- Home
- Robert Gregory Browne
Trial Junkies Page 3
Trial Junkies Read online
Page 3
"Then who do I listen to? Matt? Is he still with the Post?"
"Last I heard, although they're cutting staff like crazy."
Hutch pulled away from her. "Is he coming by tonight?"
She nodded. "They're parking the car. I rode over with him and Andy."
"That must've been an interesting trip."
She grinned. "Did you feel your ears burning?"
"No. Should I have?"
"Let's just say your name came up once or twice."
"But in a good way, right?"
Her grin widened. "You really want me to lie?"
Maybe he did. Maybe he wanted her to tell him that he was still well loved by all his old friends, because thinking that might make him believe that coming here hadn't been a mistake. "So how many times was the term 'jerk off' used?"
"We're talking about Matt and Andy, so use your imagination." She gave his arm a squeeze and said, "God, it's good to see you. Come on, let's go grab our old table before the young'ns do."
"Young'ns?"
She gestured. "I don't know if you noticed, but we're senior citizens around here."
She grinned again, then moved through the crowd, pulling him along with her. He got a few surprised stares along the way, but he ignored them and let Ronnie drag him to the back of the bar where the old table was miraculously empty.
Then he saw the RESERVED sign and realized someone had called ahead.
"Thank God for Nadine," Ronnie said, then slid onto a chair and patted the one next to her. "Don't think you're getting away from me for the rest of the night."
Hutch wasn't sure he wanted to. He was relieved to discover that Ronnie and he had slipped quite easily into their old personas, the camaraderie between them familiar and comfortable. If he hadn't been obsessing over Jenny, he might have noticed how attractive she'd grown over the last few years.
Maybe he did anyway.
But before he could sit down they were suddenly assaulted by two fast-moving figures, the first of which-Andy McKenna-slid onto the chair that Hutch was about to occupy. "Sorry, dude, this is my spot."
Ronnie tried to shove him away. "Jesus, Andy, do you always have to be so rude?"
"You don't want to sit next to me?"
"I'd rather sit next to somebody civilized, thank you."
Andy looked at Hutch. "You see how it is? Without the movie star looks, all I get is the cold shoulder."
What Hutch saw was that nothing had changed. Andy McKenna, God love him, was just as boorish as he'd always been. The only reason anyone had ever tolerated him was because he was Matt's best friend, and everyone loved Matt.
Speaking of whom, Matt himself scraped a chair back and sat across from Andy, telling him to "Quit being a douche, all right?" Then he looked at Hutch and nodded his head toward the chair next to him. "Have a seat, stranger. It's good to see you."
In light of his conversation with Ronnie, Hutch wasn't sure how sincere the words were, but he told himself to take them at face value. They shook hands and he sat down. "How've you guys been?"
Andy shrugged. "How do you think? I'm stuck in a cubicle all day. Ain't like I'm rolling around in the sheets with a hottie-of-the-month like Gina Wakefield."
Hutch had expected comments like this. The sheets in question had been on a Paramount sound stage, surrounded by a lighting crew, a continuity girl, a DP and an obsessive-compulsive director who had no idea what he was doing. Oh, and most of the shots had involved a body double named Bridget whose voice was so high and whiny it was like a knife to the skull. But Hutch didn't bother to point that out.
Ronnie frowned. "Jeez, Andy, can't you dial it back for just a few minutes?"
"Buy me a drink, hot stuff, and I'll do whatever you want." Then he turned to Hutch, a sullen look on his face. "I've got a bone to pick with you, Hutchinson."
Here we go. "Oh? Why's that?"
"I sent you a script about a year back, and you never said a word. If it sucks, it sucks, but you could at least give me the courtesy of picking up the phone and telling me."
Matt said, "Give it a rest, Shakespeare. This little soiree isn't about you."
"No, no," Hutch said, "that's okay." He looked at Andy. "Thing is, this is news to me. Where did you send it?"
"To your agent, with a nice little note telling her I'm a friend of yours."
