Wait, you were the one that took him?” Phoenix blinked. His mental image had been Edgeworth collapsing and ambulances racing—the whole nine yards.
“Yeah, I nearly got pulled over getting here!” Gumshoe exclaimed. Several nurses stopped and shot them a universal irritated stare before continuing on with their tasks at hand. “Too bad my car doesn’t have a siren—it would have come in handy. Mr. Edgeworth was gritting his teeth and mumbling ‘it hurts, it hurts’ over and over and over again…I’ve never seen him like that before.”
“I can only imagine,” Phoenix said quietly.
I should have known something was wrong last night. No one throws up like that just from a sip of water…With a start, he realized they had somehow made it back to the entrance. Gumshoe shifted back and forth, as though he wasn’t quite sure if leaving Phoenix in this despondent state was the right thing to do, but clearly wanting to extradite himself from the awkward conversation.
Finally, he decided: “Sorry to run like this, pal, but they’re probably wondering what happened to me. I called them on the way, but I didn’t really get the chance to explain what was going on.”
“I’ll see you around, Detective,” Phoenix said. “Uh, thanks. For your help today, I mean.”
“Oh, no problem, pal!” Gumshoe beamed like a dog having been given a juicy bone.
I guess he doesn’t hear that very often, Phoenix thought as he watched the detective trot away. Before he could reach the doors, Gumshoe suddenly pivoted back and rushed back towards where Phoenix was standing, next to the reception area.
“Before I forget--” he reached past the partition and snagged a pencil and a scrap of paper between thick fingers. “—I’ll go ahead and make sure everyone knows what’s going on, but I’d appreciate it if you could take care of this one for me…last time we talked, I, uh…”
He pushed the slip of folded paper into Phoenix’s hands and hurried away without even waiting for his reply.
What was that all about? Phoenix unfolded the slip of paper and flinched as the words “Prosecutor von Karma”, accompanied by a scrawled telephone number directly underneath, stared up at him balefully.
***
The clatter of the keys falling from his hands to the cold concrete of the floor created a rattling echo that flung its way down the entirety of the stairwell. Phoenix exhaled slowly, blinking slowly amidst the darkness—something must have gone wrong with the building's electricity again—and bent down to search blindly until his fingers closed back around the shape of the metal ring binding the keys together.
He straightened and focused on what he was actually doing as he experimented until he managed to successfully locate the one that unlocked his apartment door.
The first thing that hit him as he stepped through was that the air was unpleasantly stale. He crossed over to the kitchen—the remnants of the night before last's dinner, a mishmash of pizza and macaroni, was still stagnating in the sink, completely forgotten.
Still, dealing with it was better than staying fixated on his own lingering helplessness at the memory of Edgeworth's pale face in the hospital room, simultaneously right before him and a thousand miles away.
He turned the faucet on to start doing the dishes, and shut it off a second later, exhaling slowly. The water slid in a strange, surreal gloss off the grimy plates and down the drain.
He'll be fine. He's going to be fine.
He's still going to be there tomorrow.Fifteen minutes later, with the last glass put away and his hands raw from scrubbing too hard to get rid of the last bits of sauce clinging stubbornly to the plate, he withdrew back into the living room, emptying his phone and wallet from his pocket in preparation of a much-needed collapse on the couch. From the wallet fluttered a small, tattered piece of paper—the one Gumshoe had frantically, conspiratorially pressed into his hand before fleeing from its wake.
Franziska...He plucked it between his fingers, frowning. It had been years, but he was pretty sure he still had scars from the lashings she had given him when they had last encountered each other. Even with the assurance that there would be thousands of miles of physical distance between them, it was difficult not to feel some measure of aversion at inviting contact with her again.
Still, I guess it's the right thing to do...Sighing—
Edgeworth would want her to know—he punched in the numbers on the memo. It felt as though the only meaningful thing he could remember ever doing was making calls.
As the distant ringing stretched on against his ear, he let himself thrive, briefly, on the hope that the German prosecutor probably wouldn't answer a call from someone she didn't recognize. He might even be lucky enough to be welcomed into the sanctuary of her voice mail—but those hopes were rapidly crushed when the responding click went off against his ear, followed by a crisp female voice.
“Franziska von Karma speaking. Who is this?”
Here we go. At least she hadn't answered in German.
“Franziska,” Phoenix said. “It's Phoenix—Phoenix Wright.”
“Phoenix Wright?”
She sounded genuinely flabbergasted, but it didn't take long until she slid back into the same Franziska he remembered so keenly, speaking with a smug self-assuredness thick enough to drown a man even over the telephone.
“So, come to challenge me again at last? Well, you'll find I'm more than up to the task, Mr. Phoenix Wright, so you had better prepare--”
“No,” Phoenix cut in, as quickly as he could, “No, no, no. It's not like that—hey, listen to me!”
