CLANDESTINE by James Ellroy

Lorna gave herself a shove and almost toppled over. I moved to steady her and she swatted at me clumsily with her cane. “No, goddamn you,” she hissed. “I won’t be charmed one more time. I won’t let you beat up my friends, and I won’t take you back.”

She hobbled into the parking lot. I stayed behind, wondering if she would believe me, or think me insane, or even care. I let her get all the way to her car. I watched as she fished her keys out of her purse, then ran up and grabbed them out of her hand as she began to unlock the door. She started to resist, then stopped. She smiled patiently and put her weight on her cane. “You never listened, Freddy,” she said.

“I listened more than you know.” I countered.

“No, you didn’t. You just heard what you wanted to hear. And you convinced me you were listening. You were a good actor.”

I couldn’t think of a retort, or a dig, or a plea, so I just said– moving a few steps backward to give myself objectivity–“It’s on again. I’ve connected Eddie Engels to a woman who was murdered recently. I’m going to see it through, wherever it takes me. Maybe when it’s all over we can be together.”

Lorna was perfectly still. “You are insane,” she said.

“It’s been hanging over us like a plague, Lor. Maybe we can have some peace when it’s over.”

“You are insane.”

“Lorna–”

“No. We can never be together again; and not because of what happened four years ago. We can never be together because of what you are. No, don’t touch me and don’t try to charm me or sweet-talk me. I’m getting in my car and if you try to stop me I will make you regret we ever met.”

I handed Lorna the keys to her car. Her hand shook as she took them from me. She fumbled her way into the car and drove away, spewing exhaust fumes on my trouser legs.

“Nothing’s ever over, Lorna,” I said to the air. But I didn’t know if I believed it.

We drove east on the San Bernardino Freeway with the top down, away from the stifling, sun-blinded L.A. streets, past successions of interconnected working-class communities spread through terrain ranging from desert sand flats to piny woods. I was at the wheel, Michael was beside me on the front seat, and Doc was sprawled in the back, his long legs propped up on the passengerside doorjamb, where Michael wrapped a protective arm around his ankles and beat time to the big-band boogie-woogie coming from the radio.

The air that whizzed past us got hotter and thinner as we climbed the winding roads of a fir-covered forest. Lake Arrowhead was nominally our destination, but none of us seemed to care if we ever got there; we were lost in games of silence–Doc and I each knowing that the other knew, but knew what? And unwilling, as yet, to push it any further. And Michael, craning his long neck above the windshield, getting full blasts of summer air, gulping it in as fuel for what I knew had to be a brilliant imagination.

Lake Arrowhead came upon us abruptly at the end of a scrublittered access road. It was shimmering light blue, miragelike in the heat and dotted with rowboats and swimmers. I stopped the car at the side of the road and turned to face my companions.

“Well,” I said, “here or beyond?”

“Beyond!” they both exclaimed in unison, and I accelerated, skirting the blue oasis and driving a circuitous path through small mountain ranges piled up one on top of the other.

But soon my mind clicked in. We were miles from Los Angeles and I had work to do. I started getting itchy, looking around for a quiet, shady place for us to stop and eat the picnic lunch I had made. Almost as if in answer to my anxiety, it shot up in the near distance: “Jumbo’s Animal Park and Rest Area.” It looked like a set from a western movie: a single street of battered one-story frame buildings, and behind that a small wooded area crowded with picnic tables. A weatherbeaten sign at the entrance exclaimed: “Christmas in the Summertime! See Santa’s Reindeer at Jumbo’s.”

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