THE NEVADA DESERT is a lonely place. With the exception of the
scattered mesquite bushes, Joshua trees and the occasional tortoise, the
landscape appears as dead as a Martian sea. Defined by extremes, it is a no
man's land of mirages on deadly summer days and winter nights, cold like the
moon that casts its ghostly brilliance over the vast emptiness below. In the
desert, death imitates life.
More or less, that was how Bryce Hartman, a tour flight guide and
a survivor of something far worse than his stricken idealism, tried to portray
his native desert in the monologue he delivered to each small planeload of
tourists on the flights between Las Vegas and the Grand Canyon. Seven days a
week Hartman would arrive exactly sixty minutes before the ten o'clock departure
time to inspect the eight-seat aircraft, ensuring a tidy cabin for that day's
passengers. The Canyon View flights departed from the Howard Hughes Terminal,
built on the site of the millionaire's private airstrip, which was closed long
after his keen business acumen helped put the fabulous in Fabulous Las Vegas,
although not before he concluded his life as a lunatic. In a gentler era and
because of his vast wealth, the press called Hughes eccentric, a kind term for
a man who hid himself in a penthouse at the Desert Inn, letting his fingernails
grow until they curled. For decades after he died, other than a small road, few
landmarks in the city bore his name and even the holding company for his
empire's assets, Howard Hughes Limited, renamed itself, as if even bawdy Las
Vegas was embarrassed by his bizarre behavior. Over time, though, Hughes joined
Elvis in the mystique and folklore of the city and the new executive
terminal, constructed as part of a satellite airport for McCarran
International to serve private jets owned by men wealthier than even Hughes
might have dreamed of being, was named after him, as was an imposing complex of
office towers off Paradise Road.
Hartman enjoyed pointing out to his passengers that the city had a
history of spawning fame and fortune that often turned to a pathetic end. Like
the desert, Hartman routinely explained, Las Vegas was a place where life and
death, as well as success and failure, were intimately intertwined, even for
the rich and famous. Listening to his dramatic oratory, Bryce Hartman's
passengers found him extremely likable and cheerfully entertaining. "Young
man," a large woman from Omaha, with what appeared to be a pile of blue
cotton candy on her head, said after one flight, "you should be on the
stage!"
This particular day, the sun was illusory, as it often was during
the high desert winter, glaring down deceitfully on the purplish gray mountains
encircling the Las Vegas Valley but offering no warmth against a chill wind.
For the first time since he took the job, Hartman was running late. This would
be no ordinary tour day for him and his unsuspecting passengers, tediously
dimwitted as they always were, would have no clue of what he was about to do.
The high temperature was forecast for the low 30s, so Hartman had
donned his expensive new parka. It was an indulgence he allowed himself only
two days earlier and which he could hardly afford with his current wages, a
mere pittance of the salary he once commanded as a campaign aide to powerful
Governor Logan Key. For his income, like his pride, was stripped from him a
long time ago. All he now had were the one-liners and
cynical humor that sustained him in an occupation he had purposely
and desperately selected to remain largely invisible and, thus, harmless, to
his enemies. His fears were far from unfounded; just a day earlier he had
discovered outside his apartment door another one of the anonymous and menacing
newspaper clippings. The last one, which he found in his vehicle three months
earlier, was about a suspected mob hit on the owner of a topless bar. The
police found his head in the desert but never located the body. The recent and
most chilling of all, which only Hartman and his tormentors would understand,
was an innocent two-paragraph announcement in the Times metro section that the
Nye County Commission had voted to approve the construction of a small runway
next to the All The Way Inn brothel in Pahrump to ferry customers from Las
Vegas.
Hartman didn't need these reminders to keep him silent because he
had already learned the hard way that people with power will do extraordinary
things to hold on to it. His potential accusations against those very same
people could, at the least, provoke them to destroy his reputation, bringing
shame on those he loved, and probably something worse. Only his family's
stature in the Las Vegas Valley provided him protection. But after two years of
living his life as all but a prisoner ( and being a very good boy in the
process ( he was finally ready to do something different. Just how different
that something was his captors would never imagine.