“--saturated with the inevitable cowardice that you've been--what?”
“I'm not interested in a challenge,” Phoenix said.
And it's not like trials are supposed to be competitions anyway; shouldn't you know that by now? “It's about Edgeworth.”
“...Miles Edgeworth?”
Something low and wary entered her voice; it was only at the rare times when they talked about Edgeworth that Phoenix seemed to remember that Franziska von Karma was also a person who had grown up under the shadow of her father, and didn't just exist as a painful caricature with a whip.
“What did you do?”
Excuse me?“
I didn't do anything,” Phoenix said, “but listen—he's in the hospital.”
He waited for her hysteric retort, echoing his own outburst when Gumshoe had relayed the same information to him, but there was only terse silence over the line—and he realized she was waiting for him to tell her more. Franziska displaying restraint was definitely a rare novelty.
“It's not bad,” Phoenix continued. “I mean, uh, it is bad, obviously, since he's there in the first place, but he'll be fine. He's through the worst of it. Apparently he came down with appendicitis, but he had surgery and it was fine. Things are fine.”
If he was expecting some sort of sisterly relief expressed at his clumsy attempts to assure her of the stability of Edgeworth's condition, limited in vocabulary as they were, he was sorely disappointed.
“Is he there? Let me speak to him.”
You could let me answer the question before making demands...“No, I just got back from visiting him. But just, I figured you should know...”
There was another long pause. It was the type that Phoenix thought he had moved past enduring with Edgeworth and never really foresaw himself having to deal with from his younger sister.
Finally, neutrally: “I see.”
Phoenix frowned, trying to gauge her tone. “Like I said, he should be okay. Don't worry.”
“Who's worried?” she said, airily.
Oh, right. Let me guess—a proper von Karma would never allow himself to be handicapped by something as trifling as a part of his stomach rupturing...“Well, if there's anything you want me to tell him...”
“Don't be absurd,” she cut in. “I don't recall ever requesting
your services as a go-between myself and
my little brother.”
Excuse me for trying to help!“I will call him
personally,” she announced, with an inflection that Phoenix thought suggested murder more than concern.
“Last I saw, Gumshoe had his phone, so--”
“I'll manage.”
Okay then...Phoenix fidgeted, feeling as though the pressure was on him to somehow drive the terse exchange to an end, but then something else occurred to him.
“So are you, uh, flying out?” he asked. “Here, I mean.”
“Why should I?” she snapped. “If, as you've taken the care to emphasize so much, he's going to be fine.”
You were ready to fly over to challenge me, but not when Edgeworth's in the hospital? The dynamics of the ways the von Karma family expressed affection for each other would forever be a mystery to him, Phoenix supposed.
“Just asking.”
Franziska snorted.
“Don't waste my time again,” she said, “until you're ready to settle the score.”
“I'll, uh, do my best.”
He hung up the phone quickly—that seemed as good an opportunity that would come to wrap things up—and wondered with a sigh if he had any headache medicine lying around. Anything to relieve the particularly sharp throbbing in his temple that was entirely unique to dealing with Franziska—the memories of it had become blessedly dim in the years since their last separation, but it was recalled with full force now, like a forgotten specter dragged back into his life.
***
He woke up intermittently about four times through the night, all with a great deal of twisting and turning. For most of his life, Phoenix had considered himself a sound sleeper no matter how dire his prospects seemed for the next morning. Then, the circumstances of Engarde's trial were enough to prove him wrong; he had tucked Pearl in that evening, he remembered, and spent the rest of the night alternating between futile attempts at resting his eyes on the couch and pacing the hallways in an equally futile attempt to calm his frayed nerves.
It wasn't as bad now as it was then, but enough unease prickled down the length of his body and into his fingertips to make it impossible to get comfortable. The last fifteen minutes before the visiting hours at the hospital opened again were spent staring across his pillow as his cell phone ticked away the minutes. He'd shut the alarm off half an hour ago, as it became apparent there wasn't any further point in keeping it on.
A quick shower and a toss of clothes later—he found he didn't really have the stomach to eat anything solid—he was back out the door and, a taxi-ride through terrible rush hour traffic later, back pushing his way through white doors to confront a rather cynical-looking nurse. It was a different woman, but apparently the same appraising half-scowl was a job requirement amongst the staff here.
"He's been a rather popular guest," she said, directing him to the room.
Practically collapsing at the office like that... there must be a lot of people checking in on him...Still, he couldn't resist asking. "Popular?"
"I'm pretty sure you're the forth or fifth person in here to see..." Another flip of the clipboard, "Mr. Miles Edgeworth." The nurse gave him a pointed look. "Visiting hours started an hour ago."
