Table of Contents
Copyright
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
about the author
Copyright © 2010 by Jeff Klima
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Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Klima, Jeff.
The dead janitors club : pathetically true tales of a crime scene cleanup king / by Jeff
Klima.
p. cm.
1. Crimes--California--Orange County. 2. Crime scenes--California--Orange County. 3. Orange County Crime Scene Cleaners (Firm) I. Title. HV6533.C2.K55 2010 338.7'6136325--dc22
2010001458
For my boss…
He pushed me to write this book—
Now I bet he's sorry I did.
Also, for Happy.
All of what follows is true, but my apologies if my memory of chronology or events differs slightly from your own. It mostly shouldn't, though, unless you're a liar.
Maybe something good can come out of all this evil?
CHAPTER 1
from wine to spine
Man has to suffer. When he has no real afflictions, he invents some.
—José Martí
I walk into the lobby of a shockingly splendid hotel, and the wheel on the cash register in my mind is clicking audibly upward. I anticipate leaving this place a few thousand dollars richer than when I walked in. So many factors are at play here; I am chomping at the bit, trying to discern them all.
French doors gilded with a gold overlay breeze open effortlessly before me, working off unseen sensors and a pneumatic arm. Caucasian employees stare pleasantly at me from behind the counter. From a financial standpoint, this is a good thing.
White people are terrified of death. An overabundance of detachment and safety in our culture has resulted in "whitey" becoming a benign collective of soft-shelled whiners, people who understand pain only in terms of there not being three-ply toilet paper on sale at the supermarket closest to their condo.
Ethnic folks are confronted by death more frequently than white people, and that numbed acceptance of it can mean a lot less money for a guy in my line of work.
I stroll around a polite setup of stain-free and richly upholstered dark couches arranged around a coffee table holding stacks of newspapers from various regions of the world. The smell of breakfast fills the lobby. Whether it's pumped in or they have a café tucked somewhere, it still means that they give a damn about their multisensory first impression, and that is good news for me.
I set my clipboard on the counter and straighten my black polo shirt so that the biohazard symbol is smartly on display.
"Hello, sir. How can I help you?" the attractive, brunette counter girl asks. The orange script practically glows off my chest, screaming out what I do, but her eyes never waver from mine, not once. She's been trained well.
"I'm looking for Gary," I say.
"Right away, sir." She picks up her walkie-talkie, blocking out her mouth, but I can discern the same clipped and effortlessly polite tone with which she addressed me.
I feel good…important…larger than life, and regret not parking beneath the valet awning, right in the middle of the lane, my car torqued at a hard angle to create an impasse, letting everyone know the
Crime Scene Cleaner
is here. It is the sort of dick move that I typically do these days—carefree, powerful me.
What stopped me on this occasion was that my car had the misfortune to be parked the previous night under some sort of avian toilet. A ridiculous amount of white bird shit, speckled with the green remnants of devoured insects, gave my red car a rather polka-dotted appearance.
I pick up my clipboard and step over to the coffee table to scan headlines from the news of the world, hopeful that the
Orange County
Register
will scream about mass death and murder in its banner headline. But probably not, because I would have already known about it.
Gary appears from behind me, looking dapper but terribly ethnic, which yanks several thousand dollars off what I was hoping to make the price tag. I curse silently behind a confident and winning smile.
"Hi, Jeff Klima from Orange County Crime Scene Cleaners," I say, extending my hand and speaking first to inform him that I am the alpha male.
"Hi," he says, a bit puzzled, and I suddenly hope I am in the right place.
He introduces himself and looks around ashamed, as if I were a homeless urchin who had obstinately wandered into the ornate lobby and began snacking on the odds and ends in a trash receptacle.
"I understand you have some sort of scene…" I query further, losing some of my swagger, and I can't help but note how two years on the job suddenly doesn't feel like that much experience at all. Shit, I might as well have acne and a pubescent hard-on, considering the detectable quiver in my voice. It shocks me how quickly my overwhelming shyness can come roaring back to capsize my confidence.
He politely shushes me with one raised hand, vibrating softly, panicked. I understand completely but say, "A suicide, maybe?" a bit loudly, as if I didn't, comfortably reestablishing my authority. The same trembling hand waves me out of the lobby and away from the guests checking in, who can undeniably read my shirt.
We step out into the courtyard, a lush open-air affair, where hotel workers are scrambling to set up for some speaking engagement to take place a little later in the day. None of them make eye contact with me; they've been well trained. We wait in silence for a short eternity, though I'm eager to persist, having had to wake up well before noon to ready myself for this gig.
