In Crime As In Politics
Follow The Money, Follow Very Closely And If You See Your Spot Grab And Grab
Hard-Modern Crime Novelist (Meaning Not Chandler Or Hammett) Lem Kane’s Latest
Thriller- “Cup Runneth Over” (2019)
By Rav Wilson
[These days the fetish for
transparency is almost overwhelming as if you couldn’t make a statement about
anything in the public prints unless you gave a detailed description about your
relationship, or lack or relationship to the subject of your work. Here goes. I
went to graduate school with Lem Kane the author under review back in the early
1990s and have stayed in regular contact with him since then although this will
be the first review by me of one of his works.
I should also mention that
one of the writers here, Seth Garth, has done many such book reviews on Lem’s
work. Moreover Seth draws a small royalty on every book Lem sells since he is the
one who gave Lem his signature statement in the mouth of his main protagonist, John
David Nicolas -“ come on and play ball with the law or you will find your ass
in stir” which finds its way somewhere in every Kane crime novel.
The odd thing is that the
statement is not original with Seth but is an old saying, according to another old-timer
who grew up with him, Sam Lowell, from when they were what they called themselves,
corner boys, where they grew up as a negative sign. Some copper, some coffee
and cakes copper once said to one of their number, one tough corner boy, that very
statement and the guy laughed at him since he had already done a few nights in
the hoosegow and said “what are you going to do throw me in jail, been there
done that.” That became the gold standard for corner boy responses to coppers
reflecting the very tight honor bound tradition in the neighborhood that you
don’t snitch to the coppers from nothing, no way. RW]
Lem Kane was quite a
character, a holy goof in old Jack of Lowell speak, a guy who would have been prophet back in the day when the world needed
such to succor the day, looking for new types to fit a post-World War II world,
a then modernist world, under the Merrimac parlance, when I knew him back in graduate
school in in New York City in the 1990s. Shaggy hair, ruffled shirt not always the
fashionable color of the day but maybe off purple or crimson stuff my mother
used to grab at the local Bargain Center nothing but a precursor to Walmart’s,
jeans or maybe chinos with freaking cuffs for God’s sake (a no-no even in the
desperately poor neighborhood I grew up in), some kind of sneaker usually not a
name brand who loved to hang out at Matty’s in the Village to get what he
called “ a feel for the meshing masses, a feel for what makes them tick.” That
part I understood although the clientele at Matty’s ran to suburban brats out on
a haul or hot almost virgin chicks from the Long Island high schools slumming
for a while at NYU waiting to go elsewhere to graduate school to get their own “meshing
masses” gaff, since except maybe the garb tricks I was running that same gambit.
But in those days I was confounded more than once when Lem told a group of us,
more than once, that his fervent desire was to create a memorable private
detective in the manner of Raymond Chandler, Dashiell Hammett, Chester Burns,
Lester Delray, maybe Dust MacDonald or Kenny Millar before Kenny’s shocking expose
as nothing but a second-rate third rate repo man fucking up Lew Archer big time
along the way. Although, as he too liked to point out, point out endlessly, given
the new sensibilities not the hard-boiled fists flailing first let god sort it out
later, slugs burping the air stuff cutting into god’s play that animated those
classics.
The “confounded” part by
me was that Lem never wrote or presented in workshops, at least as far as I
knew, any material that even closely related to the detective fiction that he
has now become a best-seller author of and a subject of envy in some quarters
by those who went the more plebian routes of journalism or traditional novelistic
treatments. (Read” me, Jack Devine, Hoagy Lewis and Liam Leahy, all fellow grad
students). Enter John David Nicolas, private detective out in the inevitable
Southern California sweat holes of greed, avarice, maybe sloth too while we are
on the trail of earthly sins but you will have to fill in the other four sin I
have been too wasted of late to remember such stuff and with deadline hours
away I am just writing as fast as I can and am willing on my own hook to let
god sort the stuff later. Enter Nicolas in the seventeenth novel of which he is
the main protagonist sparring with felonious, evil folk who need to be taken down
a peg or two. (Jesus seventeen crime books since the 1990s and I haven’t even
gotten pass the galleys of my first book, not a crime novel but a piece on what
makes America tick these days which Lardner Press has paid me good advance money
to produce.
