“We need an ambulance forthwith,” I said, giving the address. “Call the hospital, say that the victim has been bitten by a snake. It’s a krait. K-R-A-I-T. We need antivenin now.”
“Antivenom?”
“Yes. No. It’s called antivenin. And send uniforms to take our collar into custody.”
I walked over to Johnson, who was writhing, squeaking out little yelping cries.
I stooped down and said, “Do you have any antivenin here?”
She mewled, “If I did, I wouldn’t tell you.”
I kicked her in the ribs, and she howled. I asked her again.
“No! I don’t have any.”
I didn’t believe her. I opened her refrigerator and took inventory. Three cups of yogurt, box of eggs. Six-pack of Coors. Wilted radishes. No vials that looked like something that could save Conklin’s life.
I can’t lie. It felt like dozens of eyes were staring at me. I was creeped-out to the ends of my hair, and even though I was terrified for my partner, I still had a little terror left over for myself.
I watched the floor as I made my way to the living room, where Conklin was lying on a blue plaid sofa, his arm lowered to keep the poison from traveling to his heart.
Only a minute or two had passed since he’d been bitten, but I had no idea how long it would take for that bite to paralyze his central nervous system. How long it would be until Conklin couldn’t breathe.
Was it already too late?
I whipped off Conklin’s belt and placed it just below his elbow as a constricting band. “I’ve got you, buddy. The ambulance is on the way.”
Panic welled up inside me like a tsunami, and the tears were working hard to bust down the dam. But I couldn’t let my partner see that. I just wanted to be 10 percent as brave as he was.
I forced my mind off the odds.
And I focused on the distance between us and the closest hospital. I thought about the Amazing Race–style run the paramedics would have to make carrying stretchers from the Twenty-fifth Avenue gate all the way out to the end.
And then there was the antivenin.
How would the hospital get antivenin in time?
The souls of every dead person I’d ever loved visited me as I held Richie’s good hand and listened for sirens: Jill and Chris and my mom — I couldn’t bear it if Conklin died.
I heard the sirens blare and stop.
To my overwhelming relief, twelve minutes after Conklin was bitten, paramedics bearing stretchers bombed through the door.
Chapter 99
I YELLED OUT to the paramedics and the cops. “Poisonous snakes are loose all over the freakin’ floor. They’re lethal.”
“You said a cop is down?” asked a uniform.
I knew him. Tim Hettrich. Twenty years on the force and one of our best. But he and Conklin had a feud going, started when Conklin moved up to Homicide. I thought maybe they hated each other.
“Poisonous snake bit Conklin.”
“A cop is down, Sergeant. We’re going in.”
As Conklin was strapped onto the gurney, I walked to where Norma Johnson lay cuffed on the floor. Her face was puffy and her nose was bleeding, but I had a sense that if a snake crawled out of the pantry and bit her, she’d be ecstatic.
Maybe she wanted to die as her father had died.