Forth or fifth? One of them was probably Gumshoe, but...There was something uncomfortable about that lackluster relegation, especially juxtaposed with the fresh memories of counting off passing minutes and trying to keep himself from outright sprinting out of the taxi’s backseat--but he pushed it aside. The important thing was seeing how Edgeworth was.
Edgeworth was sitting up when the nurse opened the door to let Phoenix in, and at the sight of him conscious, an odd, rather high-pitched sort of thrill played in Phoenix's throat that he barely managed to suppress against his lips. He was still a shade too pale for Phoenix's comfort—in fact, his complexion rather reminded Phoenix of his own reflection in the aftermath of his tumble down into the depths of Eagle River during the incident with Iris—but he was conscious, and Phoenix figured that that was a good enough start for him, considering his condition barely ten hours before. He let his grip on the doorknob relax. Behind him, the nurse quickly excused herself.
A loud clearing of the throat jerked his attention past Edgeworth and to the left of the bed. He blinked in surprise when he realized Edgeworth wasn’t alone. A woman with short grey hair—the string of youthful, candy-red barrettes against her right temple did nothing to alleviate the heavy wrinkles around her mouth and jaws—in an unflattering navy blue jumpsuit had gotten up from where she’d been seated next to Edgeworth and was blasting towards the doorway with all the speed and subtlety of a freight train.
Wait. It can’t be… “It’s--”
“—
you!” Ms. Oldbag finished for him, face growing even more pinched in outrage as she all but shoved Phoenix back into the hallway with the sheer force of her voice. “Hasn’t my poor Edgey suffered enough without you coming in to rub salt in the wound? After all he's been through, why would you even think of showing your ugly face to the poor man! Why I remember-back-in-my-dayweusedtohavebettermannersthantoshowuptoplaceswewerentwelcomeuninvitedIswearkids--”
How did she find out? Phoenix thought as the verbal torrent of words burst from the elderly woman’s lips, achieving a pitch and speed far beyond his listening comprehension. His eyes met Edgeworth’s on the far side of the room in a sort of mute appeal for help, but Edgeworth looked just as stunned as he did.
“If you’d just excuse me--” he began, trying to duck past her into the room. Her arm flew up as unerringly as a signpost. He stepped back into the hallway, at a loss.
“I don’t see your name on the list!” she proclaimed with a smirk.
“What list?” he asked, knowing he’d regret it.
“The approved visitors list!” she shot back, waving a—mostly blank, he noticed—sheet of paper in his face.
You've got to be kidding me.“How do you get on the list?” he sighed. It seemed easier to just go along and hope this wouldn’t take too long.
“That’s classified!”
Just glancing at Edgeworth made it obvious this “list” wasn’t any of his doing; he looked torn between swallowing outrage and hesitancy to turn the woman’s attention over his way again. Phoenix imagined it had grown increasingly difficult to keep up Edgeworth’s ‘cultured prosecutor’ facade as Oldbag’s visit had lingered on.
“Okay, so, who else is on the list?” he tried again, reaching to see for himself.
“You’re not authorized to receive that information!” She pulled back just as his fingers brushed against the edge of the paper, like a child torturing a dog with a bone. Phoenix took a deep breath and reminded himself that hitting little old ladies was bad form, especially with a prosecutor anal-retentive enough to enforce the assault charges in a hospital bed ten feet away as a witness.
“Who
wrote the list?” he asked finally.
Bingo, he thought when Oldbag’s eyes widened then suddenly narrowed.
“What’s with all the questions?” she started. “Treating a poor young lady like a criminal just because she’s--”
“Miss Oldbag?” Edgeworth ventured. Like flipping a switch, she silenced herself and turned to him, nearly skipping over to his side. Phoenix slipped into the room while her attention was diverted.
“Yes, Edgey-poo?” she crooned. Phoenix could see her eyelashes fluttering even from where he was located, fast enough that it looked as though Edgeworth was being pressed into the hospital pillows by the wind they generated instead of a self-imposed retreat.
“I was…wondering,” he managed, “if you would mind getting me something to drink. My throat is awfully parched.”
“
He could get it for you,” she said, with a dismissive wave in Phoenix’s general direction. “I’m sure there are
other things I can help you with. You know what the nurses said about making sure--”
“No, you’re the only one I can trust with this,” he cut her off with a shudder he couldn’t quite suppress. Phoenix wondered what it was the nurses had said, until he saw Edgeworth’s eyes flicker towards a portable basin and a sponge on the table next to the bed like a nervous tic. “I’m in the mood for something very special. I doubt Wright could even find the water fountain.”
At the word
special, Oldbag’s eyes lit up. “What can I get you, Edgey? Just say the word!”
“I’m really in the mood for some mineral water, but it has to be a special brand. Naïve Minérale. That brand
only. It
has to be that one.”
