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    Image of the Beast / Blown

    Page 6
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      He called the LAPD and hung on for fifteen minutes.

      No luck. He then called the Beverly Hills Police Depart-

      ment and got the same result. He had no more luck

      with the Mount Sinai Hospital on Beverly Boulevard,

      which was within walking distance. He put drops in his

      eyes and snuffed up nose drops. He wet a handkerchief

      to place over his nose and put his goggles on top of his

      head. He stuck a pencil flashlight in one pocket and a

      switch-blade knife in another. Then he left the apartment

      building and walked down San Vicente to Beverly Boul-

      evard.

      In the half hour that he had been home, the situation

      had changed. The cars that had been bumper-to-bumper

      curb-to-curb were gone. They were within earshot; he

      could hear the horns blaring off somewhere around

      Beverly Boulevard and La Cienega, but there was not

      a car in sight.

      Then he came across one. It was lying on its side. He

      looked down into the windows, dreading what he might

      see. It was empty. He could not understand how the

      vehicle had been overturned, because no one could

      have gone fast enough in the jam to hit anything and be

      overturned. Besides, he would have heard the crash.

      Somebody—somebodies—had rocked it back and forth

      and then pushed it over. Why? He would never know.

      The signal lights at the intersection were out. He

      could see well enough across the street to make out the

      thin dark shape of the pole. When he got to the foot of

      the light pole on his corner, he saw broken plastic, which

      would have been green, red, and yellow under more

      lightened circumstances, scattered about.

      He stood for a while on the curb and peered into the

      sickly gray. If a car were to speed down the street with-

      out lights, it could be on him before he could get across

      the street. Nobody but a damned fool would go fast or

      without lights, but there were many damned fools driv-

      ing the streets of Los Angeles.

      The wailing of a siren became stronger, a flashing red

      light became visible, and an ambulance whizzed by. He

      looked up and down the street and dashed across, hoping

      that the light and noise would have made even the

      damnedest of fools cautious and that anybody following

      the ambulance would be blowing his horn. He got across

      with only a slight burning of the lungs. The smog was

      slowly rusting off their lining. His eyes ran as if they were

      infected.

      The sound of bedlam came to him before the hospital

      building loomed out of the mists. He was stopped by a

      white-haired man in the uniform of a security guard.

      Perhaps the old man had worked at an aircraft plant or

      at a bank as a guard and had been deputized by the

      police to serve at the hospital. He flashed his light into

      Childe's face and asked him if he could help him. The

      smog was not dark enough to make the light brilliant,

      but it did annoy Childe.

      He said, "Take that damned light away! I'm here to

      offer my services in whatever capacity I'm needed,"

      He opened his wallet and showed his I.D.

      The guard said, "You better go in the front way. The

      emergency room entrance is jammed, and they're all too

      busy to talk to you."

      "Who do I see?" Childe said.

      The guard hurriedly gave the supervisor's name and

      directions for getting to his office. Childe entered the

      lobby and saw at once that his help might be needed, but

      he was going to have to force it on the hospital. The

      lobby was jammed and asprawl with people who had

      been shunted out of the emergency room after more or

      less complete treatment, relatives of the wounded, people

      inquiring after lost or injured friends or relatives, and a

      number who, like Childe, had come to offer their services.

      The hall outside the supervisor's office was crowded too

      thickly for him to ram his way through even if he had

      felt like doing so. He asked a man on the fringes how

      long he had been trying to get into the office.

      "An hour and ten minutes, Mister," the man said

      disgustedly.

      Childe turned to walk away. He would return to his

      apartment and do whatever he could to pass the time.

      Then he would return after a reasonable amount of time

      (if there were such a thing in this situation), with the

      hope that some order would have been established. He

      stopped. There, standing near the front door of the hospi-

      tal, his head wrapped in a white cloth, was Hamlet

      Jeremiah.

      The cloth could have been a turban, because the last

      time Childe had seen Jeremiah he was sporting a turban

      with a spangled hexagram. But the cloth was a band-

      age with a three-pointed scarlet badge, almost a triskelion.

      The Mephistophelean moustaches and beard were gone,

      and he was wearing a grease-smeared T-shirt with the

      motto: NOLI ME TANGERE SIN AMOR. His pants

      were white duck, and brown sandals were on his feet.

      "Herald Childe!" he called, smiling, and then his face

      twisted momentarily as if the smile had hurt.

      Childe held out his hand.

      Jeremiah said, "You touch me with love?"

      "I'm very fond of you, Ham," Childe said, "although I

      can't really say why. Do we have to go through that at

      this time?"

      "Any time and all time," Jeremiah said. "Especially

      this time."

      "OK. It's love then," and Childe shook his hand. "What

      in hell happened? What're you doing down here? Listen,

      did you know I tried to phone you a little while ago and

      I was thinking about driving up to see you. Then ..."

