by
Wayne Kyle Spitzer
Copyright © 2022 Wayne Kyle Spitzer. All Rights Reserved. Published by Hobb’s End Books, a division of ACME Sprockets & Visions. Cover design Copyright © 2022 Wayne Kyle Spitzer. Please direct all inquiries to: HobbsEndBooks@yahoo.com
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Her voice, once so lyrical to me, so melodic, positively grates:
“The scene here again ... I hate to draw the comparison, but it is the same thing that we saw thirty years ago in this same area ... this, this part of the city just destroying itself, burning itself up. The streets themselves are, ah, extremely dangerous. There are cars running—we clocked one at about sixty miles per hour—ah, just running down the street; no lights on, nothing, we see that constantly. We took a break, to brush some of the glass off of us, and, ah, get something to drink. We were next to a shopping center. A car drove into that area and just started firing shots randomly into cars parked in the parking lot. Even now we’re circling what appears to be a holdup—of a gas station at Florence and Normandie—I mean, that’s what it looks like from the air; people running, waving pistols, taking cans, or whatever they can find, and filling them up—presumably to start fires. It is just absolutely out of control here in South Central Los Angeles tonight. I—wait a minute. There’s something developing right here in the middle of the intersection. A truck driver has exited his vehicle—there’s, ah, smoke billowing from inside the cab—and seems almost to be, to be ...”
I look around the viewfinder and squint, seeing nothing—just pools of light from the streetlamps and the glow from various structures on fire. Just the chopper’s busted side window—its edges smeared with blood. “I don’t see anythin—”
But then I do—see him, I mean. Then I see him stumbling back into the light and waving up at us: sweepingly, expansively, a skinny, bearded, shirtless man—it is easily ninety degrees, inexplicable for November—a desert island survivor. “He sees something, someone is coming.” I glance at Peter but find I can hardly look at him, hardly look at either of them. “He’s in trouble—serious trouble—whoever he is. Take us down.”
Peter frowns. “After what happened at the shopping center?” He glances at Sunny, privately, knowingly. “That’s a negative.”
I look at Sunny, who also frowns. “He’s right, Preston. We shouldn’t risk it.” She shakes the hair out of her eyes, lifts her mic. “Are you rolling?”
I peer through the viewfinder at the man—at the desert island survivor who is backing toward his truck, his semi, the cab of which is on fire—and press ‘record.’
“Well? You’ve got the telephoto lens. What’s going on?”
“There’s someone approaching him. Some kind of mob. But I can’t—” I grind the finder and zoom in. “Okay, yuh, they’re gathering beneath the canopy of that Chevron; I can see their shadows.” I look at Peter. “It’s no good, I got nothing. Can you take us lower—say, to about two hundred feet?”
“With all those wires and powerlines, and in all this smoke?” Peter laughs.
“Just do it,” I say—as the studio feed crackles back to life—and continue recording.
Peter harrumphs. “Just do it,” he repeats—and harrumphs again. “Look, flying a helicopter isn’t like running—”
“Sunny, expound on that some, on brushing the glass off, if you would. Is everyone alright? What happened out there?”
“Yes, Sam, I’m here, and we, we were at the corner of Denker and Slauson, just, just flying low near the Slauson Shopping Center, where a crowd had gathered, and, ah, there was a man there—just sitting in the middle of the street—ah, he appeared to be an Asian man. Just sitting there, drenched in blood. There was also a, an African-American man—who appeared to be some kind of minister—who was standing over him, trying to shield him from all the, the projectiles being thrown. And so we landed—we were trying to find a way that we could rescue him; that we could get him out of there—but it got to the point where it was either him or the rest of us, because we were taking rocks and bottles and there was occasionally some gunfire. We had to get ourselves out and in the process of doing that, our side window got smashed. One of the rioters even tried grabbing us through the window. And, ah, you know, I hate to tell you this, but, we felt really guilty about that, about having just ... left him there. And I pray to God that he somehow managed to get himse—”
“Jesus,” I say, just as plain as day, before I stop myself. Before I can deny the evidence of my own eyes, which I attribute to all the smoke and fire and darkness, and to fatigue. Which I attribute to the night before and to still being hungover, and to the Incident, which rides with us still. “No—ah. Never mind. It’s ... it’s just ... all this destruction. It’s nothing.”
