Twenty-nine

I woke up because I was on fire. Sun was streaming through the window of my bedroom. Coffee was brewing in the kitchen. And something was very wrong with Nailor. He was almost too hot too touch.

I sat up and looked at him. He was red and tossing restlessly in his sleep, moaning softly.

“Ma!” I ran to the door and yelled out for her. “Ma! There’s something wrong!”

Ma came flying down the hallway. Raydean, her hair in yellow curlers, was right behind her.

“What is it?” Ma said, pushing past me and sitting down by John’s side. “Oh Lord,” she breathed. “He’s burning up!”

John opened his eyes and looked at us. His eyes were bloodshot and watery.

“That does it,” Ma said. “He has got to go to the hospital!” She pulled the bandage away from his arm and winced. “Look at that. It’s infected.” I leaned close and looked. The wound was an angry red, puffy and streaked.

“All right. I don’t know what else to do. He’s gonna die like this, isn’t he, Ma?”

Al stood in the doorway, his face mirroring my concern. “We gotta take him,” he said.

“I … can’t … go!” Nailor said, every word an effort. “I … can’t … risk … it! Too … dangerous.”

Raydean stood at the foot of the bed, staring at John and nodding. She edged a little closer to Ma. Finally she pushed Ma away and slid down onto the bed in her place.

“Let me see, honey,” she whispered, her gnarled fingers reaching for the dressing that covered his arm.

“Raydean…” I started, but let it drop. Stopping Raydean was always worse than letting her have her way.

With a gentle movement, Raydean pulled away the gauze and stared at the wound, biting down on her lower lip.

“Sepsis,” she muttered. “Okay.” She looked up at me, as if confirming her thoughts. “I’m callin’ Arlen,” she said, and reached for the phone.

“Whoa! Raydean, wait! What’re you doing?”

“I can’t treat him without antibiotics,” she said, her voice clear and strong. This wasn’t an alien watch, it was Raydean in for a landing, sane.

“Raydean,” I said, “what do you mean treat him?”

“Lt. Raydean Charles, W.A.C, R.N., W.W. Two, at your service, sir!”

What I saw was a gray-haired old lady in curlers and bunny slippers, but in her eyes was something else. Hallucination or whatever, I was in no position not to ride with it.

“Who’s Arlen?” I asked.

“My superior,” she answered. “We did time together.” She reached for the phone and started dialing.

“In the service?”

Raydean shook her head as if I was slow. “No, honey, in the Big House. State Hospital. Nineteen sixty-four.” Someone answered on the other end and Raydean cupped her hand around the receiver. “Got a patient, sir,” she said. Then: “My house.” She leaned around to look at the clock on the bedside table. “Oh-nine-hundred hours, sir. Yes, sir!” There was a pause. “Oh, and, sir? Bring them horse-pill antibiotics you got. He’s a sick’un!”

Raydean hung up and smiled down at Nailor. “Baby, you ain’t got a care in the world. The best vet what ever birthed a cow is on his way! We’ll have you crowing with the roosters by this time tomorrow.”

In his sleep, Nailor smiled.

Al could stand it no longer. “I gotta tell you,” he said, the words bursting from him like a balloon losing air, “this ain’t working for me.”

“Shut up, Al!” Me and Ma said in unison.

Raydean stood up, her cheeks pink, her hands flying to her head. “Mercy me,” she sputtered. “I’ve gotta run. I cain’t have Arlen seeing me like this!” She started shuffling toward the door. “He’ll be here in less than fifteen minutes. I’ll be back.” She reached over and patted my arm. “Don’t worry, sugar, I’ll have him on his feet and ready to howl at the moon. Just make sure you have your track shoes on when I do. That boy’ll give you a run for your money!”

I was dressing when I heard him call my name. I crossed the room and perched on the bed again.

“You called?”

He opened his eyes and for a moment he just stared. It scared me. I’d never seen anybody, let alone him, like this. I didn’t know if he was dying. I certainly wasn’t sure that we were all doing the right thing by keeping him here.

“Sierra,” he said, “give me some water. My throat hurts.”