      Jeremiah held up his hand and laughed and said, "One

      thing at a time! I'm out of my Sunset pad because my

      wives insisted we get out of town. I told them we ought to

      wait a day or so until the roads were cleared. By then,

      the smog'd be gone, anyway, or on its way out. But

      they wouldn't listen. They cried and carried on something

      awful, unreeled my entrails and tromped on them. One

      good thing about tears', they wash out the smog, keep

      the acids from eating up your corneas. But they're also

      acid on the nerves, so I said, finally, OK, I love you both,

      so we'll take off. But if we get screwed up or anything

      bad happens, don't blame me. Stick it up your own lovely

      asses. So they smiled and wiped away the tears and

      packed up and we took off down Doheny. Sheila had a

      little hand-operated prayer wheel spinning and Lupe

      was getting three roaches out so we could enjoy what

      would otherwise be a real drag, or so we at least could

      enjoy a facsimile of joy. We came to Melrose, and the

      light changed to red, so I stopped, being a law-abiding

      citizen when the law is for the benefit of all and well-

      founded. Besides, I didn't want to get run into. But the

      son of Adam behind me got mad; he thought I ought to

      run the light. His soul was really ruffled, Herald, he was in

      a cold-sweat panic
    . He honked his horn and when I

      didn't jump like a dog through a hoop and go through

      the fight, he jumped out of his car and opened my door

      —dumb bastard, I, didn't have it locked—and he jerked

      me out and whirled me around and shoved my head

      against the handle. It cut my head open and knocked me

      half-silly. Naturally, I didn't resist; I really believe this

      turn-the-other-cheek dictum.

      "I was half in the next lane, and the other cars weren't

      going to stop, so Sheila jumped out and shoved the man in

      the path of one and pulled me into the car. That Sheila

      has a temper, you got to forgive her. The man was hit;

      he bounced off one car and into ours. So Sheila drove the

      car then while Lupe was trying to heave the man out. He

      was lying on the back seat with his legs dragging on the

      street. I stopped her and told Sheila to take us to the

      hospital.

      "So she did, though reluctantly, I mean reluctant to

      take the man, too, and we got here, and my head finally

      got bandaged, and Sheila and Lupe are helping the nurses

      up on the second floor. I'll help as soon as I get to feeling

      better."

      "What happened to the man?" Childe said.

      "He's on a mattress on the floor of the second level.

      He's unconscious, breathing a few bubbles of blood, poor

      unhappy soul, but Sheila's taking care of him, too. She

      feels bad about shoving him; she's got a hasty temper

      but underneath it all she truly loves."

      "I was going to offer to help," Childe said, "but I

      can't see standing around for hours. Besides ..."

      Jeremiah asked him what the besides meant. Childe told

      him about Colben and the film. Jeremiah was shocked.

      He said that he had heard a little about it over the radio.

      He had not received a paper for two days, so he had no

      chance to read anything about it. So Childe wanted some-

      body with a big library on vampires and on other things

      that boomp in the unlit halls of the mind?

      Well, he knew just the man. And he lived not more

      than six blocks away, just south of Wilshire. If anybody

      would have the research material, it would be Woolston

      Heepish.

      "Isn't he likely to be trying to get out of town?"

      "Woolie? By Dracula's moustache, no! Nothing, except

      maybe an atomic attack threat, would get him to desert

      his collection. Don't worry; he'll be home. There is one

      problem. He doesn't like unexpected visitors, you got to

      phone him ahead of time and ask if you can come, even

      his best friends—except maybe for D. Nimming Rodder

      —are no exceptions. Everybody phones and asks permis-

      sion, and if he isn't expecting you, he usually won't an-

      swer the doorbell. But he knows my voice; I'll holler

      through the door at him."

      "Rodder? Where have … ? Oh, yes! The book and

      TV writer! Vampires, werewolves, a lovely young girl

      trapped in a hideous old mansion high on a hill, that sort

      of thing. He produced and wrote the Shadow Land

      series, right?"

      "Please, Herald, don't say anything at all about him

      if you can't say something good. Woolie worships D.

      Nimming Rodder. He won't hit you if you say anything

      disparaging about him, but you sure as Shiva won't get

      any cooperation and you'll find yourself frozen out."

      Childe shifted from one foot to another and coughed.

      The cough was only partly from the burning air. It indi-

      cated that he was having a struggle with his conscience.

      He wanted to stay here and help—part of him did—but

      the other part, the more powerful, wanted to get out and

      away and on the trail. Actually, he couldn't be much

      use here, not for some time, anyway. And he had a feel-

      ing, only a feeling but one which had ended in something

      objectively profitable in the past, that something down

      there in the dark deeps was nibbling at his hook.

