L.A. CONFIDENTIAL by James Ellroy

Jack laughed. “Am I your goddamned hero?”

“Yes, and I’m twenty-two years old and not the schoolgirlcrush type.”

“Good, because I’d like to take you to dinner sometime.” Karen swung around. Her mascara was ruined; she’d chewed off most of her lipstick. “Yes. Mother and Father will have coronaries, but yes.”

Jack said, “This is the first stupid move I’ve made in years.”

CHAPTER SEVEN

A month of shit.

Bud ripped January 1952 off his calendar, counted felony arrests. January 1 through January 11: zero-he’d worked crowd control at a movie location–Parker wanted a muscle guy there to shoo away autograph hounds. January 14: the cop beaters acquitted on assault charges, Helenowski and Brownell chewed up-the spics’ lawyer made it look like they instigated the whole thing. Civil suits threatened; “get a lawyer?” scribbled by the date.

January 16, 19, 22: wife thumpers paroled, welcome home visits. January 23–25: stakeouts on a burglary ring, him and Stens acting on a tip from Johnny Stomp, who just seemed to know things, per a rumor: he used to run a blackmail racket. Gangland activity at a weird lull, Stomp scuffling to stay solvent, Mo Jahelka–looking after Mickey C.’s interests–probably afraid to push too much muscle. Seven arrests total, good for his quota, but the papers were working the station brouhaha, dubbing it “Bloody Christmas,” and a rumor hit: the D.A.’S Office had contacted Parker, TAD was going to question the men partying on Christmas Eve, the county grand jury was drooling for a presentation. More notes: “talk to Dick,” “_lawyer???_,” “_lawyer when??_”

The last week of the month–comic relief. Dick off duty, drying out at a health ranch in Twenty-nine Palms; the squad boss thought he was attending his father’s funeral in Nebraska– the guys took up a collection to send flowers to a mortuary that didn’t exist. Two felony notches on the 29th: parole violators he’d glommed off another Stomp snitch–but he’d had to beat the shit out of them, kidnap them, haul them from county turf to city so the Sheriff’s couldn’t claim the roust. The 3 1st: a dance with Chick Nadel, a barkeep who ran hot appliances out of the Moonglow Lounge. An impromptu raid; Chick with a stash of hot radios; a snitch on the guys who boosted the truck, holed up in San Diego, no way to make it an LAPD caper. He busted Chick instead: receiving stolen goods with a prior, ten felony arrests for the month–at least a double-digit tally.

Pure shit–straight into February.

Back to uniform, six days of directing traffic–Parker’s idea, Detective Division personnel rotating to Patrol for a week a year. Alphabetically: as a “W” he stood at the rear of the pack. The late bird loses the worm–it rained all six of those days.

Floods on the job, a drought with the women.

Bud thumbed his address book. Lorene from the Silver Star, Jane from the Zimba Room, Nancy from the Orbit Lounge– late-breaking numbers. They had the look: late thirties, hungry– grateful for a younger guy who treated them nice and gave them a taste all men weren’t shitheels. Lorene was heavyset–the mattress springs always banged the floor. Jane played opera records to set the mood–they sounded like cats fucking. Nancy was a lush, par for bar-prowl course. The jaded type–the type to break things off even quicker than he usually did.

“White, check this.”

Bud looked up. Elmer Lentz held out the _Herald_ front page.

The headline: “Police Beating Victims to File Suit.”

Subheadings: “Grand Jury Ready to Hear Evidence,” “Parker Vows Full LAPD Cooperation.”

Lentz said, “This could be trouble.”

Bud said, “No shit, Sherlock.”

CHAPTER EIGHT

Preston Exley finished reading. “Edmund, all three versions are brilliant, but you should have gone to Parker immediately. Now, with all the publicity, your coming forth smacks of panic. Are you prepared to be an informant?”

Ed squared his glasses. “Yes.”

“Are you prepared to be despised within the Department?”

“Yes, and I’m prepared for whatever displays of gratitude Parker has to offer.”

Preston skimmed pages. “Interesting. Shifting most of the guilt to men with their pensions already secured is salutory, and this Officer White sounds a bit fearsome.”

Ed got chills. “He is. Internal Affairs is interviewing me tomorrow, and I don’t relish telling them about his stunt with the Mexican.”

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