Turnabout Is Fair Play-With
The Detective Fiction Writer Dashiell Hammett in Mind
By Zack James
Fred Sims’ tales of his
life as a real live private investigator, P.I., gumshoe, shamus, private dick,
or whatever you call it in your neighborhood depending on whether you had been
in thrall to the old time black and white detective films like The Maltese
Falcon and The Big Sleep and picked the lingo there or just heard it on the
streets, could only be taken in small doses. So said Alexander Slater, Alex,
who for many years ran a print shop on the first floor of the Tappan Building
in Carver where Fred had his office on the fifth floor. Many times the pair
would run into one another at Dolly’s Diner across the street from the Tappan
and they would sit and have their coffee and crullers together. Usually though
the talk was on weather, of Alex’s children and grandchildren, Fred’s troubles
with his latest girlfriend usually picked up from one of his cases since that
was one of the few places where he would run into women who might be interested
in him, or how the town of Carver, once the world famous hub of the cranberry
industry, had gone to hell in a handbasket over the past few decades who with
the place turning into a vanilla no problems need apply “bedroom community” for
the young who had flowed to the high tech industry on Interstate 495 about
fifteen miles away. If Alex wanted to hear some tale of Fred’s, maybe he had
read some story in the Gazette or the Globe from
Boston and wondered if Fred had run up against that kind of situation, he would
go up to Fred’s office, plunk himself down in one of Fred’s drastically
mismatched chairs (old-timer Fred did not believe in putting up a front and so
his office did look like old Sam Slade’s cinematic one including the crooked
coat rack), Fred would pull out a bottle of Johnny Walker Red, and Fred would
answer his question with a story, or if he had no story that would match up
with Alex’s inquiry then something from his
files.
The story about the Malone
brothers was just such a story, one that Fred told Alex even before he began to
spin the thing was a prima facie case of turnabout is fair place, although he
would admit that something about not being your brother’s keeper could have
worked too. For this one Fred reached back into the 1950s when he was first
starting out in the business, gotten himself the office in the Tappan Building
and put up his sign, after he had gotten out of the Army where he had served as
an MP in Germany during those Cold War days. Chester and Arthur Malone were
financiers, or that is what they called themselves, guys who bought and sold
stock for various clients’ accounts or for themselves if they saw a tidy profit
in some hot stock. Strictly small potatoes around the Boston stock exchange and
going nowhere fast until Chester hit upon the idea that he had read about that
he, they could use one or more clients’ stock (or bonds although that was
dicey) to buy high risk stock but which if it panned out would move them up the
stock exchange food chain and into maybe some merger with a larger firm. Who
knows what they would have finally wound up doing. This whole stock transfer
idea aside from the questionable legal, moral and smart questions was
essentially a Ponzi scheme, a scheme that has been around one way or another as
long there have been suckers who have looked for high returns for little risk,
so they think.
Well the long and short of
it was that something went wrong, a few clients wanted their assets cashed in,
something like that, and the Malone’s couldn’t cover fast enough. The clients
squawked to the SEC and the boys went on the carpet, were going to jail for a
nickel anyway. All the paper transfers though were in Arthur’s name and so they
decided that since Arthur’s goose was cooked he wound take the fall, he would
cop a plea saying that the whole operation had been his and Chester had nothing
to do with his dealings. So he won the fiver, went down for the nickel. Arthur did
his time, most of it anyway, but something happened in prison, who knows, maybe
he became somebody’s “girl,” maybe he thought he had gotten a raw deal from his
brother, maybe he didn’t like that his brother stole his wife away, stole her
after she had divorced him when he went to prison. Whatever it was something
had been eating at him by the time he got out.
Arthur though had his own
game plan, kept his own consul, and when he got out he played the game so that
Chester believed they were on good terms. Then Chester started getting
threatening telephone calls, calls telling him that the party on the other
line, a woman, but Chester though that was just a guy using a dame as a front
that they knew he had been watering stock all the time that Arthur was in jail
and that unless he forked up dough his life worthless. Chester was no fool
though, had not been scamming for all those years to just fold up when some
caller called. That’s when he called me, called me to his office saying that he
had been getting threatening phone calls and wanted to know who was behind
it. I told him that would be a hard nut to crack but he insisted he
needed help, wanted me to pursue the matter.
Here’s where everything got
squirrelly though. Arthur, as part of his plan worked in the office after he
got out, did his own hustling for accounts. While he had been away Chester had
hired a secretary, what they now call administrative assistants but still are
really secretaries with computer skills, Ms. Wyman, Bess, a looker about thirty.
Arthur made a big play for her, which she tumbled too especially when he
started dangling marriage in front of her. Of course, aside from the fact that
after prison he could use a few off-hand tumbles which he considered a bonus,
Arthur was using Bess to find out everything about Chester’s operations since
he had been gone. It turned out that Chester had been up to his old tricks,
another Ponzi scheme of sorts. So one day after he thought he had enough
information on his brother he called some of Chester’s clients and made them, a
few anyway, believe that their accounts would be in trouble if they didn’t pull
out fast. They did and as you might expect Chester couldn’t cover fast enough
before the clients complained to the SEC. And so in his turn Chester did his
nickel since al the transfers had his signature on them. It turned out that he
had been the one who had sold Arthur out to the SEC on the previous scheme to
save his own neck. So turnabout was fair play. As for me well I got paid off
once the accounts were settled for basically doing nothing except cover Chester
from a fall which I couldn’t do. Oh yeah, I got paid off too with a few tumbles
with that Bess once she gave Arthur the heave-ho when she figured out he was
playing her for a patsy. People are strange, right.
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