Robbers A novel

Christopher Cook

Book - 2000

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Subjects
Genres
Road fiction
Published
New York : Carroll & Graf Publishers 2000.
Language
English
Main Author
Christopher Cook (-)
Edition
1st Carroll & Graf ed
Physical Description
372 p. ; 23 cm
ISBN
9780786707768
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Eddie didn't mean to shoot the 7Eleven clerk in the head, but the pack of Camel straights he was trying to buy cost $4.01, and he was a penny short. Then Ray Bob went back to get some Marlboros and cleaned out the till: "You can't rob a dead man." Eddie and Ray Bob are runnin' buddies, and in this high-octane first novel, they keep runnin' all the way across Texas. Eddie starts shooting first, but it's really sociopath Ray Bob we have to worry about: he calls Eddie's 7-Eleven clerk and raises him a cop and a few more clerks. Then there's Della, a hairdresser who left a body of her own in a Holiday Inn outside Houston; she hitches a ride in the runnin' buddies' ragtop caddy, and, naturally, three's a crowd. Ray Bob, you see, has some unresolved issues about sexual orientation, and he just doesn't hit it off with Della, especially since she's getting along so well with Eddie. This may sound like a cross between Natural Born Killers and Will and Grace, but, in fact, it's something very different. Cook takes the noir chase novel (there's a persistent Texas Ranger on the boys' trail) on some remarkable detours. Yes, we feel the pathos of white-trash lives gone wrong, but soon enough, we've forgotten the big picture; we're runnin', toothe dirt of the backroads and rooting for Eddie and Della, murderers each, to escape both Ray Bob and the law and to make it into the middle-class of their naive dreams. We know better--that first 7-Eleven clerk gives us nightmares, as he does Eddie--but we don't care. Cook misfires every now and then, cranking the engine way too high with grandiloquent descriptive passages, but in time, he may just rival Daniel Woodrell for the title of white-trash poet laureate. Bill Ott

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

The harsh, foreboding essence of rural Texas dominates Cook's bloody, bittersweet debut novel, charting the adventures of two criminal drifters and their pursuer. From the disturbing opening scene in which Eddie and Ray Bob kill a convenience store clerk, the "running buddies" lash their way across Texas, shooting gas station attendants and shopkeepers and stealing small amounts of money and food. Young and broke, Eddie is an aspiring blues guitarist, baffled by the violence of Ray Bob, a natural predator for whom killing is not just a thrill but a calling. The boys' aimless adventure eventually includes Della, a woman who patterns her life on women's magazines and desperately aspires to middle-class respectability. While hiding out in a rundown beach house near Galveston, Della and Eddie fall for each other, much to the disgust of Ray Bob. Eddie and Ray Bob split upDEddie to pursue his romance and career and Ray Bob to continue his plunderDjust as a crafty Texas Ranger, Rule Hooks, picks up their scent. Hooks, a tracker by training and instinct, relies on modern police methods as well as his gut instincts to sniff out his prey. Cook's plot tumbles from scene to scene with jarring brilliance, the pathos of his characters lending his otherwise brutal world a certain beauty. His imagery is striking, almost lyrical: on a warm day, the sun floats in the sky like "a warm dab of butter." This gritty crime drama is not for the faint of heart, but Cook's prose sets it a notch above many like novels. The publisher compares the book to the work of James Lee Burke; if booksellers push that comparison, or if they aim the title at a hip, youthful readership, it could make out like a bandit. Foreign rights sold in the U.K., France and Japan. (Dec.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