But it is something, says a voice (even as I wipe my eyes and peer through the viewfinder). It’s something and you know it; same as when they were dancing together. Look closer.
And I do—look closer, I mean—at the shadows beneath the canopy and how they move so—so precisely; so primly—so haltingly, like cold-blooded animals. At the white of the truckdriver’s eyes and worse, his hurt, wounded expression (as though he can scarcely believe the trick the world has played on him). At the swish-swishing—again—of some kind of appendage; some kind of tentacle (or tail). At his assailants’ wet, shiny backs (it rained all day prior to the announcement of the Seattle verdict and the streets are still slick with it) as they rush forward, darting, bounding, leaping!
“What on earth, I mean, what the—” Sunny is dumbstruck, taciturn. “Are those, I mean, are they using dogs now?”
“Get us out of here,” I say, ceasing to record, and then lie: “Some of them are pointing guns.” But they only look at me, confused. “Go on, get us out of here: split, vamoose, head for the hills. God knows you two know how to do that. There’s nothing we can do.”
And then we are clear, the blades of the chopper going whump-whump-whump, like the blood in my brain. Then we are once again arching out over South Central L.A. like carpetbaggers, like opportunists—which I suppose we are—exchanging sweaty glances, reeling from the awkwardness, listening to the blades which pound faster and faster and faster—like war drums, I fancy, or fevered congas. Like the pulsing rhythms of a crowded nightclub—or more specifically Johnny Depp’s own Viper Room in West Hollywood—at 1:30 a.m.
––––––––
“This is the Los Angeles County Emergency Broadcast System—this is not a test. The Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department is now in full mobilization; all off-duty sheriff’s deputies are directed to contact their unit of assignment as soon as possible, or contact the nearest Los Angeles County Police facility. Due to the escalation of the situation, and seriousness of the problems that are occurring, the sheriff has mobilized all department personnel. The curfew has been extended to include the entire Los Angeles city limits, and to include Los Angeles County boundaries of Vernon Avenue on the north ...”
I look at Sunny, who looks at Peter, who looks at me.
“So what do we do?” he says, covering the mic of his headset.
“We keep at it,” I say, curtly, plainly. “We stay up until it’s resolved—the riot, I mean. We, ah, we just do our jobs.”
“... and the Long Beach Freeway on the east. The California Army National Guard has been deployed to assist the Sheriff’s Department and Los Angeles Police Department in a mutual aid operation to restore law and ...”
“Yeah?”
“Yeah.”
“... protect life and property. This concludes this activation of the Los Angeles County Emergency Broadcast System ...”
He faces forward, leans into the controls. “Well, which job is that? Gazing through that camera endlessly and making smart comments, or keeping us in the air? Because they are not the same.”
I titter a little. And then it happens: “Oh, you know, the job I helped you get after you got canned from KTTV for s****l harassment. The one that saved your whole career. I mean, it’s funny. Because some people might actually be gr—”
“Stop it,” snaps Sunny.
“Might actually be—”
“Okay, okay, let’s go there. Might what? Be grateful that they’re indebted to you?” Peter nods his head, which shines. “Oh, I see. You mean like an indentured servant. Like, some kind of house n****r, is that it?”
I just shake my head. “Oh, no. No, no. I didn’t bring race into it. That’s your bullshit. It’s not anything I would—”
“I said stop it, both of you. This isn’t the place for it. The studio is talking to us.”
I glower at her a moment before reaching out and cranking it up.
“... have been speaking to you over some video shot a while ago by your sister helicopter Sundog 9, which is in the Long Beach area, of the fires you’ve been describing, and they seem to be everywhere. Can you talk a little about that?”
