![]() Author · Books · Journalism · Information · Message Board | |
![]() The Prey Series Virgil Flowers The Kidd Series Other Novels The Night Crew Etcetera | The Night Crew The Night Crew contains strong language and scenes of
graphic violence and sex, and it may thus be inappropriate or offensive to some
readers. The excerpt below is the complete first chapter of The
Night Crew, and it has not been censored in any way. If you are offended by
this sort of material, or will get in trouble for reading it (e.g. if your
parents think it would be inappropriate for you), do not continue.
Thank you. The corner of Gayley and Le Conte, at the edge of the
campus: Frat boys cruised in their impeccably clean racing-green
Miatas and cherry-red Camaro ragtops, with their impeccably blonde dates, all
square shoulders, frothy dresses and big white teeth. Two skinny kids, one of each sex, smelling of three-day sweat
and dressed all in black, unwrapped Ding-Dongs and talked loud about Jesus and
Joy to Come; celebrating Him and vanilla-creme filling. At the Shell station, a tanker truck pumped Premium down a
hole in the concrete pad, under the eye of a big-bellied driver. And above them all, a quarter-million miles out, a buttery new
moon smiled down as it slid toward the Pacific. The Bee was impatient, checking her watch, bouncing on her
toes. She was waiting at the corner, a JanSport backpack at her feet. Her face
was a pale crescent in the headlights of passing cars, in the Los Angeles
never-dark. The Shell tanker driver stood in a puddle of gasoline fumes,
chewed a toothpick and watched her in a casual, looking-at-women way. The Bee
was dressed by Banana Republic, in khaki wash pants, a t-shirt with a queen bee
on the chest, a photographer's vest with fifteen pockets, hiking boots and a
preppy black-silk ski mask rolled up and worn as a watch cap. When she saw the truck with the dish on the roof, she pulled
the mask down over her face, picked up the backpack, and stepped out to the
curb. The Bee had small opaque-green eyes, like turquoise thumbtacks on the
black mask. Anna Batory, riding without her seatbelt, her feet braced on
the truck's plastic dashboard, saw the Bee step out to the curb and pointed:
"There she is." Creek grunted and eased the truck to the curb. Anna rolled
down the passenger-side window and spoke to the mask: "You're the Bee?" You're late," the Bee snapped. Anna glanced at the dashboard clock, then back out the window:
"Jason said ten-thirty." Jason was sitting in the back of the truck on a gray metal
folding chair, next to Louis. He looked up from his Sony chip-cam and said,
"That's what they told me. Ten-thirty." "It's now ten-thirty-three," the Bee said.
She turned her wrist to show the blue face on a stainless-steel Rolex. "Sorry," Anna said. "I don't think that's good enough," the Bee said. "We might be
too late, and it's all wasted." Behind the Bee the Shell gas-delivery man was taking an
interest: a lot of people in a TV truck and a blonde in a ski mask,
arguing. "You better get in," Anna said. She could smell the fumes from
the gas as she turned and pushed back the truck's side door. Louis caught it
and pulled it the rest of the way. The Bee looked at the two men in the back,
nodded and said, "Jason," to Jason, said nothing to Louis and climbed
aboard. "Around the corner to Westwood, then Westwood to Circle," the
Bee said. "You know where Circle is?" "Yeah, we know where everything is," Creek said. They'd been
everywhere. "Hold on." Creek took the truck around the corner, humming to himself,
which he did when he was tightening up. Anna turned back to the Bee, found the
other woman gaping at Creek, and grinned. Creek looked vaguely like the Wookiee in Star Wars:
six-seven, overmuscled and hairy. He was wearing a USMC sweatshirt with the
sleeves and neck torn out. Tattoos covered his arms: just visible through the
reddish-blond hair on his biceps was an American flag in red, blue, and
Appalachia-white skin, deeply tanned, with the scrolled sentiment, "These
colors don't run." "Hello?" Anna lifted a hand to break the stare. The Bee tore
her eyes away from Creek. "We need some facts and figured," Anna said. "How
many people on the raid, where you're based, what specifically you object to
like that." "We've got it all here, but we've got to hurry," the Bee said.
