The slightly chubby gentleman—who was no gentleman— wore a nicely tailored dark suit with a red, white and blue striped tie; he also wore wire-frame glasses with coke-bottle lenses, behind which owlish eyes blinked. He had a weak chin and a prominent nose and a receding hairline; owl eyes or not, he looked a little like a fish, and about as harmless.
DeLisa was gesturing toward us—pointing out the “friends” who were awaiting the “senator” at his table—but as Serritella approached, his fish face fell. In the background, the jazz band was playing a frantic piece, which provided an appropriately unnerving backdrop for the first ward committeeman.
Serritella had been a political fixer for the Capone people since the late ’20s; he’d been appointed City Sealer under the incredibly corrupt and incompetent administration of Big Bill Thompson, and as Sealer had conspired with merchants to short-weight consumers. Later, quite by accident, he made Thompson’s mayoral defeat by Anton Cermak inevitable by causing a scandal that was outrageous even for a Chicago administration: Serritella and his chief deputy, a Nitti associate, were charged with conspiracy to “appropriate” funds collected for Christmas distribution to the poor. That kind of thing went over real big in the depression.
Nonetheless, Dan had, with Capone support, gone on to serve in the Illinois legislature for twelve years. Head of the newsboys’ union as well, which explained his ties with oldtime circulation slugger Ragen, he was a Chicago institution; they should’ve bronzed him and mounted him on one of the lions outside the Art Institute.
Before our distinguished visitor could waddle away, I stood and gestured to two empty seats at our table and said, “Dan— good to see you. Join us.”
Peggy looked up at me like I was crazy. It’s an expression I’d seen before on any number of faces.
Serritella swallowed and whispered something to the pretty young thing and came near the table with her, but didn’t sit.
“Heller,” he said, his voice rather high pitched and hoarse, “I know you don’t believe it, but I’m Jim Ragen’s friend. I had nothing to do with what happened to him.”
“Sure. Sit down. Sit down, Dan.”
He thought about that, and then came the rest of the way over, held a chair out for the girl, and she sat and he sat next to her, me on the other side of him.
“We’ll just stay a moment. Uh, this is my protégée, Miss Reynolds; she’s in show business and I thought she might enjoy one of these black-and-tans.” He directed his gaze toward Peggy. “Miss Hogan, you’re looking lovely tonight.”
Peggy said nothing; she was burning up, furious with me apparently, arms folded, staring straight ahead, toward where the floor show had been but where frantic jitterbugging by the patrons was now taking its place. Pete sat with his arms folded, watching me and Serritella, quietly amused; Reba, to whom our conversation must’ve seemed a foreign language, watched the jitterbuggers, too, but without Peggy’s angry glazed expression.
“We haven’t seen you at the hospital, Dan,” I said.
“I, uh, didn’t want to impose. I sent flowers.”
“Oh, and they were lovely. They meant a lot to Jim.”
“I’m glad to hear that.”
“He had me flush each flower down the toilet, one at a time.”
Peggy looked at me from the corners of her eyes, her attitude toward me changing.
Serritella drew back. “No.”
“I’m just kiddin’, Dan. He gave ’em to a nurse and asked her to give them to some worthy patient in Mandel Clinic.”
“I’m sorry to hear that Jim’s bitter. I passed my lie detector test, you know. Completely exonerated.”
“Yeah, and I heard about the questions. ‘Did you shoot Jim Ragen?’ Like anybody could seriously picture you a triggerman. ‘When did you last see Al Capone?’ Brother.”
“Well, it’s true. I haven’t seen Al in years.”
“So what? He hasn’t run the Outfit since liquor was illegal.”
He straightened his tie and tried to look indignant; it didn’t wash. “Well, Jim seems to think Al’s still in charge; that’s what he told the State’s Attorney’s office.”
“He told the State’s Attorney’s office that the Capone Outfit was out to get him. There’s a difference between Al Capone and the Outfit he left behind, as you damn well know.”
