Holly Beecher had been photographing the other members of what Cassidy
Mackey liked to call the
Contact Visits Crew for a couple of weeks before it was finally Cass's
turn. Holly posed her in
front of the studio's bare brick back wall, kitty-corner to the window,
though angled so that no
one outside (hopefully) would catch a clear glimpse of the whole package.
Quite the image, one way or another: Short, stacked Cass, rocked back
on her heels in a casual
dojo stance, the flare of gym-born muscle all up and down her arms--biceps
and shoulders too solid
to dent even with a hard grab--defiantly contrasting with the delicate
way her spread palms cupped
the nipples of two incongruously large, soft breasts. She hadn't challenged
the idea of taking her
shirt off for the last few shots, but had compensated by leaving her
hat on--a soft grey watch-cap
pulled down to hide both jaw-length brown braids, so low it almost
left her eyebrowless.
"Where you gonna sell these bad boys, anyway?"
"SYSTEM magazine. And it's place, not sell--"
"--so it's art, not porn: Show some skin to get across my well-hidden
vulnerable side, right?"
"You got it."
"Coolio."
Holly could see light glinting off the contact scars on Cass's knuckles,
and immediately found
herself remembering that equally alien pad of callus at the base of
her chopping hand's palm--a
thin, scratchy seam, just rough enough to catch deliciously on the
four-fingered in-stroke.
"Shit, it's cold in here--weather in this state really fucking sucks,
you know that? You almost
done, H?"
"H", sometimes pronounced like "ache". Cass had picked Holly's nickname
of choice up far quicker
than most, drawling it in that weird (white) semi-gangsta Los Angeles
way of hers; from the sharp
grin that always accompanied it, Holly suspected her careful attention
to detail was probably more
about amusement value than real respect for Holly's preferences, but
whatever.
In the end, after all, the only motives worth worrying about here--one
way or another --were
strictly Holly's own.
So: "Almost." A step back, more fiddling with the apeture ring. "You
work out a lot, right?"
"Every day."
"How much can you bench?"
"Uh...'bout a hundred twenty, maybe a hundred twenty-five." At Holly's
stare: "It doesn't *mean*
anything."
"Just sixty pounds an arm."
Cass shrugged. "Keeps me limber."
Holly sighted on her cleavage, where a red-tinged knot of expressionistically-figured
black
numbers nested like a skeleton rose. "You never did tell me what that
was."
"A tattoo?"
"What *of*, though."
Seen straight on, in that trademark glare of hers, Cassidy's blue-grey-greenish
eyes turned blue
through and through, the same opaque shade as her uniform would have
been, anywhere but L.A. She
took a minute before answering.
Finally: "It's my Dad's badge number."
"I'm not a cop, but that strikes me a mite high."
"Multiplied it by his sentence," Cass said. And shut up for the rest
of the session.
***
The Contact Visits Crew photos would be one more set in an ongoing series,
the same one Holly'd
been pursuing--off and on--since she was old enough to hold her first
camera. The Nikon in
question had been a present from Gram and Gramps, top-of-the-line digital,
with lots of memory and
plenty of room for mistakes. And now and then, in her sourer moments,
Holly sometimes thought her
first real mistake might have been using its existence as leverage
to force Toby-Dad to at least
see her long enough to pose for a portrait. Like so--
*Something to remember you by, okay? Since you won't let me get close
enough to TOUCH, or anything.*
She could still see the look on his face when she'd played that particular
card: Shock-flattened
all over, single gash of a frown bisecting barely-there brows over
a stunned-blind stare. That
oh-so-familiar lip-curl baring a rim of kitten-teeth--half prissy,
half feral. Like looking in
some freakish funhouse mirror.
*Scratch him, even just a little, and you find me. Scratch ME, on the
other hand, and you find...*
...what?
Not sure. Still looking.
That one quick snap had soon multiplied, of course--two DVDs full,
enough for her first portfolio,
her first art school application; hell, some of them had even ended
up in her first real
exhibition. Amongst others.
But then and there, Holly always thought, was where the fascination
which continued to rule her
"art" probably stemmed from: That constant basic urge to match face
to face, form to form, even
when separated by crime and contact gates. To trace where Ryan O'Reily
ended and Cyril O'Reily
began; to catch glimpses of "you really want me to call you Uncle?"
Chris Keller in that handful
of kids the wives he'd forgotten to mention carted down for his resentencing
hearing. (Toby-Dad's
appeals crossed with Alvah Case's election had gotten him transferred
from Death Row to Solitary
eventually, not that that'd counted for much once the cancer set in.)
