***The
Life And Times Of Michael Philip Marlin –The
Big Knock-Out
Every wise guy, every sporting guy, every crippled corner newsie, hell, everybody over the age of twelve, no more, knows, knows to a certainty that boxing, you know guys (and these days gals) beating each other down for the amusement of the blood-lusted crowds is fixed. Is fixed six ways to Sunday even before the first bell is sounded. It is worst now than in the old days when you at least knew that when a champ was crowned he was the one and only champ not like now the World Boxing this, Federated Boxing that, and United Boxing the other thing handing out gaudy belts like they were going out of style. But just so nobody gets all nostalgic about the good old days, gets misty-eyed that only one champ meant only one skinning on the bet line, only one fix, let’s look at our trusty brother tough-edged, hard guy private eye Michael Philip Marlin as he tried to unravel murder and mayhem on the canvas. And while Marlin had seen it all, had figured out a few things in his time he almost for a minute believed with this kid, this well-built, scrappy kid that was being groomed for a championship fight was on the up and up. That momentary slip almost cost him his life so listen up…
From
The Pen Of Frank Jackman-with kudos to Raymond Chandler
Those
who have been following this series about the exploits of the famous Ocean City
(located just south of Los Angeles then now incorporated into the county)
private detective Michael Philip Marlin (hereafter just Marlin the way
everybody when he became famous after the Galton case out on the coast) and his
contemporaries in the private detection business like Freddy Vance, Charles
Nicolas (okay, okay Clara too), Sam Archer, Miles Spade, Johnny Spain, know
that he related many of these stories to his son, Tyrone Fallon, in the late
1950s and early 1960s. Tyrone later, in the 1970s, related these stories to the
journalist who uncovered the relationship , Joshua Lawrence Breslin, a friend
of my boyhood friend, Peter Paul Markin, who in turn related them to me over
several weeks in the late 1980s. Despite that circuitous route I believe that I
have been faithful to what Marlin presented to his son. In any case I take full
responsibility for what follows.
*******Every wise guy, every sporting guy, every crippled corner newsie, hell, everybody over the age of twelve, no more, knows, knows to a certainty that boxing, you know guys (and these days gals) beating each other down for the amusement of the blood-lusted crowds is fixed. Is fixed six ways to Sunday even before the first bell is sounded. It is worst now than in the old days when you at least knew that when a champ was crowned he was the one and only champ not like now the World Boxing this, Federated Boxing that, and United Boxing the other thing handing out gaudy belts like they were going out of style. But just so nobody gets all nostalgic about the good old days, gets misty-eyed that only one champ meant only one skinning on the bet line, only one fix, let’s look at our trusty brother tough-edged, hard guy private eye Michael Philip Marlin as he tried to unravel murder and mayhem on the canvas. And while Marlin had seen it all, had figured out a few things in his time he almost for a minute believed with this kid, this well-built, scrappy kid that was being groomed for a championship fight was on the up and up. That momentary slip almost cost him his life so listen up…
Marlin
thought that he really should have passed on the job, should have just walked
away and maybe seen if that graveyard shift as the house- peeper at the old
Taft Hotel was still available. Yes, he was short of dough, short of office
rent money, short of room rent but lining himself up with Jacky Craig, the, ah,
boxing promoter, and man of many operations, mostly illegal, gave him pause.
But damn that rent had to be paid and so in the year of our lord 1940 one more
gumshoe took a walk on the wild side and he showed up at Craig’s gym to find
out what was expected of him. See what Jackie wanted to see him about.
Of
course a wise guy, if he wants to stay a wise guy, or at least alive covers
himself with layers of protection so Markin was prepared when he was frisked by
Frankie Lip, a cheapjack gunsel who had been with Craig for years, before
entering his majesty’s office. The nature of Craig’s offer though was pretty
straight up, pretty straight up on the face of it, a job for a tough- guy
private eye and not for some brainless muscle only good for taking shots to
protect the boss. What Jackie wanted was for Marlin to investigate who had been
threatening Earl Avery, the best fighter in his stable and a boxer everybody
said was slated to take a run for the light heavy-weight championship, when he
was ready. Not only had somebody, some punk, Jackie called him been threatening
the Earl but also Jean, the girlfriend that Jackie had provided to keep Earl amused,
and to keep an eye on him in the sex, drugs, booze department. No booze, no dope and one girl, this Jean,
who had Earl under her thumb about two minutes after he saw her.