“That’s true, I suppose. But Jim did mention Capone…”
“Jim was just telling the State’s Attorney enough to send a warning signal to Guzik, but not enough to cause any real fireworks. You know that. You also know what’s in those affidavits Jim’s got socked away. He read ’em to you.”
Serritella nodded, his owl eyes blinking, double chin jiggling. “They’re dynamite. Jim should burn those. He really should.”
“I think Jim may be ready to negotiate.”
“Why are you telling me this?”
“I don’t particularly like dealing with Jake Guzik personally. These meetings with mob chieftains look bad in my FBI file; I’ve been logged in surveillance records God knows how many times. They’ve tried to pull me in before Grand Juries because of it. Anyway, you’re a go-between, Dan. Everybody knows that. Do what you do so well. Take the message.”
“Which is?”
“Like I said. Jim might be ready to talk. But he needs something.”
“What’s that?”
“Assurance that Guzik wasn’t responsible for Monday.”
“Well, it was Siegel. Everybody knows that.”
“Even you, Dan? Who goes to so much trouble not to know too much? Just in case you have to take a lie detector test or something? You deal with these people daily, but you’re like a wife whose husband cheats but she doesn’t care, she doesn’t want to hear about it, what she don’t know won’t hurt her. Just as long as he’s bringing in a fat pay check, he can screw around all he wants.”
Serritella pursed his lips and reassuringly patted the arm of his blonde, who was taking this all in with wide eyes, like Shirley Temple watching Bill Robinson dance.
“You’re a very unpleasant man, Heller,” he said.
“I know what you mean—I can hardly stand my own company. What do you know about David Finkel and Joseph Leonard?”
He shrugged, shifting in his seat. “They’re bookies, aren’t they? West Side?”
“Yeah. Are they tied in with Guzik, do you suppose?”
“Geez, how should I know?”
“They’re the ones who shotgunned your friend Jim Ragen. Doesn’t that make you mad, Dan?”
He nodded, squinted his owlish eyes, tried to summon outrage, came nowhere near, saying, “Furious. The police should arrest them.”
“That’s a terrific idea, Dan. I’ll pass that along to Bill Drury; he’ll wish he’d thought of it. Now, from what I hear, Finkel and Leonard have dropped out of sight. It would be nice if they could turn up. Alive.”
Serritella nodded more slowly. “You mean, if they showed up alive, and held up under questioning…without mentioning Guzik…maybe mentioning somebody else…that might convince Jim of the sincerity of a certain business offer.”
“For a guy who don’t know what’s goin’ on,” I said, patting him on the back, “you got a lot of savvy, Dan.”
Serritella stood, pulled out the chair for his protégée, put her on his arm, and said to me, “I’ll see what I can do.” Then he smiled and nodded at the others at the table, including Peggy, who smiled at him pleasantly, though her violet eyes were icy. They were no longer icy when turned my way, however.
“Nice piece of work, Daddy-o,” Pete said, smiling one-sidedly, leaning back in his chair, arms folded over his massive chest. “You played that little fixer like a penny harmonica.”
“I may have come on a little strong,” I said. “He’s a weasel, but he’s a powerful weasel. On the other hand, he’s used to being looked down upon by his patron saints—a guy like Serritella is tolerated by Outfit guys, never liked, let alone respected. I thought I better treat him like I fig
ure his bosses treat him.”
“Well you sure done a good job of it.”
“Thanks.” I looked about the room. “I don’t think your witness is going to show.”
“He’ll show,” Pete said. “Tad Jones is not gonna pass up a couple free rounds of drinks at the Club DeLisa. It ain’t even midnight yet. He’ll show.”
“Well,” I said, standing, easing Peggy’s chair out, giving her my arm, “I think I’ll leave him to you. Let me know if he i.d.’s Finkel and Leonard. Which he probably will. This is looking pretty cut and dried to me, now.”
“You think Guzik will sell out those two torpedoes?”