She dug into the backpack, came up with a plastic portfolio, and took out a
sheet of crisp white paper. Anna flicked on the overheard reading light. The press release was tight, professional, laser-printed. A
two-color pre-printed logo of a running mustang set off the words "Free Hearts"
at the top of the page. "Are these quotes from you or from the collective?" Anna
asked, ticking the paper with a fingernail. "Anything that's in quotes, you can attribute to either me or
the Rat. We wrote the statement jointly." "Will we meet the Rat?" Anna asked. She passed the press
release to Louis, who slipped it in a spring clip on the side of the fax. He's in the building now," the Bee said, leaning left to peer
past Anna out the windshield. "Turn left here," she said. Creek slowed for the
turn. "We'd like to get an action quote when they come out, as they
release the animals," Anna said. "No problem. We can accommodate that." The Bee looked at her
Rolex, then back out the window. They were right in the middle of the UCLA
medical complex. "I'm sorry I'm so... snappy... but when Jason agreed to
ten-thirty, we specified exactly ten-thirty. The raid is already under
way." Anna nodded and turned to Louis. "How're the radios?" Louis Martinez sat in an office swivel chair that was bolted
to the floor of the truck. From the chair, he could reach the scanners and
transmitters, the dual editing stations, the fax and phones, any of the screens
in the steel racks. He fiddled with the gear incessantly, trying to capture a
mental picture of after-dark Los Angeles, in terms of accidents, shootings, car
chases, fires, riots. "All clear," he said. "We've got that shooting down in
Inglewood, but that ain't much. There's a chase down south, Long Beach, but
it's heading the other way." "Track it," Anna said. Cop chases had produced at least two
famous video clips in the past couple of years. If you could get out in front
of one, and catch it coming by, it was a sure sale. "I got it," Louis said. He pushed his glasses up his nose and
grinned at the Bee with his screwy nerd-charm. "Why'd you choose Bee?" he
asked. "I don't want a warm and fuzzy animal. That's not the point of
animal rescue," the Bee said. Her response was remote, canned, and Louis' grin
slipped a fraction of an inch. "And that's why Steve picked Rat," Jason suggested. The Bee frowned at the use of Rat's real name, but nodded.
"Yes. And because we feel a spiritual affinity with out choices." In the driver's seat, Creek grunted again, shook his head
once, quick. Anna was watching him, taking his temperature: He didn't like
these people and he didn't like the professional PR points the PR
release, the theatrical ski mask. Too much like a setup, and Creek was
pure. A smile curled one corner of Anna's mouth. She could read
Creek's mind if she could see his eyes. Creek knew that. He glanced at her,
then deliberately pulled his eyes away. And said, quickly: "There's a guy on
the corner." Ahead and to the right, a woman in a ski mask was standing on
the corner, making a hurry-up windmilling motion with one arm. "That's Otter," she said. "And that's the corner of Circle.
They must be out turn right." Creek took the corner, past the waving woman. The street
tilted uphill, and a hundred yards up, a cluster of women spilled down a
driveway to the street, two of them struggling with a blue plastic municipal
garbage can. A security guard was running down from the top of the hill,
another one trailing behind. "Got them coming out," Anna said, over her shoulder. A quick
pulse ran through her: not quite excitement, but some combination of pleasure
and apprehension. Nobody ever knew for sure what would happen at these things.
Nothing much, probably, but any time you had guards with guns... Did the guards
have guns? She took a half-second to look, but couldn't tell. As she looked, she reached behind her, lifted the lid on the
steel box bolted on the back of her seat, pulled the Nagra tape recorder from
its foam nest. Jason was looking past her, through the windshield at the
action, and she snapped: "Get ready." "Yes, Mom," he said. He fitted a headset over the crown of his
head, plugged in the earphone. Creek was driving with one hand, pulling on his
own headset. "Everybody hear me?" Anna asked, speaking into her face mike.