First-timer Cook, a former journalist and human-rights activist in Texas, serves up “running buddies” Ray Bob and Eddie, who follow up their prison stint with a killing spree motivated by a need for cold beer, pocket money, and an amorality so deep it must have been implanted prenatally. Their demonic swathe through most of Texas leads them to Della, desperate to escape the vicinity of her hotel before someone discovers that she has, as she dreads, killed her john, who changed from Mister Dreamboat to Monsieur de Sade with the flick of a belt buckle. Eventually, the trio, casually adding more deaths to their scorecard, find themselves holed up in a ramshackle beach house belonging to a friend of Della’s—and that’s where the running buddies’ friendship begins to disintegrate, as Eddie pairs up with Della and finds work as a blues guitarist at Bubba Bear’s Stingaree Bar, and Ray Bob takes off for parts and victims unknown. Meantime, Texas Ranger Rule Hooks and his tracking dog Lucky are closing in, as is another old-time lawman, out to avenge a relative who became one of the buddies’ victims. But more cold-blooded killing is in the offing when Ray Bob returns and the partnership is dissolved with murderous finality back at the beach house. Della, whose mentors are drawn from soap operas and the sleazier talk-show hosts, is appallingly funny, while Ray Bob’s behavior makes a powerful case for capital punishment without trial. Despite some schmaltz toward the end: an impressive first effort.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Chapter One Eddie didn't intend to shoot the guy. Didn't mean to rob him either. What happened was-- They were sliding south down Lamar after rib sandwiches and beer at T-Bones Bar-B-Q House. Going no place particular on a lazy day in May. Laid back under a babyblue sky, the sun floating in it like a warm dab of butter. Cruising the street past used car lots flying plastic banners, the whole foods market, record stores, saloons. Moving through bright southern light and summer heat, vehicle exhaust rising acrid off asphalt, the hypnotic afternoon postpotative haze.     Eddie and Ray Bob, jazzing in low gear. Radio on soft, Lyle Lovett.     They rolled on southward through the commercial verge, crossed the Colorado bridge above a shimmering turquoise river. Upstream high greentreed banks flanking the course and a solitary racing shell sculling the windskipped surface, a waterborne centipede. Downstream, bridges over First Street and Congress and the snaggletoothed profile of the glassy city center.     Austin, state capital, university town. Former counterculture magnet and slacker haven now bailing the jack on a fulltilt bender. Sucking wind under the onslaught of money, a stripmall gangbang straddling the Balcones Fault. The mellow chilled-out days mere mythic history. Silicon Gulch now, hightech hysteria and the California influx, a city overrun by cyberokies on the rebound two generations after the dustbowled western plunge, returning flush, pockets stuffed with plundered gelt.     Come back to take Austin mainstream. And succeeding. Beyond a few longhaired relics holed up in canyoned university enclaves, the only surviving outlaw instincts careen through a juicy music scene in the rambunctious downtown club district. Rebellious tattooed youth there possessed of mutinous ideas and unencumbered time. Elsewhere, jackleg politicians seeking cool capitol cuties and dot.com commandos stroking bearphobic bull lust. Free market lechery for profit, unleashed.     To this scene come Eddie and Ray Bob, outsiders from the rural frontier, from the unseen and forgotten bumfuck outskirts of the urban media landscape. Rubbernecking the city, seeing what it's about, not much impressed. Just more folks humping the dollar. Two men alien among distant kindred, young and unemployed and broke, trawling boredom after a late greasy lunch. Scoping the street past fastfood joints and pawnshops in a boosted Eldorado convertible.     When Ray Bob says, Gimmee a smoke, hoss.     Eddie fished the packet from his T-shirt pocket, crushed it, tossed it over the side. Said, I'm out, pull into this 7-Eleven.     Ray Bob wheeled the Caddy ragtop into the empty lot, parked nose up to double glass doors plastered with signs advertising RC Colas by the twelvepack. He shoved the gearshift into park, let the motor idle.     Listen, he said, don't buy those fuckin straights. Get some filters.     Eddie on the sidewalk put a boot on the bumper, rolled a Zippo lighter across the back of one hand. Man, you know I smoke straights. You want filters gimmee some money.     I'm broke.     Eddie shrugged. All I got's four dollars, I'm buying straights.     Fuck you.     Yeah? Well up yours sideways, asshole.     In your momma's mouth.     Already tried it.     I ain't surprised, Ray Bob said. How was it? His face serious.     Yours was better, said Eddie. No teeth.     Try her pussy next time.     Them talking that way because they were running buddies.     Copper cowbells jangled on the door when Eddie went inside. Kaleidoscopic view: consumer soixante-neuf . Anything you wanted in there, racked up tight to please the eye and move fast. He paused, shaking his head. Then stood at the counter between the lotto ticket stand and a display of Lone Star keychains saying, Gimmee a packa Camel straights.     The clerk, a plump young man with burnished bronze skin and a black mustache, either Indian or Pakistani, laid the pack on the counter and rang it up. Four dollars and one cent, he said.     