
Driver does one thing...drive
Much later, as he sat with his back against an inside wall
of a Motel 6 just north of Phoenix, watching the pool of
blood lap toward him, Driver would wonder whether he had
made a terrible mistake. Later still, of course, there'd be
no doubt. But for now Driver is, as they say, in the moment.
And the moment includes this blood lapping toward him, the
pressure of dawn's late light at windows and door, traffic
sounds from the interstate nearby, the sound of someone
weeping in the next room . . . Thus begins Drive, the story of a man who works as a
stunt driver by day and a
getaway driver by night. He drives, that's all--until he's
double-crossed. Powerful and stylistically brilliant, Drive
has been hailed by critics as the "perfect piece of noir
fiction" (The New York Times Book Review) and an instant
classic.
Excerpt Chapter OneMuch later, as he sat with his back against an inside wall
of a Motel 6 just north of Phoenix, watching the pool of
blood lap toward him, Driver would wonder whether he had
made a terrible mistake. Later still, of course, there'd be
no doubt. But for now Driver is, as they say, in the moment.
And the moment includes this blood lapping toward him, the
pressure of dawn's late light at windows and door, traffic
sounds from the interstate nearby, the sound of someone
weeping in the next room.
The blood was coming from the woman, the one who called
herself Blanche and claimed to be from New Orleans even when
everything about her except the put-on accent screamed East
Coast-Bensonhurst, maybe, or some other far reach of
Brooklyn. Blanche's shoulders lay across the bathroom door's
threshhold. Not much of her head left in there: he knew that. Their room was 212, second floor, foundation and floors
close enough to plumb that the pool of blood advanced
slowly, tracing the contour of her body just as he had,
moving toward him like an accusing finger. His arm hurt like
a son of a bitch. This was the other thing he knew: it would
be hurting a hell of a lot more soon. Driver realized then that he was holding his breath.
Listening for sirens, for thesound of people gathering on
stairways or down in the parking lot, for the scramble of
feet beyond the door. Once again Driver's eyes swept the room. Near the half-open
front door a body lay, that of a skinny, tallish man,
possibly an albino. Oddly, not much blood there. Maybe blood
was only waiting. Maybe when they lifted him, turned him, it
would all come pouring out at once. But for now, only the
dull flash of neon and headlights off pale skin. The second body was in the bathroom, lodged securely in the
window from outside. That's where Driver had found him,
unable to move forward or back. This one had carried a
shotgun. Blood from his neck had gathered in the sink below,
a thick pudding. Driver used a straight razor when he
shaved. It had been his father's. Whenever he moved into a
new room, he set out his things first. The razor had been
there by the sink, lined up with toothbrush and comb. Just the two so far. From the first, the guy jammed in the
window, he'd taken the shotgun that felled the second. It
was a Remington 870, barrel cut down to the length of the
magazine, fifteen inches maybe. He knew that from a Mad Max
rip-off he'd worked on. Driver paid attention. Now he waited. Listening. For the sound of feet, sirens,
slammed doors. What he heard was the drip of the tub's faucet in the
bathroom. That woman weeping still in the next room. Then
something else as well. Something scratching, scrabbling.... Some time passed before he realized it was his own arm
jumping involuntarily, knuckles rapping on the floor,
fingers scratching and thumping as the hand contracted. Then the sounds stopped. No feeling at all left in the arm,
no movement. It hung there, apart from him, unconnected,
like an abandoned shoe. Driver willed it to move. Nothing
happened. Worry about that later. He looked back at the open door. Maybe that's it, Driver
thought. Maybe no one else is coming, maybe it's over.
Maybe, for now, three bodies are enough. Chapter Two Driver wasn't much of a reader. Wasn't much of a movie
person either, you came right down to it. He'd liked Road
House, but that was a long time back. He never went to see
movies he drove for, but sometimes, after hanging out with
screenwriters, who tended to be the other guys on the set
with nothing much to do for most of the day, he'd read the
books they were based on. Don't ask him why. This was one of those Irish novels where people have
horrible knockdowndragouts with their fathers, ride around
on bicycles a lot, and occasionally blow something up. Its
author peered out squinting from the photograph on the
inside back cover like some life form newly dredged into
sunlight. Driver found the book in a secondhand store out on
Pico, wondering whether the old-lady proprietor's sweater or
the books smelled mustier. Or maybe it was the old lady
herself. Old people had that smell about them sometimes.