“Don’t worry, I won’t come back until I find it for you! When you need someone to find something-all-you-havetodoiscallWendyOldbagwhyinmyyouthIusedtobeknownasfinditallWendy--”
“Thank you, Miss Oldbag.” Edgeworth managed a sickly smile. He kept it pinned tightly to his face until she rushed from the room. The outraged squawk of a nurse she nearly collided with in her haste to leave filled the air before peace finally descended, along with Edgeworth’s grimace.
“Must be tough being so popular,” Phoenix remarked.
"Shut up, Wright," Edgeworth replied. The typical edge of Edgeworth’s words was somewhat blunted by his soft, distracted tone as he settled into his pillow and closed his eyes. Phoenix thought he could almost see the tension escaping from the prosecutor, like a balloon deflating.
“Won’t she be back soon?” Phoenix asked. “Even if you can’t get mineral water in the hospital, there’s a grocery store just a couple of blocks away.”
“Weren’t you listening?” Edgeworth shifted, annoyed.
Don’t take it out on me! Phoenix thought,
I didn’t call her down here… Edgeworth continued, letting go of his tension: “I said it’s a very special brand. So special it’s not sold outside of France.”
“I see,” Phoenix said, relaxing.
“It was a wild gamble, though. I must be spending too much time with you…” Edgeworth said, after a pause. “I can’t actually drink anything…in my condition.”
“Why didn’t you pretend to go to sleep?” Phoenix asked. “That might have gotten her off your back for a little while.”
“I did,” Edgeworth said, looking genuinely exhausted. “Whenever I closed my eyes, she leaned over to,” he shuddered, “whisper sweet nothings in my ear.”
Phoenix crossed the room to settle down into the chair--previously occupied, he supposed, by Oldbag—
not exactly a pleasant correlation—to Edgeworth's bedside. He blinked—a sharp burst of color that came into view nearby caught his attention.
The tiny table across from his hospital bed bore a surprising assortment of flowers. More specifically, most of that end of the room had been overtaken by a bouquet of roses that towered over the rest like a redwood among saplings. If the excessive size of the gift alone wasn't enough to give away the identity of the sender, the large, heart-shaped tag certainly was.
But there were other vases clustered around the centerpiece—including one tied with a purple and black ribbon that briefly caught Phoenix's eye, and another with flowers so yellow that it nearly hurt to look directly at them. The only one, aside from Oldbag’s, whose sender he could tell at a glance was the one in an oversized plastic mug, with an uneven heaping of botanical bounty he couldn’t identify—but looked suspiciously similar to the flowers planted in the front of the police station.
I guess it’s the thought that counts, huh? Come to think of it, I didn’t even bring anything at all… Phoenix tried to console himself with mentally pointing out that even if he had brought something, there wouldn’t have been room for it. It rang slightly hollow.
I’ll bring something tomorrow, he promised.
“How are you feeling?” he asked.
“Better,” Edgeworth said. “Aside from the obvious." He jerked his head in the direction of the door.
Hearing the sardonic tilt to his voice, raspy and tired though it might have been, provided better reassurance to Phoenix than any of his own weak attempts for Franziska the night previous. His smile widened.
"You don't look so well yourself," Edgeworth went on to note.
"Rough night," Phoenix admitted.
“Detective Gumshoe did inform me a little about that. He told me you were acting 'real strange, pal' in your rush to get here." The last part of the sentence had an inquisitive tilt to it. .
“Strange?” Phoenix echoed.
Edgeworth's eyebrows quirked. “Thirty missed calls?”
Phoenix winced.
It was twenty—no, fifteen at most... though I guess that doesn't actually sound that much better...“Well," he mumbled, staring down into his hands, "I was worried.”
Edgeworth looked at him for a long moment, the ghost of a frown touching his lips, and then said, “I'm sorry.”
Huh? Phoenix blinked. “It's not like it was your fault...”
“No,” Edgeworth said. “I was irresponsible...”
“I don't think there's a way you could have known,” Phoenix said.
Not that I'm an expert on appendicitis, but... He added, “You're too hard on yourself.”
You always have been.Edgeworth shrugged, looking less than convinced. Phoenix decided it was probably best to just let it go—if there was one thing he had learned about the prosecutor over the years, it was that when he had his mind set on blaming himself for something, no matter how irrational, it was nearly impossible to convince him otherwise.
“I called Franziska, by the way,” he said. Changing the subject seemed like the best option. "Last night. To let her know what happened."
“I'm aware,” Edgeworth said. “She managed to reach me this morning, before permitted hours. The nurse who transferred the call was reduced to tears, as I recall."
Typical Franziska. “I hope she was in a better mood talking to you than she was to me.”
“I don't know exactly what she said to you," Edgeworth said, dryly, "but I would have to say I find that unlikely.”
“Ouch.” Phoenix winced. "Well, she must have been glad to hear you were okay.”
