“First Let’s Kill All The Lawyers”-Maybe Shakespeare Was On To Something
Back In The Day-Ross MacDonald’s “The Galton Case” (1959) -A Book Review
Book Review
By Ronan Saint James
The Galton Case, written by Ross MacDonald, 1959
Lew Archer, the somewhat famous private eye out on the West Coast,
was impotent. That is at least the opinion of a well-known lawyer who should
know and whom I met when I was just starting out as a journalist at the East Bay Other, a place where a few other
writers here did some free-lance work. Hell, it was all free-lance or free then
since you never knew if you would get paid or not, paid enough at least to keep
the wolves from your door. I had been sitting with that lawyer having drinks at
the notorious KitKat Club in San Francisco in the days when “drag queen”
culture was very much underground and I was on assignment to write about it for
the Eye and he was defending the establishment
and the entertainers against the city and against various violations of the health
moral codes then existing. Somehow the subject of great private detectives came
up, probably I brought it up since I knew that he had defended a number of
famous private eyes, famous California ones anyway when they got into legal trouble.
Got Phillip Marlowe, yes that Phillip Marlowe from the Sternwood
case P.I.s still talk about, still do case studies on in those matchbox cover
ads touting how to be a detective in ten or so easy lessons-for hard cash and
no refunds, buddy- out from under the big step off when they tried to wrap old-time
gangster Eddie Mars’ murder, murder by his own bodyguards on Marlowe when he
was allegedly doing a burglary of one of Eddie’s properties. Got Phil off in a
million other cases too like the time he wasted some doctor, some pill-pusher
who filled him ot up with junk to get him to spill where a guy named Moose
Malone, no relation to Dorothy below, was to stop him from finding some femme
who did not want to be found-by giant Moose anyway. From a million other cases and
who I had found out at that time had been married to Dorothy Malone, the famous
screenwriter who just died this year at 98 and was the last living link to the great
Marlowe legacy. Got Nick Charles into a 12- Step program on the QT after a
million DUIs without his wife Nora or any Frisco cops who had an interest knowing
about it. Got one Samuel Spade out from under about six felonies and the loss
of his license when some twist named Brigit, Mary, who knew in the end what her
real name was pointed the finger at him. That was the one where that Brigit femme
walked to the big house and took some gaff that she had attempted to tie to our
boy Sam. So that lawyer and if you don’t know who he is by now then you just
don’t lawyers who make their kale off the troubles of private detectives and
giving the name would mean nothing to you knows from whence he speaks.
What would mean something, name or no name, was that lawyer’s theory
about private detectives, and here he zeroed in specifically on Lew Archer and
how he blew the Galton case, a few others too but the Galton case is pure fuck-up
and makes his point. What that big-time lawyer said was that any P.I. who wasn’t
half crazy trying to get under the silky sheets with some femme is strictly impotent,
can’t get it up. Not gay, asexual, intersexual, bi-sexual or anything like that
that stuff is okay, was okay for him back then since he was hanging around such
people in the KitKat Club before Timmy Riley, aka Miss Judy Garland, took over
and made the place a Mecca for tourists who wanted to take a quick walk on the
wild side.
The funny thing as our lawyer described it was that Lew had about
five opportunities to bed some dame starting when he first got on the case with
Mrs. gallons of oil money Galton’s home companion, Ava, who was a knockout from
the photos of her in a swimsuit when the case went to court (the case of officially
adopting her lost grandson as her sole heir not the murder case of her son which
some lawyer forced her to look into and which was a cold case, a frozen solid
cold case when Lew put his grimy paws on the thing and screwed almost everything
up before he was done and the public coppers had to come in and solve the damn
thing, a rare occasion indeed). Then there was the guy who fingered Mrs. gallons
of oil money son back in the 1930s whose wife, remarried, practically threw herself
at him to avoid her second husband, a good man according to all parties including
Lew, finding out she was married to a shiftless bum, a con artist and accessory
to murder of that Galton son. Passed her by. We won’t even speak of the easy
pickings he would have had, could have had if he had paid the least bit of attention
to the wife, the second wife of the lawyer who hired Lew to find Mrs. Galton’s
son (I won’t continue with that “gallons of oil money” gag you know who I mean
now). Not only was she drugged to the gills, half naked at least half of the time
in his presence at the nursing home she was placed in after she had a nervous
breakdown over her role in the murder of that guy who fingered Galton’s son for
the executioner’s ax back in the 1930s but she believed, when her lawyerly
husband brainwashed her to perdition, she had killed that ex-lover. A piece of
cake.