The radios were one-way: Anna talked, everyone else listened. Creek said, "Yeah," and took the truck over the curb, one big
bounce and a nose-down, squealing, full stop. Jason had braced himself, and
Louis had swiveled to let the chair take the jolt. The Bee toppled over and
yelped, "Shit." Ahead of them, the women carrying the garbage can were jerking
and twisting down the driveway, doing the media polka looking for the
cameras, running for the lights, trying to stay away from the guards. The raiders had gone into the back of the building, over a
loading dock; the dock was contained inside a fence, with a concrete patio big
enough for fifteen or twenty cars. At least a dozen women, all masked, milled
around the patio; then a man ran out of the medical building, carrying a small,
squealing, black-and-white pig. Then another woman, carrying boxes, or maybe
cages. As the truck settled, as the Bee yelped, Anna was out and
running, the Nagra banging against her leg. Jason was two steps behind her with
the backup Sony, and Creek was out the driver's door, his camera up on his
shoulder, off to Anna's left. Bee, a little out of shape, sputtered in their
wake. Then Creek lit up and Anna yelled at the man with the pig,
"Bring the pig. Bring the pig this way... Bring the pig." The man saw them
coming and walked toward them, and she had the Nagra's mike pointed at the
squealing pig and Jason lit up. The security guards saw the camera lights and the first one
turned to the man trailing, yelled something to the other, who ran back up the
hill. The first one continued down, and shouted at Creek, "Hey, no cameras
here, no cameras." A group of masked women headed toward him, walled him off from
the rest of the milling crowd, pushed him toward the ramp. Frustrated, he
climbed up the loading dock and hurried to the open door. Just as he was about
to go through the door, he jumped back, and a young man in a blue oxford cloth
shirt and jeans ran out of the building and headed toward the lights. Anna said to the microphone, her voice calm, even, "Creek,
there's a kid coming in, watch him. Jason, stay with the pig." Creek backpedaled. When Anna spoke into his ear, he'd looked
up from his eyepiece and spotted the kid in the blue shirt: trouble, maybe.
Trouble made good movies. The kid was striding toward them, a dark smear under
his nose, one hand cupping his jaw. He seemed to be crying. "They were gonna kill this pig, for nothing for soap
tests or something, shampoo," the masked pig-man shouted at Jason's camera. The
pig was freaking out, long shrieking bleats, like a woman being stabbed. "She's
gonna live now," pig-man shouted, as the pig struggled against him. "She's
gonna live." The patio was chaos, with the cameras and the pig-man, the
women with cages, all swirling around: Blue shirt arrived and Anna saw that he
was crying, tears running down his cheeks as Creek tracked him with
the lens. The dark smear was blood, which streamed from his nose and across his
lips and chin. "Give me that pig," he screamed, and he ran at the pig-man.
"Gimme that." The animal women blocked him out, not hitting him, just body
blocking. Both Creek and Jason tracked the twirling scrum while Anna tried to
stay out of their line; she kept the Nagra pointed, picking up the overall
noise, which could be laid back into the tape later, if needed. The Bee caught Anna's arm: "He's just a flunky, forget him,"
she shouted, over the screams and grunting of the struggle. "But we're gonna do
the mice now. Get the mice, in the garbage cans." The women with the blue garbage can were waiting their turn
with the lights, and Anna spoke into the mike again: "Jason, get out of there.
Go over to that blue garbage can, it's full of mice, they're gonna turn them
loose." Jason took a step back, lifted his head, spotted the garbage can.
