***The
Life And Times Of Michael Philip Marlin – The
China Doll
As readers know Tyrone Fallon, the
son of the late famous Southern California private operative, Michael Philip
Marlin (Tyrone used his mother’s maiden name for obvious reasons), and private
eye in his own right told my old friend Peter Paul Markin’s friend Joshua
Lawrence Breslin some stories that his illustrious father told him. Here’s one
such story.
From
The Pen Of Frank Jackman-with kudos to Raymond Chandler
No
question Michael Philip Marlin, hard-headed, no nonsense, tough as nails
private investigator was a “homer,” was a guy who felt right at home in the
sun-drenched back streets and alleys of his native Los Angeles. He knew the
players, the bit players too, he knew the cops good and bad, mostly bad or
indifferent, he knew the hot spots and the low- life dens, knew Hollywood, knew
Inglewood, knew all the vastness of the city in the days before the tourists
and Okies came and ate up the land. Knew it before the ill-winds of World War
II and the vast monies hanging around to be spent by those money-starved Okies.
Knew it to be exact.
Time
were tough though all around in those years before the war money came booming
into his city of angels, his east of Eden, and the private- eye game was no
exception. So every once in a while to keep himself in coffee and cakes he
needed to take an outside job. Sometimes it was grabbing the graveyard shift as
a house- peeper over at Jackie Craig’s Taft Hotel and sometimes he had to take out
of town jobs. This one is about one of those out- of- town jobs, about a Frisco
town job, always a tough dollar and this time was no exception. Worst it
involved dealing with the denizens of that town’s bustling and crowded
Chinatown district, also always a very tough dollar. After the last episode,
the Yellow Dog case he called it, he had avoided chop suey joints in LA like
the plague.
It
wasn’t like Marlin had something against the yellow race, against the Chinese,
although he probably if he thought about it shared the same bewilderment at
that exotic race, and the same prejudices as the average Anglo- Californian
when confronted with a swarm of them. What bothered him was they were so
secretive, so clannish that you could not get a straight answer from them to
push your investigation forward. That was the case here, the case he called the
China Doll case.
He
had been hired by a woman, a young Chinese woman, Lillian Chou who wanted to
know why her house, her summer house over in Pacifica had been vandalized not
once but twice. Although she did not live there much she had a caretaker for
the place who had been beaten within an inch of his life on the second invasion,
and the thieves had taken everything that was not nailed down, everything
including some priceless rare jade jewelry handed down from her mother. She
wanted Marlin’s services because he had done similar work on that Yellow Dog
case and Freddie Ching had recommended him to her after the cops had
essentially blown off the case as just another tong war episode. (Miss Chou’s
late father, an importer, was well known to the San Francisco police for his
various, uh, enterprises, stolen jewelry, sex- trafficking, opium, coolie
laborers, whatever could be sold in the import-export market.
That
is where things started right off to get dicey. Miss Chou gave him little
information since she had spent most of her time back East becoming
increasingly Anglicized. Marlin pulled a few connections through Freddie Ching
and was able to find out that Miss Chou’s father made enemies in his time but
also many friends, among them Sonny Dell. Sonny the number one Anglo drug
trafficker in Northern California, the number one guy in the lucrative opium
and heroin market. Her father had made arrangements with Sonny to allow him to
use his beachfront house in Pacifica to bring in his materials from the Far
East in return for a big cut of the profits. That arrangement extended beyond
her father’s death. That caretaker though was the weak link in the chain. He
wanted to tell Miss Chou about the set-up but Sonny would not let him. And for
his efforts he got beaten within an inch of his life and the house was
ransacked to make it look like a robbery was the motivation.
Marlin
came this information the hard way as usual having to run up against Sonny’s
guns, and those of Lee Chang another powerful figure in Chinatown who also had
an arrangement with Sonny. Par for the Frisco course. Here is the screwy part
though Miss Chou was privy to what was happening at her estate. She in fact had
an arrangement with Sonny where he could use the premises in exchange for
shipping weapons and other materials to China to aid in the struggle against
the Japanese who had occupied the main areas of China. She used Marlowe as a
shield to find out what had happened to her caretaker who not only worked for
Sonny but as a patriotic Chinaman for Miss Chou’s operation. Marlin thought
that a couple of lives could have been saved, a lot of trouble could have been
avoided if Miss Chou another one of those damn secretive members of the yellow race
had leveled with him. In any case, since Lee Chang had some unfinished business
with Marlin as a result a certain Chinatown shoot-out, he was avoiding chop
suey joints in Frisco, staying far away indeed.
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