This
Jean was a looker, the kind of woman Marlin favored, the kind he would take
straight aim at if she wasn’t attached to the Earl, or to Jackie. Hell, taking
a second look he thought if things worked out right he might take that run
anyway, especially once he got close enough to get a small whiff of that
sandalwood perfume she was wearing, wearing just enough to make a guy, a
red-blooded guy, jump. Moreover Jean’s story,
when Marlin got around to hearing it, included some tough times, some down
times. She had come West like a million other frails as she tried to make a go
as a singer, along with another woman
doing duos and had finally caught on when Jackie heard them, mainly her over at
the Club Lola near the Santa Monica Pier. Jackie signed them to perform at his
club-casino, The Lighthouse, up in Malibu. But enough of Jean, enough for now
because Marlin was on the case to find
out what the hell was going on in that murky world of boxing, big- time money
boxing out on the angel streets of his city, Los Angeles.
What
happened was simplicity itself a guy like Jackie Craig doesn’t take chances,
tries to control his environment and so it was the case here too. That is why a
certain Sammy Sams (believe it or not his real given name so why change it), a
punk, was found floating out with the tide, a classic Jackie job and Marlin was
ripping mad once he found out that he had been simple-simon doped up by Jackie.
And Jackie tried to control all his arena, his boxing business, tried to
control the new boxing commissioner, Steve Earle, a former state senator and
power in the state capital, who had come in declaring the he was going to
“clean the sport up.” So Jackie tried by might and main to buy him off, buy him
off good. And Brother Earle turned out to be looking for the main chance, and
that had Jackie’s signature all over it too. That was what Marlin was up against
and after a few fists flying, a few off-hand shootings at The Lighthouse, and a
few off-hand tosses under the sheets with Jean he closed down Jackie’s
operation, closed down Earle’s operation and felt he had done some good work.
Even if he got no dough to pay that office rent coming due at the end of the
week.
Oh
yeah, about Jean, about that perfume driving Marlin crazy every time he came
with a mile of her. The Earl Avery thing was strictly as a favor to Jackie, a
favor to get her act on his stage and before long Marlin and she were roughing
up some sheets. Here is the funny thing though this Jean had her own ax to
grind, grind against Steve Earle. Her previous performance companion, Ada, had
committed suicide after they were forced, after striking out in a few mean
street gin mills doing opening act duos for third-rate has-beens out in the
heartland, to turn a few tricks out on the mean streets to keep body and soul
together and Ada was too ashamed to face that fact. The funny part although
obviously not funny was that this Ada was allegedly Steve Earle’s daughter and
so Jean had drifted to L.A. to squeeze Earle for some dough, for retribution
dough.
Naturally
any girl, any guy for that matter, down on her uppers was entitled to take a
chance at getting out from under with guys who had dough. But this Earle
character proved quite reluctant even when she put the proposition to the boss,
Jackie. But before she could properly squeeze the main chance Jackie as was his
way tried to insure that his boy Earl had a one- hundred percent chance, no
one-hundred and ten percent chance of winning that championship so the fix was
in, in big time. Jackie bought Earle (who actually needed dough and so it made
sense that Jean’s pitch fell on deaf ears) into the tent. Avery in three.
Marlin
took that probability off the agenda though when he confronted Jackie with his
evidence. Those aforementioned fists and guns flailed away. Needless to say the
boxing world was short one promoter. In the fallout Earle tumbled under
Jackie’s weight after Marlin pulled the hammer down on his operation Jean and
so lost her chance for serious dough. But ever the trouper all Jean said when
her current partner said that The Lighthouse was closed was “I guess we have to
hit the road again.” Nice. Nice too that Marlin told her to keep in touch, and
keep wearing that sandalwood next time they met.
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