Johnny Halloween (6 page)

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Authors: Norman Partridge

BOOK: Johnny Halloween
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We all knew who’d killed the day for us. We even knew what he looked like, because we’d finally gotten a glimpse under the Zodiac’s executioner hood. After murdering the cabby in San Francisco, the killer had been spotted by a group of teenagers. A police artist made a drawing based on their description, and it was plastered over every front page in California.

Judging by the drawing, the Zodiac killer was not at all remarkable. He was a white man with short hair, thin lips, and a wrinkled brow. He wore horn-rimmed glasses over slitted, squinting eyes that bore a severe cast.

To me, the Zodiac’s face seemed strangely unreal. Though not as obvious as a squared-off executioner’s hood, it reminded me of another mask. The killer’s severe eyes seemed to be staring at me through molded plastic slits, and I couldn’t imagine his thin lips ever forming a smile. Seeing that face in the newspaper or on the wall at the post office, I was convinced that there was something missing from it, something as essential as a mouth or a nose though not as evident, but I could never decide what that missing thing was.

 

****

 

Paul Lee Stine, the San Francisco cab driver, was the Zodiac’s last documented victim. The killer continued to send letters to Bay Area newspapers off and on through the mid-seventies, but he stopped naming his victims, saying that:

 

I have grown rather angry with the police for their telling lies about me. So I shall change the way the collecting of slaves. I shall no longer announce to anyone. when I comitt my murders, they shall look like routine robberies, killings of anger, & a few fake accidents, etc. The police shall never catch me, because I have been too clever for them.

 

Perhaps he was too clever. Perhaps he did go on killing. No one can say for sure. As for the man himself: in one of his last his last authenticated letters (written in 1974), the Zodiac claimed to have murdered thirty-seven victims.

One thing’s for certain—the killer was never apprehended. What really happened to him is anyone’s guess. Some say that as the Zodiac grew older, his need to kill lessened. Some say illness incapacitated him. Some say he simply died, or was incarcerated for crimes other than murder, or was committed to a mental institution. Others insist he’s still out there, waiting, perhaps, to strike again.

More than forty years after the murders on Lake Herman Road, Vallejo is a different place. The shipyard closed a long time ago, and the city never really recovered from the blow. The town is still home to retired people who remember the old days, and more than a few young people looking for an affordable place to live in the tight Bay Area housing market have joined them in setting down roots.

There are young families in town, too. Just like in the old days, most of the parents are blue collar workers. They raise their kids, send them to the same high schools that David Faraday and Betty Lou Jensen once attended. On October 31st, a lot of those kids go trick-or-treating, but the turnout isn’t what it once was. Most households get by with one or two bags of candy. My mom, who still lives in the same house where I grew up, is lucky if twenty kids climb the hill and ring her doorbell. Even if she had cases of Cracker Jack stacked in the hallway, it wouldn’t make a difference. The kids just don’t come out the way they used to.

Some things in town haven’t changed, though. Lake Herman Road is one of them. It was a lonely stretch of notmuch when the Faraday/Jensen murders were committed, and it was no different by the time I hit high school in the mid-seventies, when my friends and I would pack ourselves into a car on summer nights and drive out to the spot where two teenagers died in 1969, telling stories about the Zodiac, sharing the rumors we’d heard over the years, driving down that dark lonely stretch of blacktop…going slower…and slower…until we hit that one curve in the road and the tires crunched over gravel, and the guy behind the wheel stopped the car cold and killed the headlights, and we sat there in the dark until someone finally freaked out and begged the driver to hit the gas and get the hell out of there.

That’s Lake Herman Road. It’s a lonely place. Always has been, and it’s no different now.

But Halloween is different these days. In Vallejo, it’s no longer about trick-or-treaters. There’s a new tradition now. On Halloween night, more than a few Vallejo teenagers drive down a quiet country road, following the same route that David Faraday’s ’61 Rambler took all those years ago. They pass the old Borges ranch house, dip down through the stunted oaks that line the road by the still lake, and they park at a spot where rolling hills cut off the lights from town…where it’s so dark that you can actually see how black the night is, and how many stars there are in the sky.

It’s a spot where a boy just their age took a bullet behind his ear on a cold December night…where a girl couldn’t run fast enough to escape her own death…where a man turned his back on the both of them and drove away in the darkness.

