Dallas Noir

Dallas Noir

by David Hale Smith (Editor)
Dallas Noir

Dallas Noir

by David Hale Smith (Editor)

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Overview

Texas’s ultimate noir town, where nasty surprises lurk around every turn, reveals its unseemly underbelly.

“This collection of crime stories takes its inspiration from the darker corners of everyday life in a city that many associate only with a historic assassination—or a glitzy TV show about oil fortunes and family feuds. All of the authors are Dallas natives and have written stories, both contemporary and historical, that run from the sublime to the ridiculous, from the factual to the fantastical.” —CrimeReads, included in Kathleen Kent’s Dallas round-up

“All in all, the stories in Dallas Noir have an unsettling, slightly creepy presence that is not just appropriate but completely necessary for a collection of noir fiction. If you think Dallas is boring or white-bread—well, perhaps you haven’t gotten out much and seen the dark edges of Big D for yourself. And if you haven’t, maybe you don’t even want to.” —Dallas Morning News

Akashic Books continues its groundbreaking series of original noir anthologies, launched in 2004 with Brooklyn Noir. Each story is set in a distinct neighborhood or location within the city of the book.

Brand-new stories by: Kathleen Kent, Ben Fountain, James Hime, Harry Hunsicker, Matt Bondurant, Merritt Tierce, Daniel J. Hale, Emma Rathbone, Jonathan Woods, Oscar C. Peña, Clay Reynolds, Lauren Davis, Fran Hillyer, Catherine Cuellar, David Haynes, and J. Suzanne Frank.

From the introduction by David Hale Smith:

"My favorite line in my favorite song about Dallas goes like this: Dallas is a rich man with a death wish in his eyes / A steel and concrete soul in a warm heart and love disguise . . . The narrator of Jimmie Dale Gilmore’s perfect tune “Dallas” is coming to town as a broke dreamer with the bright lights of the big city on his mind. He’s just seen the Dallas cityscape through the window of his seat on a DC-9 at night. Is he just beginning his quest? Or is he on his way home, flying out of Love Field, reminiscing after seeing the woman who stepped on him when he was down?

"In a country with so many interesting cities, Dallas is often overlooked—except on November 22 every year. The heartbreaking anniversary keeps coming back around in a nightmare loop, for all of us. On that day in 1963, Dallas became American noir. A permanent black scar on its history that will never be erased, no matter how many happy business stories and hit television shows arise from here. In a stark ongoing counterweight to the JFK tragedy are those two iterations of the TV show. Dallas is not a TV show. It’s a real city . . . For the past forty years, my capacity to be surprised by it has not diminished one bit. I hope the stories in this collection will surprise you too."


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781617751905
Publisher: Akashic Books, Ltd.
Publication date: 11/05/2013
Series: Akashic Noir Series
Pages: 256
Product dimensions: 5.20(w) x 8.10(h) x 0.80(d)

About the Author

DAVID HALE SMITH is a literary agent based in Dallas, Texas. Along with fourteen Edgar Award nominations, his clients have won the Edgar, Anthony, Agatha, Shamus, Barry, Macavity, Eisner, and Bram Stoker awards, as well as the Los Angeles Times Book Prize. He is the editor of Dallas Noir.

Read an Excerpt

CHAPTER 1

HOLE-MAN BY MATT BONDURANTWhite Rock

By the time Anders opened the newspaper, four of them were on his left foot, proboscis planted deep, their hairy black torsos pumping with effort. He mashed them with his hand, leaving a bloody smear, and wiped his palm on the brittle St. Augustine grass. Nine in the morning, Saturday, late July, already ninety degrees, and a dark fog of swirling mosquitoes hung above the back alley. Anders's two-year-old daughter Blake was pushing a miniature stroller around the tiny patch of grass. Beyond the grass the blue eye of the pool, and the eight-foot wooden privacy fence, the steady atonal thump of roofing hammers pounding throughout the neighborhood. It was the summer in Dallas when the West Nile virus was killing off a dozen senior citizens a week. City Hall was in a public relations panic, and in the evenings low-flying planes crisscrossed over the neighborhood, blanketing the city with dense fogs of pesticides.

Anders and Blake were both wearing a visible sheen of 65 percent deet, stuff Anders got online because you couldn't legally buy it in stores. It helped, but the sticky residue was difficult to scrub off, leaving a pungent odor reminiscent of public restrooms. Anders was irritated for several reasons. When he was putting the trash in the alley that morning, he looked through the chinks in their fence and saw that the house across the alley had a pool that was mostly empty. This represented a blatant disregard of one of the principal codes of suburbia. Standing water meant larvae, meant mosquitoes.