“Yeah—although they may just turn up dead in a ditch, especially if Guzik was who hired ’em. Will twelve cover my end?”
Pete said sure and I handed him a ten and two ones. For the food and drinks Peggy and me put away, it was a steal. And the babe who made a pretty pretzel out of herself hadn’t cost us a dime.
“Nate,” Peg said, later, in bed, “I want to thank you.”
“Well, I think I oughta thank you.”
Her smile was crinkly and wry. “Not about that, you goof. About what you’re trying to do for Uncle Jim.”
“What am I trying to do for your uncle?”
“Despite what all you’ve said, you really are trying to find out who tried to have him killed.”
I shrugged, as best I could, leaning on my elbow in bed. “I’m curious—it’s my nature. And your uncle is right, to a degree—doing business with Guzik would feel better if we knew that it was somebody else…Siegel, specifically…who paid for that hit.”
“So what’s your next move?”
“Nothing. There is no next move.”
“I find that hard to believe…”
“Well, strain yourself a little, kiddo, ’cause it’s true. Drury’s going to nab those would-be killers and, with a little luck, and more evidence than even the State’s Attorney’s office can ignore, he’ll get an indictment and a conviction.”
“Will whoever hired them be convicted, too?”
“Sure, if it’s a cold day in hell. Doesn’t matter whether it’s Guzik or Siegel responsible, you’re just not going to see that happen.”
“Why not?”
“That’s not the way the game works. The big boys are too well-insulated; the big boys can do too much damage to the families and friends of the small fry taking the rap. No, even if they get the chair, those two won’t implicate anybody, not anybody big.”
She almost looked like she was going to cry. “What happened to justice, anyway?”
“When was it, exactly, that justice was around? I must’ve missed it.”
She sat up in bed, looking very pale, very small, just a child, holding the sheet to her breasts, looking straight ahead. “If I knew who it was, I’d kill him myself.”
“That’s silly.”
She gave me a withering look. “It’s not silly. They tried to kill Uncle Jim!”
“Hey, they tried to kill me, too. You always seem to forget that little detail.”
She said nothing for a while; me, either.
Then, without looking at me, she said, very quietly, “I talked to Ginny again. Just before she left town, this week.”
“Ginny?” I said. Not quietly. “Virginia Hill? What are you talking to her for?”
“We’re friends. I’m allowed to have friends of my own choosing.”
“Yeah, yeah. But she’s just a hooker who got out of hand. You stay away from her.”
She paused, considering, then dropped her bombshell: “She does know Bugsy Siegel. She told me.”
“She does?”
“She’s…she’s sort of his girl.”
“Sort of his girl? Oh, great. Then she was trying to pump you about your uncle, that time…”
“Maybe. But she doesn’t know how I feel about Uncle Jim. About what happened to him. How close we are.”
“So? So what?”
“She offered me a job.”
“A job! What, riding trains with bags of mob money? Sleeping with senators?”
She ignored the nastiness of that. Said simply, “She needs a secretary.”
“What for?”
“She has business interests.”
“Well, where would this be? Hollywood?”
She nodded.
“You’re not seriously considering…”
She touched my arm; cool touch. “Nate, think a minute. If I were working for Ginny, I’d be close to this Bugsy Siegel person. I might be able to find something out.”
“Find something out? Are you kidding, or just crazy? You’re no goddamn detective…”
“If I get close to him, I can find out what he’s doing where Uncle Jim’s concerned.”
“That’s stupid. Siegel’s not going to say anything around the niece of the man he wants dead—assuming he does want Jim dead. This is lunacy. Don’t even think about this.”
“Ginny doesn’t know how I feel about my uncle. I could pretend we had a falling out; pretend to hate him.”
“What is this, a school play you’re trying out for? Forget this. This is stupid. You can’t accomplish anything, except maybe get yourself hurt, or worse.”
“I was hoping you’d think it was a good idea.”
“Yeah, well it’s a good idea for the radio. For real life, it stinks. I won’t hear of this. I won’t stand for it.”
