I sensed movement behind me and spun around. While I'd been creeping into the parking lot with my back to the alley windows, Karel Sladky had silently slipped out of one and had moved up directly behind me.
He had the drop on me with that monster Russian ventilator.
I dove facedown on the pavement just as he let loose with a stream of bullets. The 9 mm slugs dug into the black tar asphalt surface in front of me.
I had just barely survived the first burst, but was in a terrible predicament. I was facedown, ten feet from the shooter, seconds from death.
Then I heard three shots ring out. They sounded like balloons popping in contrast to the roar of the Bizon.
I looked up just in time to see Sladky fly backward. Three red spots blossomed on the front of his white shirt. He landed on his back and the Bizon fell harmlessly from his hands.
I turned and saw Hitch. He'd taken cover inside the trash Dumpster. When Sladky fired at me, Hitch had jumped up, exposing himself. Then he'd taken the Czechoslovakian down with three well-placed shots.
Hitch climbed out of the Dumpster. Coffee grounds and orange rinds stained the cuffs of his beautiful rust- colored suit. I wanted to kiss the guy.
'Good shooting,' I said, my voice a croak.
The back door burst open and two gun-wielding SWAT officers came running out. Two more rounded the corner at the side of the bar. All with their guns up and safeties off.
'We re Code Four!' I shouted. 'Shooter s down.'
The SWAT commander checked the body. Sladky was alive, but just barely. The Hollywood station LT called for the ambulance SWAT had standing by and seconds later it rolled into the parking lot. Sladky miraculously continued to breathe as he was loaded aboard a stretcher, leaking blood from three chest wounds. A few seconds later he was being rushed away, with sirens blaring.
The watch commander wanted Hitch and me to be transported directly back to Hollywood Division to complete a Daily Field Activity Report, which takes place immediately after every shooting where a police officer discharges his or her weapon.
A DFAR is usually done by a 'shoot unit' headed by a sergeant from Internal Affairs. Afterward Hitch would undergo a full shooting review, also standard practice after an officer-involved gunfight.
When I finished with the lieutenant, he went in search of Hitch, who was supposed to be isolated in the back of a patrol car.
The watch commander couldn't find him and was starting to freak out. Hitch wasn't supposed to have contact with anyone until after his DFAR. The idea was to keep participants from getting together and organizing their versions of what happened.
'I'll find him, LT,' I said, trying to calm the guy. 'He's around here somewhere. Give me a minute.'
I found Hitch behind the strip club in the very alley where Karel Sladky had gotten the drop on me and then been gunned down.
When I spotted him I thought he was cleaning the garbage out of the cuffs of his rust-colored suit. But he wasn't doing that at all.
He was bent over, throwing up on his Spanish leather shoes.
Chapter 20
The DFAR took place in the lieutenant s office at the Hollywood station. Sergeant Lena Fine, a thirty-year-old nondescript woman with mouse brown hair and a careful demeanor, from the Bureau of Professional Standards conducted the interview.
The interview was on a continuous tape and was witnessed by the lieutenant watch commander. The DFAR is conducted under oath and is basically the officers retelling of the event for the official record. Hitch, as the primary shooter, went first.
I gave the supporting eyewitness statement and told my end of it, recounting how Sladky came out the window behind me after I had gone into the back parking lot and how he was dropped by my partner before he could get off a second deadly burst that would certainly have killed me.
I was told by Sergeant Fine that a separate shooting review would be conducted a day or so later at the Bradbury Building, and that I might be called to testify. She said because it was nearly Christmas Eve and even the headhunters from IA needed time at home with their families it probably wouldn't happen until after the holiday.
Hitch and I finished around eight. Despite the fact that I'd only had ninety minutes of sleep in two days, I was not the least bit tired, an adrenaline rush performing that miracle for me.
Hitch came out of the mens room where he'd been washing up and stood facing me.
'You wanta go home or do you want to let me buy you a thanks-for-saving-my-life-merry-Christmas drink?' I asked.
'Drink sounds good,' he replied.
We went to a bar right across the street called Mulroney's Roost. It was a cop bar that catered to the Hollywood station. However, at eight P. M. this close to Christmas, the bar was pretty dead. Hitch and I took a booth in the back. We both ordered a Corona with lime.
'You okay?' I asked, looking at his tired expression and the rust-colored suit, which had endured a lot of abuse in the last two days.
'Yeah, I guess,' he said, but he didn't sound too sure.
'You never put a guy down before, did you?' I said, remembering the image of him bent over in the alley, puking.
'No.'
He sipped some of his beer; his handsome face was furrowed in thought. 'Funny,' he said. 'Growing up in South Central I saw my share of bangers get taken off the count. Saw my first payback hit when I was in fourth grade. But…' He stopped and looked down at his beer.
'But it feels different when you're the shooter,' I finished for him.
'Yeah, it does.'
'Listen, Hitch. What you did for me this afternoon, that's something I can never repay. You know that, right?'
'Come on… guy was greasing off rounds at both of us.'
'You stood up. You exposed yourself to fire and you saved my life. I'm not saying I exactly understand what you're all about yet, but that's something I'm not going to forget.'
After a moment he nodded. I could see he'd taken in what I'd just said.
'You're gonna have some bad moments about it,' I continued. 'It's hard being responsible for ending somebody's life.'
'He's not dead yet,' Hitch said. 'I called the hospital an hour ago. He's still in ICU.'
'Come on. You put three in the ten ring. He might still have a heartbeat, but that guy's on the ark.'
Hitch nodded.
'I've done this a few times. It's never easy. You gotta watch out for yourself these next few days. There's a guy in the psychiatric support unit who I've talked to a couple of times when this happened to me. It's standard procedure to send you to a shrink, so I'm sure Jeb will set you up to do that soon. But some of the head docs in psychiatric support are just clocking time. I want you to have this guy. His name's Dr. Eric Lusk. I'm gonna call him.'
'Okay,' he said softly. 'Eric Lusk.' We finished our beers and were getting ready to leave when he looked at me with an earnest expression I'd never seen before.
'I guess we did pretty good. I mean, we got lucky with that video, but we put the case down and we did it in less than two days. Big, media-intense red ball and we gonked it. Home run for big blue.'
'Yes it is,' I agreed.
'Okay, so what's our story, you and me? Where do we go from here?' 'You move over to my cubicle and take