I walked out of my place. Glendale Boulevard was packed with cars, not even moving. There was no way I would drive to Joe’s place, not with this traffic. So I walked up to the monorail platform and waited. There should be one in five or six minutes. I could barely hear them from my apartment, even though they were practically feet away from my bedroom. I love those things. The screen above me flashed the location of the next train. It was in Glendale going southbound.
“Next train in three minutes,” said the computerized woman’s voice. I went to the fingerprint ID, flashed my thumb, and waited for the reply.
“Thank you Mr. Jones, have a nice trip.”
I had a year-long pass and I took the monorail everywhere. When the train whooshed into the station, the doors silently opened and I walked in. Some cholos were sitting there drinking iced cappuccinos next to a business man watching the news on his TVpod. At the other end of the train the Starbucks was open so I went to get a drink, passing literally hundreds of advertisements flashing on the porta-screens on each chair. You could buy a TV show or songs or whatever you wanted, and download it to your pod. It was a rip off so I never did it. We careened over the hills of Silverlake, stopping and letting some bohemian types on, with all their crazy facial hair. One of them was carrying an acoustic guitar and sat down to play an old Bob Dylan song. One of the cholos called him a hippie. I had read about hippies in history class. There was a neo-hippie movement going on, and hipsters were sitting around playing old protest songs in old-fashioned coffee shops around town.
In a few minutes we were at La Brea. I got off and looked up at the skyscrapers. Traffic was horrible. People were just sitting in their cars, honking. The poor rode bikes through town and the car people had to sit in traffic. I don’t know why they didn’t take the monorail. They just couldn’t stand being around other people I guess. Old habits die hard.
The sky was full of floating ad screens, and ads were projected on low-hanging clouds from powerful projectors on the ground. Music and TV blared at me from TV screens along the sidewalk, telling me to buy things. I could hook my pod into any outlet and order what I needed to be delivered today at my apartment. I forgot what high-rise Joe lived in so I got out my pod.
“Joe,” I said, and waited for it to connect.
“Hey man,” came his voice.
“Where’s your place?”
“Dude, you’re always forgetting.”
“All these buildings are the same.”
“It’s 4300 Sunset. I’m on the 81st floor.”
I walked up to Sunset, past crack dealers, men in suits, transvestites, taco carts, guys selling incense, high school students cutting class, smoking weed. Car horns blared on the street. Joe didn’t even own a car. You couldn’t really get anywhere anymore in a car. Traffic was just too bad. The freeways were parking lots, and finding parking was a joke. The city was like New York but ten times as wide – skyscrapers from the ocean to East LA, from Orange County to the Valley. A giant bed of high-rises and people sitting in traffic and waiting to drive. Every last inch of space had been built upon.
I finally got to his place and went into the elevator.
“Joe Lexington,” I called out.
“Thank you, Mr. Jones,” the voice said pleasantly, and in about ten seconds the doors opened up to a hallway. I walked down to his apartment. I had finally arrived for the party. It was a retro style party, like in the old days when people would get together in the same room instead of just hooking up their pods like nowadays. It’s all pod parties now. I guess the reason is that space is so scarce that no one has room in their apartments to get more then five people together.
I walked in to his place and saw a room full of people. I had pod-partied with a lot of them before but never actually met most of them face to face. Joe was one of the few friends I actually hung out with in person. I worked from home, partied from home, talked to my parents from home, shopped from home, ordered coffee to be delivered from home, got my groceries, bought books…you get the point. There’s just no point in leaving your house these days. It’s too easy to stay in. And the world is too crowded out there. I guess that’s what the neo-hippies are all about – getting people out of their apartments and into social gatherings like they had in the sixties. I thought that was weird, I mean, I went to school my whole life from home. I didn’t meet most of my classmates in person until I had known them for ten years.
The party was pretty fun, but I was feeling weird being away from my apartment for so long. I took the monorail home and bought some groceries on the way. When I got home they were waiting outside my door. I went in and looked out the window. All I could see was the building next to me, an eighty-story high-rise. It had just gone up a month ago and it was already full. It had several schools, some businesses and a lot of apartments. I used to be able to see the Silverlake reservoir from my window, but now it was just another skyscraper.
