Renegades: My Wild Trip from Professor to New Journalist with Outrageous Visits from Clint Eastwood, Reggie Jackson, Larry Flynt, and other American Icons
By Robert Ward and Roy Blount
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About this ebook
What followed were two decades of assignments for New Times, GQ, SPORT, Rolling Stone, and other publications, covering the biggest stars of the sporting, music, art, and film worlds. This collection includes Ward's celebrated story on Reggie Jackson that nearly tore the New York Yankees apart (and was later brought to life in an ESPN miniseries "The Bronx Is Burning"); a profile of the "outlaw" country music movement of Willie Nelson, Waylon Jennings, Jerry Jeff Walker, and David Allan Coe; and an insightful feature on Hustler publisher Larry Flynt as a young pornographer that almost cost Ward his life.
Also included are essays about the former premier of Vietnam Nguyen Cao Ky trying to adjust to life in California; an aging Lee Marvin dealing with the survivor's guilt from his time in World War II; and profiles of LeRoy Neiman, Robert Mitchum, and a variety of fringe characters on the American scene.
Robert Ward
Robert Ward is the author of eleven novels, including Four Kinds of Rain, a New York Times Notable Book, Red Baker, winner of the PEN West Award for Best Novel, Shedding Skin, and The Stone Carrier.
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Renegades - Robert Ward
Introduction from
Roy Blount Jr.
Once upon a time—in the much-abused ’70s—giants walked the earth, however unsteadily, and stayed out late, and for some reason they suffered certain intrepid reporters to do it with them and take notes. Robert Ward was very good at this. I did some of it myself, with some of the same giants…
Well, it wasn’t so much that they were giants. Tom Cruise is a giant, but he’s not a character. You don’t want to hang out with him and find out what he is like. The people Ward was so good at profiling were characters. And characters cry out, by nature, for writers. Capturing characters, back then, took not only an ability to hang, but also an ear for dialogue, a knack for words, and an ability to come off, honestly, as more than just a curiosity-seeker.
Ward’s standard statement, to the character in question, of what he was up to—I want to set the record straight
—was inspired, since characters tend to feel that they have never met the right appreciator. Frequently the character was outraged by the writer’s version of him, in print, but I doubt that Reggie Jackson still wants to kill Robert Ward. Ward was too attentive an appreciator, and Jackson too receptive to appreciation. They were a good match, working together. Ward’s piece on Reggie didn’t just clear up some Jacksonian history, it made it. And not only did Ward get it right, so did Reggie: he was the straw that stirred the drink. He stirred it by saying he was, to Ward.
Sometimes, though, Ward was honorably at cross purposes with his subject. I don’t think we’re getting at the real core of me,
Leroy Nieman tells him. Maybe not, but they got at his shuck, which was the pertinent layer. Larry Flynt, on the other hand, comes across as an integrated personality, sleazy through and through and no bones about it. Ward got good stuff
—frequently great stuff—from characters, and he didn’t have to rip it off. They wanted him to know their stuff.
If there were an equivalent to Lee Marvin today, a magazine writer would be lucky to mine him for grooming tips, relayed by a press agent who had exacted a guarantee that his client would be on the cover. Ward got drunk with the actual Lee Marvin, and talked with him heart-to-heart. Ward also received from Pete Maravich a length-of-the-court behind-the-back pass. If that’s not enough to convince you that those were good days to be out and about, how about the fact that the outlaw country
singer Jerry Jeff Walker lived, as Ward reports, in a beautiful sixty-five thousand dollar… home outside of Austin, complete with modern kitchen, fireplace, sliding paneled doors, swimming pool, and basketball court
?
Granted, we had no Internet back then. So? Do you think you learn anything worthwhile from today’s celebrity-hating gotcha-
gossip websites? And do you think Robert Mitchum would tweet? With Ward’s accompaniment, Mitchum blew his own deep, distinctive horn.
~Roy Blount Jr.