Sunny straightens and fusses with her hair, even though she won’t be on camera. “They are indeed everywhere, Sam. Ah, and we can see a bunch of vehicles, I mean, there’s gutted cars, fire gutted cars, just about everywhere you go. Ah, ah, the fire department, unfortunately, in too many instances, can do nothing. They don’t have police backup to protect them to go in and fight these fires and so they are left just to watch them burn. I should also tell you that as we monitor the police activity, ah, hardly a five-minute span of time goes by without us hearing the call of an officer needing assistance, an officer being fired upon. It’s just lawlessness, Sam. Absolute—”
But I’ve stopped listening, choosing instead to rewind the footage, to confirm what I already know, which is that L.A. is not, in fact, being overrun by monsters, by murder birds (which is what my niece calls velociraptors—which is what the wet-backed things looked like), and that, as a result of my best friend having f****d my fiancé, I am simply losing it. That I drank too much before we even went to the club (which we somehow got into, probably because of Sunny’s good looks and/or local celebrity) and that I passed out while they were dancing and had to cab it home (where Peter answered the door; even as Sunny—my f*****g fiancé!—stepped from the shower). That I’m in no condition to be on this f*****g helicopter while L.A. burns, much less with them.
I hit ‘play’ and grind the viewfinder: see dark forms rushing the truckdriver, rushing him and piling on, their (tails?) whipping about, and yet nothing is clear, nothing concrete. They’re just forms, just blurry dark streaks, streaks that could be anything.
“Preston—hello?” Sunny is waving her hand in front of me. “Come on, stud, get it together. We need coverage on this.”
I look out the busted window at what appears to be Compton, the wind cooling my face, and see that it’s burning, like everything else. Then I back it up again and hit ‘record,’ erasing everything.
––––––––
Sunny continues: “As far as we have been able to determine, Sam, the western boundary is Crenshaw Avenue, more or less. We are hearing of activity, we have seen some activity as far East as, say, Avalon. And, well, even going beyond that, probably going all the way out to, ah, I would guess, Alameda. And the eastern boundaries. Curiously, these are basically the same boundaries we saw during the unrest in ‘92—thirty years ago now—as well as the Watts Riots in, ah, 1965.”
“Okay, Sunny, thanks so very much. That’s—that’s good information to have. And do be careful. We want to go back now to the AME church where people are raising their voices in protest of today’s verdict in Seattle, in song, and in prayer ...”
“God, that was gibberish,” says Sunny, and exhales. “I may as well be reading a map. No wonder they f*****g cut to—”
“You’re tired, what do you expect,” says Peter, softly, mellifluently. “I mean, maybe it’s time we just pack this in, call it a day.”
Because you just care so much, I think, filming, and grit my teeth.
“I mean, how long have we been up, except for fuel stops? Six, seven hours? That’s a long time to be stuck in—”
“I want to go down there,” she says, cutting him off. “I want to go live, on the ground, right smack in the middle of it.”
I look up even as Peter opens his mouth to speak but hesitates, taken aback. “Ah, yeah. Well. That—that would be a negative,” he says, and frowns.
“Yeah?” Sunny just smiles. “How sure are you about that?”
Uh-oh.
“One-hundred percent,” he says. “Besides, ‘No live reporting from the ground’—remember? You heard it as well as I did. And you oughta know, when Spellman speaks, he means it.”
“Ah,” she says, and seems to let it go. But I know better.
“I mean, that’s your prerogative, of course. You’re the pilot after all. And I wouldn’t presume to tell you how to do your job. I mean, who am I? Just some girl who can’t hold her liquor.” She laughs. “Some white girl who might just black out in the middle of the dancefloor—after swigging from a certain person’s flask, that is—and wake up on a couch without the slightest clue how she got there—or what might have happened in the interim. Yeah, right. I mean, what’d I think I was going to do? Boss you around? Demand a vote?”
Nobody says anything. The helicopter’s blades go whump-whump-whump.
