Perfect People

Free Perfect People by Peter James

Book: Perfect People by Peter James Read Free Book Online
Authors: Peter James
stepped forward and wiped her.
    As she stood up she felt a sudden feeling of panic.
    What have we done? What if it has all gone wrong?
    ‘The baby is normal?’ she asked.
    His bloody secretary was standing in the doorway yet again, signalling to him. He raised a finger in acknowledgement, then distractedly turned back to Naomi.
    ‘Absolutely.’
    ‘You’re really sure?’
    ‘In as much as we can tell at this stage, fit and healthy. You don’t need to be worried. This severe sickness – this hyperemesis gravidarum – will pass soon. Just chill out, relax, enjoy your pregnancy – it’s a great and wonderful time for you.’
    The baby is healthy! she was thinking. My baby is fine, moving inside me. She closed her eyes for a moment, fighting off another wave of sickness. I’m going to be a great mum to you, and John’s going to be a great dad, I promise you. We’re going to try really hard to give you a great life, to make the most of all the advantages Dr Dettore has given you. You’re special, you know that? Just incredibly special. You’re the most special baby in the world.
    ‘So,’ John said, ‘you didn’t tell us.’
    Dr Rosengarten flipped a glance at his watch. The session had clearly timed out. There was a hint of impatience in his voice, suddenly. ‘Tell you what?’
    ‘The sex?’
    ‘You’re sure you want to know?’ He looked at them in turn.
    ‘Yes,’ Naomi said.
    ‘We do,’ John confirmed, smiling again at Naomi. ‘Absolutely.’
    ‘OK, good. Congratulations,’ Dr Rosengarten said. ‘You’re going to have a girl.’

15
     
    Naomi, belted in her seat, locked in her thoughts, was only dimly aware that they were travelling up a ramp, that John was driving, that they were stopping at a booth. It was hot inside the car; airless, stuffy, and the litter of paper in the footwell rustled and crunched as she moved her feet. John powered down his window and handed the car-park attendant the ticket. The man scrutinized the validation stickers with the rigour of an immigration officer studying a passport from a terrorism hotbed, then raised the barrier. John shut his window.
    She was perspiring.
    As they pulled out into the street, a fallen palm frond skimmed across in front of them, and moments later she sensed the car rock in a gust. High-rise walls rose sheer on either side of them, making it feel as if they had entered a canyon, and she peered up, feeling trapped suddenly. Above them, jet-black clouds jostled for space in the narrow corridor of sky. A spot of rain struck the windshield and trickled down.
    They had been talking about the weather on television this morning, saying it was unseasonable for July. It seemed that for the entire seven years they had lived in Los Angeles, the weather had been unseasonable.
    Global warming was to blame for the whole world’s weather patterns being out of kilter – that was the considered opinion. Scientists messing with nature were to blame. Scientists were becoming the new heretics. First the bomb, then pollution, then GM food. And next? Designer babies?
    Fear pounded inside her.
    OK, good. Congratulations. You’re going to have a girl.
    If he couldn’t get that right – Dettore, Dr Dettore ( call me Leo! ) – if he couldn’t get that one absolute fundamental right, then . . . ?
    Oh God, what have we done?
    John drove the grimy grey Volvo out of the car park and made a left, followed by another left, then stopped in a queue at the lights of the junction with La Cienega. He indicated right. South.
    Naomi pulled her iPhone out of her handbag and quickly glanced through her afternoon schedule. She’d gone straight from Oliver Stone’s company to a six-week assignment for a company called Bright Spark Productions, which had made a documentary series about young filmmakers. The first show was going out on the Bravo channel in two weeks’ time.
    At two-thirty she had a meeting at UCLA film school. It was now twenty past twelve. Her car was at

Similar Books

Rio's Fire

Lynn Hagen

Director's Cut

I. K. Watson

On Thin Ice

Eve Gaddy

Fellow Mortals

Dennis Mahoney

The Penitent Damned

Django Wexler

Crime & Punishment

V.R. Dunlap