Eddie glanced at the register readout. I got four dollars here, pardner. Where's the spare penny bucket?     The man pointed to an empty plastic ash tray. All out.     Hey, no problem, I'll catcha next time.     The clerk put a hand on the pack of Camels, pulled it back to his side. Saying, It's four dollars and one cent.     Eddie looked at him. You gonna hold up this deal over a penny?     The young man adjusted the collar of his red 7-Eleven shirt, gazing somewhere over Eddie's left shoulder, as though preoccupied. As if he didn't care. Saying, That is what it costs.     Eddie frowned, not believing it. Flipping the top of the Zippo open and shut in one hand. Snap, snap. Man, you jerkin my chain.     I am jerking nothing.     Hell you ain't. What kind of fuckin country you come from?     A good country. The clerk meeting his eyes then for a moment before turning to put the pack back on the shelf. He faced the counter again, splayed both dark brown hands flat on the surface. Fingernails ivory as bone. Hair black as creosote, features resolutely braced. Maybe defiant. Very fine country, he said. Where we pay for what we get.     Hot flash. A spasm sideslipped over Eddie's shoulders, crawled up his neck, hit his jaw. He eyeballed the guy. You giving me the redass, pardner. Listen to me. This is America. Gimmee them cigarettes.     Four dollars and one cent.     I ain't believing this.     Only the guy didn't budge. Not one word, just standing there like a chocolate Deputy Doright. A corner of his mouth lifting slightly, either a smirk or a twitch.     Eddie said, Goddammit to hell.     That's when he hoisted a leg and reached into his boot. Pulled out a .22 revolver, an old Colt Police Positive with a four-inch barrel, looked like a toy. Pointed it at the guy. Arm straight out, finger on the trigger. Saying, Gimmee them fuckin cigarettes.     Robbery, the man squawked. He stared at the gun, dark eyes blinking, teethed his upper lip, jaw thrust forward. I call the police. Get your license plate.     So Eddie pulled the trigger. A sharp crack, the barrel kicking up. The bullet caught the clerk square in the forehead. His head snapped back, a small black hole in the bronze curvature. He stood there with his hands on the counter a moment, eyes crossed, then slid down onto the floor out of sight.     Eddie leaned over the counter and looked down. The guy lay on his side on the thick rubber floormat, head across one arm as if taking a nap. You dumbshit, said Eddie, look what you did. He reached over the open space and took a pack of Camels off the shelf, left the four dollars on the counter. Slipped the gun down his boot and went outside, cowbells clanging behind. He got into the Caddy.     The fuck you do? said Ray Bob. Shoot somebody?     Cocksucker wouldn't give me the cigarettes.     No shit?     Cause I didn't have a penny.     Ray Bob grunted. Don't fuck with a man and his smokes.     Man oh man, Eddie said, I thought they trained them camel jockeys. You fuckin believe it?     I believe it. Where's the money?     Left it on the counter.     Not that money, asshole. Ray Bob drumming the steering wheel with the heels of both hands. The register money.     It's in the register, where you think? Eddie tamped the pack of Camels on the back of one wrist, tore open the cellophane with his teeth. His hands were shaking. Went in for cigarettes, he said, I got cigarettes.     Goddamn straights, too. Ray Bob wagged his head. Man, I told you filters. Shit, gotta do everything myself. He opened his door with the Caddy still idling in park and legged it inside griping. He returned a minute later carrying a plastic sack bulging with dollar bills and rolls of coins and loose change, a carton of Marlboros tucked into an armpit. He sat behind the steering wheel counting the money.     Eddie exhaled a thin stream of smoke, snapped the Zippo open and shut. Don't you reckon we oughta be headin out?     Just a second.     Count that shit later, man, it ain't goin nowhere.     Neither is that A-rab in there. He dead.     Reckon he is. I plugged him in the head.     Ray Bob snorted. That'll sure do it. He tucked the plastic bag under the seat, put the car in reverse and hit the brake. He peered through the windshield at the storefront. Saying, Dammit to hell, shoulda got some beer.     I ain't thirsty, Eddie said. Let's git.     They rolled on down South Lamar in the slow lane with the sky spread softly overhead, transparent and cloudless, a pale blue altitude without end and the sun suspended in it. The radio on low with Dwight Yoakam singing about love come and gone. They didn't listen and they didn't talk. They were moving and that was enough. Going anywhere and everywhere, going nowhere in particular. The motor of the Caddy purring beneath the hood.     Down near the Brodie Oaks shopping center Eddie said, Man, ain't this some weather?     Ray Bob nodded. It is that, hoss. Gimmee a smoke. Open up that carton.     Eddie tore out the end of the cardboard carton and handed Ray Bob a hardpack of Marlboros. His hands were still trembling. How much in the sack? he asked.     Ray Bob shrugged. Didn't finish counting, you was in such a rush. Not much. Musta just made a deposit. He pulled the cellophane off the cigarettes and leaned sideways for the wind to whip it back past his shoulder. Forty fifty bucks, maybe less.     Shit, said Eddie. For that you make me an accessory to robbery?     Wasn't robbery. You can't rob a dead man.     Hell you can't.     You can't.     Bullshit, said Eddie. They got a law for everything. Copyright © 2000 Christopher Cook. All rights reserved.