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Jumpchain RED [Jumpchain]

Discussion in 'Creative Writing' started by ketch117, Aug 9, 2019.

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  1. Threadmarks: Prologue
    ketch117

    ketch117 A wicked cricket critic's dinner napkin

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    So, decided to give this a try. This isn't my first time writing, but it is my first attempt at writing a Jumpchain story, so we'll see how it works out. This is a jumpchain, though with a few of the core premisses altered or shifted around. If that sounds like something you'd be interested in, feel free to check it out and let me know what you think.

    Prologue - JUMP 46 (ACE COMBAT)

    The Messerschmitt's cockpit stank of aviation fuel, cigarettes and regrets - all three of which he ignored with a combination of urgency and long practice. The sky spun crazily in and out of focus, the engine coughed and spluttered and rattled away like a thoroughbred whose heart might have no quit in it but whose lungs are shot, and the controls fought at him as well, and fought with everything they had. In a situation like this, thinking in metaphors came easier than grappling directly with what was at hand - namely that the odds of limping back and landing his plane were higher than an entire commune of hippies on a blotterful.

    Dirty black smoke streamed back from the engine, almost blinding him, and one of his ailerons had come loose, forcing him to lean hard on the opposite rudder pedal in order to keep the most up. The Messerschmitt was a stable, dependable, dull-grey plane with twin rudders and engines and wide wings that seemed to almost respond to his directives before he made them. Nobody on either side knew quite what to make of the retrofitted old warhorse of a plane which carried him into battle. It’s classic lines cut a curious and anachronistic silhouette as it glided through the skies, but then, people were fooled by appearances. Incongruous as it was to see a museum-piece in the battle, a fighter which had been a game contender in the wars fought almost a century past and had been left behind - and with it the causes and issues that men had fought and died for, replaced by the innovations and conflicts of a new age.

    When asked about it, he only sighed, and thought better of explaining the paradoxical concept of ‘Theseus’ ship’ to whoever had asked. Regardless of it’s appearance, nobody who’d seen him fly it doubted it’s right to be here. It was the plane he’d learned to fly in essence, if so extensively modified and rebuilt since that the distinction was largely conceptual, and he appreciated the classic design. What was the present? Everything sacrificed for speed, no matter how she flies or handles? No matter how she responds? No thought to grace? The man who designed those Messerschmitt’s, he had stared at a summer sky and dreamed of eagles…

    The sky was empty, but far bellow the antiaircraft guns had swivelled as they took aim and made ready to knock him sprawling into infinite sleep if he gave them anything resembling a chance. He didn’t intend to let them. He wrestled with the controls and watching the gauges. The atomic clock in his skull kept time to the pumping of his heart, a regular seventy-two beats per minute. Sensors indicated that the air had fallen below freezing sometime after dark. Suspended in insulate gel, encased in an armoured exoskeleton, he would have never known - body temperature remained at an ideal 37ºC; breathing rate - had he been breathing rather then sucking oxygen directly into the bloodstream through a tube - would have remained a perfectly calm twelve inhalations per minute. Yet he was agitated regardless, as he used all the automated strength in his arms to keep the wing's level, as he whipped his mortally wounded plane away violently around the ravenous pillars of exploding shells that were far too close for comfort, but still far enough away. He’d taken a pasting from a whole squadron of enemy fighters over the Osea coast, and it wouldn’t take much more than a near miss, much less a glancing hit, to finish him off.

    To the Royal Air Force of Erusea, his codename was ‘Gawain’ - a familiar handle which he'd carried for a long time and which fitted him comfortably, if somewhat at odds with the fashion of the nations usual conventions when it came to codenames, though still far more to their taste than his squadron, which he called ‘Flying Circus’. Miles behind him, his assailants lay smashed and tangled in the smoking, splintered wreckage of their aircraft, which he’d dutifully marked and reported. And behind them, the Allies were caught in a long and bloody battle that had begun months ago and lasted just long enough to demonstrate what cruel folly it was. Tanks ground towards Dinsmark like tracked battleships, their multiple turrets dulling with the fearsome heat rays of the insect-like Belkan tripods which bestrode the Osean countryside, laying waste to every town and village in their path.

    Ahead, through the gunsights and bulletproof glass of the windshield, he could see the gleam of Erusea’s chalky cliffs. Below his wings, the hard, ceramic-blue waters of the Channel. The war was behind him now. He’d beaten the odds just getting this far. Almost home now…

    He saw the pillboxes and machine gun nests on the beach at the foot of the cliff. Lines of white surf broke against the sand, and the cliff towered above him: an immovable wall of white rock, at least three hundred feet in height. He glanced down at his dashboard and tapped the altimeter. The dial wasn’t working. He bared his teeth, and hauled back on the stick. The engine spluttered, threatening to stall. The propellor hacked at the sky.

    He only tugged harder.

    Finally, it responded. The nose rose with aching slowness. For a second, he wasn’t sure if he would make it. For an agonising second, the plane seemed to hang in the air–

    Then the cliff’s grassy lip dropped away beneath his wings, and he saw the countryside spread beneath him like a chequered blanket. He took his right hand off the stick, and rubbed his forehead.

