Street Dreams

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by Street Dreams


  I stared at him shocked. “That was beautiful.”

  He beamed. “Thank you. It took me twenty minutes to get the words right.”

  I threw a pillow at him. He blocked it with an elbow. “Isn’t it the thought that counts?”

  “Yes, that is worth something.”

  “Worth a lot. I used a thesaurus. English isn’t my native language.”

  “Don’t give me that. You’re totally fluent.”

  He put on Jockeys, then slid into a pair of black jeans. “Nowthat is a very good compliment.”

  His face was dead serious. I had hit something important. “How’d you learn?”

  “I learned at first in Ethiopia, more in Israel, but mostly from my stepmother.” He buttoned his shirt. “She is English speaking . . . from Canada. I make her speak the language to me because I want to speakreal English. I saw America as my ticket to freedom. I think my vocabulary is pretty good.”

  “It’sexcellent, Koby.” I got up and started to dress. “I have Ivy League friends who don’t sound nearly as educated as you do.”

  “Thank you, that means very much to me because I work very hard on it. Now I must work on my spelling. Other than medical terms, my English spelling is absolutely atrocious.”

  “My spelling is atrocious and English is my native language.”

  He smiled. “That is nice for you to say. English is the third alphabet I learned. There is little in common between Amharic and Hebrew, although both are Semitic languages, and English is totally different. When I first get here, I could speak and understand quite well, but I couldn’t read much except medical texts and that is only because the medical language in Hebrew is borrowed from English. There is an expression in Hebrew—to break your teeth, meaning to do a hard thing. I used to break my teeth reading the newspapers. Now I can read the words, but I still cannot spell them. That is the next hurdle.”

  I tucked my blouse into my pants and began putting on my boots. “You’re very . . . driven, aren’t you?”

  “You are first discovering this?”

  I laughed and shook my head.

  “What?” he asked.

  “I know I keep harping on this, but”—I laughed again—“you are so like my father—just thinner and darker.”

  “Don’t they say that girls are attracted to their fathers, as boys are attracted to their mothers?” He sat down next to me. “Now, my mother died when I was young. She is not so clear in my mind. So I can create whatever fiction I want.”

  “What’s your stepmother like?”

  He thought a moment. “Tall . . . strong . . . brown eyes . . . pale skin.”

  “Sounds familiar,” I said. “Red hair?”

  He shook his head no. “Brown. Then after ten of us, it turned gray. Batya was tough as a mother, but fair-minded. No sense of humor, but I could make her laugh.” He eyed me intently. “I like when you laugh. It’s good music.”

  I looked down and patted his knee.

  He raised my face and kissed me gently. Did it a second time, but with more passion. His hands stroked my arms, lust in those incredible jeweled eyes. “Still tired?”

  “We’re dressed.”

  “An easy thing to change if the spirit is willing.”

  I bit my lower lip. “If you’re convincing, I could be persuaded.”

  He raised his eyebrows. “I like challenges. Especially this kind.”

  “Go for it, Yaakov.”

  He grinned and started by unbuttoning my blouse and unhooking my bra from the front. Then he unzipped my pants but kept them on. He laid me down on the mattress; then beginning at my forehead, he gently kissed a path downward, his lips traveling onto the tip of my nose, onto my mouth, between my breasts, and over my stomach and navel until he reached the top of my pubis. He lowered the waistband of my panties, his tongue dipping into my thatch of red hair. Softly, he bit the skin. “How do I do?”

  My fingers dived into his kinky black hair as I moved his mouth lower. “Very convincing.” I sucked in my breath when he hit the right spot. “Oh Lord, yes, I amdefinitely persuaded.”

  19

  We eventually made itto dinner, then hit a ten o’clock movie. The cinema was followed by drinks at a small jazz club, talking and talking until the wee hours of the morning. We had been together for over twelve hours, and though I was zapped, I politely declined Koby’s offer to bunk down at his place. I didn’t have to work until the afternoon, but I wanted to wake up in my own bed, on my own time. He didn’t look insulted. On the contrary, I felt he needed breathing room as well.

