The doctor is IN.
Gender: None specified
Rank: Suspect
Joined: Sat Nov 24, 2007 11:25 pm
Posts: 17
Edgeworth didn’t think twice before making the decision to visit Phoenix straight away. He’d only gone on looking at the case file for a few more minutes (with absolute focus on the victim’s segment) before packing it in his briefcase, seizing his car keys, and leaving the office. For nearly the entirety of the trip, his mind was plagued by the reality of one salient detail of the report: the close proximity of the bullet wound to Phoenix’s heart.
The shooter missed her intended mark. If this was anyone else’s case, he realized with a slight twinge of queasiness, he would be rejoicing. The bullet’s close location proved beyond reasonable doubt that the assailant had clear aims to murder and not just to injure. Naturally, this was an important argument to establish in any effort to convict someone of attempted murder.
As he neared the hospital, Edgeworth’s thoughts shifted to the anticipation of what he would find. What had befallen Phoenix troubled him a lot more than he judged it should and he therefore planned to hide it. Showing signs of how concerned he was would only cause Phoenix to panic, he reasoned. There was no better time to put his ability to appear cool and unconcerned to use.
Luckily, St. Fred’s West was not far from the Prosecutor’s Office and he arrived within twenty minutes. During a brief visit to the reception desk he learned Phoenix’s room number, but he sought out the doctor before the patient.
And he learned that Phoenix was
not ‘all right.’
Edgeworth entered Room 106 as quietly as he could manage to, his eyes darting to the only occupied hospital bed in the two-patient room. Phoenix shifted to face him, and he was immediately overcome by two conflicting emotions of relief and dread—relief, because Phoenix seemed awake and responsive, but dread at the simple sight of him. Like all hospital rooms, this one gave off an air of purity because of the lighting in the room and the colors which they shone upon—all light peaches, soft blues, and pure whites. However, none of this eased his distress at seeing Phoenix confined to a hospital bed, gripping a small fistful of blanket in the purest form of silent agony.
Perceptibly reddened eyes stared up at the prosecutor over some abominable breathing contraption Edgeworth at first couldn’t take his eyes off of. Chiefly due to the device, Phoenix’s breaths were audible from anywhere in the room. After a still pause at the door, Edgeworth finally stepped in, claiming a chair beside the bed and setting his suitcase down nearby it. Despite the fact that a glimmer of joy was discernible in Wright’s glance, Edgeworth found himself unable to look at him for long and averted his eyes instead to the bed sheets.
“… Are you all right?” he said, with lack of better else to say. The reply came as a low, hoarse whisper and though Phoenix’s mouth was covered, Edgeworth could hear a smile in it.
“… Been better…”
“Do the Fey girls know? I can get them train tickets to come down here…”
Phoenix flinched. “No… Don’t want them here… N-No offense…” He took what should have been an infuriatingly long time to speak, but Edgeworth was patient.
“I understand… … I can’t believe this happened…” he mused, still avoiding eye contact. “I’ll get her punished to the maximum extent of the law.”
“Who?” To Edgeworth’s surprise, Phoenix sounded completely confused at the mention of the suspect.
“… Byrde.”
“What… did she do?”
Edgeworth finally passed Phoenix a light glance in a silence that followed. He knew that Maggey Byrde and the defense attorney had a history of acquaintance and friendship, and he didn’t want to be the one to break this news to him. His almost instinctual loathing for crime had him riled up over the simple mention of the incident, but he didn’t want to cause the bedridden man to worry any further. His grey eyes, still cleverly devoid of any obvious emotion such as worry, returned yet again to the bed sheets.
“She shot you.”
“… Maggey… … Why?” If there had been a smile before, feigned or genuine or otherwise, it was gone now, because dejection rung clear in Edgeworth’s ears.
“I don’t know… why she would have anything against you, but she did. All of the evidence points to her and her trial is in two days.”
Phoenix said nothing.
“… I know you were close, but she needs to pay.”
“… Miles… I’m scared…” Phoenix admitted suddenly in a twist of conversation Edgeworth neither expected nor hoped for. The downhearted statement left Edgeworth silent for a moment.
