Fugitive Nights: A Novel

Fugitive Nights: A Novel

by Joseph Wambaugh
Fugitive Nights: A Novel

Fugitive Nights: A Novel

by Joseph Wambaugh

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Overview

Playground for the rich, arena for the powerful, graveyard for the unlucky—welcome to Palm Springs!
 
For some, it’s the pleasure capital of the world. For other, it’s a city of last chances, a paradise on the edge of the desert. For soon-to-be-ex-cop Lynn Cutter, sweating out a disability pension, it could become a point of no return.
 
As a rule, Cutter wouldn’t give a private investigator the time of day, but Breda Burrows is the exception to every rule. Sultry, blue-eyed, long-legged, and tough as nails, Breda can be very convincing, and she’s convinced Cutter to be her guide through the glittering netherworld of Palm Springs—an explosive mix of silicone, Geritol, old money, and murder.
 
The trail begins with the monied socialite wife of a philandering husband. The wife doesn’t care about her husband’s infidelity, but she does want to know why he’s made a secret deposit—at a sperm bank. What Cutter wants to know is the identity of the strange, violent man hubby is meeting in the desert—a man known only as the fugitive.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780804150651
Publisher: Random House Publishing Group
Publication date: 04/20/2016
Sold by: Random House
Format: eBook
Pages: 384
Sales rank: 427,509
File size: 3 MB

About the Author

About The Author
Joseph Wambaugh is the hard-hitting bestselling writer who conveys the passionate immediacy of a special world. He was a police officer with the LAPD for 14 years before retiring in 1974, during which time he published three bestselling novels. Over the course of his career, Wambaugh has been the author of more than 20 works of fiction and nonfiction, all written in his gritty, distinctive noir-ish style. He's won multiple Edgar Awards, and several of his books have been made into feature films and TV movies. He lives in California with his wife.

Read an Excerpt

prologue
 
 It was unbearably thrilling. The police detective who was detailed to provide personal security hoped that the Mayor wouldn’t reel in ecstasy onto the tarmac. And it was undeniably historic: the first meeting held on the West Coast between the Japanese and U.S. heads of state in forty-three years. They were calling it the Summit in the Sun.
 
The cop watched his Mayor very closely. Everyone else—Secret Service, State Department security, FBI, Japanese security—everyone else was watching the gathering crowd and the taxiing aircraft, while Greenpeace demonstrators were handing out Japan-baiting bumper stickers that read, HONK IF YOU LOVE WHALES AND HATE VCRS. When President George Bush finally bounded from the plane the detective was fascinated. The man was all knees and flying elbows, a bouncing collection of angles. He did his usual wing flapping, flailing those elbows first to the right then to the left, trying to hook up with Prime Minister Toshiki Kaifu, who was lost in the clutch of dark-suited Japanese. Finally, the President sprang toward a youngish man in a blue pinstripe, the only one shorter than the Mayor, and did one of his sidearm ball-fisted swings in the Prime Minister’s direction, which scared the crap out of the Japanese bodyguards, but was only George Bush’s Yalie boola-boola rockem-sockem pantomime, not meant aggressively, only to show he had pep. The Mayor’s police escort would recall that George Bush move later in the year when he did it again with Syrian President Hafez al-Assad, and about a hundred cameras got a candid shot of the Syrian grinning like a jackal, saying in Arabic to his aide-de-camp: “Who coaches this dork, anyway?”
 
When it was the Mayor’s turn to greet two of the most powerful men on earth, the little guy was hovering. The policeman thought His Honor might come right up out of his loafers. The cop always thought of him as a restaurateur, up to his mustache in spaghetti sauce six nights a week, listening to snow-bird tourists from Minneapolis pretend they knew the difference between cacciatore and calamari, only to ask him questions about his ex! He’d nearly drowned in olive oil back in the sweltering kitchen of that Palm Springs eatery, but he’d emerged pluckier than ever, and defeated the cronies of the old cowboy mayor who’d been in Palm Springs politics a century or so.
 
Now with Reagan gone where old stars go to watch their orange hair change color, now with Mayor Clint Eastwood sick and tired of debating whether a Tastee-Freez would disrupt the fragile ecostructure of Carmel, now he, the Mayor of Palm Springs, was the only show business legend in American politics. And there was talk about him becoming a U.S. Senator. Today, Palm Springs. Tomorrow…?
 
The cop figured that the Mayor had rehearsed all he should know about Japan and the U.S., just in case White House Chief of Staff John Sununu engaged him in some heavyweight conversation about the U.S.–Japan trade imbalance.
 
Suddenly, it was too late for rehearsals! Too late for Japanese GNP and IMF and GATT and all those other confusing goddamn letters that don’t mean shit anyway. Because George Bush himself was pinwheeling toward him, those lanky arms lashing out every which way. Someone pointed, and the President himself gestured toward the Mayor! Then President Bush flailed back toward the Japanese Prime Minister, almost smacking him across the mouth with a return-of-serve backhand that would’ve cold-cocked the little Nip.
 
Then the President careened forward, his right arm whirling toward His Honor, and said: “It’s wonderful to be in your beautiful city, Mister Mayor. And to be able to present you to Prime Minister Toshiki Kaifu.”
 
And only the Mayor’s police escort was close enough to hear the response. CNN didn’t hear it. Nor did any of the panting local newshawks. The only one close enough to hear his response was Detective Lynn Cutter of the Palm Springs Police Department.
 
The detective later said that the Mayor’s eyes glistened, perhaps because he was brimming with thoughts about his bungee-jump career: He, so recently at the nadir of the dive; she, his ex at the apex. Well, let her sit on that Oscar, for he now stood—levitated really—in a place she’d never be, facing CNN cameras as a Brother Politician to the leaders of the industrial giants of the planet!
 
