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Dawn Patrol - Don Winslow [41]

By Root 882 0
a gas bill, anything. When he runs into skells, he asks them if they’ve heard anything about Rasmussen, but none of them have.

When the man disappeared, he disappeared.

Maybe he’s dead, taking the truth with him.

But Boone doesn’t give up. Boone Daniels, one of the most peaceful creatures in the universe, keeps a .38 in his apartment. He never takes it out, never carries it. He just saves it for the day when he finds Russ Rasmussen. Then he’s going to walk the man to a quiet place, make him talk, and then put a bullet in his head.

30

Boone walks back to the office.

To the office, not into the office.

What he’s going to do is just get in his van and take off to Angela Hart’s place. If Angela took Tammy’s place, there’s a good chance that Tammy took Angela’s. Anyway, it’s the best shot he has. And he needs to hurry, because Johnny Banzai’s gonna figure out on the quick that he’s got the wrong ID and he’ll be on it.

So will Danny Silver, Boone thinks. Cops get comped at strip bars, for the same reasons he gets free nosh at The Sundowner, so there’s any number of guys who could have given Danny the heads-up.

It doesn’t really matter who it is, Boone thinks; it only matters that it is, and now we’re in a race to get to Tammy Roddick. So if Tammy’s lying low in Angela’s place, Boone thinks, I’d better get over there first. And I sure as hell don’t need Pete coming with me, endlessly busting balls, getting in the way. Better she busts Cheerful’s balls. He likes being miserable—they’re perfect together.

But when he gets to the Boonemobile, Petra’s sitting in the passenger seat like a dog that knows it’s going for a ride.

“I’ve been meaning to get that lock fixed,” Boone says as he gets behind the wheel.

“So,” Petra asks, “where are we going?”

31

Boone heads south through Mission Beach.

“Why do they call this Mission Beach?” she asks. “Is there a mission here?”

“Sure,” Boone says. He knows what the mission is, too. Lie on the beach all day, pound beer, and get laid.

“Where is it?” Petra asks.

“Where’s what?”

“The mission,” Petra says. “I’d like to see it.”

Oh, that kind of mission.

“They tore it down,” Boone tells her, lying. “To build that.”

He points seaside—to Belmont Amusement Park, where the old wooden roller coaster looms over the landscape like a funky man-made wave. It’s been there a long time and is one of the last of the old-style wooden coasters. There used to be a lot of them, all up and down the coast. Seemed like the first thing people did when they settled a beach town was to build a wooden roller coaster.

Of course, that was before the Hawaiians taught us to surf, Boone thinks. Speaking of missionaries … We sent people over there with Bibles, and they sent guys back with boards.

The Hawaiians sure got the shitty end of that stick.

Anyway, thank you, mahalo.

Boone heads to Ocean Beach.

Ocean Beach is not a place that time actually forgot. It’s more like time got up to about 1975 and said fuck it.

OB, as the Obeachians call it, has old hippie shops where you can buy crystals and that shit, bars that still do black-light effects, and used-record stores that sell actual records, including ones by a staggering variety of obscure reggae bands. The only thing that ever roused the Obeachians from their usual “Peace, dude,” torpor was when Starbucks wanted to move into the neighborhood.

Then there was civil insurrection, or the Obeachian version of it anyway.

“The Frisbees will be flying tomorrow,” Johnny Banzai had correctly predicted, and, indeed, there was a mass Frisbee demonstration, a marathon Hacky Sack show of force, and a sit-in along Newport Avenue, which didn’t really work because a bunch of people sitting on the sidewalk doing nothing looked pretty much like any other day. So corporate culture, in the personification of Starbucks, won out, but it’s really there for tourists because the Obeachians won’t go near the place. Neither will Boone.

“I respect all local taboos,” he says.

And you have to love a community that named one of its major streets after Voltaire, and that

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