“… Of what?”
“I've never... Been so hurt before... It's scary...”
Court trials were battles of wit which involved a lot of speaking, and so he had become naturally accustomed to hearing Phoenix’s voice, talking or yelling or otherwise. Despite the way that mechanism altered it, causing it to sound hollow and mechanical, Edgeworth deciphered something he hadn’t heard in over 15 years: Phoenix sounded like a child. At this realization, Edgeworth’s heart sunk in an almost tangible manner.
“You’re not going to die, Nick,” he assured him.
To his dismay, Phoenix only appeared increasingly more frightened, as if dying hadn’t even occurred to him. Eager for his attention, Edgeworth reached forward slightly to touch his shoulder. “You’re going to be alright. I’ve already spoken to the doctors… They said you’re fine.”
Phoenix, the terror in his eyes replaced with something else, stared blankly at Edgeworth for a moment and then nodded as though he had been asked a question. Edgeworth frowned.
“… They drugged you, didn’t they?”
Phoenix closed his eyes softly, turning his head slightly in some vague acknowledgement that was neither a nod nor a shake of the head. “I think so…”
That’s why he’s acting this way… He’s afraid, and trying to comfort him while he’s like this is going to fail. Intent on retaining his composure regardless, Edgeworth sat back with a plain sigh. “I can’t argue what’s necessary… I’ll let you rest.”
Whatever peace was meant to follow was interrupted by a quiet knock on the door. After slight hesitation, Edgeworth rose to open it and he was greeted by the sight of Gumshoe with a fistful of devastated, shedding flowers and an optimistic grin on his face.
“… Gumshoe,” Edgeworth muttered in simple greeting.
The detective was startled by the annoyance in Edgeworth’s voice, but his smile did not falter. “Mr. Edgeworth?”
Edgeworth grimaced. “What the hell are those weeds?”
Gumshoe shifted his hand to hold up the dilapidated flowers a little higher, looking them over in an attempt to understand the prosecutor’s cynicism. He saw nothing.
“They’re irises, sir…”
“Why are they ruined?” Edgeworth snapped, his voice hushed to conceal the ordeal from Phoenix.
“Huh? They’re not ruined… Squished, a little bit, but they’re fine.” Despite Gumshoe’s judgment, the flowers were hardly just ‘squished’ by Edgeworth’s standards. He glanced back at Phoenix momentarily before turning a glare back to Gumshoe, sighing in exasperation. Not in any mood to argue, he fished his wallet out of his pants pocket and easily pulled out a $20 bill, pushing it into Gumshoe’s free hand.
“Throw those away and get some fresh ones.”
Needless to say, Gumshoe was surprised by the gesture, but he was apparently more engrossed by this new mission. “Oh… Okay, sir! I will!” Turning on his heel, the detective departed down the hallway, leaving Edgeworth to close the door behind him.
“… Who was that?” Phoenix finally said, leading Edgeworth to further dread the degree to which he was medicated.
“Detective Gumshoe,” Edgeworth answered, crossing the room and retaking his seat.
“… Oh… Why’d he leave?”
“He came to ask for directions to the flower shop. He wants to buy you some.”
Phoenix smiled a little. “... Oh... I'll thank him when he comes back...”
A silence followed for which Edgeworth found himself unable to look at Phoenix yet again. It upset him implausibly to see his childhood friend this way; part of him wanted to ask if it hurt, how much it hurt, and what had happened, but a stoical logic kept him from it. Whatever tranquilizing medication Phoenix was on was an effectual communication barrier and Edgeworth wasn’t about to challenge that.
Unlike most silences which Edgeworth traditionally enjoyed, this one prompted him to speak.
“Well... Do you mind if I stay here to work for a couple of hours?” he asked, reaching to grab the suitcase. He was naturally eager to give Byrde’s case file a more thorough read.
“No… You can stay…” Phoenix paused, and then continued without need: “Please stay…”
“… I will,” Edgeworth said after some notable hesitation, carefully slipping the case file out of the briefcase and setting it neatly on a small white table which bordered the bed and the wall. He opened the folder and flipped to the first page of information, giving it a more scrupulous assessment.