Hutch frowned. "Do you realize how many emails my agent gets every week from so-called friends of mine? I have a two-minute conversation with a car wash attendant and we're suddenly long lost buddies."
"So?"
"So I never got it. And knowing my agent, it went straight into her trash folder."
"What the hell kind of agent is that?"
"The kind who's trying to protect him," Ronnie said, "from morons like you."
Andy shot her a look and Hutch asked, "So do you still want me to read this thing?"
Andy's eyes brightened. "Hell, yeah."
Hutch hadn't known the guy was a closet writer, and was skeptical that the script would be any good. Ninety percent of the screenplays that managed to get past his agent were complete dreck. But it wouldn't kill him to take a look. "I'm thinking I might stick around for a couple days, so if you can get it to me before I leave…"
"Are you serious?"
"Absolutely."
Andy stood up. "Hell, I'll go get it right now."
"Oh, for chrissakes," Matt said, "give the guy a break. You can email it to him later."
"I'm like six blocks from here. I'll pop it on a thumb drive and be back before you finish your first drink."
There was a sudden desperate eagerness to Andy's demeanor that made it impossible to discourage him. Hutch had seen it a million times before-people on the outside looking for a way in. And despite his agent's love of the trash folder, he figured everyone deserved a shot. Even Andy.
"Have at it," he said. "I'm here for the duration."
Andy clapped a hand on his shoulder, a transformed man. "Thanks, Hutch. You're a pal." Then he was threading his way through the crowd and out the door.
"He seems pretty chipper for a guy who just came from a funeral," Ronnie said.
Matt shrugged. "Everyone has their own way of coping."
"Or he's just an egocentric jackass."
"There's that, too," Matt said, then turned to Hutch. "You do realize you just made my life a living hell."
"Why's that?"
"Because no matter how this turns out, I'm never gonna hear the end of it."
— 7 -
Andy was less than a minute gone when a chorus of voices called out to them.
Three familiar faces emerged from the crowd-Monica Clawson and Tom Brandt, with Nadine Overman pulling up the rear.
Hutch rose from his chair and the next few seconds were filled by hugs and kisses and shaking hands. He felt a sudden warmth envelope him, his trepidation about coming here melting away with each new embrace. They all seemed genuinely glad to see him, and he felt the same.
Back in college there had been others who had fallen in and out of their little tribe-boyfriends, girlfriends, hangers-on-but the core members were here tonight, and it reminded Hutch how much he missed those days. He didn't want to be one of those maudlin jerks who dwelled too much on the past, but tonight was different. Tonight he could allow himself to wallow a little without feeling foolish.
When they were finally done greeting one another, chairs scraped back and everyone sat down.
"Where was McKenna rushing off to?" Tom asked.
"Chasing a dream," Matt murmured. "He's got a script he wants Hutch to read."
"That's intriguing," Monica said. "Any idea what it's about?"
"Not a clue. Today was the first I've heard about it."
Ronnie said, "It's a thriller of some kind. Something to do with a woman trying to fight off a stalker."
They all turned, Matt asking the obvious question. "And you know this how?"
"From Jenny."
"Jenny?" Hutch said.
"I ran into her about a month ago. At a play at the Godwyn Theater. We got to talking about you, Hutch, and she mentioned that Andy had called her, wanted her to read a script he'd written, see if she'd be willing to pass it on to you."
Hutch's surprise deepened. "Why Jenny?"
"He thought she might still be in touch with you."
"Or he was just using you as an excuse to call her," Matt said. "Try to see where her head was at."
Hutch frowned. "What do you mean?"
"You didn't know? Andy's had a thing for Jenny for as long as he's known her, but you kept getting in the way. And after you left, she got involved with that guy from Brooklyn-and they were together, what?"
"Over three years," Nadine said.
"Then she hooked up with that assistant D.A., and once that went south, Andy probably thought it was time to finally grow some balls and make his move."
Monica snorted. "As if. No offense, but I don't see him being Jenny material."
"I tried to tell him that," Matt said. "That she was way out his league. But you know Andy. He's always looking for some new way to humiliate himself."
