The Set-Up-With The
Detective Fiction Writer Dashiell Hammett In Mind, Hey Throw In Raymond Chandler
Too And Maybe Ross MacDonald For The Trifecta
By Zack James
Alexander Slater had always
been ever since he was a kid, maybe ten or eleven if not before, been a big fan
of hard-boiled detective novels and films based on those novels by guys like
Dashiell Hammett, Raymond Chandler, Rich O’Connor, Sid Stein, and Lanny Drew.
Had spent many a Riverdale hometown Saturday afternoon in the late 1950s in the
faded run-down, gum-strewn on the floor, cobwebs in the balcony seats, toilet
in the men’s room a relic of plumbing around the time of the original Cranes
who made their fortunes providing such hard-wear to the growing population in
need of indoor plumbing and whose castle overlooked Crane’s Beach up north of
Riverdale about seventy-five miles away, old-fashioned popcorn cooker which
always, always provided burnt kernels at the bottom of the box Majestic Theater
on Mooney Street just off of the downtown shopping area watching
re-runs of the classics like The Maltese Falcon, The Big
Sleep, The Lady In The Lake, The whole Thin Man series, The
Last Kiss, Girl Hunt, and The Lost Ones. That downtown area
also beginning to fade as the stores, Doc’s Drugstore, the 5&10, Morley’s Clothing
store, Sam’s Furniture store and the like that used to cater to the town’s
needs moved out to the strip malls or all-purpose malls out on Route One a few
miles from downtown.
Of course as a kid all
Alexander cared about, along with his regular crew of Saturday matinee
double-feature companions, Skip James, Jack Callahan, Johnny Rizzo,
Five-Fingers Murphy, Frank Jackman and sometimes, Jimmy Jenkins, before his
family moved out of town so his father could take a job in the emerging
computer industry at Honeywell about forty miles away along Route 128, was that
they had enough money to cover the admission (trying as boys universally would then,
probably still do, to get the under twelve reduced admission price long after
they had entered their teens), were being “grounded” for some silly home or
school infraction , and, maybe, just maybe, that for once the popcorn although
always with burnt offerings was not stale. So Alexander had through the marvels
of cinematic technology and the printed page been able to form a very distinct
idea about what a private detective should be like, what he looked like and how
he handled himself in the rough spots.
That ideal was probably
epitomized by Sam Slade in The Maltese Falcon on the screen
(the 1940s one that made Humphrey Bogart, Bogie, famous not the two earlier
ones which he had never seen until a few years ago via Netflix he had ordered
the pair online and was seriously disappointed in those efforts, as was his
wife Mary who while not nearly as much a fan of the private detective did love
the Bogie version of the Falcon) and in some short stories done by
Hammett by scrambling through a few libraries and second-hand bookstores
looking for compilations. In a word a guy and it was always guys then still was
a lot now although he had read a few interesting female detective stories,
working class guys, tough, tough enough to by sheer will and pluck to outsmart
his well-organized criminal opponents, hard-boiled no question, no sap for
anybody even women which every guys knows is easy enough to become when the
skirts going swishing by, with a code, a beautiful code of honor that he
follows as best he can, maybe not to the letter but as best he can in the
spirit, hard-drinking which somehow focused the senses whenever the bottle in
the lower desk draw came out, and a rough and ready sense of justice, of
tilting after windmills for the good of the cause.
And there that image stayed
for a fairly long time until Alexander went out into the world of work after
high school. He had taken shop classes in school, printing shop and so
immediately after high school he had taken a full-time job with Mister Calder, the
best commercial printer in town, whom he worked for after school and on
weekends in high school. In due course after a few years in the dreaded Army in
Vietnam which took a certain toll on him when he came back to the “real” world,
a few years “finding himself” through dope, rock and roll, and following the
hitchhike road that many guys of his generation took for a while when Mister
Calder retired he took over the shop located in the first floor of the Tappan
Building on Lancaster Street right off of downtown (in the opposite direction
from the now long gone old Majestic if you were familiar with Riverdale back in
the 1970s or earlier).
At one time, back in the
1940s, early 1950s, the eight story Tappan Building was what they would call
today the anchor of the downtown business section. Was the pride of Riverdale
what with prosperous small law firms, a few doctors’ offices when doctors had
their own private practices more, a couple of dentists, a few reputable
insurance companies, nothing big, no Fortune 500 firms but
substantial, solid professional. As those firms and professionals drifted out
to the strip malls or were eaten up by larger firms elsewhere the once glorious
Tappan Building began a long decline into “seen better days.” The owners kind
of gave up on the place, not keeping it up with leaking faucets in the restrooms,
un-waxed public area floors, unreliable elevators, and the sanctified smell of
decay that follows such downward spiraling enterprises. Alexander had taken
over for Mister Calder well into the decline of the building but since the
leasing arrangements with the owners provided for cheap terms and the fact that
his printing business was not one in need of a “good front” he never felt the
need to move, probably a wise move once the high tech moguls made self-printing
for most occasions a worthwhile effort.