“In her way, yes.”
“So... is she coming here?"
"Why would she?" Edgeworth asked. "It isn't as though my life is in danger."
Phoenix opened his mouth to respond with something about
his still being here, seeing as that was generally the thing that was done when a loved one was hospitalized, but thought better of it.
Still, Edgeworth seemed to settle a little more comfortable back against the pillow, resting one hand over his lap and letting the other drape over the side of the bed's railing, eyes focused on Phoenix.
“Did you make any other calls?”
“Huh?" The question threw him.
Who else would I have called? "No... Gumshoe probably had the rest of that taken care of, right? He just didn't want to deal with, uh, her.”
Phoenix wasn't sure why the pause that followed felt as heavy as it did. Edgeworth had that look about him—when there was something he was hoping Phoenix would understand without forcing him to actually verbalize it.
“I see.”
Whatever it was, it was beyond Phoenix's comprehension, and he found he didn't have the energy to try to pry through Edgeworth's reluctant barriers at the moment—he was tired and still grappling with the transition from anxiety into relief.
"So... you're going to be all right?"
"With about a projected week's stay here, yes," Edgeworth said. "I can't say I'm thrilled about it. The backlog at the office is going to be a nightmare."
And, of course, that's your main concern about this entire mess..."It could be worse," Phoenix offered.
"You don't have to tell me that."
No, I guess I don't.As the morning slipped into afternoon, a nurse came to the room. She seemed cheerful enough compared to her coworkers downstairs, especially considering the smile on her face and the chirp in her voice as she fluttered around Edgeworth like some large, white bird. No matter how far her grin stretched, though, it was hard to ignore the pliers and what looked to be a large syringe in her hand. Just as Phoenix was trying to think of a way to excuse himself from the room without being obvious—he wasn’t sure he wanted to be around for this—his stomach gurgled a complaint.
“I think I’m going to go grab something to eat really quick,” he said, his chair screeching against the tile as he stood up a little too quickly.
Judging by Edgeworth’s deadpan expression, Phoenix hadn’t quite accomplished that whole ‘not being obvious’ thing, but he didn’t say a word as Phoenix left him to the tender mercies of the nurse.
It took Phoenix a good fifteen minutes to figure out where the cafeteria was located—all the hallways tended to blend into one another, and there wasn’t a single sign to let him know whether he was on the right track or about to hit another dead end.
It wasn’t exactly the most welcoming place either; most of the space was taken up by long stainless steel rows, where people could choose between some sort of meat-product with congealed fat jiggling on the surface like clear gelatin or an equally unappetizing glop of watery, orange macaroni and cheese. Then on the other side of the room, a sad assortment of lopsided chairs and wobbly tables huddled in the corner along with a small selection of men and women in scrubs, chewing their food with all the enthusiasm of a cow masticating cud.
Phoenix walked over to the stuttering freezer unit and picked out a prepackaged turkey sandwich—all the other choices looked, to him, like they would land him in a hospital bed himself. After paying a price that made airport food seem like a bargain in comparison, he managed to locate both a relatively stable chair and table.
The turkey was dry and the bread tasted like damp mayonnaise-flavored foam rubber. He ate it all and licked his fingers when he was done for good measure.
Was the last time I ate really yesterday? It must have been for something this excruciatingly bad to taste so good. He considered buying another sandwich, but both his wallet and his head protested in equally loud measure. Now that his stomach wasn’t trying to kill and digest his lungs, that prickling sensation of unease was back in full force—an itch that wouldn’t go away until he was back upstairs again.
Come on, he told himself,
nothing’s going to happen while I’m gone.When he made it back, the door was closed. It had been open when he left. Irrationally, he debated for a moment before grasping the handle and pushing it open—only to stop short at the sound of another voice.
“…we think these fingerprints will prove to be pivotal in--” The stranger left off in mid sentence as soon as he heard the click of the latch, turning to stare at Phoenix.
Reporting a case? Phoenix thought, incredulous.
Here, like this?“Should I…” the detective—or so Phoenix assumed—began.
“No, please continue,” Edgeworth said, both cutting him off and dismissing Phoenix from the room in a single sentence.
Phoenix ducked back into the hall and leaned against the wall.
Well... it can’t take that long, can it?Twenty minutes later, the leaning had become more of an irritated slouch. He let out a half-hearted groan when another man, this time in a navy-blue officer uniform, came into view. He held a slip of paper in his hand that he thrust up to his thick, round glasses in between peering at the door numbers. When he finally made it to where Phoenix was standing, he asked, “Is this the line for Mr. Edgeworth’s room?”
I guess it is now, Phoenix thought. “Go ahead, I was planning on sitting down anyway.”