This cracked everyone up, but Hutch couldn't bring himself to join in. Andy could be an overbearing snot, no doubt about it, but that was no reason to laugh at him behind his back.
Besides, there was no "league" when it came to Jenny. Yes, she was beautiful and smart and classy and successful, but she didn't have a superficial bone in her body. She'd be the last person in the world to discriminate against someone because of some intangible social or personal barrier. And in their attempt to make fun of Andy, they were disrespecting Jenny, as well.
But maybe Hutch was being overly sensitive about all this. He was just coming off of a nearly two-year stint as the butt of everyone's jokes. Two years full of knowing stares, quiet snickering and snide remarks. There was no doubt in his mind that some of the people here-and even Andy himself-had been part of it. But that didn't mean Hutch had to join in when someone else was the target.
He had inflicted enough cruelties in his life.
When they were done laughing, a harried-looking waitress finally approached their table. They all ordered the same drinks they had back in college: a pitcher of draft beer for Matt, Ronnie and Tom, a rum and Coke for Nadine, and a kamikaze for Monica.
The only one who deviated was Hutch.
As promised, he ordered a root beer.
When the waitress was gone, he said, "Okay, enough about Andy." He turned to Matt. "You're the man with all the police connections. What can you tell us about the investigation into Jenny's murder?"
Nadine groaned. "Oh, God, must we? I've done enough crying for one day. Can't we talk about the good times?"
"I just want to know how it's progressing."
Matt sobered. "It's not my story."
"Why not?" Monica asked. She had leaned back in her chair as if to accentuate her breasts, which every male in the group had long ago agreed were quite spectacular.
She had worked her way through college as a webcam stripper, baring those breasts on a private video website to anyone with enough cash to subscribe. She had never made any apologies for what she did, but to keep things civil, she'd asked her employers to block the IP addresses of the school and the house they all lived in, so that none of the guys could join in-much to their chagrin.
The last Hutch had heard, she had long retired, but was running her own web dynasty now, hiring other models to cater to the lost and lonely.
"Seems like a no brainer, to me," she said to Matt. "Jenny was a friend of yours."
"That's exactly the problem. There's conflict of interest to think about. So my editor assigned the story to another reporter."
Ronnie smiled. "You mean they still have ethics in the news business?"
"Just barely. Although you wouldn't know it if you turned on a TV."
"You might not be assigned to the story," Hutch said, "but I doubt that you're out of the loop. Do they have a suspect or not?"
Matt shrugged. "Our sources at CPD are playing this very close to the vest-which is unusual. And that leads me to believe the hammer has come down and come down hard. I figure they've got someone in the pipe for this, and they don't want any leaks."
"So what's the delay? Why haven't they arrested the bastard?"
"This isn't like your old TV show," Matt told him. "Murder investigations take time and expertise, and in a city this size, that could mean days, rather than hours. And if they do have somebody on the hook, they'll want to be sure they've got a solid case against him before they make an arrest."
"My money's still on some random maniac," Ronnie said. "He saw, he wanted, he took."
Nadine hugged herself as if the room had suddenly gone cold. "My God… If that's true, then it could've been anyone in that casket. One of us."
"It was one of us," Hutch said.
"You know what I mean."
Tom Brandt, who had remained silent until now, finally spoke up. "I know you're all hoping for a tidy end to this saga, but if you look at the stats, the Chicago PD only clears about thirty-five percent of its homicide cases in a given year. So the prognosis is fairly bleak."
Tom had been something of a pretty boy in College, but was now a slightly rotund man with very little hair and pasty, indoor skin. He had always, however, been a pessimist, and Hutch refused to allow that pessimism to get to him.
"No," Hutch said. "That's unacceptable. They'll catch this son of a bitch, and the minute he goes on trial, I'll be sitting there in the front row."
"So will I," Ronnie said.
Several of the others nodded their heads solemnly as the waitress approached with a tray full of drinks and started passing them around.
Then glasses were raised and Nadine said, "To Mama J."
