Police and Thieves: A Novel

Read Police and Thieves: A Novel Online

Authors: Peter Plate

Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #Hard-Boiled, #Literary, #Urban

Copyright © 1999 by Peter Plate

A Seven Stories Press First Edition

All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form, by any means, including mechanical, electric, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without the prior written permission of the publisher.

Seven Stories Press
140 Watts Street, New York, NY 10013
http://www.sevenstories.com

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

Plate, Peter.
Police and thieves: a novel / Peter Plate.
—A Seven Stories Press 1st ed.
p.   cm.
eISBN: 978-1-60980-287-5
I. Title.
PS3566.L267P65 1999    813′.54—dc21
98-55232

v3.1

open the prison doors
         
and let the dragons fly

Contents
1

Valencia Street was known in the north Mission by the name the cops had given it, the devil’s quadrant. It was the center of the neighborhood, lined with second-hand bookshops, bodegas, Thai take-out restaurants, panhandlers, and check-cashing stores.

A lone Guatemalteco evangelist in a wash-n-wear suit was handing out prayer leaflets to the school kids at the Muni bus stop. Standing next to him were two dope dealers. I saw them as if I were a policeman staring through a pair of binoculars, maybe from the roof of the Wells Fargo Bank up the street. From somewhere far away where it was safe to gaze at petty criminals like them.

The taller dealer had a nervous tic in his mouth that he was trying to disguise by constantly smiling. His unlaced secondhand oxford shoes didn’t fit him; ten dollars’ worth of marijuana was burning a hole in his pocket. The other dealer, standing in his shadow and furtively looking the other way while pretending to stay calm, that was me.

The summer heat caused my blood to percolate, making me lightheaded. The tension on Eichmann’s face was contagious and sparked for me, as anxiety often does in friends, a family story that had nothing to do with him.

On a torrid afternoon months before I was born, my stepfather was released from prison and went over to his parents’ house to have a talk with his dad. After hours of argument with the old man and the loan of two hundred dollars, he was last seen heading
toward the tavern in Brisbane, a popular watering hole with the local bikers. He didn’t know that my mother was at the bar waiting for him. She didn’t know it either. She was six months pregnant with another man’s child, a guy she hadn’t seen in nine weeks. She was eighteen, an only daughter, and had kept the two trimesters of her pregnancy a secret from her parents and her friends. But she was at the juncture where she needed a husband or she was going to give birth to a kid out of wedlock. In Daly City, California, that was a no-no.

My stepfather, a loose-limbed dark-skinned man, walked into the roadhouse brimming with good cheer. After doing hard time in the correctional facility at Soledad, a cold beer was the next best thing to being in heaven. He stepped up to the bar and ordered a Budweiser. The place was almost empty; it wasn’t even five o’clock. The only woman in the juke joint was a shapely motor-mouthed blonde who started talking to him the second he sat down on a barstool. He hadn’t eaten a thing that day, but it didn’t matter; he could fill up on beer.

From the start, they had differences that couldn’t be mended. She was Jewish and he wasn’t. He was on parole and found it impossible to get a decent-paying job with his record. He started drinking at a whirlwind clip and a month later he married her in a civil ceremony attended by half of her family. The bride wore a black velvet maternity suit with a Peter Pan collar. His folks didn’t attend the proceedings. Ten weeks after that, I came into the world. The nurse who delivered me cleaned the blood and the placenta from my cheeks and said, “What a cute, sweet baby. See? He’s not even crying. I bet he looks just like his daddy.”

My mom didn’t have anything to say about that. Her newly wedded husband was getting plastered at a bar. The nurse handed me to her, and as I lay in her arms, pawing her honey-colored tits to get some milk, I knew she wasn’t feeling too positive
about the situation she was in. She looked down at me with a deep abiding pain in her self-protective brown eyes, replying, “He doesn’t look like his father at all.” I wore the mark of a bastard on my pure forehead, the signature of a Jewish prince from hell.

And Eichmann? He was wincing in the harsh sun and fingering the bag of indica in his pocket. His customer was an hour late, a common and distasteful occurrence in our line of work. He grimaced at me, fretting, “You know what, Doojie? Fuck it. I don’t think he’s coming. Let’s go home.”

2

I came from my grandma’s apartment in Daly City, three miles south of San Francisco along the coastline. We lived in a crumbling stucco subdivision where the rooftops were crowded with satellite dishes that didn’t work. I’d been with my grandpa and grandma ever since my mom left me with them. They were Old World Jews who argued in Russian about the merits of Isaac Bashevis Singer’s novels.

My grandfather had an obsession with the writer Delmore Schwartz. Whenever he was losing an argument with his wife, he’d scream at her, “See what the goyim did to Delmore? See?”

Zaydeh
used to take me to his room, sit me down on his army cot, and tell me things he never said to anyone else. When I was seven or eight, he gave me an order in his clipped, gravelly voice. “When you grow up, read Mayakovsky.” By saying the name of the Russian poet, he was anointing me, giving me the family jewels, my fortune. I was supposed to take that name and use it like a dowsing rod to find something important in life.

