“Open it and see.”
I pulled off the cap, exposing a tiny hole at the top of the cylinder.
“Press the button on the side.”
I pressed and a hypodermic needle sprang from the hole.
“Only a single dose, but the poison metabolizes almost instantaneously, completely paralyzing the victim.”
The needle glittered wickedly in the fluorescent lights. “For how long?” I asked.
“Depends on the subject. Up to five minutes. Press the button again.”
I pressed, and the needle retracted.
“Why are you giving it to me?”
One of his eyebrows rose toward his dark, perfectly coiffed hair.
“You should refrain from asking questions to which you already know the answer, Alfred. It could create the impression that you are not as smart as you really are.”
He tapped lightly on the door with the head of his walking stick. “Until our next meeting, Alfred Kropp.”
“I’m really hoping there won’t be one.”
“The odds are against that.”
Bulldog-Face Man opened the door. Nueve stepped quickly into the hall and the door swung closed behind him.
I sat on the bed and waited. I got tired waiting there, so I went to the window. The window faced south, and there was Broadway, a dark ribbon between the yellow streetlights. I looked down six stories to the parking lot. A long drop, but I had recently dropped a lot longer. The window didn’t open, of course. I’d have to break the glass. And then the concrete below would break me. I guessed I could make a rope out of the bedsheets, but that would probably get me to only the fourth floor.
The door behind me opened and Bulldog-Face Man was standing there holding a bundle of clothes. He tossed them on the bed and stepped outside again without saying a word.
They were identical to his getup: white tube sox, white soft-soled shoes, white pants with a drawstring, a white short-sleeve shirt.
I dressed quickly and knocked softly on the door. He opened it, avoiding eye contact.
“Left down the hall, elevators on your right,” he murmured. “Unit 214. You got ten minutes.”
I started down the hall and he called softly, “Other left.”
So I turned back and hurried the opposite way. Behind some of the locked doors came sounds: moans, screeches, strange whoops; and behind other doors just silence. Maybe those rooms were empty, but I doubted it, and somehow the silence was more disturbing than the muffled screams.
I took the elevator to the second floor. The hallway here was a lot more crowded than my floor, which had all the ambience of a haunted house. Nurses and orderlies were everywhere, and doctors with stethoscopes around their necks and white lab coats billowing around them as they hurried to the next life-threatening emergency. Nobody paid any attention to me. In a hospital, just like anywhere else, I guess, you see what you expect to see. I was just another orderly hurrying along like all the other, real orderlies.
I stepped into Samuel’s room and eased the door shut behind me. There wasn’t much light and I stood with my back against the door for a few seconds, waiting for my eyes to adjust. I heard the hiss of an oxygen feed and the soft, steady beep-beep of a heart monitor. To my right was a row of cabinets. To the left were the bed and the screens showing Samuel’s heart rate, temperature, and blood pressure.
He looked very pale except for his eyelids, which were black as charcoal. If it weren’t for the squiggly lines on the monitor and the beeps, I might have thought I was too late.
“Samuel?” I whispered. “Samuel, it’s me, Alfred.”
He was muttering something under his breath, the word a barely audible hiss. I leaned closer and thought I heard him say “Sofia.” Sofia? Who was Sofia?
“It’s okay,” I said, patting his shoulder through the covers. “I’m getting you out of here.”
“Sofia!”
“No,” I said. “Alfred.” Maybe Sofia was the name of his nurse.