Crystal Meth Cowboys

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Authors: John Knoerle

CRYSTAL METH COWBOYS

by

John Knoerle

Copyright © 2003 by John R. Knoerle.

All rights reserved.

Cover designed by John Nguyen.

Printed in the United States of America.

Published by Blue Steel Press.

Chicago, IL

[email protected]

johnknoerle.com

ISBN 978-0-9820903-2-9

This is a work of fiction.

Other books by John Knoerle

The Violin Player

The American Spy Trilogy:

Book One, A Pure Double Cross

Book Two, A Despicable Profession

Book Three, The Proxy Assassin

The author would like to express his gratitude to Deputy
Mark A. Ward
for his generous help in the writing of this book.

Contents

Chapter 1

Chapter 2

Chapter 3

Chapter 4

Chapter 5

Chapter 6

Chapter 8

Chapter 9

Chapter 10

Chapter 11

Chapter 12

Chapter 13

Chapter 14

Chapter 15

Chapter 16

Chapter 17

Chapter 18

Chapter 19

Chapter 20

Chapter 21

Chapter 22

Epilogue

Chapter 1

"This has got to be the only housing development in America where the color scheme is based entirely on human waste," said Bell.

"12 Frank - Control."

Wes Lyedecker squinted to hear the dispatcher on the police band while the car radio played Junior Walker and the All Stars, the wind whipped white dust across the windshield as Bell hiked his voice into a hillbilly twang. "You got yer piss yella." Wes dutifully turned to observe the bright mustard tract house in the stark new housing development. He thought he'd heard '12 Frank'. His mind raced as he tried to remember their designation. One was their unit number, two was their beat, Frank stood for felony.

Bell wheeled past a stucco house painted a ripe avocado. "This here's yer snot green."

"12 Frank - Control."

Bell's small head periscoped back and forth atop his seventy-six inch frame, scanning the geometric jigsaw of one-story homes. Wes turned to look at him. "I think the dispatcher is trying to call us, sir."

Bell continued to cruise down the hall of mirrors, passing the same tract house, in different colors, on both sides of the street. They rounded a corner. The view was just the same. Bell rolled to a stop in front of a house with a just-seeded lawn and a tarp-covered speedboat in the driveway. The house shone a bright burnt umber.

"Sir, I think I heard our unit number."

Bell turned to Wes with a smile. With his watery blue eyes and mottled pink Scotch-Irish skin, he looked like a graying oversized elf. "Aaaand yer shit brown."

Bell's smile vanished as he X-rayed his rookie with a look. "Don't
ever
step on your partner's punch lines. That's the first rule of police work."

Wes, unable to gauge the ratio of jest to threat in this remark, managed only an "Oh."

Bell plucked the mike off the police band with long, thick untapered fingers. He keyed on. "Control - 12 Frank."

"12 Frank, barking dog. 3100 block of D-David."

"Control, this is 12
Frank
."

"Sorry, 12. We're fresh out of felonies right now."

Bell keyed his mike - the squelch of static was his sullen acknowledgement to the dispatcher - and hung a U-turn.

Lyedecker peered out at the parade of stucco houses. They were good size, set back from the street, most had well-tended lawns and flower beds. But Wes thought they looked temporary somehow.

The LTD Crown Victoria turned right on Playa Road, a commercial artery that formed the southern border of Wislow. They passed a Burger King and a Circle J Mini-Mart advertising gas for $1.12 a gallon. "You must be pretty shit hot to get accepted from an Academy that's out of state."

Wes suppressed a prideful grin. "I guess my degree helped a bit."

Bell waggled his eyebrows lasciviously. "You're a college boy."

Wes nodded. "I majored in police science."

"Oh my stars and garters," said Bell, taking his foot off the accelerator and fixing his watery stare on Lyedecker for a full five seconds. They were still moving forward and Wes wanted to watch the road, but he didn't turn away from Bell's stare. Just before they reached the
intersection, Bell turned back to the road, braked and said, "I am sincerely fucked."

