Tuesday, March 31, 2009

NORTH NORTH HOLLYWOOD - Chapter 4 - by Peter Nolan Smith


FOUR

The red light next to Las Vegas flashed on the departure board. America West's flight was in the final stages of boarding and Frank deRocco rushed Sean through the JFK's crowded terminal. The detective's gold shield got them through the metal detector and Sean's bag passed the X-ray test.

They ran to the gate and deRocco brandished his badge.

"I gotta get this man on the plane."

"They're shutting the door." The Dominican attendant was closing out the flight.

"Is the door shut?" deRocco presented his NYPD gold shield. He was out of breath. Cigarettes were killing him.

"Not yet." The gate attendant hated dealing with late passengers, but he picked up the phone and told the ground crew to hold the flight. "I wish you people could get here on time.

"This is police business." deRocco wasn't taking no for an answer. "Tell them to hold the plane."

"I could always catch the next flight." Sean tried to shrug off the heavy cop's grip.

"No you can't. I paid for this one and this is the one you're taking." deRocco dragged him down the slanted corridor to the Boeing 757. Once more the badge was presented and the ground crew reopened the door.

"Are you sure you're going to be alright?"

deRocco's face was a florid red.

"Stop stalling and get on the plane." deRocco pushed Sean through the jet's door.

"What about you?"

"I'm not going anywhere."

"I'm going alone?"

"Yeah, you're going alone, but someone will meet you in Las Vegas. He'll tell you the what, where, and when."

"What about the money?"

"The money?" The detective stuck an envelope in Sean's pocket. "You just do like I told you. It'll be a snap."

The 757's door shut with a slow thunk and the stewardess asked Sean to take a seat.

"Does this flight make any stops?"

"No, it's direct to Las Vegas."

"Figures."

A non-stop flight excluded his deplaning at a hub airport. deRocco's contact would be waiting in Las Vegas with Sean's photo in hand and probably a gun in a shoulder holster, but that fate was hours away and he walked down the aisle.

He almost sat in first-class.

No one ever questioned an intruder, but decided to not push his luck and settled for snatching three magazines from the overhead bin. Economy was almost as bad as a charter flight, since nearly every passenger was white-haired and overweight. The steward motioned for him to buckle up and Sean sank into his seat by the window.

The 757 pulled away from the gate on time and taxied onto JFK's main runway. The big engines throttled up with a roar and the jet's acceleration drove the tons of steel down the runway, till the plane climbed into the air in defiance of gravity. Seventeen seconds later the pilot banked the aircraft, giving Sean a slanted vista of Manhattan's spires and towers and for the first time this morning he realized that he was leaving New York.

Once the 757 leveled off at 24,000, the flight crew passed out free nuts and drinks.

Sean scrounged three packets, which he devoured in a minute.

Once the seat belt sign went off, he dug his bag for a leather toiletry bag. The cop hadn't touched a thing. With Las Vegas only five hours away he had a lot of work to avoid violating the Fifth Commandment.

Back on the ground at JFK deRocco punched a ten-digit number on his portable phone and a gruff voice answered after three rings, "Who's this?"

"Like the only person who has this number. Me."

"Where are you?"

"JFK."

"Where's Tempo?"

"On the plane"

"What about you?"

>"I don't fly, you know that." Throughout their long collaboration Kev had played the ‘away games'. The ex-cop had insisted on his partner joining him for this last contract and now shouted, "You and your fuckin' flyingaphobia. How am I gonna do this?"

"You're not doin' nothin'." Normally Driscoll could have executed this contract in his sleep, except every pro only has so many 'games' in him and Kev was well into overtime. "You got the Fed-Ex package, right?"

"Yeah."

"Just do like I told you and we're in the clear."

"Is he clean?"

Tempo?"

"Who else?"

"He's like an altar boy." deRocco fought off the urge to light up a cigarette in the non-smoking terminal.

"Good, this is going to tie up a lot of loose ends."

DeRocco was slowly coming down from the morning's high-tension act.

"What's it like out there?"

"What'd you care, you fear-of-flyin' freak? I'll call you later." The line went dead.

Outside the terminal building deRocco lit up a cigarette and lifted his eyes to a jet lumbering into the sky. What scared him most about flying was the lack of control. All you could do was sit there and pray the plane didn't crash into a swamp or cornfield.

Shaking these fiery images, deRocco sucked on the burning tobacco and congratulated himself on another job well done. No one else would have, of course very few people did what he did and after this job neither would he.

NORTH NORTH HOLLYWOOD - Chapter 5 - by Peter Nolan Smith



FIVE

The warm California sun flayed the storm clouds into fleecy shreds and soon the morning reminded every non-native why they had moved to Los Angeles in the first place. Two days of rain had painted the hillside scrubs a verdant green and the palm trees wavered with the waning wind. By mid-morning the temperature in the Valley rose into the mid-seventies and a superbly conditioned brunette touched up her tan on the back balcony of the unoccupied apartment complex near Sherman Way.

Any voyeur would have mistaken the naked woman to be a mindless sun worshipper, but Sherri Conti was thinking very hard about how to get money to finish her first non-pornographic project ADAM AND TWO EVES.

She had the crew, the equipment, and the two actresses, Lena and herself for this low-budget feature about the last man on earth. They had shot 70% of the film throughout December. Neither woman had exchanged Christmas gifts, since they had financed the film through their credit cards. All their plastic was maxxed out to the limit. Another $20,000 would finish the film, however money wasn't the biggest problem for this project. Sherri could get the money with a single phone call.

They didn't have a male lead.

Hollywood actors’ fees were out of her league and most weren't risking their careers on working with an unknown director connected to the porno industry. Sherri had scavenged every casting book in the business. She had auditioned almost a hundred unknowns. None had fit her vision for 'ADAM AND TWO EVES' lead, a man like the saint from Bunuel's SIMON OF THE DESERT.

Beaten by weather and cursed by God.

40 and still handsome.

He had to be out there somewhere.

Sherri turned her head to the bedroom.

Lena was packing an overnight bag for her trip to Las Vegas.

After forty-one films together their relationship had become more than simply sex for the older woman. Lena was unlike any other of her previous lovers and Sherri wasn't the only one who felt that way.

Men and women at gas stations, supermarkets, and coffee stores demanded autographs, as if Lena was a budding Hollywood star. Most of them had seen the young actress in Sherri's XXX videos online, which portrayed women as instruments of their own desire rather than receptacles for men's lust and Lena's uncanny metamorphosis into the films’ characters had helped these films realize a massive cross-over demand from the mainstream audience. In recognition of these phenomena, Lena would be honored with the 'Best New-Comer' title at the XXX-RATED Awards ceremony tonight in Las Vegas.

She deserved much more.

Several minutes later Lena came out on the terrace.

"You all ready to go?" Sherri shielded her eyes from the sun.

"After a kiss, yes." The young actress wore a matching combo of gold silk hot pants and a tube top. A white leather jacket dangled from her fingertips.

"Aren't you going to be cold?"

>"That's why I have the leather." Lena didn't like clothes. "I wish you were coming with me."

"I have some editing on the film, besides this is your big night.”

Twenty years ago Sherri had been a young girl straight out of the Jersey Pine Barrens on the way to the top, completely blind, deaf, and dumb to how much the lifestyle of a porno actress would demand from her body and soul.

"I'll go to the gym later."

"To exorcise the demons." Lena was too young to be haunted by an adult past.

"It's the only way." A strict diet and daily exercises fought off the tidal tug of her old life. She was in good shape for a woman her age or ten years younger, but her heart was a wasteland from too much sex and too many drugs.

"There are other ways besides gym and hard work." Lena rubbed the back of her heel. The straps of her high heels were biting into the flesh. They were new and she liked the sound of them clicking on tile.

"Like you."