    That had been a whole order of magnitude too close.

    A couple of miles inland, through the engine smoke, he caught sight of the aerodrome, and at long last he allowed himself to relax, at least a little. He’d beaten the odds once again.

    He let the nose drop - though not as much as it wanted, trading his hard-won altitude for a little additional speed, until his wheels almost brushed the tops of the hedgerows lining the fields.

    He cleared the first hedge, scattering a herd of dairy cows, and then the second. A skeletal tree snatched at the tip of his starboard wing. The Aerodome’s perimeter fence appeared, right smack between fat mountains beyond the placid blue sea and white cliffs. He pulled back just enough to clear it, and the airfield yawned open like the arms of an anxious parent, ready to catch him.

    The Messerschmitt’s wheels squeaked as they hit the concrete. The stick juddered in his hand. Somehow he kept the nose straight.

    The mortally injured Messerschmitt bumped to a halt at the far end of the field and the engine burst into flames. By the time the fire crews reached it, the engine wasn’t worth saving. Ammunition popped and sputtered in the flames. Paint blistered. But they knew their work, containing the fire and enough of it to save what could be saved. The whole thing would have to be rebuilt, and not for the first time. Theseus’ ship, he thought ruefully. Hell, he was as out of place here as the plane.

    They found him sitting on the grass at the edge of the runway, with his flying goggles loose around his neck, haggard and wan.

    “I need a drink.” He told them, so they gave him a ride back to the Officer’s Mess, while the technicians made for what had once been his plain. The heavy figure of Brutus, swathed as usual in red robes emblazoned with the cog and skull symbol was arriving just as he departed on the back of an army truck. He lifted a hand tiredly in acknowledgement as he passed, but the gesture was not returned. The Enginseer was still human, despite all the bulky augmentations, but had never really gotten the hang of human interaction, on display as he pushed and shoved mechanics and technicians out of the way and moved over to what was left of the plane.

    A few of them asked him what had happened to him, and to the plane. He ignored them.

    The Mess was housed in a canvas marquee at the end of a row of semi-cylindrical steel Nissen huts. Immediately alongside was the abandoned railroad ditch that carried the pipe that carried the aviation gasoline down to the fuel trucks at the airfield. When he pushed through the khaki flap that served as its door, the crowd fell silent. It was a busy night. The bar was busy, the crap table was busy, the ping-gong table was busy. Some young officers - children, really - had been busy at the bar singing old and sentimental favourites which thrummed with patriotic sentiment and nobody ever seemed to get tired of, but they’d paused as well on his arrival.

    Perhaps they were expecting something.

    He just shook the rain from his fleece lined jacket and walked into the room. Nobody said a word, they stopped talking and playing cards, updating social media, checking for updates, fiddling with their phones or computers - all of it. Everyone turned to look at him, tall and dark and bearded (counter to regulations, but he would have shaved if they’d asked and nobody had) - handsome enough even with the discrete but noticeable scars which hinted at extensive surgery and only a few flourishes to his appearance that hinted at how little of him was left (Theseus' ship again), dressed in a greasy flight suit and fleece-lined jacket. His artificial eyes weren’t obvious in the light, and they didn’t miss a detail - they all appeared as grainy, green-tinted holo-images, because his filter needed adjusting. Smoke curled above their heads. Their faces were amused and curious, and he didn’t recognise any of them - save a few old familiar faces that he knew as well as his own, mixed amidst them all like an alloy.

    There were four of them seated together at a table, near the crap table on which Jenny always managed to win. Miranda, as it turned out, wasn’t any good at gambling despite being as close to perfect as science and nature could achieve, but Jenny was just as good at shooting crap as she was at playing ping-pong, and she was just as good at playing ping-pong as she was at everything else. Everything Jenny did, she did well, and everybody who knew her liked her, and people respected Miranda but they mostly didn’t like her very much, and she mostly didn’t give them a reason to. That was the way she liked it, or so she had told him anyway.

    It wasn’t common to see them to sharing a table, since Miranda was a political appointment and was much too far up the chain of command to be involved in the persecution of the war. In practical terms, Miranda was not a political officer, she was a spook, a government appointment. Actually, she was a lot more than that, but she wasn't spreading that little fact around - people were worried enough about her already.

    He should have sat with them, the rest of his squadron who were fighting a war they didn’t have a stake in, sat down and got to figuring things out. Or just found something to talk about, but he didn’t feel up to it. Not right then. He shouldn’t have been flying alone, that’s what he had a squadron for, but he hadn’t done that either. He was becoming erratic, and that should concern him, but it didn't either. Nothing really seemed to be getting through.

    Most of the people gathered, however, were strangers. The men had moustaches and slick-backed hair, the women wore their hair short, and they all wore brand new flying jackets over crisp uniforms. And they were all needed - the war was still going on. Young men and women were going mad and they were getting rewarded with medals. Not just here, all over the world, from Anea to Antarctica, boys and girls on every side of the front-lines were laying down their lives for what they had been told was their country, and no one seemed to mind, least of all the boys and girls who were laying down their young lives. There was no end in sight. The only end in sight was their own.