-----

The squad car nosed past the cottonwood trees that lined D Street. The wind whipsawed their branches, flashing the shiny undersides of their leaves. Bell and Lyedecker pulled to the curb in the 3100 block. This neighborhood was older, modest wood frame houses with detached one-car garages. Both officers cranked down their windows and listened to the sounds of late afternoon.

"I don't hear any dogs barking," said Bell. "You?"

Wes listened intently but heard only the eager rattle of the wind and Martha and the Vandellas. "No. I guess not."

Bell flung a long arm out into the wind, his palm splayed outward. "This heah's whut you call a sundowner," he said in a deep Georgia drawl. "It comes away offa the desert 'bout five o'clock and makes the locals vera twitchy, v
era
twitchy." A brown leaf scuttled across the hood of the car. The wind pinned it under the arm of the windshield wiper where it struggled to break free. Wes blinked dust from his eyes. "The river acts like a carbuerator in this situation, sucking hot air through the mountains. It's called the…something effect, I forget. Anytime you squeeze air through a narrow aperture it accelerates." Bell let the warm dry air bathe his palm. "Venturi. It's called the Venturi effect." He grabbed a white card from the metal clipboard mounted on the dash and held it out for Lyedecker. "Your first MS card. Kind of a special moment."

Wes took the Miscellaneous Service card and studied it. In the line marked 'Complaint', he carefully printed 'barking dog' in the boxy style drilled into him at the Academy, recalling how it made him feel like a first grader
to endlessly draw square letters inside the plastic stencil. He recorded the location, the beat number, the sector number, his name and ID number. When he reached the line marked 'Disposition' he turned to Bell. "What was our response?"

Bell pondered a moment, then cranked his cheeks into an idiotic grin. "I'd say it was jackshit!"

Wes printed in big block letters.

"Hey," said Bell, snaking out a rawboned arm. He read the card and chortled. "Very funny. The Emperor will be
tres
amused."

Wes, his cuff case digging into his lumbar, shifted his gunbelt with a creak of leather. He wanted to write another MS card now, fill it in properly in neat block letters. But he didn't guess he could.

"Say 'Park my car in the Harvard yard.'"

"Pahk my cah in the Hahvard yahd."

Bell thrust his tongue under his upper lip. His gray-brown mustache bulged as he ran his tongue up and back. "Boston, thought so."

"Braintree actually," said Wes.

"How in the hell'd you pick Wislow?"

"Well, it's California, it's near the beach, it's about as far away from home as I could get…"

"And you didn't want to get your ass shot off in some urban hellhole."

Wes shook his head. "I just wanted to start small. Someplace where I could make a difference."

Bell shifted in his seat and looked across the street. A young girl with impossibly skinny legs chased her little brother around the lawn of a small white house. The little boy took refuge under the sparse dome of a dwarf lemon.

Bell clicked on the oldies station in time to catch the closing bars of
Under the Boardwalk
. He chuckled to himself, shaking his shaggy locks. "Braintree."

They motored back toward Playa Road. White alders and live oaks towered from back yards. Cottonwoods flanked the sidewalks. Wes thought there was something spiky about the trees here. Bell rolled through a stop sign and turned right. An olive tree shaded the corner. Wes examined it as they passed. The leaves looked thick and greasy.

"So these cops at a Southern California beach community…"

"Which one?" demanded Wes. He had decided Bell's odd behaviour must be some kind of hazing ritual and he wanted to show he could stand up to it.

"I can't tell you."

"Why not?"

"Because you're low scrotum on the totem!" said Bell, turning west on Playa Road. "So these cops are assigned day shift after working graves. They go out the night before their new shift for a little choir practice. What the fuck else you gonna do? You can't sleep. So they go to the beach, get
seriously
shitfaced, one thing leads to another and about zero dark thirty they decide to take target practice on the lifeguard station." Bell took his hands off the wheel and held them up. "I'm not sayin' it was a good idea!" Bell flashed an apologetic grin as he returned his hands to the wheel at the ten and two positions. "But they pumped about sixty rounds into that lifeguard station."

