Fear And Loating In Las Vegas - BestLightNovel.com
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"We'll see," I said, moving around to the rear with the air- hose. In truth, I was nervous. The two front ones were tighter than snare drums; they felt like teak wood when I tapped on them with the rod. But what the h.e.l.l? I thought. If they ex plode, so what? It's not often that a man gets a chance to run terminal experiments on a virgin Cadillac and four brand- new $80 tires. For all I knew, the thing might start cornering like a Lotus Elan. If not, all I had to do was call the VIP agency and have another one delivered . . . maybe threaten them with a lawsuit because all four tires had exploded on me, while driving in heavy traffic. Demand an Eldorado, next time, with four Michelin Xs. And put it all on the card . . . charge it to the St Louis Browns.
As it turned out, the Whale behaved very nicely with the altered tire pressures. The ride was a trifle rough; I could feel every pebble on the highway, like being on roller skates in a gravel pit.., but the thing began cornering in a very stylish manner, very much like driving a motorcycle at top speed in a hard rain: one slip and ZANG, over the high side, cartwheel ing across the landscape with your head in your hands.
About thirty minutes after our brush with the Okies we pulled into an all-night diner on the Tonopah highway, on the kirts of a mean/scag ghetto called "North Las Vegas." Which is actually outside the city limits of Vegas proper. North Vegas is where you go when you've f.u.c.ked up once too often on the Strip, and when you're not even welcome in the cut-rate downtown places around Casino Center.
This is Nevada's answer to East St. Louis - a slum and a graveyard, last stop before permanent exile to Ely or Winnemuca. North Vegas is where you go if you're a hooker turning thirty and the syndicate men on the Strip decide you're no longer much good for business out there with the high rollers .. . or if you're a pimp with bad credit at the Sands . . . or what they still call, in Vegas, "a hophead." This can mean almost anything from a mean drunk to a junkie, but in terms of commercial acceptability, it means you're finished all the right places.
The big hotels and casinos pay a lot of muscle to make sure high rollers don't have even momentary ha.s.sles with "undesirables." Security in a place like Caesar's Palace is super tense and strict. Probably a third of the people on the floor at given time are either s.h.i.+lls or watchdogs. Public drunks known pickpockets are dealt with instantly - hustled out parking lot by Secret Service type thugs and given a impersonal lecture about the cost of dental work and of trying to make a living with two broken erms.
The "high side" of Vegas is probably the most closed society west of Sicily - and it makes no difference, in terms of the lay life-style of the place, whether the Man at the Top is Lucky Luciano or Howard Hughes. In an economy where Tom Jones can make $75,000 a week for two shows a night at Caeser's, the palace guard is indispensable, and they don't care who signs their paychecks. A gold mine like Vegas breeds it's own army, like any other gold mine. Hired muscle tends to acc.u.mulate in fast layers around money/power poles . . . and big money, in Vegas, is synonymous with the Power to protect it.
So once you get blacklisted on the Strip, for any reason at all, you either get out of town or retire to nurse your act along, on the cheap, in the shoddy limbo of North Vegas . . . out there with the gunsels, the hustlers, the drug cripples and all the other losers. North Vegas, for instance, is where you go if you need to score smack before midnight with no refer ences.
But if you're looking for cocaine, and you're ready up front with some bills and the proper code words, you want to stay on the Strip and get next to a well-connected hooker, which will take at least one bill for starters.
And so much for all that. We didn't fit the mold. There is no formula for finding yourself in Vegas with a white Cadillac full of drugs and nothing to mix with properly. The Fillmore style never quite caught on here. People like Sinatra and Dean Martin are still considered "far out" in Vegas. The "underground newspaper" here - the Las Vegas Free Press - is a cautious echo of The People's World, or maybe the National Guardian.
