So, yeah, I got out. I quit Food 4 Less. I drive a truck now. Delivering for UPS. I’m a member of the Teamsters union. The company pays benefits. I make a decent living.
I moved up by USC. I stay there now. I mostly like it but not always. The people are different. Especially the students. Put it this way: we don’t have much in common.
The 901 is a bar on Figueroa. It’s like the official bar of USC or some such shit. I don’t know why I go there. I mean nobody bothers me. Not physically anyway. Maybe in the back of my mind, I think some rich college chick is going to hit on me, take me home. I look all right. My job keeps me in pretty good shape. LOL, right?
Anyway, one night as I was about to leave — the frat boys’ behavior was bugging the shit out of me — who do I see, flirting with some football-player-looking guy? Marta.
I mean back in the day, Marta looked like a young J. Lo, only better. As I got closer, I could see that she’s still fucking gorgeous; she just looked tired. I was nervous about approaching her. Not about the guy. Fuck him. But it has been a long time, and we were never really close.
The guy moved on. Started flirting with some really young-looking chick. Like high school young. She probably had a fake ID.
When the guy split, Marta looked around; she saw me and rushed at me. What the fuck? Then she hugged me, she fucking hugged me. I hugged her back.
“Oh my God! It’s been forever. How are you?”
We let go of each other. I was even more nervous. I wasn’t even sure she remembered my name. So I offered to buy her a drink. She said yes and we talked and we drank for a long time. I asked what she was up to. She was blunt as hell about what happened to her modeling career.
It was her turn to ask me about my life.
“Do you work around here?”
“No, I stay here, I got a place not far from the new stadium. I drive for UPS. I get to see neighborhoods all over town. It ain’t bad...”
She looked up from her drink and straight at me.
“Are they hiring?”
About the Contributors
Steph Cha is the author of Your House Will Pay — winner of the Los Angeles Times Book Prize and the California Book Award — and the Juniper Song crime trilogy. She’s a critic whose work has appeared in the Los Angeles Times, USA Today, the New York Times, and the Los Angeles Review of Books, where she served as noir editor. Cha is the current series editor of The Best American Mystery and Suspense anthology. She lives in Los Angeles.
Nikolas Charles writes about heroes, thugs, and firebugs. Before devoting his time to writing crime fiction, he was a music journalist and photographer. His work has been published in Rolling Stone, Playboy, People, Life, and US Weekly. He was embedded in the Los Angeles Fire Department at Station 33 in South Central. He’s currently contributing to Time magazine and writing noir stories. Follow him on Instagram: @nikolascharlesauthor.
Tananarive Due is an American Book Award — winning author who teaches Black horror and Afrofuturism at UCLA. She has published several books including the novels My Soul to Keep and The Good House, and the collection Ghost Summer: Stories. She was an executive producer on Shudder’s Horror Noire: A History of Black Horror. She and husband Steven Barnes cowrote an episode of The Twilight Zone for Jordan Peele and two segments in Shudder’s Horror Noire anthology film.
Larry Fondation is the author of six books of fiction, primarily set in the Los Angeles inner city, where he works as a community organizer. Three of his books are illustrated by London-based artist Kate Ruth. He has received a Christopher Isherwood Fiction Fellowship. In French translation, he was nominated for Le Prix SNCF du Polar. His work in progress is called Single Room Occupancy, set on the fringe of Skid Row.
Gar Anthony Haywood is the Shamus and Anthony award — winning author of twelve crime novels, including the Aaron Gunner private eye series and the Joe and Dottie Loudermilk mysteries. His short fiction has been included in The Best American Mystery Stories anthologies and Booklist has called him “a writer who has always belonged in the upper echelon of American crime fiction.” Haywood’s spiritual thriller, In Things Unseen, was published by Slant Books in 2020.
Naomi Hirahara is the Edgar Award — winning author of traditional mystery series and noir short stories. Her first historical mystery, Clark and Division, follows the release of a Japanese American family from a World War II detention center. The seventh and final installment of her Mas Arai series, Hiroshima Boy, was published in Japan on August ٦, ٢٠٢١. Currently living in her birthplace, Pasadena, California, she was an editor of the Rafu Shimpo newspaper.
Emory Holmes II is a Los Angeles — based journalist and short story writer. His reporting has appeared in the Los Angeles Times, the Los Angeles Daily News, the San Francisco Chronicle, the Los Angeles Sentinel, and other publications. His short stories have appeared in The Cocaine Chronicles, The Best American Mystery Stories 2006, Los Angeles Noir, and 44 Caliber Funk.
Roberto Lovato, a journalist and teacher, is the award-winning author of Unforgetting, a memoir picked by the New York Times as an Editors’ Choice. He is also the recipient of a reporting grant from the Pulitzer Center. His essays and reports from around the world have appeared in numerous publications including Guernica, the Boston Globe, Foreign Policy, the Guardian, the Los Angeles Times, Der Spiegel, and other national and international publications.
Penny Mickelbury is the author of twelve mystery novels in three different series, two novels of historical fiction, and a collection of short stories. She has also contributed short stories to several anthologies. Her first career was as a journalist, and in 2020 she was inducted into the National Association of Black Journalists Hall of Fame. The Atlanta native lives in Los Angeles.
Gary Phillips has published novels, comics, and short stories, and edited numerous anthologies. Violent Spring, first published in 1994, was named one of the essential crime novels of Los Angeles. Culprits, a linked anthology he coedited, has been optioned as a British miniseries, and he was a staff writer on FX’s Snowfall about crack and the CIA in 1980s South Central, where he grew up.