Read Immortality Is the Suck Online
Authors: A. M. Riley
Tags: #Romance MM, #erotic MM, #General Fiction
pier where my ride would meet me, so when I got there I went into a drugstore,
added a few minutes to my prepaid cell phone, and while I was standing there I
looked over and saw the Marlboros.
“Give me two packs,” I said to the clerk.
I was just outside the entrance to the pier, so I tapped the tobacco tight
against my fist while strolling all the way to the end. Where there always
seemed to be a nodding old man with leathern skin and a line reaching forty
feet down into the rolling black water.
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A. M. Riley
I lit up. Dragged the evil smoke into my lungs. God, it felt good. I loved
smoking, you know? I only quit to prolong my life. Seemed funny now. Except
it didn't. I smoked a few cigarettes then walked back the length of the pier.
I walked by kids throwing basketballs at hoops to win cheap stuffed
animals. A
churro
standkeeper getting ready to go home. The smell of burned
sugar saturated the air as he cleaned out his machine and the smell was bright
and alive.
I wasn't.
At seven p.m. on the button, the distinct roar of double mufflers on an old
Harley rose above the pier's hubbub, and I looked down Main and saw the
remembered, chromed out, hard-tail Harley, Albert's bald pate, rebelliously
sans helmet, shining almost as much as the polished chrome, under the Santa
Monica city lights.
Right on time. Just because a man's a criminal doesn't mean he isn't
prompt.
He pulled up and killed the engine. His mirrored sunglasses danced with a
rainbow of colored merry-go-round lights on the pier behind me. “El Demonio!
La caminata muerta
,” he said cheerily. He grinned and the diamond-capped
tooth flashed at me. “
O es usted un fantasma
?”
“You always said I was a demon.”
He spat a laugh. “
Epa
, that you are.” Albert removed his sunglasses. His
black black eyes were heavily creased at the corners and a white scar raised
one eyebrow in perpetual surprise. He managed to look amused and patrician.
Like a svelte Sean Connery. No mean feat for a bald-headed, diamond-toothed,
evil biker.
“I'm surprised you'd heard,” I said. I wondered who had called him, and
stored that question for later.
“
Mierda
, everyone has heard.” He eyed my duffel. “Are you leaving town?”
“Can't. My bike's in impound. On account of I'm dead.”
Immortality is the Suck
105
“The lot up on Venice?”
“Yeah.”
“Epa, 'mano, it may as well be Alcatraz.” He kicked the clutch and the
carburetor filled the night with sound.
“It's my
bike
, man,” I shouted. “But I need to make a stop first.”
“Do I look like the fucking RTD?”
I looked him up and down. “You
are
getting a little big in the ass, 'mano.”
He flipped me the bird. “Climb on. Where we going?”
I yelled in his ear as he gunned his engine and slid into traffic. “The
county morgue.”
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A. M. Riley
Chapter Eleven
Okay, I know you're thinking Albert and I are friends. But remember when
I was stuck naked in the basement of the LA morgue and I told you the only
person I could call was Peter? Nothing's changed.
I pay Albert to be my friend. So, you could say Peter was currently
bankrolling our friendship.
Albert and I had crossed paths, as they say, a few times already. He'd
been part of the Bandidos, in Texas, when his fortune changed by way of a hit
on his brother. Albert turned state's evidence against the Bandidos and had
helped put a couple in prison. In return, Albert entered witness protection.
Which is why Albert didn't ride with the Hispanic OMG in SoCal. Our federal
marshals have a limited comfort zone about those things.
But Alberto still rides, because you can change a man's social security
number and last name. You can rewrite his personal history and give him a
new life. But you can't peel a biker off his ride while his body lives. And it
wasn't long before I recognized Albert's smiling face roaring by the Rock Store,
thick hair shaved, newly capped teeth spread in a wide grin and tats lasered
clean, cruising the back roads of Mulholland Highway. Poor guy was pulling
into the bushes every time he saw a man wearing colors. I was looking for a
knowledgeable source that maybe could function outside the gossipy, paranoid
OMG. Albert was feeling the financial pinch of living an honest life. And he and
I both saw the potential for a mutually satisfying relationship.
The federal marshals would undoubtedly protest this little arrangement.
Which is why you'd never see Alberto on my books.
Immortality is the Suck
107
It's a twenty-minute ride from Santa Monica to East Los Angeles, even
flogging it, and I had time to think about things. Unfortunately, I was
distracted by the smell of Albert. He wore a beaten brown leather vest, no
patches, no shirt beneath. I could smell the aged, soft leather, his clean sweat.
His arms were like a hairless gorilla's, and I could still see the faintest bruise of
ink where the lasers had scoured his past. The armpit hair slightly damp and
curling where it disappeared into the loose armholes.
Albert smelled a little like chicken mole and vanilla milk shakes.
I was salivating heavily when he finally looped down the freeway off-ramp,
hanging a slow left to cruise under the overpass, by the graffitied “Wall of
Memories,” slowing as we drove by the morgue parking area. He cruised
another half block down and slid his bike around the tire spikes set in the
entryway to the Children's Hospital parking lot, then circled to the second level
where we had a clear view of the morgue and the coroner's cars parked there.
Albert ripped his engine a couple times and killed it. His scent seemed to
gather and wash over me and I practically fell trying to get off the bike and
away from him. From behind a concrete pylon I could survey the entire area.
There was an unmarked car sitting behind a tree in the permit only parking lot.