“‘Some white girl’ ... well, now, that’s, ah, that’s an interesting choice of words.” He takes a deep breath and looks at me. “And how about you? Where are you at on all this? You going to vote this s**t down or are you going to keep carrying water and maybe get someone killed? Or fired?”
When I don’t respond he adds: “Because this isn’t just my job we’re talking about; this is all our livelihoods—not to mention our lives. This is meat on the table—the girl, the gold watch, everything.”
After which he just glowers at me, and I, thinking about them together in our west Hollywood apartment—f*****g like animals on our couch, perhaps—just smile. Breezily, toothily.
Murderously.
––––––––
It happens so fast we barely have time to notice how wrong everything it is, how incongruous—how empty the intersection at Florence and Normandie feels, how the palms and other vegetation—the grass itself—all seem to have grown and multiplied. Or that the streets are now full of abandoned cars and trucks—as though everyone has just gotten up and wandered off, wandered into the smoke—or that we are being triangulated from the instant we touch down: triangulated and set upon—all of it before we’ve even unloaded our equipment or Peter has shut off the engine. All of it in a virtual eyeblink.
All of it, in short, in a perfect whirlwind—as the jackals, the wolves, the f*****g emus (only with lashing tails and monitor lizard teeth), descend on us like flies, like marauders. As Peter takes the helicopter up and I do the only thing I can; which is pretty much to drag Sunny into the nearby Chevron (even as the engine whines and the animals scatter), and, ultimately, watch her bleed out and die in my arms.
And then it’s over, and I’m alone, and there is nothing but the television squawking and a lone siren. Then it’s just me and Bizarro L.A. and Patty Severinsen-Wood—the eleven o’clock news anchor—who apparently hasn’t gotten the memo.
“It is, ah, now eleven o’clock and, ah, tonight a community is venting its fury over the verdicts in the Troy Harper beating trial. Fires are raging in South Central Los Angeles at this hour—a testament to the anger and frustration felt by many of its residents. It began just a few hours after the verdicts were announced, with people looting stores and setting them on fire, but quickly escalated to assaults and beatings; four drivers, at least, pulled from their vehicles and attacked. Chaos also erupted at the downtown Parker Center, L.A.’s police headquarters, where scuffles broke out throughout the evening. Meanwhile, police in riot gear can mostly just stand by, hoping by their presence to somehow keep a grasp on order. We’re going live to one of our news ...”
But I’m no longer listening, only tittering uncontrollably. I’m no longer doing much of anything but marveling at the absurdity of it all—the futility. And then I’m not even doing that; but just staring at Sunny. Then I’m crying as the tv drones on and the whump-whump of the helicopter slowly remanifests.
––––––––
“Sunny? Preston? Hey!”
I sit up with a start at the sound of Peter’s voice; push myself off the ground.
“Preston?” asks Peter. “Oh, thank God. Is—is everybody all right? Where’s—”
And we just look at her, maybe for five minutes, maybe a hundred.
At last he says, “I ... I circled back immediately ... once I figured out what had happened. But. But you were already gone.” We stare at the corpse; at the slim white girl with her side ripped open and her intestines poking out. “I—I’m sorry.”
I shake my head. “She was only twenty-three—did you even know that? This was her first job ... straight out of college. Straight out of USC. She’d—she’d barely moved out of her dorm.”
“Look, I know you loved her. And I know—well. But the thing is ... we gotta get out of here. I mean ... I wasn’t up for long—ten minutes, maybe, tops, but while I was there, I—I saw more of those things. I mean, they’re f*****g everywhere.”
I listen to the television, to Patty Severinsen-Wood, who Sunny despised: “Ah, right now we’re gonna roll some videotape we shot, that we shot within the last hour or so. What you’re looking at right now—and I don’t have a monitor here, but I believe what you’re looking at right now are two fires burning simultaneously on the corner of Western and Slauson. This, unfortunately, despite the calls for peace; despite the calls for, ah, taking action at the polls instead of on the streets ...”