Anders's pool was like something out of resort brochure, expertly cleaned and with a water quality that almost made you cry to look at it. The pool service kept it sparkling and inviting, a crew of men coming weekly to vacuum, backwash, apply chemicals. The pool took almost the entire backyard, the edges of it coming within four feet of the house on the garage side. Anders put a potted palm tree on the deck and a plastic owl on the diving board to keep the ducks out.

He was a fleshy man, over six feet, with the broad back and pillow shoulders of swimmer. A former collegiate water polo player, Anders had insisted on the pool when they moved to Dallas, but he'd been in it maybe a dozen times that summer, mostly due to Blake's lack of interest and the horde of mosquitoes that descended about a minute after you exposed your naked flesh.

Blake had a sippy cup and her Batman mask buckled in the seat of her toy stroller. She was murmuring to the mask, and Anders could see a half-dozen mosquitoes on her face and neck, like a slash of dark freckles on her fair skin. Fuck! Anders swiped at her face, then scooped her up like a football, Blake hanging onto the stroller, and ran inside the house. He set her down and she continued pushing the stroller through the kitchen, murmuring to her mask. Anders was getting a wet paper towel to wipe her down when he heard the slow crunch and thrum of footsteps above him. Someone was walking across the roof.

This was East Dallas, the broad swath of suburban neighborhoods with teardrop cul-de-sacs, wide concrete avenues, and brick ranch-style homes built tight together. A network of alleys ran behind every house and everyone had privacy fences with lumbering automatic gates that opened to the garage. Front yards were landscaped and unspoiled, tended by feverish bands of Mexican men who descended upon the neighborhoods in droves at all hours, eight men at a time cutting, edging, trimming, cleaning gutters, pruning trees in a yard barely big enough to hold a racquetball court, knocking the whole thing out in about ten minutes. Sometimes in their enthusiasm they did yards they weren't contracted for, but it didn't seem to matter. So a gang of Mexicans running across your roof with backpack leaf blowers and pruning saws wasn't too unusual — but Anders knew that his normal day was Tuesday. This was Saturday.

He stepped out the front door to look but there was nobody on the roof, at least on the front side. His square plot of front yard grass was neatly trimmed and edged, his hedges cut with razorlike precision. When was that done? Some of his neighbors a few houses down and across the alley had crews scrambling around, men carrying ropes, saws, stacks of shingles, stepping from roof to fence to neighboring roof like circus performers. Somebody was always getting their roof done, and Anders never understood how this was possible. In North Texas hail the size of golf balls was a yearly occurrence, but it seemed that some in his neighborhood were getting their roofs replaced several times a year. He decided that he would have to get a better look at the pool across the alley before he reported it to some kind of authority.

So Anders got on his roof. Easy enough using the side fence gate; low slope, no gables, a brick chimney for the gas fireplace that they never used. He hadn't been on the roof before, and he was struck by the ease of access and the powerful monotony of the vista. The same roof layout was repeated in rows as far as he could see, some partially obscured by the swelling branches of oak and pecan trees, alleys running between the rows like rivers, the privacy fences cutting clean lines. He walked up to the peak over the garage, next to the alley, and stood for the best angle.

The house directly behind him was a rental; that he already knew. It was the exact same house as his, the 1960s ranch-style, with large windows covered by heavy shades, cracked and buckled cement patio, sunbaked landscaping. The vegetation was withered and clearly uncared for, and small drifts of rotting leaves lay in the corners of the house and fence. Must be the only one on the block, he thought, without a lawn care contract. Dominating the backyard was a deep in-ground pool, a couple feet of water in the deep end choked with leaves and debris, a turgid swamp of muck and algae growth, the air above vibrating with movement. Dragonflies swooped and cut through the outer edges of the cloud of mosquitoes, like cowboys culling the herd, and formations of brown swallows lined up and took turns plunging through the fog, mouths agape. The water must be thick with larvae, Anders thought, a new batch erupting every few minutes.

He noticed a roofing crew on a nearby house looking in his direction, motionless, hammers dangling in their hands, shingles balanced on their shoulders, long-handled spades for scraping tar paper cradled akimbo. Then, as if on cue, the pounding of roofing hammers began again, and Anders realized that all the roofers in the neighborhood had gone silent when he got up there, as if they were tethered together by some unseen cord. When he came inside Megan had ground beef in the skillet for tacos, Blake sitting at the table using her plastic scissors to cut shapes out of tortillas.

