Sunset People. Herbert Kastle
It had been an unusually uneventful night. They hadn’t descended to street level even once. But now the screen lit up with large red letters and numbers. A voice came over the radio, “Emergency distress signal from a citizen with a wrist alarm.”
Patrolman Jim Kelly hit the drop lever and started down. His partner, Tad Boleslaw, activated the night binocular screen. They foufourtnd what they were looking for almost immediately.
“There they are,” Boleslaw snapped. “Near the corner of Locust and MacArthur.”
Suddenly there was a lance of flame between the two small figures below.
When they swept in, one of the figures was sprawled over the gutter. The other was standing, facing them. He held a gyro-jet rocket pistol in his right hand.
Boleslaw and Kelly vaulted out and drew their guns. “Drop it!” Kelly yelled.
“I’d rather not,” the other replied with a grin.
“Drop that gun,” Boleslaw said dangerously.
“Why don’t you just try and take it from me?”
IT WAS A MIDNIGHT WORLD OF LOVERS AND LOSERS—AND “SILENCER” HATED THEM ALL.
He drove north to Sunset Boulevard. It was late enough for traffic to have thinned out, but there were still cars and pedestrians aplenty. They’d be there all through the night, because it was summer and this was the Strip,
A young woman in bright, revealing clothing—dress slit to her upper thigh, blouse open down to her middle—crossed in front of him at a traffic light. She looked at him and ran her tongue over her red lips in an obvious solicitation. His face twisted and he gunned his engine in sudden need to run the filth down. She leaped out of the way and shouted, “Fag bastard!”
People turned to look, and he jumped the light and turned south off Sunset at the very next corner.
His nerves were stretched taut. He couldn’t go on this way. He’d do something foolish.
He needed the tranquilizing effect of the gun.
BOOKS BY HERBERT KASTLE
ONE THING ON MY MIND
KOPTIC COURT
BACHEL OR SUMMER
CAMERA
COUNTDOWN TO MURDER
THE WORLD THEY WANTED
THE REASSEMBLED MAN
HOT PROWL
THE MOVIE MAKER
MIAMI GOLDEN BOY
SURROGATE WIFE (pseudonym Herbert d’H Lee, with “Valerie”)
MILLIONAIRES
ELLIE
CROSS-COUNTRY
EDWARD BERNER IS ALIVE AGAIN!
THE GANG
DEATH SQUAD
LADIES OF THE VALLEY
SUNSET PEOPLE
HERBERT KASTLE
SUNSET PEOPLE
Copyright © 1980 by Herbert Kastle
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopy, recording, or any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher.
For Raines & Raines & Korman & Buck, comrades in arms in the longest battle.
“The fox knows many things, but the hedgehog knows one big thing.”
—Archilochus
“Death, that is the most important of all ideas.”
—L’Enfer by Henri Barbusse
PROLOGUE
One night in July of 1966, in a clearing beside the ferocious jungle called the Annamese Cordillera, not far from Danang, a special three-man squad was deposited by helicopter, and settled down to wait for daylight. Two were American civilians, CIA men in their late twenties. The third was Vietnamese, an ARVN specialist, a guide who’d once farmed on the fringes of the Cordillera and had as good a chance of finding his way through it as any man did. Which wasn’t saying much.
Dressed in standard Marine fatigues, they entered the jungle at break of day. According to a map and a briefing given them at the American Embassy in Saigon, a high-ranking Viet Cong political officer would be at a clearing x-marked on the map between eleven and twelve today, which gave them five to six hours. The clearing wasn’t more than two miles away, but exactly where was the question.
Four hours later, fatigues drenched in perspiration, they came upon a trail, on either side of which were signs of a nearby VC staging area—pangee traps, the impaling stakes fresh, and spider holes for snipers. They paused for a quick meal, and the smaller of the Americans, sporting a pencil-line mustache, unslung his rifle, a Remington 7.62mm with scope and tubular silencer. He was the sharpshooter, the hit man in this execution squad, and he had to be ready.
They set off again, following the path, peering at the soggy soil and damp growth before their feet, trying to pick up the gleam of mine trip wires. Abruptly, the jungle darkness broke before them: a clearing. A subdued chattering of Vietnamese indicated that it was the clearing.
On the path about fifteen meters to their left was a VC sentry shabby in patched pajama clothing. They dropped to their faces in the dampness, the dankness, and the sharpshooter tapped the guide on the ankle. The Vietnamese looked back. The sharpshooter jerked his head right, to where another sentry was just visible some twenty-five meters off through the brush.
Voices rose in the clearing. Both VC guards craned to see what was going on.
The three-man squad inched along on their bellies in the slime. The sharpshooter eased a shell into the chamber of his rifle. He was now able to see directly into the clearing.
Perhaps twenty-five VC stood there, thirty at the most, their backs more or less to the assassination squad, their voices growing louder, taking on a cheering, greeting sound. The guards edged closer to the clearing to see their celebrity.
The sharpshooter also edged closer, and saw a man in a North Vietnamese uniform and cape rising dramatically up and over the VC, being lifted onto some sort of platform.
He stood alone, small, slight, aging; nodding and smiling. He was clearly in view.
The sharpshooter adjusted his scope. As the old man opened his mouth to speak, he fired.
There was a whisper of sound, not enough to alert the guards; certainly not enough to alert anyone amidst that crowd of VC. The man simply fell backward and out of sight. The sharpshooter was satisfied that the dum-dum had entered his chest, and that no one could survive that spread.
He was already turning and crawling. In the clearing behind him, there was a hush.
He saw that the guide was now well ahead of him, rising and moving off in a crouch. The sharpshooter rose and followed, glancing back at the other American, just now jogging toward him, smiling. But the smile disappeared, along with the entire face, as a heavy burst of automatic rifle fire raking the brush caught him. The fire continued—wildly, the sharpshooter realized—from the clearing, then ended in screams of rage and further firing on the other side of the clearing.
The sharpshooter waited a moment, not wanting to go back there. But his orders were explicit, and he sprinted to the nearly decapitated body and grabbed the submachine gun.