This private dick John David
(the name used most often although there are stretches where the three-name
moniker gets a full workout which somebody should have red-penciled big time) lately,
the last six crime novels as far as I can see, assisted on the psychological profile
side by Doctor Alexis Newcome and while there is thus far no budding romance
between the pair of singularly driven personalities, churning up evil and evil-doing
they work well together even though most of their collective work is shifting and
sifting through whatever archival data any given case throws at them. (By the
way am I the only person old enough to be shocked to discover that this Alexis
of no fixed sex through the first five books turned out to be a male found out only
when somebody mentioned boxer shorts as his undergarment, opening up a whole
different kind of era from the guys and dolls of my youthful reading where guys
had a fistful of women and the women had a fistful of men and no cross-over
stuff, not for public consumption anyway although everybody knows that deep in
Hollywood and its environs whole gay and lesbian subcultures thrives with
blinked eyes, especially if Lem goes all out and has them get married).
This gun moll case, this
gangsters from the past case really highlights that John David-Alexis collective
work since this nail-biter beyond the expected horrendous crimes, and bang-bang
quick murder is the least of them here, calls for many insights that a normal
case would not require. Remember, or if you have not read a Kane crime novel, John
David only takes cases that the public coppers, usually the Bay City or Long
Branch cops but occasionally the LAPD when he is pissed off after they went on
another rampage against some master-less black kid in a white neighborhood,
have thrown their hands up at, have put into deep freeze cold storage. Best
forgotten. This, let’s stick with the facts of the gun moll case, is a classic of
the type the public coppers drop like a lead balloon after about two days work.
Maybe three but that is just to file the paperwork and put the ice cubes on the
damn thing.
This old dame, called Tammy
by the staff but as usual in La La Land, Hollywood names are a dime a dozen, maybe
cheaper so don’t get too hung up on that score, the gun moll of some forgotten
second-rate gangster, second behind Bugsy, Meyer, Jimmy The Turd, and the Viper
from the 1930s is found dead in her swank Bel-Air hotel. (For the rubes the difference
between a hotel and another gaga condo in seven figures is that staff services
and meals figure in the bill). The public coppers, scratching their heads
figured it simple, figured from her fragile body for her just falling down with
old age and left it at that even though the name Theda Barrows was a well-known
gun moll for Zeke Fallon back in the 1930s when LA really was the Wild West.
Guy like Zeke who even second rate third rate P.I.s like Kenny Millar before the
fall and Lew too knew as part of knowing the links to the past and what was
still out there for the pickings if times got tough, were planning a heist a
week, maybe more depending on available manpower and enough guys smart enough to
jimmy doors and cut some wires. Good stuff too, jewels, art, whatever the
market would bear, remember this was flashy Hollywood not the later Wharton
School play. Guys like Zeke, what the hell half the time they grew up on the
same abandoned city blocks sometimes cutting the coppers in, sometimes no. Here
is the very smartest part every once in a while letting the owners, mainly Hollywood
directors, producers, their wives, more likely their mistresses and concubines after
being robbed in on the grab by splitting the insurance money to keep things
quiet. Nice play.
Jenny Dale, something of a
handmaiden, servant girl to this Theda (who knew her as Tammy) although actually
employed by the hotel thought something was wrong even though Theda could have
easily been just a regular fall down case of old age. After the cold storage
play by the public coppers this Jenny who figured in Theda’s will and
distributions contacted John David (who would bring in Doc Alexis later once he
had enough evidence to see which ways the wind blew), signed a contract, gave
him a nice retainer for his dailies and expenses and off he went. (I had to laugh
one fifty a day, three day minimum and one hundred per for expenses or no go
when I though about poor Phil Larkin toward the end back in the late 1940s trying
to squeeze a Jackson and some car fare, maybe gas money, out of some frail looking
for her lost sugar daddy, never found). Off he went after Jenny lured him in
with two pieces of information, one some bruises on Theda’s neck and two, a few
things were missing from Theda’s digs that Jenny had seen recently. Enough to
put hound dog Nicolas in the trail.
