They
didn't
do stunts.
Everything they did was real.
Otto and Burt simply had no pain threshold. They'd singed their nerves off long ago.
No one, not even Eddie, knew their last names. Legend had it they were born attached, sharing the same brain stem until they were torn apart. Otto got a slightly bigger chunk, but that was also a topic of much conjecture.
Otto and Butt were paid strictly in cash, under the table, to avoid messy problems with unions, studios, insurance companies, and banks concerned with such niceties as safety and liability. Where Otto and Burt's money went, nobody knew. They lived in a mobile home in Chatsworth and drove cars that looked salvaged from the scrap heap. What they did for fun not even Eddie knew, and few people had the stomach to imagine.
Eddie wasn't on the set this particular day, having no desire to be anywhere around when a public relations disaster might strike. But they were in his thoughts. Very much so.
Everyone on the
Frankencop
set was watching them zip into fire-proof suits, strap on their helmets, and check out their steel reinforced Fords. But the check was just for show. The axles could be cracked, the tires bald, and the engine gushing oilâthey wouldn't notice. They only wanted the chance to walk behind their cars and, unseen, take a final leak before the gag.
Then they did their ritual dance. An inept soft-shoe, a little patty cake, two jumping jacks, and then a quick spin that finished with John Travolta's pose from
Saturday Night Fever.
"Too cool for words," Otto said, grinning his lopsided grin.
"Yeah," Burt replied.
They climbed into their cars and roared off in opposite directions. The director cued the four cameras. The cars spun around to face each other on either side of the gorge.
The director picked up a megaphone and yelled,
"Action!"
Otto and Burt revved in place until their spinning wheels were smoking and then they shot forward, screaming with glee.
The two cars tore across the desert, weaving crazily, mowing over sagebrush, smashing through piles of stone, hurtling toward the deadly fissure. The cars surged over the edge, tires spinning, dust hanging in the air behind them like a comet's trail, then smashed together into one crinkled mass of metal and flame that slammed into the ground with such force it pounded out a crater.
The dust settled. The metal creaked and groaned. Steam hissed. Pebbles rained down like hail.
The director called out
"Cut!"
and then there was a moment of apprehensive silence as all eyes watched the cars. After a moment, Otto pulled himself out of his car, with a dislocated shoulder and three broken fingers, and took off his helmet, leaving half his scalp inside. He peered into Burt's car and saw nothing. But then, to everyone's surprise, Burt emerged from behind a sagebrush, his nose at a new angle, a piece of metal lodged in his chest, and his shoes on fire.
Otto stomped on Burt's blazing feet. "I told you not to wear your dress shoes."
"I wanted to look good for the camera," Burt said, heading for the craft services table.
The special effects crew hurried past them to the wrecked cars and doused them with fire extinguishers.
Burt plucked the shard of metal out of his chest and tossed it in with the empty aluminum cans in the recycle bin. Then he grabbed a handful of potato chips with his bloody hand and headed for the stunt trailer.
Otto bent down over the icebox for a Coke, but couldn't gel his right arm to work. That's when he realized his shoulder was dislocated. He looked around, finally spotting a solid tree he could use.
He was slamming himself against a cactus, trying to jam his shoulder back into its socket, when an assistant director came up to him with the cellular phone.
It was Eddie Planet inviting them to lunch at La Guerre.
Charlie stopped at a pay phone at the El Pollo Loco around the corner from the North Hollywood precinct and put in a call to Detective Emil Grubb. To his relief, the cop was out.
He got back into his LTD, and took a bite out of a chicken taco, careful to dribble some sauce onto his shirt, which he had already taken off and wrinkled up before leaving the studio.
Charlie had never met a detective who looked too good, except on television. But most viewers weren't cops, so they could buy it. A cop wouldn't.
Satisfied that he looked anything but stylish, he drove around the precinct and swung into the lot reserved for official police vehicles, sliding the car snugly into a space between two other identical LTDs.