A psychiatrist had diagnosed her condition as 'adonia mixed with apathy'.

This inability to feel pleasure stole any chance to fall in love and Sherri prayed that Lena was the cure, but as long as they were involved in porno, nothing would fill the emptiness of her soul.

"Yes, me." Lena knelt between Sherri's bare thighs. "You know I want you with me."

"I know, maybe next year.” Lena was young and the only thing Hollywood worshipped more than beauty was youth, which was the one commodity that money could not buy in this town.

"I know the real reason you can't come.” Lena inhaled the fragrance of burnt peaches off Sherri's skin and her finger skated along the raised tracks of scar tissue inside her lover's arm. “You can't see any of those people. Those people from your past. You think it would kill you, if you did, but I wouldn't let that happen to you."

"I know, but I'm still not strong enough.” Sherri stroked Lena's head, so the long black tresses tumbled onto her belly. "Sorry."

"Nothing to be sorry for, Sherri, but if you don't mind, I want to wait a few more minutes before I go.” Lena shucked off her clothes and the morning sun melted their nakedness together, until Sherri tapped her shoulder. "If you don't go now, you won't make it there."

"Only if you insist." Lena picked up her clothing from the tiled floor. It took her less than ten seconds to get them on.

"Go have a good time.” She had lived through her own wild period without listening to anyone and understood Lena was too young for domestication. The two women kissed without parting lips. How long Sherri could hold Lena was a question she would never ask the girl.

"If you see anyone suitable to play the male lead for ADAM AND TWO EVES, get their number."

"Anyone?" Lena had met tens of men who could have performed the role and Sherri had turned them all down.

"You know what I'm after.”

"Yes, a man in his forties. Blonde hair. Slightly beat-up. Not too thin, not too fat. A rough voice and a not just another pretty face." Lena wouldn't have been so strict as Sherri. After all it was just a movie.

"And he has to look like he has lived on the road."

"Slightly brutish. Like Robert Mitchum with a heart of gold,” Lena joked, but Sherri remembered the actor’s darker roles. "Not from NIGHT OF THE HUNTER."

"Or CAPE FEAR."

"And he's too nice in HEAVEN KNOWS."

>"And too young in THUNDER ROAD.” They would never find a man at this rate. "I have to get going."

Sherri handed over the keys to the Skylark parked downstairs. "Drive carefully."

"I'll come back in one piece." Lena could not bring herself to tell Sherri she loved her for letting her run free. She had heard the word 'love' from too many men and women in a multitude of languages, when they meant something else, instead she stepped into the hallway from where she would have blown Sherri a kiss, except the apartment door shut.

Accustomed to no good-byes, Lena pressed the elevator button for the garage.

>The Buick's V-8 powered the Skylark onto the Ventura Freeway. Lena's finger hit the stereo's PLAY button and Madonna's MUSIC blasted from the speakers. Her body wriggled to the beat under the fastened seat belt.

A warm wind blew through the driver's window.

Once she was out of the city, she'd put down the top.

She was happy to be on the road, for like a river overflowing its bank, there was no controlling youth once she were free.

NORTH NORTH HOLLYWOOD - Chapter 6 - A novel by Peter Nolan Smith



SIX

The 757 descended for its final approach to Las Vegas. The passengers tightened their safety belts and the male steward knocked on a bathroom door. A single passenger was missing from the flight.

"Sir, you have to get back to your seat."

"Just a second.” Sean Collan was unraveling the turban of toilet paper in front of the bathroom mirror. The blonde man in the reflection resembled an aging extra from a 1960's biker flick. The wedges inside his shoes added another inch of height and his rumpled black suit shadowed his persona with a nondescript aura. He exited from the bathroom and said to the steward, "Thanks for being so patient."

The steward was visibly dismayed by the passenger's bizarre appearance, especially since no golden-haired man had boarded the plane at JFK.

"What seat are you in, sir?"

>"32-A, I can show you my ticket, if you would like."

"No, that won't be necessary."

Satisfied by the steward's bafflement, Sean proceeded past the passengers gaping at the wonders of Las Vegas below the 757. They should have been recoiling in fright like they were meeting a thief in a dark alley, yet none of them cared a fig whether they won or lost at the gaming tables or slots as long as they weren’t home watching television.

A black boy about eight years old had changed seat for the view.

"You the same guy here before?"

Sean raised his eyebrow to indicate 'maybe'.

"Where's your mom?"

"She's waiting for me at the airport." The boy peeked out the porthole.

"First time flying?" Sean stashed his bag before buckling into the aisle seat.

"Yes, sir.” His small hands gripped the armrests for dear life.

"Empty planes never crash." Sean imitated the exact tone with which his own father had calmed his son on a shuttle flight from Boston to New York decades before, except the boy slouched fearfully into the seat.

"Mister, last year I seen this movie, where a plane crashes in the mountains. Everyone had to eat everyone else."

"Trust me, I won't eat you.” Sean reached over to tighten the boy's seatbelt, as the 757 dropped with a wiggle of its wings. Seconds later the tires touched down on the runway. The young boy had survived the worst of his fears and proudly announced, "That was nothing."

"Just like I said and you'll be with your mom soon."

The 757 stopped at the terminal gate and the young boy was escorted by the steward. Sean positioned himself behind two beefy men in Giants paraphernalia and shuffled from the plane in a slouch. Inside the gangway a bearded air marshal dismissed the bleached-blonde man as a danger only to himself.

Two old ladies elbowed him out of the way and scuttled over to the nearest WHEEL OF FORTUNE slot machine. All seniors loved that show.

Waiting friends, relatives, lovers, and drivers ignored Sean and no one called his name on the ride down the escalator or as he walked out of the terminal into the warm desert air. He had visited Vegas in 1971 and gazed dreamily at the hazy outline of distant mountains. Somewhere over those peaks lay Death Valley and California.

A rough voice short-circuited his attempt to flag a taxi.

"Nice outfit, Tempo, though a little late for Halloween, ain't it?"

"You know the East Village." Sean turned around hoping the voice belonged to a mirage, but he should have known that deRocco would have never sent him on that plane without his maddog partner being on the receiving end.

"Yeah, it's Halloween all the time with those losers." Driscoll's eyes ping-ponging back and forth. The invalided cop was on a binge of speed and dope.

"So I didn't fool you at all?"

"No, but I almost bust a gut seein' you do this hobo thing. Where'd you learn that shit anyway?" Driscoll was in a dark suit a size too small for his waist, but his belly didn't matter, because ex-cops like Driscoll never ran from trouble.

"I went out with this married make-up artist in Paris. She disguised me to keep from finding out her husband from seeing that she was going out with a man."

"She did you up as a woman?"

"Yeah." Sean was telling the truth. "This lasted about six months and finally the husband came up to me at a bar. He was a big guy about your size and showed me some pictures. At first I thought they were me, but the husband told me they were of her old boyfriends."

"Why he tell you that?"

"He thought I was her lesbian lover and wanted to go out with me."

"I woulda liked to seen you as a girl. You have nice hair." Driscoll’s laugh stuck in his throat. “I woulda thought you got the disguise thing from your ex-wife. She's an actress, right? Or your friend, Vic Granollers. Now he's really big in films now, right?"

"I didn't know you were such a movie buff."

"I like to know all about my friends and their friends.”

They entered the shade of the parking garage and Sean changed the subject.

"Where we going?"

"I'll tell you, when we get there." Driscoll ran his hand through his thick hair.

A blue-jacketed peace officer was ticketing a car and Driscoll jabbed Sean's ribs with what felt like a pistol muzzle. "He's havin' a good day, so why would you want to spoil it?"

"Not me." Sean walked past the local policeman to a fire engine red Mustang 5.0.

Driscoll forced him into the front passenger seat and handcuffed his wrist to the door.

"Just think of the cuffs as an extra safety feature."

