“I’m not going to be run off my job. I’m walking into my classroom in September. I’m going to teach those thick-headed kids whether they want to be taught or not.”
Earlier Wyte had suggested that if Suzanne would come in they could stage a video “statement” in a good location, subtly reveal her whereabouts, televise it and wait for Lupercio.
“Help us set a trap,” said Hood. “You come in. We help you video a statement where you refuse to come in for questioning out of fear. But you want your family and friends to know you’re okay, safe right where you are. You send it to the newspeople and they run with it. We’ll make sure it gives Lupercio an idea of where you are. Just a touch, just enough to get him to come around. Then you’re free to go. Or you can take a safe house. Up to you.”
“You do remember my last
safe
house?
“Do you have a better idea?”
“You’re unimaginative, Hood.”
“I’m trying to save your ass.”
“Why bother?”
“So I can enjoy it.”
Suzanne was silent for a long moment. Hood slipped outside the headquarters building into the heat of the evening. Again he almost told her what he knew, but he could not.
“You have to help me help you. Come in.”
“Okay,” she said. “You work out the details. You get the location set up and figure the clues and get the video camera ready. Then I’ll do it. But no safe houses. No protective custody. No cages of any kind. None of that. I’ll tape a statement then I’m splitting. Deal?”
“Deal. There will be at least two more of us, a sergeant and a captain. They’ve done this before.”
“Comforting.”
“I want you to be okay, Suzanne.”
“You busy tonight, Charlie?”
He hesitated. If she was with him she was safer. Suzanne and Allison were safer. He would protect them and bring them to justice.
He couldn’t think of any meaning of the word
idiot
that didn’t apply to himself. “I hope so.”
26
W
hich leaves me three hours to boost a better ride because I can’t entertain Hood in a Sentra. And I need to hit the Burger King on Reseda Boulevard, which I cased last week and looks very good.
I take a taxi to a long-term parking lot by LAX where I’ve got an arrangement with one of the shuttle drivers who has a nice black GTO in a private corner. I pull out the door lock with the slide-hammer, grab the ignition assembly and go to work on the wires. My heart is not steady but my fingers are.
When I’m done I check my time on the Rolex I bought from Carl Cavore for a grand. It’s got ten diamonds on the dial and a rare mother-of-pearl face that tells me I’m gone in seventy-five seconds, not bad for a history teacher who steals cars only as a hobby.
Ten minutes later I’m at the Pep Boys in San Fernando, where another associate of mine replaces the GTO door lock with an off-the-shelf universal that looks fine. And he pulls what’s left of the old ignition and installs an aftermarket imitation that operates on a regular key. Which means I don’t need a key with a microchip to start my new beauty, just a freshly cut key that costs me next to nothing. The work and parts run me six bills but I’m out in less than fifty minutes because this guy doesn’t fool around.
Then to work. I park on a quiet residential street not far from the BK and I get suited up for the job: wig, gloves, pepper spray on my belt, Cañonita in the satchel, mask in my pocket. I’m already wearing the loose trousers and blouse and vest that allow for unrestricted movement in the event I need to run for miles and climb fences to get away from a homicidal maniac. The clothes help disguise me, too. I think a very quick prayer of thanks that the only person in the world who has recognized Allison as me is my own mother. I think I put some doubt in her, however, by questioning the agility of her mind. A little doubt goes a long way.
One of the things that Joaquin liked to do was to work fast, hit three or four remote ranches in one night, steal the good horses and run them up north into the mother lode because that’s where the miners and the money were. Three-Fingered Jack, who rode with Joaquin, used to complain about the thirty-six-hour runs to steal and sell the horses—no sleep, no time to drink or whore or gamble until they’d sold off the horseflesh. In his journal Joaquin admitted to drinking “many gallons of powerful coffee” on his three-day crime binges. He brewed the coffee and carried it in cloth-covered canteens wrapped in serapes to keep it hot and protect the horses.