Introduction
I was thrilled to learn that Ben LeRoy, major honcho of upstart and super-hip Tyrus Books wanted to put out a collection of my journalistic pieces from the fab ’70s and ’80s. I mean how many scribes get their perishable magazine and newspaper work collected in book form?
Yep, a collection of my best pieces. Perfect, thought I! That is, until I began to ponder what this endeavor might entail.
Boss Ben wanted me to write a companion essay along with the pieces. Something that might give the inside poop on the life of this particular New Journalist, as he waded his way through the muck and double dealing of the high-powered journalistic world of sharpies, slicksters, and general freaking editorial maniacs.
Sounds a-okay to me, Ben,
says I.
But then I started to write and a sick, twisted feeling spread through my bowels.
The very idea of revisiting my younger self, the mustachioed, cowboy-haired, ill-kempt, bourbon-drinking, wild man who would go anywhere at a moment’s notice, meet total strangers, get them to reveal crucial things about themselves, sleep two hours a night, come back home on the red-eye with a filled notebook and then sit down and lash together a ten-thousand-word story over the weekend, while still finding time to play the guitar, go to all-night discos with Morgan Entrekin, Jay McInerney, Bob Datilla, David Black, John Lombardi, Lucian Truscott, Richard Price, Mike Disend, John Eskow, Terry Southern, Rip Torn, Bob Asahina, and anyone else we happened to pick up along the merry way… just thinking about that younger version of myself was exhausting. Plus, I’d have to relive the doubt and fear I felt every time I went out on a piece.
The question every freelance journo (without a trust fund) asks himself: What if I blow it? What if my subject refuses to talk to me? What if all he or she says is, ‘We play them one game at a time, Bob.’ Or ‘I just thank Jesus Christ for my movie career.’
Or, even worse, as one former NFL quarterback once told a friend of mine: I love playing football and the forward pass is my favorite play.
Well, no fucking shit! My friend Hicks then asked his subject to think of something that really made him mad, just drove him nuts, the idea being he might be able to squeeze a soupçon of passion out of this meathead. The QB agreed to try and think of the thing that bugged him, that drove him batshit, like no other. My friend called him back the next day, and the great QB said: Jack, I got it. I really got it. The thing that pisses my ass off more than anything in this goddamned world!
Good man,
Jack said, getting pen ready to scratch paper. And what is said thing?
Careless drivers,
the QB screamed. Careless fucking drivers really make me angry, pal!
Whereupon Hicksie saw his entire piece, career, life fall apart. This was the big reveal? This was what someone would plunk their money down for? Careless fucking drivers?
Holy addled-shit, Batman!
Yes, that was the great fear. Going out into the big world and having the guy/gal/celeb/sports star/murderer just stare at you and mumble clichés. Every time you ventured out, you lived and died by getting good stuff.
No wonder journalists drank, snorted,
smoked… anything to give them an edge, to shut down the fear that ran through them like an electric cord when they showed up at some total stranger’s home and had to become their instant confidant/best friend, if only for a day.
In the end, of course, I agreed to give the essay a shot, but even now… for real… sitting here thinking about the past, I cannot believe how I did it. Supported myself for years—eight to be exact—as a freelance writer. Never once did I receive a contributing editor’s stipend from any magazine, as some of my friends did. See, to get a magazine to give you guaranteed money you had to already HAVE MONEY! If they knew you had a nice bankroll, or your dad was sending you dough from the fund every month, they also knew you didn’t have to write for them. You could afford to wait, write your novel, work on a screenplay, or… worse… write for one of their higher-paying competitors. But if you were a poor muther, like yours truly, you had no leverage, and, ergo, you had to take whatever assignments they tossed your way. Everyone knew I had zero in the bank account, and that I could ill afford to turn down any assignment or I’d be living in a phone booth on Forty-second Street. Therefore, as in all things business, it took money to make more money, and I had no freaking dough.
Which meant I had to get the story every month, or I simply couldn’t live in New York City. But here’s the wildest part: Yes, they had me by the cojones, these slick-assed magazine editors, but even so, I absolutely loved doing it. I loved the freaking challenge. After teaching for six years in Nowheresville, USA, I wasn’t ever going back to the dead-assed academic life. I’d get the fucking story even if it killed me (or I had to kill someone else). As the U.S. Marines say, Failure wasn’t an option.