"What if we get into an accident?"

"This piece of shit has dual air bags, Seano." Driscoll got behind the steering wheel, and revved the engine once before peeling out of the parking lot. Sean took the wedges out of his shoes and the ex-cop chuckled at the show.

"What's so funny?” Sean rubbed his feet.

"Whatcha gonna do with your hair?" Kevin Driscoll pointed at his head.

"Let it grow out." Sean smoothed down the brittle blonde hair and looked out the window at the throngs of tourists. Even the sorriest of the casino fodder was better off than he was.

"Might take some time."

"And I have plenty of that, right?"

Driscoll didn't answer him and drove under I-15.

The glittering hotels and tourists on holiday were replaced by car repair shops, sleazy go-go bars, truck stops, cheap motels and transients permanently down on their luck. Driscoll pulled into a heat-warped parking lot of a run-down motor lodge and stopped the car before room #7. He undid the handcuffs from the door and said, "Get your own bag, cause I ain't no bellhop.”

Sean got out of the car.

Dust devils swirled across the vacant lots into the desert where Las Vegas ended for better or worse.

“Ain't nothing to see here." Driscoll pushed him into the small room. Two single beds were topped by faded polyester spreads. A Formica card table and two plastic chairs leaned into the corner and the bureau was missing its bottom drawer.

"How romantic." Sean dropped his bag on the mildewed carpet.

"Cheap and cheerful, not in the middle of town, so no one sees us come in or out."

"Place stinks." The disinfectant had failed to kill the smell of a thousand illicit affairs.

"This might help.” Kevin Driscoll twisted the AC to the max. "Now strip."

"What for?" Fear crawled like a million fire ants on Sean's skin.

"Cause I said so." Kevin Driscoll performed the finger-breakings, the baseball bat beatings, and the killing for the two-man team. The ex-cop took off the gray suit jacket. Sweat stained his white shirt. A shoulder holster held a 9mm Beretta, his weapon of choice.

"What if I don't want to?"

"You don't want to know.” Driscoll wasn't usesd to people saying 'no'.

"Since you put it that way." Sean took off his jacket, trousers, and shirt. Once he was down to his boxers, Driscoll said, "Stop there. I don't need to see your pecker."

"You sure?"

Several years back deRocco and Driscoll had been staked out a cocaine warehouse on Avenue D. A lookout spotted the unmarked car and three Dominican gunmen surrounded the car to discover one man fellating the other. The dopers told the maricons to get lost. When the warehouse was busted, Driscoll capped the three witnesses to his giving head and earned a citation for the killings. Later deRocco had joked that his partner was the only cop in NYPD history to get a medal for sucking cock.

"What's that supposed to mean?"

"Nothing."

No one in the 9th Precinct had had the balls to ask what his cock were doing out at the stake-out and Sean was following their lead. He lifted the handcuff on his wrist. "What about this?"

"Thanks for reminding me." Driscoll holstered his weapon and snapped the open manacle onto the TV stand.

Both men eyed the telephone and Kevin Driscoll tugged the wire from the wall.

"Sorry, it just broke."

"I wasn't calling anyone anyway."

"That's for sure." Driscoll punched Sean's arm.

It was not a playful gesture and Sean slumped into the wall.

"I'll see you."

The door slammed shut and five seconds later Sean tugged at the chain, but the TV stand had been bolted to the wall by anti-theft experts. These four cinderblock walls were his Las Vegas.

No showgirls, roulette, blackjack, craps, or even a nickel slot machine and he couldn't help from asking himself aloud, "What I ever do to deserve this?"

His first bad deed had been erased from his memory, but his most recent sins shone crystal-clear; greed for fencing those watches, lust for trusting Mira, and pride for thinking he'd fool Driscoll. He slammed his fist into the wall. The shock of pain to his long-abused knuckles was enough to prevent any repetition and Sean turned on the TV.

Its bright glow wavered across the bleak room. He was in purgatory and his only release from this limbo depended on his breaking the 5th Commandment.

Sean attempted to visualize whether his target was a man or woman, good or bad, young or old, usually ending up with the image of a lowlife criminal deserving of this death sentence, as if this boldfaced delusion could render homicide more doable in his eyes and Sean once more tried to free himself from the TV stand.

After futile five tugs he rubbed his chaffed wrist, resigned to the fact that the world's population had been savagely reduced down to three people; Driscoll, himself, and the unknown victim. Everything had become very simple, when kill or be killed were your only options.

Ten minutes later Kevin Driscoll entered the room with two large paper bags from McDonalds.

"Dinnertime."

"Great. I guess the condemned man doesn't get a choice of last meals."

"What wrong with Mickie Ds?"

"The beef is everything of a cow other than the moo and I don't think there's any potatoes in the fries." His mouth watered upon smelling the fries.

"You're wrong. The fries are 65% potato. I read it on the wall, besides you're not gonna do the dying, so stop the drama." Driscoll flipped one bag to Sean, who caught it without spilling the soda inside and lifted the cuff.

"Think the prisoner can eat with his hands free."

"Stop rushin' me." Driscoll snapped before freeing Sean from the TV stand.

"What about my wrist?"

"What about it?" Driscoll ignored whatever Sean was implying until headed across the room and Driscoll asked, "Where you think you're going?"

"My teeth are floating. Mind, if I go to the bathroom?

>"Knock yourself out," Driscoll mumbled through a mouth filled with fries, as Sean entered the bathroom.

"Don't shut the door."

"Can't I do this in private?"

"What and let you slip out the window? No way."

>Once Sean finished, he squeezed past Driscoll to sit on the bed with his food. The barely-warm cheeseburger tasted good after having not eaten anything for seven days. The ex-cop ate a second burger in three bites.

"Everything is go for tonight."

"Tonight?" Sean choked on his food.

"Yeah, tonight. Better this way. You come into town and do the job, then you're history. A quick in-and-out."

"You mean, I go in, kill him, and come out alive? No one seeing me?" The burger trembled in his hand.

"That's the way it's supposed to go."

"And who am I killing?" Sean doubted whether Driscoll had any idea as why the victim was being targeted. To him it was just another job.

"You ask that question, when your French whore poisoned those businessmen?"

"That was different."

"Take it from a pro. The whos and whys are unimportant. Names only make you remember the faces later."

"So I kill a total stranger and then what?"

"You go your way and I go mine."

"After you give me the five grand."

"You think I'm gonna welch on you."

"Sorry to hit your sensitivity button, it's just that I never killed anyone before."

"Don't think nothin' about it, this is basically your 'wham-blam-thank-you-ma'am' deal." Driscoll stroked the barrel of the 9mm inside his jacket.

"Nice to put a sexual angle on it."

"Hey, everyone gets their kicks different ways."

"If you say so." Sean had no doubt murder gave the ex-cop a hard-on and finished his meal in silence, as Driscoll brushed the crumbs from his lap.

"Get dressed, Seano. We got places to be."

"Now?"

"Now." Driscoll repeated with a directness detouring any argument.

Sean dressed in his black suit and the ex-cop patted him down. He pulled out the $5000 from deRocco and handed back the roll.

"All you gotta do is pull a trigger. Boom, and you get another five Gs. Ten Gs for a day's work. Good deal?"

"You keep telling me that and I might believe it." Sean stuffed the money in his pant pocket and checked himself in the mirror, thinking he looked more like a defrocked priest than an initiate to murder.

"You'll be thanking me once it's over. 10 Gs for a minute's work."

"Too bad I'm not working every day."

"Too bad is right." Driscoll left $50 to cover the mini-bar and the damaged telephone. He swiftly policed the room for any trace of their presence and plucked an empty Fed-Ex package out of the trash, then pushed Sean toward the door.

"I'm not going anywhere, till this cuff comes off." Sean dug in his heels.