"Creek, stay with the kid," Anna said. "Stay with the kid." As Jason came up, the women with the garbage can, who'd been
waiting, popped the lid and tipped it, and two hundred or three hundred mice,
some black, some white, some tan, scurried down the sides and ran out onto the
patio, looked around and headed for the nearest piece of cover. Jason hun close and then the kid in the blue shirt went that
way, screaming, "Gimme those," and, sobbing, tried to corral the mice. They
were everywhere, running over his feet, over his hands, avoiding him, making
the break. He finally gave up and slumped on the ground, his head in his hands,
the mice all around. Jeez: this is almost too good, Anna thought. As Creek tracked them, the Bee came back with her nagging
voice: "Do you want an on-camera statement?" And Anna thought, Who's running this thing? But she
had to smile at the other woman's effective management: "Yeah, but we'd better
hurry," Anna said. "The cops'll be coming." Anna said into the mike, "Jason, get on the Bee, she'll make a
statement." She pushed the mike up, raised her voice, shouted, "Rat, where are
you?" The man with the pig turned toward her: "I'm the Rat," he
said. His teeth were bared, his face spotted with what looked like mid, but
could be pig shit. "We're gonna need you over here: we need a comment," Anna
said. "No problem," he said. He handed the struggling pig to a
woman. "What exactly do you want?" The Rat had a deep, smooth voice, a singer's
baritone. His eyes were pale blue behind the black mask. "Just tell us why you did it," Anna said, nodding at Jason's
camera. He leaned forwards and stage-whispered, "For the
publicity." Anna grinned back and said, "Tell that to the camera." Jason yelled, "Hey, Rat: You wanna do this, or what?" As the Rat and the Bee talked to Jason's camera, Anna pulled
the mike down in front of her face and said, "Creek, let's talk to the kid. Let
me in there first." Creek hung back a couple of steps, so the camera wouldn't be
right in the kid's face. Anna squatted next to him, and patted him on the
shoulder. "Are you okay?" The kid looked up, dazed, a pale teenage child with brown eyes
behind his gold-rimmed glasses. What?" "Are you okay?" Anna asked again. "They're gonna fire me," he said. He looked back at the
building. "I was supposed to watch them. They were my responsibility, the
animals. I was supposed to keep everybody out, but they came in so
fast..." "How'd you get the bloody nose?" Anna asked. "I tried to hold the door, but they kicked through. Then about
four of them held me and I couldn't get to the phone, and they tipped
everything over in the lab, all the animal cages, everything." He touched his
face. "I think the door hit me..." "Look, there's gonna be two sides to this," Anna said. She
looked back at Creek, and said, "Creek." Creek stepped away, spotted a mouse looking at him from the
top of the loading dock and closed in on it. Behind him, the Bee and the Rat
were still talking to Jason's camera; the pig was still struggling with the
woman who'd taken it, but the squealing had stopped, and the scene was almost
quiet. Anna turned back to the kids and continued, "The animal rights
guys will be heroes to some people. And some people will be heroes to the
scientific community." She patted his thigh. "Now, go like this. From your
nose." She made an upward rubbing gesture with her hand, on her own
face. The kid gulped. "Why?" "Want to keep your job?" Anna grinned at him. She was a small
woman, dark-haired, with an oval face and cornflower-blue eyes behind
gold-rimmed glasses: she had an effect on young males. "Be a hero. Smear a
little blood around your face and we'll put you on camera, telling your side.
Believe me, they won't fire you." "I need the job," the kid said tentatively. "Smear a little blood and stand up... what's your name?" The kid was no dummy: He'd been born in front of a TV set. He
wiped blood up his cheek and said, "Charles McKinley... How do I look?" His
cheek looked like a raw sirloin. "Great. That's McKinley, M-c-K-i-n-l-e-y, Charles, regular
spelling." "Yeah." He touched his face again: the blood was brilliant
red. "What's your job up there, Charles?" Anna got a few more
details about his job, his age, where he lived. "That's really great," she said. "Now what..." The pig screamed, and Anna turned. The woman who'd been holding it had carried it toward Jason's
camera, where Jason was interviewing the Rat. As it screamed, the animal kicked
free, and ran. The Rat stooped and tried to scoop it up, like a bouncing
football; but the pig went through, smacked into his ankle, and the Rat fell
squarely on his butt: "Shit," he shouted. "Get the pig..." Jason was still on him, lights in his face: He rolled and the
pig, now panicked, ran behind the woman who'd originally held him, did another
quick turn, and as the Rat tried to get to his feet, ran squarely into the
Rat's chest, knocking him flat on his butt again. Jason stayed with it as the Rat scrambled to his feet. Anna grinned and turned back to the kid: "... Tell us what
happened, talk to the camera," Anna said, pointing at Creek. "Creek, come on
back." Creek lit up and the kid told his story, breaking into tears
again as he got caught up with it. Anna stepped away to watch Jason, and when the Rat got tangled
in a long complicated explanation of animal rights, she broke in: "How come all
the women in the group?" "There are some guys they just didn't make it tonight,"
Rat said. He started to say more, when Anna's cell phone rang. She unclipped it and stepped away, glanced at Creek, who was
still with the Kid. "Yeah." Louis, calling from the truck seventy-five feet away, excited:
"Jesus, Anna, we got a jumper on Wilshire, he's on a ledge." "Where?" A basic rule: everything happened at once. Anna
looked back at the two interviews, calculating. "I don't know, somewhere on Wilshire, close, I think. I'm
getting the address up." "Get it now," Anna rapped. Very tense: a jumper would make
everything. The networks, CNN, everything if they got the jump. She
could hear Louis tapping on the laptop keys, where he kept the address
database. "C'mon, c'mon." "I'm getting it..." "How're we doing on the cops here?" "You got a couple-three minutes, I just heard the call." "Get the address, Louis." "I'm hurrying." Anna turned to Creek: "Get ready to wrap it up." And to the kid, "Cops'll be here to help, minute or two." Louis came back on the phone: "Jesus, Anna, it's just down the
street, we're a half-mile out. And he's still up there." Anna spoke into the mike, her voice urgent: "Jason, Creek.