Anyway, I dug the high. The adrenaline rush of making the plane, flying to some unknown place to talk to some cat who had no real interest in talking to me, and, half the time, was barely aware I was coming. Oh, they all knew ahead of time, but guys like ballplayers, cops, actors… agreed to things through their publicists, and then forgot about them. More than once, I landed somewhere only to be told my subject was too busy to talk just now.
However, not once did I ever get back without that same guy talking to me. And I usually got good stuff,
too.
Like I say, I loved it all. The sheer juice of it. Hell, I even loved the churning upset stomach, the frazzled nerves, the looming, terrifying deadlines. I dug all of it, and lived for it, and would have done it forever if I hadn’t almost died from the trip.
Part One
The
Existential
Clown
Hello Dear Reader! Ever since I read that greeting in Charles Dickens I’ve always wanted to use it. Besides it’s true. I do have affection for anyone who reads my books, and I hope it’s returned. Before I take you on a ride with my Outlaw Journalistic Clan in New York (living on fast food, dope, and booze; catching planes at all hours of the night; battling with editors; making love on the fly; and generally having one hell of a wild time), please allow me a small digression, as I remember how I got into the freelance racket to begin with. After all, people have asked me to tell them how to get into the biz for years. More than one half-defeated wannabe has trundled up to me and said, I guess I could never be a journalist because I didn’t go to any recognized journalist school.
My answer is always the same:
Good for you. Neither did I.
In fact, thinking back on it all, I doubt this book would even exist if I had. Schools teach you the right way to do things, the polite way, and that little lesson has ruined more than one writer, whether journalist or novelist. As for myself, originally, I had no intention of heading into the freelance game. No, no, this working-class kid from Baltimore, Maryland, was on track to live a perfectly nice, normal academic life as a professor of literature at Hobart and William Smith College in the frozen and picturesque Finger Lakes region of Northern New York. Yes, I had a gorgeous wife, named Bobbi (the Bob and Bobbi Show), her two kids from her first marriage, and in thirty years or so I’d be a full professor. I could wear a robe, fumble with my car keys, and act all confused when those darn, meddlin’ kids hid my eraser.
Yeah, Robert Ward, novelist and professor, was headed for Mister Chipsdom. Dead on.
Hell, it was only my fourth year of teaching and I’d already published a prize-winning novel called Shedding Skin, the wild, comic story of my escape from my drugged-out, dark, harbor hometown of Baltimore, across the fruited plains to the whacked-out, psychedelic, harbor town, San Francisco. To be more precise, a trip to wild and woolly Haight-Ashbury where I took every drug known to mankind; lived across the street from the Grateful Dead; attended be-ins, love-ins; saw the Hell’s Angels stomp a guy nearly to death out in front of the Head Shop; hung out with Bill Graham, the great rock promoter; saw Jimi Hendrix play on a flatbed truck in the Panhandle Park, the first time he’d ever played San Francisco (I was in the front row blasted out of my head on Purple Haze); met Janis Joplin and Al Owsley, the actual Purple Haze acid maker; had a total nervous breakdown; and came limping back to Baltimore half dead, seeing psychedelic demons flying out of the toilet.
After recovering, I finished grad school, got married, and ended up assistant professor of English at Hobart and William Smith. Shedding Skin came out, won a National Endowment Grant, sold maybe a thousand copies, and my editor, the great Fran McCullough, asked me what I wished to do next.
Next, haha,
I said. Say, Frannie, I’ve got a million freaking ideas.
That’s fine, Bobby,
Frannie said. But really you need just one.
I know. No problem. I’ll get right back to ya.
Yeah, a million all right. I took some Dexedrine, smoked a couple of packs of cigarettes, and set my mind a workin’. What would I write next?
Then, all at once, I knew.
