Inherent Vice (10 page)

Read Inherent Vice Online

Authors: Thomas Pynchon

Tags: #Fiction, #General, #Political, #Satire


This is fun,

he remarked once after
about a week on the job, as he
and Fritz Drybeam were parked up in Reseda someplace on what was proving to be an all-night stakeout.

Fritz, in the business twenty years and seen it all, nodded.

Yep and wait till you start with the Inconvenience Premiums.

This being Milton the bookkeeper

s term. Fritz, as graphically as pos
sible, went on to describe some of the forms of motivation that clients, typically those who loaned at high interest, often asked the agency to provide.


I

m
supposed to kick somebody

s ass? How believable is that?


You

ll be authorized to carry a weapon.


I never fired a gun in my life.


Well.
..

Reaching under the seat.


What—kind of a weapon

is that?


It

s a hypodermic outfit.


I knew that, but what am I supposed to load it with?


Truth serum. Same kind the CIA uses. Just stab
’em
anyplace that

s
easy to reach, and before you know it they

re jabbering like speed freaks,
won

t stop, telling you all about assets they never even knew they had.

Larry decided to stash the outfit in a sinister-looking red faux-crocodile
shaving kit he

d found at a yard sale up in Studio City. It wasn

t long before he noticed how many of the delinquents he and Fritz visited seemed unable to keep their eyes off of it. He understood that if he was
lucky, he might not have to so much as unzip it. It never quite became a
tool of his trade, but did develop into a useful prop, in time earning him the nickname

Doc.

Today Doc found Fritz banging around under the hood of a Dodge Super Bee preparing to go out on a collection run.

Hey there Doc, you look like shit.


Wish I could say the same for you, bright eyes. Keepin all
’em
carbu
retors straight?


Wholesome thoughts and don

t smoke nothing
’s
been grown in a combat zone, that

s my secret and it could even work for you, that

s if you had any self-control.


Uh-huh, well my good luck today that your brain
’s
all dialed in, because I need to find somebody in a hurry—my ex-ol

lady Shasta Fay.


I think you mean Mickey Wolfmann

s girlfriend. This is Dr. Real
ity

s office calling, you

re way overdue for your checkup?


Fritz, Fritz, how have I offended you?


Every cop in the LAPD and the Sheriff

s is out looking for both of them. Who do you think will find them first?


Judging by the Manson case, I say any random idiot off the street.


Well come on in and check this out,

motioning Doc into the office. Milton the bookkeeper, wearing a flowered Nehru jacket, several strings
of cowrie shells around his neck, and vivid yellow shooting glasses,
glanced up with a wide smile out of a haze of patchouli scent and waved
slowly as they headed for the back room.


He looks happy.


Business has been picking up, and it

s all because of—

He flung open a door.

Tell me how many random idiots you know got anythin like this.


Wow, Fritz.

It was like being inside a science-fictional Christmas
tree. Little red and green lights were going on and off everywhere. There
were computer cabinets, consoles with lit-up video screens, and alphanu
meric keyboards, and cables running all over the floor among unswept
drifts of little bug-size rectangles punched out of IBM cards, and a couple
of Gestetner copy machines in the corner, and towering over the scene all along the walls a number of Ampex tape reels busily twitching back and forth.


ARPAnet,

Fritz announced.


Ah, no I

d better not, I

ve got to drive and stuff, maybe just give me one for later—


It

s a network of computers, Doc, all connected together by phone lines. UCLA, Isla Vista, Stanford. Say there

s a file they have up there and you don

t, they

ll send it right along at fifty thousand characters per second.


Wait, ARPA, that

s the same outfit has their own sign up on the freeway at the Rosecrans exit?


Some connection with TRW, nobody over there is too forthcoming,
like Ramo isn

t telling Woolridge?


But.
..
you

re saying somebody hooked up to this thing might know
where Shasta is?


Can

t know till we look. All over the country, in fact the world, there

s new computers gettin plugged in every day. Right now it

s still experimental, but hell, it

s government money, and those fuckers don

t
care what they spend, and we

ve had some useful surprises already.


Does it know where I can score?