  We were quiet on the way home, tapped out on ideas, and happy to let the stereo provide the background noise. We were sailing on Sunset back into Silver Lake, his car finally missing a light and gliding to a stop. There were no other vehicles about us, no cross-traffic in sight.

  But there was a lone pedestrian crossing the street. A woman—hunched and wrapped in a heavy black coat. She was clutching a purse to her chest.

  I was suddenly alert. I looked at my watch: three in the morning.

  “Poor thing,” Koby whispered. “Can’t we take her to a shelter?”

  “I don’t know if she’s homeless,” I told him. “No shopping cart, no bags . . . just a purse. She’s also wearing sheer stockings, and in this light, her ankles look normal.”

  “Ankles?”

  “Most of the homeless women have terrible ankles from walking in ill-fitting shoes. And also, the poor health.”

  “Hooker?”

  “Not one that I recognize. To me, it looks like she had a fight with a boyfriend, and he kicked her out of the car. Look at the downcast gait.”

  “Then perhaps we can take her home. It’s dangerous out here.”

  Before I could agree, the horrid scene played out in slo-mo. A Jeep Cherokee SUV, tearingagainst the light, smashed into her, five yards before the safety of the sidewalk. As the body flew upward, a Dodge Caravan minivan crossed the intersection, just in time for the Jeep to smack it broadside, flipping it over. As the woman fell back to earth, she was hit a second time by the minivan, spinning and bouncing on its roof, the van careening totally out of control until it crashed into a power pole. Electricity sparked. The noise was deafening. The woman had been propelled clear across the boulevard and had landed on the asphalt with a thud. The Jeep did a two-tire screeching turn, speeding off to freedom.

  “Shit!”Koby screamed. He punched open a dashboard door, extracted a pair of latex gloves, and snapped them over his hands. He was out of the car before I could unbuckle my seat belt.“Don’t move, don’t move, don’t move!” he yelled out to the passengers in the wrecked minivan. He was running over to the woman’s inert body.

  I raced out of the car, cell phone in my shaking hand.

  “Go to the van and tell them not to move!” Koby ordered me. He was leaning over the pedestrian, checking her neck for a pulse. The face was unrecognizable pulp, her body as limp as a rag doll. I bit back bile and ran over to the van, calling 911 as my eyes gawked at the smoking hunk of sheared steel and tangled wires, the entire mess reeking of spilled gas and oil and the metallic stink of burned flesh. Inside, the air bags had deployed, but even so, there was so much blood, guts, and moaning that I nearly fainted at the grisly sight. But as soon as the operator came over my cell, I was surprised by my calm tone, telling him the precise location while requesting paramedics and the fire department stat.

  After I hung up, with my mouth still agape, I stared at the carnage inside, unsure how to proceed. I just kept repeating over and over for the passengers not to move, hoping that the panic in my voice wasn’t noticeable. When Koby finally appeared at my side, I exhaled audible relief. Immediately, he went to work, his voice as soothing as lapping waves, as he told the passengers—two men, two women, a couple of kids, and a lifeless baby—not to move while he assessed the damage. Blood was spurting from the arm of one of the women. He tore off his shirt and tied up the artery. Though the night was cold, he was sweating and breathing
hard. “You call 911?”

  “Yes.”

  “I’ve got a first-aid kit and blanket in the back of my car.”

  “I’m on it.” I rushed over to the car, my boot heels clacking against the street, then popped the trunk, taking out the kit as well as a flashlight and a blanket. He had another set of gloves in the kit, so I put them on, then brought the supplies to him and shone the light into the car.

  “You brought the flashlight. Someone was thinking. Shine it here.”

  “What about the pedestri . . . ?”

  “Gone. Ah, you’re gloved. Press down here, okay? No, not there . . . here.”

  The wail of sirens in the background. At this hour, the noise could be heard blocks away. As I applied pressure to a leaking vessel with my left hand, I called 911 again with my right. Then I tucked the phone between my shoulder and cheek, so I could free up the other hand to direct light to where Koby was working. He was trying to liberate the infant—thankfully, he had found a pulse—but a web of razor-sharp metal was in his way.