A week in Vegas is like stumbling into a Time Warp, a regression to the late fifties. Which is wholly understandable when you see the people who come here, the Big Spenders from places like Denver and Dallas. Along with National Elks Club conventions (no n.i.g.g.e.rs allowed) and the All-West Volunteer Sheepherders' Rally. These are people who go abso lutely crazy at the sight of an old hooker stripping down to her pasties and prancing out on the runway to the big-beat sound of a dozen 50-year-old junkies kicking out the jams on "September Song."
It was some time around three when we pulled into the parking lot of the North Vegas diner. I was looking for a copy of the Los Angeles Times, for news of the outside world, but a quick glance at the newspaper racks amde a bad joke of that notion. They don't need the Times in North Vegas. No news is good news.
"f.u.c.k newspapers," said my attorney. "What we need now is coffee."
I agreed, but I stole a copy of the Vegas Sun anyway. It yesterday's edition, but I didn't care. The idea of entering a coffee shop without a newspaper in my hands made me nervous. There was always the Sports Section; get wired on baseball scores and pro-football rumors: "Bart Starr Beaten by Thugs in Chicago Tavern; Packers Seek Trade" . . . "Namath Quits Jets to be Governor of Alabama" . . . and a speculative piece on page 46 about a rookie sensation Harrison Fire, out of Grambling: runs the hundred in nine flat, 344 pounds and still growing.
"This man Fire has definite promise," says the coach. "Yesterday, before practice, he destroyed a Greyhound Bus with bare hands, and last night he killed a subway. He's a natural for color TV. I'm not one to play favorites, but it looks like i'll have to make room for him."
Indeed. There is always room on TV for a man who can beat people to jelly in nine flat . . . But not many of these gathered, on this night, in the North Star Coffee Lounge. We had the place to ourselves - which proved to be fortunate, because we'd eaten two more pellets of mescaline on way over, and the effects were beginning to manifest.
My attorney was no longer vomiting, or even acting sick. He ordered coffee with the authority of a man long accustmed to quick service. The waitress had the appearance of a hooker who had finally found her place in life. She was definitely in charge here, and she eyed us with obvious disapproval as we settled onto our stools.
I was'nt paying much attention. The North Star Coffee Lounge seemed like a fairly safe haven from our storms. There are some you go into - in this line of work - that you know will be heavy. The details don't matter. All you know, for sure, is that your brain starts humming with brutal vibes as you approach the front door. Something wild and evil is about to happen; and it's going to involve you.
But there was nothing in the atmosphere of the North Star to put me on my guard. The waitress was pa.s.sively hostile, but I was accustomed to that. She was a big woman. Not fat, but large in every way, long sinewy arms and a brawler's jawbone. A burned-out caricature of Jane Russell: big head of dark hair, face slashed with lipstick and a 48 Double-E chest that was probably spectacular about twenty years ago when she might have been a Mama for the h.e.l.l's Angels chapter in Berdoo . . . but now she was strapped up in a giant pink elastic bra.s.siere that showed like a bandage through the sweaty white rayon of her uniform.
Probably she was married to somebody, but I didn't feel like speculating. All I wanted from her, tonight, was a cup of black coffee and a 29 cent hamburger with pickles and onions. No ha.s.sles, no talk - just a place to rest and re - group. I wasn't even hungry.
My attorney had no newspaper or anything else to compel his attention. So he focused, out of boredom, on the waitress. She was taking our orders like a robot when he punched through her crust with a demand for "two gla.s.ses of ice water - with ice."
My attorney drank his in one long gulp, then asked for an other. I noticed that the waitress seemed tense.
f.u.c.k it, I thought. I was reading the funnies.
About ten minutes later, when she brought the hamburg ers, I saw my attorney hand her a napkin with something printed on it. He did it very casually, with no expression at all on his face. But I knew, from the vibes, that our peace was about to be shattered.
"What was that?" I asked him.
He shrugged, smiling vaguely at the waitress who was standing about ten feet away, at the end of the counter, keeping her back to us while she pondered the napkin. Finally she turned and stared . . . then she stepped resolutely forward and tossed the napkin at my attorney.