“Oh, thank you very much!” The officer replied, looking as though Phoenix had made his morning, noon, and night when Phoenix vacated the spot and relocated to the bench along the end of the hallway.
It proved to be the perfect vantage point to watch the steady flow of police officers of various rank trickle in and out of Room 307. The shortest visit was a record breaking thirty seconds—when the man had come out, he looked torn between bursting into tears and kicking a line of holes in the wall—while the longest were about thirty minutes on average. Phoenix had a sneaking suspicion he was getting a firsthand look at what a typical day at Edgeworth’s office looked like—something he’d find exhausting even on a good day.
Is he holding up okay...? “Hey, pal!” Phoenix nearly jumped at the familiar voice from behind. He turned to the right, where Gumshoe was standing, inspecting the scene. “Waiting to see Mr. Edgeworth? You should have gotten here earlier.”
“Mmm,” Phoenix mumbled noncommittally.
“Looks like he’s pretty popular—I even heard a group of nurses talking about him on my way up.”
“Yeah,” Phoenix said, with considerably less enthusiasm than the detective. He changed the subject: “Are you here to give a report too?”
“Nah, I just happened to be in the area and decided to stop in and see how Mr. Edgeworth was doing.” Gumshoe said with a lopsided grin. Before Phoenix could warn him, he’d already clomped over to the room, past the two officers currently waiting, and stuck his head inside. If his sudden jolt and tensing of shoulders was any sign, Edgeworth didn’t exactly welcome the interruption with open arms—and if that had been in doubt, the sheepish way the detective scratched the back of his head when he returned over to where Phoenix was sitting dispelled the last of it.
“Wow, that’s Mr. Edgeworth for you! Not even exploding internal organs can keep him down!”
He looked pretty exhausted to me, Phoenix thought. His chest still tightened at the mention of ‘explosions’ and ‘internal organs’.
“I guess it just goes to show you there’s always something worse, pal. I thought I was going to die when I caught that flu that was going around a few weeks back. I couldn’t even
move for three days. Even after Maggey was nice enough to make me an extra large batch of her five-alarm ‘Put the Pep Back in Your Step’ chicken noodle soup, I couldn’t take more than one bite.”
“The nausea was that bad?” Phoenix asked.
No wonder Edgeworth thought he had it…“No, it felt like my tongue was on fire!” Gumshoe exclaimed. “Weirdest flu symptoms I’ve ever had, pal, that’s for sure.”
Uh, I don’t think that was from the flu!“But, yeah, and that was just the flu! I don’t even want to think about how Mr. Edgeworth must have been feeling, how much pain he must have been in…”
Something cold and icy trickled through Phoenix’s lungs, making it hard to breathe for a moment.
“It was pretty terrifying, seeing him like that. Mr. Edgeworth is a really sensitive guy, but he’s actually got a high pain threshold. There was one time I accidentally smacked him in the face with a ladder, and he filled out the pay reduction form without even
flinching, even with all that blood gushing down his forehead--”
“Sorry, Detective Gumshoe,” Phoenix said, cutting him off. “I think I’m going to go take a quick walk. My legs are falling asleep.”
Once he reached the opposite end of the hallway, before he turned the corner, he stole a glance to make sure Gumshoe didn’t get any more bright ideas, like trying to follow him. A running commentary on the various injuries Edgeworth had sustained over the years was one of the last things he wanted to hear right now. But, instead, the tall detective just seemed slightly puzzled, brow furrowing momentarily before he shrugged and walked to the other side of the hall to talk to his coworkers.
Phoenix wandered aimlessly until he was sure Edgeworth’s visitors would be gone. The empty hallway that greeted him upon his return bore out his theory, as did the bare-except-for-Edgeworth-himself room when he opened the door again.
Edgeworth looked worse than he had that morning. Where before, when someone entered the room, he’d maneuver himself into a sitting position, now he just barely cracked his eyelids when he heard the door open.
Phoenix settled back into the chair next to the bed.
“Is it over?” he ventured after a few minutes of silence.
Edgeworth didn’t open his eyes. “I certainly hope so.”
“It’s not going to be like this every day, is it?”
“No, probably not,” Edgeworth replied. He paused to wet his lips. “It appears the office hasn’t gotten around to reassigning my cases yet.”
“Still, coming to give reports in the hospital seems a bit much…”
“It doesn’t make sense to give them to someone uninvolved in the investigations, and we can’t exactly freeze everything in place for a week because of my own carelessness.”
“Couldn’t they just call?”
“Detective Gumshoe seems to have misplaced my phone…” Edgeworth trailed off, finishing the thought with a shake of the head.
Silence descended.
Phoenix shifted his weight in the chair, letting his hands fold in front of him. "...you know, we missed the play."
Edgeworth's line of sight had drifted to the far window; it fell squarely back on Phoenix.
"I completely forgot," he admitted.
"So did I," Phoenix said.