  “This is Officer Cynthia Decker from LAPD. I just reported a fatal hit-and-run traffic accident. I need to hook up with radio dispatch so I can give out pertinent information to all cruisers near the scene.”

  My neck was constricted, screwed up into a god-awful position to secure the phone, and the muscles began to throb. Adrenaline was shooting through my system, choking my breathing with pounding heartbeats. Still, when the police RTO came on the line, I had found my voice.

  “Reporting a hit-and-run with fatalities. The vehicle was a late-model Jeep Cherokee, dark in color, last four digits of the license plate—Henry-five-two-three, again, Henry-five-two-three—last seen heading northbound on Terrazzo Avenue. All officers in the area respond immediately. Requesting additional units to the scene of the accident—Terrazzo and Sunset.”

  I waited until the operator repeated the information. When she did, I hung up, put the phone down, and rolled my neck. Koby was wrist deep in blood, dressing horrid gashes with gauze from the kit. It was like plugging up the proverbial dike with a finger.

  The sirens grew louder. I could see flashing lights in the reflection of the shattered window glass. The EMTs arrived less than three minutes after my first call, though it had seemed much longer. When they pushed me out of the way, I wanted to say thank you. Koby spoke rapidly while continuing his work, informing them about the infant, then requesting to speak to the doctor on the ambulance phone. When my date started conversing in medical lingo, I walked away, trying to figure out how to be useful.

  With great trepidation, I walked over to the thrown body and held my mouth. I regarded her—discarded, her limbs broken and distorted. Her skull had been cracked open and brain was oozing out. The urge to puke was almost as strong as the urge to pass out. I jerked my eyes away from the corpse just as an unmarked car pulled up. Two people got out, flashing their badges. They needn’t have bothered, because I knew both of them by more than just name.

  Hayley Marx was a fellow officer in Hollywood, the closest thing I had to a friend in the Department. We used to eat dinner together twice a month, but now our schedules conflicted. We kept meaning to make time, but never got around to it. She looked great, her tall frame svelte in a black pantsuit. She’d grown out her blond hair so that it now brushed her earlobes, softening her face.

  The man she was with was the last guy on earth I wanted to see. Detective Scott Oliver worked Homicide under my father’s leadership. Once, they had been colleagues, and there remained festering resentment over my father’s promotion, further aggravated by my idiotic fling with Oliver. It was over almost before it started, but I was told by sources close to both of us that he wasn’t thrilled. God only knew why. I wasn’t a day at the beach.

  Scott was a sharp dresser. He had on a black jacket, black T-shirt, and khaki pants. His face was handsome in that middle-aged-man rugged way, and his thick hair had silvered at the seams. Ordinarily, his penetrating stare would have put me under, but at the moment, I was preoccupied with other things.

  “Decker!” he barked out.

  “Oh my God!” Hayley gasped. “You all right, Cin?”

  I started babbling. “We were sitting at the intersection when a Jeep just smashed into her.” I realized I was sobbing. “I don’t know if we should move her out of the way—”

  “First just calm down!” Oliver told me.

  “Okay, okay—”

  “Because we can’t move her until Traffic and Homicide get here. It was a hit-and-run, right?”

  “Yes.”

  “We heard it go over the box; I’m sure others heard it, too. Just hang for a moment.” Oliver turned to Hayley. “I’ve got some crime tape in the trunk of my car. Can you get it for me?”

  “I’ll go with you,” I told her.

  “No, you stay here and tell meexactly what happened.”

  Another cruiser had arrived: two more guys from my division—Bader and Guensweit. With others there, it made it easier to tell the story; the crowd mitigated the queasy feeling. Scott told the uniformed officers to rope off the body while he took me aside and pushed me for details.

  “I told you, I only remember the last four digits of the license plate number, Scott. It happened so fast—”

  “Just let me get a physical picture, okay?”

  “Okay.”

  He sighed, making me feel like an errant child. Hayley said, “It’ll be okay, Cin—”

  “Can you not interrupt, Marx?” Oliver’s eyes went to my face. “So you’re heading eastbound, stopped at a light.”