    Ignoring them all, he loped over to a corner table and climbed onto a chair. After a moment, heads turned away and discussions resumed. Another moment after that, the Mess Officer shuffled over. He looked up at him thoughtfully. The mess officer was a sad, birdlike man, very neat and very clean with the worst combover in the world whose idea of a good time was to have a good sulk while people were likely to notice. But in spite of that, the mess officer was good at his job, and he quite liked him - mostly because he wasn’t expected to.

    As a connoisseur, of sorts, he liked bars and clubs and other places to have a drink best of all when he was the first customer, just after they opened for the evening. When the air inside was still cool and clean and everything shiny and fresh, when the barkeep is giving himself that last look in the mirror to see if his tie is straight and his hair is smooth in the knowledge of how vital a good impression could be.

    He liked the neat bottles on the bar back and the lovely shining glasses and most of all the anticipation. He liked to watch the man mix the first one of the evening and put it down on a crisp mat and put the little folded napkin beside it. He liked to take that drink and to taste it slowly. The first quiet drink of the evening in a quiet bar - that's the sort of simple pleasure that will bring a man back from the dead, in his opinion anyway.

    A long way away from the Officers Mess, in other words. He’d endured worse, of course, but he didn’t see why he should have to.

    “Tea or coffee, squire?”

    “I’ll let you know when I figure it out.” He replied, settling back in his chair and lighting a cigarette. The cigarette helped clear the reek of aviation fuel from his nostrils, and now all he wanted was a rest. He yawned. He couldn’t remember the last time he’d been asleep. Not dreaming, just sleeping. He was getting to feel as though it had been forever, flying one sortie after another in an endless string of confused dogfights, fuelled only by nicotine and whiskey and sheer bloody-mindedness, climbing and diving and twisting and turning steeply and sharply with an aching howl of engines, as he wove his way through the filthy barrages of flak.

    It hadn’t been that way when he’d first arrived. It never was, of course, the urgency had to be allowed to build before it could get it's hooks in you. At first it had been exhilarating, but it never lasted. The shrinks called what he was suffering ‘battle-fatigue’ - by which they meant that he was as well balanced as an upturned pyramid. He’d seen it happen before, more times - many more then he could begin to say, in other places and times. He’d seen it happen here as well, to other pilots. They lived too long, lost to many comrades, and withdrew into themselves. Then, one day, they stopped caring altogether. They took mad chances, pushed their luck beyond the ragged limit, and they died.

    Was that what he was doing? Was he finally tired of it all, ready to pick his patch of ground to die on? He wasn’t sure, and that scared him - the idea that his subconscious might have taken a turn to the self-destructive without telling him. He didn’t have a problem with the idea, exactly, but he would like to be kept in the loop of the decision making process.

    He’d gone up against five F117s flying in formation this afternoon, black diamond-shaped fighters straight off the factory lines, said to be invisible to radar, turbofans whirring within their bellies, as they hunted. And he’d chosen to face them, even though they’d had a height advantage on top of everything else. Two he could have handled, had handled plenty of times, but three would have been pushing it, and pushing it hard. An entire formation of five had been asking for it - he should have turned and fled, at least tried to manoeuvre them onto more favourable ground. Called for help. Anything. If one of his companions had been so reckless, he’d have had them confined and put under observation, even given Dr Dax permission to ask his intrusive questions and poke around in their heads for their own good. But there was nobody to do that for him, at least nobody that he’d listen to. That was the burden of command. In spite of everything, he’d carried the day, and skill had played a part, but he’d been fortunate beyond reason to make it home in one piece, and he knew it. Was he pushing his luck until it broke? With a sigh, he reached for his flask, then stopped, as someone firmly placed a bottle between the two of them. He looked up to find Jack standing there, his face as familiar as his own.

    Jack - the other Jack - was a moustached man in his early forties like always, habitually contemptuous of any uniform and dressed in mufti - western chic as were his preferences. He looked the part of a true all-American male - not that anyone here had ever heard of such a place: a black ranchers hat, black denim jacket, black denim jeans, black tie and black boots and the crowning touch: a silver flask belt buckle. All well tailored, and comfortable on his lean frame as a second skin. “You’re not going to get very far drinking that - it’s the good stuff today. You know what this is?” He asked, something about the way he drawled it suggesting it was a trick question.

    He looked up. Wafer thin lenses in his artificial eyes turned. “A bottle of Statesman reserve?”

    Jack - Agent Whiskey shook his head. He had a good-ole-boy attitude combined with a no-nonsense professionalism, and exuded the calm confidence of a man who could handle himself in any situation, whatever it might be. “Missed, but close enough. It’s actually the last bottle of the Statesman Reserve. After this, it’s all used up - who knows what we’ll do for lubrication then?”

    “The last.” He repeated, as though he couldn’t believe it and picked it up gently, almost reverently. It had been bottled in 1969 - whenever that was, relative to him and to now - a question he couldn’t begin to untangle, time was a thing that happened to other people, or so it seemed. They’d taken a dozen barrels, and worked their way through it all. He sighed. Men weren’t meant to live this long. Sometimes he wondered how the gods could stand it.