“I kept you waiting, I suppose.”
And down about ten fifty in coffee and taxi fare, but nevermind that. “Don't worry about it.”
"You could still see it," Edgeworth murmured. "There's more than one showing. You don't have to stay here."
Phoenix shook his head. "Don't be stupid."
"But if you..."
"I said not to worry about it. Like I said, it's not like it's really your fault. There'll be other times."
"Yes..." Edgeworth said. His voice was almost thoughtful. "You're right."
Lacking further conversation, they settled into a familiar quiet. It wasn't a bad thing, Phoenix figured—probably more conductive to recovery. He found that exchanging small talk with Edgeworth wasn't really necessary for him to want to be here anyway.
As time passed, Edgeworth's breathing slowed to an even pace that signified, if not sleep, then at least a comfortable doze. A smile touched Phoenix's lips. Unbidden, he reached out and let his fingertips brush against the outline of the other man's knuckles.
The door flew open with a bang and the bulb of light exploded from behind. Phoenix wasn't sure whether he or Edgeworth's hands snapped back first, as though they had been burnt. The voice, shrill with triumph and thick with a familiar Southern accent, rattled against both of their ears a quarter of a second after the flash finished its sweep over them.
“
Gotcha, rock star!”
A moment passed. It was silent enough that Phoenix could hear the sound of the nearby clock ticking away the seconds. Out of the corner of his eye, he saw Edgeworth pushing himself into something like a sitting position, and with an internal lurch Phoenix found he felt ill enough in that instant to consider committing himself to the bed adjacent to the prosecutor.
“Hey,” Lotta noted, perturbed, lowering her camera in a gesture of honest bewilderment. Her eyes darted to the left, then to the right, then to the ceiling—as though whatever she was searching for would manifest itself if she just looked hard enough. “This ain't right...”
Edgeworth heaved a world-weary sigh. Phoenix felt his own insides fold over in a strange, acidic blend of relief and exasperation. Lotta apparently didn't notice, because she was still ranting in unimpeded indignation to herself.
“That nurse
swore up and down—” the Southern photographer stamped her foot. “--doggone it, nobody fibs like that from my part of the country, I'll tell ya that! You city folk, couldn't learn to talk straight to save yer lives...”
Edgeworth's expression could have made one think the man had just swallowed a vat of lemon juice. “It wasn't a lie. He already left.
Hours ago.”
Phoenix's eyes darted to him briefly, almost curious.
“Aw,
darn it,” Lotta sighed, forcing a frustrated hand into her glob of hair, “I thought I had him for sure this time! And if he's at a hospital, I figured, it's got to be a real juicy story, being a
hospital and all...” She blinked. “Hey, this is a hospital, ain't it? What the heck are
you doin' here, Edgeworth?”
Astute as ever, Phoenix noted.
“I would think,” Edgeworth said, “that would be fairly obvious to anyone with eyes.”
Lotta scratched her head, as though she wasn't sure whether to be offended or not—before diverting the problem altogether by rounding on Phoenix in a jump of exaggerated surprise.
“Oh, hey, if it ain't Phoenix on top o' that! Since when did you get here?”
I've been here the whole time!“What, you two workin' together on a case again?” Lotta asked, fiddling with the camera strap around her neck.
“No,” Phoenix said. “It's not like that...”
“Huh,” she said, vaguely. “Well, you sure look in a bad way, Edgeworth. Stress get to ya at last? Some murderer you tryin' to nail strike back?” She blinked, mulling further over the idea. “Now
there'd be a story. I mean, yer kind of a rock star all by your lonesome these days yourself, ain'tcha, prosecutor? All the press 'bout you and your sordid, under-the-table dealings...”
“What?” Edgeworth said.
The gleam in Lotta's eyes had shifted from astute disappointment to that of a predatory hawk. “Lots of people'd love to take a shot at ya, goes the rumor mill. So what went down to land ya here as an invalid? Did they hit ya outside the courthouse? Come on, share a coupla details and I'll run with the rest--”
“Lotta,” Phoenix said, but it was a futile attempt. She plucked a notepad from her jacket, already taking furious notes, darting knowing glances at Edgeworth, who was looking less and less amused with each passing second.
“Ooh, don't tell me it's the--” she lowered her voice to a harsh whisper, “
Cadaverini varmints? Papers've been going wild about them last couple o' weeks, nasty pieces o' work--”
“I'm not even connected with that case,” Edgeworth said, speaking very slowly, as though if he enunciated firmly enough, he could force comprehension onto the woman.
“Yeah,” Lotta said, not to be dissuaded, “that's what they
say, but they say a lot of things... they
said you went and kicked the bucket a coupla years back, and they
said what's his name offed your pop all that time ago, but--”
Edgeworth's mouth opened again, then closed.