Anders and Megan came from West Texas, flatlander kids who met at a fraternity mixer at Texas Tech when Anders became enamored of the pretty girl who delicately vomited into her solo cup. He offered a new toothbrush and paste from his room in the frat house, and this was the anecdote they often depended on to set what they felt was the appropriate tone of their relationship; they were uncomplicated, casual extroverts who were not humiliated easily. Megan went to his water polo matches and whistled and catcalled from the bleachers every time he came out of the water, Anders flexing and posing in his Speedo. Anders was a three-meter man, or "hole-man," the position in water polo that demanded the most strength and a vicious nature. The holeman posted-up with his back to the opponent's goal like a center in basketball, and all the offense ran through him, while a hole defender — the biggest, nastiest man on the other team — fought him for position and to deny the ball. It was something akin to freestyle wrestling a powerful psychotic in eight feet of water with a ball coming at you every ten seconds.

Anders was in sales, at Dell computers. He didn't know shit about computers, hated sales, and his job remained foreign and separate, like some bizarre cultural ritual he performed daily without any knowledge of why it was done. He wrote this off as something that was a matter of course, and that it was best not to get too involved in one's vocation. What he did for a living didn't define him; rather, he was a slightly flabbier version of the man he was in college, the vortex of the party, always in the throes of whatever action, with Megan as his running partner. He had other dreams and he was bound to realize them. He was the hole-man. Everything went through him.

But moving to Dallas a few years ago when Megan got her nursing job called this extroverted notion of themselves into serious question. They hadn't met anyone in the neighborhood other than the androgynous lunatic of indeterminate age who lived next door, and the university literature professor down the block with his strangely beautiful trophy wife, who both seemed to do little more than drink gin cocktails by their pool and grouse about how Austin had a much better "literary scene." Anders believed it was the simple arrangement and logistics of the neighborhood that was responsible: because all the garages faced the back alley and everyone had privacy fences, people entered and exited their houses by their concealed back entrances. No children playing in the front yards, no gatherings of adults meeting by chance on pleasant afternoons. Anders was convinced that many of the people in his neighborhood had no idea what the lawn crews were doing with their topiary or hedging because they'd never even seen their own front yards.

Later that afternoon the doorbell boomed as Anders was having a beer and watching SportsCenter. Blake was napping, and the girl had the sleeping habits of a paranoid bloodhound. The slightest sound, movement of air particles, or change in barometric pressure and she'd spring up and seize the bars on the crib, loosing a soaring shriek that would ring in your ears for the rest of the day. Megan was on the computer in the kitchen and when the doorbell went off they both looked at each other with real anguish, as if they were on separating ice floes. They had a note taped over the doorbell button that read: Please Knock Softly, Sleeping Baby. Anders and Megan gesticulated at each other in frantic pantomime: Who the hell rings the goddamn doorbell like that? Anders sprang up and raced to the door, but as he grasped the knob it went off again, answered down the hall by Blake, the timbre of victory in her voice.

Anders flung open the door to find a short Mexican man in clean jeans and cowboy hat standing on the porch. A small group of men stood in the front yard. At the curb an enormous Dodge pickup, the kind favored by work crew foremen, idled with a throaty rumble.

Good afternoon, sir. My name is Salvador.

He smiled and bowed slightly, proffering a card.

Anders looked at the note covering the doorbell, then back at Salvador. He had a belt buckle the size of a small dinner plate in the shape of Texas.

I am asking, Salvador said, if you have some trouble with your roof.

Anders blinked. The men in the yard looked elsewhere, sweating in the shade of the oak tree. They weren't dressed like a normal work crew. These guys had pressed shirts and fancy cowboy boots like something a Texas congressman might wear. Behind him Blake's shriek had warbled into an approximation of a rebel yell.

My roof?

Yes sir. You been up on your roof, yes? Is there something wrong? We are expert roofers. Insured and licenses, we do all the roofs around here.

He held out the card again. Anders took it. It simply said Salvador and had a phone number on it.

I don't think so, Anders said. I mean, no, there isn't anything wrong with the roof.

Salvador shrugged.

Then perhaps, he said, you should stay off it, eh?

He pointed up, still smiling.

Is dangerous up there, you understand?

Anders nodded.

* * *

In the evening Anders sat on the patio drinking whiskey, his skin polished with a layer of deet. Inside Megan did a yoga DVD, her arms folded behind her head like a Hindu goddess. The even, stentorian breathing of Blake was audible on the baby monitor in the kitchen. Overhead jets droned invisibly, lining up for the pattern into DFW. All through his young life Anders was a social animal of the first order, and so he was completely unequipped to handle the developments of the last couple years. It felt as if his life was telescoping away from him, disappearing from view as night fell on the world outside this tight bubble of responsibility.