    “That’s what I said.” Jack replied. "The last."

    “So what’s the occasion? Why are we opening it, rather then holding it back and waiting?”

    “Well it’s another day when we’re all alive. Seems reason enough to celebrate, now don’t it?”

    “Better than many.” He allowed. Again, he wonders about ‘Battle Fatigue’. He thinks about the war, though not this one. In his mind, they’re all one, one endless conflict stretching behind and in front of him. Sometimes he feels as though a million voices are crying out to him from where they were left in no-man's-land, all pleading only for a release from pain. Help me, help me, help me. He hears them in English. French. German. Russian. Other languages, many no longer spoken. He hears the whispers of a dozen disparate empires lost and forgotten by time, and the alien sounds of those dying beneath an unknown sky. Voices which screamed at the sight of their own exposed organs and ruined limbs. Which implored the heavens to take away their pain. To bless them with death. Voices which could soon be his - which nearly had been, countless times.

    When it is as bad as it gets, he begins to feel as though he's the only human being alive, that it’s just him and the voices of the dead, all haunting him. Bodies move around him, talking, eating in the officer’s mess, sometimes talking to him and then waiting as if they expect a dialogue. There are bodies everywhere he looks, men and some women chatting, military and some civilians - but no people. One of the bodies who he talks to in order to save Dr Dax the trouble - an army surgeon - took the time to explain to him that he's suffering from what's actually a common stress disorder, survivor's guilt. This may be so, he admits, but it doesn't change anything.

    Jack nodded, still following the conversation he's barely aware of but sensing the direction of his thoughts, and placed a pair of tumblers beside the bottle, then opened it and poured them both a generous measure. The amber liquid rolled seductively in the glass. His nostrils flared as took in the scent. As Sir Winston Churchill (or perhaps it was it Oscar Wilde) once said, ‘my tastes are simple: I am easily satisfied with the best.’

    “Absent friends.” Jack said, raising his glass.

    They drained their glasses, and he refilled them. This time they didn't toast, they just drank.

    “So who’s worried about me?” He asked, swirling the liquid around in the glass thoughtfully.

    Jack nodded, telling him his assumption was the correct one - someone had put him up to this. Jack wouldn’t have himself, he was of the belief that talking it though did not good, men should suffer in silence. Jack’s codename was as out of place as his own, of course, but it fit him, somehow. Better than his real name, even. “We all are. But it’s my turn to make sure you’re alright.”

    He let out a small chuckle. “Well don’t ask me. I’m not an expert. I’m… coping.” The voices that he imagines do not leave him when he dreams. They all come at once. They twist and turn in their unheeded millions, little difference between them - or at least there seemed to be. His dreams did not confine themselves to the current conflict but embraced every war man had instigated - he’d seen them all, or enough of them, at least. Vividly, he remembered huge battles. Some of them he recognised, others were only dry history and imagination. Some had never existed at all. Most, however, were merely the repetition, with different costumes, of the obscenity he had witnessed again and yet again, each as painful as the socket of a missing tooth. He has a mouthful of emptiness, bitter and aching, out here in the skies.

    “Are you?”

    He puffed on his cigarette to avoid answering the question, or at least buy him some time. Was he? What is it that they were doing, exactly? Every day, they climbed as high and as far as their machines could take them. To the very limits of human achievement. To the gates of heaven itself. And then tried to kill each other. They stained the sky, in order to fight a war in heaven.

    Jack could be irritatingly perceptive at times. Or maybe he was just a lot more transparent than he liked to believe. “Must be a reason we’re here.”

    “Must there be? I’m starting to wonder.”

    “There always has been. So far, anyway.”

    “Or at least, that’s what we decided. Afterwards. Do you ever wonder if that’s all it is?”

    Jack finished his glass. “No.” He told him. “You do the job in front of you, then you do the next one. That’s… life. That’s just how it works. In my experience, which is extensive.” 'Even before I met you' went unsaid.

    “Maybe I just need some perspective.”

    “Maybe you need some time to get your head straight.”

    He sighed. He’d been here for six years now, and this was the second war he’d fought in, during that time. And, unlike the previous battle, which had started and finished so quickly the world had barely noticed, this one would be fought all the way to the bitter end - whenever that might arrive. No war could last forever - something always gave out.

    His name was Jack Mitchell, Graf of the nation of Erusea and the last of his earthly line. And this, it seemed, was his fate.

    “I guess that’s it. The secret.” He told his old comrade. “Don’t stop and think about it. Don’t stop and ask why. Just go on, because the only way out is getting through. And don’t think of what’s waiting for you on the other end. Because it’s only more of the same.”

    “That’s a way to look at it.” Jack Daniels allowed. “But you know, in three words, I can sum up everything I have learned about life. It goes on. Shall we drink to that?”

    He inclined his head, acknowledging the point. “We’d better.”
     
