Wrong Thing (21 page)

Read Wrong Thing Online

Authors: Barry Graham

BOOK: Wrong Thing
10.26Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

There were six cars. The Kid was sitting with his back to the wall, and the cops stood behind the cars, forming a semicircle around him. They all had guns aimed at him.

Vanjii. Vanjii. He kept bringing her face into his mind, remembered how she looked when she was smiling in the bathtub in candlelight and loving him.

“Lie down on the ground and put your hands on top of your head! Do it right now!”

He stood up, flipped them off with one hand, and reached in his pocket with the other, pretending he was reaching for a gun. He didn't get his hand out of the pocket before the bullets hit him, turning him weightless and throwing him against the wall. It hurt and it didn't hurt and then it hurt again. The cops kept on firing until there were bullet holes even in the soles of his feet, but he didn't know that. He thought about Catboy and hoped that nobody would be mean to him.

Then he was dead, and some people cried, but most didn't. And the people with lawns and 401(k) plans and straight white teeth felt safer now, because the Kid was gone. But, in hospitals and houses in the barrios, more kids were being born. And, when they were born, they were slapped on the ass and they started to cry. With their first breath they started to cry, and they would not be quiet because they knew what was theirs.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

I
've heard it said many times that writing is a lonely occupation. This is not true if the writer has friends like mine. Years ago, on a cold winter night in Santa Fe, Chrissie Orr and I were eating, drinking, and talking as we sat together in the warmth of the Cowgirl Hall of Fame, and the idea for this novel came to me during our conversation. I told Chrissie, who then encouraged me to write it. I am grateful to her, for that and many other things.

There are people to whom I owe thanks who would prefer not to be mentioned by name, some for reasons of good taste and some because they have cases pending. My gratitude to them is no less because they are anonymous.

Thanks also: Larry Fondation, Nick Hentoff, Cecily Dubusker, Taryn Shell, Craig Taylor, Dale Baich, M.V. Moorhead, Chuck Bowden, Lonna Kelley, Rebecca Story, Susan Thompson, Rebecca Hoelting, Daishin Bree Stephenson.

And to Andrea Gibbons and Gary Phillips, without whom you wouldn't be reading this book right now.

A sliver of this book appeared, in different form, in the anthology
Phoenix Noir.
I'm grateful to Patrick Millikin for that.

A man can live and write without cats, but why would he? Nine deep bows to Jimmy and Maggie, who taught me that opposable thumbs don't mean I'm smart.

BG

The Sitting Frog Zen Center

Phoenix, Arizona

Summer, Year of the Tiger

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Barry Graham is a fiction writer, poet, journalist, and blogger whose novels have received international acclaim and whose reporting has helped more than one corrupt politician leave office.

Born and dragged up in Glasgow, Scotland, he has traveled widely and has been based in the United States since 1995. His previous occupations include boxing and grave-digging. He is also a Zen monk and serves as the Abbot of The Sitting Frog Zen Center in Phoenix. He has witnessed two executions, invited by the inmates, not the state. To keep up with what he's doing, find him online at dogobarrygraham.net.

P
M
P
RESS
was founded at the end of 2007 by a small collection of folks with decades of publishing, media, and organizing experience. PM Press co-conspirators have published and distributed hundreds of books, pamphlets, CDs, and DVDs. Members of PM have founded enduring book fairs, spearheaded victorious tenant organizing campaigns, and worked closely with bookstores, academic conferences, and even rock bands to deliver political and challenging ideas to all walks of life. We're old enough to know what we're doing and young enough to know what's at stake.

We seek to create radical and stimulating fiction and non-fiction books, pamphlets, t-shirts, visual and audio materials to entertain, educate and inspire you. We aim to distribute these through every available channel with every available technology—whether that means you are seeing anarchist classics at our bookfair stalls; reading our latest vegan cookbook at the cafe; downloading geeky fiction e-books; or digging new music and timely videos from our website.

PM Press is always on the lookout for talented and skilled volunteers, artists, activists and writers to work with. If you have a great idea for a project or can contribute in some way, please get in touch.