He'd paid his dollar-ten and left. Not that he could tell the movie had anything to do with
this book. Driver'd had some killer sequences in the movie once the
hero smuggled himself out of north Ireland to the new world
(that was the book's title, Sean's New World), bringing a
few hundred years' anger and grievance with him. In the
book, Sean came to Boston. The movie people changed it to
L.A. What the hell. Better streets. And you didn't have to
worry so much about weather. Sipping at his carryout horchata, Driver glanced up at the
TV, where fast-talking Jim Rockford did his usual verbal
prance-and-dance. He looked back down, read a few more lines
till he fetched up on the word desuetude. What the hell kind
of word was that? He closed the book and put it on the
nightstand. There it joined others by Richard Stark, George
Pelecanos, John Shannon, Gary Phillips, all of them from
that same store on Pico where hour after hour ladies of
every age arrived with armloads of romance and mystery
novels they swapped two for one. Desuetude. At the Denny's two blocks away, Driver dropped coins in the
phone and dialed Manny Gilden's number, watching people come
and go in the restaurant. It was a popular spot, lots of
families, lots of people if they sat down by you you'd be
inclined to move over a notch or two, in a neighborhood
where slogans on T-shirts and greeting cards at the local
Walgreen's were likely to be in Spanish. Maybe he'd have breakfast after, it was something to do. He and Manny had met on the set of a science fiction movie
in which, in one of many post-apocalypse Americas, Driver
had command of an El Dorado outfitted to look like a tank.
Wasn't a hell of a lot of difference in the first place, to
his thinking, between a tank and that El Dorado. They
handled about the same. Manny was one of the hottest writers in Hollywood. People
said he had millions tucked away. Maybe he did, who knew?
But he still lived in a run-down bungalow out towards Santa
Monica, still wore T-shirts and chinos with chewed-up cuffs
over which, on formal occasions such as one of Hollywood's
much-beloved meetings, an ancient corduroy sports coat worn
virtually cordless might appear. And he was from the
streets. No background to amount to anything, no degree.
Once when they were having a quick drink, Driver's agent
told him that Hollywood was composed almost entirely of C+
students from Ivy League universities. Manny, who got pulled
in for everything from script-doctoring Henry James
adaptations to churning out quickie scripts for genre films
like Billy's Tank, kind of put the lie to that. His machine picked up, as always. You know who this is or you wouldn't be calling. With any
luck at all, I'm working. If I'm not-and if you have money
for me, or an assignment-please leave a number. If you
don't, don't bother me, just go away. "Manny," Driver said. "You there?" "Yeah. Yeah, I'm here.... Hang a minute? ... I'm right at
the end of something." "You're always at the end of something." "Just let me save.... There. Done. Something radically new,
the producer tells me. Think Virginia Woolf with dead bodies
and car chases, she says." "And you said?" "After shuddering? What I always say. Treatment, redo, or a
shooting script? When do you need it? What's it pay? Shit.
Hold on a minute?" "Sure." "... Now there's a sign of the times. Door-to-door
natural-foods salesmen. Like when they used to knock on your
door with half a cow butchered and frozen, give you a great
deal. So many steaks, so many ribs, so much ground." "Great deals are what America's all about. Had a woman show
up here last week pitching tapes of whale songs." "What'd she look like?" "Late thirties. Jeans with the waistband cut off, faded blue
workshirt. Latina. It was like seven in the morning." "I think she swung by here, too. Didn't answer, but I looked
out. Make a good story-if I wrote stories anymore. What'd
you need?" "Desuetude." "Reading again, are we? Could be dangerous.... It means to
become unaccustomed to. As in something gets discontinued,
falls into disuse." "Thanks, man." "That it?" "Yeah, but we should grab a drink sometime." "Absolutely. I've got this thing, which is pretty much done,
then a polish on the remake of an Argentine film, a day or
two's work sprucing up dialog for some piece of artsy Polish
crap. You have anything on for next Thursday?" "Thursday's good." "Gustavo's? Around six? I'll bring a bottle of the good stuff." That was Manny's one concession to success: he loved good
wine. He'd show up with a bottle of Merlot from Chile, a
blend of Merlot and Shiraz from Australia. Sit there in the
wardrobe he'd paid out maybe ten dollars for at the nearest
secondhand store six years ago and pour out this amazing stuff. Even as he thought of it, Driver could taste Gustavo's
slow-cooked pork and yucca. That made him hungry. Also made
him remember the slug line of another, far classier L.A.
restaurant: We season our garlic with food. At Gustavo's,
the couple dozen chairs and half as many tables had set them
back maybe a hundred dollars total, cases of meat and cheese
sat in plain view, and it'd been a while since the walls got
wiped down. But yeah, that pretty much said it. We season
our garlic with food. Driver went back to the counter, drank his cold coffee. Had
another cup, hot, that wasn't much better. At Benito's just down the block he ordered a burrito with
machaca, piled on sliced tomatoes and jalapenos from the
condiment bar. Something with taste. The jukebox belted out
your basic Hispanic homeboy music, guitar and bajo sexto
saying how it's always been, accordion fluttering open and
closed like the heart's own chambers. Chapter ThreeUp till the time Driver got his growth about twelve, he was
small for his age, an attribute of which his father made
full use. The boy could fit easily through small openings,
bathroom windows, pet doors and so on, making him a
considerable helpmate at his father's trade, which happened
to be burglary. When he did get his growth he got it all at
once, shooting up from just below four feet to six-two
almost overnight, it seemed. He'd been something of a
stranger to and in his body ever since. When he walked, his
arms flailed about and he shambled. If he tried to run,
often as not he'd trip and fall over. One thing he could do,
though, was drive. And he drove like a son of a bitch. Once he'd got his growth, his father had little use for him.
