That night a hard rain fell.
Leslie Harrington cherished the rain. Loved the sound of it beating on the window, the sight of it splashing on the panes. The coolness it brought. The excuse to light a fire in her Rustic Canyon home in Santa Monica. When it came down hard, she loved to curl up on her couch, wrapped all cozy in her favorite red comforter, Central Coast Chardonnay within easy reach, and watch Casablanca or Waterloo Bridge or Here Comes Mr. Jordan.
She was content, even if she was alone, which she usually was lately. She loved to walk down to the deserted beach at night, no umbrella, just her hooded parka, and watch the silent rain meet the roaring surf of the sea. If there was thunder and lightning, all the better. But she would gladly settle for just the rain. She knew how to settle.
She settled a lot in court. She knew if you could settle for something just a little less than what you wanted, more often than not, you’d win the case. She was a Los Angeles County Deputy District Attorney. A rising star. Her star had begun to shine years ago when she sent one Cleamon Desmond away for the rest of his life for ordering the murder of two men on Central Avenue just north of Watts in Green Meadows.
It was in that trial that she’d really learned to settle. Of course, she wanted the death penalty for this murderous thug known as Big Evil, said to be responsible for more killings than anyone else in the history of Los Angeles’s world-famous gang warfare. He’d beat many cases before. She knew this case was weak, hinging mainly on the testimony of another gang member, Freddie Gelson, who agreed to testify if he was granted a new life far away from 89th and Central. She laughed when one of the detectives, John Hart, told her “No problem. We can put Gelson up at the Rio Palace. Not the one in Brazil, though. The one on 105th and Broadway.”
She also knew that in the wake of a then-recent Illinois decision to ban the death penalty, unless you had a without-a-doubt case, it was much harder to get a conviction on a capital case than a LWOP, life without the possibility of parole. Also in this crime, Desmond had not been the triggerman. That meant, as dim-witted as it was, even though he had ordered the hits, some jurors would rationalize “well, he didn’t actually pull the trigger that killed these people.” That was the breed of jurors she encountered.
So she went for LWOP and won the trial. She gained the admiration of her peers. She had put away the most feared gang member in the city. Big Evil didn’t even seem to mind. She had, however, gained the intense hatred, the pure loathing of the father of one of Big Evil’s victims.
On that rainy night in Rustic Canyon, that father, one Edward Sims, was parked on her street, watching her watch the rain and a movie. Watching her drink some white wine. He put down his binoculars and cracked a new 750 ml of Hennessy, courtesy of an unwitting LAPD detective. He took a sip and smiled as he wondered if that detective could be considered an accomplice for what was going to happen in Rustic Canyon tonight.
Eddie Sims leaned over onto the passenger seat, out of sight, whenever he heard or saw a car coming down the street. There were not many cars, but Sims figured anyone who saw a black man here might get suspicious, just as anyone seeing a white man on his block would. The difference was that on his block the white man, unless he was police, might get his ass kicked and robbed. Over here in Rustic Canyon, they’d just call the police. Roll the damn SWAT team just because a brother parked on the street. And with binoculars? Prob’ly get five years. What the charges, man? BMPWB of the Rustic Canyon Criminal Code. Black man parked with binoculars.
He had made up his mind even before he’d shot the reporter that he would never go to prison. He had two options—to get away with it or to die resisting. At this point, he was so far gone, he didn’t even care. At the same time, he felt very much at peace. He was hoping to get away with this, but knew in the long run, he would not. In a way, he felt Eddie Sims was already dead. It was very freeing to live when you are already dead.
And that was sad to him. Eddie Sims, he thought, had been a good man for many years. A decent man. A man who always tried to do the right thing, even if he made some wrong decisions. Like when he asked Jennette to marry him only two minutes after she told him she was pregnant. He knew she wasn’t the woman he wanted to spend a lifetime with, knew she was more interested in diamonds than in sharing a life together in a modest home. Eddie knew that with just his high school education and limited mechanical skills he wasn’t going far. He just wanted to work, get a good job, pay for the baby’s education. That’s what he wanted most, to make his baby’s life better than his had been.
Eddie’s life as a youth was rough. He had lived in the largest and, probably, worst housing project in the United States, the doomed Robert Taylor Homes on the South Side of Chicago. But, his family—mother and two brothers—got out when he was seven. His father had been locked up in Joliet for armed robbery and manslaughter. Received twenty years, but only did six months because he got shanked to death in the yard by the cousin of the man he killed during the botched liquor store robbery on 66th Place and Blackstone Avenue.
The family moved to his mother’s mother’s two-bedroom home in South Central on the corner of 76th and Wadsworth, just a mile north from the home he’d rented for the last ten years. In South Central in 1971, his two older brothers had joined the original Crips gang, founded by the legendary Raymond Washington who lived just two doors down.
Back in those days, there was just one gang called the “Crips”—not like now where there are a one hundred different Crip gangs—and they fought with their fists. But, soon the guns came with bloody, reckless vengeance. The older Sims brothers were both killed fighting against the Swans, part of the newly formed alliance of black gangs—Bounty Hunters, Piru, Brims, Denver Lanes, Bishops, Van Ness Gangsters—that went under the umbrella of the Bloods.
Eddie never joined the Crips. Never took retaliation against the Bloods, either. His mother would curse him for this. “Your brothers, my two sons, get killed by Swans and pussy bitch Eddie just wants to stay home and work on his shitty old Oldsmobile. I’m glad your father is dead. He’d be ’shamed of you. Little bitch.”
But Eddie didn’t have it in him to kill. It didn’t seem to him it was courageous—or took—courage to kill. It wasn’t toughness. He guessed it was hatred and despair and a never-ending tormented feeling that it was better to kill and get killed than to just go on living. That was the way Sims felt now.
Eddie kept working on that Oldsmobile, a ’67 442 with its 360-horsepower force air engine, that was his pride and joy. To his sadness, he sold it when times demanded. He would eventually get another Olds, an ’84 Cutlass, from his earnings as a mechanic at a ramshackle auto supply/repair joint. He made enough money to get by and salt away some for his son’s college fund. It wasn’t much money he stashed—sometimes only five bucks a week, but it was enough to be a source of pride for Eddie Sims. That’s what kept him going, his beautiful, sweet son, Payton.
Payton was named for Eddie’s favorite football player, Walter Payton aka “Sweetness.” Jennette didn’t want the name, but let Eddie have his way after he bribed her by offering up his entire next paycheck if she named the boy after the great Chicago Bear running back. “What’s in a fuckin’ name?” Jennette had said. “For your paycheck, as pathetic as it is, you can name him Gale Sayers for all I care.”
Eddie always remembered that because he was stunned his wife even knew who Gale Sayers was. Musta seen that TV movie of the week about Brian Piccolo getting cancer. Everybody in the whole country saw that tearjerkin’ motherfucker. Even Dick Butkus probably cried.