“Ten minutes, you say. f*****g everywhere.”
“f*****g everywhere ... and not just that but, but the sky is wrong. I mean, it’s like, it’s like it’s boiling. Like they’ve set fire to it—only the color is all wrong. All I know is, we’ve got to go.”
“... these fires erupted shortly after sundown, ah, I think we counted about, I would say, anywhere between six and ten of them as we drove down the Harbor Freeway. There were fires burning off of, ah, Manchester Avenue. And the power was completely out. And as we drove down the street, as cautiously as we could, we saw people looting in the stores, carrying whatever they could—large tv sets, clothing, shoes ...”
“Ten minutes.”
I look at Peter, who looks back even as glass from one of the broken windows crunches and I realize we have a visitor—two visitors. Three.
“You left us down here for ten minutes ...”
“Now, look. My job is to protect that chopper, to make sure—”
“You and your f*****g flask ... I mean, what the hell’s in that thing, anyway? Did you pour some on her t**s, Peter? Did she suck your d**k? How was the couch? Was it soft but also firm enough to really have a go at her, my fiancé, in my own—”
And then I’m charging—startling back the velociraptors, piledriving him into a circular sunglass display, which crashes to the floor. Then I’m hitting him again and again until he catches my fist and shoves me off—after which comes the blows, the impact of my head against the tiles, the kicks to my ribs and groin. After which comes the sweat and the stars and the blood. Until I hear gunshots and we stop fighting long enough to see policemen piling into the building—only to be attacked by the raptors. Until I look outside and see a driverless squad car rolling toward the gas pumps—making impact—after which everything goes white and orange and black.
––––––––
“Ah, they’re weren’t any fire engines, they’re weren’t any police officers in the area to control the crowds. I believe primarily, and this is the sense we got from the command post at Van Ness and fifty-fourth, that ah, the police feel at this point that by going into these areas they simply will incite more, ah, just more rioting, ah, more trouble, more anxiety on the community’s part. And the anxiety is off the rails as reports come in of missing persons, missing children, strange weather—including a churning, almost greenish-glowing storm-front—and even, bear with me, packs of wild animals.”
I lift my head amongst all the dust and debris and look around: at the burning rubble of the Chevron and the tv lying sideways in the wreckage; at the mauled, mangled cops like ragdolls and the burning, broken raptors—none of which were dreams.
“I was beginning to wonder about you, if you want to know the truth,” harrumphs a voice, and coughs. “You were out for quite a while.”
“Yeah, well, like you,” I drag myself into a sitting position, hacking and wheezing. “I didn’t get much sleep last night.”
Peter only smiles, his face covered in soot. “Yeah. Well. It was a rough night for everyone.”
And then we just sit there, watching the tv, watching Patty Severinsen-Wood—watching until the signal cuts and we’re off to the ant races. Watching until we have no choice but to look at the sky and the strange, green, rainless storm clouds.
“What do you think it is ... some kind of weapon, maybe? Some kind of new bomb that’s maybe punched a hole in time and let those things in to ... to do what they did to Sunny?”
I lay back and study the clouds, study the lights flickering deep within them. “It’s making people go away, whatever it is. It’s funny; but I got a pretty good look at that police car before it went into the pumps, and, well,” I laugh, which becomes a cough. “There was no one driving it. Like, whoever was in it had just poof, ceased to exist. Like maybe this, this time-bomb of yours, made it so he had never existed in the first place.” I roll my head to look at him; find him already looking at me. “Or maybe transported him back ... to wherever they came from. The Cretaceous Period—or whatever.” I turn back toward the sky. “Now what do you make of that?”
“Well, if that were the case, I’d say we were pretty much screwed.” I hear shuffling, as though he is digging in his vest. “People start just vanishing, and society’s not going to last long.”
“Yeah,” I say. “Could get primitive.”
And then we titter, dryly, bitterly, after which he passes me his flask. And we drink.
end.
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