Checking himself in the mirror, he snapped on his ID and slipped his badge onto his belt. The sunglasses fit him a little too well, so he took them off and slightly bent one of the arms. He slid the shades back on, pleased to see them slightly askew. The unloaded gun under his arm made a nice bulge under his jacket, and the knit tie was just ugly and dated enough lo be unnoticeable. He picked up the thick, ratty file on the passenger seat and took one last look at it. He reached into his jacket pocket for the plastic bag containing Esther's bullet and dropped it among the papers in the folder.
It was all in the details. Now, he just had to be as full of verisimilitude as everyone said he was. Charlie took a deep breath and then heard some unseen director snap,
Action!
He got out of the car, hiked up his pants, and walked with the same weary, bad-ass swagger as the detectives around him. The key to the walk was imagining your underwear was riding up your ass from sitting too long.
Safe behind his shades, Charlie glided into the station without meeting anyone's gaze and headed purposefully across the faded linoleum floor toward the detective bureau. He could almost feel the Panavision camera on a track behind him, following him into the wide, busy room. A cloud of cigarette smoke hung just below the fluorescent lights, fed by a dozen rumpled detectives, puffing away as they finger-pecked their reports out on heavy electric typewriters that apparently predated plastic or electronics. A city ordinance outlawed smoking in public buildings, but the detectives didn't seem too concerned about anyone citing them.
Charlie went to the back of the bureau, snatched a foam cup, and helped himself to the pot of coffee, setting his file down and using the opportunity to casually survey the room. Everything seemed faded hereâthe walls, the papers, the faces. The detectives were occupied with their reports, or on the phone, or talking with suspects or victims, who sat in straight-back chairs beside the gray, steel desks.
Charlie wasn't in a hurry and was completely at ease, or so he wanted to seem. Cases often intersected across precinct lines, so it was common for a detective from outside the station to walk in and make himself at home. And that's what Charlie was, just another detective on a case. Only he wasn't the investigating officer, he was the suspect.
No one even seemed to notice he was there. If someone had, and questioned him enough, he could find himself arrested for impersonating a police officer, something he'd been paid handsomely for only a few days earlier. It was also a skill he'd honed for a dozen years in the Beverly Hills PD.
He picked up the file, and coffee in hand, ambled over to the row of filing cabinets. Atop them were the big, thick binders containing the current case files. Black for homicide, blue for robbery, red for vice. It didn't take long to find the binder that contained his homicide report.
The information it contained held only one surprise. The .38 Charlie used that day wasn't his prop gunâit had been switched with a real weapon containing live ammo. Unfortunately, the serial number had been removed, making the gun virtually untraceable. The only fingerprints on the gun belonged to Charlie and Itchy Matthews, the prop man. Still, Grubb had the lab boys trying to match the bullet with slugs recovered from other crime scenes.
Charlie was also relieved to learn he was not a suspect in the killing, though Grubb was checking him out to see if anyone might have a motive for setting him up. Charlie doubted Grubb would stumble on the one person with the biggest motive of all. But even Charlie wasn't discounting the possibility someone else was involved.
Esther had implied that somebody was blackmailing her for $50,000 and that it was him. That meant there was at least one other person in the mix, maybe more. And that Esther had a secret she wanted to keep. How it all figured in, he didn't know. But he was going to find out.
According to the report, Grubb had already given up on the possibility that someone out of the victim's past was responsible for the murder. Apparently, Darren Clarke had led an exemplary life, until he unknowingly sacrificed it for a television show, a soon-to-be-released video, and an
Inquirer
article written by his girlfriend.
Charlie committed the case number to memory, closed the binder, and headed down the busy corridor toward the forensics lab, which meant crossing the front lobby. This was when he'd be most vulnerable, cutting through a crowd of civilians and then past the desk sergeant serving as gatekeeper to the door beyond.
"Hey," someone said to him, "I know you."
