
architectural detail there. In the background, soft music played over concealed speakers.
Andy had been in malls before, but never one like this. When he applied yesterday he had come through a side
entrance near the mall offices. He realized he didn’t have the faintest idea where those offices were.
»Excuse me.«
An old man in T-shirt and shorts pounded by him, breathing heavily, eyes fixed on something infinitely far ahead.
Not far behind him came an elderly couple in matching blue warmup suits, striding along in lockstep. A middle-aged
man in shorts, running shoes and a Walkman passed them, driving past like a freight locomotive, torso shining with
sweat.
Andy stepped out of the runner’s way and up to an information kiosk to try to find where he was supposed to
report and to meet his new supervisor.
Eduardo Morales was a chunky, swarthy ex-cop with a big nose and tight little eyes that never seemed to stop
moving. He greeted Andy amiably enough, shoved a pile of clothing and equipment at him and nodded him toward the
locker room.
The uniform was a little loose on Andy’s lanky frame, and the combination of dark blue and sky blue with yellow
piping made him feel like a movie usher. Still, he was careful to wear it in the style he had learned at the police academy.
The patch on the shoulder read »Black Oak Security« over a stylized picture of an oak tree.
When he came out of the dressing room, Morales looked him over and nodded approvingly. Then he handed him a
plastic card with a clip on one end and a bar code on the other.
»This is temporary, but don’t lose it. It’s your real badge. It opens doors and clocks you in when you make your
rounds.« Andy fumbled a bit as he clipped it to his other breast pocket, across from his shield.
»Come on,« Morales said. »I’ll show you around in here for a little bit. Then I’ll take you topside and LaVonne will
show you the ropes on day duty.«
He led Andy back into a big gray room behind the main office. In the center was a large U-shaped desk with about
fifteen monitors. Another guard in the blue-on-blue uniform sat at the console sipping a cup of coffee and watching
the monitors.
»This is the security center. The whole place is watched from here.«
»How many guards are on?«
»In the daytime, anywhere from eight to a dozen, depending on the day of the week and the season. At night, just
three. One guy here, one patrolling inside and one patrolling outside.«
»That’s not much for a place this big.«
Morales smiled. »Technology, man. They really don’t need nobody except the guy in the security center. Those
cameras show everything that happens in the whole mall.«
The stubby man with jug ears and thinning hair watching the monitors glanced up and then went back to the
screens.
Andy did a quick count of the screens. »Just fifteen?«
»Nah, there must be a couple of hundred cameras. You can switch back and forth, see?« He leaned over the
console to demonstrate. »But you don’t need to worry about that. Senior man takes the security center and the other
two guys do the patrolling. One inside, one outside. Be a while before you’ll be sitting at that desk.«
He turned to the man at the console. »Anything good, Henderson?«
The guard grunted. »Nah, too early. Maybe something later.«
»People don’t realize the whole mall is covered by those cameras,« Morales said as they left the security office.
»Sometimes they’ll do the damnedest things in the corners and hidey-holes around here. Hell, we’ve seen people
screwing, men going down on men, women on women.« He smiled and shook his head. »We made a videotape of
some of the best stuff. You ought to see it some time.«
Instead of turning left to go back out into the mall they turned right. There were no more offices along the corridor,
just metal double doors with store names stenciled on them. The corridor was wide but deserted. The walls of the
corridor were unfinished concrete and the baseboards and corners were black with tire marks and chipped from the
passage of hand trucks and forklifts. The floor was spotless and buffed to a matte finish. The air was warmer and still,
Andy noticed. Apparendy it wasn’t air-conditioned directly.
»This is the fast way to get to the central elevators,« Morales explained. »It runs behind the smaller stores.«
»We’ll keep you on day duty for a few days until we get your test results back,« Andys new supervisor told him.
»Then you’ll float wherever we need you. Probably mostly graveyard, but some days too.«
»Much happen here at night?«
Morales snorted. »You know why we’re here at all at night? It’s the goddamn insurance. It’s so much cheaper if
they have people on around the clock that they can pay a guard force and still save on the fuckin’ premiums.«
»Night shift’s a piece of cake. You make a round every hour, that takes you about forty-five minutes. The rest of
the time you sit at the desk in the information center down on the first level.«
»Days are tougher cause the mall’s full of people. There’s lost kids and drunks and shit. LaVonne will tell you
about it and it’s all covered in the regs book in the security center. Get here a little early for the next couple of days and
go over the book. It’s pretty straightforward.«
»What lands of crimes should I watch out for?«
Morales looked at him oddly. »Crime? You mean like felonies? Hell, we don’t even have much car theft. Not with all
those cameras. When the place first opened they had a couple of gangs lifting cars from the lot. But that stopped
when they found out we had everything on tape. Not only made it easy to ID the perps, it was real convincing when