A Stranger Lies There

Read A Stranger Lies There Online

Authors: Stephen Santogrossi

Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #General

 

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Contents

Title Page

Copyright Notice

Dedication

Acknowledgments

1972

Desert

Chapter One

Chapter Two

Chapter Three

Chapter Four

Chapter Five

Chapter Six

Chapter Seven

Chapter Eight

Chapter Nine

Chapter Ten

Chapter Eleven

Chapter Twelve

Chapter Thirteen

Chapter Fourteen

Chapter Fifteen

Chapter Sixteen

Chapter Seventeen

Chapter Eighteen

City

Chapter Nineteen

Chapter Twenty

Chapter Twenty-One

Chapter Twenty-Two

Chapter Twenty-Three

Chapter Twenty-Four

Chapter Twenty-Five

Chapter Twenty-Six

Chapter Twenty-Seven

Chapter Twenty-Eight

Chapter Twenty-Nine

Sea

Chapter Thirty

Chapter Thirty-One

Chapter Thirty-Two

Chapter Thirty-Three

Chapter Thirty-Four

White Water

Chapter Thirty-Five

Author's Note

Copyright

 

For Ronda, who brought this stranger to life

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

Thanks to: Michael Murray, Ruth Cavin, Barbara L. Taylor, Melody Hampton, Sharleen Bazeghi, Reed Dinsmore, Toni Plummer, Tanisha White, Lisa Santamaria, and my family, especially my wife, Ronda Hampton, and my daughter, Allison.

1972

They let loose with the fire hoses around eight, two hours after it started. Somebody shot a flare gun into a tree and the dry pine needles ignited, turning the tree into a column of fire. The hard, horizontal rain suddenly stopped as the water was redirected toward the flames. They crackled and warped, licking the night sky. Glowing embers dropped like bombs onto the roof of the administration building.

I knew what it must've looked like from above: an anthill that had been disturbed, everyone scattering in all directions, eyes wild, faces lit orange and white by the flames and the floodlights over the area. I was almost to the edge of the mall, where the trampled grass ended. It was getting harder to avoid the billy clubs and the men in riot gear. The
woosh
of the water cannons couldn't drown out the blaring megaphones. A metallic screech pierced through, impossibly loud, and I turned to see the microphone stand onstage topple over. An amplified thump silenced the feedback. Then the water hit the electronic equipment, on loan from the music department, and sparks exploded, as if in slow motion, like fireworks from a great distance. Blue-white flames joined the orange ones above. The sound system began shorting out, a steady buzzing sound gaining volume. To my left, I caught sight of Turret fighting his way through the crowd before someone with a handmade sign staggered into him. The reinforced posterboard got him above the eye, drawing blood. Then the lights went out.

*   *   *

A half mile away, I finally reached Rowland House and started up the stairs to the second floor. The dormitory was nestled in a pine forest on the other side of a wooden footbridge spanning a small creek on the eastern edge of the UC Santa Cruz campus. Most nights you could smell pine needles and wild berries, and the ocean if the wind was right.

But not tonight. Tonight smoke was in the air, a physical manifestation of the rebellion that had taken over. A warm glow spread into the western sky, back where hundreds of students still hadn't gotten it out of their systems. It could have been a football game, except for the sirens and the mechanized voices from the megaphones, and I thought I heard glass breaking too. A helicopter suddenly streaked overhead, blades
thwacking
, heading for the vortex. I watched its spotlight recede to a point, then continued up the steps in my damp clothes.

There weren't many people around. I was one of the few that had made it back, so far. Ellen's apartment was three down, and I found the door slightly open. Joni Mitchell drifted out, tranquil and serene. As I stepped inside, the record skipped and stuttered, spewing gibberish. I walked over and lifted the needle.

“Hello?” Ellen called out from the bedroom as I drifted toward it. “I'll be right out,” she said.

I stopped in front of her open door. She was lifting her damp shirt over her head. Her breasts were soft and milky white, nipples still hard from the cold water we'd been doused with. I found myself staring, unable to look away. Ellen smiled. I took a step closer, heart pounding. Still smiling, she gently closed the door.

“There are some towels in the bathroom,” Ellen said from behind it.

I didn't bother. Went back into the living room, then the kitchen, where I found a beer in the fridge. It was next to some sprouts that were a little too green and a carton of chocolate milk. After opening it, I walked to the window and took a look outside. The beer made me shiver and I put it on the windowsill. Outside in the courtyard a few people had started a bonfire, but it was only to dry off. They danced around the flames in a shamanistic display, enraptured by the heat.

Ellen had come into the room behind me. “Where is everybody?” she asked.