See, after my Shedding Skin days I’d become friendly with many New Lefters, who had all convinced me that I had to get more serious. One of them, Sol Yurick, a then forty-nine-year-old novelist who had written a wonderful, very radical, Lefty novel called The Bag, told me that if I was going to be a real novelist I had to commit to The Revolution. He had liked Shedding Skin, but admonished me about my comic leanings. You’re a hell of a writer. But you don’t want to end up where you are now.
Right,
I said. Where’s that?
Bob, you lack seriousness. You’re just an existential clown. You skewer everybody but that’s not the real you. We’re in a serious revolution. Our work has to serve that.
An existentialist clown.
Oh, God, that was the worst thing in the world. All over the world young people were protesting the Vietnam War, fighting evil capitalism, trying to let LOVE flourish, and here I was an existential clown? Why, existentialism was a worn-out, exhausted philosophy for burned-out cases from the Second World War. I didn’t want to be associated with them. I wanted to be with my brothers and sisters of the new Revolution. I wanted (God help me) to change the world!
I loved Sol like the father I never clicked with, and decided then and there to write a SERIOUS LEFT-WING NOVEL, replete with evil capitalists, and shining-eyed Leftist idealistic bombers. I wrote and wrote and wrote… hundreds and hundreds of pages. The novel was called Baltimore. I aimed to show noble Lefties fighting the city government, changing working-class counterrevolutionary attitudes. Lefties would take over the fucking world. My book would be a giant sword of righteousness, stabbing the evil bosses in their fat, plutocratic guts.
The only problem was that most of the Leftist Radicals I’d met at Sol’s place in Brooklyn were kind of humorless assholes, rich know-it-alls who had never met a working-class person except maybe their father’s chauffeur.
Still, I recall it all fondly. Sitting in Sol’s warm, happy Park Slope kitchen we would argue about what the working class wanted. Some of the SDSers I met there were sure they knew. The working class, they said, wanted revolution, they wanted to own the means of production, but due to False Consciousness (Herbert Marcuse’s term for Capitalist and Mad Ave brainwashing in his lefty diatribe One-Dimensional Man) they didn’t yet know it. The left’s job was to raise their consciousness so they understood what they really wanted.
It was all so heady. We were going to save the working class from their own brainwashed instincts.
All righhhhht! Righhhhht onnnnnn!
Except for one thing. I had grown up with all these working people in row-house Baltimore, and I was pretty sure most of them weren’t the least suffering from False Consciousness. Not only that but I was pretty dang positive that what they really wanted wasn’t Revolution at all but something a lot more tangible. Something like, well… boats. That’s right, speedboats. Which they could race up and down the Chesapeake and the swift rivers outside Annapolis. Yes, they wanted boats and country houses, and RVs, and snowmobiles. Just like the middle class. Okay, granted, maybe working guys wanted speedboats instead of sailboats, but I was pretty sure boats were at the top of the list.
I knew this as sure as I knew the sun was going to come up. So why didn’t I say so in Sol’s hothouse kitchen? Well, I was younger, and I hadn’t gone to Harvard or Berkeley or anywhere important. Unlike me, the clown, these people were committed. Their eyes burned with the passion of True Believers. In short, I was intimidated. Talking to all these Ivy League–educated folks made me doubt what I knew. Maybe I was suffering from False Consciousness my very own self!
So when I got around to writing novel number two, I tried. Oh, man, how I tried. I was going to write the great, the ultimate, the most radical of radical novels, stuff that would make Sol’s eyes pop. I would be Dreiser, Jack London, and André Malraux all rolled into one. I turned out page after page of Leftist fiction. Serious! Committed! I wrote of giant demonstrations, I glorified union guys and hippies and brave new women!
It was gonna be some kind of wonderful!
Except for the fact that I didn’t really believe any of it. My characters were cardboard, talking agitprops, lame knockoffs of Clifford Odets and John Steinbeck. I was never going to be a good radical
because I didn’t believe in Socialism. Of course, I didn’t really believe in Capitalism either, which Sol attacked me for. Which side are you on, Bobby?
he said. (Will you be a dirty scab or will you be a man?
