Magary said, 'I mean I didn't know if I should come over. But they called me. I felt kind of... an obligation?'
'Eric needs friends,' said Petra. The woman seemed confused. Given the circumstances, that seemed the appropriate state of mind.
'I do hope he gets okay. He's a nice guy.'
'He is.'
'What... exactly happened?'
'Eric was involved in a police incident,' said Petra. 'Apprehending a suspect. He got stabbed in the abdomen.'
Magary's hand flew to her perfect mouth. 'Omigod! All they told me is he was hurt. And then, when I got here, they said I couldn't go inside.' Pointing to the ICU door. 'I guess you got in because you're a police person.'
'I'm his partner,' said Petra.
'Oh.' Magary's eyes got wet. 'I'm so, so sorry.'
'He's going to be all right,' said Petra with phony confidence. Magary relaxed and smiled.
'That's great!'
Maybe, thought Petra, I picked the wrong career. There's always telemarketing.
Magary said, 'I guess I'll go now. Think it's okay if I come back tomorrow? Maybe he'll be better, and I can go in there?'
'It's more than okay, Kathy. Like I said, he needs all the support he can get.'
Something about that knocked Magary down a notch. 'It's still real bad, isn't it? Even though he's going to make it.'
'He incurred a serious injury. He's getting really good care.'
'Good,' said Magary. 'The only doctor I know is my orthopedist. I'm a dancer.'
'Ah,' said Petra.
'Well,' said Magary. 'I'll be going. I'll come back tomorrow. If Eric wakes up, tell him I was here.' She kissed her fingertips, waved them at the ICU door. Smiled at Petra and sashayed down the hall.
Shortly after that, Petra spotted Dr LaVigne exit an elevator, talking to two gray-haired people. The three of them stopped and continued their conversation out of her earshot.
The man was in his sixties, short, slight, wore a brown sport coat, a white shirt under a tan sweater, and pressed beige slacks. Gray crew cut, steel-rimmed glasses. The woman was tiny - maybe five feet tall, also slender. Blue sweater, gray slacks.
LaVigne said something that made both of them nod. They followed him past Petra, into the ICU. LaVigne emerged a half hour later, ignoring Petra as he hurried by. A quarter hour after that, the gray-haired couple came out.
Petra had been slumped in a horrid orange Naugh-ahyde chair that squeaked every time she exhaled. Trying to chase away her thoughts by reading a magazine. The words might as well have been Swahili.
The woman said, 'Detective Connor?'
Petra stood.
'We're Eric's parents. This is the Reverend Stahl, and I'm Mary.'
'Bob,' said her husband.
Petra reached for Mary Stahl's hand, covered it with both of hers. 'I'm so sorry, ma'am.'
'They say he'll be all right.'
Reverend Bob Stahl said, 'We'll be praying.'
'We sure will,' said Petra.
'How did it happen?' Mary Stahl asked her. 'If you know.'
'What I know,' said Petra, 'is that your son's a hero.'
What she thought was: It didn't need to happen.
Stahl had stopped calling in an hour before the confrontation with Shull. She'd tried reaching him twice on the tac band but couldn't get through- Meaning he'd ignored her. Or switched off his radio.
Why?
She sat with Bob and Mary Stahl for over an hour before the answer took shape.
Learning they lived in Camarillo, where Eric had grown up, a short drive from the beach. Eric had been a good student, lettered in baseball and track, loved junk food, played the trumpet. Surfed on weekends - so her initial guess hadn't been that off, after all. She suppressed a smile. Suppressing wasn't hard, thinking of Eric lying there, his abdomen stitched from sternum to navel. Shull's blade had ravaged his intestines, missed the diaphragm by millimeters...
Mary Stahl said, 'Eric's always been a good boy. Never a lick of trouble.'
'Never,' Bob agreed. 'Almost too good, if you know what I mean.'
Petra urged them on with a smile.
Mary Stahl said, 'I wouldn't say that, dear.'
'You're right,' said Reverend Bob. 'But you know what I mean.' To Petra: 'The P.K. syndrome. Preacher's kids. It's hard for them - keeping up the image. Or thinking they need to. We never pressured Eric. We're Presbyterian.'
As if that explained it.
Petra nodded.
Reverend Bob said, 'Still, some kids feel the pressure. My other son did. Put himself under serious pressure and sowed some wild oats. He's a lawyer, now.'
'Steve lives on Long Island,' said Mary Stahl. 'Works at a big firm in Manhattan. He'll be flying in tomorrow. He and Eric used to surf together.'
'Eric never seemed to be bothered by the pressure,' said her husband. 'Really easygoing. I used to joke that he'd better get upset about something, or he wouldn't have any blood pressure.'
Mary Stahl burst into tears. Petra sat there as Reverend Bob comforted her.
'Pardon me,' she said, when she recovered her composure.
'Nothing to pardon, dear.'
'Eric needs me to be strong. I don't like making a scene.'
Petra smiled. Smiling seemed the only damn thing she could do. She hoped it came across real because it sure didn't feel real.
Mary Stahl smiled back. Cried some more. Said, 'A few years ago, Eric's life changed.'
'Mary,' said Bob.
'She's his partner, dear. She should know.' Bob's eyes nickered behind his trifocals. 'Yes, you're right.'
Mary sighed, touched her hair. Sat back. Became rigid, again. 'Eric used to have a family, Detective Connor. Back when he was in the Army - in Special Forces. A wife and two children. Heather, Danny, and Dawn. Danny was five and Dawn was two and a half. They were all living in Riyadh. Saudi Arabia. Eric was assigned to the American embassy, he never really told us for what - it's like that, in Special Forces. You can't talk about what you do.' 'Of course not.'