>"No?" Driscoll flexed his knuckles and the tendons of his neck stuck out like a garrote was cutting off his wind.

"No." Sean prepared to dodge a punch, however the ex-cop unlocked the handcuff.

"You happy now?"

"Happier, yes. What about you?"

"I would have been happier killing you a few seconds ago."

"You wouldn't kill someone who owed you $10,000."

"I'd grease 'em like lightning," Driscoll spoke with a cold-bloodedness of which only true killers are capable. "When you want to kill someone, screw the money. Now pick up your shit and let's get out of here."

Sean grabbed the leather bag, stuffing the extra French fries and a packet of ketchup into his jacket pocket.

"I thought you didn't like Mickie D's."

"I didn't, but I might get hungry later."

Have it your way."

The two men exited from the motel room.

Only two other cars were in the parking lot. Their passengers had not come to the Desert Inn to look out the windows. Across the street a piggyback of train engines hauled a long line of boxcars southward on the Union Pacific's tracks. The squeal of the steel wheels on the rails mingled with the peal of a couple's laughter from a motel room.

"This why I like this place. No one is nosy, so nothing can connect us to here."

"I'll remember that next time I want to kill someone.” Sean pulled up his collar against the cold wind and lifted his head to the sky. The stars seemed bigger in the desert night.

"You'll have plenty of time to stare at the stars later." Driscoll shoved Sean into the Mustang's passenger door. "Throw your shit in back and get in the car. The door's not locked."

"Okay, okay, chill your jets." Sean strapped himself into the seat, wishing he was a couple of inches taller or had studied Kung Fu or Frank deRocco had not found him at the diner this morning or he had not blown the money Mira Lachelle had left him or he had not met her in the first place.

deRocco started the car.

"Put on your seatbelt. I don't want the Vegas PD stopping us for somethin' stupid."

The car's V6 revved into the tach's red zone and Driscoll stomped on the gas. The Mustang burned rubber out of the parking lot to cut off a commercial van, then accelerated through a yellow light to catch up with the flow of traffic on Las Vegas Boulevard.

"So much for doing nothing stupid." Sean shook his head.

"Just driving like the rest of the losers. How about a little mood music?" Driscoll tuned on a country-western station.

"Country?" Sean reached for the dial.

"Yeah, country." The driver karate-chopped his left arm. "Don't touch that dial. I love Willie Nelson."

Sean rubbed his wrist and stared out the window. The only signs of human life were the heads and shoulders wrapped inside cars.

"We're goin' to where we'll do it later.” Driscoll steered past a slow-moving camper with Michigan plates. “It's a glassed-in stairway. You wait on the second-floor landing. Out of sight. There are no video cameras. No guards either. When the 'guy' shows up, you stick the gun in his ear and pull the trigger. The bullet will do the rest. You get his wallet to make it looks like a robbery. You come out and meet me. I give you your money and we split. One, two, three, maybe four, five, six, sounds easy, huh?"

"A snap." Sean rotated his wrist, which he had broken three years ago on the Thai-Burma border, when an opium farmer's pick-up truck rammed his motorcycle head-on. He had been shocked to have survived and sometimes thought that this existence might be the After-Life, though tonight was not one of them.

"After checking out the hotel, I'll take you out to the desert to pop off a few shots.

"Target practice?"

"You're gonna be too close to miss. Just get used to pullin' the trigger, so you don't freeze up."

"You have a picture of this person or do I have to guess who he will be?" Sean scratched at the day-old stubble.

"You're doing him." Driscoll handed Sean a photo of old man in his 70s.

Somewhere along the line he had committed an offense great enough to warrant his being wanted more dead than alive.

"Why don't we give him a couple of weeks to die of natural causes." Sean passed back the photo.

>"Cause that's not the way this works. The next time you see that guy, you're gonna do him." Driscoll inspected his passenger's shadowed face, trying to ascertain whether he could go through with this. Not many people could, but twenty-two years ago he had seen Sean beat a Russian Mafia member close to death, which meant somewhere he had it in him to go all the way and if Sean couldn't, then doing Sean would give him the right motivation for doing the stranger.

"It’ll be over before you know it." Driscoll drove into a hotel parking lot across from the Casino Center.

"Yeah, that's real comforting.”

All that was required was a little nerve and a few ounces of pressure on the trigger.

A little more than a breeze.

How easy a steel-jacketed bullet ended the universe for another human being bothered Sean, but he would find out soon enough how hard it really was.

NORTH NORTH HOLLYWOOD - Chapter 7 - by Peter Nolan Smith

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NORTH NORTH HOLLYWOOD - Chapter 8 - by Peter Nolan Smith


By 10PM everyone in Las Vegas was gambling in the casinos or sleeping under TV's warm glow. The rear lot of the Desert Winds Inn was deserted, as the Mustang parked amongst the out-of-state cars. Sean and Driscoll got out of the car and walked to the back entrance, where the ex-cop opened the stairwell door, saying, "This is the place.”

“Here?”

“No, one flight up. The old man doesn't take elevators. No one uses these stairs. No closed-circuit camera either.”

Driscoll screwed a long silencer onto plastic-gripped .357 revolver. “The casino security is too interested in catching skimmers and card-counters to worry about some stupid stairs. When you see him, stick the gun about three inches from the back of his head and pull the trigger. The silencer will make it real quiet. He drops to the ground and you steal his wallet, and then meet me outside. One more thing, don't stick the gun into the back of his neck, because he could whip around and you'd have a fight with an old man on your hands. You got it?"

"Yeah." Sean listlessly accepted the revolver and Driscoll tapped the stairwell's window. "I'll be watching from out here."

“What if___” Sean turned on Driscoll.

"Does 409 Seaview Road mean anything to you?” Driscoll beat him to the punch. “Mom and Dad Land, right? You hit me and Frank will take out your Wonderbread family in Boston. You got that, Seano?"

Sean lowered the gun to his side and Driscoll shoved him inside the stairwell.

"It'll be over before you know it, Seano." Driscoll left him to climb the stairs.

Sean's knees buckled on the second-floor landing and he leaned against the concrete wall for support. His killing someone was an act which hundreds of all around the world committed everyday in scores of different ways, yet this collective globalism didn't slow his heart’s non-stop tattoo and he realized he wasn't killing any stranger, not for money or the threat of death.

The ex-cop was expecting a free show and Sean was fully intent on giving him one. His finger hooked around the trigger and he pressed the cold steel circle of the silencer's extended barrel to his temple. The suicidal twist of the killer killing himself would screw up Driscoll's and deRocco's plans, yet he couldn't gut up the nerve to find out waited behind death. His life was precious. Another man's existence was unimportant.

A man was slowly climbing the stairs. It had to be his victim. Sean lowered the muzzle from his skull and aimed the revolver where his target's head would appear.

Two seconds later the old man from the photo stepped into the gun’s sights.

Sean's index finger tightened on the steel.

A little more pressure and the trigger would flick the hammer down onto the bullet.

Sean stopped breathing, as the old man's brown eyes focused on him rather than the silencer's black hole.

"You don't look like a murderer." The old man calmly arched his left eyebrow.

"And what does a killer look like?" Sean's finger stalled on the trigger.

"Like he's killed more than once," the old man stated matter-of-factly without fear.

"You want to bet?" Sean centered the red-dotted gunsight on his victim's forehead.

"I'm already gambling."

"Then you lose, cause I have to kill you."

"Nobody has to do anything they don't want to, but if you 'got' to, then do it already. In the meanwhile I'm going to close my eyes, because I don't want to watch."

The old man's wrinkled lids shut, signaling that he was resigned to either of his assassin’s options.

Sean would have done the same and this situational synchonicity forged an unforeseen link between the two.

The old man opened his eyes.

"See, you don't have a killer inside you."

