water, his eyes on Jimmy, a sour expression on his face, a sour smile, as though remembering a sick joke.
They were called Sailors.
A trio of Valley teenagers walked past him, stopped to read the names of the bands on the club marquee. The man in the peacoat ignored them, took another drink of water, kept his eyes on Jimmy.
There was an edge of blue light around him, at least to Jimmy’s eyes.
“I know you, Brother,” he looked at Jimmy and mouthed.
Suddenly the passenger door opened and a girl plopped into the seat beside him, a very young girl in a very short skirt. She yanked the door closed, as if that settled something, closed the deal.
“Hi, what’s your name?” she said, like she was thirteen.
Jimmy looked over at the turquoise nightclub. The man in the peacoat and watch cap raised his bottle of water in salute.
The light turned green.
“You’d better get out,” Jimmy said to the girl.
“Let’s just ride around,” she said. “Just until it stops raining.”
“It’s not going to rain for four months,” Jimmy said.
“It rained earlier.”
“Bullshit.”
“You’re not very friendly,” she said with a pout someone must have told her was sexy. The car behind the Porsche flicked its lights. Jimmy pulled out.
“I’ll take you to the All American Burger,” he said.
“Cool.” She tugged at the hem of the skirt under her and changed the station on the radio.
“I hate this song,” she said.
“I mean, I’ll drop you off there,” Jimmy said.
She ignored him, fumbled in her bag, found her cigarettes.
“Don’t,” he said. “Please.”
She pouted another half second then closed her bag and turned in the seat to face him, to let him see her legs, if he wanted to look.
Jimmy looked up at the crossroads behind him in the mirror. The Sailor had turned away to walk back up Sunset. On the prowl.
“So. What do you do, Mr. No Names Please?” she said.
“Just drive around.”
“Looking for trouble.”
“No, I know where that is,” Jimmy said.
She bit her lip and said, “I bet.”
“You’ve been watching too much TV,” Jimmy said.
He drove two more blocks, looking ahead. It was after midnight now and the night was coming into its own, shaking itself awake like a dog, the whores and their men, the hyper teens, pierced runaways on bus benches, their legs jumping, laughing and hitting each other, all of it looking like fun, for about the first ten seconds. The All American Burger was ahead, red, white, and blue and way too bright.
“This car is cool but it’s like older than you are, right?”
“It’s a ’64.”
“And that’s like older than you are, right?”
He laughed. “Yeah.”
“I have a ’99 Corvette back home in Ohio up on blocks with only a hundred miles on it. I was a Gerber baby.” She said it all in one breath.
“A what?”
“A Corvette.”
“No, I mean—”
“A Gerber baby. In ads. In Good Housekeeping.”
There was something sweet about her lies, something that made him want to try to pretend he was her brother, take her along with him for a few hours and try to beat back the night.
But before they made it to the All American Burger they came up on a tricked-out pickup on the other side of the wide street. Another girl like this girl leaned in the window, talking to three teenagers wedged into the front seat shoulder to shoulder, El Camino High linebackers.
“Stop!” she said. “I know those guys.”
Jimmy pulled to the curb.
She jumped out.
She threw the door closed and leaned all the way in. “You’re sweet,” she said in that way that doesn’t mean anything.
Then she kissed him on the cheek.
She pulled back, spooked. She stepped away from the car. She stood on the sidewalk. She touched her lips.
Jimmy drove away, up Sunset.
When he looked up in the mirror, she still stood on the side of the street where he left her, watching him go, holding herself as if from a sudden chill.
Angel’s house was halfway down an impossibly steep hill in Silver Lake in a neighborhood of Craftsman bungalows, some restored and almost too neat, the rest of them peeling under all the sun the hill took. Jimmy parked the Porsche, wheels canted to the curb. You could hear the music from here. The moon was still up. A couple made out against the fender of a cherry Camaro. They ignored him.
The partiers spilled out of the house onto the terraced backyard. Angel’s place was never closed, his friends and wards mostly Latinos with a few Cal Arts types. Three people danced