T. JEFFERSON PARKER
Contents
I drove past the old SunBlesst packinghouse today. Nothing left
Because the Vonns are direct descendants of murderers, thats why,
That night Max and Monika Becker loaded their four sons
Andy steered the Submarine up Red Hill Avenue, into Lemon
The Becker brothers all made it home the day before
David stood on the crumbling asphalt of the old Grove
Janelle Vonn showed up for Davids service on a drizzly
Nick found Casey Vonn at Foothill Rents. Sundays were busy,
Andy read the Vonn arrest reports early Monday morning. He
The wind blew hard that day, the first strong Santa
Nine the next morning. Three hours of sleep. Day warm
Andy sat in the Journal newsroom and looked out the
David set the ladder into the back of his work
Nick sat in Assistant Sheriff Gorman Harloffs office arranging his
They went to a late lunch at the new place,
Andy Becker crunched along a gravel walkway toward one of
David took two days off from work. Then another. Hed
Janelle Vonns pale blue Volkswagen Beetle sat in the shade
He was on his way to headquarters by seven. A
Two weeks and no suspect in the Vonn murder, said
Lynette Vonn lived up in Huntington Beach. She let Andy
Nick walked into the Tustin Union High School varsity locker
Nick and Lobdell walked into Mystic Arts World in Laguna
David walked the new chapel that morning with young Darren
David followed Nick and Lobdell into the interview room. Hed
It took Nick almost one hour to make the evening
The next morning Andy stood on the porch of 1303
So yesterday, Shirleys doing the laundry and guess what she
That Sunday David sat in the first row of the
Nick steered the Red Rocket south on I-5 while Lobdell
Andy got Katy and the kids to the hospital in
Andy spent the night and half of the next day
On Nicks first morning home he had breakfast with his
That evening Andy stood off Laguna Canyon Road snapping pictures
On Sunday two of the major county dailies intimated that
Orange county superior court, Department C-7.
Listen to me, Nick. Everything we thought about Janelle Vonn
The next evening I drove up to the Stoltzes house
Three days later I was guest of honor at the
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HERE AND NOW
I DROVE PAST the old SunBlesst packinghouse today. Nothing left of it. Not one stick. Now theres a bedroom store, a pet emporium, and a supermarket. Big and new. Moms and dads and kids everywhere. Pretty people, especially the moms. Young, with time to dream, wake up, and dream again.
I still have a piece of the flooring I tore off the SunBlesst packinghouse back in sixty-eight. When I was young. When I thought that what had happened there shouldnt ever happen anywhere. When I thought it was up to me to put things right.
Im made of that placeof the old wood and the rusted conveyors and the pigeons in the eaves and the sunlight slanting through the cracks. Of Janelle Vonn. Of everything that went down, there in October, 1968. Even made of the wind that blew that month, dry and hot off the desert, huffing across Orange County to the sea.
I have a piece of the picket fence from the grassy knoll at Dealey Plaza, too. And a piece of rock that came not far from where Mercury 1 lifted off. And one of Charlie Mansons guitar picks.
But those are different stories.
LATER I MET my brother Andy at the Fishermans Restaurant down in San Clemente. Late August. The day was bright as a brushfire, no clouds, sun flashing off the waves and tabletops. Andy looked at me like someone had hit him in the stomach.
Its about Janelle, he said.
Janelle Vonn in the SunBlesst orange packinghouse in Tustin.
Thirty-six years ago, two brothers who didnt look much alike, staring down at her and across at each other while the pigeons cooed and the wind blew through the old slats.
A different world then, different world now.
Same brothers. Andy stayed thin and wiry. Tough as a boiled owl. Me, Ive filled out some, though I can still shiver the heavy bag in the sheriffs gym.
San Clemente, and you have to think Nixon. The western White House, right up the road. I picture him walking down the beach with the Secret Service guys ahead and behind. Too many secrets and nobody but the seagulls to tell them to. Andys newspaper ran a cartoon of him once, after hed been chased out of office, and the cartoon showed him walking the beach with a metal detector, looking for coins. Thought that was a funny one. I kind of liked Dick Nixon. Grew up just over the hill from us. He was tight with my old man and his Bircher friends for a while, used to come to the house back in the fifties when he was vice president and in the early sixties when hed lost for governor. Theyd sit around, drink scotch, make plans. Nixon had a way of making you feel important. Its an old pols trick, I know. I even knew it then. In fifty-six I graduated from the L.A. Sheriffs Academy and Dick Nixon sent me a note. The vice president. Nice handwriting. Its still in my collection of things.
But thats a different story, too.
You dont look so good, Andy, I said.
Brothers and we still dont look much alike. An old cop and an old reporter. There used to be four of us Becker boys. Raised some hell. Just three now.
I looked at Andy and I could see something different in his face.
What gives? I asked.
Listen to me, Nick. Everything we thought about Janelle Vonn was wrong.
1954
BECAUSE THE VONNS are direct descendants of murderers, thats why, said David Becker. One of their relatives got hung in Texas. And I saw Lenny Vonn bust a brick with his bare hands once. One chop. Thats exactly what hell do to Nicks head. The Vonns are crazy.
The Becker brothers. Four of them, walking down Holt Avenue in Tustin for a rumble. June and still light out, the sun stalled high above the groves like it didnt want to come down. Air sweet and clean with the smell of oranges.
Nick was second oldest. He imagined Lenny Vonns hand crashing into his skull. Wondered how a skull compared to a brick. Nick was sixteen and strong, had played Tustin varsity football as a sophomore, started both ways. Not a talker.
Andy was the baby. Twelve, skinny, buck-toothed. He wasnt officially a part of the rumble but figured there was no way Lenny Vonn could crush Nicks skull. Nick was God.
David, the one who had seen Lenny Vonn break the brick with his hand, was eighteen. He was the oldest and smart but graceless and unformed.
Ill yank Casey Vonns head off and piss down his neck. This from Clay, fifteen. He smiled at each of his brothers in turn, a clean, straight-toothed grin that was both knowing and mean.
Clay had gotten them into this. Grabbed dumb Casey Vonns new baseball cap and tossed it over the fence to the German shepherd that snarled and snapped and threw himself at the chain link every time the school kids came past. Clay laughed while the dog tore it to shreds. Told Casey hed throw him over next time. Casey so dumb he believed it.
The next day at school Caseys big brother Lenny shoved David hard against the lockers and said it was rumble time for what happened to Caseys cap. Lenny was large and chinless, with an enormous Adams apple and sideburns like Elvis. Brothers, said Lenny, three-on-three, the packinghouse, no weapons. On Davids face, breath like coffee and cavities. David asked Lenny to forgive Clay, said hed pay for a new hat. Lenny spit in Davids face.