It doesn’t end there, and maybe I will miss a few other opportunities
today when I think about the long ago case but I will give you enough examples
that my lawyer friend gave me to condemn Lew to strictly third-rate private
detective-dom. There was the grandson’s college time, Ann Arbor, University of
Michigan girlfriend who had enough dough to sink a ship, was ready to give the
kid cars, and whatever else he wanted. The kid walked way, went to greener
pastures. When Lew interviewed the twist, trying to find out what she knew
about the kid’s whereabouts, what made him tick, and why he was the pawn in
some nefarious scheme to dupe Mrs. Galton into believing that he was really her
grandson, she was as ready to have a soft shoulder to cry on as anybody in the world.
Lew walked. Wouldn’t give her the time of day, made some excuse up about his time
of the month, male version. (My lawyer checking into her fate just because he
was interested, maybe grab her on the rebound told me she already had a new boyfriend
about five days after Lew talked to her although he still was able to get a
date with her since she and the new lover were not “exclusive,” whatever that meant.
Now I think that the next women Lew passed on maybe he wasn’t
wrong to not take a run at although my lawyer was infuriated that I would say
such a stupid journalist kind of thing. This was a dame, an older dame but not
that old who frankly didn’t keep up her appearances as they used to say in the days
before body-shaming became taboo, vert taboo whether for good or evil. She
would have been easy pickings too, maybe a one-night stand but here is what she
was about. She had actually been married to Mrs. Galton’s son, has seen him
killed out on the coast south of Frisco where they were staying, had had an affair
or two with the finger man and her husband’s murderer before under threat of
murder to her son, that Galton heir grandson she had married the guy and fled
to Canada with him. Stayed with him trying to protect her son she said-likely story.
No go for Lew though.
Here is the one I don’t figure, the one he should have taken a run
at with all hands. Once Mrs. Galton found out that her son had been murdered
but that she had a grandson who had been missing for years and who turned up during
Lew’s tenure as her private investigator that case was over. Still there were
plenty of people who for their own reasons believed the kid, John was the name
he used but as usual any name will do since they are all aliases, was an
impostor, was in it for the big payoff when Granny croaked. One was Mrs. Galton’s
doctor who had a young daughter whose was at just that age when she was as
flirtatious to older guys as young guys. The doctor wasn’t happy when he found out
that said daughter was having an affair with John after Lew basically frosted
up on her. Jesus how many chances can a guy have and flub everyone.
My lawyer friend also had a theory about the cause of Lew’s impotency
which led to his royally screwing up the case so badly. It is tough being third
or fourth fiddle in the private detective game (and that was only in California
we won’t even discuss the whole country). Lew tried I think, maybe to be a lady’s
man but it didn’t work, so he tried a different route, the no sex with clients
or persons of interest. It didn’t work but that is that. It now makes perfect
sense that he didn’t believe John was the real deal, that the lawyer who hired
him played him like a yo-yo. That everybody lied through their teeth to him and
he bought it, or at least followed more false flag leads than you could shake a
stick at. The funny thing was that all the loose ends got collected up without
him. The Galton son murderer hung himself rather than going back to jail. The
finger-man’s ex-wife got redemption from her second husband. John got his girl
and his mother’s forgiveness. Mrs. Galton got her real heir, despite the murderous
machinations of her scoundrel lawyer and his bedazzled wife got a clear conscience.
Lew, well, Lew got egg on his face, lots of egg and a lonely roll-away bed in
his low rent rooming house.
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