Back in the truck. Now! Kill the lights. Move it!" "Hey, what, what?" Jason kept shooting. "Close down! Get in the truck. Now." Creek's light went down and he was moving, no questions, but
the Rat shouted at her, "Wait a minute, wait, what're... Hey, Anna, we didn't
talk." And the Bee started toward her. Anna, the phone pressed to her ear, walking back toward the
truck, fumbled a card out of her shirt pocket and thrust it back at the Rat:
"Call me. We gotta go." Creek yelled at her: "What?" "We got a jumper," she shouted back. "Let's go, Jason..." They ran toward the truck: Louis had climbed into the driver's
seat and was backing off the sidewalk. As Anna and Creek came up, he jammed it into park and climbed
over the seat into the back, as Jason came through the side. Creek slipped into
the driver's seat and Louis shouted, "Down Westwood, then left on Wilshire,
it's three blocks, it's a place called the Shamrock." Creek: "I know the place: Jesus, it's two minutes from
here." "Gotta hustle," Anna said. "Gotta hustle, gotta hustle." Creek spun the truck in a U-turn, paused at Le Conte long
enough to make sure he wouldn't hit anything, then swept through. Louis, whatever happens with the jumper, this animal thing is
an A-tape," Anna said over her shoulder. "We want the bloody-nose kid to be a
hero..." Jason said, "That pig really pissed off the Rat, I think it's
heading for a barbeque." "I got a great shot of this little mouse, Louis, really cute,"
Creek shouted over his shoulder. "Shut up, shut up," Louis said to them all. He had an earphone
clamped over one ear. Then, "The guy's still out there. On a ledge. There's
hotel people talking to him. He's from a party, high-school kids." Creek had the gas pedal on the floor and they just caught the
light at Wilshire. As they swept through the intersection, Anna said to Jason,
"Give yourself some space on your tape. You gotta be ready, but the first tape
is good, too." "I'm ready," Jason said. "Creek?" Creek nodded. Creek was always ready. "Louis, talk to me," Anna said. Louis' eyes were closed, and he was leaning away from them,
listening hard. "There're two cars on the way, we got maybe a minute by
ourselves. Maybe two minutes." Anna said, "where's that Three truck? Weren't they still
out?" "They were drifting south after that chase," Louis said.
"They're way the hell down by Huntington Beach. They're out of it." Anna said, "Jason, I want you tight on the guy. Creek will
pull back a bit, get the full jump, if he goes, but I wanna see his
face..." "You got it, sugarbun," Jason said. Creek showed his teeth: "Sugarbun?" Jason grinned at him: "Me'n Anna getting intimate." "Yeah?" Creek glanced at Anna, who rolled her eyes. "Me'n Anna doing the thing," Jason said. He was almost talking
to himself, looked like he might giggle. He was wound, his eyes big: He liked
the movement, maybe too much. He was talented: might go big in Hollywood
someday, Anna thought, if he didn't blow his brains out through his nose.
"Doin' the thing," he muttered. "Shamrock," Anna said, and pointed. Ahead, a twenty-story
green-glass-and-steel building showed a bright green neon shamrock at the top.