)
After writing about five hundred pages of horrific crap I tossed the book aside. What dreck. What horrific bullshit! My attendant rage from my own stupidity made me probably not the world’s best guy to live with at this time. I took speed to hide my depression and disappointment. But speed made me a little cranky. People would walk up to me on campus and say Hi ya Bob!
and my response would be, Hi ya Bob? Hi ya fucking Bob? How’d you like me to rip your head off and stick it up your ass? Hi ya fucking Bob that, asshole!
Soon, not only was the book finito but my marriage was too. The gorgeous Bobbi left me for an earnest rock ’n’ roller who was going to change the world through music. Together they opened a Leftist vegetarian restaurant known as The Coming Struggle. As I drove by the place I could see all our former friends hanging there. None of them bothered to call me anymore.
A month or so after flopping on people’s couches I found myself living in a little cabin on Lake Seneca, feeling like the ultimate loser.
It was all so true. Karl Marx help me, I was a mere existentialist clown.
God, the pain of that declaration! That all my earnest reading of Marx, Lenin, Paul Sweezy in Monthly Review, Marcuse, Fanon… had come down to this miserable, lonely existence. I had let the Movement down. I had thrown two years of deeply earnest, if god-awful, work away. I had lost my family. And what of my students, those who looked to me to do something deeply radical, something brave… something that would lead them over the threshold of stagnant bourgeois life to a new and glowing socialist humanism? Yeah, you got it. I’d failed them too.
Clown that I was, I picked up my guitar and played I’m a Loser
and found myself laughing instead of crying. Bobby Ward, the Revolutionary. What a terrible, pathetic joke.
What’s more, I had real material worries too. I had about a thousand bucks in the bank. I was thirty-two years old. I had no future in academia… I had failed the Left… hated the right… God, what a mess I was.
There seemed to be nothing left.
But then, at the very Poe-like pit of despair, I found it.
Even through all the misery of my marriage breaking up, tossing out my book, the kids crying, I had always loved reading, and during those lonely, soul-searching days the only thing that kept me together was The New Journalism. Tom Wolfe was my God. I stayed up all night reading The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test again and again. It was, after all, much like my own novel, Shedding Skin. And I felt that Wolfe was nothing if not an existential clown. As were Hunter Thompson, Charles Portis, Joe Eszterhas (before he went Hollywood), Roy Blount Jr., and of course, the genius comic writer Terry Southern. It was impossible to guess which politics they endorsed. Thompson was sort of a Leftist, but more of an anarchist. Wolfe was possibly a hated Republican. But he spared no one his acid wit. Blount was a true comic and even something of a scholar, and Terry Southern found the entire world absurd.
And they didn’t have to worry about what subject to write about. America was teeming with change. Rock ’n’ roll, sex, politics, art… anything you could think of, it was all changing, morphing into something else new, both brave and absurd at the same time. And which novelists were chronicling all these changes and societal explosions?
No one. Not a one.
Okay, Updike sort of was with his Rabbit series, but his suburban generation barely felt the psychic earthquakes. Pynchon was still making up his mythic worlds, which bored me to death. His books seemed to exist solely to exhibit his high IQ. James Baldwin had moved to France and barely wrote anymore, though I still idolized him for Another Country and for his essays. The only one who still really mattered to me, Norman Mailer, had moved to journalism and done his best work in that form. More proof that journalism was where it was at.
This, I thought, could be the life for me.
The real world. After all, what was really good about my first novel, Shedding Skin, was that it was all based on things I’d lived through or knew about firsthand. I had known gangster teens in Baltimore. I had hitched all over the United States. I had lived in Haight-Ashbury. Yes, the chapters went off into madness and comic exaggeration, but what made them work was that at the core they were real. But all the Radical Political material I had worked into my five-hundred-page opus was second-hand stuff from books. I wasn’t a Communist. I didn’t come, like Sol, from the Brooklyn Jewish Left. I was a Baltimore boy from a town where your sense of humor was your main weapon in life.
