A motorcycle cop cut in front of us and opened up his siren.
We picked up speed as the traffic in front of us melted away.
"I’m sorry about Rina, Jonas," Buzz said. "I didn't know she was your father's wife."
I looked at him.
"Where'd you find out?"
"It's in the papers," he said.
"The Norman studio had it in their press release, together with the story about your flying out here to see her." I shut my lips tight.
That was the picture business for you.
They were like ghouls hovering around a grave. "I've got a container of coffee and a sandwich here if you want it."
I reached for the coffee. The black stuff was hot and I could feel it reach down inside me.
I turned and looked out the window. My back began to throb and ache again.
I wondered if I could wait until we got to the hospital before I went to the bathroom.
The Colton Sanitarium is more like a hotel than a hospital.
It's set back high in the Pacific Palisades, overlooking the ocean. In order to reach it, you come off the Coast Highway onto a narrow winding road and there's a guard standing at the iron gate.
You get past him only after showing the proper credentials.
Dr. Colton is no California quack. He's just a shrewd man who's recognized the need for a truly private hospital.
Movie stars go there for everything from having a baby to taking the cure, plastic surgery to nervous breakdowns.
And once inside the iron gate, they can breathe safely and relax, for no reporter has ever been known to get inside.
They can feel certain that no matter what they've gone there for, the only word that will ever reach the outside world will be theirs.
The gateman was expecting us, for he began to open the gate the minute he spotted the motorcycle cop.
Reporters shouted at us and photographers tried to take pictures.
One of them even clung to the running board until we got inside the gate. Then a second guard suddenly appeared and lifted the man off bodily.
I turned to Buzz.
"They never give up, do they?"
Buzz's face was serious. "From now on, you'd better get used to it, Jonas.
Everything you do will be news." I stared at him.
"Nuts," I said. "That's only for today. Tomorrow it'll be somebody else."
Buzz shook his head.
"You haven't seen the papers or listened to the radio today.
You're a national figure. Something about what you were doing caught the public imagination.
Radio stations gave your flight progress every half hour.
Tomorrow the Examiner begins running your life story.
Nothing like you has swept the country since Lindbergh."
"What makes you say that?"
He smiled. "Today's Examiner trucks. They've got billboards with your picture.
'Read the life story of Hollywood's man of mystery – Jonas Cord. By Adela Rogers St. Johns.' "
I stared at him. I guess I would have to get used to it.
St. Johns was Hearst's top syndicated sob sister. That meant the old man up at San Simeon had put the finger of approval on me. From now on, I would be living in a fish bowl.
The car stopped and a doorman appeared.
"If you'll kindly step this way, Mr. Cord," he said respectfully. I followed him up the steps into the hospital. The white-uniformed nurse behind the desk smiled at me. She indicated a black, leather-bound register. "If you please, Mr. Cord," she said. "It's a rule of the hospital that all visitors have to sign in." I signed the register quickly as she pressed a button underneath the counter.
A moment later, another nurse appeared at the desk.
"If you'll come with me, Mr. Cord," she said politely, "I’ll take you to Miss Marlowe's suite."
I followed her to a small bank of elevators at the rear of the lobby.
She pressed the button and looked up at the indicator.
A frown of annoyance crossed her face.
"I'm sorry to inconvenience you, Mr. Cord, but we'll have to wait a few minutes. Both elevators are up at the operating room."
A hospital was a hospital no matter how hard you tried to make it look like a hotel.
I looked around the lobby until I located what I was looking for. It was a door marked discreetly GENTLEMEN.
I pulled a cigarette from my pocket as the elevator doors closed behind us.
Inside, it smelled like every other hospital. Alcohol, disinfectant, formaldehyde. Sickness and death.