“You really feel that strongly.”
“Of course I do.”
“Then…then I won’t go.”
I didn’t say anything. I came within an inch of saying, you’re goddamn right you won’t go. But instead, I just touched her face; smiled at her, gently. She smiled back the same way, though there was disappointment in it.
“Good girl,” I said. I gave her a kiss; just a peck. I turned out the lights and pulled the covers around us, as the Morrison’s air conditioning was downright chilly tonight, and we cuddled like spoons, me behind her, slipping a hand around to cup one sweet breast.
“I love you, baby.”
“I love you, Nate. I really do.”
We were just drifting off to sleep when the phone rang; it was after two—nobody calls me that late. I damn near ran to the phone, out in the other room, and it was Drury on the line.
“Nate,” Drury said. His voice sounded hollow. “It’s started.”
“What’s started?”
“Tad Jones is dead.”
“What? Christ…”
“He was killed by another Negro. Drunken scuffle over a watch is the story.”
“Pete was going to meet with him tonight…”
“Tad never showed up at the Club DeLisa. Pete’s going to look into the slaying, of course. It’ll be hard to prove anything. Even with Pete on the case.”
“This could spook the other witnesses. Pardon the expression.”
He sighed. “I know. I thought we had these bastards wrapped up in a bow. Shit.”
“What now?”
“I’m not giving up,” he said, as if a little insulted that I might think that a possibility, even though I hadn’t suggested it, except maybe by my tone. “I’ll put the other witnesses under protective custody, till we pick up Finkel and Leonard, and then we’ll have a show-up. If the witnesses can pick ’em out of the line, and we can get their statements, then we might still have something.”
“Damn. Is this Guzik?”
“Or Siegel? You tell me.”
“Finkel and Leonard are Jews,” I said, thinking out loud, “but then so are Guzik and Siegel.”
“And Davey and Blinkey don’t have any great ties to either of them.”
“But they’re bookies,” I pointed out, “meaning they got some ties to both of ’em.”
“Right.”
“I’m sorry about this, Bill.”
“Yeah,” he said, wearily. “Well, thanks for all your help, Nate. You’re a good man despite yourself.”
“I’m a goddamn prince,” I said, and h
ung up.
“What was that about?” she asked.
I turned and looked at her; she was in her little blue see-through nightie, looking about sixteen years old, a pale vision, those huge violet eyes melting me.
I told her what Drury had told me.
Her jaw tightened; her hands turned into fists. “They’re going to get away with it, aren’t they?”
I went to her; put my arm around her, daddy soothing baby. “I don’t think so. I don’t think Bill’s going to let them.”
She stepped away from me, just a bit. Her expression intense. “Can’t you identify them? You recognized them, didn’t you?”
“Yeah, at the hospital today—but not when they were shooting at me. I’ve already given a statement to that effect. Gone on record.”
“Can’t you say it just came to you?”
“A week later, I suddenly remember? After I have a run-in with these guys outside Ragen’s hospital room? The prosecutors wouldn’t want anything to do with me—once I was in court, even an inexperienced mouthpiece would chew me up, and with my checkered background, I’d be easily discredited, anyway.”
Her pretty mouth was pinched to near ugly. “I wish you’d just…go after them.”
“This isn’t Dodge City 1880, honey. It’s Chicago 1946. Which is a hell of a lot worse, in a way, but times still have changed. I’d do most anything for you, I think you know that—but I’m not going to go shooting it out with Outfit guys.”
“There’s no justice, is there?”
“Sure there is. It just doesn’t have anything to do with the legal system.”
“That’s why we should do something ourselves.”
“No,” I told her. “We got an honest cop, who has three live witnesses. He’s going to get the shooters. We’re going to bed. That’s all we’re doing.”
We did.
In the dark, she said, “Even if he does put them in jail, what about whoever hired them? What about him?”
Not that again.
“Baby,” I said, “go to sleep.”
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