The words he'd been afraid of hearing for the last fifteen minutes. He turned to see a ten-year-old boy standing beside a woman with a black eye, who was filling out a report at the front desk. The little boy, in a dirty polo shirt and torn jeans, leaned against his mother and stared up at Charlie with wide eyes. Charlie would have turned and kept walking, but he saw the uniformed sergeant glance up at him, the first time he'd been noticed since he entered the precinct.
Charlie smiled at the boy. "You do?" It was a lame response, but he couldn't think what else to say. With the officer's eye on him, he couldn't ignore the kid.
"I've seen you before," the boy said. "On TV,"
"Yeah," Charlie replied, shooting a look at the sergeant. "So did my mother and every drug dealer in town. One second of fame, twelve years as an undercover cop shot to hell."
The sergeant shook his head. "Damn reporters." He tapped a button on the floor and buzzed Charlie through the door leading to forensics.
"You're a thorn in the side of justice," the boy cried out enthusiastically.
"I sure am, kid," Charlie said, closing the door behind him.
Once in the hallway, safe from the kid, he felt relief wash over him, but he didn't dare show it, for fear the cops in the hallway would read something on his face.
He found his way to the forensics department and marched through the door like a man in a hurry. The cramped, windowless room looked like a high school science lab and smelled like a doctor's office. Microscopes and vials lined the long tables and countertops. In the back half of the room, evidence was kept on shelves, safely locked behind an iron cage. Everything from kilos of cocaine pulled from the seat cushions of a teenage drug dealer's Mercedes to the fluffy pillow a Chatsworth plumber used to smother his two-timing wife. And somewhere on those shelves was the bullet and the gun Charlie had used to kill Darren Clarke.
This room was Harry Spinoza's domain, and he was hunched over a microscope looking at a nose hair when he noticed Charlie come in. Spinoza looked like he hadn't seen sunlight in years.
"What can I do for you?" Spinoza asked.
"Detective Derek Thorne, Beverly Hills PD," Charlie said. "I'm working a homicide, happened about three weeks ago. A twenty three-year-old actress got popped in her apartment. We've got zip, except for the bullet we pried outta the starlet's skull."
He fished the ziplock bag out of the file and dropped it on the counter. "I wanna see if it matches one you dug out of an actor a few days ago."
His story was brushing so close to the truth that Charlie expected Spinoza to start laughing and arrest him where he stood. Instead Spinoza stood up and pulled a key ring out of his pocket.
"Case number?" Spinoza asked.
Charlie opened his file, as if reading off the number from a piece of paper. "78039845," he replied. Thankfully, Spinoza watched TV even less often than he ventured into the sunlight.
Spinoza walked over to the cage, unlocked it, and disappeared behind some shelves. "You know anything about nose hairs?" Spinoza asked.
"No," replied Charlie, wondering who
would.
''Take a peek through the scope," Spinoza said.
Charlie did. "It looks like a hair."
"An entire murder case hinges on whether that hair, found in the victim's carpet, matches those taken from the suspect," Spinoza said. "The theory is the killer was standing around, picking his nose, waiting for the victim to show up. That'd show premeditation, too."
Spinoza emerged holding an evidence bag marked 78039845, containing several bullets, a couple of which were bent out of shape by their travels through Darren Clarke's various organs, bones, and major arteries.
"Imagine going to prison, knowing you were done in by a nose hair," Spinoza said, opening the bag, selecting a bullet and setting it up on a scope. "I once nailed a guy with a piece of lint. It takes real expertise to do that."
Spinoza took Charlie's bullet and put it beside the other one under the comparison scope. He delicately turned the knob that adjusted the focus and brought the two images end to end.
"Do they match?" Charlie asked.
"I'm not sure yet," Spinoza said. "We're still taking nose hairs from everyone who knew the victim."
"The bullets," Charlie said.
"The microscopic stuff, trace evidence, that's the challenge," Spinoza said. "The stuff the perps don't even know they're leaving behind. Bullets are easy, hell, they're practically billboards. They get all scraped up by imperfections on the barrelâthe striations on the slug are as good as a fingerprint. Where's the challenge in that?"
"Do they match?" Charlie asked impatiently.