I shrugged. “Lost 'em,” I said, turning around. “Just like you.”

Ellen smiled again and went into the kitchen. Picked up a glass from the counter, and after dumping what was in it into the sink, filled it from the tap. She'd changed into another T-shirt with a suede vest over it and blue jeans with butterfly patches sewn into the fabric.

“It was wild out there,” she said after taking a few gulps, standing there in the kitchen. Her long silky hair shone in the overhead light. It was parted in the middle and secured with a beaded Indian headband.

I turned back to the window and watched them dance out by the fire. “It was bound to happen,” I said, picking up the beer. “Probably worse up front, wasn't it?” Ellen had made her way through the crowd as it went on, drawn by the words coming from the stage. Rory and Greg and I had hung back together, taking it all in, joining in the chanting that rose up every now and then. Glenn was about to follow Ellen, but he'd glanced at me for a second and changed his mind.

“Nice to see everybody so fired up about it,” Ellen said. She took a seat on the couch in the window's reflection.

Earlier today, the committee on presidential debates had denied the third party candidate, Tom Duncan, a place in the upcoming televised debate. Called him a fringe candidate with no serious stake in the campaign. He was against the war, for civil rights, and liable to shoot his mouth off at all the wrong times. But Duncan was passionate and idealistic, with a huge following among the college-age segment of the population. In other words, he was scary as hell to the political establishment.

The cops had shown up almost immediately, sparks in a tinderbox, and things had escalated quickly. Which was exactly what they'd wanted, I supposed, all for the evening news and middle-class America—youthful rebellion run amok.

Ellen got up and switched on the TV. As expected, the sounds of protest blended with what was still going on outside.

“We made the news,” she said enthusiastically.

No kidding,
I thought, seeing Turret appear in the courtyard alone. Passing the bonfire, he stopped and did a little dance before moving on. I could've sworn he was mocking the others, who seemed oblivious.

“Glenn's back,” I said as he reached the stairs. Ellen jumped up to meet him at the door.

“Oh, what happened?” she asked when she saw the blood above his eye, reaching up to put her hand on it.

“Motherfuckers,” Turret muttered, striding past her into the kitchen. Ellen followed him, found a towel, which she proceeded to wet, then started dabbing his forehead with it.

“Goddamn pigs with sticks,” Turret explained. He leaned back against the sink while Ellen tended to him.

I knew he was lying about what had happened. That it wasn't the cops with their billy clubs, but a fellow protester with a cardboard sign. I kept quiet anyway.

Greg came in then, running his hand over his wet hair, those water hoses not sparing anyone.

“Any sign of Rory?” Turret immediately asked him.

“Smoking a bone with 1A,” he replied, which didn't surprise me. They always had the choice stuff down there, and Rory never could pass up an offer.

“'Cause we got some serious talking to do, you guys,” Turret said, still in the kitchen with Ellen.

When she finished with him, Turret went to the refrigerator. “Anyone want a beer?” he asked, looking inside. Before anybody could answer, he took one out and closed the door. Put the bottle in the opener on the edge of the countertop and smacked his palm against it. The cap fell and rattled around on the floor. Turret ignored it. He guzzled a third of the beer and came over to sit on the couch next to Greg. Ellen sprawled in a beanbag chair, one eye on Turret, the other on the TV. I stayed standing near the window.

“Look at those fuckers,” Turret said, shaking his head, referring to the authorities trying to restore order.

Greg nodded. “City statute says we have the right to assemble peacefully—”

“You think that's going to stop them?” Turret interrupted impatiently. “I been telling you guys, we gotta do it another way. All our flower-power, peace and love b.s. ain't gonna get it done, man. They just laugh at us. Right before they smash our heads against the wall.”

Ellen winced but then nodded. Greg just stared at him, uncharacteristically quiet. Normally the most talkative one in the room, Greg tended to speak in a rapid-fire stream of words, like he was afraid his audience would lose interest if he didn't get it out all at once. A political science major with a short afro and almond-shaped eyes, he aspired to one day open a political consulting business. I knew him through Ellen, who'd met Greg in one of her philosophy classes.

We watched TV quietly for a few minutes. The newscaster talked about how many arrests had been made. Ellen closed her eyes, seemed satisfied that the injustice done to her candidate had inspired such outrage on campus. A petite blonde with emerald eyes and a dreamy smile, she'd roped Greg and Rory and me into running flyers and going door to door for Duncan, who had an office downtown. Ellen was drifting toward a sociology major. I'd settled on history, with no particular emphasis yet. We'd also met on campus. I'd been trying to pursue something with her since the semester started, but she'd casually brushed me off without actually saying “no.” Then we'd met Turret.

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