 

 

 

 

[
1
]
Years later, in
Zodiac,
the definitive exploration of the case, author Robert Graysmith revealed Mageau’s own bizarre explanation for the extra clothes. Mageau said that he was self-conscious about being skinny and wore all those layers to “look huskier.”

[
2
]
A few years later, this threat provided the climax for Clint Eastwood’s
Dirty Harry
, a film that featured a San Francisco cop tracking a serial killer obviously inspired by the Zodiac. Eastwood’s nemesis, not-so-subtly, was called “Scorpio.”

[
3
]
Belli actually appeared as a villain on an episode of the original
Star Trek
.

[
4
]
Ironically, the chief Zodiac suspect fingered by Robert Graysmith (and many others) was at the time employed as a janitor at another Vallejo elementary school, a school I’d attended just a few years before.

 

BLACK LEATHER KITES

 

 

The riderless Toro mower rounded second base and headed for third, and from his perch atop the pitcher’s mound Dennis Wichita eyed the mechanical beast the same way a man stranded on a desert island eyes a hungry shark. At least that’s the way the scene looked to Deputy Chavez, who admired Gary Larson’s
Far Side
cartoons.

“All this one needs,” Bernardo Chavez said, “is a palm tree and a duck.”

A dust devil swirled across the baseline and chalk powdered the deputy’s Nocona boots. The Toro motored toward home plate, coughing like an aged DH. Then the rampaging mower suddenly changed course, and the trio of flashlights duct-taped to its chassis illuminated Dennis Wichita.

“C’mon, Nardo!” Wichita’s expression melted from simple concern to full-bore hysteria. “Jesus H. Christ, c’mon!”

The deputy’s fingers danced over the grip of his .357. The Toro had red fenders and a blue body, a custom paint-job that left little doubt in Nardo’s mind as to the identity of the mower’s owner. But reason reared its ugly head, and his gun remained in its holster. Nardo didn’t want to piss off Letty, though a dead mower would serve Bill right for putting a relative through this kind of grief on the third watch.

Nardo Chavez charged the Toro. He was a stocky man, 209 pounds the last time he’d bothered to tangle with a scale, and he mounted the mower gracelessly, cutting the power just as the machine skirted the mound.

The deputy leaned against the steering wheel and worked up his Jack Webb voice. “Let’s hear it, Wich.”

The junkman popped a Lifesaver between his thin lips and endeavored to stay downwind of the deputy. “Damnedest thing, Nardo. I was heading home from the junkyard when I seen the lights. I thought some bikers were tearing up the field…figured it for a Halloween prank, y’know. Anyway, I helped coach one of the teams last season—Ascot Funeral Home Panthers, we finished in third place—and I sure don’t want my boys fielding balls out of a bunch of tire tracks next year, so I pulled over and started hollering. Just about then a truck pulled out from behind the equipment shed. Damned thing headed right for me and creased my fender, and about the time I scraped my chin up off the seat cushions I seen—and I swear to God this next part is true, ’cause it’s a full moon tonight and I could see just as plain as day—anyway, what I seen in the back of that truck was a bunch of boys all dressed up in hoods and such. And you know how windy it is tonight and all, and when I seen what happened next I figured it had to be a prank for sure ’cause the bastards let loose with a half-dozen kites right off the truck-bed while they tore down Highway 63!”

The deputy laughed. “I think it’s time for you to toe the baseline. Or you can try lobbing a few quick ones over home plate…see if you can strike me out. Take your pick.”

“Shit, Nardo….”

A dry breeze drove a wave of dust across the field. Nardo squinted, fighting the urge to rub his eyes. “Okay, let’s try this again, with some ground rules this time. Lights I can buy. I can buy a truck sideswiping you. Hell, tonight I can even buy guys in hoods and you being sober. But box kites? C’mon, Wich.”

“Not box kites.” The junkman’s hands went as wide as an imaginative fisherman’s. “They were big enough, all right. And they were made of something heavy and shiny, like leather. Black leather. But they looked like…. Aw shit, the damn things looked like bats.”

“Bats. Uh-huh. How about the truck then? It look like the Batmobile?”

“Shit no. Dodge.”

“You sure?”

“Dodge Dakota. I know a goddamn Dodge Dakota when I see one, Nardo. Same truck that I’m driving. A damn good one. For an Eye-talian, that Iacocca—”

“Spare me.” The deputy shined his flashlight across the field, pausing when the beam illuminated a blue-and-red baseball cap that had been ripped to bits by the rampaging Toro just short of second base. “Blue-and-red truck?” he asked.