My grandparents had nothing, absolutely nothing, just a bare bones Social Security retirement plan, and so when I got out of high school, I did them a favor. With ten dollars in my hand and a sleeping bag rolled up on my back, I said farewell to them and took a bus into the city.

I met Eichmann twelve months later at the St. John Coltrane storefront self-help center down the hill from Haight Street, a soup kitchen where you could get a free vegetarian meal of stewed cabbage and corn bread.

While you ate the hot macrobiotic food, Coltrane’s music was played for your spiritual benefit over a superb sound system. I forked runny cabbage leaves into my mouth as Coltrane riffed notes higher and higher until the boiled vegetable tasted like a magical potion sliding into my stomach. Since I didn’t have any money, Eichmann felt a pang of sympathy for my plight, and he took me back to the carport.

Bobo had joined forces with Eichmann some months before that. Quiet and modest to the point of self-effacing, he was a short, raw-boned, dark-complected Mexican with the heavily defined muscle tone of a prison inmate, something he’d never been. You could easily picture him lifting weights in the exercise yard, with nothing but dead time on his hands. “I just look that way,” he told me. Bobo didn’t talk much about himself, only saying his family was from the East Bay, from the factory outskirts of Vallejo, a place he didn’t recommend to anyone.

I never expected any miracles, and I never had any hopes of getting rich while I was doing business with Eichmann.

Six feet tall with the lapsed muscle tone and brittle self-confidence of a former amateur athlete, Eichmann had been going bald since he was fourteen and now that he was on the verge of his twenty-second birthday, it was high time he thought about doing something with his hair because it was dying on his head. Being older than me by two years, he was the big brother I’d never had and always wanted.

He was sitting on our thrift-store couch, saying to Bobo and me, “Let me ask you guys something. Are we making any money selling our product?”

The evidence was all around us.

Precisely stated, we were dwelling in a two-car garage behind the Del Rosa Laundromat on Mission Street. Eichmann homesteaded
the carport a year ago when he was evicted from the homeless shelter at St. Martin de Porres for overstaying the twenty-nine-day limit. This was before his aunt threw him out of her Section Eight duplex on Mariposa Street. She said there wasn’t enough room for both of them and that he should get a home of his own. But even if you had some cash, something Eichmann never had, it wasn’t guaranteed you could find a spot to rent in the Mission. Housing was scarce as hen’s teeth. When he found the deserted, ramshackle carport, he knew he was onto something good. If you came across a building that was abandoned in the Mission, and if it had a roof over it, and if no one was watching the premises, you had to take it.

The garage was a boon to us. So many people were homeless, I was glad to have four walls around me, even without the amenities of heat or running water. Eichmann had broken into the carport by shearing the rusting lock on the door with a pair of bolt cutters. The three of us were trespassers. The landlord knew what we were doing, but instead of calling the police, he kept asking us to pay a bit of rent. It became a game we played with him. To get the money, we sold microscopic amounts of marijuana in the street for exorbitant prices.

Our supply came from two brothers who lived on Potrero Street. Their prices were decent, no more inflated than anybody else’s—wholesale was forty-five dollars for an eighth of an ounce. The quality of their product was questionable, though; it was awfully green Mexican sinsemilla, sometimes good, often not.

So far, we hadn’t been able to pay the rent.

The problem was we didn’t have a telephone. This made our operations sporadic, inconsistent, largely ornamental. Whenever we wanted to communicate with our customers, we used the pay phone next to Chita’s Beauty Parlor on Eighteenth Street. And if we were ever to get busted, Eichmann was the one who’d get the
stiffest sentence when we were carted off to jail. Naturally, he never got tired of reminding Bobo and me about it.

But a few weeks ago, our status changed. The fear got stronger. It all began the day Louis came to pay us a visit. At first, I thought the knock on the door was the landlord, a diminutive immigrant from the Philippines who permed his hair and didn’t care if he was lending us an uninhabitable lodging—little did he know, he was never going to get any money for it. Bobo said to me, “Don’t be so jittery. It’s only Louis. He said he was coming by.”

Just like the landlord, Louis had a single-track mind. But what he wanted from us was indica. Eichmann got the door open enough for our guest to bend over and enter the garage. When Louis staggered in, the door was slammed shut behind him, raising knee-high dust whirlwinds from the scuffed concrete floor. The portly black man smiled and crip-walked over to where we were sitting. He sat himself down on the edge of our couch and reached in his shirt pocket for a Salem cigarette.

Louis had been buying dope from us for months. As long as I could remember, I’d been selling weed to him. He was from the west side of Los Angeles, where he’d gotten injured working as a nurse in a VA hospital. Nowadays he was semiretired, existing comfortably on a variety of hard-earned federal employee benefits. Every time he came by, my spirits were lifted by his presence. Why, I didn’t know. I just liked him. Not one to piddle with his time, he said, “I got some friends coming over and I want to entertain them with the good stuff, you know what I’m saying?”

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