      He put his hand on Jeremiah's bony shoulder and said,

      "I'll try to phone him, but if …"

      "No use, Herald. He has an answering service, and it's

      not likely that'll be working now."

      "Give me a note of introduction, so I can get my foot

      in the door."

      Jeremiah smiled and said, "I'll do better than that.

      I'll walk with you to Woolie's. I'm just in the way here,

      and I'd like to get away from the sight of so much

      suffering."

      "I don't know," Childe said. "You could have a con-

      cussion. Maybe you ..."

      Jeremiah shrugged and said, "I'm going with you. Just

      a minute while I find the women and tell them where

      I'm going."

      Childe, waiting for him, and having nothing to do but

      watch and listen, understood why Jeremiah wanted to get

      away. The blood and the groans and weeping were bad

      enough, but the many chopping coughs and loud, long

      pumping-up-snot-or-blood coughs irritated, perhaps even

      angered him, although the anger was rammed far down.

      He did not know why coughs set him on edge so much,

      but he knew that Sybil's nicotine cough and burbling

      lungs, occurring at any time of day or night and especially

      distressing when he was eating or making love, had

      caused their split as much as anything. Or had made him

      believe so.

      Jeremiah seemed to skate through the crowd. He took

      Childe's hand and led him out the front door. It was three

      minutes after 12:00. The sun was a distorted yellow-

      greenish lobe. A man about a hundred feet east of them

      was a wavering shadowy figure. There seemed to be thick

      and thin bands of smog sliding past each other and thus

      darkening and lightening, squeezing and elongating ob-

      jects and people. This must have been an illusion or some

      other phenomenon, because the smog was not moving.

      There was not a rumor of a breeze. The heat seemed to

      filter down through the green-grayishness, to slide down

      the filaments of smog like acrobats with fevers and sprawl

      outwards and wrap themselves around people.

      Childe's armpits and back and face were wet but the

      perspiration only cooled him a little. His crotch and his

      feet were also sweating, and he wished that he could wear

      swimming trunks or a towel. It was better outside than in

      the hospital, however. The stench of sweaty frightened peo-

      ple had been powerful, but the noise and the sight of the

      misery and pain had made it less offensive. Now he was

      aware that Jeremiah, who was, despite being a "hippie," a

      lover of baths, a true "water brother" as he liked to say,

      stank. The odor was a peculiar combination of pipe to-

      bacco, marijuana, a pungent heavy unidentifiable some-

      thing suggestive of spermatic fluid, incense, a soupçon of

      rosewater on cunt, frightened sweat, extrusion of excited

      shit, and, perhaps, inhaled smog being sweat out.

      Jeremiah looked at Childe, coughed, smiled, and said,

      "You smell like something washed up out of the Pacific

      deeps and two weeks dead yourself, if you'll forgive my


      saying so."

      Childe, although startled, did not comment. Jeremiah

      had given too many evidences of telepathy or mind-

      reading. However, there were other explanations which

      Childe did not really believe. Childe's expression could

      have told Jeremiah what he was thinking, although Childe

      would have said that his face was unreadable.

      He walked along with Jeremiah. They seemed to be in a

      tunnel that grew out of the pavement before them and fell

      flat onto the pavement behind them. Childe felt unaccount-

      ably happy for a moment despite the sinus ache, throat and

      eye burn, insidious crisping of lungs, and stabbing in his

      testicles. He had not really wanted to be a good servant in

      the hospital; he wanted to sniff out the tracks of crimi-

      nals.

      6

      "You see, Ham," Childe said, "the vampire motif in the

      film could mean nothing—as a clue—but I feel that it's

      very important and, in fact, the only thing I can follow up.

      But the chances ..."

      His voice died. He and Jeremiah stood on the curb of

      the north side of Burton Way and waited. The cars were

      like elephants in the grayness, gray elephants with trunks to

      tails, huge eyes glowing in the gloom. The lanes here were

      one-way for westward traffic, but all traffic was moving

      eastward.

      There was only one thing to do if they wished to cross

      today. Childe stepped out into the traffic. The cars were

      going so slowly that it was easy to climb up on the hood of

      the nearest and jump over onto the next hood and onto

      a third and then a fourth and onto the grass of the divider.

      Startled and outraged drivers and passengers cursed and

      howled at them, but Jeremiah only laughed and Childe

      jeered at them. They crossed the divider and jumped from

      hood to hood again until they got to the other side. They

      walked down Willaman, and every house was unlit. At

      Wilshire and Willaman, the street lights were operating,

      but the drivers were paying no attention to them. All were

      going eastward on both sides of Wilshire.

      The traffic was a little faster here but not too fast. Childe

      and Jeremiah got over, although Jeremiah slipped once

      and fell on top of a hood.

      "Middle of this block," Jeremiah said.

      The houses and apartments were middle middle-class.

     


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