"What is this?" she snapped.
"A napkin," said my attorney.
There was a moment of nasty silence, then she began screaming: "Don't give me that bulls.h.i.+t! I know what it is! You G.o.dd.a.m.n fat pimp b.a.s.t.a.r.d!"
My attorney picked up the napkin, looked at what he'd written, then dropped it back on the counter. "That's the name of a horse I used to own," he said calmly. "What's wrong with you?"
"You sonofab.i.t.c.h!" she screamed. "I take a lot of s.h.i.+t in place, but I sure as h.e.l.l don't have to take it off a spic pimp!"
Jesus! I thought. What's happening? I was watching the woman's hands, hoping she wouldn't pick up anything sharp and heavy. I picked up the napkin and read what the b.a.s.t.a.r.d printed on it, in careful red letters: "Back Door Beauty?" The question mark was emphasized.
The woman was screaming again: "Pay your bill and get h.e.l.l out! You want me to call the cops?"
I reached for my wallet, but my attorney was already on feet, never taking his eyes off the woman . . . then he reached under his s.h.i.+rt, not into his pocket, coming up suddenly with the Gerber Mini-Magnum, a nasty silver blade the the waitress seemed to understand instantly.
She froze: her eyes fixed wildly on the blade. My attorney, watching her, moved about six feet down the aisle and the receiver off the hook of the pay phone. He sliced it off, then brought the receiver back to his stool and sat down.
The waitress didn't move. I was stupid with shock, not whether to run or start laughing.
"How much is that lemon meringue pie?" my attorney's voice was casual, as if he had just wandered into and was debating what to order.
"Thirty five cents!" the woman blurted. Her eyes were turgid with fear but her brain was apparently functioning on some basic motor survival leveL My attorney laughed. "I mean the whole pie," he said.
She moaned.
My attorney put a bill on the counter. "Let's say it's five dollars," he said. "OK?"
She nodded, still frozen, watching my attorney as he walked around the counter and got the pie out of the display case. I prepared to leave.
The waitress was clearly in shock. The sight of the blade, jerked out in the heat of an argument, had apparently triggered bad memories. The glazed look in her eyes said her throat had been cut. She was still in the grip of paralysis when we left.
9. Breakdown on Paradice Blvd.
EDITOR'S NOTE:.
At this point in the chronology, Dr. Duke appears to have broken down completely; the original ma.n.u.script is so splintered that we were forced to seek out the original tape record ing and transcribe it verbatim. We made no attempt to edit this section, and Dr. Duke refused even to read it. There was only one way to reach him. The only address/contact we had, during this period, was a mobile phone unit somewhere on Highway 61 - and all efforts to reach Duke at that number proved futile. In the interests of journalistic purity, we are publis.h.i.+ng the following section just as it came off the tape - one of many that Duke submitted for purposes of verification - along with ma.n.u.script. According to the tape, this section follows an episode involving Duke, his attorney and a waitress at an all - diner in North Vegas. The rationale for the following section appears to be based on a feeling - shared by both Duke and his attorney - that the American Dream would to be sought out somewhere far beyond the dreary confines District Attorneys' Confrrence on Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs.
The transcription begins somewhere on the Northeast out of Las Vegas - zooming along Paradise Road in the White Whale . . . >
Att'y: Boulder City is to the right. Is that a town? Boulder City is to the right. Is that a town?
Duke: Yeah Yeah Att'y: Let's go to Boulder City. Let's go to Boulder City.
Duke: All right. Let's get some coffee somewhere . . . All right. Let's get some coffee somewhere . . .
Att'y: Right up here, Terry's Taco Stand, USA. I could go for a taco. Five for a buck. Right up here, Terry's Taco Stand, USA. I could go for a taco. Five for a buck.
Duke: Sounds horrible. I'd rather go somewhere where's there's one for 5O cents. Sounds horrible. I'd rather go somewhere where's there's one for 5O cents.