'They killed his family,' said Mary. 'One of the royal family cousins in a fast car - a Ferrari. Heather was walking the children in a stroller on a main street near a big shopping mall. This person came speeding through and hit them, and they were all killed.' 'My God,' said Petra. 'Our grandchildren,' said Mary. Reverend Bob said, 'On top of the trauma, what bothered Eric was the way the government - our government - treated him. The killer was never punished. The Saudis claimed Heather had been jaywalking, it was her fault. The Saudis offered Eric a cash payment - one hundred fifty thousand dollars.'
'Fifty thousand for each life,' said Mary. Bob said, 'Eric turned to the Army and the embassy for support. He wanted prosecution. The Army and the State Department told him to accept the money. In the national interest.'
'Eric resigned,' said Mary. 'He was different after that.'
'I can understand that,' said Petra.
'I wish he'd talked about it,' said Mary. 'To me, his father, anyone. Before that, he could always talk. We had an open family. Or at least I thought so.'
She shook her head.
Bob said, 'We did, darling. Something of that magnitude, you can't prepare for.'
'You've been working with him how long?' Mary asked
Petra.
'A few months.'
'I'll bet he doesn't talk much, does he?'
'No, ma'am.' Petra flashed on something: The stricken look in Eric's eyes after the interview with Uncle Randolph Drummond. Eric had taken an instant dislike to the man. A drunk who'd crashed and killed his family.
Mary Stahl said, 'Now, this. I don't know what this is going to do to him.'
'He'll heal up,' said Bob. 'Who knows, maybe this will
get him to open up.'
'Maybe,' said Mary, doubtfully.
'The main thing, right now, is that he heals up, dear.'
'He gets so depressed,' said Mary. 'We've got to do something.' To Petra: 'Are you a mother?'
'No, ma'am.'
'Maybe one day,' said Mary. 'Maybe one day you'll
know.'
She stayed with the Stahls for another three hours. Day broke, and the parents left for an hour to make personal
calls.
Petra entered the ICU.
A nurse said, 'He's doing a lot better, Detective. Amazingly better, actually. Vitals are good, temperature's just slightly elevated. He must've been in really great shape.'
'Yup,' said Petra.
'Cops,' said the nurse. 'We love you guys, hate when this happens.'
Petra said, 'Thanks - can I go in?'
The nurse glanced through the glass. 'Sure, but gown up, and I'll show you how to wash your hands.'
Clad in a yellow paper gown, she approached Eric's bed. He was draped from neck to toe tip, connected to multiple TV lines and catheters, backed by a bank of high-tech gizmos.
Eyes closed, mouth slightly parted. Oxygen tubes running up his nose.
So vulnerable. Young.
With the gut wound obscured, he looked okay. If you blanked out the apparatus, he could be sleeping peacefully.
She placed a gloved hand on his fingers.
His color was better. Still pale - pale was his normal state - but none of that creepy green around the edges.
'You had an adventure,' she whispered.
Eric kept breathing evenly. His vitals remained steady. No dramatic movie-of-the-week response to the sound of her voice. He couldn't hear her. Which was fine.
Not a bad-looking guy, when you got past his personality.
She'd thought him weird, now she knew him as another victim.
Life was like a prism; what you saw depended on how you turned the glass.
His mother described him as depressed. Sometimes depressed people duked it out with the police, wanting to end it all but lacking the courage and hoping to force the police's hand.
Suicide by cop, they called it.
Had Eric chosen suicide by perp?
Experienced guy like that - all that Special Forces experience - how had he ended up getting shanked by a ninny like Shull?
It made you wonder.
She looked down at him.
Not a bad-looking guy at all. Kind of handsome, really. She tried to picture him younger, tan, easygoing as he rode the waves.
'Eric,' she said, 'you're going to pull out of this.'
No response. Just like when they rode together.
Petra stroked his fingers, feeling warmth through the latex of her gloves.
'You are definitely going to pull through, Detective Stahl. And then you and I are going to talk.'
Allison and I were naked on her bed. My left hand rested on the nape of her neck. Her nails grazed my arm.
She released a long exhalation, freed herself, slipped under the covers. lifting her hair above her head, she knotted it loosely. 'How's Robin doing?'
'Better.'
'Good. Could you hand me that water, please?'
'Sure.'
'Thank you.'
Moments ago we'd been lost in each other. Now we were having a civilized conversation.
I said, 'Robin's on your mind?'
'I'm not preoccupied with her. I feel for her.'
She drank water. Placed the glass down carefully. 'Darling, eventually you're going to have to deal with it.'
'With what?'
'Saving her. What it means to her.'
'Tim's with her. She's getting support.'
I'd stopped by the house in Venice two days ago. Tim had met me at the door, wanting to say something. The
words had frozen in his throat - vocal guru struck mute. He clasped my hand, shook it hard, walked out. Leaving Robin and me alone in the living room. Strange to see her, just sitting there. As long as I'd known her, she'd had trouble doing nothing.
She accepted a hug, thanked me, told me she was okay.
I agreed that she was.
Both of us, getting through the moment. I stayed for a while, then left.
Allison said, 'I'm not talking about support, darling.'
I said, 'The way I see it, I didn't save her. Far from it. Tim's the hero, his call got the ball rolling. I didn't even answer the first time he tried to reach me. And if it wasn't for you, who knows if I'd have followed