And so I decided out there in my little lakeside cabin that I would start writing journalism. Fuck ’em all. I would make my worst attribute, my clown’s view of life, my strongest asset. I would become a New Journalist.
The question was how?
I did a little digging, asking around in New York and I found out my first Catch-22. To get an assignment you needed a clip from another article you’d written. You sent that clip, along with a written proposal, to the magazine you wished to write for. Since they didn’t know you and might not even read the clip, you should send your lead—the first paragraph of the piece—along with a few paragraphs of what the piece probably would sound like (I say probably,
because since you hadn’t interviewed anyone yet, how the hell would you know what it REALLY sounded like?). The editors of the magazine would then read your clip and your proposal, and if they liked it all they would hire you to write the piece.
But who was going to do that for me? The only clips I had were from years ago, when I’d written for an underground newspaper in Baltimore (theBaltimore Free Press, which I had started with Jack Hicks and John Waters!). I became depressed, downhearted. I had to find something close by to write about, some subject I could drive to and observe. Then I’d have to write my lead, send it in, and hope that someone would read it.
I sent a query to my agent, Georges Borchardt. No answer. Fed up with Geneva, my new girlfriend—the gorgeous and brilliant Robin Finn (who later became a great sports journalist for the New York Times)—and I drove one weekend to Toronto just to get the hell away from town. While hanging around Bloor Street we saw this new movie called Dirty Harry, which blew us both away. The star, this new guy called Clint Eastwood, was the coolest actor I had seen since Steve McQueen. He played a manly killer of a cop: cool, tough, dug jazz, girls fell to their knees when he walked up to them. It was all ridiculous but great fun. Any guy would want to be Clint.
When we got back to depressoville, Geneva, we were both exhausted and famished. We pulled up to an Amy Joy’s on Route 5 and 20, and there were three real, live Geneva policemen, all of them the exact opposite of Clint. They were overweight local guys, laughing, drinking coffee, and eating a huge helping of doughnuts. They talked about their kids, sports, and the bad weather. Existentialist clown that I am, I started thinking of a story that would show small-town cops as they really were. I mean what did these guys do all day? Did they, like Dirty Harry, ever solve murders (I had never heard of any in Geneva). Did they have to battle drunks, gangsters on the lam, like in Hemingway’s The Killers
? I had no idea. But I thought it might be fun to find out.
The trouble was I had no assignment, and I couldn’t get an assignment without having a lead paragraph to show an editor that I knew something about my story.
Catch-22, indeed.
I thought about it for a couple of days. Then I decided, what the hell, I’ll just drive down to the police station, reporter’s notebook and pen in hand, and ask them if I could cruise around with them for a few days. If they asked which magazine I was writing for, I’d have to fake it. I decided I would say something like "I have friends in New York who want me to do an article for Rolling Stone or this new magazine New Times, and if I could just drive around with you a little.…" It was the truth but by a nose. My friend in New York wasn’t an editor on any magazine but my own agent. A white lie, but a kid’s got to get going, somehow.
I shouldn’t have worried so much. I learned very quickly that when it comes to being written about most people are thrilled to get a chance to tell their story. Before I could get my request out of my mouth, the chief of police had assigned me to hang out with three teams of cops as they made their rounds.
I left the station house, deliriously happy. I couldn’t wait to get out there with the Geneva fuzz. I was back into real life again, finding out what actually happens. Suddenly, Geneva, New York, seemed a hundred times more interesting. Why? Because I would be seeing the place from the cop’s point of view, and they knew way more than I did about the world we both lived in. As an academic, high-classed NOVELIST I pretended to stand above the townies and small-town cops who protected me. An easy sense of cultural superiority (i.e., snobbery) kept me from actually learning anything about the very town I lived in. But that was ending now, and I was thrilled to get out and do legwork like a real journalist.
A day later I found myself in the backseat of a patrol car. I was excited, a little scared, but mainly thrilled out of my mind.
Notebook and pen in hand, I started on the ride that a few weeks later would turn into the piece that would be published in New Times magazine, under the title The Yawn Patrol
(a title made up by Frank Rich, one of the founders of the magazine and one which would cause me more trouble than I could have ever imagined).