    Last edited: Aug 10, 2019
    Lord Greyscale, Trek and Cap'nSmurfy like this.
  2. Threadmarks: Great Detective 1 - 1
    ketch117

    ketch117 A wicked cricket critic's dinner napkin

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    CHAPTER 1 - Jump 1 (GREAT DETECTIVE)

    GREAT DETECTIVE
    HARDBOILED
    Rough and Tumble
    Barfights were where he cut his knuckles, and he’s had more than his fair share of dust ups. Tough enough to put down a drunk gorilla, and strong enough to haul it out onto the street.
    Trust Me I'm A Detective
    Project an aura of confidence and competence. The crowd will part around him, the red tape is cut, and the police give him a knowing nod.
    Time in the Army
    Or that's what he claims. He’s had more than his knuckles dusted in alley touch ups, and can claim true lethality. Also grants a reputation for strength:
    1st is combat knowledge, enough to hold him over any sudden encounter.
    2nd is deadly knowledge, better bring more than ten men to warmup.
    3rd purchase: One of the world's top ten deadliest fighters, easily.
    Lockjaw
    Undying determination granted to the human will. Should there be a task or goal he sets himself towards, nothing will distract or deter him from it. Not obstacles, not enemies, not even injury. Mental aspects and sheer bloody stubborness increase up to ten times. Post-jump lets him grant this effect to others up to a day. If only his body could keep up with his will.
    Temp Noir
    The ultimate sharpening of animal instinct and the subconscious. Threats, clues and cues are highlit in his monochrome world. Reaction times up to ten times faster and take more than double his usual amount of damage. He also hears himself narrate in a gravelly voice. Activated by the smell of blood or danger. Post-jump removes this limit. Paired with a strong will, he could be virtually unstoppable.
    Written on Their Face
    He has a sixth sense for other people's discomfort. He can, with a glance, see their subconscious and if they feel like lying, what they believe is true, or if they killed recently. Better not blurt this out, mixing messages makes monitoring muddier.
    Detectives Notebook
    Never gets permanently lost, damaged or out of pages and ink (somehow). A place to write down thoughts almost perfectly that's always on hand, when facing blackouts or out of tape. Organise thoughts and clues! Comes with an Index that updates like magic!
    The Badge
    To protect and to serve, it says when it is read. Keeps it on his belt, pocket, wallet or collar, this is proof of authority in near any jurisdiction or plane of existence. Allows him to freely interrogate anything once a day.
    The Hip-Flask
    This silver engraved flask was given to him after his first successful case. It keeps an unlimited amount of one fluid, and at the same temperature. Somehow manages to catch a fatal blow once wherever it comes from. Repairs after a week. Liquids sold separately.
    Forensics Kit
    Enough litmus papers, slides, tweezers, droppers and swabs for any crime scene. Do in minutes what would take a full team hours. Good for break-ins, beheadings and birthday parties. About the size of a shoebox.
    Worthy Opponent
    Perhaps it’s Inmate 24601, a world-class jewel thief, a doctor with a taste for white meat or even a humble clerk? No, it’s Don Toletti, old school gangster. The Don will keep him on his toes his entire stay, but he can earn their respect and cause a change of heart.
    Jimmy the Shoeshiner
    His friend Jimmy here is the man to ask about anything from the recent bakery theft to how to perform open heart rocketry, for a price. The only problem is finding him and getting a place in line. Does not count towards the companion limit, and can still be found wherever he goes.
    You've Got Murder
    A depressingly large portion of his cases end up being murder. He can't just write everything off as death though, but he will gain a reputation for having things die around him. He can't even go on holiday without solving ‘the Affair of the Drowned Concierge’.
    Smokin' Aces
    Some of the best Assassins in the world, or ‘Aces’ will come sniffing for a price that's on his head. These aren't your blade and bullet types, they're a bit weird. They'll give him a run for his money once a year, and pose a threat to nearby collat-, er, bystanders. Somehow, they have counters for his counters, how odd.
    Compulsion
    He has a fixation with alcohol. He needs it. Whenever he is idle, he will seek this out to distract himself, and enemies can use it to distract or blackmail him should they have the opportunity.
    Not Playing by Knox
    There is a group out there dedicated to mayhem and disorder. No tell hostels that ensnare young travellers, themed serial killers manufactured by the dozens, housewives and postmen purchasing locked room murder kits. Find them. Solve them. Destroy them. He will not rest until they are brought to justice for their crimes.

    ‘We cannot choose what we are - yet what are we, but the sum of our choices?’

    There are times in a guy's life when he finds himself floating facedown in a sea of troubles, and as hope bubbles away he thinks, How the hell did I get here? But hindsight is always unhelpful like that - once you're there it’s too late for it to matter.

    It was about eleven o'clock in the morning, late in the year, with the sun not shining and a look of hard wet rain on offer, and I didn’t feel bad about showing up so late on account of the big fee I’d earned the night before. I hadn’t slept well, but I drank an extra cup of coffee, smoked an extra cigarette, ate an extra slice of Canadian bacon, and that made me more or less fit for company. Well, the office had been locked when I got there, and I still hadn’t gotten my key replaced. All I could do was kick on the door a few times and eventually Effie roused herself to click the lock back. When she saw who it was all she had to say for herself was “Oh, it’s you.”

