Raine stopped talking, and there was a moment of silence on the line. Finally, Courtney asked, ‘Well? Did you do it?’
‘He’s… he’s not here,’ Raine said.
‘Not there? Where are you?’
‘At Que’s friend’s pad. You remember, that one we met when we saw Avatar? The one with the bad skin?’
‘Oh yeah, Mr Creepy.’
Raine laughed at the name. ‘Yeah, well, Mr Creepy has his own place. Up here on Adanac.’
‘Is Que there?’
Raine made a sound somewhere between embarrassment and frustration. ‘No one is. And Que hasn’t come back all night. I dunno. Maybe he wasn’t really that… into it.’
Courtney felt the water trailing down her legs and feet, forming a small pool on the hardwood floor of the den. She didn’t care. ‘God, are you kidding me? He was, like, so all over you at the restaurant. Something must have happened.’
‘Like what?’ Raine asked.
It was something Courtney hadn’t really considered, and the thought bothered her because Que was either out with some other girl or he’d gotten into some kind of trouble and was probably in jail or something.
‘Maybe he got drunk again and was sent to the drunk tank.’
Raine’s tone turned defensive. ‘He only did that once.’
‘I’m just saying-’
‘I know, I know. Look, Court, what you doing? Wanna come down and see me? I could use the company. All I been doing is powering through Twilight. It’s good, but if I read any more, my eyes are gonna fall out. And besides, I sure as hell can’t go home right now.’
‘Why not?’
‘You kidding? After staying out all night at Que’s, I’m as good as grounded for the rest of the year. I got my Britney ticket, I got my dress. I ain’t going home again till after the Parade of Lost Souls and the concert.’ She paused, cleared her throat. ‘Hey, it’s almost two o’clock now. Parade starts in three hours — why don’t you head down now and we’ll start partying.’
Courtney thought of the two cops guarding her home. ‘About that..’ she began.
‘I talked to Mandy and she said Bobby was asking about you.’
‘Really?’
‘Said he was gonna be in the park before the show started, just having a few drinks and stuff, wanted us to come down.’
Courtney closed her eyes, cursed Dad. It was so unfair. He was so unfair. Mom would never have held her back like this. She thought about the two cops positioned out front and back of the house and wondered if there was some way she could give them the slip. Maybe out the side window, over the fence through the neighbour’s yard. Or even the other way through the park. There had to be a way.
‘You coming?’ Raine asked again
Courtney took down the address. ‘Be there in an hour.’ She said goodbye, hung up the phone, and stood with only the damp towel to protect her from the cold draughts of the house. Already, her body was chilled. She started back for the shower, stopped, covered herself up as best she could, and looked outside the front-room window.
No cop car was out there.
She turned around, stepped into the kitchen and stared into the back lane.
No cop car was there any more either.
‘Strange,’ she said, but counted her blessings. She hurried back for the shower and finished washing her hair. She had to get ready. There was a lot to do before the party started. A whole lot.
Raine was waiting for her
And so was Bobby Ryan.
Seventy-One
Striker and Felicia took the east wing elevator to the third floor of St Paul’s Hospital. When they reached the locked entrance to the Critical Care Unit, Striker grabbed a gown from the bin and put it on. He tied the ends behind his back and looked around for a nurse. Moments later, the same nurse he’d dealt with last time came out of the staff lounge. He called her over and requested the doctor.
She furrowed her brow. ‘He’s on break.’
‘This is a police matter.’
‘It’s the first break he’s had in nine hours.’
‘And we haven’t had one in twelve. Get him. I wouldn’t be asking if it wasn’t crucial.’
‘I guess I could try paging him.’ She spoke the words with obvious reluctance, then walked down the hall without so much as another word.
Striker watched her go, then looked at Felicia. ‘Is she getting him, or not?’
Felicia threw up her hands. ‘This is bullshit. Wait here, I’ll find one myself.’ She marched down the south branch of the hallway, turned the corner, and disappeared from Striker’s view.
With the nurse and Felicia gone, the interconnecting area of the hall was empty, and Striker was alone. He thought of Courtney, as he’d been doing all day, and of the fight they’d had two nights ago.
The guilt, it was always the one thing he could count on.
He pulled out his BlackBerry, called home, got nothing. He tried calling her cell phone and got the machine. She was screening the calls, he knew. Avoiding him. Like she always did when she got pissed. He waited for the beep, and was about to leave a message when he peered through the windowed door into the Critical Care Unit and noticed something that bothered him.
The cop guarding Kwan’s room was gone.
Striker snapped his cell closed. He took a quick look around for a nurse, doctor, janitor — anyone with a pass card to get him through the door — but found no one. The place was as devoid of life as a mausoleum. He got on his cell, called Dispatch and asked them to radio the cop who was guarding Kwan’s room. He was put on hold for nearly two minutes, and when the dispatcher came back on the line, her voice sounded concerned.
‘He’s not responding.’
‘Get units here now. Code Three.’ Striker pocketed the phone and kicked open the door. The swipe receptacle snapped off the frame and a loud, high-pitched alarm filled the halls. Striker ignored it. He drew his Sig, ran thirty feet down the hall to Kwan’s room, and threw open the door.
In the far corner of the room, Patricia Kwan lay on the bed. Standing to her left, his back to Striker, was one of the hospital janitors. The man was cleaning the array of hospital equipment that flanked Kwan’s bed. Besides the missing cop who was supposed to be guarding the room, nothing seemed amiss.
Striker relaxed a little, let his gun fall to his side. ‘Hey, man, have you seen the doctor?’
‘On break. Come back ten minutes.’ As the janitor spoke the words, he glanced back over his shoulder, and Striker saw his eyes — those cold, dead eyes.
Red Mask.
‘Don’t fuckin’ move!’ he yelled, and raised his gun.
But Red Mask had already reacted. The gunman spun around, crouched, and took cover behind Patricia Kwan. He raised his gun over her bed and began shooting.
Bullets slammed into the wall behind Striker. He dropped low, took aim — and couldn’t get a shot off, not without hitting Patricia Kwan, who still lay helpless in the hospital bed. Without cover, he was screwed. He scampered leftward across the room.
Red Mask remained hidden behind Kwan’s bed. He pulled the trigger fast, in rapid fire — four shots, five, six, seven — and all of them punched into the wall to the far right of Striker.
Three feet from their intended target.
At first, when the bullets missed him by several feet, Striker counted his lucky stars. But then a cold feeling ran through him. He’d battled Red Mask twice now, and the gunman was no novice. He had displayed exceptional gun-fighting skills back at the high school and at the Kwan residence, where he had kept Striker pinned down in the foyer with suppressing fire.
There was no way his shots would be that far off their target.
Unless Striker was not his intended target.
Striker kept low and looked in that direction. What he spotted made his heart race — someone had left an oxygen tank directly beside the door, and the bullets were landing all around it.
If the tank got hit, it would damn near obliterate him.