Alarums.

Chapter 9

Pen drew the girl gently against her. Melanie"s arms went around her and she rested her forehead against the side of Pen"s neck. Her breath felt hot through the blouse. "Don"t worry, okay?"

"I"m scared."

"So am I."

"What if he"s dead?"

"He"s not. Joyce would"ve said so." But my phones were unplugged, Pen thought. Joyce might"ve tried to call back. "Come on, Mel. Let"s go." She eased the girl away.



"Do you know where they took him?"

"The Beverly wood Medical Center."

"Okay. It"s not far."

They hurried down to the front of the apartment building. Bodie offered to drive. His blue van was parked at the curb. Pen rode in the pa.s.senger seat and gave directions, while Melanie crouched behind the gap and hung onto the seat backs.

The numbness in Pen wouldn"t pa.s.s. None of this seemed real.

"Make a right on Pico," she said.

When Pen finally saw the hospital at the end of the next block, she felt as if she were in an elevator and its floor had dropped out from under her feet.

"That"s it," she gasped.

Bodie swung his van to the curb. "Is this close enough?"

"Fine," Melanie said.

It"s as close as I ever want to get, Pen thought.

They climbed out. Bodie fed the meter. Melanie took his hand, and Pen led the way.

The morning sky was deep blue. The mild breeze, smelling fresh after last night"s rain, drifted Pen"s blouse against her skin. She noticed that it felt good, and she wondered how anything could feel good at this moment with her stomach clenched and her shaking legs barely able to hold her up - with her father in the building up aheada He has to be alive. He has to be. Please.

A woman approaching, pushing a baby stroller.

He always wanted a grandchild.

Only a week ago, he"d said, "I"m not getting any younger, you know. Why don"t you go out like a good daughter and get yourself knocked up?"

Pen"s throat tightened. Her eyes started to burn.

Christ now, don"t cry.

He"s all right, d.a.m.n it.

Don"t fall apart in front of Melanie. Hold it together.

She glanced back. Melanie was holding Bodie"s hand and gazing at the sidewalk. Bodie met her eyes. She wondered how he must feel, finding himself in the middle of a family tragedy. Probably wishing he"d never left Phoenix. First he gets stabbed, now this.

At the corner, Pen turned toward the crosswalk. She pushed a b.u.t.ton on the light post to activate the WALK sign, and waited. Across Pico Boulevard was a driveway marked "Ambulance Entrance". A police car was parked at the curb.

The WALK sign went green. She stepped off the curb and a hand clamped her shoulder from behind. It jerked her to a halt. A red blur steaked by, roaring, hitting her with its slipstream. As she staggered backwards a step, she saw the low rear-end of a speeding Porsche.

"a.s.shole ran the red light," Bodie muttered.

Pen turned to him. He took his hand off her shoulder. "Thanks. Guess I"d better watch where I"m going."

Melanie had a hand pressed to her heart. She looked wide-eyed and breathless as if someone had just jumped at her in the dark.

"You okay?" Pen asked her.

She nodded.

The DON"T WALK sign was already flashing, so they waited through another cycle of the traffic lights. When the WALK sign returned, Pen checked the intersection before leaving the curb.

On the other side, she headed for the ambulance driveway, realized she shouldn"t try entering there, and turned around in confusion. She shrugged, stepped past Bodie and Melanie, and spotted a doorway facing Beverly Drive.

Her numbness seemed to spread and deepen as the gla.s.s doors parted.

She stepped into a reception room. A young woman gnawing her lower lip glanced nervously at her and looked away. She was on a bench, holding the hand of a tow-head no older than five who was bent forward to peer at a black woman with a b.l.o.o.d.y rag wrapped around her arm. The black woman, on a chair along the far wall, held her arm and rocked herself back and forth, humming softly. She had a blank look in her eyes. The child stopped staring at her long enough to eye the three new arrivals, apparently checking them for injuries.

Pen turned to the office enclosure on her left. Through the gla.s.s part.i.tion, she saw two women in white uniforms. One was seated at a desk. The other, heavy and wearing her brown hair in a Prince Valiant cut, looked up from her paperwork, smiled at Pen, and approached the window.

Pen froze.

She was here - a few steps, a few words, a few moments away from learning the truth - and the weight of it paralyzed her. She couldn"t move. Her legs shook. She stared at the woman and gasped for breath.

Bodie stepped around her. He leaned close to the window. "We got word that a Whit Conway was brought here yesterday after an accident. These are his daughters. They"re awfully anxious to find out how he is."

The woman looked down at something out of sight below the counter front. "That"s Whitman Conway?"

"Yes."

"He was admitted via ambulance last night, accompanied by his spouse." She stopped talking, but continued to read whatever gave the information.

Pen"s stomach gave a little flip.

Melanie took hold of her hand.