Alexander thus observed the
decline of the Tappan Building first-hand as the type of businesses switched
from prosperous professionals to shady characters. A couple of “repo” men, a
few failed dentists whom you would not want within fifty feet of your mouth,
maybe farther away, a couple of chiropractors, some no-name insurance firms, a
notary public, a least a few guys who were running some kinds of scams out of
their offices, and a detective agency. Fred Sims’ Detective Agency although all
the years that he knew Fred he was the sole detective.
Fred had been in the
building since the mid-1960s but between Alexander’s military service and his
wanderlust he did not meet Fred until he took over for Mister Calder. Once they
met, met in Dolly’s Diner across the street from the Tappan, a place that is still
there although Dolly’s granddaughter runs the place now and has changed it from
a smoked-filled ham and eggs, coffee and crullers place to more healthful food
and clean atmosphere for those who own the condos that had been created as a
result of converting many of the old buildings, schools and churches in the
area, they hit it off from the beginning although Fred was a good decade older
than Alexander.
Fred, let’s be clear, was
not, hear this, was not, and probably never would be Alexander image of a private
detective build up from childhood (although in fairness to Fred he was the very
first P.I. he had run into). Short, bald, with unkempt side hairs sticking out
of the baseball cap that he wore indoors and out, and almost never took off, an
old Robert Hall’s, if you remember that name in men’s clothing from another
age, shaggy sport’s jacket, one of three he owned and alternated, threadbare
socks, turned at the heel shoes, black, and many days, many no client days, a
fair amount of stubble on his face. His office on the fifth floor reflected
that persona, no real “front.” A hand-printed cardboard sign
advertising his name and business on the front door, a small waiting room
(which made Alexander laugh for all the years that he knew Fred he never saw anybody
in that room), dust in the corners, a well beyond its prime coatrack of
uncertain steadiness, a couple of mismatched chairs, a small end table with magazines
describing the first Apollo landing in 1969, an office area with a snarled
desk, unmatched chair, and a few, too few file cabinets if Fred was prosperous
which he was not. Later when they were easier to figure out he did purchase a
computer but otherwise over the years the place had, and would continue to
have, that beleaguered downward spiral look.
Alexander one time early on
remarked, no, made the mistake and remarked, that Fred was no Bogie while they
were sitting at the counter of Dolly’s having their coffee and. Apparently this
kind of remark was Fred’s pet peeve because he commenced to rail against the
popular notion of what a private detective looks like, what his office looks
like, and the real cases that he handles. They are not the murder cases of
cinematic and book renown, the public cops, detectives handle that, well or poorly,
but in some then twenty years in the business he had never seen any private detective
brought in to solve a murder and only once had heard that a very rich guy who
had the dough to do so and was frustrated with the public coppers and their
inability to solve the kidnapping/murder of his young daughter actually had a
private detective savvy enough to solve the crime, after two years on the
trail.
No, the real work was
bullshit stuff. Some barber from Gloversville whose wife ran off with a salesman
and he wanted her back her, fast, maybe three days, and not too many expenses.
Some “repo” work the average repo guys wouldn’t handle or wouldn’t be allowed
by the insurance companies to handle. Back in the day a few Peeping Tom
snooping around motels cases looking for adultery when the grounds for a civil
divorce were harder to find. A lost dog or other pet once in a while if
somebody was attached to the animal, although they usually found their ways
home on their own or were never seen again. Looking for long last relatives,
usually fruitless since those relatives wanted to be lost from view. Maybe
checking out a scam or two, flimflam stuff. Definitely not looking for lost
falcons filled with riches and history with dead bodies and greedy people hovering
around. Definitely not taking on some high-powered criminal gang when an old
general with wild daughters one of whose husband is missing. Definitely not
being employed by some man-mountain to find his long lost and wants to stay
lost Velma. Definitely not trying to find some eccentric rich inventor guy
whose thin shadow had disappeared in the mist and somebody liked that
idea.