 

 

 

 

FIVE

SHASTA HAD MENTIONED A POSSIBLE LAUGHING-ACADEMY ANGLE
to Mickey Wolfmann
’s
matrimonial drama, and Doc thought it might
be interesting to see how society-page superstar Mrs. Sloane Wolfmann
would react when somebody brought up this topic. If Mickey was currently being held against his will in some private nuthouse, then
Docs immediate chore would be to try and find out which one. He
called the number Shasta had given him, and the little woman herself
picked up.

a
I know
it’s
awkward to be talking business right now, Mrs. Wolf
mann, but unfortunately time is a factor here.


This wouldn

t be another creditor inquiry, would it, there
’ve
been an
astonishing number already. I

m referring them to our attorney, do you
have his number?

Some kind of English smokers voice, it seemed to
Doc, at the low end of the register and unspecifiably decadent.


Actually,
it’s
our firm who owe your husband some money. As were
talking in the mid—six figures, we felt we should bring it to your atten
tion.

He waited half a subvocalized bar of

The Great Pretender.


Mrs.
Wolfmann?


I may have a few minutes free around noon,

she said.

Whom did
you say you represented?


Modern Institute for Cognitive Repatterning and Overhaul,

Doc said.

MICRO for short,
we’re
a private clinic out near Hacienda
Heights, specializing in the repair of stressed personalities.


Ordinarily I review all of Michael

s larger disbursements, and I must
confess, Mr.—is it Sportello?—that I am unfamiliar with any dealings he may have had with you.
’’

Doc
’s
nose had begun to run, a sure sign that he was onto something here.

Perhaps, given the sum in question, it might be easier after all to work through your attorney.
...

It took her a tenth of a second to calculate how much of a shark-bite out of the surfboard that might involve.

Not at all, Mr. Sportello. Perhaps it
’s
only your voice. .. but you may consider me officially intrigued.

In a former en suite broom closet at the office, Doc had assembled
a collection of disguises. He decided today on a double-breasted velour suit from Zeidler
&
Zeidler, and found a short-hair wig that almost matched the suit. He considered a glue-on mustache but figured simpler would be better—switched his sandals for standard-issue loafers and put
on a tie narrower and less colorful than cur
rently fashionable, hoping Mrs.
Wolfmann would read this as pathetically unhip. Looking in the
mirror, he almost recognized himself. Groovy. He considered lighting a
joint but resisted the impulse.

At the print shop down the street, his friend Jake, used to rush orders,
ran him off a couple-three busine
ss cards with the legend MICRO—
Reconfiguring Southland Brains since
1966.
Larry Sportello,
Licensed Associate
,
which was true enough, long as you meant a Cali
fornia driver
’s
license.

On the Coast Highway about halfway to the Wolfmann residence, the Bonzo Dog Band cover of

Bang Bang

came on from KRLA in Pasadena, and Doc cranked up the Vibrasonic. As he moved up into
the hills, the reception began to fade, so he drove slower, but eventually
lost the signal. Before long he found himself on a sunny street somewhere in the Santa Monica Mountains
, parked near a house with high
stucco walls, over which flowers of some exotic creeper poured in a flame-colored cascade. Doc thought he spotted somebody looking down
at him from one of the openings of a Mission-style loggia running the length of the top floor. Heat of some kind, a sniper no doubt, though federal or local, who knew?

A presentable young Chicana in jeans and an old SC sweatshirt answered the door and checked him out with dramatically made-up eyes.

She

s hanging by the pool with all the police and them. Come on upstairs.

It was a reverse floor plan, with bedrooms on the entrance level and then upstairs the kitchen, maybe more than one, and various entertainment areas. The house should have been full of law enforcement. Instead the boys from Protect and Serve had set up a command post at the pool cabana, somewhere out in back. Like getting in some last-minute free catering before their federal overlords showed up. Sounds of distant splashing, rock

n

roll radio, eating between meals. Some kidnapping.

As if auditioning for widowhood, Sloane Wolfmann strolled in from poolside wearing black spike-heeled sandals, a headband with a sheer black veil, and a black bikini of negligible size made of the same material as the veil. She wasn

t exactly an English rose, maybe more like an
English daffodil, very pale, blond, reedy, probably bruised easily, overdid
her eye makeup like everybody else. Miniskirts were invented for young
women like her.

