“There’s a rowhouse on Ninth and G, Southeast, got a red awning over the porch. The dude you want to talk to is John Heidel. But don’t tell him we turned you on to the address.” I handed him the thirty, and he eyed me suspiciously. “You sure you’re no cop?”
I looked him over and said, “If I was, I would have called for backup by now.”
“Damn straight,” he said, missing the irony and walking, with his friend, down the stairs to hang out in the cloakroom.
I followed them down but veered off into the men’s toilet. I stood at the urinal and drained, reading the names of bands and slogans etched into the black walls.
Below an anarchy symbol, two words were dug deep into the heart of the plaster. “No Future.” I buttoned up my fly and flushed the head.
TEN
The red-awninged rowhouse stood in the middle of G between Ninth and Tenth, just as flannel-shirt had said. I parked in front of it the next morning somewhere around eleven o’clock.
Real estate salesmen pitched this area as Capitol Hill, and it was, though a far cry from the connotations that such a prestigious name would suggest. There were residential homes here, struggling group houses, neighborhood bars and shops, and a few marginally upscale businesses that quickly came and went.
I opened a chain-link gate and stepped along a concrete walkway split and overgrown with weeds and clover. A mongrel shepherd in the adjacent yard was on the end of its tether, up on its hind legs and growling viciously.
I stepped up onto a small porch with brown brick columns and knocked on a thin wooden door. A dirgelike bass insinuated itself through the walls of the house.
I knocked again. The door swung open and a girl stood before me. She was taller than me, even allowing for the fact that she was up a step. Her legs were long and her hips immaturely narrow. Through the sides of her green tank top I could see the curvature and bottom-fold of narrow, sausagelike breasts. Her tired eyes bore the mark of experience, though her childlike bone structure put her at around seventeen.
“I’m looking for John,” I said. “Is he in?”
Leaning in the doorframe, she looked behind her, then back at me, and said, “Which one?”
“I’m sorry. I didn’t know there was more than one. John Heidel.”
“There’s a lot of people live here, man, on and off. Johnny’s in his room, upstairs and through the second door on the left.”
I thanked her, but she was already walking away. The sound of several loud male voices came from the kitchen, where she was heading. From the mismatched, worn furniture in the living room to the requisite black and white television with foil antenna, the place resembled a student group house without the books.
I grabbed the loose wooden banister and took the steps slowly. At the top of the stairs I passed a room where a kid sat in the window box smoking. He didn’t return my nod.
My knock on the second door was hard enough to open it halfway. A young man lay on his back on an unmade bed, reading a paperback. Smoke rose slowly from behind the book. An emotionless voice told me to “come on in.”
He lowered the book and, squinting from the smoke of the cigarette that was planted in his mouth, cocked one eyebrow as he sized me up. He sat up on the edge of the bed and butted the weed in an overflowing ashtray set next to a radial alarm clock. From the looks of his wrinkled jeans, this would be the first time he had risen from the bed that day. His shirtless upper body was thick and naturally strong, without the artificial bulk obtained fro ^theant time hem weight machines, and there was a crescent scar half-framing his right eye.
“What is it?” he asked, slowly rubbing the top of his shaven head.
“John Heidel?”
“Yeah.”
“I’m Kevin DeGarcey from the Washington Times.” I flashed him a card imprinted with the Times logo, not giving him time to read DeGarcey’s title of advertising account executive. I extended my hand and received a grip weak with suspicion.
“What do you want?”
“The Post ran an article several weeks ago about the local skinhead movement that in my opinion was very negative. My editor feels they only captured, or chose to print, one side of the story.”
“I would agree with that.”
“He’s assigned me a different type of story on you guys. I’ve been working on it awhile now, doing interviews, talking to different people.”
“Why did you want to talk to me?”
“I heard you knew most of your peers on the local level.”
“From who?”
“Two younger guys I met at the Snake Pit last night. I didn’t get their names. One of them wore a flannel shirt, the other one was a little guy. They looked like they could have been in your group, but I have to admit, they were very eager to sell information.”
“They’re ‘wanna-bes,’ not skins. I’ll have to speak to those two about giving out my name.”
“What are you reading?” He seemed to warm to the question as I pulled a wooden chair next to his bed and had a seat. I took a pad and pen from my jacket.
“The Territorial Imperative,” he said, “by Robert Ardrey.” He spelled the author’s name for me as I wrote.
“Any good?”
“Interesting ideas. The man doesn’t judge violence. Violence just is.”
“What do you think about violence?”
“In what sense?” He smirked. He was probably smarter than the majority of his friends, but it was a relative intelligence. There was something stupid in his dead eyes and slack jaw.
“Skinhead violence, specifically,” I said. “The Post said your group beats up gays, the occasional black who gets in your way. Is that true?”
“You and me, they call us human, but we’re really animals, right? And even though we’re animals, we’re supposed to suppress our natural instincts to preserve and protect our turf.” He paused to rub his head. “It just boggles my mind that there isn’t more violence out there, that people aren’t w cle to asting each other wholesale in the street. I’m saying that since violence is a natural instinct, it’s amazing that there’s so little of it happening.”
“Why gays, though? Why blacks? The Post article said that the recent P Street Beach beatings were done by the skinheads.”
“Look,” he said, leaning in, “here’s the thing. We don’t care what people do in their own homes. We really don’t. But take that part of the park-P Street Beach-that’s my park too. I should be able to walk through it without stumbling on some freak faggots. So they get stomped once or twice, maybe they’ll take that shit back indoors where it belongs. As for the blacks, we send them a message every so often to remind them that we live here too. Fuckin’ bootheads act like they own this town.”
“Do you personally approve of these acts?”
“I’m not even saying we do the violence ourselves. But it is understandable. It’s a matter of protecting your turf.”
“I interviewed a guy they call Redman,” I said abruptly.
“You mean Eddie Shultz?” Heidel looked surprised and a little sad.
“That’s him.” I wrote the name. “He made some interesting connections between the music you guys listen to and the violence. Any thoughts on that?”
“Yeah. My thought is that anything Eddie Shultz says is bullshit.” He looked at me sourly and flipped open the top of his hardpack, put a smoke in his mouth and lit it, then absently threw the blown-out match onto the nightstand.
“I thought he was one of you guys.”
“He ain’t shit. Eddie was okay once, but he fucked up.”
“How so?”
He looked at me warily. “You writing a story about Eddie or the skins?”
“The skins. But that’s the point. If I find out why someone falls out of favor in your group, I find out more about the group itself. Maybe the article will be more sympathetic.”
He dragged hard on his cigarette. “Eddie started hanging with the wrong kinds of people. I mean, we just don’t get into the drug thing here, as an unwritten rule. We do consume some alcohol, though.” He smiled for the first time, revealing chipped and dirty teeth.