So that day Alexander
got his comeuppance, got a first-hand real-world view of what private investigation
was all about. Thereafter Fred, when the met for their coffee and at Dolly’s or
sometimes when Alexander after work would go up to Fred’s office for a shot of
whiskey from that bottle he kept in the bottom drawer of that snarled desk (and
one of the few commonalities between real and film detectives) Fred would tell
him stories about his previous cases, or cases that he had heard about from other
P.I. around the area when they ran into each other at some meeting or on a
spree. Except the one time when Alexander became a moving part in a case that
Fred would wind up getting involved in before the coppers stepped in.
One day a guy, an ordinary
looking guy, about thirty, fairly well-dressed, a sports coat and tie, trimmed
hair and short beard, not from around Riverdale but with a New England accent,
probably Maine, came in Alexander’s print shop looking for a customized job, a
small job but in those days as people were self-printing more extensively the
small jobs were drying up (fortunately the big commercial orders were still
coming in at their normal pace). He wanted fifty copies of what he called a
missing person’s poster, you know with photo of the person and description of
last known place, who to contact and so on, done on the press and not the copy
machine. No problem. Alexander handled the order while this young guy
waited.
A few weeks later the
person who had come in with missing person photograph turned up dead, very dead
along the bank of the Waban River. Not only very dead but very murdered from
the bullet holes through his mangled soggy shirt. Chief Powers of the Riverdale
Police came into Alexander’s print shop to find out what he knew about the
situation since in the dead man’s back pocket there was a water-logged copy of
the missing person poster that had print shop mark on the right corner.
Alexander told the Chief what he knew, said he wanted to help any way he could
but the young guy was just a young guy and his description and demeanor would
have fit a million young guys. As had the guy he was looking for. That pretty
much ended Alexander’s involvement in the case, probably the case would go into
those cold files that most murder cases go into if somebody doesn’t jump and
confess with all hands open.
Or so he thought. A few weeks
later a young woman, Lara Barstow was the name she gave him, came into Alexander’s
printing shop with a shopworn copy of the poster he had created for the
murdered young man, and asked to see the proprietor. Since he was that person
he introduced himself and asked how he could help her (although he was a little
suspicious that an average young good-looking woman like Lara would have any
connection with the crime, or crimes associated with the young man for whom he
had done the work or the young man on the poster). Lara soon cleared things up,
“I have been to the police and they told me what happened to my brother Emmet,
how he was found murdered out on the riverbank. They said that as far as they
were concerned the case was still open but that they had no further leads to
work on so that unless they got something that is probably where the case would
stand.” [The police did not mention “cold case” file but Lara said she knew
what they meant]. Lara then started to cry a bit and Alexander not knowing what
to do offered his handkerchief and asked if he should call his wife to assist her
in her time of troubles.
Lara stiffened at that and
told Alexander that she did not need that kind of help but that she was determined
to find out who had killed her brother and asked if he had any ideas. Then
Alexander, secretly thrilled as the prospect told her that on the fifth floor
of the building that they were standing in his friend, Fred, a private detective,
had his office and that maybe he could look into the matter. Lara said that she
did not have any serious resources (her word), meaning money but that if Fred
as able to do something to find the murderer and clear up a legal situation
then she would be coming into some funds. Alexander thinking to himself that
this was starting to be something out of the movies let that statement only
saying, “Let’s see what Fred says,” and led her to the elevator and the fifth-
floor office. (On the way she did not comment on the urine smell in the foyer,
the seedy dilapidated aspect of the elevator and its slowness, or the condition
of the outside building windows, broken panes letting the weathers in, on the
fifth floor as they left the elevator which made him a little wary since her whole
demeanor was of some old-fashioned gentile upbringing but he figured she was
desperate, concentrated on her task, or indifferent to such matter.)
Fred, despite the seedy
condition of his office, already commented on by Alexander and nothing had
changed since the last time he had been up in the office for a few drinks so no
further comment is necessary, was smooth affable charm itself when greeting and
listening to Lara’s story. And listen he, they did for the story really did
have a Hollywood feel to it.
“Emmet Barstow is, ah, was,
my older brother, who had gotten into a lot of trouble when he was in prep
school at Exeter Academy several years ago. I don’t know if I should tell you
the nature of the trouble since it was a rather delicate matter.” Fred stopped
her right there and said he needed to know everything, everything in this weak
fact case, or he would not be able to help her. She continued, “Well, ah, see
there was this other boy, this Prescott Devine, a pervert, you know, a homosexual,
who tricked Emmet into having sex with him, having sex and taking photographs
as it turned out.” [Fred and Alexander gave each other knowing eyes about what
was to follow.]
