
white statues of tourists taking pictures of each other; at the end of the lane sprawled the hotel in which
Eddie Murphy’s character had stayed inBeverly Hills Cop.
The shoppers — the real ones — were pearlescent, truly beautiful to look at. Couples, moms, girlfriends
prowling in packs, they were dressed in the height of fashion, in clothes that fit perfectly. For the most
part, they looked unflappable. Relaxed, in calm control, nothing in their demeanor betraying the slightest
bit of concern about anything in their lives.
Mere blocks away Beverly Hills sprawled, with its enormous, beautiful homes. Lucille Ball’s house was
so big it had two street addresses. Some of the palatial residences had been in movies — the Greystoke
mansion came to mind; some were actual movie sets — the “witch’s house” he occasionally passed.
These were the people for whom the Hollywood dream had become reality. It happened. And for some,
wealth and fame were even better than they’d imagined they would be.
Against the smudged sky, people were going home. The wide boulevards of Beverly Hills swelled with
Range Rovers, stretch limos, and tour buses. The traffic was ungodly. Angel had read that there were
more Mercedes Benzes per capita in Southern California than anywhere else in the United States. Only
locals had the nerve to make a left across the lanes of traffic, even when they had the light. Even when
their cars were worth half a million dollars.
Or when, like Angel, they figured they would live forever.
Mass trans was for bottom feeders. By car, sad and dirty Western Boulevard was not all that far from
Beverly Hills. Any kid who had ever been in a high school play could hitch from the hellacious bus station
to the nearest Avis, rent a Porsche, and try to bolt the famous baroque gates of the Paramount lot.
Driving south, he reached some of the sad, bad parts of town. Here there was poverty. Here dreams
had died. In the twilight some weatherworn pages ofThe Hollywood Reporter snapped against a
chain-link fence. Hip-hop made the windows of a two-story stucco house shake, rattle, and roll. Little
kids played tag among the tumbleweeds and crushed Colt .45 cans. Billy D’s, they were called. But there
weren’t many lying around: They could be turned in for money. There was a lot of recycling going down
here. A lot of things turned in for a few coins: glass, newspapers, blood, and friends with outstanding
warrants.
Angel supposed it was understandable. A few coins would buy something to eat: a taco, a can of cat
food. Or something to drink: a Pepsi, a bottle of Thunderbird. Or an escape: a ticket to whatever was
playing at the dollar theaters.
A ticket to whatever was available to shoot into your arm.
These were the Angelenos he supposed in some ways were most like him. Isolated. Wary. They figured
that friends would leave you eventually; either because you didn’t measure up, or they died, or they got
thrown in jail. If your friend didn’t hurt you, you would probably hurt your friend.
So it was best not to make any.
Best to stay guarded and protected and as safe as possible, because the world was a great, big,
dangerous minefield.
Only in his case, he was the minefield.
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