But after he opened Buchanan’s door, exposed Buchanan’s injuries, and aimed a narrow-beamed flashlight at them, he muttered, “No shit you need a doctor. You need stitches.”
“I can’t depend on somebody local not to notify the police about a gunshot wound,” Buchanan said.
“No problem,” Wade replied. “I have contact with an American doctor in the area. He’s worked for us before. We can trust him.”
“But I can’t waste time going to him.” Buchanan’s voice was raspy, his mouth dry. “The police will soon have that sketch ready. I have to reach Merida. I have to get on a plane out of Mexico. Hell, Florida’s just a couple of hours away by jet. When I said I need a doctor, I meant stateside. The quicker I’m out of here, the quicker I can. .”
“You’ll bleed to death before then,” Wade said. “Didn’t you hear me? I said you need stitches. At the least. I don’t know about the gash in your head, but the wound in your arm-it’s hard to tell with so much blood-it looks infected.”
“The way it feels, it probably is.” Buchanan struggled to rouse himself. “What’s that you set on the ground?”
“A first aid kit.”
“Why didn’t you say so?”
“Hey, what you’ve got wrong with you is more than any first aid kit’s going to help.”
“I keep forgetting. You’re a civilian. One of those guys from the Agency.”
Wade straightened, defensive. “You don’t expect me to reply to that, do you? Besides, what difference does it make?”
“Just open the kit,” Buchanan said. “Let’s see what you’ve got. Good. My people prepared it. Pay attention. Do what I tell you. We’ve got to get the bleeding stopped. We have to clean the wounds.”
“We? Come on, I don’t know anything about this. I haven’t been trained to-”
“I have.” Buchanan tried to stop his mind from swirling. “Take that rubber tube and tie it above the wound in my shoulder. For five minutes, a tourniquet won’t do much damage. Meanwhile. .” Buchanan tore open a packet and dumped out several gauze sponges.
Wade finished tying the rubber tube around Buchanan’s exposed shoulder. The bleeding lessened dramatically.
“That plastic container of rubbing alcohol,” Buchanan said. “Pour some of it onto those gauze sponges and start wiping the blood away from the bullet wound.” It seemed to Buchanan that his voice came from far away. Fighting to remain alert, he pried a syringe from a slot in a block of protective Styrofoam and squinted at the label, satisfying himself that the contents was an antibiotic. “Use a clean sponge and wipe some of that alcohol on the upper muscle of my right arm.”
Wade did what he was told, then quickly resumed cleaning the bullet wound.
Buchanan injected the antibiotic into his right arm. As soon as he withdrew the needle, the fingers of his right hand started jerking again. Clumsily, he returned the syringe to the slot in the Styrofoam block.
“There,” Wade said. “I finished cleaning the edges of the wound.”
“Now pour that hydrogen peroxide into it,” Buchanan said.
“Pour?” Wade asked. “That’ll hurt like-”
“Nothing compared to dying from blood poisoning. The wound has to be disinfected. Do it.”
Wade unscrewed the top from the hydrogen peroxide, pursed his lips, and poured what amounted to several tablespoons of the clear liquid into the long slash of the wound.
In the glow from the flashlight propped on the seat, Buchanan saw the liquid enter the slash. He saw his flesh and blood begin to bubble, like boiling acid. The pain suddenly hit him, even worse than the pain he’d already been feeling. It gnawed. It stabbed. It burned.
His vision doubled. He wavered.
“Buchanan?” Wade sounded alarmed.
“Do it again,” Buchanan said.
“You can’t be serious.”
“Do it again. I’ve got to be sure the wound’s clean.”
Wade poured. The wound bubbled, its edges turning white, clots of blood welling out. Sweat slicked Buchanan’s face.
“And some on the gash on my head,” Buchanan murmured.
This time, Wade surprised Buchanan by complying without objection. Good, Buchanan thought through his pain. You’re tougher than I expected, Wade. You’re going to need to be when you hear what you have to do next.
The hydrogen peroxide felt as if it had eaten through Buchanan’s skull and into his brain.
He shuddered. “Fine. Now you see that tube in the first aid kit? That’s a triple-antibiotic ointment. Squeeze some on the gash on my head and a lot more into my bullet wound.”
Wade’s movements became more confident.
Buchanan felt the tourniquet digging into his right shoulder. Apart from the agony of the wound, the arm seemed swollen and had no sensation. “Almost done,” Buchanan told Wade. “There’s only one more thing you have to do.”
“One more? What’s that?”
“You were right. I need stitches.”
“What are you talking about?”
“I want you to sew me up.”
“Sew you-? Jesus Christ.”
“Listen to me. Without stitches, once that tourniquet’s released, I’ll hemorrhage. There’s a sterile surgical needle and thread in that foil pouch. Wash your hands with rubbing alcohol, open the pouch, and sew me up.”
“But I’ve never done anything like-”
“It isn’t complicated,” Buchanan said. “I don’t give a damn about neatness, and I’ll tell you how to tie the knots. But it has to be done. If I could reach that far around my shoulder, I’d do it myself.”
“The pain,” Wade objected. “I’ll be so clumsy. . You need anesthetic.”
“Even if we had some, I couldn’t risk using it. I have to stay alert. There’s so little time. While we drive to Merida, you have to coach me about the identity you’re giving me to get out of the country.”
“Buchanan, you look as if you’re ready to pass out as it is.”
“You son of a bitch, don’t ever do that to me again.”
“Do what? What are you-?”
“You called me Buchanan. I forgot about Buchanan. I don’t know who Buchanan is. On this assignment, my name’s Ed Potter. If I respond to the name Buchanan, I could get myself killed. From now on. . No, I’m wrong. I’m not Ed Potter anymore. I’m. . Tell me who I am. What’s my new identity? What’s my background? What do I do for a living? Am I married? Talk to me, damn it, while you sew me up.”
Cursing, insulting, commanding, Buchanan forced Wade to use the curved surgical needle and stitch the bullet wound shut. With each thrust of the needle, Buchanan gritted his teeth harder, until his jaw ached and he feared that his teeth would crack. The only thing that kept him from losing consciousness was his desperate need to acquire his new persona. He was Victor Grant, he learned. From Fort Lauderdale, Florida. He customized cabin cruisers and yachts, specializing in installing audiovisual electronics. He’d been in Cancun to speak with a client. If he had to, he could give the client’s name and local address. The client, cooperating with Buchanan’s employers, would vouch for Victor Grant.
“Okay,” Wade said. “It looks like hell, but I think it’ll hold.”
“Smear antibiotic cream on a thick gauze pad. Press the bandage onto the stitches. Secure the pad with a wraparound bandage, several layers, and wrap the bandage with tape.” Buchanan sweated from pain, his muscles rigid. “Good,” he said. “Now release the tourniquet.”
He felt a surge of blood into his arm. As the numbness lessened, his flesh prickling, the already severe pain became worse. But he didn’t care about that. He could handle pain. Pain was temporary. But if the stitches didn’t hold and he hemorrhaged, he didn’t need to worry about remembering his new identity or about getting to the Merida airport before a police sketch of him was faxed there or about being questioned by an emigration officer at the airport. None of those worries would matter. Because by then he’d have bled to death.