She looked at him with the eyes of judgment as she opened her phone again. She pushed a single button and spoke to Bosch while waiting for the connection.
“You better hope we get to these people before-”
She cut off when her call was picked up. She delivered the information without identifying herself or giving any sort of greeting.
“He’s at the Mark Twain on Wilcox. Room three-oh-three. Go pick him up.”
She closed her phone and looked at Bosch. Worse than judgment, he saw disappointment and dismissal in her eyes now.
“I have to go,” she said. “I’d stay away from airports, subways and the malls until we find that cesium.”
She turned and left him there. Bosch was watching her walk away when his phone started to buzz again and he answered without taking his eyes off her. It was Joe Felton, the deputy coroner.
“Harry, I’ve been trying to reach you.”
“What’s up, Joe?”
“We just swung by Queen of Angels to make a pickup-some gangbanger they pulled the plug on after a shooting yesterday in Hollywood.”
Bosch remembered the case Jerry Edgar had mentioned.
“Yeah?”
Bosch knew that the medical examiner wouldn’t have called to waste his time. There was a reason.
“So, we’re here now and I go into the break room to grab some caffeine and I overhear a couple of paramedics talking about a pickup that they just made. They said they just brought in a guy and the ER evaluation was ARS and it just made me wonder if it could be connected with the guy up on the overlook. You know, since he was wearing the radiation alert rings.”
Bosch calmed his voice.
“Joe, what is ARS?”
“Acute radiation syndrome. The medics said they didn’t know what the guy had. He was burned and he was puking all over the place. They transported him and the ER doc said it was a pretty bad exposure, Harry. Now the medics are waiting to see if they’re exposed.”
Bosch started walking toward Rachel Walling.
“Where’d they find this guy?”
“I didn’t ask but I assume it was somewhere in Hollywood if they brought him in here.”
Bosch started picking up speed.
“Joe, I want you to hang up and get somebody from hospital security to watch this guy. I’m on my way.”
Bosch clapped the phone closed and began running toward Rachel as fast as he could.
SIXTEEN
THE TRAFFIC ON THE HOLLYWOOD FREEWAY was all flowing into downtown at a slow crawl. Under the laws of traffic physics-that for every action there is an equal and opposite reaction-Harry Bosch had clear sailing on the northbound lanes out. Of course, this was aided by the siren and flashing lights on his car, making what little traffic there was in front of him move quickly to the side and out of the way.
“I told you. I’m taking you to the cesium.”
“What does that mean?”
“It means paramedics just brought a man with acute radiation syndrome into the emergency room at Queen of Angels. We’ll be there in four minutes.”
“Damn it! Why didn’t you tell me?”
The answer was that he wanted a head start but he didn’t tell her this. He remained silent while she opened her cell phone and punched in a number. She then reached up to the car’s roof and flicked off the siren toggle.
“What are you doing?” Bosch exclaimed. “I need that to-”
“I need to be able to talk!”
Bosch took his foot off the accelerator and dropped it down to seventy to be safe. A moment later her call was connected and Bosch listened to her bark commands. He hoped it was at Brenner and not Maxwell.
“Divert the team from the Mark Twain to Queen of Angels. Scramble a contamination team and get them there, too. Send backup units and a DOE assessment team. We have an exposure case that may lead us to the missing materials. Do it and call me back. I’ll be on-site in three minutes.”
She closed the phone and Bosch hit the siren toggle.
He pinned the accelerator again even though he didn’t need to. He was confident they would be first to the hospital. They were already past Silver Lake on the freeway and closing in on Hollywood. But the truth was that any time he could legitimately hit ninety on the Hollywood Freeway he took advantage. There were not many in the city who could say they had done that during daylight hours.
They were silent for a long period. Bosch concentrated on the driving. And his thoughts. There were so many things that bothered him about the case. Soon he had to share them.
Bosch let some time go by. He was tired of yelling. But then he called over another question.
Bosch was about to respond but they came up on the exit and he had to concentrate on weaving around the traffic on surface streets. In two minutes he finally killed the siren and pulled into the ambulance run at Queen of Angels.
Felton met them in the crowded emergency room and led the way to the treatment area, where there were six ER bays. A private security cop stood outside one of the curtained spaces and Bosch moved forward, showing his badge. After barely acknowledging the rent-a-cop he split the curtain and moved into the treatment bay.
Alone in the curtained space was the patient, a small, dark-haired man with brown skin lying beneath a spider web of tubes and wires extending from overhead medical machinery to his limbs, chest, mouth and nose. The hospital bed was encased in a clear, plastic tent. The man barely took up half the bed and somehow looked like a victim under attack by the apparatus around him.
His eyes were half-lidded and unmoving. Most of his body was exposed. Some sort of modesty towel had been taped over his genitals but his legs and torso were visible. The right side of his stomach and right hip were