I propped his head up and held the glass to his lips while he drank. He took two sips and leaned back. “That’s better. Sierra, you have to do something. Dial a number for me.” He slumped back against the pillow, exhausted with the effort it took to talk.

I picked up the phone and waited as he slowly called out a long-distance number. Maybe it was the area code for Tallahassee? I held the receiver to his ear, waiting.

“Hey,” he said, his voice a near whisper. The person on the other end obviously had questions because there was a long silence from John and then a sigh. “Wait. I can’t … not now. Listen … the mouse … is on … the move! You hear me? Tonight.” When the voice acknowledged the message, Nailor slumped back.

The person on the other end wasn’t finished. I could hear a woman’s voice yelling, “John! John! Answer me!”

John wasn’t going to be doing any more talking, that much I could tell from looking at him.

“He can’t talk anymore,” I said into the receiver.

“Who’s this?!” The woman’s voice demanded.

“Sierra Lavotini. And who the hell are you?”

There was a pause, then, “Oh, my God! Not you! The stripper, right?”

The awful realization sank in. I knew exactly who the voice was on the other end of the phone. I’d heard it enough in person when my friend Denise had gotten in trouble over her dope-dealing husband. Carla Terrance, DEA agent and John Nailor’s ex-wife.

“Ain’t you sweet to remember?” I said.

“What happened to John?” she asked. She needed me. She needed what I knew.

“He’s been shot.”

There was a sharp intake of breath. “Is he all right?”

“Hell, no, he isn’t all right, and he won’t let me take him to a doctor or a hospital, either! That probably has something to do with you, doesn’t it?”

“What do you need?” she asked. “He’s right. No hospital. Just tell me what you need.”

I looked over at John. “A doctor might be nice,” I said. “I think he’s infected. That’s what Raydean thinks.”

“That crazy woman that lives across from you and shoots at aliens?”

“Hey! She’s got training and she’s got a friend on his way over here with antibiotics. I’d say Raydean’s doing all right.”

Carla sighed. “Well, if you got a doctor coming, what do you need another one for?”

“The one on his way’s a vet. I was thinking maybe you could do a little better, even though it’s your ex.”

“It may take me a little while,” she said. “We may have to wait until after dark. I don’t want to take any risks.” But she didn’t mean with John’s life, I knew that much from the one time I’d had dealings with her. Carla had a one-track mind. She only wanted what was best for the DEA.

“Yeah, well, if he ain’t alive, Carla, how’s about I have him stuffed for you!”

She hung up on me. Just as well. If we’d chatted two seconds longer, I’d have gone through the phone and kicked her shapely little behind. Carla Terrance! I knew it all along. She was the only one who could yank him out of his department and make him dance like a puppet at the end of her little string.

I looked over at John. “She must’ve hurt you bad, big man. She must’ve tied Mr. Happy in a hell of a knot for you to be in this much of a mess!”

He moaned softly in his sleep.

“Yeah, well, when this mess is over, you can have her if that’s what you want.”

The phone rang again and I snatched it up, ready to tell her the rest of what I was thinking.

“What?” I yelled. “You haven’t done enough?”

“Sierra, that you?” a male voice asked.

“Who wants to know?”

“Albert—uh, Meatloaf. Lord, honey, you’d better come quick. Roy Dell’s got Frank and I think he’s fixing to kill him!”

“Listen, Meatloaf, this isn’t a good time.”

From the background I could hear an ungodly scream.

“What was that?” I asked. The hair on the back of my neck jumped to attention. “Meatloaf! What’s he doing?” But Meatloaf wasn’t listening to me.

“Roy Dell! Roy Dell! Stop it! Are you nuts? Look at him! You done cut the circulation off!”

Roy Dell said something I couldn’t make out. Then there was another long scream, this time ending with a shriek.

“I hate to do this,” Meatloaf said into the phone, “but right now, you’re the only one he’ll listen to. Roy Dell!” Meatloaf yelled at him again. “The phone’s for you!”

“What? Huh? The phone?” Roy Dell’s voice sounded liquor-slurred. “Tell her I ain’t talking!”