Jack’s real name was Manuel Garcia. His hand got mangled in a roping accident when he was a boy, thus the finger loss. He was killed alongside Joaquin by Harry Love and his “California Rangers,” and they cut Jack’s three-fingered hand off for ID. The hand was purportedly displayed in the same jar as Joaquin’s severed head, and I’ve seen posters advertising the exhibition of the “HEAD OF JOAQUIN! And the HAND OF THREE-FINGERED JACK!” but there was no hand in the jar I was given by my great-uncle Jack and now keep in the barn down in Valley Center. I miss Valley Center.
Joaquin was credited with stealing roughly fifty thousand dollars’ worth of gold and over a hundred horses. According to his journal it was more like twenty thousand in gold and a hundred and forty horses. Historians said he and his gang killed nineteen men, mostly unarmed Chinese mine workers. But according to Joaquin they killed four, and there is nothing dishonest, boastful or evasive in his own account.
All of which runs through my mind as I park in the lot beside the Burger King lot. The two lots are separated by a hedge of lantana and there’s a nice body-sized opening to let me through.
I stride toward the Burger King, all those nice yellows and reds brightly shining within.
I must have timed out the dinner rush pretty well because the dining room has only a few customers and there’s nobody at the counter as I step up and point Cañonita at the young Latina girl whose smile freezes on her pretty face.
“The money.”
“Yes.”
A boy with pimples and a French fry basket in one hand stares at me. The girl working the drive-through stops midsentence. A stout older woman with short red hair barrels out of the kitchen wiping her hands on a dirty white towel and glares at me.
I swing the gun on her. “Sit and stay.”
“Where?”
“Right where you are.”
She crosses herself and kneels on the tile while the pretty girl empties the cash register into a plastic take-out bag.
“Double-bag it, please,” I say. “And don’t forget the quarter rolls.”
“Okay, yes.”
“Any dye packs, locators, I’d appreciate it if you’d leave them out.”
“We don’t have those.”
“Somebody’s going to get hurt,” says the manager.
“You volunteering, Red?”
Right then the door opens and in wobbles an old couple, the kind you look at and think, Wow, that’s what I’ve got to look forward to if I’m
lucky
. Mr. Geezer stops, balanced on a cane. He’s nodding. He’s wearing a blue shirt with a green cardigan over it even though it’s a hundred degrees out. Mrs. Geezer has monumental hair, a scowl and heavy-duty therapeutic nylon support hose. She looks at me.
“We will not eat here, Frank,” she says.
The old man regards me with beautiful gray eyes and he smiles, then pivots and places his cane for the turn.
He’s still nodding as he drops to the floor.
The old woman just stares at him.
The pretty cashier gives me the heavy double bags with one hand and the other goes to her mouth. The kid with the French fry basket says, “Whoa,” and the manager suddenly jumps up and looks over the counter. Two customers rush in from the dining room. The front door opens and three teenaged boys shuffle in then stop, bumping into each other.
I aim Cañonita at the teenagers while I walk across the room and stand over Mr. Geezer. I kneel down and find his carotid pulse with my left hand, my right still holding Cañonita firm on the boys. There isn’t much pulse and his mouth is hanging open some so I figure he’s not breathing right.
“Get down here and CPR this guy,” I say to the wife.
“I don’t know how.”
“Boys, you know how to do CPR, right?”
They mumble and shy away.
“Fuck, what’s wrong with you people? Pretty face, you know CPR?”
“I forgot, I used to know, but . . .”
“Shut up!
Red!
Get over here, sister. Your lucky day. And make it quick.”
The manager bursts into the lobby through a windowed kitchen door.
“Do you know CPR?”
“I do not.”
“Watch me. I’m going to show you
once
. I’m going to explain what I’m doing. Then you’re going to take over. If you make a move on me while I’m breathing for this guy—like if you try to get this mask off or the gun? I’ll come off him and shoot you. Got it?”
“Yes, ma’am.”
“Watch and learn, Red.”