The next day was a no-water day. The drought had gotten so bad that sometimes there were no-water weeks now. Luckily I had some stored in my fridge. I had learned to ration my water so I didn’t get fined. I was only allowed a gallon a day.
To add to that it was an Smog Emergency Day– that meant no going outside. No driving, no walking, nothing. Normally traffic was so bad you couldn’t drive anywhere. But smog was approaching unhealthy levels so they instituted the Smog Emergency Days.
I was trapped inside. It was for my own good, I know, but it was pretty annoying. I couldn’t afford gas anyway, so it didn’t make a big difference. It was either gas or food for me. I looked out my window and saw the brown smog ring hovering at eye level. Since I lived on the twentieth floor I was right in the middle of it. It was strange to look down on the freeway and not see any cars. You could be arrested and thrown in jail for at least a month if you went outside on a Smog Emergency Day. If you drove it was worse. The few exceptions were delivery trucks and cops. They could drive. I was getting cabin fever sitting inside. My air purifier was broken, so I had the windows open and a fan blowing. But the air was so dirty I was coughing and my sinuses were all backed up.
I took a laser shower. No one took water showers anymore, just laser showers. It blasted you with a thousand purifying anti-bacterial laser beams. It only took a minute and you were clean.
After my shower I couldn’t take it so I put on some clothes and went downstairs to the lobby. If I could hail down a truck quickly I could maybe get out of town where I could get a hotel somewhere for a few days, until the smog emergency passed. The lobby was empty and the security guard was off duty for some reason. I walked calmly out onto the street. No cars, no cops, no pedestrians.
Then I noticed a giant corn syrup delivery truck barreling down the street. That was what most people drank on no-water days, and it was where all the country’s water went – the corn farmers. I waved frantically. The driver saw me, made a bewildered face, and slowly pulled over.
“You ain’t supposed to be outside, my friend.”
“I know, I’m trying to get out of town, can you give me a ride?”
“Alright, but I’m going to Bakersfield.”
“That’s fine.”
“Hop in.”
I got up and sat down and we drove away, just as a cop pulled around the corner and cruised down my street.
“Thank you so much,” I gasped. The air had me wheezing. Most people in the city had asthma and died early from it.
“No problem, pal. Gets boring without company. Want some jerky?”
He handed me a bag of dried meat.
“Is this beef?”
“Sure is.”
“How did you get this? It must’ve been two hundred dollars a bag!”
“My cousin sends it down from Canada. He buys it for cheap, in bulk.”
“Jesus. I haven’t had beef in years.”
I took a bite. It was the taste I remembered from my childhood, before the beef crisis. I would go get burgers or steaks with my mom at the fast food places.
“How can you get it cheaper from Canada?”
“They can feed their cows. We can’t. It’s that simple.”
“Yeah.”
“All the water we have goes to corn, and all the corn goes into our food. It’s either we eat, or the cows eat. There ain’t food enough or water enough for the two of us in this country.”
Since no cars were on the freeway we got out of the city limits pretty quickly.
“Are there any little towns around here I could stay in for a few days?”
“Not unless you like prisons.”
“What?” I hadn’t left Los Angeles in so many years I didn’t know what the rest of the state even looked like.
“See all this?”
He waved at the Central Valley, which we had a nice view of from the top of the Grapevine. It was a bed of giant gray buildings, offset by a few farms here and there.
“This is all prisons. I make most of my deliveries to prisons nowadays. This whole state is covered north to south with prisons. There’s only a few farms left.”
“You deliver corn syrup?”
“Corn syrup, corn meal, corn mush, soy meal, potato meal.”
“Are there any little towns anywhere that aren’t so hot this time of year?”
“The one place that comes to mind is Las Placitas. It’s real nice. Beach town. Some nice places to sit on the beach and drink a margarita.”
“Where is it?”
“Out on the coast. North of Santa Barbara. If you can get there.”
“How do I get there?”
“Train. But it don’t run too often. Most times it’s broke.”
“Where do I get the train?”