It took about a year of living in Dallas to really hit him. It was the early spring and Anders had been in the pool alone on a Saturday afternoon, Blake and Megan napping. The water was a cool seventy degrees and the mosquitoes had yet to issue forth from whatever underground lair they hibernated in. Anders read somewhere that the ancient Egyptians believed that insect life was created spontaneously from the effect of the sun on the muddy banks of the Nile. This bit of extrapolation made complete sense to Anders. How did they survive the winter, when Dallas might have a foot of snow, a couple weeks of freezing temperatures? How deep in the soil did the larvae and eggs have to be planted to stay alive? Anders was thinking about all these things as he treaded water in the deep end, unconsciously putting up his hands to work on his leg strength, an old drill from his water polo days, when he suddenly became aware of his loneliness. Surely, on a day like this, in a pool like this, and people like himself and Megan ... he didn't know how to finish this thought. Anders paddled to the shallow end and stood, hands on his hips. The wooden privacy fence gave the impression of a bowl that opened up onto clear, empty sky. The casual, muted sounds of occasional birds, the distant deep whoosh of the freeway. The dull thump and whack of work crews, roofers. He tried to picture the interior lives of these houses, these small brick-and-mortar capsules of life. There would be people inside, going on about the business of dreaming and living. But doing what, he couldn't imagine. It was blank. He was just over thirty years old.

* * *

On Monday Anders called the Dallas Public Works Department to notify them about the house across the alley.

I can see them right now, a literal cloud of mosquitoes.

I understand, sir.

Saturday there were about five of them on my daughter's face. We just walked outside. And with the West Nile Virus epidemic ...

We will send someone over to check it out.

I think there is something strange going on over there. At this house.

What do you mean, sir?

Well.

What's strange?

I just think someone needs to take a look.

* * *

Blake struggled in her long pants and long-sleeved shirt, but after a block she collapsed, her head lolling at those amazing angles that only a toddler can endure, her face shining beneath the sun shade. Anders wanted to get a look at the front of the house across the alley, so he decided he'd take Blake out for a walk in the stroller. If they could hack the heat maybe they'd go the mile to the "lake," as it was called in Dallas parlance, which in reality was a runoff cesspool and duckshit depository. A narrow grass park surrounded the lake and each heavy rain left a thick watermark of cans, bottles, packaging, and plastic grocery bags. The members of a boat club bravely raced one-man dinghies on the weekends around the circuit of the lake, their zeal for victory moderated by the potential horror of capsizing into the murk. The turtles that rose to the surface to accept bread crumbs were the size of manhole covers, their backs carpets of lush algae, their soft exposed necks festooned with pale leeches. In the evening the surface of the lake roiled with the froth of mutant life, larvae, distended, globular fish, tadpoles that never fully transitioned into frogs.

But it was too hot for more than just a few blocks. The wide cement road was hazy with heat flares, the lawns down the road distorted and shimmering like oil on water, lifeless. Megan swore that a pair of young twins lived across the street, but Anders couldn't believe it. How could two young boys, subteen boys, live in a house and never play in the front yard, never swagger down the street on aggressive bikes, never make a yelp or holler, never clip a ball onto the roof, never climb a fucking tree? Two cars idled farther along, one an aging Hyundai compact that pulled away only to glide to the curb a few houses later. The flat lines of the roofs, all with girt-garnet asphalt shingles. The hedges had the same flat-edged look, sharp corners, heavy lines. The landscaping of Frank Lloyd Wright. The next block was the same again, this time two cars and a pickup, idling, tinted windows, pausing and drifting away as he drew near, like scuttling cockroaches on the kitchen counter.

(Continues…)


Excerpted from "Dallas Noir"
by .
Copyright © 2013 Akashic Books.
Excerpted by permission of Akashic Books.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

Table of Contents

Table of Contents

Introduction

Part I: Cowboys

“Hole-Man” by Matt Bondurant (White Rock)

“The Realtor” by Ben Fountain (Swiss Avenue)

“In the Air” by Daniel J. Hale (Deep Ellum)

“The Clearing” by Emma Rathbone (Plano)

“En la Calle Doce (Flaco’s Blues)” by Oscar C. Peña (Oak Cliff)

Part II: Rangers

“The Private Room” by Merritt Tierce (Uptown)

“Night Work” by Clay Reynolds (Old East Dallas)

“Full Moon” by Lauren Davis (Pleasant Grove)

“Like Kissing Your Sister” by James Hime (Irving)

“An Angel from Heaven” by Fran Hillyer (Northpark)

Part III: Mavericks

“Coincidences Can Kill You” by Kathleen Kent (Cleburne)

“Big Things Happening Here” by David Haynes (Oak Lawn)

“The Stickup Girl” by Harry Hunsicker (South Dallas)

“Dog Sitter” by Catherine Cuellar (Love Field)

“Miss Direction” by J. Suzanne Frank (Downtown)

“Swingers Anonymous” by Jonathan Woods (M Streets)

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