To even, on selected
occasions, watch those intermittent flashes of Vern Schillinger's mock-mild
menace come and go in
his granddaughter Jewel's heartbreakingly open Minnesota stare.
Or Cass and her famous/infamous Dad, knee to knee in their usual corner
of the contact visits
suite, while C.O.s Pole and Murphy paid extra-careful attention from
the sidelines. Reputation
aside, Vic Mackey had never been anything but pleasant to Holly, but
watching he and Cass interact
could definitely be more than a little scary--especially so whenever
they leant their foreheads
together in that conspiratorial way, speaking in low, even tones about
who was due to get what
when, how, and why: No names, no specifics. Nothing that could go on
the record.
Just a brutal personal shorthand codified over ten years' worth of
cold rage, born of a mutual
understanding that justice--blind bitch that she was--had *really*
dropped the fuckin' ball this
time.
That was where you saw "blood start to tell", as Holly's Gram and Gramps
liked to say, because
Cass--otherwise far too feminine to look *like* her Dad, per se--had
sure as fuck long since
internalized Vic's trick of toting up grudges the way other people
balanced their checkbooks.
Inside or out, the Mackeys seldom forgave and never, *never* forgot;
it was a shared trait which
kept Holly consistently glad Toby-Dad had been able to do whatever
it was he'd done (Beecher still
rarely told her details about his prison experiences, not unless she
pressed) for that particular
clan of two, before he'd finally left Oz behind forever.
Genetics in action. What we learn by osmosis vs. what we learn by example.
How some people learn
to blame themselves for nothing, while others, others--learn--
(somehow)
--to blame themselves for *everything*.
Even the stuff they have nothing at all, in the final analysis, to
do with.
***
After the shoot, Holly and Cassidy ended up at a place down the block
from Holly's studio, a
greasy spoon of indeterminate age called Sam's. Far as Holly could
tell, the name was a
hand-me-down from earlier owners; nobody who worked there now answered
to anything vaguely like
it, certainly, unless you counted that guy Sunil who sometimes cleared
tables.
Holly watched Cass tear her way through a mushroom burger (no fries,
very rare), eyes hidden once
more behind a pair of sleek, socket-fitted sunglasses: Perfect for
L.A., one assumed, though Holly
barely knew how she managed to find her way around while wearing them
out here. She'd pushed her
cap up again, freeing the braids, which whipped back and forth with
every ferocious bite.
"You and C.O. Pole still an--item?" Holly ventured, sipping her watered-down
Coke.
And: Such a nasty cherub smirk, teeth stained blood-pink. "Well, yeah,
sure. On and off."
"*That*'s euphemistic."
"Accurate, too." More chewing, then: "Look, what can I say--some basic
level, I guess he sorta
reminds me of this Strike Team guy, Lemonhead? 'Uncle' Lem, heh. Dumb
as a dog, but that boy's
shit was *tight*, yo. Like, super-fine."
To which Holly nodded, thinking: Tight shit, I can get behind that.
First thing I look for in a
guy, aside from money, taste, and a nice...personality...
But that way lay confusion, if not madness. Especially when sitting
across from Cassidy, knowing
she could practically still lick her lips and taste the other girl's
lipstick. That tearful hug
they'd shared in the parking lot outside Oswald Maximum Security the
day Cass hot-footed it all
the way to Oz just in time to hear her Dad was in the Hole, the one
leading straight (ha, ha) to a
trip back to Holly's for a bag of weed and some ill-timed female bonding,
a sofa-bed shared in the
gathering dark--
Then waking hung-over and regretful in the dull morning light, without
even a note to tell her why
she was alone again--just Cass's beeper on the kitchen table, handle
towards Holly's hand, like
Macbeth's phantom dagger. *Is this another fucked-up chick with Daddy
issues I see before me?*
Yeah, well.
"Fine is good," Holly said, aloud. Cass nodded, elaborating--
"It's fun, 's all. Recreation."
"And it's not like you have a hidden agenda, or anything."
Another bite, the same grin. "Who, *me*?"
Followed by dead air, chewing, tinny classic Eminem leaking from Sunil's
headphones as he dragged
a rag across the next table over. While Holly just kept looking at
Cass, thinking about how--for
a potential career manipulator, trained (albeit long-distance) by one
of the LAPD's former
finest--Cass remained so remarkably simple *to* manipulate, so innately
easy to read and
understand. How, on some level, she still carried around the gooey
centre of her former self, a
pudgy suburban princess with every Malibu Stacey accessory known to
humankind...that brash,
bullying kid who everybody in the neighborhood worshipped and hated
in equal measure, not the
least because her world-view hinged around the knowledge that if she
had a problem all she ever
had to do was complain to Daddy, and he'd make it go away.