Your usual cold case is maybe
some unsolved murder of mayhem which nobody gave a fuck about except maybe the family
after a few years. Maybe they grabbed some dough, enough to pursue the case a
little, maybe that loss of kin gnawed at their souls when all they had was the
monthly trip to Mount Calvary to shed some salty tears. Christ this Theda deal
was going back almost three quarters of a century with the added weight on the shoulders
that nobody would be around to give any serious info about why a kindly old
lady who was some gangsters’ frill in her day was murdered, murdered most foul.
Nicolas with a three-day retainer to start and what looked like plenty of dough
coming darling Jenny’s way figured to milk this one dry, very dry and maybe he could
get around to asking Alexis the big question if he played his cards right.
But enough of side play because
as it turned out between them, between John David and Alexis working very
slowly they finally saw a pattern to where this thing was going. Finally saw
that kindly Theda had a very checkered past almost as bad as Zeke’s who would
wind up dying in prison but not before taking care of his sweetie. Digging that
“taking care of his sweetie” card by Zeke made everything else almost fall into
place by itself. See if a big-time crook, even a second-tier big time crook, wanted
to take care of his sweetie (or whoever) then given the nature of the profession
somebody else had to take the fall, somebody did not get their cut. Normally
one would think that that just the cost of doing crooked business, a little
sideways overhead and move on if the big guy had enough guns to keep things at the
steady. Not this time. A guy, a Bay City copper as twisted and corrupt as any
you find in the LAPD say which back in Wild West days was saying a lot, was the
inside man on a serious jewelry heist back in the later 1930s where one of the
items taken was something like the Hope diamond to give you an idea of what Zeke
meant when he wanted to take care of Theda even though he was heading to the Q
for silly tax evasion and would wind up very dead not long afterward.
This inside man, Chester Davis
had a serious grudge against Zeke when he came up on the short end of the stick
and got no dough for his efforts, no dough and a couple of well-placed slugs to
finish that branch of the story. Well, not quite, see old Chester had kids, and
when nothing happened to aid in some revenge in that generation they turned
over their unresolved hatreds to their kids, nice DNA right, who almost by accident found out Theda had a
ton of dough and more importantly that fat diamond worth a ton of dough. With
very little planning except grabbing a dinky suite a few doors down to keep an
eye on her movements Theda fell down, took the gaff and quickly if you think
about it. But Chester’s grandkids, actually one sullen granddaughter had big
dreams, had a very common big dream that the fewer ways the stash needed to be
cut up the better, to have the whole thing for herself just like Zeke had set
up Theda. One by one her confederates, a couple of lifers, or wannbe lifers who
got caught in her sexual lair, what did Allan Jackson call it one time- “went to
sleep the fishes,” then anybody like the hotel manager looking to get out from
under a mountain of debt who was on the second layer and finally naturally Jenny
had to fall although she was not part of the caper, she was going to have the
whole deal, dough, stocks, bonds, jewelry the way Theda had worked things out.
That granddaughter would fall down to a John David hard case bullet, fall down
hard leaving Jenny in the clear as to title though.
Here is the funny thing Theda
had lived too long and had about three or four dollars in hard cash to her name.
The stocks and bonds were lightweight stuff that should have sold many moons
before but to top things all off though that so-called Hope diamond gag was just
that, glass which some smart financier or hedge fund operator had placed in
public display back in the 1930s leaving the real stuff elsewhere (and probably
grabbing the insurance dough with no questions asked when Walter Neff came to
call about the account). So Jenny got a few thou, maybe a little more but not enough
to pay John David more than that three days retainer and some gas money. Needless
to say, smitten John David never asked Alexis for his hand. Lem went way out on
the edge on this one.
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