And Jason, who'd crawled between the seats, spotted the jumper: "There he is!
He's toward the bottom, like five or six stories up, you can see him..." He pointed, and Anna noticed that his hand had a tremor: not
the trembling of excitement, but the jerk of a nerve breakdown. She glanced at
his stark, underfed face: Christ, she thought, he's back on the crank. She turned away from his straining face, and looked where he
was looking. Five stories, Anna counted: And there he was. The would-be jumper
wore dark pants and a white shirt. From a block away, in the lights that bathed
the outside of the building, he looked like a fly stuck to a sheet of glass.
"Get us there, Creek," Anna said, breathlessly. They were doing seventy-five, the wheels screaming, right up
to the hotel, then Creek hammered the brake and cut sideways and they went over
the curb again and Jason spilled out, running toward the hotel with his
camera. The man on the ledge had his back to a sheet of plate glass,
his arms spread. The ledge, Anna thought, wasn't more than a foot wide
she could see the tips of his shoes. "Guys, I'm gonna try to get up there," Anna said into her mike
as she dropped from the truck. "You're gonna be on your own for a minute:
Jason, I want face." She sprinted toward the hotel's front entrance,
the Nagra flapping under her arm. Hotels didn't want to know about media. As far as hotels were
concerned, no media was good media. Anna had two options. She could try to
sneak in, but that took time. Or she could run. She ran forty miles a week on
the beach and if the stairs were placed right, no hotel security man in
California could catch her. She hit the glass doors and went through the lobby like she
was on a motorcycle. Two bellmen huddled at the reception desk with a couple of
clerks, and one of the bellmen saw her and just had time to turn, to open his
mouth and shout, "Hey," when she was past him. The elevators were straight
ahead, and a brass plaque with an arrow pointing to the right said
Stairs. She took the stairs. Ran up one flight, two, then a man
shouting again, from the bottom, "Hey..." Third floor, not even breathing hard.
Anna got off at the fourth: There'd be security on the fifth floor, and the
desk people might have called them. She rain into the hall on the fourth floor,
looked right and left, decided that the right end would be the far end of the
hotel. There should be another flight of stairs that way. She ran down the hall, now aware of her heart pounding in her
chest, turned a corner past a niche with Coke, ice and candy machines, to
another stairway. She pulled open the door, looked up and down, heard nothing
and ran up to Five. She took three seconds, two long breaths, pulled off her
headset, shoved it with the Nagra up under her jacket in back, held it with one
hand and sauntered into the hallway. Halfway down, three older men
security, probably stood outside an open doorway. A dozen kids were
scattered up and down the hall, a few of them talking, most just looking down
at the open door. All the kids were dressed up, the boys in suits and ties, the
girls in pink-and-blue party dresses, all with the stark white look of fear on
their faces. One of the security men looked toward Anna, and even leaned
her way but as she did, a woman shrieked, and the men in suits turned
and ran through the open door. My God, Anna thought, he jumped. The girls in pastel dresses were looking at the door, the boys
were looking at each other, all were frozen. Anna knew that this was one of the
moment's she'd remember: they were like sculpture in some modern wise-cracking
installation called California Kids. Then Anna moved, and when she did, a couple of the girls began
sobbing, and one of the boys yelled, "Oh no. No, Jacob..." Anna ran lightly down the hall, found another open door a few
rooms closer than the one where the security men had been. She looked inside: a
man and woman, both gray-haired, horrified, were standing at their window,
looking out. Anna stepped inside: "Did he jump?" The woman, white-faced, looked at her, her mouth working,
nothing coming out, then: "Oh my God." Anna stepped around an open suitcase, walked across the room
and looked out the window. The jumper was facedown, a black-and-white
silhouette on the yellow stone, six feet from the pool. Ten feet from the body,
Jason was moving in with his camera. From across the pool, Creek, also focused
on the body. Anna took out the recorder, hit the record switch, held it by
her side: didn't hide it, just held it like a purse. "What happened?" she asked. "I don't know... I think it was just kids, having a party.