At his best, all Holly's Toby-Dad had ever been able to make disappear
had been himself. Which
would certainly have been bad enough under any circumstances, even
if it *hadn't* led to Holly's
Mommy later getting much the same idea...
But there it was: Daddy off getting who-knew-what done to him in jail,
Mommy "asleep" in that
fume-filled car in the garage. And nothing had ever seemed truly permanent
to Holly after
that--not Gram and Gramps' literate, social, "understanding" townhouse
life, not the three-week
nightmare of her own childhood abduction, not even those few dim, remaining
memories of her
brother Gary's stupidly trusting smile.
Like Cassidy Mackey, shared trauma of parental incarceration aside,
Holly Beecher had grown up
both rich enough to do what she wanted and loved enough to do what
she needed without ever
hesitating over the consequences...yet she couldn't remember ever taking
any of it for granted,
not when she'd been taught so early on that what one person thought
of as "reality" could be
revealed--all too easy, all too often--as nothing more than a matter
of perspective.
Not since the day her grandparents had taken her gently by both hands,
led her into their parlor,
and shown her Gary's coffin.
***
Houses full of secrets breed lies, so Holly had gotten expert at eavesdropping
fairly early on.
Which is how she'd come to not let on she was around during the following
exchange: Toby-Dad vs.
poor, court-appointed Dr. Skoda, with his slant-eyebrowed stare and
his deceptively lazy Yellow M
& M drawl; Holly had never understood just why Beecher's already-high
quotient of snark seemed to
skyrocket whenever he had to weather the good doc's proximity, 'till
the very moment she'd
realized that under the "right" circumstances--lack of sleep, stress-related
tics, the sort of bad
day at the office which probably fairly cried out for a phantom martini--he
looked almost exactly
like Vern Schillinger in a toupee.
Not that Beecher ever seemed to consider said resemblance valid grounds
for complaint, naturally.
Because that would have taken some sort of...responsibility, on his
part: *Far* too hard, or too
easy--
(or both)
Toby-Dad, stalking up and down the oriental like a caged house-cat,
snarling: "Look, you DON'T
dangle normal human life in front of me and then take it away, like--whooo!
Just jokin', baby. The
person I *was* would've taken that. *I* won't."
"Mmm-hmm." Scritch of pen over paper. Then: "Care to clarify?"
That bitter Beecher laugh, the one Holly'd already felt scraping up
from inside her, a time or
two. "Sure, doc--I'm a lawyer. So try these stats on for size: I went
to jail, I did five years, I
was raped twenty times a week, I stabbed a man, I got the shit kicked
out of me, I did a month and
a half in the Hole, I took drugs, I had a nervous fucking breakdown.
You want to revoke my parole
over a fucking *check-up*, you go on ahead and do it. But if you do--no,
I won't say it aloud,
because if I did, you'd call it a threat." A pause. "I'm just not going
back. Ever. And that's
all."
Holly hugged the wall, watched Skoda not react. He was good at it, obviously;
well worth studying.
Just like a real, live...
(role model)
"How's the advocacy work going?"
A sigh. "Okay, for an exercise in uselessness. McManus's still got me
working on an appeal for
Miguel Alvarez, trying to knock off some of that extra time he got
for escaping--not gonna happen,
but I might be able to get him out of solitary, at least. And it does
keep Timmy-boy off my back."
"Ever discuss any of that with the kids?"
"They don't talk to me, Doctor. Not about anything...real. That'd be
like I was part of their
lives, or something."
Another pause. More scritching. Holly pored over the last statement
in her head, considering it
from all angles, checking for holes. Beecher's tone had been surface-wistful
yet oddly
perfunctory, a shrug in every syllable; to her, it sounded as though
much as he might *want* to
find--and fill--the him-shaped gap in she and Harry's world, he'd already
reconciled with the
permanent loss of his once-innate ability to recognize what it looked
like.
"Dream much, Toby?"
"Every night."
Not a question: "About Oz."
"Oz?" Beecher'd repeated. "Not quite. In the dreams, I wake up, and
I go downstairs, and my mother
makes me breakfast, and my father hugs me goodbye. And I go to work,
and I do my job--my old job.
I work all day. I don't steal anything. And then I come home, and I
eat dinner with my parents,
and I watch some TV. And then I go back to sleep."
"Just like none of...what happened...ever happened."