“Yeah. How’d you know?”

The deputy flashed his light on the blue-and-red mower, then on the shredded blue-and-red cap. “I’m a trained observer,” he said.

 

****

 

Nardo sent Wichita to check the concession stand and the equipment shed for signs of a break-in. Then he thumbed the extender mic fastened to his left epaulet and hailed dispatch by way of the handpack radio attached to his belt. “71SAM1 here,” he said, and Sylvia Martin acknowledged. “Put me out of service, Sylvia—investigating suspicious circumstances at the little league field. Let’s go code 4 with this one. We’ll let 71NORA1 enjoy his nap, wherever he might be.” Sylvia laughed and Nardo signed off, happy to get a jab in at Ron Allen, the deputy who was working the northern end of the county.

Wichita hadn’t returned. Nardo found a pay phone behind the bleachers and was embarrassed when he had to look up Letty’s number in the phone book. Of course, he flipped to “Chavez” before he remembered that she’d be under “Bleu” these days. Her voice was groggy with sleep. “Billy, it’s one o’clock.”

“Not Billy,
niña
…it’s only your big bad big brother.”

“Nardo! What’s up? Don’t tell me something happened to—”

Not wanting to answer the obvious question, Nardo cut her off with a half-truth. “Looks like my least-favorite brother-in-law left some of his precious equipment here at the little league field. I thought I’d save him a trip, if you can tell me where I might find him.”

“It’s hard to say. With this heat wave and the full moon, he decided to work late, when it’s coolest. He left here about nine tonight, but he could be almost anywhere because he’s got to change the timers on all the watering systems he services. You know—daylight savings time ends tonight.”

“Tell me about it. I’ve got to pull an extra hour of mandatory.”

“Sorry I can’t help you.” Letty’s voice brightened. “You can always drop Billy’s stuff here at the house. I can make some coffee. Bill left a slice of peach pie in the fridge, and there’s some Häagen-Dazs in the freezer…vanilla, I think. It’s been a long time,
hermano
.”

Nardo almost swore. His baby sister baked peach pie for the bastard! Bill Bleu sure as hell didn’t deserve that. And they ate designer ice cream, too. Hell, they were probably doing well enough to afford that imported beer with the tin-foil jackets. The landscaping business must be pretty damn solid.

“Well?” Letty said. “How about it?”

“Naw. I think I’ll just hunt up your husband. Who knows, he could be stumbling around with amnesia or something.” Nardo sighed. “And I’ll pass on what I’m sure would be a damn fine cup of non-instant coffee, and the pie, and the ice cream, and the truffles and finger sandwiches and whatever other goodies the maids and butlers didn’t get into today.”

“Watching your weight, El Bandito?” she teased. “Making a comeback?”

“Your husband wishes,” Nardo said, and he hung up laughing.

El Bandito. It had been a long time since anyone had called him that. Nardo walked to second base and scooped up the tattered cap. Before he could straighten up, another blast of hot wind sprayed dust in his eyes. He swore, squinting, not rubbing because he remembered all too well the doctor’s warning about rubbing an eye that had suffered a detached retina.

The injury had come in his biggest fight, a bout with Carl “The Truth” Williams, who at the time possessed the best jab in the heavyweight division outside of Larry Holmes. Best thumb, too. Anyway, the detached ret had ended the career of Bernardo “El Bandito” Chavez, an in-your-face boxer with a good left hook who had KO’d a string of fringe contenders.

While the doctors had been able to repair his eye, they had also recommended that he retire. Nardo had taken their advice, and since then no one had succeeded in finding him another career that satisfied his lust for designer ice cream and foil-sheathed beer. Lately, he settled for the in-store brand when it came to ice cream, and his beer of choice was canned and the special of the week.

At least he’d earned enough from his loss to Williams to buy a new house in his hometown and a used Firebird. And time. Time to think things through for the first time in his life. And when the money ran out he was done thinking; he took the law enforcement exams at the county office and now here he was. A deputy. An upstanding member of the community. But drawing county pay meant that luxuries came few and far between—his Noconas were on their third set of heels and three of the four speakers in his Firebird were long dead—and the things some people called him these days made him long for the days when they’d called him “El Bandito.”