Time passed during which Edgeworth read the file in silence; the room quiet except for Phoenix’s mechanically regulated breaths and the occasional turning of pages. Edgeworth didn’t look up from the report, not entirely out of pure fixation on its contents, but because he didn’t want to see the look in Phoenix’s eyes.
Therefore, he was unaware that Phoenix was actually staring up at the ceiling until the injured man’s voice sounded out again and Edgeworth at last looked at him.
“I’m not used… to being alone…” he mused, his eyes fixed in a motionless stare. “I don’t like it.”
That class trial… Does it haunt him still? Or is this the morphine talking…“You’ll never really be alone. You have lots of friends,” Edgeworth assured him calmly.
All too soon, there was a disruptively brisk knock at the door, and Edgeworth winced, already aware of the visitor’s identity. He sighed, standing up and heading to the door to answer it.
Phoenix didn’t seem to notice the knocking, and he spoke again, causing Edgeworth to pause where he was. “… You’re one of them… right?”
“… Yes. I am.”
Edgeworth proceeded to open the door, and no simple words could express his disgust at the sight.
There stood Gumshoe, beaming and holding six sunflowers which were at least twice the size of his head.
“They were out of irises, so I got these!”
The scowl on Edgeworth’s face alone caused Gumshoe’s smile to vanish. “… Is there something wrong with them, sir?”
“Do you think these would fit in a vase?” Edgeworth replied suddenly.
“Oh… Right…”
Before Edgeworth could send the detective off, Phoenix’s small voice called out from behind him.
“Gumshoe?...”
At this, Edgeworth sighed quietly, looking away from the detective and stepping aside to let him in. At the sight of Wright, Gumshoe regained a small bit of his cheerful composure.
“Mr. Wright! How're ya feeling, pal?”
Phoenix smiled a little despite himself. “Not so good…”
"Oh… Well, I brought you flowers, but I guess they're too big..." Gumshoe said, closing the door after himself. Edgeworth walked back to his seat beside the bed, and Gumshoe followed suit, taking a seat beside his. He reached to carefully prop the sunflowers up against the table.
“It’s okay… Thank you,” said Phoenix politely, somehow warranting another silence during which Edgeworth pretended to already be preoccupied with the case file.
The quiet was abruptly broken by Detective Gumshoe. “Do you really think Magg-, I mean, Officer Byrde--”
“Yes,” Edgeworth replied without missing a beat, whether or not the question was directed at him. Gumshoe slumped.
“The evidence points to her. That’s all I need.”
“… I don’t understand,” Phoenix continued, gloominess almost palpable in his voice. “She was my friend…”
“She has a very peculiar way of showing her friendship,” Edgeworth murmured confidently. “Whoever did this was trying to kill you.”
Gumshoe quite nearly stood up, obviously flustered by the calm accusation. “I just can't believe that she would do that, Mr. Edgeworth, sir.”
“Unfortunately, whether or not you can believe a suspect is guilty is irrelevant in a courtroom. What matters is evidence…” Edgeworth said with a lack of acknowledgement for Gumshoe’s disillusionment.
Gumshoe did not pursue the argument further, quietly drooping back into his chair.
“… I’m sorry, Phoenix…” Edgeworth admitted after a short pause, finally looking up from the papers.
“It’s not your fault…”
“… I’m going to see Ms. Byrde. Detective, stay here and get Wright anything if he needs it, but don’t disturb him needlessly, understood?”
Gumshoe nodded steadfastly. “Yes, sir.”
Edgeworth rose to his feet, grabbing his suitcase but leaving the stack of papers on the table. “I'll be back in an hour or so.”
“… You promise?” Phoenix asked, staring up at him with dismayed eyes Edgeworth was afraid to look at.
“Yes. Do you think I would leave that case file behind?”
Once again, Phoenix smirked a little despite himself. “You’re still the same…”
Unsure of how to reply, Edgeworth hesitated and did not answer directly. “I’ll see you later.”
He made his way past the still-seated detective and out the door.