“It ain’t Lulu. It’s Ruby’s friend, Sierra.”

Oh, just dandy, I thought. Turn the psycho over to me! Thank you, Meatloaf! I could here two sets of shoes shuffling over to the phone.

“Here,” said Meatloaf, apparently guiding Roy Dell’s drunken progress.

“Hello, darlin’,” said Roy Dell, pitching his voice to sound low and sexy. It sounded more like a sick animal, but I didn’t let on.

“Roy Dell, what in the hell is going on?” I wasn’t going to waste time on sympathy. He needed a mama.

“Ma’am?”

“Are you drinking?”

“Yes, ma’am,” he answered, his voice a sheepish little boy’s.

“And did you go against what I told you and go after Frank?”

“You’re damn right I did,” he roared. “And Meatloaf agreed with me, too!”

Uh-oh. Wrong question. “Well, you left me all alone,” I said. “Where did you go?”

“Aw, now darlin’, I didn’t mean nothing by it. I was sittin’ out in your car, with that blanket what Lulu and I inaugurated with our love, and I jest got to thinkin’. Then, before I knew it, I saw Mr. Rhodes go driving by, real slow. I needed to talk to him about something, so I took off, thinking maybe I could catch him.”

“Then what?”

Roy Dell sighed, torn between talking to me and exacting revenge from Frank. “Well, he parked and said he had business to attend to and he couldn’t talk just then. I told him I was done waiting for my money. It had been six weeks and I wanted some action.” Roy Dell took a swig of something. “Summ’n a bitch told me to come up to his office later in the afternoon and he’d pay me. Then he walked off. And do you think he was anywhere to be found? No indeedy.”

I could hear voices coming from the direction of my kitchen. Raydean was back and I was going to have to wrap this up quick.

“Roy Dell, did Mickey Rhodes go into Wannamaker Lewis’s house?”

“Hell, honey, I don’t know. He walked off in that direction, but you know, the place caught on fire right after that. Why would he go in there?”

So, Roy Dell stuck around long enough to know the house was on fire but was gone when the firemen arrived.

“Where are you, Roy Dell? I want to see you.”

“No, ma’am! Whass about to happen here ain’t fit viewin’,” he said. “Frank done wrong and I got to let him know you don’t dog Roy Dell Parks.”

“Roy Dell! Did it never occur to you that I might have a few resentments toward Frank, too?”

Footsteps were moving down the hallway. John Nailor was burning up. And I was stuck talking Roy Dell out of killing a man I agreed needed killing. There’d be an extra jewel in my crown for this. Maybe I’d have to say one less Hail Mary when the final reckoning came.

“All right, all right,” he sighed. “If you want to wop him upside the head once before I finish him off, you can come on.”

He dropped the phone and shuffled away. “Roy Dell! Roy Dell, where are you?” I could hear Meatloaf ask.

“We gotta wait to kill him,” he said. “Women! Always wanting to direct the action.”

The door to my room opened and Ma stepped in, followed by an entourage.

“Don’t hang up!” I yelled into the receiver. In the far distance, I heard the unmistakable sound of a pneumatic lug-nut loosener. Then Frank screamed again.

“Sierra, you there?” Meatloaf sounded breathless.

“Where are you?”

“The garage.”

“At the track?”

“Yeah, don’t worry. Won’t no po-lices ever find us here. Roy Dell’s got an early warning system. Hurry now!”

“Don’t let Roy Dell kill him till I get there!”

He hung up and I turned around to face the small crowd that had gathered in my room. There was a much larger crisis at hand than saving Frank’s ass. Arlen the vet had arrived.

He stopped at the edge of the room, a short man with thinning white hair and twinkling blue eyes. Judging from the three-piece suit he wore, time had stopped for him in the late-thirties. I figured he had to be closing in on ninety. But Raydean was oblivious to this. She stood by his side, beaming, her Easter bonnet secured to her head with a huge hatpin, and white go-to-church-lady gloves on her hands.

“Sierra, this is Dr. Arlen Fellows,” she said proudly, blushing. “Rear Admiral, U.S. Navy, Retired.”

