The night is soft like velvet, smog lifting after a
hot day. The sound of engines and horns muffled by residential streets that
barelyseparate the crumbling twostory victorian from downtowntraffic. Andrew
and his crew gather outside, just out of sight. They’re all wearing sneakers,
dark pants and LAPD windbreakers over bulletproofvests. The guy in front is
called Hulk for obvious reasons, and he’s the one with a 10poundsledgehammer.
Behind him, the rest of the fellas carry pumpshotguns, with Andrew bringing up
the rear, a pistol in each hand. They quicklypush inside; stairs creak beneath
their feet on the way up to the secondfloorapartment. With a swing like a
majorleaguer hitting a homerun, Hulk smashes the sledge into the door,
immediately over the dead bolt. One more swing rips the door free from locks
and hinges, sending it crashing to the floor. Inside, there’s a mad scrambling
as the crew rushes in, screaming, "Police! Freeze, you motherfuckers!
Freeze!" Andrew and the fellas throw their quarry to the ground and apply
the plastictietypehandcuffs made popular during theLAriots, pistolwhipping the
resisters into piles of bloody chorizo. Speaking in rapid fire spanish, Andrew
and his men tear the place apart, stacking bags full of cash, heroin and cocaine,
then rush the evidence into a van waiting on the street below. Chalk it up as
the cost of doing business for the dealer. For Andrew, it’s a kickass sting,
enhanced by some asskicking of the "bad guys." Except that’s not what
this is about. As the crew makes its exit, Andrew turns to the bossdopedealer
splayed out on the floor: "Hey, Pendejo!" When the bleeding immigrant
looks up, he sees a tattooed neck and face looking down at him. Suddenly, he
knows he’s not busted. He just got robbed. This is the second time no less that
Andrew has picked on this particular dealer, adding insult to injury. Our
friend Andrew blows a kiss at the bound and outraged gangsta on the floor,
laughs out loud and exits stage left. Diplomacy has never been Andrew’s strong
suit.
Andrew and crew pile into three vehicles and turn
onto the freeway. Two fourdoor, latemodel americanmade cars serve as rolling
barricades, in case the heat catches on and goes after the van. Andrew’s
listening in on a policescanner to make sure that isn’t happening. Reaching the
destination, the van pulls into an enclosed garage in a lowermiddleclass
neighborhood that is quickly turning industrial. The two crashcars continue on
to a Ralphssupermarket a few blocks away, where the occupants transfer to a new
vehicle and carpool [verb] back to the safe house. Andrew counts out paper
towers of fives, tens and twenties. The smack and coke not already packaged in
preweighed bundles get thrown on a digital scale, then wholesaled out quick.
It’s smiles and backslapping all around.
As he’s running down this story for me, Andrew flips carne asada on the
barbecue and sips at a winecooler. The band ? and the Mysterians is playing on
the stereo, harmonizing the strains of "96 Tears," their one hit. The
sun hammers down as some of the fellas, kicking back in lawn chairs, throw in a
comment or joke. It’s a nice day. I size up homeboy as he flips the carne. He’s
got fine features, green eyes, could be of spanish or cuban descent, even scot
or irish as long as you throw in some latino cut. He’s put together like a
boxer. Healthy without having the bulk you get from weights. A regular matineeidol
except for the ink all over his face and neck, original LA-tribal. The India
ink was hand-applied in stages while spending back-to-back summers in our finer
penal institutions.
Andrew’s a distinctive individual, but his is not the
ideal look for job interviews. "Couldn’t get a job," he says.
"You know the drill. They take onelook at a guy like me and that’s it. "I
wouldn’t hire me," he adds. "Would you? No skill, no education. I look
like what I am." The criminal record doesn’t help either, and to tell the
truth, he hasn’t been that eager to play it straight; the honestyEthic was
never properly instilled.
He started stealing as soon as he had pockets to put
things in. "Used to do burglary, checks, credit cards, whatever," he
says. "My first robbery was a convenience store, and that was it. I was
hooked. Get in, get the ferria,
get the fuck out. Fast. Nothing to sell, nothing to carry except cash." Problem
was, his tattoos began to make most illegal endeavors as impractical as the
straightest job. He was just too recognizable. "As I got more and more
ink, passing checks and credit cards got harder and harder." An armed
robber would want very much to blend in. Andrew didn’t, and was getting tired
of going to jail. And all the risk never netted much. "A store will
usually get you a few hundred," he notes, "plus they got video and
all that shit."
Then, one day, he says, "I started clocking the
local tacatos,
you know, junkies.
They were all picking up from this one borderbrother. All day every day, he’s
taking cash. Lots of cash. Thought about it and didn’t see any downside. Either
he shoots me first, or I’m going to take everything he’s got. Right?" Andrew’s
first heist of a pusher netted almost twogrand and a handful of heroinballoons
to boot. And what was the dealer going to do about it? Call the police?
Moments later, Andrew is playing with his two boys,
shooting makebelieve guns and rolling in the grass, dying dramatically. He
magically resurrects himself to do battle all over again. His old lady stands
on the side, slim and strikingly pretty, sporting small tattoos on her hands.
She orders the kids to the table, while Andrew and I kick it. He gestures
around the yard, points at his girl and the kids. "I’ve always dreamt
about this, as long as I could remember."
Now about 30, Andrew was Stateraised. "Never knew my parents. Bounced from foster homes to
juvenile hall to theCaliforniaYouthAuthority, right into laPinta."
He developed a real case of familyenvy as he watched other prisoners
"writing their old ladies and families, getting visits. Me? I never had
it, but I wanted it," he says with a soft cholo lilt. "Could never stay on the bricks
more than a couple of days before I caught a new case or got violated. Now,
man, every day is pretty fucking good." Andrew’s house is very much home
sweet home, with the yard full of women and kids wearing bright colours; the
men taking hits of cold cervezas and wine coolers; the smell of pot hanging
sweet and heavy in the air, mixing with the aroma of barbecue.
A heroinaddict as a youth, he’s put that behind him
for now. He kicked the habit on his own, because he sees twelvesteps or any
kind of program as a copout for the weak. "Sitting in a room of sniveling
motherfuckers ain’t for me."
But there’s something out of place in this scene of
contentment, and it’s not just the 9mm stuck in Andrew’s belt, nor the
rottweilers circling the yard silently. I narrow it down to Andrew’seyes.
They’re beyond watchful. It’s like he’s alwaysappraising everything around him,
alwayswaiting. That makes sense. Even when he doesn’t have cops to worry about,
there’s always the chance, at any given moment, that some burned drug dealer
with no sense of humor is going to settle the score for good. The penalty for
hitting a big time slinger of hard drugs is death, obviously, and not by lethal
injection or some other relatively humane method. Nope. It’s got to be bad
enough to send a message. "Anything you care about makes you weak,"
says Andrew. "So I don’t care too much, I don’t let myself. That don’t
mean I don’t love my old lady and kids. But I wake up every day knowing it’s
like my last. Like I’m a deadguy already, and I just got one bonus day with my
family." This guy has learned to live in the
present, without any help from aBeverlyHillsshrink. [Supposed to be ironic.]
Andrew is once again playing copsandrobbers with his
boys, going down in a hail of play gunfire, and I’m wondering how long he has
until it happens for real. No more magicresurrections. No starting the game
over. I ask him what he thinks his chances are of living to 40. He points a
cocked finger at me and says, "None." He punctuates his last
statement with a whispered, "Pow. Gotcha."
The carne is delicious, the tortillas fresh, the company pleasant.
The oldies keep playing, and life is great.
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