In the time it took her to lead him through a dim sunken interior full of taupe carpeting, suede upholstery, and teak, which seemed to extend indefinitely in the direction of Pasadena, Doc learned that she
had a degree from the London School of Economics, had recently begun
studying tantric yoga, and had met Mickey Wolfmann originally in Las Vegas. She waved at a picture on the wall, which looked like a blowup of an eight-by-ten glossy from the lobby area of some nightclub.

Why, goodness,

said Doc,

it

s you, isn

t it?

Sloane made with the half-frown, half-smirk Doc had noticed among
minor- and ex-showbiz people trying to be modest.

My lurid youth. I
was one of those notorious Vegas showgirls, working at one of the casinos.
Up onstage in those days, with the lights, the eyelashes, all the makeup,
we did look fairly much alike, but Michael, something of a connoisseur in these matters as I was later to learn, said that he picked me out the minute I walked on, and after that I was really the only one he could
see. Romantic isn

t it,
yes, c
ertainly unexpected—next thing either of us
knew, we were down at the Little Church of the West, and I had this on my finger,

flashing a gigantic marquise-cut diamond up in the double digits someplace with respect to carats.

She had told the story hundreds of times, but that was all right.

Handsome stone,

Doc said.

Like an actress hitting her mark, she had come to a pause beneath a looming portrait of Mickey Wolfmann, shown with a distant stare, as if scanning the L.A. Basin to
it’s
farthest horizons for buildable lots. She
whirled to face Doc and smiled sociably.

Here we are, then.

Doc noticed a sort of fake chiseled stone frieze above the portrait,
which read,
Once you get that first stake driven, nobody can stop
you.

Robert Moses.


A great American, and Michaels inspiration,

said Sloane.

That

s always been his motto.


I thought Dr. Van Helsing said that.

She

d found and stopped exactly inside a flattering convergence of
lights that made her look like some contract star of the grand studio era,
about to let loose with an emotional speech at some less expensive actor.
Doc tried not to glance around too obviously to see where the light was
coming from, but she noticed the flicker off his eyeballs.


Do you like the lighting? Jimmy Wong Howe did it for us years ago.


The D.P. on
Body and Soul
wasn

t he? Not to mention
They Made
Me a Criminal, Dust Be My Destiny, Saturdays Children



Those,

quizzically,

are all... John Garfield movies.


Well.
..
yes?


Jimmy did film other actors.


I

m sure he did ... oh, and
Out of the Fog,
too, where John Garfield is this evil gangster—


Actually, what I find memorable about that picture is the way Jimmy
lit Ida Lupino, which, now I think of it, had a lot to do with selling me on this house. Jimmy was certainly fond enough of specular highlights, all that prize-fighter sweat and chrome and jewelry and sequins and so forth
...
but his work also had such a spiritual quality—you look at Ida Lupino in her closeups—those eyes!—and instead of hard-edged lamp reflections there

s this glow, this purity, almost as if it

s coming from inside—..
..
Excuse me, is that what I think it is?


Darn! It

s that Ida Lupino, every time her name comes up, so does this. Please don

t take it personally.


How curious. I can

t recall ever feeling that way about John Garfield
...
but as I have a meditation appointment at one, we might find time for drinks, if we guzzle them down fast enough, and perhaps you can even tell me what you

re doing here. Luz!

The young lady who

d let him in appeared from the artfully sculpted shadows.

Senora?


The midday
refrescos
now, if you wouldn

t mind, Luz. I do hope, Mr.
Sportello, that margaritas will be satisfactory—though given your film preferences, perhaps some sort of beer and whiskey arrangement would be more appropriate?


Thank you, Mrs. Wolfmann, tequila

s just fine—and what a welcome relief not to be offered any pot

! I

ll never understand what these hippies see in the stuff! Do you mind if I smoke a normal cigarette, by the way?

She nodded graciously, and Doc fished out a pack of Benson & Hedges menthol he

d remembered to bring instead of Kools, given the
expected class level here and so forth, and offered her one, and they both
lit up. Sounds reached them, from a pool whose dimensions he could only imagine, of policemen at play.

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