'And about time, too.'
Glitsky collapsed back into his pillows. 'Never mind.'
'What?'
'You want to hear this or not?'
Hardy acquiesced. 'OK, the guy is dead…'
'Right. He gets to the pearly gates. St Peter says, "Hold it, no luggage allowed," and the guy tells Peter that in his case God made an exception. Peter should check with the boss.'
'This is a long joke,' Hardy said.
Glitsky ignored him, forging ahead. 'So God says our guy isn't lying. He's allowed to bring one suitcase. And Peter says, "You know, I've been here a long time and nobody's ever brought anything with them before. I'd be curious to know what it is." So the guy proudly opens his suitcase. And Peter looks at him and goes, "Pavement? You brought pavement?'"
Hardy crossed a leg and sat back. A smile played at the corners of his mouth. 'That's not really a dying joke.'
Glitsky pushed the button to raise his bed, his eyes now with some life in them. 'What are you talking about? A guy dies in it, so it's a dying joke, OK? It's not like there's a formal definition.'
A partition sheet hung from the ceiling and set off Abe's bed from the others in the room. Someone was pulling it back and Hardy turned to see Abe's spry and spunky seventy-something father, a yarmulke over his white hair, plaid pants, baggy polo shirt. 'Definition of what?' he asked.
'A dying joke,' Hardy said. 'Hi, Nat.'
'I got a good one of those,' Nat replied. 'How you feeling today, Abe?'
'Abused.'
Hardy smiled, translating. 'Normal.'
Nat went around to the monitor side, leaned over the bed and kissed his son on the face. 'They have toothbrushes here? Maybe you want to use one.'
Glitsky had been extraordinarily lucky, although that did not mean he was out of trouble yet. At the peak of Nob Hill, Grace Cathedral had seen more than its share of heart attacks, more even than the famous and appropriately-named Cardiac Hill, the steep and lengthy grade upon which some genius architect had erected the main walkway into 3Com Park. Almost anyone walking any distance to Grace from any direction had to climb, and history had shown that many elderly hearts – and some not so elderly – weren't up to it.
Accordingly, a well-attended event such as Elaine Wager's memorial service usually featured an ambulance staffed with paramedics parked nearby. There had been one there on Monday morning when Glitsky's heart had gone into ventricular fibrillation. They'd had the electrodes on him and shocked the muscle out of its spasm in – everyone agreed – a miraculously short time.
'So what are they saying now?' Hardy wanted the facts, but they were maddeningly inexact. 'What's the prognosis?'
'They're saying it was moderate,' Glitsky told him.
'Which means what?' Nat put in.
Glitsky cast an eye over to his dad. 'More or less it means they don't have a clue what happens next.'
'Swell,' Hardy said. 'That's really swell.'
'I like it,' Abe said, agreeing with him. 'It could be a dying joke, after all.'
'What are the options?' Nat asked. The boys liked to run with tough-guy irony, but Nat didn't find any part of it funny. 'What are they actually telling you?'
'Anything I ask. Although like everything else, if you know nothing about something, it's hard to pick the right questions.' Glitsky drank from his water glass. He lifted his shoulders. 'The only way they can figure actual damage to the heart muscle for now is the enzyme count, which, they say, is in the moderate increased range. Also, they're doing an angiogram before they let me out of here to see if I've got blocked arteries, which looks like a good guess. Then they'll either do a bypass or decide I don't need one.'
'So what does moderate heart muscle damage mean?' Hardy asked.
'It means maybe not as much muscle died as could have, so I've got a chance to keep living.'
Nat needed to clarify. 'You mean some of your heart could be dead right now – the muscle – and you wouldn't know it?'
Glitsky nodded. 'The part that didn't get any oxygen for long enough, that's my understanding. But they don't think that was too much.'
'But if it was?' Nat persisted.
A shrug. 'Then it ought to show up in a couple of days. And that would be a problem.'
'How big a problem?'
'A problem,' Glitsky repeated. His father's hand was on the bed and he covered it with his own. 'But I'm lucky so far, Dad. They're saying these enzyme levels are OK. Let's go with that. If nothing gets complicated, I'm out of here by the weekend. Dancing.'
Nat looked across at Hardy. 'This I would like to see.'
Dr Campion – mid-fifties, exuding competence – had come and gone. He'd shooed both Hardy and Nat out for the morning exam. When he came out, he told them he'd ordered the nurse to give Glitsky a light sedative. They could go back in to say goodbye – that was enough visiting for this morning. He cautioned both of them to refrain from talking about anything that might be upsetting. The feeling was that they were just going to give him another day to rest, then they'd evaluate the situation and make some decisions.
Hardy stood by the bed and waited while Nat talked domestic details. Abe's youngest son, Orel, was in school today but would be back by visiting hours tonight. Nat hadn't heard back from Isaac, the eldest, until late last night. He was driving up today from LA and he'd be by tonight as well. Nat hadn't been able to reach Jacob in Milan, but he was still trying.
'Don't do that.' Abe was appalled at the idea. 'There's no reason to bother him about this.'
'You don't think he'd want to know his father had a heart attack? Wouldn't you want to know if, God forbid, I ever have a heart attack?'
'You don't have those genes. This,' he said, pointing to his chest, 'was Mom.'
'Or forty years of junk food and no exercise.' Hardy smiled helpfully.
Glitsky glared at him and spoke back to his father. 'Besides, what's Jacob going to do about it over there?'
'How about fly home, make sure you're OK?'
Abe was shaking his head. 'He doesn't have the money for that.'
'I'll pay for it, Abraham.'
Glitsky raised his voice. 'I'm not trying to get out of paying, Dad. I'm saying he doesn't need to come. By the time he gets here, I'll be home. I'm fine.'
Nat took his case to Hardy. 'He's fine. His heart muscle might be already dead inside his chest and he's fine.'
Hardy decided he ought to step in. 'Abe. Shut up. Your sons need to be here. All of 'em. End of story.'
'Thank you.' Nat touched his forehead in a gracious gesture. 'Listen to your friend here, Abraham. He knows what's good for you.' Glitsky took in the two of them. 'God help me,' he said.
Nat went away, muttering. Glitsky had motioned Hardy to stay back a minute. Now he sat down again. 'Dr Campion said keep it short. And we're not supposed to upset you.'
'Really?' Glitsky deadpanned. 'Good going.'
'He also said the nurse gave you a sedative. I'm thinking you palmed it or something.'
'It must not have kicked in yet.' But to Hardy, it seemed that it was starting to. Glitsky laid his head back against his pillow and closed his eyes for a moment, then visibly seemed to gather his strength so that he could talk. 'So what did I miss on Elaine's case?'
Hardy shook his head. 'That would go under the general topic of things that might upset you.'
'Not telling me will be worse. Was there something?'
Hardy sighed. He didn't know about Treya Ghent's verbal attack on Glitsky the day before, and therefore didn't know that it was a good bet as the proximate cause of the heart attack. He did know, however, that his friend had lost his daughter and his job in the same week – that could do it, too. And the doctor had warned about creating more stress.
Still, Glitsky was probably right. If he didn't tell him, it might be worse. 'Some snitch is saying he gave Cole the gun on Saturday.'
'What is Cole saying about that?'
'I wish I knew.' Hardy gestured. Frustration. 'The story broke in the paper this morning. I haven't had time to see him, what with you and all.'