    “What do you mean ‘Oh, it’s you’! You’d think you’d remember me - Jack Mitchell, your boss.”

    “Well, you haven’t been here in so long I can’t tell you from another bill collector. So who’s at fault, I ask you?” Well, that was probably fair. I closed the door, hung my topcoat and my snap-brim fedora on the rack by the door just for the purpose, and followed her into my sanctum sanctorum. I plunked myself in the old swivel chair, then swung around facing the window. It had already been a lean season, but this was something else altogether - the kind of day where you begin to wonder if the earth has stopped revolving. The clunky telephone on my desk had the look of something that knows it's being watched. Traffic trickled by in the street below, and there were a few pedestrians, too, men in hats going nowhere, mostly. I’m paid to notice things, but there wasn’t a thing to see.

    Of course, if you’re hearing this, it probably all feels very abrupt, and missing something fundamental. I wish I could clear that up for you in a satisfactory manner, but in all honesty, I was too busy living my new life to wonder much about how it had come to be, or what had happened to my old one - Life is short, time is luck, or so somebody I hadn’t met yet would one day impress on me, and I have come to see the attractions of it as a philosophy.

    For those who desire a more complete picture for book-keeping purposes, I will say that I didn’t miss my old life all that much, all things considered. Oh, there were elements that I missed - the conveniences of modern life seem like small things until you have to get used to getting by without them, but I hadn’t spend much time dwelling on any of it. I’ve never been the kind of guy who’s afraid of change, and I wasn’t doing too bad so far, or so I thought anyway.

    But perhaps that’s not enough. Maybe I should be crying about now about how I'm never going to see my family again? That’s how these stories tend to begin, an ode to one's family and friends left behind in reality - or wherever it was that I came from. Perhaps I should be mopey as to only be worth skimming the emotional melodrama that will have very little impact on what happens next. Should I feel that way?

    Well, if so I can't account for it. I suppose I’ve never been very good at feeling the way I’m supposed to. Of course I miss my family, and a few of my friends as well… but that’s life. I miss people every day, no matter where I happen to be, and throwing a temper tantrum and indulging in some angst at being uprooted by circumstances beyond my control seemed (and still does) kind of pointless, particularly after you've already lost your mother eight years ago… well, eight years ago in my first life, now long behind me. I mean, of course I was going to feel sad and depressed, some of the time - but that is just the human condition. It hits you from time to time, sometimes hard enough to completely paralyse you when it does, but life continues, just like it always does.

    Anyway, stop and think about it for a moment. 2018 wasn’t much of a year to be alive - if it wasn't my 73 year old father's health acting up and needing to be tended to, my younger brothers twenty two years of self-neglect and alcoholism leaving him briefly institutionalised and ultimately in my care suffering crippling anxiety and depression which could set him into a spiral at a moment’s notice and no possibility of holding down a job, the crappy job market, the houses issues, my left over debt and extended families’ drama, dealing with a crappy work environment and feeling like the only one to give a damn at my job… I could go on, but that’s really only scratching the surface. All things considered, this was the perfect way to end 2018 - a fresh start, completely ending my old life and starting a new one. And you know what - considering where that old life was going, why not? Why not trade that in for a new life? It hadn't been so bad - not so far, anyway. My problems were of a different nature, problems that I could resolve by taking action, rather than problems that sapped away at my resolve, wringing me out until I was hollow and devoid of feeling. At least I didn’t have to satisfy any readers' expectations of how I was supposed to behave… or maybe I was supposed to? But at the time I didn’t think it was my problem, and the life that followed has done little to make me see it differently - my problem was making the most of this opportunity.

    And that was easier said then done.

    I’d arrived at my office, but now that I was there, there wasn’t much to do save kill time. I’d picked up some odds and ends of mail, so I slit the envelopes and let the stuff lie on the desk. I opened the windows wide to let out the stale air. I recall distinctly opening my desk-drawer and searching around around until I found an old airlines timetable, and started looking up flights to Paris. There was no chance of my going there, but it was a nice thing to dream about.

    The tappity-tap-tap and the thin bell and muffled whir of Effie Page’s typewriting came through the closed door. Somewhere in a neighbouring office a power-driven machine vibrated dully. A limp cigarette smouldered in a brass tray filled with the remains of limp cigarettes. Ragged grey flakes of cigarette-ash dotted the yellow top of my desk and the green blotter and the papers that were there. A buff-curtained window, eight or ten inches open, let a current of air faintly scented with ammonia through the Venetian Blinds. The ashes on the desk twitched and crawled in the current.