They were making noise, we could hear them running in the hallway. The next
thing we know people were screaming and the hotel people came." Anna could feel the recorder taking up tape: "Did you see him
go?" she asked the gray-haired man. "I think he was coming in," the man said. "He turned and it
was like he lost his balance and all of a sudden he jumped, like he was trying
to make the pool..." The woman turned to her husband. "Jim, let's get out of
here." Anna stepped back, looked at the luggage tag on the suitcase:
James Madson, Tilly, OK. "Are you Mr. And Mrs. Madson?" The woman turned toward her. "Yes, yes... Are you with the
hotel? We'd like to check out." "You'd have to talk with the people downstairs. Are you all
right, ma'am? What is your name?" "Lucille... I'm all right, but the man, the boy, he... Jim, I
think I'm going to throw up." She started toward the bathroom with her husband behind her,
one hand in the middle of her back, patting her, and Anna stepped to the door
and looked out. Hotel security was there in force, along with four or five
uniformed cops. She stepped back, said, "Madson, M-A-D-S-O-N, Tilly, Oklahoma,
T-I-L-L-Y," to the Nagra, then popped the recording tape and slopped it inside
the waistband of her pants. She had two spare tapes in a black pouch on the
carrying: she took out a spare, slipped it into the recorder. Hotel security
usually didn't ask if they could have the tape, they simply took it, destroyed
it, and apologized later. Anna stepped into the hall. Two of the men who'd been in the
room were just coming back out. Hotel security and a manager-type. Before
either could say anything, Anna said, "Could somebody help my mother? I think
she's gonna be sick." The manager-type asked, "What's wrong?" "She saw the man jump, she's in the bathroom..." The manager went by, into the Madsons' room, while the
security man ran down the hall toward the elevators. Anna turned the other way
and walked back down the hall to the steps. Into the stairwell, down and around, and around, to the first
floor. Pause, listen. Nothing. She stepped into the hallway, saw a sign that
said Parking Ramp, and went that way. Creek was standing fifty feet from the body. No blood, no
movement, nothing but a hotel clerk and three cops walking reluctantly toward
it. Creek saw her coming and made his open-handed "Got anything?" gesture. She'd pulled the headset back on. "Quick quotes from a
witness," she said into the mike. "They said there was some kind of party
before he jumped, or fell, or whatever." Anna spotted Jason, headed toward
them. "Creek, look up there, fifth floor, about one, two, three, four, five
windows to the right of the jumper's window... See where the curtain comes
through?" Creek nodded. "I'm gonna see if I can get the Madsons to come over
there." Jason came up and Anna asked, "How'd you do?" "I got his face all the way to the ground," Jason said, with
trembling satisfaction. "He hit twenty feet away." "That's great," Anna said. "Look up there, to the left of
where he was. I want you to yell, 'Jim and Lucille Madson, come to the
window.'" "What?" "'Jim and Lucille' I don't have the lungs for it." "You've got nice lungs," Jason said; and his eyes seemed to
loop. Stoned, or coming down. Too much of this lately; the last time she'd gone
to pick him up, he'd been wrecked. "Just yell the names, huh?" she said. "Yes, Mom." Jason yelled, and after a minute, the Madsons came to the
window and peered out. "Get them?" Anna asked. Creek had the camera on the window. "Yes." The Madsons went inside and Jason dropped the camera off his
shoulder, his face suddenly somber. "You know what?" "What? Look, we gotta get..." "I think I'm gonna hurl..." Anna leaned closer to him: "What the heck are you doing, Jase?