It was a nickname Hutch had forgotten about. Given to Jenny because of her striking resemblance to a young Michelle Phillips, one of the members of an old sixties rock group, The Mamas amp; the Papas-a favorite of Nadine's father.
"To Mama J," everyone repeated, then clinked their glasses and drank their drinks.
— 8 -
Over the course of the next couple hours the drinks kept coming and the conversation flowed, moving on to other, less painful topics-memories, new careers, relationships, travel, sports-several of the conversations branching off as they often do.
Somewhere in the middle of it all, Andy showed up carrying a thumb drive, trembling slightly as he handed it to Hutch, saying, "Just give it an honest read. That's all I ask."
Hutch had never seen him so vulnerable. Felt as if he may be catching a glimpse of the real Andy McKenna.
"You took your sweet time getting back here," Matt told him. "You might've missed your golden opportunity."
"I decided it needed a few tweaks. Couple clarifications in the second act. The killer's motive seemed a little murky, so I figured I'd-"
"No spoilers," Hutch said. He wanted to smile, but resisted. "I like to read a script fresh."
Andy nodded. "Totally get that, man. I feel the same way." But he stayed on his feet as if he expected Hutch to somehow pop the thumb drive into an invisible computer and start reading.
"Don't worry," Hutch said. "I'll check it out before I head back to L.A. and read the rest on the plane."
This seemed to satisfy Andy and he finally found a chair and sat down. "Thanks, man."
"No problem," Hutch told him, hoping like hell he could get past the first five pages. It wasn't likely, but he was willing to try.
As the conversations changed course again, Hutch switched chairs with Tom and finally got a chance to sit next to Ronnie. They chatted for a moment, then Hutch said, "You still smoke?"
"Not if I can help it."
"It's the one addiction I haven't been able to conquer. I'm down to two a day and I'm due. You mind stepping outside with me?"
"Be glad to," she said.
"Fair warning-I have a bit of a reputation. You might not want to be seen wi
th me."
She smiled. "I'll take my chances. If anyone looks, I'll pretend I don't know you."
A moment later, they excused themselves and went outside. The sky had grown dark and the air felt crisp and clean-and there Hutch was, about to destroy it all with cigarette smoke. The booze and the drugs had been a cakewalk compared to nicotine, so he'd decided to wean himself. Slowly.
So far it seemed to be working. He only felt the craving a couple hundred times a day.
He dug a pack of Marlboros out of his shirt pocket, then lit up and took a deep drag, careful not to blow the smoke in Ronnie's direction.
"So Nadine tells me you're grooming pets these days."
She rolled her eyes. "Oh, God, I'm so embarrassed."
"Why?"
"Because clipping dog hairs isn't exactly what I had in mind for a career path in college. I feel like such a failure."
"Don't," Hutch told her. "Failure has nothing to do with how you pay your rent, and things don't always go the way we planned. I'm a shining example of that."
She smiled wanly. "Thing is, I've never had any real plans. I went to pet grooming school on a lark, and I'm still not sure what I want to be when I grow up. Hell, I'm not even sure I want to grow up."
"Believe me, I know the feeling. Sometimes I think I never will.”
On this note, they both fell silent, Hutch wondering what he'd do with himself if he ever decided to leave L.A. for good. He had no real skills other than acting, and that one was questionable at best. Maybe Ronnie and he could shampoo dogs together.
After a moment, she said, "So how does it feel?"
"How does what feel?"
"Being back home after all these years?" She gestured to the bar. "Especially here. It's gotta be surreal."
"Trust me, I've seen surreal and this isn't it. Truth is, despite the circumstances, I feel more comfortable right now than I've felt in a long time."
"But you're the big Hollywood star…"
She was grinning when she said it, but he still gave her a look. "You're trying to hurt me, aren't you?"
"No, that cigarette will hurt you. I'm just giving you a hard time." She paused, then said, "What happened to you out there, Hutch? If you're so comfortable here, why did it take Jenny's death for any of us to see you again?"