Another man, also ethnic (and more money off the bill), joins us. I don't remember his name, so we'll call him Osama. He is better dressed than Gary, and I clue in to his seniority when Gary quickly moves aside, his eyes slightly downcast. I introduce myself to this man as well, comfortably meeting his gaze through his executive eyeglasses. This guy may be a fearsome boss to the minimum-wage herd working here, but to me he's just another jerk who needs my skills. It further empowers me.
Osama shepherds Gary and myself quickly along manicured stone pathways past doors with placards that refer to the rooms beyond the doors as "suites." This is usually good news for me. This place, in its self-congratulatory way, considers itself a "nicer" establishment. I bet I can get some good money out of them after all.
The elevator is farther away from the lobby than I would like, though, which is a glaring indication that this is an older hotel with fresh polish—not a good sign. It was built when places put less consideration into guest needs, and more into overall aesthetics and intent. Old hotel casinos do this, making guests walk through the main casino floor en route to their rooms, hoping the whirling lights and cheerful pings of jackpots being wheedled out will entice the guests into making a long detour at their expense.
Stepping into the elevator further confirms my suspicions. The elevator, with its glass paneling staring out into the courtyard, has threadbare and nappy carpeting that would be completely
verboten
anywhere near the entrance or lobby. The elevator buttons, once a trickle of elite white circles, have faded to a stale version of their past glory. The elevator buttons run from top to bottom, though, with the higher floors listed at the top, convincing me that the hotel started off as a glitzy, hip place some time ago.
We head for the third floor, the elevator doors closing around us like a tomb. I tap "Another One Bites the Dust" on my clipboard with my fingers as the elevator chugs upward, its pneumatic lift struggling far more than its brothers operating the front doors. Nobody speaks and nobody looks at each other, which is fine with me.
The elevator halts with a lurch, and the doors swing open to reveal a maid's cart jutting obstinately across the pathway, completely oblivious to would-be passersby. The fat cats share a collective acknowledgment over this, and I develop the melancholy opinion that this year some woman's kids aren't going to have much of a…however you say "Christmas" in Spanish.
The doors here, each similarly designated as suites, belie the fact that this hotel has no real suites, only standard rooms. It's one of those places that refer to every room as a "suite." This hotel lures guests in, rather like insects to a bug zapper, by using an alluring lobby complete with an English-speaking counter staff to make tourists feel comfortable—like they are going to have a high-dollar hotel experience.
Once guests check in and take the walk to their "suite," however, they realize they've gotten the bum's rush, and similarly, so have I. This job practically feels now like I will be doing it for free.
We step to a door conveniently located a short distance from the elevator, good for me on the likely chance that I will have to move a stain-mottled bed, flush with leaking guts and malodorous chunks, through the hallway. Few things are a bigger pain in the ass to a crime scene cleaner than a crime scene on the upper floors of a multiplestory establishment.
I wait apprehensively for one of the two suits to open the door, but nothing happens. Glancing right to left, I suddenly feel like it's all a trick and I've been led here to be whacked, Mafia-style. (Since I dropped acid in college, my mind occasionally leaps to these extremes.)
"We wait," Osama says mysteriously. I step over to the railing, wondering if there is anyone around who will hear the gunshots and react appropriately, but there probably isn't. My jaded experience over the past couple of years has taught me that precious few people react appropriately to the sound of gunshots anyway.
"Did a man kill himself in there?" I ask, adopting a slight personto-an-affected-child voice.
"Please, we must wait," Osama maintains, and I look to Gary for some semblance of understanding. He is deathly silent and subservient to his master; he, too, has been well trained.
The doors to all the rooms face inward, open to the courtyard air, and it is warming up quickly. It will be a hot day, and I pray the job will be over quickly. Working in a protective biohazard suit normally makes all the sweat from my body collect and slosh uncomfortably around me. In the July heat, though, it makes the sweat stink. I need the money, because summers in the crime scene business are always slow, but craving even more than that, I need a few extra hours of sleep. I think I'm still drunk from a party the night before.
The clip-clop of quickly approaching executive shoes drums out the nearby freeway sounds and I look up. A third man, dressed better still than Gary and Osama, has arrived and has an assistant in tow, showcasing his importance beyond what a mere suit could achieve. Real power players have assistants, you see. Not that I care. I'm done introducing myself. Now I only want answers, not new friends to add to my Facebook account.