Att'y: No . . . this might be the last chance we get for tacos. No . . . this might be the last chance we get for tacos.
Duke:. . . I need some coffee. . . I need some coffee.
Att'y: I want tacos I want tacos Duke: Five for a buck, that's like . . . five hamburgers for a buck. Five for a buck, that's like . . . five hamburgers for a buck.
Att'y: No . . . don't judge a taco by its price. No . . . don't judge a taco by its price.
Duke: You think you might make a deal? You think you might make a deal?
Att'y: I might. There's a hamburger for 29 cents. Tacos are 29 cents. It's just a cheap place, that's all. I might. There's a hamburger for 29 cents. Tacos are 29 cents. It's just a cheap place, that's all.
Duke: Go bargain with them.. Go bargain with them..
[Only garbled sounds here.-Ed.]
Att'y:. . . h.e.l.lo.
Waitress: May I help you? May I help you?
Att'y: Yeah, you have tacos here? Are they Mexican tacos or just regular tacos? I mean, do you have chili in them and things like that? Yeah, you have tacos here? Are they Mexican tacos or just regular tacos? I mean, do you have chili in them and things like that?
Waitress: We have cheese and lettuce, and we have sauce, you know, put on them. We have cheese and lettuce, and we have sauce, you know, put on them.
Att'y: I mean do you guarantee that they are authentic Mexican tacos? I mean do you guarantee that they are authentic Mexican tacos?
Waitress: . . . I don't know. Hey Lou, do we have authentic Mexican tacos? . . . I don't know. Hey Lou, do we have authentic Mexican tacos?
Woman's voice from kitchen: What? What?
Waitress: Authentic Mexican tacos. Authentic Mexican tacos.
Lou: We have tacos. I don't know how Mexican they are. We have tacos. I don't know how Mexican they are.
Att'y: Yeah, well, I just want to make sure I get what I'm paying for. 'Cause they're five for a dollar? I'll take five of them. Yeah, well, I just want to make sure I get what I'm paying for. 'Cause they're five for a dollar? I'll take five of them.
Duke: Taco burger, what's that? Taco burger, what's that?
(Sound. of diesel engine truck. -Ed.]
Att'y: That's a hamburger. with a taco in the middle. That's a hamburger. with a taco in the middle.
Duke: A taco on a bun. A taco on a bun.
Att'y: I betcha your tacos are just hamburgers with a sh.e.l.l sad of a bun. I betcha your tacos are just hamburgers with a sh.e.l.l sad of a bun.
Waitress: I don't know I don't know Att'y: You just started working here? You just started working here?
Waitress: Today. Today.
Att'y: I thought so, I've never saw you here before. You go school around here? I thought so, I've never saw you here before. You go school around here?
Waitress: No, I don't go to school. No, I don't go to school.
Duke: Oh? Why not? Are you sick? Oh? Why not? Are you sick?
Att'y: Never mind that. We came here for tacos. Never mind that. We came here for tacos.
[Pause.]
Att'y: As your attorney I advise you to get the chiliburger. a hamburger with chili on it. As your attorney I advise you to get the chiliburger. a hamburger with chili on it.
Duke: That's too heavy for me. That's too heavy for me.
Att'y: Then I advise you to get a taco burger, try that one. Then I advise you to get a taco burger, try that one.
Duke: . . . the taco has meat in it. I'll try that one. And coffee now. Right now. So I can drink it while I'm waiting. . . . the taco has meat in it. I'll try that one. And coffee now. Right now. So I can drink it while I'm waiting.
Waitress: That's all you want, one taco burger? That's all you want, one taco burger?
Duke: Well, I'll try it, I might want two. Well, I'll try it, I might want two.
Att'y: Are your eyes blue or green? Are your eyes blue or green?
Waitress: Pardon? Pardon?
Att'y: Blue or green? Blue or green?