A nod. "Just like that." Followed by another pause, slightly longer--
(and oh, Holly'd often thought, if I only had his gift for timing, I'd
never have to worry over
class presentations again. That *diva*, my long-lost ex-con D-A-D...)
"--but then I really wake up. And I'm screaming."
***
Talking with Cass was always a performance, never a real conversation.
Somewhat like eavesdropping
on a careless MPD sufferer, one could only assume--except for the constant
hail of spitfire L.A.
cop jargon it all came along with, thrown haphazardly in on top.
"So they had me on mayoral security detail, right? Full dress uniform
gauntlet--the whole
straight-out-the-'cademy rookie Training Day nine yards, big D Denzel-style.
And he comes walking
right up to me, squinting down. Goes: 'Officer Mackey. I've heard...*things*
about you.'" A pause.
"Pockmarked bitch."
Holly nodded, murmured: "That's diplomatic."
"Hey, I didn't say it out *loud*. Just stood there, thinkin' oh yeah,
Dave: Me too, *ese*." Down
to the last of the fries now, gone in two neat snaps; Cass cleared
her throat, then laid the
punchline. "Fucker ever gets that near me again, for whatever reason,
I'm gonna plant my stick
right in his ass."
"With your Dad's tacit approval, of course..."
"Ooh, big words. Look, actual fact, I don't know *what* Vic wants, half
the time. I mean--him and
Dutch Wagenbach, the Feeb? They got this fucked-up Hannibal Lecter
scenario goin' on, so every
time Dutchman gets kicked some dirty cop case from I.A., first thing
he does is come in and
'consult'. Like any of that's gonna mean shit come parole-board time,
what with Mayor A. leading
the pack. 'Ladies and gentlemen, Victor Mackey abused the public trust...'"
"Well, didn't he?"
"The public's trust is for crap, H. I don't trust *them*, and why should
I? You ever worked with
real fuckin' people in any real fuckin' context, you'd understand that."
"It's probably mutual."
"Hope so." A mid-sentence switch, weirdly plaintive: "But look, man--just
look at the stuff he
did, then look at the stuff he *stopped*. Add it up."
"Shouldn't work that way. And would you even want to think that was true, if he wasn't your Dad?"
Which just brought both blue eyes down again, pinning Holly flat over
the rim of those Matrix
shades--round and flat and empty under lowered brows, like a shark's,
like a doll's. And Holly
could already hear the voice of Dr Skoda rumbling up from somewhere
deep inside, his breath
tickling her mind's ear: Clinical words, exactly sufficient to the
symptoms, though cut with a
sorrowful sort of diagnostic understanding. Hero-worship; self-definition.
Self-delusion.
Established pattern of behavior.
Institutionalization.
(Oh, HO yeah.)
Because that last was the one cut the deepest, wasn't it? Not to mention
both ways. Cass playing
her patented Vic Mackey.2 game, still proudest of the fact that even
though her mother'd been the
one who left--took the autistic brother, the new baby girl and Cass
and fled, 'round about the
same time Aceveda and company had finally decided Vic was more of a
liability than an asset to the
Farmington squad--*she*'d been the only one who came back once the
shit hit the fan, ready to
listen, learn and emulate, to carve herself into a living rebuke to
the system that'd failed them
both.
Or Holly, always most "content" to observe from the sidelines of life
rather than risk direct
involvement, while simultaneously filing away the details for future
artistic reference. Watching
Toby-Dad, so scrupulous in his own not-drinking, yet quick enough to
cast a cold eye over her
surviving sibling Harry's mounting experimentation--much like the way
he kept track of Harry's
dealings down at the family firm, but never volunteered any but the
most sidelong possible shadow
of advice on how he conducted them: Contract law, huh? Investment
counselling? Probate
challenges? Well, I guess you know what you're doing, son; you did
go to Harvard, after all.
Just...
...don't get caught.
Watching the fissures form and spread, like cracks in glaze under ever-increasing
heat. Gauging
the point at which Harry might or might not break from some icy mental
distance, as though it was
nothing more than a hobby. A bet he'd made solely with himself, so
he'd never have to worry about
paying off anybody he didn't want to be in debt to, no matter *which*
way the chips eventually
fell.
While Holly stood even further back, at even more of a remove. Taking pictures.
And: "Fuck you, bitch," Cass replied, flatline level--the classic comeback,
so rote it didn't even
sting. "Least I got something to live up to."
Well, hmmm; no getting 'round that one, not really. Not even when your
next thought, as Holly's
was, went a little something like--
*Yup. And at least *I* know MY Dad deserved to be in Oz, when he was.*
--because, shit...that just wasn't much of an insight, now, was it?