    Like I said, it had been a leaner season than I’d expected it to be. I had done.a week playing bodyguard to a guy who had flown in from New York on the clipper, all in a funk. He had a long blue jaw and wore a gold watch and a pinkie ring with a sapphire on it as a big as a boysenberry. He said he was a businessman and I decided that there wasn’t any reason not to believe him, but kept an eye out for one just in case. Well, his funk only got worse, he worked his lips, glanced at the windows and sweated a lot, but nothing happened and I got paid when he headed back to New York. Bernie Gilks in the sheriff’s office put me in touch with a nice old lady whose hophead son had pinched her late husband’s rare coin collection. Well, I had to apply a little muscle to get the goods back there, but nothing worth getting all that worked-up about. It was a fascinating collection - I admired it myself after I’d gotten it back before returning it - there was a coin in that collection with a head of Alexander the Great on it, and another one showing Cleopatra in profile, with that big nose of hers and that self-satisfied expression to go with it - what did they all see in her, again? But other than that, it had been pretty quiet - missing persons and divorces, which were my bread and butter.

    Well, they used to be, anyway. They implemented a no-fault divorce here a couple of years back after the war that really screwed things up. A lot of private cops folded. A lot of people complained about loose morals, and that sort of thing. Hypocrites, most of them, but that’s hardly a surprise. People are the same more or less everywhere.

    The day that took shape was the sort of day that comes around, now and then, where the wind picks up the strays and deposits them all in your lap.

    The first guy who showed up was a big roughneck with a buzzcut, named Modjeski or something Polish like that. I’ve got a chair for customers, but he wouldn’t have been able to fit on a couch much less the chair - he barely fit into my office - and anyway it seemed that he preferred to loom, planting his wide and horny knuckles on my desk and leaning over like a fridge about to topple. He told me that he was a power-shovel operator - although I hadn’t asked, that he lived in Culver City - which was good information to have if I ever needed a power-shovel operator, and that the ‘goddarn’ woman who lived next door to him was trying to poison his dog. That, it seemed, was where I came in.

    It added up like this (and I’m the detective, I’m usually the one who does the adding up): every morning before he let the dog out for a run in the back yard he had to search the place from fence to fence for poisoned meat that had been thrown from next door, over the fence separating the two yards. He'd found them twice now - left over meatloaf, that had been dusted with a powder that he knew had a lead base, though how he knew this he hadn’t elaborated.

    "How much to watch out and catch her at it?" He demanded, glowering down at me when I didn’t leap to the defence of his pet.

    "Well,” I replied, making my first contribution to the interesting case of the dog in the back yard “since you got it all figured out, why not do it yourself?"

    He let out a harsh bark of laughter. “I got to work for a living, mister. I'm losing four twenty-five an hour just coming up here to ask."

    "Try the police?”

    Clearly all these questions were frustrating him. Having laid it out so cleanly, he couldn’t understand why I wasn’t doing my bit. “I try the police. Goddarn useless. They might - might - get around to it some time next year."

    He hadn’t contacted them, if I’m any judge, but what could you do? "It says on the door you're an investigator," he said truculently, feeling that I was confusing the issue to much by asking all my questions. “This is your office? Okay, go the hell out and investigate. Fifty bucks if you catch her."

    "Sorry," I said. "I'm tied up. Spending a couple of weeks staking out your back yard with my camera would set me back anyway - even for fifty bucks."

    He leaned further forward, and I sear the desk creaked in protest, turning his head so as to glower at me sideways with one eye. I didn’t care for the effect, myself. "Big shot, is it?” he said. “My dough not good enough for you, big shot? Beneath your dignity, saving the life of my dog? To hell with you, big shot."

    "I've got troubles of my own, Mr. Modjeski." I replied calmly.

    He stood up, making a dismissive noise that sounded like he was clearing his throat. For a moment, I figured he was planning to spit on me. “I’ll wring her goddam neck for her if I catch her, see if I don’t.“ he said, and I believed he could too. Hell, with shoulders like that he could have twisted the neck of a dinosaur. “What did he ever do to her, that’s what I want to know? My dog never hurt anyone, and that’s a fact. Sour-faced old bitch."

    He stomped around, and headed for the door. It was a bit like watching an avalanche turn around and leave in a huff. "Are you sure it's the dog she's trying to poison?" I asked his back, unable to resist.

    “I told you, didn’t I?” He snapped back. He wrenched the door open before the nickel dropped, and swung around fast there and then. “Care to repeat that, mister?“

    I snorted, but I just shook my head. I didn't want to fight him. All he’d need to do would be fall on top of me, and that would be that. He snorted and went out, almost taking the door with him. I rolled my eyes, and fumbled around for the travel brochure. Paris again - I’m a romantic, and it was also a long way away from Mr Modjeski, which sounded good around then.

    And the world was good enough to leave me like that for a little while.

    “There’s a woman who wants to see you. Her name’s Grace.” Effie told me an hour later.

    I looked up from my busywork. Even on a day like that day, you can only fantasise about Paris for so long. “A client?”

    “I guess so. You’d want to see her anyway: she’s a knockout.”

    “Well, I’ve got nothing better to be doing.” I said. “Why don’t you shoo her in?”

    Effie Perine opened the door again, following it back into the outer office, standing with a hand on the knob. “Come on in, Grace.” Still in my swivel-chair, I made a quarter-turn to face her, and smiled politely. I smiled without separating my lips.

    True to advertising, Grace had a lot going for her in the looks department, she was tall and pliantly slender, without angularity anywhere. She had dark hair and green eyes, and looked ready to make trouble for someone. “You’re the investigator?” She asked.