"Maybe not, but someone in the parking lot does and he'll kill us both now, if I don't kill you."

The old man lifted his hands higher and contorted his creased face into a parodied plea for mercy.

"You ever play 'Cops and Robbers', when you were a kid?"

"Yeah,” Sean replied, although coming from the suburbs he was more into ‘cowboys and Indians’.

"Then we fake this killing."

"Fake it?"

"Yes, you pull the trigger. I fall down like I've been shot. You walk out. I lay low for a couple of weeks. You get lost. No one gets hurt. How's that sound for a plan?"

"Like one I'd make up?" Sean told himself, though the only question was whether he could trust this stranger. He had no other choice and he pulled the trigger.

The silencer reduced the explosion to a metallic spit.

The revolver recoiled up and away.

The old man slammed against the wall and slumped heavily to the floor.

Bitter cordite fumes snaked into Sean's nostrils, and he knelt to rifle the pants' pockets for the wallet.

Standing up Sean pulled the trigger. The second shot seemed quieter than the first and he leapfrogged down the stairs two at a time, while clumsily sticking the gun into his jacket.

Reaching the Mustang he jumped inside and slammed the door shut.

"Where's the piece?" Driscoll demanded, as the car squealed from the parking lot to merge with the 25mph traffic on Fremont.

Sean grabbed the gun inside his jacket and his fingers dipped into the busted ketchup packet among the cold French fries he had stashed earlier.

"Here." He handed the gun to the ex-cop, who spotted the red stain on Sean's hand.

"First blood, Seano. Way to go. But get rid of it, cause blood is evidence."

"Sure." Sean wiped off the red condiment with the paper towel.

"So what'd the old man say?" Driscoll licked his lips like a lizard on concaine.

"He begged for his life." Sean half-expected the cop to high-five him.

"A lot of them do that." Driscoll had been deaf to his share of plea for mercy. "Frank would be real proud of you. Not for nothin', but you came through like a pro. Showed no mercy. Where’s the wallet?”

"I have it." Sean flipped the ex-cop the stolen wallet.

"A stone-cold killer." Driscoll checked the IDs. "Damnit, you got the right guy too. You'd be surprised how many killers screw that up. We're out of here, Seano."

The Mustang broke free of traffic and the two men rode in silence past the futuristic casino's fluorescent facades.

Crossing Tropicana Wash's dry riverbed south out of town Sean reflected on this evening's miracle and lifted his eyes to the millions of stars overhead. He was up $10,000 and hadn't killed anyone. Tomorrow he would be in California and fly to Panama. Once Driscoll and deRocco discovered how he had fooled them, they would be pissed, but would never find him on the San Blas Archipelago.

Some god in the stars had to like him and Sean dispatched his prayers to a nameless and faceless entity for fear of angering the one he didn't choose, and then sat back, his body relaxed with his new freedom, laughing inside, for he should have had more trust in his luck, but then everyone should when they can't count on anything else.

NORTH NORTH HOLLYWOOD - Chapter 9 - by Peter Nolan Smith


Not one of 273 Louie Sinreich's video productions had been recognized by his peers at AVFA awards and none of his video were in the final selection of the evening, Best New Starlet.

"Fuck it." He shrugged off the rejection, satisfied that Steven Spielberg must have felt the same at the Oscars.

"Excuse me." Bob Olsen's droned from his left.

"Nothing. What were you saying?" Louie had been humoring the hippie blob by nodding his head, as if he really was listening.

"Now most of the people working on Virtual Reality are interested in the visual stimulation. Just like we were nothing, but eyes. They think that VR will be a movie we can only watch, instead of feel. You know the first VR we programmed at Livermore labs was an interactive sex dream and we used hypnotic brain wave patterns and the proper hertz levels to lower the senses' defenses. Once the Pentagon figured out I was trying to make love, not war, they pulled me off the project. For about one day, because____"

'B-b-bob." Ur Bell admonished his partner with a withering glance. "You're talking t-t-too much."

"About what?" Bob had a beer in his hand. Half the bottle was gone. He talked too much to drink too fast.

"Ur’s right." Louie was good at keeping his mouth shut. "The only good secret is the one you never tell."

Before he could continue, the emcee announced Lena de Gama as the winner for the Best New Starlet award. Everyone in the auditorium rose to their feet to applaud the young actress, as she stepped up to the podium.

"I want to thank you all for this honor. I don't know whether I deserve it, but I sure earned it and I couldn't have done it without help. I'll make it short."

Bob Olsen and Ur Bell were spellbound, while Che Chasta gazed on the young vixen, as if her heart was melting. The Johns stood with their mouths open and the rest of the audience wore expressions of desire, longing, and hope.

Louie had underestimated her sexual allure, for even he was drawn into this gathering's cult of worship and telling himself she was just another woman couldn't break her hold.

Luckily his cell phone silently vibrated against his ribs and Louie lifted it from his jacket. "So?"

"Your itch has been scratched," the ex-cop from New York informed him.

"Great." Louie had eliminated another barrier to his future and he leaned over to Che. "I want you to get her coming off the stage, so no one else can grab her."

Lena finished her speech and the crowd cheered, as if she had discovered a cure for AIDS.

The young actress curtsied with a ballerina's grace and descended from the stage to a mob of admirers.

Hands groped at her breasts, pinched her ass, and tore at her clothes. Bodies pressed closer and held off her feet. As a child she had gone swimming in a crowded pool. The lifeguard had whistled for everyone to leave the pool. She had been knocked under water by the rush. She couldn’t breathe then and was out of breath trouble now.

A hand snatched her away from the maelstrom. It was Che Chasta.

The surging throng stepped back in anticipation of the two putting on a show. They groaned with disappointment, as Che led Lena from the hall. It was time to call it a night.

Louie Sinreich was more pleased with the evening's events. All charges had been dropped against Che, the Johns were ecstatic to meet these stars, Che had Lena, and once the geeks learned that old man had been whacked, they would have to work with him.

All in all today had been as good as it gets and Louie smiled, "How sweet it is."

The truth was that it was very sweet and promised to only get sweeter.

NORTH NORTH HOLLYWOOD - Chapter 10 - by Peter Nolan Smith


The fastest way to LA from Las Vegas was the Interstate. The Mustang had a full tank of gas, but Driscoll exited into the desert. Route 160 was no short-cut and Sean asked, "Where are you going?"

"There's a place up ahead I wanna stop at." Driscoll's eyes concentrated on headlight’s funnel boring through the night.

"Stop where? There's nothing out here."

Off the unlit two-laner not a single dot of electricity challenged the star-lit desert and Sean grasped the door handle, ready to bail out at 80mph. The car locks popped down and Driscoll turned on the radio.

"Sure, there's nothin', but nothin' out here, except Pawrump."

"What's Pawrump?" The name sounded like a bodily function.

"Two roads crisscrossin' in the middle of nowhere between a coupla golf-courses, though they're closed now."

"So why we going, if everything is shut?" Sean hated surprises.

"Because they have a couple of whore houses that never close and nothin' makes me hornier than murder." Elvis was a welcome change from the boy band drivel on the other stations.

"I like the idea of driving straight to LA better."

"And I like the idea of killin' a couple of hours with some trailer park whores. I'll get you LA tomorrow morning. How's that sound?"

"Like it's my only choice."

“Free will doesn’t exist in this life.”

”Only things you had to do.”

"No one ever said anythin' about this bein' a democracy," Driscoll interrupted the discussion by turning up the music and hummed NOW OR NEVER out of tune. The Mustang accelerated to 90mph. "Seano, I know how you feel."

"I don't think so.” Their only common link was New York.