In over a decade of service to the LAPD, 90 percent of which had probably
been spent numbing my ass cheeks in some car, I'd staked out the morgue
myself a couple times. It's often interesting to see who, besides the next of kin,
comes to identify a murder victim. I figured the dusty black TransAm sitting
there was a stakeout.
The morgue was open twenty-four seven, but I had to get inside without
whoever that was seeing me.
Albert perched his ass on his bike, watching me think and smoke. He dug
a pipe out and lit it, inhaling fiercely. The sickly rich odor of marijuana mixed
with a minty hint of heroin floated past my nostrils.
“Albert, we are ten yards from an LAPD establishment.”
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A. M. Riley
Albert seemed unimpressed. He squinted at the building through the
smoke curling from the bowl of his pipe. “Those are scientists, 'mano,
sí?
They
can't hurt nobody.”
“Not just scientists,” I told him. But I knew it was hopeless. If you're going
to try to intervene with every drug user you encounter, you aren't going to be
long in Vice. “Just keep it cool. I might need you to make a quick getaway
later.”
He seemed to think this very amusing and his black eyes danced as he
relit his pipe. “What has happened to you,
mi bueno
, eh? I've never seen you
like this.”
I'm not what you'd call vain, but the lack of a reflection in the past twenty-
four hours was fucking with my head. I made an attempt to smooth my
perpetual cowlick and said, “What do you mean?”
He shook his head, considering me, as he rose from the curb. “I don't
know, 'mano. You walk, you look, like someone else. Like the
lupi
, you
understand?”
Like a wolf.
“Like a hunter,” said Albert. “Hungry.” Albert looked surprised at himself.
He wasn't a poetic man. “Never mind.” He chuckled. “Maybe I shouldn't have lit
that last bowl after all.”
Of course he'd put his proverbial thumb right on it, hadn't he? Hungry.
That's how I felt. Ravenous. The gnawing ache that only subsided when I drank
the blood, a constant spur. I'd seen men who looked like I felt and wolfish was
a good description. I remembered at an NA meeting one of the members talking
about reconciling himself to a life of longing for a fix he'd never have. Fuck.
Who could live like this?
“I haven't been myself lately,” I said.
Albert pursed his lips and let his gaze drop briefly to my groin. Yeah, and
then there was
that
. Like I was on a Viagra drip or something.
Immortality is the Suck
109
“Sí,
cuate
." The scarred eyebrow dipped knowingly.
“
Cojale
.”
“
Ah, no
.” He was laughing. “
Pero, sí, usted necesita culear
.”
Yeah. All the time, it seemed. “I'm going to try to climb the hill from
Marengo street,” I told him. “Wait here for me.”
I jogged down the stairs to the street, suddenly very aware of my loping
stride, my “wolflike” movements. My senses were unnaturally tuned. Especially
my sense of smell. I could smell the exhaust raining down from the freeway,
the burning rubber scent from so many EMT vehicles. I slowed to a hump-
shouldered, shambling walk as I passed the unmarked vehicle. Hoping to look
like just another random homeless man. Then I picked up speed, jogged left at
the corner and climbed the Hurricane fence, jumping into the mass of fire-
retardant coated vines holding the slope in place.
I could easily climb a fence and jump the ten feet to the ground with
grace. Fact number three hundred and whatever the fuck. It was starting to
seem almost natural. Well, not natural, but something I presumed upon.
From there, I hopped up onto the cement overhang and swung open the
glass doors leading to the front desk. About four security cameras swiveled to
record my entry. Well, there was nothing I could do about those, I reasoned,
but I could avoid the guard who seemed absorbed in the sports pages as I
zipped by him and around the corner. Unnaturally fast and quiet. Adrenaline
pumping, hearing and sight ramped up so that I could almost
feel
the click of
digital clocks, the
beep, beep
of lab equipment, the slight crinkle of the guard's
fingers as he held up the newspaper.
I waited, heard nothing to indicate he'd noticed my passage, then slid
down the first flight of stairs to the lower level. Security cameras noted my
passage down the stairwell. From there, I entered the elevator, taking it
straight down to the subbasement where the new intakes were held. It looked
as it had the night I'd died, except the only corpse was Freeway's.
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A. M. Riley
And he looked exactly as he had on the floor of the shed in Hollenbeck.
Right down to the big black holes in his neck. I shook him and whispered,
“Freeway, 'mano. Wake up.”
He didn't move. I wondered if there was some trick to this. Of course I'd
been there when I'd woken, but I didn't know what had transpired beforehand.
For lack of any better ideas, I tried a little CPR, pressing my mouth to
Freeway's clammy cold lips and recoiling in disgust at the fetid air that exhaled
from his mouth when I paused.
Maybe he needed some blood?
I found one of the slim metal tools the coroner used and pricked my
thumb. Only one blob of blood fell out before the cut closed again, but I
managed to get that blob to fall on Freeway's open mouth. It trickled over his
lip and part of it slid down his chin but nothing happened.
Repelled by the idea, but having none better, I pressed my mouth to
Freeway's again.
He stirred under my hand. His lips opened, his chest heaved upward. One
of his hands moved. Then, all at once, he was awake, spitting and sputtering
and shoving me away violently, yelling, “
Puta
, you fucking
marcena
, what the
fuck you trying to fuck me?” He looked down at his naked body and cursed
again, struggling to get off the table and away from me.
“Freeway! Hold on, amigo. I brought you back from the dead.”
That stopped him. He swayed, as if feeling that massive headache that I
had also felt. Freeway's head swiveled slowly as he took in his surroundings.
Then he sat his scrawny ass down on what must have been the freezing cold
cement and covered his face.