  “Yes . . . exactly where the car is parked now. We haven’t moved it.”

  “So where was the Jeep coming from?” Oliver asked.

  “I told you I don’tknow. There were no cars on either side of us. The Jeep just came out of nowhere and ran the light.”

  “Then it came up from behind you?” Oliver asked.

  “Maybe. Probably. I don’t know, Scott, I wasn’t driving. I wasn’t checking the rearview mirror.”

  “Who was driving?”

  “Koby.” I turned toward the crash site. “My date. He’s over there somewhere, helping out the paramedics.”

  “He’s a doctor?” Hayley asked.

  “A nurse.”

  “Oh.” She sounded disappointed.

  I exploded. “What the hell difference does it make?”

  “Cin, I’m sorry—”

  “She had a purse!” I suddenly recalled. “The woman . . . she was holding a purse. I remember pointing it out to Koby as we watched her cross the street. She looked so sad.” I began to pace. “We’ve got to find the purse. It’s bound to have her ID. I’ve got to find it—”

  “No, you’ve got to sit down,” Oliver told me.

  “No, no, I’m okay. . . .”

  Another cruiser pulled up. Oliver said, “Cindy, sit down! That’s an order. I’ll call it into Hollywood Homicide.”

  But I didn’t listen. As Oliver left with Hayley to give instructions to the next set of units, I started hunting around for the handbag. There was blood all over the place. Piercing screams and sobs were coming from the pile of mangled metal. The group of EMTs working on the accident had grown. There were now two ambulances and two fire trucks with lots of firefighters in yellow slickers standing by. They were bringing out the Jaws of Life.

  Koby emerged from the shadows, speaking to a paramedic, using his hands as he talked. I stared at him, in awe of how fast he had reacted. I jumped when Oliver tapped me on the shoulder.

  “I told you to sit down.”

  “I’m okay.”

  “No, you’re not.”

  Silence.

  “Who’s your date?” Oliver asked.

  I pointed to Koby. “Him.”

  “Shirtless wonder?”

  I jerked my head around and glared at him.

  Oliver let out a bitter chuckle and shook his head. “Does Daddy know you’re eating chocolate cake?”

  Stunned didn’t eve
n remotely approximate the way those words hit me. Rage welled up so quickly, it made my eyes tear. The old Cindy would have slapped his face and berated him with a string of curse words. But if I had learned anything the past year, it was the value of saying as little as possible.

  “Stay away from me, Oliver.” My voice was feral. “Stayfar away.”

  “Hey!” Hayley shouted as she tied up the last bit of crime tape. “Everything okay?”

  The absolute fury must have showed on my face. “Just fine, Marx.” I stalked off, snapping off my gloves, and continued searching for the purse. Oliver had the good sense not to follow. Hayley joined me a minute later with a flashlight. “What’d he say to you?”

  “Nothing.”

  “Liar.”

  “Help me look for the handbag.”

  “That’s what I’m doing.” She swept the light across the dark ground. “Who’s your date?”

  I gave up on subtlety. “The black guy over there.”

  “Really.”A pause. “Great body. Why’s he shirtless?”

  I couldn’t keep the scorn out of my voice.“Because he ripped it off to tie up a gushing artery.”

  “Wow . . . that’s cool.”

  “Hayley, shut up!”

  She held my shoulders, and I started to cry. She hugged me tightly and I let her do it. “You’re okay, Cin, you’re okay.”

  “It was just so awful . . . that horrible noise!” I pulled away. “We’ve got to find the purse. We’ve got to find out who she is . . . was.”

  “I know he’s a jerk, Decker. I know I’m a jerk for going out with him, especially ’cause he still likes you—”

  “Not the time for a psychodrama, Marx.” I stepped away from her and took in my surroundings. The body had landed around ten feet from a stucco office building encircled by a three-foot hedge of waxy privet. Maybe the purse landed somewhere in the bushes. I began separating branch from branch. It was dark and I was looking into black holes.

  “Maybe you’d do better if you could see.” Hayley offered me the flashlight. I took it and shone the beam into the thick leaves.

 

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