Seeing how Toby-Dad'd probably
be the first to tell you it himself, you only asked.
*'Something to live up to.'*
That phrase, still ringing in her ears even as Cass pushed her sunglasses
back up and turned her
re-hidden eyes safely elsewhere, the muscular curve of her neck on
full, arrogant display: *Jump
'cross and take a bite out, baby, you really think you'd have a hope
in hell of getting away with
it. 'Cause I could DO with a little more exercise today.*
One blue vein pulsing, only visible indicator of a triphammer heart
on constant overdrive. And for
a second, Holly felt herself almost overcome--sucked down, undertow-deep,
by a karmic wave set in
motion long before either of them were even old enough to see themselves
as *people*. Sins of the
father(s), that tired trope, yet no less powerful for all its predictability.
Because: Here I am, "living up". Knowing the people I love most will
always be the ones who're
worst for me. Knowing the only way I'll survive is to take responsibility,
like Toby-Dad never
will--for who I am, as well as for who I'm *not*.
My Dad loved Chris Keller right to the bitter dregs, even though he
knew it was bullshit. He knew
it'd end in tears and he went there anyway, *all* the way. So is that
strength, or weakness? Is it
weak to want to love that much? To *be* loved, that much?
...by Vic and Cassidy Mackey's standards, probably. With no amount
of drunken fumbling, no matter
how heart-felt, ever being enough to change *that* assessment.
"I'll send you the prints, when they're ready," Holly said, at last,
pushing her chair back.
Checked the bill, calculated interest, and threw two more bucks in
on top: A lady's tip, just
large enough for true largesse. Enough to make Gram and Gramps proud,
for sure.
Holly took one more brief glance back at Cass, still studying Mars like
it was some skell she'd
been assigned to surveil. And walked the hell out.
***
No pathetic fallacy followed her back to her car, thank Christ, where
she sat dry-eyed for a good
ten minutes before turning on the ignition. Thinking, without even
wanting to, about that time
right after Beecher's parole went through--the orgy of hugs, then Harry
hanging back and clutching
Uncle Angus' hand 'till this weird new man in the shabby old suit finally
stopped trying to meet
his eyes and just let him creep ever closer, slowly, like some cat
checking out an empty box with
a familiar/unfamiliar smell.
An hour later he was in Beecher's lap, hugging him so hard they'd had
to pry his arms open to put
him to bed. Deep asleep, but still clutching.
And now came another Skoda conversation, intruding: Toby-Dad, bemused
yet once more by the outside
world's rules, listing off the many ways in which OZ had that shifting
moral morass beat
cold--where to go, what to do, how to stand, sit, walk, answer back.
Who to pay, and how. Whose
ass to kiss, lit or fig. What was worth killing, or being killed, over...
"Sounds to me like you wish you were back there."
"...some days."
She'd stopped him in the hall, later on. Begged him outright to swear
he wasn't going to do
anything--stupid. And got nothing in return for her passion but the
barest, most tired crinkle of
brows, the slightest narrowing of those faded eyes. "Holly, c'mon.
Do I want to stay out? Do I
*want* to stay out? Of course I want to stay OUT, Holly. You
know I do. I want to stay out--"
*--just as long as I possibly can.*
The unsaid coda, to almost everything. Pure ambivalence lurking inside
every action and reaction
just like the cancer that ate Chris Keller's heart, love-first. What
remains behind, inevitably,
even when all the rest is burned away.
At which Holly had closed her eyes, the very same way she was closing
them now. Seeing the contact
visits room at OZ coalesce behind her eyelids in a blood-vessel map:
The place where all matter in
her particular universe tended to collect, one way or another. Second
home for her first, her
truest self. The room in which a person can see all things broken down
to their most basic
elements, their component clockwork parts.
That's where you'll be, she thought; on one side of the glass to see
Harry, or on the other, with
him. And that's where I'll be, too--in there with you and him, or with
Cass, 'till she gets
herself put somewhere else: Mennenvale, maybe. Some California WCI.
Gonna spend the best years of
my life in a row of plastic boxes, pressing my hand against a divider.
And that's because all you
ever thought to teach me about true love...is...
(...it always makes time to visit.)
Jesus. Jesus, Jesus, Jesus--Christ.
Eyes shut, ignition on. Holly felt the car purr against her, warming
her thighs. And knew that she
didn't know *what* they had, she and her father, her brother, her friend.
Her haphazard lover.
What they had, or would have, now: In common, out of it. Or what-the-fuck-ever.
But--they had something, at least, though. Right? All of them.
Finally. *Undeniably*.
Something.
THE END