Here it is then, my first piece: The Yawn Patrol.
The Yawn Patrol
Serpico… The French Connection… Magnum Force… tableaus of murder, suave narcotics dealers, massive payoffs, crazed killer rookies… bullet holes in foreheads, eyeballs, cheekbones spattered in twilight city streets.… These are the police… battling the forces of evil, mayhem, insanity that threaten to engulf us at any moment. But wait… let us take another look… what have we here?
A thirty-year-old policeman named Ed McGuigan of Geneva, New York, is putting on heavy-duty Big Boy Gardner’s Gloves… another policeman, a big round man named Cring (Richard Cring, partner), is standing there in the dusty old station house with him. Outside, across Castle Street, the tough city bars are quiet… McGuigan and Cring are also quiet, businesslike, tense. They are going out on Patrol. Their assignment? They must stop a potential killer… a killer who stalks the third floor of one of the plush three-story original American settler Historic Houses that line Geneva’s South Main Street. The killer is named Toughy. He is… a Persian cat, and he is Out of Control.
I hope we don’t get scratched,
says Trickler. These goddamned animals… once they lose their minds… you can’t tell what the hell will happen.
Cring nods his head.
Yeah,
he says, his eyes bulging. I know what you mean.
Earlier that day I had talked with Cring about his duty.
It’s not bad,
he says. But what I really look forward to is retirement. I’ve been on the force six years. Only fourteen more and I can move to Atlanta, get a nice little house… play some golf.
That is if that damned cat, Toughy, on Main Street doesn’t get him first.
The main reason I hope it’s not too crazed,
says McGuigan, picking up a wire hook and a burlap bag, which he tosses jauntily over his back, "is that if he is nuts… and I have to shoot him… Christ, I’ll never hear the end of it my… wife for one… she loves animals… and the damned civic groups… you can’t shoot a cat in this town and expect to get away with it."
Which is, of course, true. You can’t expect to get away with anything in a town the size of Geneva, New York (population 17,500). The town is located on Lake Seneca, which runs from Geneva, way down past Watkins Glen, of Grand Prix and Rock Concert fame. But Geneva itself, like many small cities in America, will never gain the fame of Watkins Glen. For Geneva is what is known as a dying town.
Once prosperous in the ’20s, once the home of gamblers, a vacation spot for Mafia men who were attracted to the lake (Lake Trout Capital of the World), to the good hotels and the Club 86 where they used to see name stars such as Billy Eckstein, the town has long since been past its Golden Age. Though private and prestigious Hobart and William Smith colleges and the Cornell Experiment Station reside here, the town’s main economic booster, the Sampson State Air Force Base, has been gone since the Korean War. With it went Shuron Optical, though the uninhabited building still stands next to Shuron Baseball Park, once home of the minor league Geneva Twins, who themselves have disappeared. Also listed among Geneva’s casualties are the Patent Cereal Company, the Andes Range Company, the U.S. Radiator Company, and finally the Geneva Market Basket. All of them were bought out by bigger corporations and moved to more lucrative, less isolated cities.
When one rides around Geneva (as the police do), one begins to feel that all that is left in the town are bars: those bars mostly inhabited by working-class whites; the black bars; the funkiest and strangest of Geneva’s bars, Moon’s, which features poor whites, blacks, Puerto Ricans, and several transvestites; bars like Tiara’s, where Geneva’s first murder in several years took place last summer; and the Central Hotel, which even the police don’t like to walk by, in the town’s Butt End.
Many more, without names or signs, are just storefronts with taps serving Genessee and Utica Club to the tired, sweaty blacks, Puerto Ricans, and rednecks who work at the few places left to work at in Geneva—Libby’s and the American Can, or the Geneva Foundry, a hideous smoke-belching building that blasts forth excrement into the sky night and day.
This torpor then, which pervades every aspect of the town, is the atmosphere in which the Geneva Police must work. The boredom, the feeling of exhaustion, of almost a twilight sleep, is as real an enemy to the police as the fights, marital spats (their most dangerous call), and burglaries that the Punch Patrol must combat.
