tired and asked if I had anything to say, which I really didnât, except that I wasnât sure how I was going to pay the money back, which she said didnât count as an apology and just got mad again. Yesterday, I had asked her how Birch was doing and she calmed down a little bit and put him on the phone, but then he disconnected.
Aside from the call to Doon, Delia was being a real monster about letting me use her phoneâeven though she couldnât use it herself when she was filming. After the first day on set, the zombie film had lost its charm. My sister was right about the dialogue being idiotic. It was almost like the director had decided that if he filmed every scene at least twenty times, the words coming out of the actorsâ mouths might magically become interesting. Wrong. So I started to read the book that Roger had given me.
I found a relatively quiet place near the food table and cracked Helter Skelter open to the pictures in the middle: mug shot after mug shot of Charles Manson, lined up beside each other to show how heâd changed with each passing term in jail. The pictures reminded me of when parents lined up school pictures to show how their toothless second grader gradually became their peroxide-at-the-beach ninth grader. Over the years, the short-haired, clean-cut con man of the 1950s became the dead-eyed, swastika-tattooed, homicidal maniac of the sixties. There were also pictures of bad furniture, the rooms where the victims were murdered, and the various household objects that had been used against them: electric cords, beams in the ceilings, roasting forks from family dinners. The bodies were whited out, almost like after they were murdered theyâd been erased from the scene.
And then there were the girls: long-haired and without makeup, looking like they all knew some juicy secret that they werenât going to tell you. A group shot of five of them talking intently, heads shaved, worried brows, like they were getting ready to go on a cancer walk, not waiting to be sentenced to death. It was hard to believe that crimes that horrible had actually happened, in regular living rooms on regular evenings. Mansonâs battalion of zombie-bimbos were the kind of slow-moving death that scared me more than any dumb Hollywood movie. If you wanted a go-to for âAt least heâs notâ¦â and Hitler was taken, Manson was a pretty safe second choice.
Iâd been reading for three hours, which meant thirty dollars. I would have to read for fifty hours to make back the plane ticket, and fifty more to get home to Atlanta again. Or maybe Iâd be like some sleazy lawyer and start charging Roger for whenever I thought about the Manson family. I mentally gave myself five extra dollars for having to read about the murders twice, just to get the details straight.
On the night of August 8, 1969, Charles Manson sent Charles âTexâ Watson and three of the Manson girls, including head psycho Susan Atkins, to 10050 Cielo Drive with instructions to murder everyone inside in the most gruesome way possible. They killed five people, including the eight-and-a-half-months-pregnant actress Sharon Tate. But the murders didnât stop with Tate.
The next night, six more of his âfamilyâ members killed a married couple, the LaBiancas, in basically the same way but in a different part of Los Angeles. The killers even showered and changed into new clothes from the victimsâ closets at the crime scene. Then they hitchhiked back to the Manson compound and treated the person who drove them home to breakfast. The whole city of Los Angeles locked its doors, bought guns and guard dogs, and started concocting theories about orgies in the Hollywood Hills and roaming bands of Satanists. Everyone panicked. And those werenât even the only murders Manson was responsible for. Evidently there were plenty more, bodies in the desert never found, close friends who couldnât