You know what happened
next, Prescott forced my brother to continue with his wicked designs while in
school and later asked for money to avoid a public scandal in our household. So
Emmett paid, or rather my father paid before he died and after that Mr. Sidney,
the lawyer who has handled our estate until we come of age paid. Then Prescott
fade from view for a couple of years until several months ago after my father
died he showed up at our door looking for more money. Emmett gave him what he
could but somehow he got wind of my father dying and remembered that Emmett was
to inherit a large sum of money upon his death, something he had told Prescott
when he was in the throes of love at the beginning [said bitterly]. The terms
of the will were that Emmett would inherit almost everything when he turned
twenty-five as long as he was alive, and if he were not then I would inherit.
But only inherit if there was no cloud over his death. That part had been added
only a few months before my father’s death so he must have had a premonition of
something happening.”
She paused, then continued,
“Emmett had been trying to find Prescott for a while after he had come to our
house in order to tell him that he was no longer afraid of any scandal, that he
would take his chances with society, our society which might be able to
overlook what could be a youthful indiscretion, and maybe just a bout of
loneliness. Somebody whom they went to school with told Emmett that Prescott
was in this area living in Gloversville and that was why he had the posters
made. He was going to distribute them around and the thousand dollars for
information figured to draw somebody out who might know his whereabouts. That’s
all I know until the police called to have me come and identify the body. The
police have kind of let it go to hell and I need your help.
Fred wise to the ways of
the world although not used to dealing with upper middle class young women, as
clients anyway except once he had a girlfriend from the leafy suburbs but the
parents practically imprisoned her when they found out he did not have three
names in his moniker, you know Ward Stewart Lawrence, stuff like that the
Brahmins go for, told Lara he needed a one hundred dollar cash retainer before
he could represent her in her time of sorrows. She opened her pocketbook,
pulled out five Jacksons and they were in business.
Fred said later that he sensed
something was wrong from that moment, the moment she gave him the cash like she
expected him to ask for cash rather than haggle over a check or something but
Alexander said that was just Fred’s wishful thinking after the fact when the
whole thing blew up in his face and the cops had to pull him out of the line of
fire. To leave the reader in no suspense at this point Fred went out and did
several days of investigation trying to locate the guy who told her brother that
Prescott was in the area. He did locate him finally but the lad, a young man
whom Fred using the old- time expression was “light on his feet,” and fearful
to say anything at all. Fred pressed the issue though and the kid (Fred did not
use that word) folded. It seems the kid, Fred said he would not use his name in
order to get the information he wanted, also fell under the spell of Prescott,
had his pants down more than once over the “crush” he called it, and had done
Prescott’s bidding telling Emmett that Prescott was in Gloversville.
A couple of days late Fred
traced Prescott to a bed and breakfast place outside Gloversville. He figured
that he would just go in and talk to Prescott but before he could enter the
door to Prescott’s room there was a volley of gunfire aimed his way through the
door. He got on the ground first and worked his way back to the kitchen where he
called the cops, called the sheriff’s office because he was not sure
Gloversville had its own police department. The sheriff came with a few deputies,
and a few sharpshooters from the State Police SWAT team. After a couple of
futile attempts at coaxing Prescott out they went in full blazes (Alexander
said if anybody wanted to know the details of the firefight check with the
Norfolk County Sheriff’s Office they would have all the details). After a few minutes
the firing from Prescott’s room stopped. The cops went into room and recovered
the body, recovered two bodies really, for the other body belonged to one Lara
Barstow.
The way things figured out
later piecing together everything found in Prescott’s room and later at Lara’s
house what happened is when Prescott came to confront Emmett for dough at his
house he somehow caught Lara’s eyes, gave her a tumble or two, maybe more.
Whether he was just working the scam of a lifetime for a lowlife like him or he
had some affection for Lara who knows. What is known from some legal papers
found at Lara’s house is they formed a scheme to kill Emmett and have her
inherit the family money (when she turned twenty-five as well a lawyer handling
the trust before that time). Prescott must have known from that Exeter kid that
Emmett was on his trail. They probably met somewhere, and Prescott put a couple
of nasty slugs in him and shipped him off down the Waban River and easy street.
What fouled the whole thing up was the part about having to know the cause of
Emmett’s death before the trust could even be touched in the future. The whole
Lara tall tale story in Fred’s office was to see if they could find a fall guy,
maybe some hobo or something.
Not every criminal, smart
or stupid always figures things out right but that what it looked like. Maybe
Lara thought just hiring Fred would satisfy the terms of the trust. Who knows.
But when Fred was able to find Prescott he, they panicked. And that was that.
So Alexander forever after will be able to say he way part of solving a private
detective-type crime. He was just glad, glad as hell that he had not
accompanied Fred when he had asked him to go to Prescott’s room. He thought save
that part for the movies.
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