The long legs stiffened, knees knocking against vinyl. Sturgis's eyes were shut now, and his color looked bad- grayish, his face screwed up tight.
“Ever have this before?” said Beaudry, fighting to sound calm.
Milo's response was a deep, bearish moan.
“Sir, have you ever experie-”
“Ohh! Jeez- get me- oh
Beaudry said, “I'm getting you to a hospital-”
“No, just get me-”
“No choice, sir- where's the closest one- Cedars, okay, Robertson exit's just a ways up, hold on-”
“No, no, I'm oka
Left hand back on the wheel, Beaudry switched to the fast lane and floored the unmarked, using his right hand to snatch the handset and call in an emergency.
No one answered at Deputy Chief Wicks's office. Of course; they'd asked him to bring Sturgis straight to that conference room on the fifth floor, some kind of high-level detective stuff- what was the extension there? No idea. Should he go through the Parker switchboard? No, they'd made it clear this was confidential. Meaning they were trusting him with more than just chauffeuring, probably preparing him for something bigger and better-
Meanwhile, his charge was moaning and gasping like a fish out of water, sounding like he was gonna die right here in the car- look how heavy he was, probably didn't exercise, ate all kinds of garbage- just his luck, Ernest Beaudry's golden luck. All that clean living and raising his kids right, doing his job without a hitch, getting assigned to the motor pool and making Delores happy because he wouldn't get shot by some crackhead. Pushing for motor pool because his uncle had started that way and made sergeant even with all the departmental racism. Because his uncle and other relatives had told him a smart young guy like him, with presence, could do even better. Driving, the connections you made, maybe he'd get to drive for the chief.
Heck, driving could
Silence. Oh, no- “You all right?”
No answer. But Sturgis was still breathing, Beaudry could see the big belly heaving.
“It's all right,” he said soothingly. “We'll take good care of you, almost there.”
Sturgis's face screwed up tighter as he seized again and landed almost prone on the seat, sliding down. Thank God he had his seat belt on. Bucking and heaving… that wheezing-
Robertson, 1 mile. Beaudry checked the rearview and slid across all four lanes, raced down the exit ramp, which was thank-God clear, ran an amber-to-red at National, and jetted north. Cedars just a couple miles away.
Don't die here, man, at least wait til we get there- Pico, Olympic, another iffy amberoo, some cross-traffic that honked at him.
Forget
“We're here, just hold on, man,” he said, slamming the car into park. “Help's right on the way.”
He left the engine running and track-starred into the E.R. reception area, yelled at the sleepy-looking clerk that an officer needed help.
The place was full of sick old people and accident victims, various species of lowlife. Before the clerk could answer, Beaudry ran past them and grabbed the first person in uniform that he saw- a nurse, Filipina- then a female intern in scrubs, the three of them hustling to the unmarked.
“Where?” said the intern, red-haired, looking maybe sixteen, but her badge said S. Goldin, M.D.
“Right here.” Beaudry threw open the unmarked's passenger door.
No one inside.
His first thought was that Sturgis had been gripped by another attack, had somehow opened the door, fallen out, crawled somewhere to die… He ran around the car to check, then looked under the vehicle.
“Where?” said the intern, now looking skeptical.
She and the nurse stared at Beaudry. Taking in
Figuring, he was for real but what the hell was his
Beaudry raced around the parking lot, looking over, under, between every damn vehicle, greasing up his uniform, soaking his tapered-to-the-muscle shirt with stress sweat.
When he came back, Intern S. Goldin repeated, “Where? What's going on, Officer?”
Now Beaudry was breathing hard and his own chest hurt.
Stand tall, show no stress.
“Good question,” he said.
So much for family advice. Driving was
58
Newly retired police captain Eugene Brooker, thirty pounds overweight, slightly hypertensive, and a non- insulin-dependent diabetic, walked uphill.
Old man and the mountain; some image. When his daughters inquired about his health, he always said, “Feel like a kid.”
So, live the lie tonight.
Danny's surprise call- talking twice as fast as usual, from that consulate bathroom- had ended with, “It'll probably be nothing. Do what you can, Gene, but don't put yourself in danger.”
Sneaking a phone into the john? Why were Danny's own people doing this to him?
He trudged up Lyric, staying in the shadows when he could. He'd parked his car a long way down on Apollo, brought the only two weapons handy: the old service revolver, which he'd continued to clean and oil out of habit, and the nine-millimeter that he kept in his bedside nightstand. No long guns because all three of his were already packed away in the U-Haul and they were for quail, not people. Another reason: Rifles were too conspicuous. An overtly armed black man walking the hills at night was beyond a joke.
Up, up, and away… He forced himself to breathe slowly. How long had it been since he'd done real-life, break- a-sweat police work? He didn't even want to think about it.
Pathetically out of shape, but with the diabetes you had to be careful about your exercise- who was he kidding, since college football and walking a beat on Central, he hadn't done a damn thing, athletic-wise…
Climb every mountain, ford every stream, huff huff, the old Nikes nice and quiet.
He'd memorized the address on Rondo Vista.
Slow and steady, it wouldn't do to have a heart attack up here and end up roadkill or worse.
No reason to hurry, probably a quiet night, as Danny had said. Just a precaution for the shrink's sake.
Danny hadn't had time to give many details. The main thing was that a cop named Baker, whom Gene didn't know, might be part of it, so watch out for him, he drove a Saab convertible.
A cop behind all that blood? It could make the Rodney King case look like musical comedy. Beyond that, all Gene knew was that a crazy girl was also part of it and the shrink was on an undercover date with her.