Dawn Patrol - Don Winslow [71]
Teddy tries to hold out.
For Luce’s sake, for Tammy’s sake, for the sake of his own soul—if that isn’t a hopeless, antiquated concept. He holds out until Dan starts counting down from ten.
He makes it to six.
“I’m only going to ask you once,” Dan says, “and I’m really hoping I don’t have to ask you ten times. Where is Tammy Roddick?”
58
The Boonemobile rests on its front bumper, like a wounded bull on its front knees, exhausted in the ring.
Its front right tire is flat.
Boone looks at the van. “Goddamnit.”
“I thought they shot Teddy,” Petra says. She goes into the front seat and roots around in her purse. “They took my phone.”
“Mine, too,” Boone says. “It’s a good thing I took Teddy’s.”
He pulls Teddy’s RAZR out of his pants pocket and scrolls through Teddy’s call history. Seventeen calls in the past two days made to the same number. He punches it in.
Tammy picks it up right away, like she’s been waiting for the call.
“Teddy?” Tammy asks.
Her voice sounds anxious, worried, scared.
“Where are you, Tammy?”
“Who is this?”
“Wherever you are,” Boone says, “get out now.”
“What are you—”
“Teddy is on his way,” Boone says, “with Dan and some of his thugs. He gave you up, Tammy.”
“He wouldn’t do that.”
“He wouldn’t want to,” Boone says, “but I guarantee you, if he hasn’t already, he will. Get out. Let me meet you somewhere. I can help you.”
“Who are you?”
“Petra Hall is here with me.”
“Oh, fuck.”
“You want to talk with her?”
“No,” Tammy says.
“Look,” Boone says, “you have no reason to trust me, but you have to get out. Now.”
“I don’t know.”
“Let me meet you somewhere,” Boone says. “I’ll pick you up, take you somewhere safe.”
She clicks off.
“Damn it!” Boone says. He gets on the horn to Hang Twelve while he goes into the back of the van, pulls out a spare tire and a jack, then goes to work on the car.
“I could do that for you,” Petra says.
“I’ll bet you could,” Boone says, fitting the tire on. “But I don’t want you to wreck your clothes.”
Boone gets the tire on, tightens down the lugs, and releases the jack. He’s putting it back into the van when Hang calls back.
He has the number traced.
59
The Institute of Self Awareness was founded back in the 1960s.
Of course.
If there was any single word that typified that decade, it was self.
Some shrink came down from Esalen with a head full of acid and a trust fund and bought the old Episcopalian retreat that had been founded on a bluff above one of the best right breaks on the entire West Coast.
The shrink didn’t surf but didn’t mind those who did using the stairs on the south side of his property to go out and hit that marvelous break. To honor that generous man, and because The Institute of Self Awareness was too cumbersome to pronounce all the time, the beach below the retreat simply became known as “Shrink’s.”
The Institute of Self Awareness became first a hippie, and later a New Age retreat where people could check into a room, eat vegetarian meals, take meditation seminars, yoga classes, and otherwise become aware of themselves.
“What does that mean?” Dave the Love God asked Boone one day while they were sitting in the lineup at Shrink’s waiting for the next set and looking up at the retreat’s cottages.
“It has nothing to do with masturbation,” Sunny told Hang Twelve.
“I don’t know,” Boone said. “I guess you just do it.”
“Yeah, but do what?” Dave asked.
“Whatever it is.”
Then the set came in and they forgot about the question.
Boone had only been vaguely aware that the place was even called The Institute of Self Awareness anyway. He had always known it as Shrink’s, had carried his board down those wooden steps probably hundreds of times, and there was no way he was ever going to check into a room, eat vegetarian meals, take meditation seminars, yoga classes, and otherwise become self-aware.
For one thing, he couldn’t afford the steep room rate. For another thing, he wasn’t introspectively inclined. For a third and final thing, he was already