I put Cañonita in my left hand, hook my right thumb deep over the old man’s tongue and lift his head back to open the trachea. I explain this to Red, who is nodding quickly. Then I get Cañonita in a funny grip so I can use my left hand to pinch Mr. Geezer’s nose shut. With my mouth I cover my thumb and his mouth and give him a nice, slow, even exhale. I taste my breath going into a small cavern that smells mildly of meat. I feel my breath come to the end of the cavern, like blowing up a balloon. I look up sideways to see Red nodding even faster. I count to four and breathe for him again. Red practically elbows me away so she can get in and try it. So I swing around and straddle the guy and join my hands over his firm but oddly thin and light chest. It feels like he’s made of aluminum, like an office blind or a soda can. Down-up. Down-up. Down-up.
“Count seconds, Red. Every other second you press in.
One,
two,
three,
four—all the way to twenty. Got it? It’ll keep his heart going or maybe even start it back up.”
“Push on every other count.”
“Then ventilate him, like I just did. Some of the new protocols say to skip this part, but I wouldn’t. Look at this guy.
It’s four breaths, twenty pushes. Four breaths, twenty pushes.
The damned experts change the ratio every year or so just to confuse people like us. But this can work. Good luck.”
“Yes,” she says, then grabs Mr. Geezer’s nose and swoops down to get him in a mouth lock.
I jump up, swing Cañonita in a semicircle and make sure the parking lot isn’t crawling with innocent bystand ers or cops.
And if it were, what choice would I have but to run out through them? I feel as if I’ve been breathing for that old guy for hours, like the whole world has had time to get here and get their cameras ready and their guns drawn and wait for me to walk into the shitstorm. I feel like I’m never going to make it to those swinging doors. I step in that direction. The teenagers part.
I’m too rattled to even hand out my business cards.
But miracle is in the air tonight. The GTO beckons from the other side of the hedge like a burning bush.
Four hundred horses.
And the lot is empty of pedestrians, just a minivan looking for a place to park.
I’m almost to the door when Mr. Geezer coughs and sputters. Red looks at me with pugnacious wonder. Mrs. Geezer throws tears as she silently kneels over her husband with her hands folded under her chin like for a prayer.
Too bad nobody has a camera to show me saving the old man’s life on TV—fame to go with my infamy.
I walk out, palm the gun and shorten my stride. I take a deep breath. Mask off. Head high, back straight, eyes alert.
I know I look right.
I’m a just a hungry consumer with a hard-earned bag of burgers and fries. Maybe even a family to feed. Nobody can stop me.
I can’t even stop myself.
I have just enough time to secure my tools in the adjoining room, shower and change before Hood arrives. Short dress. Of course I brush my teeth.
When he comes through the door I swarm him.
A thick bunch of roses and a bagged bottle of something drop to the floor and I pull him through them toward the bed. I hear the crunch of the stems on carpet and the rattle of the paper bag. Hey, I can drink wine or smell a flower anytime but right now I got Charlie Hood where I want him and no conventional weapon can keep me off him.
It doesn’t last long but after it I’m starved so I take him to dinner in the GTO.
“Nice car.”
“I have nice friends,” I say. “I choose them on the basis of the cars they can lend me.”
“This have the three-fifty horse?”
“It’s the six-liter, Charles—a full four hundred. Sick torque, and I love that it looks like something my grandmother would drive. No wonder they quit making it.”
“Where’s the Corvette?”
“In for service.”
He’s looking at me with an expression I’ve never seen on him before. Like he’s discovered something and locked it up for safekeeping. Up until now I made Hood nervous or least uncertain but now I wonder if my mother might have got him thinking about my unorthodox girlhood and or that I shot Bradley’s father or that I’ve had more boyfriends than Hood has had dates.
Or maybe he changed his mind about me and the diamonds.
Or . . . Allison?
I pick a Persian restaurant on Sunset with private rooms where we can sit on beautiful pillows and eat spicy food and I can touch him. Hood seems gently befuddled by his surroundings and I wonder if it has to do with his time in Iraq. Or, again, if it has to do with me.
“You’re quiet,” I say. “Remind you of the war?”
“Just the way the people look.”
“I want you to tell me about it someday.”
“I will.”
“Tonight?”
“Not tonight,” says Hood. “Have a glass of wine.”
“I told you I don’t drink, Deputy.”