The Mayor said what he had to say, the only thing he could say given his background, history and experience. The only response that came close to expressing the explosion of emotions as he now soared through the stratosphere on this, the Ultimate Bungee Jump! According to the detective, his boss extended a white-hot palm toward the prime minister of 125 million Japanese and the president of 250 million Americans.
 
And His Honor, the Mayor of Palm Springs, USA, said: “AWESOME!”

Later that day, when the Mayor was back in his restaurant chopping garlic, the detective was nursing a severely swollen knee. While jogging to keep up with His Honor—who’d gone cosmic from pressing the flesh of world leaders—the detective had stumbled and smashed his one good knee on the curb in front of the Palm Springs Airport.
 
By year’s end he’d failed his police physical exam, had arthroscopic knee surgery twice, and was patiently awaiting an uncontested disability pension allowing him to retire with fifty percent of his salary for the rest of his life. Tax free! He figured he owed part of it to George Bush and vowed to vote a straight Republican ticket forever.
 
And of course, the Mayor would always be his favorite politician. For all those months, while doctors tried in vain to rehabilitate his damaged knees, the detective couldn’t stop whistling “I Got You, Babe.”
 
 
chapter
1
 
 “What does it make you feel like?” Mrs. Rhonda Devon asked, as the private investigator studied a painting hanging over the mantel: figures in repose by the banks of the Seine, all done in the remarkable brush dots of Georges Seurat’s pointillism.
 
“A cup of coffee.”
 
“Coffee? Why?”
 
“It makes me think of cafés and truck stops all over this desert.”
 
“Why in the world do you say that?” Rhonda Devon asked. She took the P.I.’s cocktail glass to the bar. Behind her the sun was setting west of Mount San Jacinto, cooling down the unseasonably hot desert valley very quickly.
 
“In every single truck stop and café there’s a Dot behind the counter. I must’ve had a thousand cups of coffee served by waitresses named Dot, more dots than you have in this painting.”
 
Rhonda Devon chuckled and brought the P.I. another diet Coke in a cocktail glass. “What else does it make you feel?”
 
“Poor. I’ve heard of this artist. The painting’s worth more than every house I’ve ever owned.”
 
“Possibly,” Rhonda Devon said, gesturing palm upward toward the sofa by the Seurat.
 
The P.I. didn’t like the sofa’s silk floral print, nor the Chinese Chippendale, nor the lacquered nesting tables. The massive old Spanish Colonial house cried out for some masculine bulk.
 
“I usually ask clients to come to my office for the first interview,” the P.I. said, sipping the freshened drink.
 
“Why did you make an exception for me?”
 
“You’re rich.”
 
“Do you treat rich clients better than poor ones?” Rhonda Devon asked coyly.
 
“Absolutely. I mean, I would, except poor people don’t go to P.I.’s.”
 
“Have you been in business long?”
 
“Only long enough to get in the yellow pages.”
 
“That’s how I chose you, the yellow pages. I liked the name of your firm: Discreet Inquiries. Sounds like a massage parlor.”
 
“How would you know about massage parlors, Mrs. Devon?”
 
“I used to work in one.”
 
It was best to let that one zing past. The texture of the rosy damask wall covering would absorb the ricochet. The damask was also wrong, the P.I. thought.
 
Rhonda Devon smiled into her cocktail, then picked up the onion with a plastic toothpick and sucked it provocatively before dropping it back into the gin to bathe a while longer.
 
Then she chuckled again, and the P.I. wondered how they learn to do that. Regular people guffaw or snicker or giggle. You even meet a few who chortle, but rich people, they chuckle. Chuckling 1A. They must learn it at boarding school and pass it around.
 
“We could sit here all evening and you’d never ask, would you? I took a job as a masseuse in order to research a paper in social science when I was an undergraduate. It was fun. I learned a few tricks.”
 
When she said it she sucked on the onion again and smiled. That time there was almost certainly a sexual connotation.
 
It was easy to see the former undergraduate when Rhonda Devon smiled. The intervening years hadn’t been hard on her but why should they be? She probably had a personal trainer to keep the belly hard, and a hairdresser to keep every strand of gray from that honeyed Marilyn Quayle flip, and a weekly visit to a manicurist probably took care of those long graceful fingers, two of which wore diamonds that could bail out Lincoln Savings.
 
The P.I. was wondering what it would be like to be this rich, when Rhonda Devon said, “Your answering service told me you’re an ex–police officer.”
 
“Apparently, they do listen to instructions once in a while. I was twenty years with LAPD. Thought it might be impressive for callers to hear about it.”
 
“You can’t be old enough for that,” Rhonda Devon exclaimed.
 
“I’m old enough.” Then, seeing she wasn’t satisfied, said, “I’m going on forty-three.”
 
“And you’re right back into police work.”
 
“This is nothing like police work, Mrs. Devon,” the P.I. wanted to say, thinking of the garbage work, such as interviewing witnesses for criminal defense lawyers; that was particularly hateful for an ex-cop. Virtually all defendants brought to trial were about as innocent as Josef Stalin, so most of the defense work consisted of trying to persuade them to cop a plea. This made the local criminal lawyers happier than it made the prosecutors, because the court-appointed lawyer got paid without lifting a finger. The local courthouse, like all others in the U.S., was more cluttered than a dressing room at the Folies-Bergère, so in a sense, it was doing what LAPD detectives did: offering tickets to the slam and hoping the defendants would buy.
 

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