When Ginger
Alden awakened, she ran her hand over stained sheets, searching
for her lover's arm. But his side of the bed was cold. "Elvis?"
she called out softly. She noticed a wedge of light emanating
from the partially open door of Elvis's bathroom suite. Ginger
walked to the door of Elvis's inner sanctum, which included an
office, a library, and an oversized bathroom, and called out his
name. But there was no answer again. Not bold enough to fling
open the bathroom door, Ginger instead crept up and looked through
the opening.
She instantly
put her hand to her mouth and reached out to steady herself against
the door.
In the reflection
of the smoked-glass mirror she could see Elvis, his body contorted
on the floor, his buttocks upward in the air, both feet splayed
behind him. She saw his face, too. It was bloated, turned to one
side, and pressed into the thick nap of the vermilion carpet.
Blue streaks were spreading up through his face, and his hands,
which were frozen into fists, were grasping the carpet fibers.
Shoving the door open, Ginger confronted the full horror of the
scene. Elvis had been on the toilet and had fallen face forward
onto his knees. He was stiff and frozen in that position. The
bottoms of his blue silk pajamas were bundled around his feet.
At 2:48,
the ambulance reached the double doors of the Baptist Hospital
emergency room. At the admittance desk, a registrar hurriedly
logged Elvis in: "John Doe. Profession: Entertainer."
Elvis was
so stiff and contorted that it took all three physicians to straighten
his body so they could tend to him. The bluish fingers of death
had spread down his legs and arms. His cheeks were discolored
and swollen by pools of blood.
Kim Davis,
an emergency room nurse, threw up her hands. "Why are we
working on this corpse?"
The answer
came from one of the physicians: "Because he's Elvis Presley."