At first. Bill had pushed for a comeback. Training Nardo was the only job he’d ever had, and he wasn’t happy about losing his one-and-only client. “Look at Sugar Ray Leonard,” he’d whined. “He didn’t quit when they fixed his eye. He made big money afterward.”

“The gravy train’s done run its course. Bill. You’d better get yourself a job, because if you don’t take care of my sister I’ll put your ass in a sling.” Those had been the deputy’s exact words.

Fuck it. Nardo rubbed his eyes and felt blessed relief from the dust. He dribbled in some eye drops as an afterthought and was still blinking when a blurry Dennis Wichita came jogging toward him.

“You were right!” Wichita called. “There is something missing! The equipment shed was busted open, and the chalker is gone!”

“The chalker?”

Wichita pointed to the indistinct first baseline, which disappeared under a cloud of dust. “You know—the machine we use to line the field.”

 

****

 

Nardo took Wichita’s keys and told him he’d be back in a hour or two with a full report, suggesting not too subtly that Lee Iacocca had designed the seat of the Dodge Dakota especially for sleeping off tough nights. Then the deputy thumbed his extender mic and arranged a meeting with Ron Allen at the Ascot Funeral Home parking lot.

After Nardo related the story of the missing chalker and a good bit of family history, Ron asked, “Is your brother-in-law drunk, or is he just naturally insane?”

“Who knows? Maybe the whole thing is a Halloween prank. Bill and his buddies might do something crazy if they got a real snootful. They might be out there this minute chalking dirty words on decent folks’ lawns.”

“Halloween night.” Ron laughed. “And a full moon, to boot. Shit, I hate working mids. The only time to deal with nuts is in the light of day.”

“If then.”

They decided to soft-pedal it for a while. When they found Bill, they’d try to talk sense to him, convince him that the thing to do would be to pay for Wich’s truck repair and return the chalker. And maybe skip a couple of the county’s field maintenance bills, too, just to show that he was genuinely embarrassed about the whole thing. If Bill did that, and if he was very nice about it, maybe they wouldn’t worry about the 459, the 2002, and the big bad deuce rap. It sure as hell would save all concerned a whole bunch of paperwork, and Dennis Wichita had already told Nardo that the last thing he wanted to do was deal with his insurance company. Again.

Nardo got behind the wheel of the patrol car and headed for the county line, thinking about Bill’s biggest contracts, the places he was likely to visit first. He’d start with the cemetery, then work his way back toward the heart of the county. Soon he found himself thinking about Häagen-Dazs and foil-wrapped beers and steak dinners—thick filet mignons smothered with mushrooms and garlic and red onions—but he couldn’t work up a good head of jealousy over Bill’s success. His brother-in-law was a real entrepreneur. Two years ago he’d started out with a mail-order book called
How to Earn $50 an Hour with a Pickup Truck
, and now he was….

Hell, now he was driving around drunk while his loony buddies flew black leather kites off of his truck-bed.

Nardo eased the blue-and-white Dodge Diplomat onto Old Howard Road, careful to avoid the many potholes that dotted the blacktop. Up ahead, a blue-and-red pickup was parked on the sloping shoulder. Nardo killed his lights as he pulled in behind it.

Stepping onto the gravel shoulder, he took his nunchaku from the inside door panel. When he was a teenager, he had seen every Bruce Lee movie that had played at the Visalia Drive-In at least a dozen times, and he’d been sold on the preferred weapon of Okinawan rice farmers ever since, even though his police training with the chucks had disappointed him, concentrating on wrist locks rather than elegant flourishes and passes. Still, he had seen many a perp freeze at the very sight of them, and he thought that the chucks were a hell of a lot more intimidating than the nightsticks most cops carried or the tonfas favored by the California Highway Patrol.

Nardo checked the truck. Nothing. He tried contacting Sylvia Martin with his extender mic, but he was too far from the station’s repeater and the signal was miserably weak, so he called in his position using the patrol car’s more powerful radio.

Once again, code 4. Once again, investigating suspicious circumstances.

The full moon shone a chalky white-blue, the color of an oyster. Nardo hustled quietly across a weed-choked drainage ditch and through a tangle of scrub oak that partially circled the cemetery fence, glad for the moon because it made his flashlight unnecessary. He started to swing open the rusty gate before he saw the men, and the squealing hinges would have given him away for sure if not for the loud chanting that began at the same instant.

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