“Up here,” he nodded at an old disused train station by the side of the road. A sign said “Las Placitas-Sacramento.”
“This is it?” I asked, incredulous. “Are you sure it still runs?”
“I’ve seen it. Not too often, but I’ve seen it.”
“Can you let me off here?”
“Are you sure? It’s about a hunnerd degrees out there.”
“I don’t care. I have to get to that town.”
He pulled over.
“You might be waitin’ a long time.”
“That’s okay. Thanks for the ride.”
Jesus Christ it was hot out there. I sat on the bench in the station by myself the whole afternoon. Eventually an old Mexican woman showed up, old and wrinkled.
“When does the train come?” I asked her.
“Train?”
“The train – when does it come?”
“Train come…soon.”
She smiled. After awhile the train appeared far in the distance.
The train was almost empty. No wonder it never came. Everyone drove. That was the thing I never understood. If gas was so damned expensive nowadays, why did everyone drive everywhere? I guess we were gluttons for punishment. I sat on a dusty plastic seat and looked at the hazy central valley air. We passed prison after prison after prison. I fell asleep to the soothing hum of the slow train.
When I woke up it was dark and the ocean was on the right of me. I panicked for a second. Where was I? It had been so long since I’d seen the ocean it scared me. Did I miss my stop? Where was a porter when you needed one? I looked around and saw no one on the train with me. Then an old man in a train uniform came walking down the aisle slowly.
“Sir! Where are we? Have we passed the town, Las…Las…”
“Las Placitas is next stop,” he droned without looking at me. “Half an hour.”
The ocean was dark and it rippled gracefully next to me. Why weren’t more people on this train? We entered a curved bay and I saw, on a small peninsula, the sparkling lights of a little town up ahead. My heart pounded as we approached a tiny train station.
“Last stop, Las Placitas,” the conductor said over the PA. I got up and bounded down the stairs and into the warm night air. The sea breeze was fresh and clean and the smell of the sea mingled with some desert sagebrush. I walked through the station and found myself in a town that sloped down towards the sea. I walked down the street, past houses, towards the ocean, maybe ten blocks away. An old man sat on a porch, rocking back and forth as he looked at me strangely. Old-fashioned televisions blared in old people’s homes. It must be a retirement community, I thought. These people probably don’t even have pods or email! They probably still have radios! It was comforting. Like being in a place that was preserved before the world went crazy.
Down at the beach there was a main street packed with restaurants and bars. Teenagers were making out on the beach and old people walked slowly down the street. At the end of the downtown area there was a small hotel with a courtyard that opened onto the beach, directly facing the waves. An empty, glistening swimming pool sat unused in the middle of the courtyard.
My room was small, but it faced the ocean and I could lay there listening to the waves crashing. It was amazing to hear something natural, instead of helicopters and the constant beeping of my pod with messages, news alerts, advertisements, advertisements, advertisements…it was all too much for me. I must’ve fallen asleep because I woke up to the sound of a mariachi band playing in the courtyard. I went out and found the other guests dancing by the pool, drinking margaritas. The hotel was serving free margaritas, so I had one and started dancing when a young Mexican woman came up to me to dance. She was an employee of the hotel and she smiled as I did my ridiculous white man’s dance.
After a few margaritas we ended up on the beach, trying to talk in broken English and Spanish. She taught me some Spanish, which I should really know better, seeing as seventy-five percent of the state’s population speaks it fluently. But that didn’t matter. I was free, at last. I was living large, unfettered by the freeways and the smog, the skyscrapers and the traffic. I remember falling asleep with my head on her shoulder, wishing I could live at that hotel and never go back to my regular life.
That town doesn’t exist anymore. The prison system bought it a couple of months ago and a prison is currently being built there. It is being touted as the largest and most escape-proof prison in the country. That is saying a lot.
I did have to go back to my regular life, and my regular job, and my air-sealed purified apartment on the twentieth floor, but I know there is somewhere out there that is free from the noise and the glaring lights of advertisements. It might be in my mind, or there might be some real town out there that hasn’t been converted to a prison, but what matters is that it’s there somewhere. And you can’t convince me otherwise.