PM P
RESS
• PO Box 23912 • O
AKLAND,
CA 94623

www.pmpress.org

F
RIENDS OF
P
M
P
RESS

These are indisputably momentous times — the financial system is melting down globally and the Empire is stumbling. Now more than ever there is a vital need for radical ideas.

In the three years since its founding — and on a mere shoestring — PM Press has risen to the formidable challenge of publishing and distributing knowledge and entertainment for the struggles ahead. With over 100 releases to date, we have published an impressive and stimulating array of literature, art, music, politics, and culture. Using every available medium, we've succeeded in connecting those hungry for ideas and information to those putting them into practice.

Friends of PM allows you to directly help impact, amplify, and revitalize the discourse and actions of radical writers, filmmakers, and artists. It provides us with a stable foundation from which we can build upon our early successes and provides a much-needed subsidy for the materials that can't necessarily pay their own way. You can help make that happen—and receive every new title automatically delivered to your door once a month—by joining as a Friend of PM Press. And, we'll throw in a free T-Shirt when you sign up.

Here are your options:

  • $25 a month
    Get all books and pamphlets plus 50% discount on all web-store purchases
  • $25 a month
    Get all CDs and DVDs plus 50% discount on all webstore purchases
  • $40 a month
    Get all PM Press releases plus 50% discount on all webstore purchases
  • $100 a month Superstar
    — Everything plus PM merchandise, free downloads, and 50% discount on all webstore purchases

For those who can't afford $25 or more a month, we're introducing Sustainer Rates at $15, $10 and $5. Sustainers get a free PM Press T-shirt and a 50% discount on all purchases from our website.

Your Visa or Mastercard will be billed once a month, until you tell us to stop. Or until our efforts succeed in bringing the revolution around. Or the financial meltdown of Capital makes plastic redundant. Whichever comes first.

More from
SWITCHBLADE

Send My Love and a Molotov Cocktail: Stories of Crime, Love and Rebellion

Edited by Gary Phillips and Andrea Gibbons

ISBN: 978-1-60486-096-2

256 pages     $15.95

An incendiary mixture of genres and voices, this collection of short stories compiles a unique set of work that revolves around riots, revolts, and revolution. From the turbulent days of unionism in the streets of New York City during the Great Depression to a group of old women who meet at their local cafe to plan a radical act that will change the world forever, these original and once out-of-print stories capture the various ways people rise up to challenge the status quo and change up the relationships of power. Ideal for any fan of noir, science fiction, and revolution and mayhem, this collection includes works from Sara Paretsky, Paco Ignacio Taibo II, Cory Doctorow, Kim Stanley Robinson, and Summer Brenner.

Full list of contributors:
Summer Brenner
Cory Doctorow
Rick Dakan
Andrea Gibbons
Barry Graham
John A. Imani
Penny Mickelbury
Sarah Paretsky
Gary Phillips
Kim Stanley Robinson
Luis Rodriguez
Paco Ignacio Taibo II
Benjamin Whitmer
Ken Wishnia
Michael Moorcock
Michael Skeet
Larry Fondation
Tim Wohlforth

The Chieu Hoi Saloon

Michael Harris

ISBN: 978-1-60486-112-9

376 pages     $19.95

It's 1992 and three people's lives are about to collide against the flaming backdrop of the Rodney King riots in Los Angeles. Vietnam vet Harry Hudson is a journalist fleeing his past: the war, a failed marriage, and a fear-ridden childhood. Rootless, he stutters, wrestles with depression, and is aware he's passed the point at which victim becomes victimizer. He explores the city's lowest dives, the only places where he feels at home. He meets Mama Thuy, a Vietnamese woman struggling to run a Navy bar in a tough Long Beach neighborhood, and Kelly Crenshaw, an African-American prostitute whose husband is in prison. They give Harry insight that maybe he can do something to change his fate in a gripping story that is both a character study and thriller.

Other books

The Accident Man by Tom Cain
The Unintended Bride by Kelly McClymer
Kelan's Pursuit by Lavinia Lewis
My Front Page Scandal by Carrie Alexander