His father had had little use for his mother for a lot
longer. So Driver wasn't surprised when one night at the
dinner table she went after his old man with butcher and
bread knives, one in each fist like a ninja in a red-checked
apron. She had one ear off and a wide red mouth drawn in his
throat before he could set his coffee cup down. Driver
watched, then went on eating his sandwich: Spam and mint
jelly on toast. That was about the extent of his mother's
cooking. He'd always marvelled at the force of this docile, silent
woman's attack-as though her entire life had gathered toward
that single, sudden bolt of action. She wasn't good for much
else afterwards. Driver did what he could. But eventually
the state came in and prised her from the crusted filth of
an overstuffed chair complete with antimacassar. Driver they
packed off to foster parents, a Mr. and Mrs. Smith in Tucson
who right up till the day he left registered surprise
whenever he came through the front door or emerged from the
tiny attic room where he lived like a wren. A few days shy of his sixteenth birthday, Driver came down
the stairs from that attic room with all his possessions in
a duffel bag and the spare key to the Ford Galaxie he'd
fished out of a kitchen drawer. Mr. Smith was at work, Mrs.
Smith off conducting classes at Vacation Bible School where,
two years back, before he'd stopped attending, Driver had
consistently won prizes for memorizing the most scripture.
It was mid-summer, unbearably hot up in his room, not a lot
better down here. Drops of sweat fell onto the note as he
wrote. I'm sorry about the car, but I have to have wheels. I
haven't taken anything else. Thank you for taking me in, for
everything you've done. I mean that. Throwing the duffel bag over the seat, he backed out of the
garage, pulled up by the stop sign at the end of the street,
and made a hard left to California. Chapter FourThey met at a low-rent bar between Sunset and Hollywood east
of Highland. Uniformed Catholic schoolgirls waited for buses
across from lace, leather and lingerie stores and shoe shops
full of spike heels size fifteen and up. Driver knew the guy
right away when he stepped through the door. Pressed khakis,
dark T-shirt, sport coat. De rigueur gold wristwatch. Copse
of rings at finger and ear. Soft jazz spread from the house
tapes, a piano trio, possibly a quartet, something
rhythmically slippery, eel-like, you could never quite get a
hold on it. New Guy grabbed a Johnny Walker black, neat. Driver stayed
with what he had. They went to a table near the back. "Got your name from Revell Hicks." Driver nodded. "Good man." "Getting harder and harder all the time to step around the
amateurs, know what I'm saying? Everybody thinks he's bad,
everybody thinks he makes the best spaghetti sauce,
everybody thinks he's a good driver." "You worked with Revell, I have to figure you're a pro." "Same here." New Guy threw back his scotch. "Fact is, what I
hear is you're the best." "I am." "Other thing I've heard is, you can be hard to work with."
"Not if we understand one another." "What's to understand? It's my job. So I'm pit boss. I run
the team, call all the shots. Either you sign on to the team
or you don't." "Then I don't." "Fair enough. Your call ..." "Another sparkling opportunity gone down the tubes." "Let me buy you another drink, at least." He went to the bar for a new round. "I do have to wonder, though," he said, setting down a fresh
beer and shot. "Care to enlighten me?" "I drive. That's all I do. I don't sit in while you're
planning the score or while you're running it down. You tell
me where we start, where we're headed, where we'll be going
afterwards, what time of day. I don't take part, I don't
know anyone, I don't carry weapons. I drive." "Attitude like that has to cut down something fierce on
offers." "It's not attitude, it's principle. I turn down a lot more
work than I take." "This one's sweet." "They always are." "Not like this." Driver shrugged. One of those rich communities north of Phoenix, New Guy
said, a seven-hour drive, acre upon acre of half-a-mill
homes like rabbit warrens, crowding out the desert's cactus.
Writing something on a piece of paper, he pushed it across
the table with two fingers. Driver remembered car salesmen
doing that. People were so goddamned stupid. Who with any
kind of pride, any sense of self, is gonna go along with
that? What kind of fool would even put up with it? "This is a joke, right?" Driver said. "You don't want to participate, don't want a cut, there it
is. Fee for service. We keep it simple." Driver threw back his shot and pushed the beer across. Dance
with the one who bought you. "Sorry to have wasted your time." "Help if I add a zero to it?" "Add three." "No one's that good." "Like you said, plenty of drivers out there. Take your pick." "I think I just did." He nodded Driver back into the chair,
pushed the beer towards him. "I'm just messing with you,
man, checking you out." He fingered the small hoop in his
right ear. Later, Driver decided that was probably a tell.
"Four on the team, we split five ways. Two shares for me,
one for each of the rest of you. That work?" "I can live with it." "So we have a deal." "We do." "Good. You up for another shot?" "Why not?" Just as the alto sax jumped on the tune's tailgate for a
long, slow ride.
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