“I got one other sergeant,” Paco said. “Harry Bright. He was one good cop. Gonna have trouble replacing him.”
“Was?”
“Harry had a stroke several months ago,” Paco said. “Then a heart attack. He won’t be coming back. Maybe not to this world even. Just lays in the hospital like petrified wood.”
“He’s holding his own,” Coy Brickman said.
“Anyway, go get yourselves a cold one,” Paco said. “I’ll send O. A. Jones over soon as he blows in from his latest crime-crushing adventure.”
J. Edgar Gomez was washing dishes behind the bar of the Eleven Ninety-nine Club when he saw the two strangers stop in their tracks to gape at the mural of John Wayne pissing on the miniature of Michael Jackson and Prince.
“I shoulda put Boy George between those two gender benders,” J. Edgar Gomez said. “Maybe I’ll do that one a these days when my artist is sober.”
“Couple a beers,” Sidney Blackpool said, checking his watch and seeing that it was still too early for Johnnie Walker Black.
“Kind you want?”
“Drafts,” said Otto, thinking that if they were back in Palm Springs he’d order a beautiful exotic drink to put him in a holiday mood. It was depressing being in a cop saloon.
There were ten men and one woman sitting at the bar or at wooden tables scattered around the little dance floor. One look and the detectives knew they were all cops except for a desert rat in a brand-new cowboy hat who was sitting alone next to the jukebox glaring at everybody who stepped up to drop a quarter in. Beavertail Bigelow was not in a party mood that afternoon.
Six of the cops were from other desert police agencies. Representing Mineral Springs were Choo Choo Chester Conklin, Wingnut Bates and Nathan Hale Wilson, who was pretty well bagged for so early in the day.
The cops were moaning about what working in the desert was doing to them.
“Chapped lips. Jock rot to the knees,” Wingnut moaned. “Sometimes I think I never shoulda left Orange County.”
“How about what this freaking desert air does to your hair and fingernails?” Nathan Hale Wilson griped. “I can’t keep them trimmed, they grow so fast. I was here a month and I looked like Howard Hughes!”
“You should work Indian territory,” an off-duty Palm Springs cop complained. “I got a drunk call on two Agua Calientes yesterday and there’s me all by myself and I got these two Indian brothers fighting each other cause they didn’t have nobody else to fight, and they’re so big they look like dueling refrigerators, and one throws a punch from the vicinity of Arizona and knocks the other one clear over my car. And I’m standing there thinking, he’s a three-hundred-pounder. He thinks he’s Crazy Horse. He’s into a total uprising at this moment. He’s got two broken beer bottles in his mitts. And he’s rich!”
“Yeah, well you should see Cat City now,” said a Cathedral City cop who was almost as drunk. “Sodom and Gomorrah East is what it is. AIDS and palimony is what it’s all about.”
J. Edgar Gomez eyed the two strangers and said, “What department you guys work?”
“L.A.P.D.,” Otto answered, wincing. The beer was so cold he put the glass down and grabbed his skull.
“Drink it slow,” J. Edgar Gomez said. “Keep our beer icy. Come outta the heat and drink too fast it’s like a buck knife stuck in your skull. Here.” He gave Otto a glass of warm water. “Sip it.”
“Wow!” Otto said after the pain subsided. “That is cold beer.”
“Customers like it that way. How come you guys’re way out here?”
“We’re in Palm Springs on vacation,” Sidney Blackpool said. “Have to talk to O. A. Jones. Know him?”
“Sure,” the saloonkeeper said, scratching his belly, which was covered by an apron and a wet T-shirt. “He’ll be in pretty soon.”
The door banged open just then and three policemen from Palm Springs P.D. swaggered in. J. Edgar Gomez shook his head and said, “Young cops these days, nobody can open a door without knocking holes in your plaster.”
“Fred Astaire?” Sidney Blackpool said, pointing toward the jukebox. “I haven’t heard Fred Astaire, or even a jukebox, in I don’t know how long.”
“ ‘Puttin’ on the Ritz,’ ” J. Edgar Gomez grinned. “Far as I’m concerned, the world is divided between two groups a people: those that think Fred Astaire’s ‘Puttin’ on the Ritz’ is the greatest side ever cut, and scumbags that don’t.”
“My name’s Stringer,” Otto said, shaking hands with the saloonkeeper. “This is Sidney Blackpool.”
“J. Edgar Gomez,” the saloonkeeper said, and then added, “Oh, shit!”
They followed his eye line and saw that J. Edgar was looking about three feet above the floor at a midget in a tennis hat and tennis whites and a desert tan darker than any unemployed actor’s.
“Oleg Gridley,” the saloonkeeper said. Then he glared at the cops at the other end of the bar and pointed at the “No trash sports” sign over the bar, causing Otto and Sidney Blackpool to shrug at each other.
Oleg Gridley looked around the gloomy barroom, spotted the lone busty woman at the far end of the bar and hopped on the stool next to her by chinning up with both hands. He sat at eye level with her tits.
“Hi, Portia,” the suntanned midget leered.
“I knew this day was going too good,” she said, tipping up her glass of beer, looking like she’d had lots of them.
“Portia Cassidy,” the saloonkeeper whispered to the detectives. “Not much of a face, but the best body in Mineral Springs. Everybody wants her, especially Oleg. We call them Bitch Cassidy and the Sunstroke Kid.”
Just then Bitch Cassidy said to the midget, “No, Oleg. It’s just that I don’t like perverts. Even big perverts.”
Then after the midget whispered in her ear again, she said, “Oleg, I wouldn’t care it was big as King Kong’s. Size don’t impress me and I do not want a chiffon body wrap and a whipped-cream rubdown!”
“I’d be good to you, Portia,” the passionate midget murmured. “I’m slow but thorough.”
“Yeah, like a tarantula. I ain’t interested. And I don’t wanna do those filthy midget things, and if you don’t leave me alone I’m calling a cop!”
“Maybe the things only sound filthy to nonmidgets,” J. Edgar Gomez offered.
“I don’t understand you anymore!” Oleg said testily. “J. Edgar, gimme a double bourbon on the rocks. And give the lady another beer.”
“It’s a living soap opera,” J. Edgar Gomez said to the detectives, as he poured the midget’s whiskey. “I’m starting to wonder how it’s gonna come out.”
And then they began to arrive. First a pair of hairdressers from the ladies’ spa at the biggest downtown Palm Springs hotel. Then five tellers from a Palm Desert bank. Then four waitresses from a Rancho Mirage country club. Then the day-shift boys from eight police agencies, and by 5:30 in the afternoon the saloon was packed with drinkers, dancers, lechers, drunks, midgets and desert rats. Sidney Blackpool wondered how in hell they were going to find Officer O. A. Jones even if he did show up, and he should have arrived by now.
The conversations raged around them as the saloon got hotter and smokier. Both detectives switched to hard booze in self-defense. The only difference from any cop saloon in L.A. was that the talk was often weather-oriented.
“It’s so hot in summer,” Prankster Frank said to a new desert cop, “that I’ve started thinking in Celsius. It sounds cooler that way.”
It was not essentially different in that most conversations were about women.
“Look at her!” Nathan Hale Wilson said of Portia Cassidy who was dancing with a Palm Springs detective and trying to avoid the “accidental” touches of Oleg Gridley every time he waddled to the jukebox. “She’s the Lucretia Borgia of this valley but she could suck the Goodyear blimp through a garden hose.”
“I got two planned parenthoods and one drunken mistake!” a drunken Maynard Rivas suddenly whined to a tipsy waitress from an Indian Wells country club who couldn’t care less.