On my first day cruising with the Geneva Police, I ride with Jim Trickler, twenty-six, who has served two years on the force. We have been riding his route—the Northwest Area of town, out Highway 5 and 20, past the Twin Oaks Restaurant, a hangout for Hobart kids, past the Town and Country Plaza and back again—for three hours and not a trace of anything has happened.
It’s like this,
says Trickler, taking off his blue cap and running his hands through his hair. Sometimes nothing happens for so long you wonder why you’re getting paid at all… but that’s when it can get very dangerous for you… because when it does happen, it always happens fast… very fast… and if you’ve let the boredom get to you, you could react in the wrong way… or maybe not react at all… which could be fatal.
Notes While Riding: Friday
It is eight o’clock on a Friday night and Officer McGuigan, thirty-two years old, married with two children, is telling me about his most memorable evening as a policeman: I was off duty and I was trying to catch some hookers down on Exchange Street,
he said. It was right outside of the Paddock Bar.….
He is smiling and his eyes twinkle. Though his nickname among his fellow cops is Barney Fife, he looks more like a thin Steve McQueen, blond, friendly, and boyish.
"Anyway, we were down there to get this whore… me and a couple of the other guys… a couple of them were real bad actors. They just didn’t have it right… I mean they stood out on the corner just leaning on the parking meters saying, ‘Hey, baby’… stuff like that.…. I figure there’s only one way to get this baby… you got to drive up to her and come on from the car. I get the unmarked car… the one that works, most of the cars don’t work, a couple of the engines are literally held together by bailing wire… anyway, I ride up to her and I say, ‘Hey, how you doing.’… I don’t ask her to go with me, ’cause that is entrapment… but sure enough, she comes right over… and soon she’s in the car.
Anyway… these colored broads all got old men… pimps… and you don’t want to have to mess with some of these guys… jeez… so anyway, we get going, now I’m tryin’ to get her to take me to this motel outside the town, where the cops are waitin’, you know… but she don’t want to go… so we start going out 5 and 20… right along here… and she finally says, ‘Hell, whitey, I gonna give it to you right over by the car wash there… yeah right over there by the car wash across from Loblaw’s.…. and I’m thinkin’… ‘Ohhh boy, maybe I ought to knock off a piece free and make the city pay for it,’ you know? But I don’t do it.…. Anyway, we get over there and she takes off her dress, right there in the car wash, man she just whipped that dress off… and she no sooner had it off than she looks at me and says, like she can smell me or somethin’, ‘You’re a cop. You are a cop, you mutherfucker.’ Well, I had just given her the money… that’s very important… it was ten bucks… and I said, ‘That’s right, baby… and you are under arrest.’ Well, she started screamin’ and yelling, and she laid one on me almost put me through the window, wham, she punched me in the head, knocked me every way but loose. I didn’t want to hurt her. She’s a girl, right? But what you gonna do? I finally grabbed her, and held her down. Well, she sees where I’m takin’ her and she says, ‘No you don’t, you muther’… and grabs the wheel. I couldn’t believe it. Then, she manages to get over next to me, and slams her foot down on the gas pedal. Oh, that was it. I thought, ‘Well, Ed, you’ve had it now, baby.’ We were going across the parkin’ lot about eighty miles an hour, and I’m holding her, slapping her with the back of my hand now, with one hand, and trying to steer with the other, and we were headin’ right at the big lights… zoom zoom… just whizzin’ past’ em… By Jesus, I thought, this is it, Ed… and finally I whacked her a good one and said, ‘You cool it or I’ll put you out with some Mace’… and I started trying to take her in. It was a hell of a struggle, I’ll tell you… and I felt weird… I mean a naked black chick in my car… riding down 5 and 20. Christ, what a night.
He is in high spirits now, laughing and looking at me.
Soon, however, the car falls into silence. Though the radio is always on, and we are receiving calls from the Canandaigua Sheriff’s Department and the New York State Troopers, one learns not to really listen to it. It’s like a low