Bell slowed for a signal at J street. A pigeon sat nestled in the red light cylinder. Bell stopped a full car length behind the '72 Chevy Caprice in front. "Never pull up close. Always leave yourself room to swing around." Bell resumed his story. "So they show up at briefing the next morning, screwed, blued and tatooed, and the duty officer says there was an 11-44 on the beach last night. Dead Hispanic Male." Bell scoped left and right and ran the red light.

"Wellll now. Everybody looked at everybody else, several o'ccers soiled themselves, and they were about to
confess to involuntary manslaughter when one of the cops runs in waving a teletype back and forth like a checkered flag and says…". Bell leaned over and whispered hoarsely, "'It's OK, it's OK. He was
stabbed
!'"

The SWACK of of Bell's huge hand on the dashboard caused Wes to leap forward, locking his shoulder belt and bouncing him back onto the seat. The LTD Crown Victoria passed a paint store, a massive Municipal Pool building and Miss Muffet's Cafe. A sign in the window read 'Air Cooled'. "That's a safe house there," said Bell.

Wes nodded like he knew what safe house meant. They rolled on toward the ocean, past the city government complex, two stories of sand-colored, windowless stucco that housed the police department. The roof was fringed with red tile in a low-budget attempt at Spanish Colonial.

Bell decelerated, peering ahead. "It's amazing, isn't it?"

Wes followed Bell's look but saw nothing of note. "What is?"

"You pave some streets in the middle of bumfuck nowhere, throw up a couple of strip malls, and
he
appears."

Wes again scanned the street. "Who?"

Bell slowed to a crawl and pointed a long white index finger. "Esteban No Middle Name Rodriguez."

Lyedecker looked up the block a good fifty yards and saw two Hispanic males standing on the sidewalk. "I don't know who the one with the hair is…" Bell referred to a Latino with a mop of black hair so thick it looked like a fright wig. "But the other one's Estebang."

The unit crept closer. The two men made a great show of ignoring them.

"He beat the livin' dogsnot out of his mother," said Bell. "But che was maddoggin' heem, mang. Che was gibing heem the evil eye, the
ojo malo
! And of course Mama would
never
testify against her little nino. So we ran him out of town."

"How'd you do that? Threaten him?"

"No," said Bell. "We didn't
threaten
him. We threw him in the back of a squad car, drove down to the Greyhound, handcuffed him to a bus seat and gave the driver the cuff key and a one-way ticket to Tijuana." Bell eased the squad car to the curb. "It's taken him six months to weasel his way back."

Close-up, standing outside the car window that Bell told Wes to lower, Esteban Rodriguez vibrated with kinetic energy, black eyebrows flaring, cheek muscles clenching. He wore dirty chinos and an open yellow shirt. The T-shirt underneath stopped halfway down his narrow belly. His scalp was buzz cut except for a fringe of hair that fell forward on his brow. When he bent down to the car window, Wes sensed he had to struggle to keep from springing erect. Rodriguez looked past Lyedecker to Bell. "Officer, officer, officer, officer," he said.

"Back in town, I see," said Bell, leaning over for some serious eye contact.

Esteban stepped back, glanced left, glanced right, and shrugged. "Looks like it, mang."

The guy with the hair squelched a laugh. Esteban bugged his eyes out and grinned. Though he kept his torso still, Wes noted that his feet were pivoting.

Bell cocked his hand like a gun and pointed the barrel at Rodriguez. "Watch yourself," he said and punched the accelerator. The LTD gurgled, then lurched forward, bouncing their heads off the head rests. Rodriguez and his buddy fell about themselves laughing. "Fucking Ford," said Bell.

They cut a fat hog down Playa Road. The roadside development thinned, giving way to five acre plots of strawberries on both sides of the road. A sheen of orange mist announced the approach of the Pacific Ocean.

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