Yeah, retired many times over, I thought.

“Where is my patient?” he asked, peering myopically past me. Raydean motioned me aside and led Arlen up to John’s side.

Arlen changed abruptly. “My bag, nurse,” he said, brusquely.

Raydean stiffened, took the cracked leather bag Ma carried, and plopped it down on the bed next to Nailor.

“Yes, sir!” she answered.

Arlen reached forward and briefly touched Nailor’s nose. “Dry,” he said. “Not a good sign in a human.”

Ma shook her head and looked at Al. She was thinking the same thing I was. The man was a lunatic.

Arlen took out a penlight and shone it in Nailor’s eyes. “Hmmm,” he murmured. “Nurse, horse pills it is! Let’s start with a broad spectrum antibiotic, this ampicillin oughta get it. Acetamenophen and ibuprophen, alternating every two hours for the first eight. Oughta bring that fever down.”

Nailor was struggling to be awake, trying to track Arlen with his eyes.

“You hurt just everywhere, don’t you, boy?” Arlen said. “Not just your withers, but your flanks, too, I’d reckon. Well, you’ll feel better soon.”

Arlen turned to Raydean. “Nurse,” he said, “Clean and dress that wound again. Give him his meds. Then let’s play a hand or two of cards.”

Raydean nodded and started hauling medicine bottles, gauze, and tape out of the black bag. As an afterthought, she reached in deep and pulled out a pack of playing cards, which she tossed to Al.

“Doc’s orders,” she barked. “Deal ’em out in the kitchen. Five-card draw! Boil water!”

“Boil water?” Al sputtered.

“You don’t know how?” Raydean asked.

“Well, sure I know how,” he said. “I just don’t know why.”

Raydean was calmly pulling on a pair of latex gloves. “Coffee, you young idiot!”

Ma laughed. “Come on, Dr. Fellows, I got some cinnamon buns with your name written all over them.”

She led him away, leaving me and Raydean to change Nailor’s bandage. We boosted him up in bed, with him moaning every time we touched him.

“It’s the fever, Sierra,” Raydean said. “He cain’t stand our touch to his skin. I’m gonna get him a cool rag in a minute.”

He choked on the pills, but we got them into him. He didn’t say a word when Raydean cleaned his arm. He was out of it.

“Sierra,” Raydean said, as we finished. “I want you to listen to me.”

I stopped and looked at her, recognizing the clear, distinct tone of Raydean sane.

“You think Arlen’s a kook. Don’t bother denying it!” She held up her hand to stop my comment. “And in some respects he is. Just like me. But he’s a good vet. We’re taking good care of your man. You trust me, don’t you?”

I looked right back at her. “Of course I do, Raydean.”

“That fever’ll be down some in thirty minutes,” she said. “He’s starting to mend. So if there was anyone whose life was hanging on yours … anyone you might’ve said ‘don’t kill him yet’ to…”

“Oh! Oh, yeah!” I looked back at Nailor, lying on the bed, his face pale again.

“Honey,” Raydean laid her hand on my arm. “Let me take care of him. He won’t die. I promise you.”

I hugged her and stepped over to the bedside. I sat down and ran my fingers lightly through his hair.

“I gotta go over to the racetrack for a little while,” I whispered. “I’ll be back soon.”

His eyes flew open. “No!”

“It won’t take but an hour, I promise.”

“No! I told you. The … mouse. It’s moving. Any second!”

“It’s the fever, honey,” I answered. “Carla knows about the mouse. You told her. It’s all right.”

He grabbed my arm with his good one. “No!”

“Okay, okay, then I won’t go. I’ll just hang around here.” Panic was rising up, choking me. What if Roy Dell really did kill Frank? Then it would fall on my head because I could stop him if I left now.

Raydean stepped in then. “Sugar, go eat,” she said, giving me a little shove. “Here, honey,” she said soothingly to John, “I got a nice cool cloth for your head. Sierra’s gonna go eat her lunch now. She’ll be right back.”

I felt like a heel. I wasn’t going out into the kitchen to eat. I was going up to the racetrack and save a lowlife from death. Or so I thought.