Are you stoned?" "No, no, no... I'm just having a little trouble dealing with
this," Jason said. He looked at the body. "At what?" Anna cocked her head, puzzled. I'm just... my head's fucked up," he said. Then: "Anna, I'm
sorry, but I gotta go," he said. He pulled off the headset and handed it to
her, shamefaced. "I'm sorry, but I've never seen this before. I've seen bodies,
but this was... He was smiling at me." he turned his knees in, so he was standing on the edges of his
tennis shoes, head down, like an embarrassed little boy. "I gotta go. You gotta
couple of bucks I could borrow until we sell this shit? Take it out of my
cut?" Anna stared at him for a second. Concerned, not angry. "Jase,
how bad is it?" "It's nothing," Jason insisted. "You're probably done for
tonight, anyway. You got a couple of bucks?" "Yeah, sure," Anna said. She dug in her pants pocket, came up
with a short roll of twenties, gave him two." "Thanks." And he went, hurrying away across the stone patio, Creek
peering after him. In the background, they could hear sirens: fire rescue, too
late. "What was that all about?" Anna asked, watching as Jason went
out to the street. Creek shook his head. "I don't know." "Well..." Anna hoisted the camera, looked through the
eyepiece, focused on the group of cops around the body and ran off fifteen
seconds of tape. Then she ran it back, forty-five seconds, and replayed The jump was there, in and out of focus, but undeniably real,
taking her breath away: and at the last second, the man's arms flailing, his
face passing through the rectangle of the lens display, then the unyielding
stone patio. "Jeez," she said. She looked at Creek. "This is..." She groped
for a concept, and found one: "This is Hollywood." Creek muttered, "Better go. The pigs are about to fly." She
nodded and they headed for the truck, walking fast, but not too fast. The cops
were disorganized at the moment, but five minutes from now they wouldn't be.
This would not be a good time to be noticed. Louis had backed the truck into the street, jockeyed it into a
no-parking zone. "Where's Jason?" he asked, as Anna and Creek unloaded the
cameras. "Took off," Anna shrugged. "How come? Did he shoot it?" "Yeah, he got some great stuff," Anna said. "I don't know what
his problem is: he freaked." "Doesn't sound like the Jason we know and love," Louis said,
puzzled. An ambulance went by, and Creek turned the truck in another U
and they headed through light traffic back west down Wilshire. "We get it all?" Louis asked. "We got it all," Anna said. "The jump is an A-plus-plus.
Probably the best thing we've ever had, exclusive. I'm gonna sell it with the
pig as a package." "As a poke," Louis said. "Yeah. Let's find a spot where we can see the mountain." Anna
pushed a speed-dial button on the cell phone, waited a moment, then said, "Let
me speak to Jack Hatton. Anna Batory. Tell him I'm on Wilshire at the Shamrock
Hotel." Creek looked at her curiously, and Louis said, "Hatton? Why're
you calling Hatton?" "Revenge," Anna said, and grinned at him... Jack Hatton came on ten seconds later, his voice the perfect
pitch of good cheer: "Anna, how you doing?" "Don't 'how you doing' me," Anna shouted into the phone.
"Remember the swimming cats? I hope you got lots more cat tape, you jerk,
because we got the jumper coming off the ledge, all the way down. Two camera,
in focus, twenty feet, and there was nobody else there. So go watch channel
Five, Seven, Nine, Eleven, Thirteen, Seventeen and Nineteen and then tell the
Witch why you don't have it, you cheap piece of cheese." "Anna..." "Don't Anna me, pal. And I'll tell you something
else. We got there quick 'cause we'd just been up to UCLA for the animal raid,
which you probably heard about by now, too late, as usual. We got a mile of
tape on that, too. We got animals screaming, we got a riot. We got a kid beat
up and bleeding. And when you see it on Five, Seven, Nine, Eleven, Thirteen,
Seventeen, and Nineteen tomorrow, you can explain that too, dickweed." "Anna..." A pleading note now. "Go away." And she clicked off. Beside her, Creek grinned. "I'm proud a ya," he said. From the back, Louis said, "Such language... we really gonna
blow off Three?" "No," Anna said. "But they'll be sweating blood. I'm gonna
jack them up for every nickel in their freelance budget." "Most excellent," Louis said, with great satisfaction. "Get me
to a place where I can see the mountain and I will crank this puppy out." Anna punched the next speed-dial button: "I'll start
selling." |
13 May 2008 The Prey series, the Virgil Flowers series,
the Kidd series, The Night Crew, Dead Watch, The Eye
and the Heart: The Watercolors of John Stuart Ingle, and Plastic
Surgery: The Kindest Cut are copyrighted by John Sandford. All excerpts are
used with permission. All original content on the website (excluding the message
board and some other specifically disclaimed text) is copyright © 2008 by
Roswell Anthony Camp. Please do not steal anything from these pages. If you
want to borrow something, write and ask first. Help keep moofs happy. | |