"Hell, I felt the same as you after my first time. Me, I popped my cherry back in 1980. I go into an Avenue C apartment on a 1054 call, expectin' to clonk some PR for beatin' up on his wife, only I walk in the wrong apartment and stumbled on a heroin deal. One of the spics whips out a piece and pulls the trigger. I almost shit in my pants. I mean I thought I was dead, 'cept the greaser's gun jams. You shoulda seen his face, when I popped 'im. Boom. One shot to the head." The ex-cop laughed with the recollected comfort of having dodged fate, though it came out more like a drum roll of coughs.

"This old guy was scared.” Sean looked at the desert. It was empty.

"You’d think after living that long he’d be happy someone put him out of his misery."

The car raced toward Mountain Summit Springs.

"No, he wanted to live." And Sean had spared him.

"What he wanted was unimportant, Seano. I'm proud of you for pulling this off like a man."

"Thanks.”

Driscoll might have bought the faked murder, but this detour was wrong.

The DJ announced the rest of his shift was dedicated to Elvis and Driscoll tapped on the steering wheel to the beat of DON'T BE CRUEL. At the top of the pass, he pointed to a ball of light shimmering on the dark horizon like a star fallen to earth.

"That's Pawrump up ahead. Maybe another thirty miles. You're gonna love it there."

"Yeah, I can hardly wait." It sounded like the perfect place to disappear off the face of the Earth.

"Once we get to the whorehouse, I'll give you the other five thousand, but you be careful, cause the 'girls' out here are kinda fast with their hands, if you get my drift."

Driscoll stepped on the accelerator and the car sped up to 110 mph. After several minutes the car slowed to less than seventy.

“Damn, I gotta take a pee. I'll stop at the next road."

"What road?" The desert was untouched by man.

Sean never saw the punch riveting four knuckles into his temple. His mouth tasted metal, as if all the fillings in his teeth had come loose before he tumbled down a narrowing black hole to hover above a pool of unconsciousness. Something had gone horribly wrong and he didn't need any fingers to add up what, because sum came up snake eyes.

The Mustang rocked onto a rutted dirt road for a quarter mile. Driscoll's right foot stomped the brakes and the car skittered to a stop. He opened the passenger door and Sean Tempo slumped from the car like a bag of potatoes. The ex-cop squinted back to Route 160.

No headlights lit either direction.

Driscoll might have lost his taste for killing strangers, but wasting an old acquaintance would be a treat and he kicked Sean Collan several times, until burying his toe in the fallen man's ribs knocked his left knee out of alignment.

”Goddammit.”

The big man turned Sean face down in the sand and slipped the five wallets his partner had Fed-Exed him into Sean's jacket, then dropped the empty .357 revolver on the sand.

"Frank, you're a genius."

Tomorrow the local cop would investigate the buzzards circling in the air.

The police chief would wire the NYPD about the wallets and revolver on the corpse.

If the NYPD were on the ball, they would link the revolver's forensics to five unsolved New York murders and tonight's killing in Vegas, clearing any suspicion on his partner and him.

A car was coming from Las Vegas on Route 160.

Probably two miles away. Driscoll lowered to the 9mm’s muzzle to his victim.

"Seano, you won't feel a thing."

The ex-cop's words broke through the rushing in Sean's ears. Black shoes bracketed his head. Why sand was in his mouth and what the cold metal stuck into the base of his skull came to Sean. Driscoll was ignoring his own instructions about placing the muzzle to the back of his victim's neck.

Sean twisted his head to the side.

An explosive crack broke the sound barrier next to his ear and a sword seared across his neck without decapitating him. He rolled over and wildly swung his fist. The punch connected with the ex-cop's knee and threw Driscoll off-balance into the Mustang.

Sean scrambled to his feet and juked from side to side.

Shots rang out and bullets hissed through the air. Sand squished beneath his feet. Cactus tore at this clothing. Jesus had lived up his end and now it was up to Sean to fulfill his part of the bargain by running for his life.

Driscoll emptied the 9mm at the disappearing target. He jammed another clip into his automatic and popped off every round without hearing a shriek of pain.

"Godfuckingdammit, I hit nothin', but the motherfuckin'' wind."

He jumped in the Mustang and shoved the shift into DRIVE. The spinning rubber excavated a hole in the loose sand and buried the rear tires up to the hubcaps. Driscoll beat the steering wheel and screamed, until a chunk of phlegm popped out of his lungs.

Looking into the black desert, the ex-cop rubbed his aching knee and said aloud, "Frank's not gonna like this."

And that was the god-awful truth.

NORTH NORTH HOLLYWOOD - Chapter 11 - by Peter Nolan Smith


The winter wind whistled over the Skylark’s ragtop. The heat was on full and Che Chasta slid across the seat to caress Lena's thigh. Neither of them could wait till Death Valley.

"Is there a town close?" Stopping in the middle of nowhere might look good in a movie, yet there was no telling what kind of homicidal maniac was lurking in the dark and Lena stepped on the gas.

"I see a light up ahead." Che hadn't never been on this road. "Might be a town."

Good." Lena spread her thighs and the blonde’s hand slipped inside her panties. "You know I've dreamed about meeting you for a long time.”

"Not a gang-bang film." Che groaned, for while she could handle more than a hundred men at a row by imagining her body belonging to someone else, the recovery time from the all-out assault took weeks.

"No, it was a old film with Sherri.” Lena clenched the blonde’s hair tight like Sherri had in one scene. “Just the two of you.”

"GIRLS LIKE US was our only solo film.” Che didn't see any reason to tell Lena that they had done the film to pay off a drug debt. "You really like it?"

"No, but it was like your bodies were unattached from your souls."

"Yeah, we were damned."

"Drugs?"

"Crazy too."

"What was Sherri like back then?” Lena wished she could have been them with them for a night or two, only no time machine could resurrect that Sherri without killing her.

"Sherri didn't care about anything. She would fuck anyone for a fix and rob them. A lot of people were after her and not to wish her good luck, but she was so wild, no one would touch her, since it was real apparent that she was going to kill herself sooner or later. Why? She never told me why. Maybe because she fucked too many men for no good reason or maybe she realized she could never go back to whoever she was before she started in the business. I don't know, but she was crazy and even worse once her brother died. She never tell you about this?"

Before Lena could say, "No.", a blonde man in the black suit materialized on the road.

She stamped on the brake.

The sudden deceleration threw her passenger onto the floor. Lena braced for the expected impact, except the car swerved to a stop without her hearing the sickening thud of metal hitting a human body. The overpowering stench of burning rubber filled the interior and the Skylark's V-8 purred at low revs, its headlights pointing into the shadowy undergrowth.

Che climbed onto the seat. "What happened?"

"I might have hit something." Lena also might have killed a human being.

"What?" The blonde's eyes darted upward, as if a UFO might be fleeing into the heavens.

"A man.” Lena looked behind them.

A prone form lay on the road’s shoulder lit by the red glow of the brake lights.

"Men always show up, when you need them least." Che quickly pulled on her dress.

Lena put the car in neutral and opened her door.

"Where are you going?" Che clutched the younger girl’s arm.

"I am going to see, if he is dead or alive." Lena picked up the heavy Maglite under the front seat.

"Who gives a shit? Let's get out of here. No one saw nothing out here."

"Except us." Lena got out of the car and focused the tight beam on the horizontal man.

"Is he dead?"

"I don't think so, but sit behind the wheel. If I shout, be ready to get out of here." Lena cautiously approached the man on the highway.

He was in no shape to hurt anyone. His blonde hair was splotched with blood seeping from a cut over his left eye. Blood from a furrow on his neck was splattered on his white shirt. Neither wound could have come from her sideswiping him. When the flashlight's beam touched the man's face, he flinched and covered his eyes.

"Are you okay, Mister?" Lena was relieved he was alive.

"I'm just a little banged up, that's all," His left shoe was gone and he gasped for breath like he had been running a mile. "I got into a car crash back off the road."

