“There is, but—”
“Who’s going to know?” he asked, anticipating my objection.
“One of the computer maintenance guys goes up there for a smoke every now and then.”
“Is he the type that would tell on you?”
“No,” I admitted.
“Hurry, then! We’re almost there!”
Wondering if Wrigley might call to check up on me, I set the phone on my desk to forward calls to the cell phone.
I took the stairs to the top of the building — a good workout — and opened the door marked ROOF ACCESS.
This actually opened on to another stairway. When I opened the final door, and stepped out onto the roof, I took a moment to enjoy my surroundings. It was good to be out in the open. The night air was cool but not chilly enough to make me long for a jacket. A slight sea breeze blew away the worst of the city smells. Sounds came to me — muffled traffic sounds, the hum of transformers and machinery housed on the roof, the sharp ching-ching-ching of the cables on the flagpoles, the soft flapping of the brightly lit flags (the Stars and Stripes and the California Bear). Within this mix I could also hear the steady pulse of an approaching, but still distant, helicopter.
Peering over the edge of the building, I could see some of the gargoyles and other ornamentation that in my childhood had put me in awe of this building, and had long since endeared it to me. I remembered the first time my father told me that this was the place where the newspaper was made, the Las Piernas News Express that landed so unfailingly on our driveway each morning, a grand publication that could have only come from so grand a place.
I reached over the waist-high guardrail and trailed my fingers across the sooty masonry, remembering my youthful veneration. “And look where that got me, old girl.”
I looked up at the flat, featureless face of the skyscraper next door, a dark gray nothingness broken up only by an office light left on here and there. The Box, I sometimes called it. The Box had other names — so many, in fact, it kept signmakers busy changing the logo at the top every few years. For all its shiny newness, it had never filled all of its rooms. Some of the Wrigley’s were empty now, too, but we had been around a lot longer. I stroked the stonework again.
I brushed off my fingertips and began walking. Although newer, taller buildings nearby have made it less spectacular than it once was, the view from the roof of the Wrigley Building is still breathtaking.
I wasn’t at the highest point of the building; part of the roof held several structures — some of them fairly tall — that were clustered at the end of the roof nearest the stairway. A series of narrow alleyways ran between the housing for the huge air-conditioning unit, various utilities, the high mounting block of the satellite dishes and others. The flagpoles and a spindly lightning rod were on top of one of the tallest and longest of these, most of the space below used for storage.
Despite these obstructions, one could walk all around the perimeter of the roof and still see quite a distance. I didn’t have time to take the grand tour that night — I could hear the helicopter coming closer.
I hurried to the other side of the building, and stood near an area with a special flat surface, painted with markings — the helicopter pad.
By now, I had seen the big Sikorsky. Its noise drowned out all other sound, a bright light shone down from beneath it, and a stinging cloud of dust and grime was raised in counterpoint to its slow descent to the landing pad.
I found myself grinning, pleased with Travis’s skills, wondering what my mother’s shy sister would have thought of her son’s outlandish arrival. I waved and waited for them to shut down the engines, then to crawl out of the cockpit.
“Were you piloting just now?” I asked Travis, after we exchanged greetings, knowing full well that he had been.
“Yes,” he said. “My first night landing on top of a city building!”
“Your first?” I echoed, then tried not to let him see how much that statement unnerved me. “You did great.”
“Sorry about all that dust,” Stinger said, shaking my hand. “Been a while since anybody landed here?”
“Yes. The Express used to have its own helicopter, but that was before budget cutbacks. Now the paper has a contract with a company at the airport. They’ll come here and pick up reporters and photographers and take us to anything we need to get to,” I said. “I think we were better off with our own, because we could respond more quickly, get to the scene we were covering without waiting for the contract pilots to pick us up. We’re a little slower now. Of course, most of the time, Wrigley just wants us to drive to the scene.”
“Hell,” Stinger said, pointing back at the Sikorsky, “this will get you most places you need to go a damned sight faster than a car — especially on the L.A. freeways.”
“Too bad you have to stay at work,” Travis said. “I could take you for a ride.”
“I’d like that,” I said, “we’ll definitely have to set that up for another time. How did you manage to call from the helicopter?”
“Pappy — Stinger’s ground crew — stays in radio contact with us while we fly. He patches calls through from Fremont Enterprises to the helicopter, and vice versa. Most of the calls are Stinger’s girlfriends—”
“Now, that’s enough out of you, Short Stuff,” Stinger said, although Travis was easily a head taller than he. “Time we were going. Irene’s got to get back to work.”
“But you just got here!” I protested.
“We might stay overnight in Las Piernas,” Travis said. “Jack said he could put us up. We’re just going to do a little more night flying and then go out to the airport after this.”
“There’s room at our place, too,” I said. “Do you need the van back?”
“I might want to borrow it for a little while tomorrow. I’m thinking of making an offer on a place not far from your house.”
Pleased by this news, I talked with him for a few more minutes about his plans. When I looked over at Stinger, his head was tilted to one side as he studied me. “When’s your next night shift?” he asked.
“Thursday.”
“Be back Thursday — same time, same station.”
I laughed. “Giving Travis more practice?”
“Call it that,” he said, nodding.
“Okay, why not?”
“Well, now that you mention it,” he said, scratching his chin, “could be a reason why not. Here, let me borrow your cell phone for a minute.”
I handed it to him, and he programmed a number into it. He handed the phone back, and showed me how to retrieve the number he had labeled “Stinger@FE.”
“That’s ‘Stinger at Fremont Enterprises.’ That will get you Pappy, and Pappy can patch you through to us. If your boss is hanging around or it’s otherwise inconvenient to have a chopper landing here, give a call. Otherwise, we’ll see you on Thursday.”
They took off.
I walked back toward the stairway access in a much happier frame of mind. I strolled a little more slowly, and found myself thinking that staying at the paper was worth overcoming any obstacles one member of the current generation of Wrigleys might toss in my way. Otherwise, I thought, I might end up in a building that looked like the Box.
I had just reached that corner of the Wrigley Building rooftop where the Box came into full view. I stopped. Something was odd about one window, a window nearly at the same height as the level on which I stood. There was some light in that office, but not enough to work by. Stranger still — this light was moving.
Fluorescent ceiling panels don’t move. A bright flashlight? Was I witnessing a robbery?
I had not rounded the corner that would place me in full view of the Box, and as the light bounced off the windowpane a few times, I stepped back into the shadows and took the cell phone out.