Aspen Pulp - Hardcover

Hasburgh, Patrick

 
9780312331832: Aspen Pulp

Inhaltsangabe

It's off-season in Aspen and former TV writer turner private eye Jake Wheeler is hired to find bimbette-in-training Tinker Mellon. Using what little he's learned from The Rockford Files and other TV detective shows, Jake's search for the cheerleader-turned-runaway uncovers a complex crime ring that lies deep within the old mines shafts of Aspen mountain.

So begins Aspen Pulp, a slalom ride of mystery for Jake and his crew of misfits and burnouts which include Hermy, the booze-swilling Swiss ski instructor, Ernie, the yokel deputy of the Aspen PD, and Winston, a loyal malamute the size of a snowmobile.

Filled with hilarious digs at its ostentatious home, Aspen Pulp is a page-turning debut.

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Über die Autorin bzw. den Autor

Patrick Hasburgh is a long-time TV writer, editor and producer. He began his career as a writer for The Greatest American Hero and went on to become a producer for The A-Team. Among his numerous other credits, he then went on to create the hit Fox show, 21 Jump Street. Aspen Pulp is his first novel.

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Chapter 1

"Remember when this town was a work free drug place?" Herman asked.

The Swiss expat slammed back a shot of tequila and then flinched as if the smelly yellow liquid had ignited a cerebral aneurism.

"If you can remember those days, you weren't here," I said.

It was about nine in the morning, late in the politically whacked summer of 2003, and the Big Easy's dishwasher was just finishing the nightshift, chanting what sounded like Spanglish reggae into the dreadlocks of a kitchen mop. But the Rasta wetback was making enough sense to serenade me back to 1975. That's when I was the Big Easy pearl diver and that low ceiling firetrap was the coolest joint in Aspen. I got ten dollars a night and all the beer I could drink.

The Easy kitchen had been set up to feed silver miners beans and franks during the boom of the 1880s, and more than a century later it took all night and a case of Coors to chip out the lobster bisque from the cast iron pots. You'd think the owner would spring for a new Maytag, but he's on death row for putting his wife through ten years of mental cruelty and then a wood chipper.

"Now you get tested all the time," Herman said. "Life's nothing but a lousy test."

"A snap quiz," I said, recalling that I had recently inebriated another birthday.

Herman Thayer had been in Aspen since he almost won the World Pro Skiing Championship in the mid seventies, losing three years in a row to a former Olympian whose name sounded like something you spread on small pieces of triangular toast. He always had more wins than the Frenchman but lost on points because he'd either finish first or not finish. Herman had yet to learn that life's a marathon, not a sprint.

"I hate the French," he said, glancing at the TV behind the bar as a FOX morning news anchor slapped around a Parisian apologist over France's Mesopotamian ambiguities. "They'll do anything to win."

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"Except fight," I said. "But what can you expect from a country where half the population cuts cheese for a living."

"Yeah, well, if it wasn't for the Frogs I'd be living in Starwood."

Herman tossed down another shot in a way that whiplashed the grim remains of his blonde hair into a transparent pompadour, and I flashed on how handsome he used to be before the booze and the coke twisted him into a punchline. The locals called him the Night Mayor because he never slept. He could win fifty grand in a giant slalom against the best in the world after snorting through a rack of eight balls on a seventy two hour binge. But people don't respect that kind of talent anymore.

"You could've bought John Denver's house," I said.

Aspen's country boy was now thanking God personally after he turned his airplane into a submarine off the coast of Santa Barbara.

"I think it went for just under six million," I continued, "but it had a solar powered security system and an endangered species petting zoo."

"I had money once," Herman said. "It's a pain in the ass."

Starwood was where the rich people in Aspen lived if they found Red Mountain too crowded or too expensive. I found all of Aspen too crowded and too expensive, but so were good public golf courses and sushi bars. In spite of the tawdry press and aging rock starian excess, this sky high hamlet is still one of the last great places on earth. That was why I had crawled back into town.

"You working today?" I asked, motioning to the bartender that maybe Herman had had enough breakfast.

But the keep poured him another shot and slid it down the bar.

"I'm always working," Herman said. "Like a fucking peasant."

"We're all peasants," I said.

"Not you, Jake," Herman slurped, lopping off his tequila shot. "You're a hot shit Hollywood sellout."

"Everybody's got his price, Hermy. I just know exactly what mine is."

"Yeah, thirty pieces of silver," Herman said, like someone who had read a book or two. "And don't call me Hermy. I hate that."

The racer chaser chicks used to call him Germy Hermy back when he was banging them two at a time. He was Aspen's own Typhoid Mary, but at least the snowmeister never passed around anything fatal.

"Let me buy you a real drink," Herman said, hand signaling the bartender like a deaf mute at a spelling bee. "I got a tab here."

"I'm trying not to drink anything real," I said, swizzlesticking a packet of sugar into my Diet Coke and taking a sip. "At least not before the market opens."

"The Farmer's Market in Carbondale? They're open. I was down there already, buying paint."

Herman taught skiing in the winter and painted houses in the summer, and the co op in Carbondale was a long way from almost medaling in the downhill at the Sapporo Olympics. But the square headed kamikaze hit a tree at about a hundred miles an hour, so maybe it was okay for him to be drinking at eight in the Morning. Herman spent ten months in a body cast before he was thrown off the Suisse ski team for dealing his leftover Percocets. I have never heard of anybody who ever had any leftover Percocets. But that's when Herman decided to come to the United States and turn pro.

"The stock market," I said, thinking that a toddy might taste better than the carcinogenic concoction I was drinking and remembering how my portfolio had been circling the drain ever since George junior curiously bushwhacked the election and Osama bin Laden powdered the World Trade Center into a trillion tons of talcum.

That our cheerleader in chief and his madrassas of dissemblers had the Third World's cheap seats cheering for Saddam's side during the second half of the Gulf War also forebodes what else might happen when genetically connected Skull & Boners skip political science class. But don't get me started on Bill Clinton, either. We should have sewn that monkey puncher into a giant condom and dropped him off the Chappaquiddick Bridge. Bubba put procuring pudgy delights before principle, an unpardonable sin when one signs up to run the big white hut.

"So how's business?" I said, trying to hang a U turn away from one of my political tangents.

"Better than the stock market," Herman said, licking salt off the back of his hand. "I'm painting a Victorian on West Smuggler. Thing's eight hundred forty square feet and just sold for a million two."

"You can't buy that kind of craftsmanship anymore," I said, half right.

"It's a mail order shit box," he said, completely right.

A gang of self righteous trust funders and no growth terrorists protected the ghettos of Aspen from the carpetbaggers' backhoe, but only after previously allowing themselves to scrape off some shanties and put up mausoleums of their own. Most of the buildings the Historical Society goes to war over were picked out of a JCPenney catalogue before it was hung on the inside of an outhouse and used for toilet paper.

"We got assholes who think anything built before American Bandstand is historically significant," Herman said.

I nodded and stirred some ice. My ears were chirping like a choir of crippled crickets at a faith healing contest.

"Why the fuck you put sugar in Diet Coke?" he asked.

It wasn't the first time I'd heard the question.

"There's eighteen tablespoons of sugar in a regular Coke," I said. "Booze metabolizes into about the same amount. I'm easing out of the Jones by cutting down on the sweets."

"What are you, in rehab?"

"Not anymore," I said.

I'd done a two month jolt in an outpatient program at St. John's in Santa Monica back when my final television series was cancelled after the first episode. It was an industry record and, unfortunately, my best work.

"It doesn't stick," Herman said.

44you have a brilliant grasp of the obvious," I said, looking at his empty shot glass. "Hold on to...

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