"Anyone with you?" The headlights of a car blinked in the desert. She had no curiosity to find out whether or not the man was telling the truth.

"No, I was alone." The blonde man in the black suit blindly outstretched his hand.

"I'm not going to hurt you, I promise."

"How can you be sure?"

"Cause I'm in no shape to hurt anyone." The man shivered with an icy wind ripping across the road. "Help me."

She played the light on him. There was something familiar about his face. Not from a photo, but Sherri’s description of the man they needed to cast in her film. Her grasping voice was in character, his beaten face was forgettable and the dusty suit completed the image of the last man on Earth. Like the saint from Bunuel's SIMONE OF THE DESERT.

There was no guarantee that he could act or would do the film or that he wasn't dangerous other than her having a feeling that he had been put here to star in that role. She just had a feeling and helped him to his feet.

"You better not be any trouble.”

"Just get me out of here and I'll love you forever."

"That won't be necessary.” Lena was scared, but only for an instant, for the man sighed, "Good, because forever seems like it's coming real quick."

When he flopped onto the trunk of the car, Che poked her head out the window. "Girl, are you out of your mind? Drop him and let's go."

"Open the back door," Lena ordered the blonde. "I'm not leaving him out here."

"Great, just what the world needs. A good Samaritan for drifters." Che cleared their bags off the backseat and Lena released the man, who keeled through the car's open rear door.

Lena sat behind the wheel and both women regarded the man sprawled across the backseat.

"What do you think?" Lena asked Che, as if she might be a better judge of men.

"He looks no different than the hundreds of fuck-ups I've fucked for the camera or for the fuck of it. Just another man screwing up my night. We should dump him at the next town."

"No hospitals. No cops," the man muttered from the backseat. "All I want is a ride to LA."

"What if we're not going to LA, big boy?" Che rubbed her chilled skin.

"Then you're out $500." The blonde man produced five crisp hundred-dollar bills. "Once we hit LA, you can throw me out of the car."

"Deal." Che snatched the money out of his hand.

The blonde man crumbled into the seat, sapped by whatever had happened to him.

"I hope he doesn't snore." Che checked the bills. They looked good.

"Men like him talk in their sleep." Lena stepped on the gas and the Skylark raced along the forlorn two-laner. Che gave Lena $200. "So I guess our ride to Death Valley is shot."

"The faster I get him to LA the better.” Even at 80mph it would take three or four hours, but she could tell by the way the blonde man lay that he would be out for even longer. "I guess I'll have to give you a rain check."

"I was afraid you would say that, because it never rains there."

"You like his type?" Lena peeked in the rearview mirror.

"You're asking the wrong girl. Remember I'm the gang-bang queen. I'll do anyone," Che boasted, though it was all an act.

"I'm not asking about anyone.” Lena was having doubts about this man, whose face she couldn't see in the dark. "I'm talking about this one."

Che studied the man for several seconds. "He's a little older than I like them, but I'd do him, if they was no one else around. What about you?"

"I haven't been with a man in six months.” She couldn't say she missed it either.

"Hey, I told the truth. Now it's your turn."

"If he was the last man of Earth, maybe."

"Out here he's the only man on Earth." Che laid her head on Lena's lap. "Just remember that."

The Skylark picked up more speed and left only the tang of a V-8's exhaust on the passing wind, which was better for everyone, except for the man they had left behind in the rain.

NORTH NORTH HOLLYWOOD - Chapter 12 - by Peter Nolan Smith

A pale streak of dawn slithered below the charcoal black storm clouds impaled on the city's tallest buildings, as the streetlights dimmed one by one up Fifth Avenue. Traffic on the icy avenue was sparse and only a few dog-walkers braved the snow-clogged sidewalks in front of the Plaza Hotel. This morning most of New York would stay in bed except for those who had yet to go to sleep.

"C'mon, ring, you bastard." Frank deRocco glared at the telephone for the hundredth time since 3am.

Something was fucked up and the detective poured himself another glass of whiskey, which he downed it in one go. When the empty glass fell from his hand, he realized he was in no condition to show up for his precinct 8AM roster.

Derocco dialed the station house and told the desk sergeant he was sick.

With only seven months to go until his 'twenty and out', none of the white shirts at the 9th Precinct was going to bust his hump for taking and the detective flopped onto the mattress, his head drowning in a sea of swirls.

A half-hour later the telephone rang and his hand groped for the handset on the night table. The plastic was cold on his ear.

"It's me." His partner sounded high on cocaine.

"Of course it's you. Who else is gonna call me here. My ex-wives?" deRocco slurred with the wind shuddering against the windows.

"I been waitin' all night for you to call. What's wrong?"

"Nothin' really, but...."

"I hate hearin' the word 'but.'" deRocco sat up too fast and keeled over onto the pillow. "Get it over with. But what?"

"He did it. I saw it with my own eyes."

"And?"

"I took him out to the desert like planned."

"And?"

Static interference answered deRocco.

"You still there?"

"Yeah, I'm calling you from a payphone."

"I don't want to know where. I'm gonna ask you one question, and I'm not wantin' to hear you say, "No." Ready?” deRocco was sobering up fast. “Did you take him out?"

"Yes and no."

"Whatcha mean, yes and no?"

His partner explained about the shooting and Sean escaping into the desert with the wallets along with the car stuck in sand and his bad knee.

"Shit."

"So what do I do now?"

"You mean, "Now you fucked up." This news had ruined his day and it was only seven hours old.

"Sorry." Kev’s voice was as contrite as that of an altar boy caught drinking the sacramental wine.

"Save your 'Sorrys' for Judgment Day." deRocco rubbed his unshaven face and spoke deliberately, "This is what I want you to do.”

”What?”

”Nothing.”

”Yeah,. do nothing till dawn. When it's light, go back to where you were and follow his tracks like you were an Indian. Maybe there's a God and you did hit 'im. If so, look for the vultures overhead. Got it?"

"I think so. Anything else?"

"Yeah, you better spend some quality time on your knees prayin' you did kill 'im."

"I already been doin' that."

"Well don't stop, cuz his those wallets are a death warrant." deRocco stopped his harangue, for Kev needed reassurance everything between them was as before. "Everythin' gonna work out."

"What if I can't find him? I mean I might have hit him, but it's a big desert out here."

"Forget about it."

"What about them wallets?"

"Screw them too. We go to plan B. You head to LA and pick up the money for the hit." They had stashed around $400,000 in a Cayman account. That cache plus their pensions should keep them going for years, if not till death parted one of them from the other.

"I'll meet you and we'll head anywhere in the world we want."

"You comin' out?" Kev sounded like he had won Lotto.

"Yeah, I have some vacation time I gotta take or lose." DeRocco was already visualizing his trip cross-country. "Not for nothin', but everythin' is gonna will be fine. Trust me."

"Who else can I trust?"

"Me and no one else, partner. If you find the body, call me. The last thing I want is go out to L friggin' A."

"I know, I know. Maybe I'll be lucky like you said."

"Yeah, right, it's always darkest before the dawn" What worried deRocco most was that bad things usually came in threes.

Even worst somehow that stupid song CALIFORNIA, HERE I COME popped into his head. Not getting rid of it had to be number two. He only prayed number three wouldn't be as bad as the first two, but the way his luck was breaking he couldn’t count on anything other than the worst and thankfully he always knew how to handle that end of the business.

NORTH NORTH HOLLYWOOD - Chapter 13 - by Peter Nolan Smith

Lena’s passenger remained unconscious the entire ride to Hollywood. An hour before dawn no one was on the streets and Che suggested dumping the stranger on the Church of Scientology lawn.

"They know how to take care of people like him."

"I'll take care of him." Lena had plans for 'the man from nowhere'.

"Suit yourself, just drop me at my house." Che didn't say another word

Upon arriving at her bungalow she got out of the car and slammed the door, as if to wake the man in the back seat.