Phoenix rose from his chair.
“All right, that's enough,” he announced, hoping a firm hand on the shoulder would be sufficient to steer Lotta decisively from the premises.
“
What's enough?” Lotta huffed, flapping the loose pages of the notepad against Phoenix's nose. “I still got questions to ask! I got journalistic integrity to maintain! C'mon, be straight with me! Who put a hit on ya, Edgeworth!?”
Edgeworth, by all appearances, was busy drowning out the sound of her voice by counting the number of circles engraved on the ceiling above, jaw tense and hands tight around the bed sheets.
With a fair amount of effort, and lots of squawking, Phoenix finally managed to get Lotta to the doorway, managed a hasty goodbye, and closed the door in her face. He pressed his full weight against it until he could be sure of the sound of annoyed, retreating footsteps peppered with a fair amount of distinctly Southern curses.
He turned back to face the other man, caught between three separate impulses still trying to untangle themselves from one another within his mind.
What was that all about, anyway?“Uh, rock star?” he inquired, somewhat weakly, figuring that was likely to be the least offensive of his conversational options.
“Don't ask,” Edgeworth said. “I'd rather not be reminded.”
That did little to satisfy Phoenix's curiosity, but it probably wasn't a good idea to continue provoking Edgeworth when he was still pale and confined to the hospital bed—not to mention probably still stewing over the unwelcome reminder of DL-6. So the silence fell back on them again.
There wasn't much, Phoenix knew, with some despondence, that he could offer about the incident that had taken Edgeworth's father from him that he hadn't already said or done. So as he settled back into his chair, his thoughts slid instead back to the near heart attack he'd suffered at the burst of light that had shattered the comfortable silence that had taken so long to attain—and the cold sweat that had congealed against his hands before Lotta confirmed she didn't find anything particularly amiss in what she saw besides the lack of her unknown target.
It wasn't something he particularly wanted to define the implications of.
But his eyes fell onto Edgeworth's hand, still pale and looking oddly vulnerable and out of place against the steel railing of the hospital bed.
Phoenix swallowed heavily. He wanted to take it, but he held back.
***
The rest of the visit had proven uneventful; Edgeworth, in between fits of dozing, was uncomfortably reticent throughout the remainder of the day for a variety of reasons one or both of them hadn't really felt up towards discussing.
Still, Phoenix hadn’t felt inclined to leave until the sun had dipped beneath the horizon and the announcement came over the speakers that visiting hours were coming to a close; he'd stood, diverting his eyes from the television hanging from the corner of the room, and left with a promise to return the next day. Edgeworth had mumbled something about how just because he was confined to bed rest it didn’t mean Phoenix had to join him in doing nothing for a week.
When he walked back through the halls to the entrance of the hospital, he was mostly isolated—no detectives, photographers, or other law officials in sight. It was oddly comforting, after biting back the unsettling feeling of intrusion that had permeated the entire day, where it was almost like he'd spent more time staying out of Edgeworth's way than actually keeping him company.
It wasn’t just the nurses, subordinates, and other irritants in the ointment; he hadn't heard from Franziska in years, Gumshoe in months. He'd forgotten about the former entirely, even though it was her brother who had been hospitalized, until reminded.
In a way it was as though the world constructed around just the two of them—consisting of the things they saw together, looks from people they didn’t even know and would never see again, and the counting game of how long Phoenix could silently goad Edgeworth into grasping his hand—had been punctured and all the things he hadn’t bothered or wanted to think about came seeping in. Because Edgeworth had fallen sick—and the backlash the world offered in response turned out to be even more jarring than being forced to act as a serving boy to his assistant in his own office.
What would Maya even say, seeing things like this...At that, Phoenix frowned.
I have no idea what she'd say.He couldn't immediately remember the last time he had spoken to Maya, off the top of his head either, if he was being honest with himself. With a start it hit him, after thinking about it, that it was almost two weeks ago, and even then, he couldn’t bring to mind a single thing they’d talked about.
He’d been too busy thinking of what
not to talk about.
For a second he felt annoyed, not with himself, but with her—she had access to a phone just as much as he did. In the second after that, he had a hard time feeling much of anything except a rather bitter flood of self-disgust at even reflexively trying to pin it on Maya.
If she hadn't been calling, it probably meant that she was busy—whether with the gardens she had mentioned a while back, or any other number of tasks he only had the vaguest of ideas about--while he had spent the past two months not worrying about much of anything beyond counting the minutes to and since the next dinner or walk or impromptu library visit.
Keep me updated, okay? she had asked.
And he suddenly remembered that Edgeworth had looked at him oddly, slight frown touching his lips, and asked him if he had made any other calls.
After all, it wasn't just Phoenix—there were other people who would want to know something had happened to him.
Phoenix pulled his phone out of his pocket once again to dial.