'Do you want him in the fridge?' one of the squad members said to me.
'No. You can wheel him into the X-ray room.' I unlocked more doors, the stretcher clattering after me, leaving drips of blood on tile.
'You going solo tonight?' asked a paramedic who looked Latin.
'I'm afraid so.'
I opened a plastic apron and slipped it over my head, hoping Marino would show up soon. In the locker room, I fetched a green surgical gown off a shelf. I pulled on shoe covers and two pairs of gloves.
'Can we help you get him on the table?' a paramedic asked.
'That would be terrific.'
'Hey, guys, let's get him on the table for the Doc.'
'Sure thing.'
'Shoot, this pouch is leaking, too. We gotta get some new ones.'
'Which way do you want his head to go?'
'This end for the head.'
'On his back?'
'Yes,' I said. 'Thank you.'
'Okay. One-two-three heave.'
We lifted Anthony Jones from the stretcher to the table, and one of the paramedics started to unzip the pouch.
'No, no, leave him in,' I said. 'I'll X-ray him through it.'
'How long will it take?'
'Not long.'
'You're going to need some help moving him again.'
'I'll take all the help I can get,' I told them.
'We can hang around a few more minutes. Were you really going to do all this alone?'
'I'm expecting someone else.'
A little later, we moved the body into the autopsy suite and I undressed it on top of the first steel table. The paramedics left, returning the morgue to its usual sounds of water running into sinks and steel instruments clattering against steel. I attached the victim's films to light boxes where the shadows and shapes of his organs and bones brightly bared their souls to me. Bullets and their multitude of ragged pieces were lethal snowstorms in liver, lungs, heart and brain. He had an old bullet in his left buttock and a healed fracture of his right humerus. Mr. Jones, like so many of my patients, had died the way he had lived.
I was making the Y-incision when the buzzer sounded in the bay. I did not pause. The security guard would take care of whoever it was. Moments later I heard heavy footsteps in the corridor, and Marino walked in.
'I would've got here sooner but all the neighbors decided to come out and watch the fun.'
'What neighbors?' I looked quizzically at him, scalpel poised midair.
'This drone's neighbors in Whitcomb Court. We were afraid there was going to be a friggin' riot. Word went down he was shot by a cop, and then it was Santa who whacked him, and next thing there's people crawling out of cracks in the sidewalk.'
Marino, still in dress uniform, took off his coat and draped it over a chair. 'They're all gathered around with their two-liter bottles of Pepsi, smiling at the television cameras. Friggin' unbelievable.' He slid a pack of Marlboros out of his shirt pocket.
'I thought you were doing better with your smoking,' I said.
'I am. I get better at it all the time.'
'Marino, it isn't something to joke about.' I thought of my mother and her tracheotomy. Emphysema had not cured her habit until she had gone into respiratory arrest.
'Okay.' He came closer to the table. I'll tell you the serious truth. I've cut it down by half a pack a day, Doc.'
I cut through ribs and removed the breastplate.
'Molly won't let me smoke in her car or house.'
'Good for Molly,' I said of the woman Marino began dating at Thanksgiving. 'How are the two of you doing?'
'Real good. |