In Slipstream, Leslie Larson traces the intertwining paths of five characters as each struggles to stay afloat in the face of major setbacks, minor failures, and a reckless pursuit of elusive second chances. When Rudy loses his job cleaning jets at the airport, his sanity and his marriage threaten to follow. While his wife, Inez, secretly saves her pennies and plots an escape, his coworker Wylie, a bartender at LAX, is about to receive the surprise of his life. Meanwhile, Wylie’s brother, Logan, freshly released from jail, tries desperately to stay out of trouble while traipsing through a minefield of temptation. And Logan’s daughter Jewell is nursing a heart broken once by an unfaithful girlfriend and again by a father who can’t seem to stick around. Though they don’t know it, these five people are headed toward an explosive event that will have consequences for them all.
Deftly weaving suspense, humor, and revelation, Slipstream is a rich human drama with the breathless pace of a thriller and the soul of classic noir.
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From the Hardcover edition.
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Leslie Larson was born in San Diego, California. Her work has appeared in Faultline, the East Bay Express, and the Women’s Review of Books, among other publications. She lives in Berkeley, California.
From the Hardcover edition.
Chapter 1
Wylie's eye was acting up again. That and the wrist he'd broken forty years ago falling out of the back of his father's moving pickup. He'd been nine; now it ached whenever it was going to rain, like a goddamn barometer. He squeezed a lime into a Bombay and tonic and looked out into the terminal where the morning business crowd was thinning out. The line at the security check had dwindled to a trickle. As he watched, a fleshy man whose gray suit made him look like an elephant bent awkwardly, removed his shoes, and passed through the metal detector. The security crew, in khaki uniforms and latex gloves, lounged behind the X-ray machine, chatting as they stacked the plastic bins and waited for the next rush of passengers. Wylie set the drink down in front of his customer, took the money, and rang up the sale. From behind the bar he had a good view of the travelers who streamed in from the ticket counters and passed through the pavilion where his bar stood along with a See's candy cart, an umbrella stand that sold espresso, a newspaper and gift shop, the La Paz Cantina, and a store that sold gifts for pets. The other end of the pavilion bottlenecked into the security check, where people were shunted through chutes, sifted through metal detectors, and discharged out the other side, where they gathered their belongings and disappeared toward their gates.
Wylie's eyelid fluttered and twitched like a bug was trapped under the skin. Stress, he figured, though he couldn't think of any particular reason for feeling edgy. A skinny woman with a too-dark tan ordered a screwdriver. Wylie counted the ice cubes as he dropped them into the glass, a bad sign. Not five, not nine. Seven. Otherwise, who knew what might happen? He added an extra one, eight, just to spite himself. To short-circuit the syndrome. But just before he served the drink, he took the extra cube out. When disaster struck, did he want his last thought to be I should have stuck to seven? Here we go, he told himself.
Across the pavilion, people waited in rows of black plastic chairs for arriving passengers to emerge from behind the barrier. At this hour, just before ten in the morning, the seats were almost empty. The professional travelers with their crisp suits and heavy smell of cologne, the occasional speck of dry blood on their freshly shaved faces, had flown off to San Francisco or New York. Soon families with whining kids would start straggling in, along with people on their way to weddings or funerals, honeymooners, and foreigners going back to their own countries after seeing Disneyland, Hollywood, the Pacific Ocean. The seats would fill with people who read newspapers and shushed their children as they waited, who looked up anxiously when a stream of people appeared, dragging suitcases and pushing strollers.
"Can I get a drink over here?" a scrawny white guy with a head shaped like a lightbulb called out. He tapped his money on the bar, one of Wylie's pet peeves.
"What can I do for you?" Wylie asked in a flat voice, placing a napkin in front of him.
"Dewar's on the rocks."
On the television over the bar, the weatherman announced that a storm was moving in from the south. It would hit late tonight. That explained Wylie's wrist, but he wondered about his eye. Not that you needed an excuse to feel jittery these days. You weren't safe anywhere--not in McDonald's, Safeway, or your own house. Not at your job or in your car or at school, and certainly not at the airport. The earth could heave and rip open. A plane could be heading for them this very minute, ready to explode in a fireball right here in the bar. Some nut could go ballistic and mow down the crowd with an automatic weapon. The only time you could relax, the only time you didn't have to worry about being maimed or killed, Wylie reflected as he poured the Scotch over ice, was when you were already dead.
"Six-fifty," he said, setting the drink down.
"I didn't ask for a double," Bulbhead replied.
Wylie clenched his jaw. "This is a single."
The guy made a big deal of pulling his wallet out of his back pocket and picking through the bills for the right amount. Just as he was putting his money on the bar, the phone rang.
Wylie took the money. It was going to be one of those days.
He answered the phone, expecting it to be one of the airport maintenance staff calling to say an electrician would be in to replace the light over the register that kept shorting out, or a manager from the concession he worked for wanting to know if he could cover somebody else's shift. He was surprised to hear Carolyn's voice.
"Is everything all right?" he asked anxiously. She'd never called him at work before. He pictured his house burned down, his dogs run over.
"Oh yeah. Everything's fine, Wylie. I'm sorry to bug you at work, but listen--"
"What is it, then?" he interrupted. Once the scare was gone, he was annoyed. They had their routine.
"Well, listen. I'd like to talk to you," Carolyn said uncertainly.
A flight crew bustled by like a flock of blackbirds. The bar was filling up. The Amber Ale had sputtered empty a few minutes before. The sink was full of dirty glasses, and the tables over by the big-screen TV needed to be bussed.
"Listen, Carolyn. Can I call you back in a few minutes?" Wylie asked. "It's kinda crazy in here right now."
"Sure," she said. "Okay."
"I just need to catch up a little. I'll call you right back."
He cleared the empty glasses off the bar and plunged them in the steaming water in the stainless-steel sink. He replenished the piles of cocktail napkins and stocked the containers of olives, lime wedges, and maraschino cherries. He liked the fluorescent lights of the airport, the low buzz of canned air, the garish purple and gold carpet. Outside, the sun was fighting to come out. Lurid, milky light streamed through the big windows, turning the people walking by into silhouettes, overwhelming the fluorescent tubes overhead, dimming the screens that listed arrivals and departures. Newspapers and paper cups were starting to collect on the black plastic seats in the waiting area. Big planes nosed up to the jetways, fuel lines dangling from their undersides like umbilical cords.
"Ketel One over," a guy who looked like a professional basketball player called out. He wore chunky diamond studs in his ears, garlands of gold chains. His buddy was tall and flashy, too. He ordered a cosmo.
Wylie spotted a handful of potential deathtraps as he made the drinks. The unattended sports bag against the wall, the package on the seat next to the glass case where pretzels twirled under heat lamps, the guy with the too-big overcoat looking around shifty-eyed as he stood with his hands in his pockets. Meanwhile they were taking away people's toenail clippers, confiscating penknives and tweezers. What a joke. People here had no idea what it felt like to think twice every time you touched anything, every time you raised your foot and set it down. It had been thirty years since Wylie was in Vietnam, but he was still looking for booby traps, still keeping an eye out for mines. People didn't know what it felt like always to be wondering if you were going to lose your legs, your balls, your life. Wylie had seen a nineteen-year-old from Tulsa, Oklahoma, step on a Bouncing Betty, do a double flip like an acrobat, and land gracefully in the limb of a...
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