Chapter 2

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"Emmanuel's on Faulkner, that's great, thanks. Faulkner Drive or Faulkner Court?"

Herbert George Washington—George to everyone but his wife and mother—pounded the steering wheel of his rusty Eighty-Eight Cadillac and wove through curving suburban streets. A sign caught his eye and he slowed. "When did this road turn into Faulkner Lane? What the hell!"

To George's building frustration, Emmanuel Hospital lay in plain sight beyond the curving roads and man-made hills of Sandalwood Heights, a wealthy and ever-expanding suburb on the south side of Stapleton. Yellow and red flowers mocked him, spelling out "Emmanuel" in an emerald background on one of the slopes ahead.

What happened to square-grid streets and simple city planning? All the curves, the gardening... Gotta pretty everything up for the rich folk, make sure they know they live somewhere better.

He pushed his round-rim glasses back up his nose, and they promptly slid back down. Even with the windows down and air rushing past, his face beaded with sweat.

The Indian Summer stole the cool breezes of autumn and replaced them with eighty-five degrees of heat and stifling humidity. The Cadillac's air conditioning always made grinding noises after two minutes of use, so it was no help.

Another thing to get fixed someday, George thought. Maybe if this Emmanuel job goes well, I can get a recommendation for work at Westside.

Faulkner Lane wound around another bend and revealed the gate of the hospital staff parking area. Shoulda just followed the signs to the damn E.R. and found my way in from there.

George stopped at the gate and held his temporary Emmanuel Staff badge up to the scanner. The yellow arm lifted, permitting him entry.

He found a spot, grabbed his personal satchel of tools, and exited the car. Two young men in clean white coats stood near their sports cars, giving either George or his old beater furtive glances. One shook his head and muttered something George couldn't make out.

George paused and leveled a direct glare their way. Yeah, boys, this is what happens when no one on your staff knows how to fix your dinosaur patient alarm system. You gotta call in the poor folk from downtown. But you bet I'll take your money.

The small tuft of hair atop his head caught a light breeze, but he felt withered in the sunlight. His thick blue maintenance coveralls trapped in the afternoon heat. He clipped the badge to his chest pocket and hustled toward the staff entrance.

"Seven East? All right. I'll send him up." The fat white security guard put down the phone. "You're the contractor for the Rawlins system?"

"Yessir. Like I said." George tapped his foot and pursed his lips.

"Staff elevator's down the hall."

"I know where the damn elevator is, son." He held up his badge. "How do you think I got this in the first place?"

He shared the elevator ride with two doctors, both male, one black. George leaned against the back corner and watched the lights mark each floor's passing. He ignored the look of disdain the doctors gave him, as though he might stain the pristine walls by his mere presence.

The doctors got off on the fifth floor, and the doors lingered open long enough for George to catch their conversation. "Couldn't they find someone more... local?"

A few expletives came to mind, but George kept his thoughts to himself. Always better that way. Let 'em think you're a nobody, just some brother from the 'hood, maybe a little smarter than the rest of "your kind."

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