"His admitting diagnosis was fracture of the patellae bilaterallya"

"What does that mean?" Bodie asked.

"Both kneecaps were broken. His right upper arm was also fractured," she added, bypa.s.sing the medical jargon. She rubbed her mouth. "He also had a severe head injury. He was unconscious when they brought him in."

Melanie"s hand flinched in Pen"s grip.

"He was admitted to the hospital for surgery. I only have the ER records here, so you"ll need to check the main hospital for his current condition."

She gave directions to Bodie. He nodded, then asked, "Does it say how he got hurt?"

"He was struck by an automobile while crossing a street in Beverly Hills. A hit and run."

Bodie thanked her. He led the way to a door at the rear of the room. Pen and Melanie followed him into a corridor.

Hit by a car. Pen thought of her own close call on the boulevard outside, but in her mind Bodie didn"t stop her and the car broke her knees back. She flew headfirst at the windshield.

Dad.

A severe head injury.

Surgery.

At least he"s not dead, she told herself. At least he wasn"t dead when he left the emergency room.

The woman would"ve known, wouldn"t she, if he"d died later on? Maybe not. Or maybe she knew, but preferred to let someone else break the news.

They came out of the corridor into a lobby. Double gla.s.s doors faced Pico. A woman was seated behind an information desk.

"I"ll try to find out what"s going on," Bodie said. "Why don"t you two have a seat?"

Pen nodded. She guided Melanie to a sofa near the wall, and they sat down.

Bodie spoke to the woman at the desk. She made a telephone call, said something to Bodie. He came back and sat beside Melanie. "A doctor"s going to come out and talk to us."

They waited.

Pen rubbed her sweaty hands on her pants.

I"m sorry, we did everything humanly possible.

A man came through a doorway at the far side of the lobby. He walked straight toward them. He was not the old, weary physician Pen had expected. He looked young, not much over thirty, handsome and energetic. He belonged in tennis whites, but he wore gray slacks and an open white jacket, a shirt of Stuart plaid and a solid green tie, loosely knotted. He carried a clipboard.

Pen tried to read his expression. It was business-like. It gave nothing away.

Bodie was already standing.

Pen forced herself up. Melanie hesitated, then stood.

"I"m Dr Gray," he said, and shook hands with Bodie. "I"m the neurosurgeon who operated on Mr Conway." He had a pleasant voice, a pleasant smile.

"How is he?" Melanie asked, her voice a choked whisper.

"Your father"s in a stable condition."

His words tore the fog from Pen"s mind.

Dad"s all right.

The tears came and she thought, it"s okay, oh my G.o.d, he"s not dead, he"s okay. "Can we see him?" she asked. Blubbering. I"m blubbering. I don"t care.

"Certainly. But we need to talk first. Will you step this way?"

Talk.

It"s not okay.

Dr Gray led them into an office. They sat on soft chairs and he sat on the edge of his desk, facing them.

"Your father sustained what we call a subdural hematoma. The impact from the accident caused blood vessels inside his skull to rupture. We operated on him immediately after he was admitted last night to open the skull, relieve the pressure of the blood build-up inside, and stop the bleeding. The surgery went well. However, your father did sustain a certain amount of brain damage, which is almost inevitable considering the trauma he experienced." Frowning, Dr Gray rubbed his cheek as if checking for whiskers. "I"ve seen patients in worse condition than your father make full and complete recoveries. I"ve seen others who weren"t so fortunate. But your father is in excellent physical shape for a man his age, so we can be somewhat optimistic about the outcome. At present, however, he"s comatose."

"He"s in a coma? Bodie asked.

"He hasn"t regained consciousness since the time of the accident. He is no immediate danger, however. We have him on life support systems, and his condition is being constantly monitored. His vital signs are good."

"You think he"ll come out of it, though?" Bodie asked. "There"s just no way of knowing. He might pull out of it today or next weeka"

"Or never," Melanie said.

"That"s also a possibility. But we"re doing everything we can for him."

CHAPTER EIGHT.

Bodie stood at the foot of the bed. Melanie, beside him, stared at her father while Pen went to the man"s side and took hold of his hand.

A sheet covered him to the chest. Tubes ran into his nostrils and arms. The top of his head was wrapped in bandages.

The cardiac monitor had a jagged green line and beeped regularly just as such machines did on television - which was the extent of Bodie"s exposure to such things until now. The respirator made a chirping sound as it pumped air into the man"s lungs. Somewhere, Bodie had heard the term "bird respirator". He supposed they were called that because of the noise.

All very interesting.

He wanted the h.e.l.l out of there.

The doctor had made it sound pretty good, almost as if the coma was just a minor setback. But the old guy, bandaged and hooked up from every direction, looked like a Victor Frankenstein experiment on a bad day.

"Dad, it"s Penny. The doctor says you"re going to be fine. Melanie"s here, too."

"Hi, Dad," Melanie said.

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