His breathing was the only sign of his not being dead.

Che cleared the blonde mane from her face and asked Lena, "When will I see you again?"

"Here's my number." Lena scrawled the info on a fast food wrapper.

"Sherri won't mind me calling?"

"You and me. We're just friends?"

"So far." Che kissed the young actress through the window of the LeMans. Their lips melted whatever faults they possessed between them. "You be careful of that man."

"I can handle men." Lena looked over her shoulder. The man was dead to the world and almost dead men weren't trouble. "Call me."

Lena drove over to the freeway. Traffic was light, but a heavy rain lengthened the drive over the Hollywood Hills.

Lena shut her eyes. It had been a long drive from Las Vegas.

Car horns woke her and she opened the window. The cold wet air revived her long enough to get home, where she parked the LeMans in the sheltered garage and got out of the car.

"Mister?"

The man was out cold.

"Mister, I can't carry you." She shook his arm for several seconds, then slapped him in the face.

"Where are we?" His hands covered his face.

"LA." To Lena he seemed a million years old. She figured his age for 40. "Can you walk a little?"

"Maybe." The man pulled himself off the seat and Lean helped him out of the car.

He smelled of dust and old clothes. His blonde hair rubbed stiff against her skin and felt, as if it had been stolen from a brush. She picked up her bag and led him to the elevator. without locking the car. It was safe. No one else lived in the condo building which had been condemned after an earthquake.

"Don't fall down," Lena told the man.

"Where we going?" His words stuck like mush in his mouth..

"Someplace safe." The elevator stopped on the 4th floor and the man in the black suit sagged against the wall.

He wasn't drunk.

He wasn't on drugs.

Someone had beat him into this state.

Lena knocked on the door to her apartment.

"Sherri, open up. It's me."

"Did you forget your keys?" Sherri asked opening the door.

"No."

"Who is he?"

I'll tell you later. Help me carry him into the guest bedroom?"

"Are you crazy?"

No, just do it."

The two women dragged the man to the back bedroom and dumped him on the single mattress. For all intent purposes he was dead to the world.

Lena stripped off his bloodstained clothes and bundled them in a ball. The swelling bruises to his head suggested that he might be suffering from a concussion and Sherri checked the unconscious man's pulse. It was strong and steady. Lena went out into the bathroom and returned with their medicine kit.

"He's going to live."

"Good." Lena tended to the naked man's cuts. "Because I have plans for him."

"What kind of plans?" Sherri surveyed the pale stranger's body and pointed to the ancient tracks from a needle. The older woman wore the same tattoo. "You don't get these for graduating from a seminary."

"I know, I know.” Lena threw the covers over him and explained about finding the blonde man on the highway without mentioning Che Chasta. "I wanted you to see him."

"Why?” This stranger didn’t belong inside their home. No man did.

"You don’t see what I see.”

"No, I don’t.” Sherri could only see a man. “Plus this wasn’t the deal.”

”What deal?”


”What you and me? I said ‘no men’.”

"I didn't sleep with him and I have no intentions to sleep with him." Lena cleansed the wound on the man's neck. He was too far gone to feel the sting of alcohol. "But you said I could bring home strays."

"I meant a cat not men?"

"I couldn’t leave him to die in the desert?"

"A dead man in the desert sounds better than a dead man in my house."

"He asked for my help." Lena reached up to stroke her lover's hair.

Sherri pushed away the gesture.

"I can understand that, but why didn't you dump him on the sidewalk like he asked? Plenty of people get their start out here like that. I want the truth."

"I told you I had plans for him."

"Like what?"

"I see this man in the desert and I think SIMON OF THE DESERT.”

”He looks nothing like the saint.”

”Shave the saint." Lena pointed to the man. "Now you see what I see?"

"You’re kidding." Sherri had to admit the man on the bed met the physical requirements for her road film’s lead.

"Not at all. This is the Man from Nowhere. Look at him. He has been screen-tested by the road. When I saw him, I saw the last man on Earth."

"He's a complete stranger." At this point in Sherri’s life most men were little else.

"ADAM AND TWO EVES will never be completed, unless we find a man for this role and who better to play a man from nowhere than a man from nowhere.”

”They are actors.”

“And you’ve rejected them all.”

"I hate men."

"I know you do. I've heard you and your friends talk about a world without men. -50% one of them called machocide. I respect your beliefs, but we'll never finish ADAM AND TWO EVES without a man. This is our 'Adam'." Lena could sense Sherri’s wilting to her suggestion. The final push had to come with cautious reason. "We do not have to love him or even like him. All we have to do is act in a few scenes with him. Maybe you are a little jealous of this man?"

Not jealous, but he could be a rapist or a murderer."

"He does not look the type." Lena stood over him with a bemused smile.

”What’s so funny?”

”If I drove past that spot in the desert two seconds earlier and I wouldn’t have seen him.”

”And a second later you would have killed him.”

”Life’s a question of timing.”

”He still could be a killer.

”Not him.”

"And how can you tell?"

I have been with enough men in my life to know the difference between the good and the bad." She searched his pockets, uncovering a stack of hundred-dollar bills, five wallets, cold French fries, and an Irish passport..

"What are you doing?" Sherri half-expected the man to wake during this frisking.

"You want to know who he is." Lena opened the wallets and examined their IDs. Only the passport matched the man’s face. She handed it to Sherri.

"Sean Collan of New York."

"At least now he has a name."

"That doesn't prove whether or not he's dangerous." Sherri flipped the passport onto the suit in the corner.

"Maybe to himself, but not us," Lena stated defiantly, yet she had to demonstrate that she wasn't buying this 100% and examined the wallets. "He might not be a killer. A pickpocket. A thief. But that doesn't change his looks?"

"Are you sure you want to use this man?" Sherri dropped the wallets on the floor.

"Yes, he is better than some stupid actor pretending to be the real thing."

"Everything in my body says get rid of him.”

”And everything in mine says he’s perfect.”

”This is crazy, we don't even have any money to shoot the film."

"Yes, we do."

Reaching into her backpack, Lena poured Isaac Conti's money from an envelope.

Seeing the banded stacks of $100 bills, Sherri asked, "And where'd this come from?"

"Your uncle gave it to me last night at the award ceremony. He wanted you to use it to finish ADAM AND TWO EVES."

"My uncle."

"Another man."

"I can't keep them out of my life." Sherri started to cry, until Lena caressed her cheek.

"Don't be scared, baby. You’re the one always saying we have to do this film. How ADAM AND TWO EVES can save me from whatever happened to you. It would be easy for me to keep thinking it was a dream and nothing else. I have had a lot of those in my life, but I believe in you and believe in this film. I think ADAM AND TWO EVES can be something great, but we need a man to finish it. If not him, then nobody.’ Lena stared at the still form on the bed. No man was harmless other than in this condition and even unconsciousness was no guarantee of safety. “You got me, remember that and nothing else."

"How can I forget? Without you I'd be like everyone else in LA. Wake up, drive my car to work, come back home, watch TV, sleep alone."

"You might have a lover sometimes."

"Strictly for sex."

"And what's wrong with that?"

"Nothing."

"So let's finish the film.” Lena pulled Sherri out of the back bedroom into the living room, where they lay on the sofa. The young girl's jade eyes gazed up at her lover, as she arched her back to get closer.

“You have the money. You have the actor. You have me. What else do you need?"

"Nothing."

ADAM AND TWO EVES could bring Lena and her to another world away from having sex on film. She could visualize them film on-screen with the man in the distant background. Sherri wrapped her arms around Lena, as if to protect the young actress from all the harm she had ever experienced as a woman. A last fear arose and she asked, "What if he refuses?"

Lena trembled with anticipation of her lover's caressing her secret places.

"Everyone wants to be in the movies."

And that was no lie.