•CHAPTER TWELVE•
I steered the Chevy home, and nearly had a heart attack when I saw Galigani’s Honda parked across the street.
Was he staking out my house?
Don’t get paranoid, Kate.
I pulled into the garage and ran upstairs. Mother was watching the Spanish language station. Laurie was asleep in the bassinet.
“What are you doing?” I asked Mom.
“I’m trying to learn Spanish.”
“Why?” I glanced at the screen. El Gordo y La Flaca was on.
“Because Hank asked me to go with him on a cruise to the Mexican Riviera.”
I strained to look out the window at Galigani’s car.
“Did anyone call or ring the bell or anything?”
“No. So, is it okay with you, dear?”
“What?”
“I’ll only be gone a week. But I wanted to make sure I clear any vacation plans with you first. Because of Laurie.
Who’ll watch her when you need to go shopping? What did you get anyway?” She searched the floor for shopping bags.
“Oh. Nothing. Nothing fit.”
Mother mistook my distraction as disappointment. “Don’t worry, dear, it’s only been a few weeks. You’ll get your figure back in no time.”
“Mom, I need to go downstairs a minute, okay?”
She stared after me as I closed the front door behind me and ran down the steps.
Was Galigani having trouble with his car again?
As I approached, I noticed he was slumped over the steering wheel. I felt faint.
Oh, sweet Jesus. Not again.
I knocked on his window. He didn’t move. I couldn’t tell if he was breathing or not. He looked pretty lifeless.
Had someone killed Galigani in front of my house?
I ran back inside the house, ignoring the excruciating pain that shot through my hips and pelvic bones. I grabbed the phone and dialed 9-1-1.
Mom noticed the alarm on my face. “What it is, dear?”
“I don’t know.” Please don’t be dead, I prayed. “There’s a man parked outside and he’s slumped over the steering wheel.”
Mother rushed to the window. “Do you know him?”
I shrugged my shoulders noncommittally, not wanting to lie again, but not wanting to tell the truth either. How many white lies can a person tell before it catches up to her? Before she becomes a liar?
“Is he a neighbor?” Mom persisted, squinting through the front window, trying to get a good look into the Honda.
I ignored Mom and told the 9-1-1 operator what I knew.
The operated asked, “Does it appear that a crime has been committed? Does the victim have a gunshot wound or anything?”
“Not that I can tell. He’s doubled over the steering wheel.”
“Does he respond when you knock on the window?”
“No.”
“Do you know CPR?”
“Yes.”
“All right, ma’am, I’m calling the EMTs. They’ll be there shortly. In the meantime, you can try to gain access to the car and attempt CPR.”
Maybe I could break a window?
Well, at least I knew there was no one lurking in the car.
I searched my front room for a heavy object.
Nothing.
I ran to the closet and fumbled around inside. The best I could do was grab a broom. I sprinted down the steps.
Please don’t be dead, don’t be dead, don’t be dead, I chanted as I made my way toward Galigani’s car.
Mom watched from the window as I swung the broom over my head.
Wait. I hadn’t even tried the doors. I let the broom drop to the ground and tried the driver’s door.
The door opened. I could hear sirens approaching. I pulled Galigani away from the steering wheel. His body was wet and hot. Blood?
I shook him and called his name, trying to get a better look at him and any injuries he might have. As I pulled him toward the open door and light, he tumbled onto the cement, taking me with him. The sirens grew louder. Suddenly, I was looking straight into the grill of a rapidly approaching fire truck.
Please God, don’t let me die this way.
I tried to push Galigani’s huge mass off me. He weighed a ton, but I had a tiny infant to live for. I heaved against him with all my might. My forgotten ab muscles were screaming out, as if to say: “Sure! You don’t work us for nine months and now you want action?”
Tires screeched and ground into the cement.
My heart was in my throat. The truck had stopped inches from me.
I took as deep a breath as I could, with Galigani on top of me.
I tried again to push him off me. I could see boots approaching. Two pairs.
The men in the boots rolled Galigani off me. I gasped for air. One gave Galigani CPR. The other bent over me. I tried to get up. He restrained my shoulders with his hands.
“Lie still, ma’am,” he said, hovering over me. His breath smelled like mint. His brown eyes searched my face.
“I’m fine.”
“Even so, just give me a minute.” He wrapped his fingers under my head and gave me a gentle head massage. “Just looking for any abnormalities.”
“I’ve often thought my head should be examined for abnormalities.”
He smiled. “From the fall. You don’t seem to have any.”
I refrained from telling him where I’d landed, lest he want to check my ass for any abnormalities. He helped me to my feet. I glanced over at Galigani. No blood. His shirt was soaked through with sweat. What could have happened?
Another car approached.
A police cruiser.
Inspector McNearny lurched out of the car and approached the firefighter who’d been helping me. They discussed something in hushed tones. The other firefighter continued to give Galigani CPR.
I stepped forward to see how Galigani was progressing and hell, I’ll admit it, to try and eavesdrop on McNearny. My foot kicked something on the ground.
Galigani’s notebook!
Without taking my eyes off McNearny, I quickly scooped it up and slipped it into my back pocket.
After a moment, McNearny broke away and approached me.
“What a coincidence,” I said in my best sarcastic tone.
“No coincidence, Mrs. Connolly. I already told you I don’t believe in those. I requested the dispatch office alert me regarding any calls from your residence, especially after your 9-1-1 fiasco the other night. You remember, your husband broke into his own house.”
Jerk.
“How nice. I feel much safer now.” I smiled my best smart-ass smile.
He indicated the abandoned broom, which now lay near the front tires of Galigani’s Honda. “What happened? Did you sweep him to death?”
“I found his car parked here. He was slumped over the steering wheel. The broom was to assist me with the rescue attempt.”
McNearny glared at me. “How?”
“I thought I might have to break a window to get him out of the car.”
“Do you know him? Is he your friend, too?”
I bit my lip. I felt a lie bubbling up. What good would it do? When had I become a liar anyway?
“He’s a PI. His name’s Galigani.”
“He’s my friend,” McNearny said, his eyes settling onto mine. The animosity between us seemed to dissipate.
An ambulance arrived. The firefighters put Galigani onto a stretcher.
“Is he alive?” I asked.
“Barely,” one paramedic responded.
We watched the ambulance screech off, sirens screaming.