    "I'm Mitch." It wasn’t the name I was born with, but it was the name that I answered to. “The Investigator.”

    "Mitch? That's a kid's name."

    "Yeah well, where I grew up the neighbourhood was run by a bunch of old Italian guys who think anyone under sixty is a kid, so blame them."

    She laughed. She’d grown up on a neighbourhood not too dissimilar. As it happened, she was an actress, or at least she had aspirations in that profession, and had a steady gig in a vaudeville routine in some shabby theatre on Broadway. She didn’t like her job much, and wasn’t afraid to say so, but what had prompted this was that one of her costars - she wasn’t sure which one, but she hadn’t a kind word for any of them - was taking money out of her purse. A dollar here, four bits there, but it added up. She figured she was out close to twenty dollars in all. Well, she couldn't afford it. She couldn't find another job - not if she wanted to make the rent. She certainly couldn't afford a detective. Still, she thought I ought to be willing to throw them a scare - just on the telephone like, not mentioning any names.

    By the end, I felt the beginnings of a headache. “Anybody you know could do that," I told her.

    "Yeah, but you being a dick and all."

    I fetched out my cigarette case. I didn’t ask if she minded if I smoked; I didn’t feel like being polite. "I don't have a license to threaten people I know nothing about. Not really my line of trade.”

    She didn’t take that well at all. “I’m going to tell them all that I’ve been in to see you.” She snapped at me. “I don't have to say they’re suspects. Just that you're working on it."

    I let out a plume of smoke. “Well, I wouldn't if I were you. If you mention my name, someone might check it up with me. And if that happens, I'll stick to the facts."

    She stood up and slammed her purse closed. "You're no gentleman," she said with a poisonous look.

    “It says investigator on the door. Where does it say gentleman as well?”

    She flounced out. Much as her looks suited my taste a whole sight better than Cleopatra's, I wasn’t sorry to see her go.

    I had lunch. And so passed the morning in the life of a P.I. Not exactly a typical day but far from atypical, all things considered. It’s a calling, perhaps - but it’s not a rewarding one. You don't get rich, and you don't often have much fun. Mostly, you see people at their worst - murder, and murder done by little people with big dreams, little people getting out of their depth in criminality and over their heads in trouble, lies and death. Sometimes you get beaten up or shot at or tossed into the jailhouse. Other days, it passes so slowly that those are the things you look forward to. Every other month you decide to give it up and find some sensible occupation while you can still walk without shaking your head. Then the door buzzer rings and Effie leads another lost soul to your office, a new soul and a new problem, a new load of grief, and a small piece of money.

    And, somehow, it's my life now.

    Well, that’s who I was that day. You have me pictured by now. Jack Mitchell, twenty-nine years of age, private detective. I am tall and broad at the shoulders, I am physically strong and I am resolute. My character? I’ll let you draw your own conclusions to that as you get to know me - just now what you have seen is perhaps enough. What else is there? Am I clean-shaven? I am not, I favour a short beard I keep well cropped. My eyes are dark, my hair darker and thick. These things scarcely matter, in the scheme of things.

    A telephone-bell rang. When it had rung three times I picked it up. And before I realised it, my entire world changed.

    * * * * *

    My office was just three miles from the Station House, on the edge of Broadway, so the drive didn’t give me much of a chance to ponder why Lieutenant Gilks might be calling me over during hours. Not that there was any sort of lack of possibilities - Gilks was an old friend, the two of us had been doing favours for each other… well, it felt like forever, though it couldn’t have been since I’ve only lived this life for a few months, and he’d recently been getting grief in the department for busting a burglary ring that included the teenage son of a police commander. Some old-timers thought he should have let the case file disappear. Well, he hadn’t.

    And yet, I had a feeling things would work out alright for Bernie Gilks. It always seemed to.

    The uniformed officer at the front desk was carefully filling out a report. He waved me through to the squad room with barely a second look - I took it for granted that he was expecting me. Eighteen men had been gathered in the squad room, and many of them were enormous, the largest cops I’d ever seen. The whole room seemed to be straining at the seems with them all in there, and it led me to reassess a few things. I'd assumed this was about the burglary case, but unless someone had made off with the Crown Jewels of England, I didn't think that was what was happening here.

    Gilks was waiting at the far end of the squad room. He was the smallest guy in the room, even smaller than me, but he didn’t let that bother him. He was a tough little fellow who had been shot early in his police career and had served as a gunnery officer in the Marines in the war. And no matter how big a guy might be, Gilks would take him on. He kept his hat pulled down low, over his eyes, like the bad guys do, and stood behind his desk, where a Thompson submachine gun rested.

    “Find the place alright?” He asked me.

    “I followed the screams.” I replied. The bit of lip wasn’t appreciated, but only prompted an amount of grumbling and eye-rolling. These guys were all here to listen, not to venture opinions of their own, and so that was what they were going to do. "Always seem to be plenty of them about, wherever you lot are."

    "I’ll take that as a compliment."

    “Yeah. Don’t.” I found a place that nobody was using, and got myself as comfortable as I could.

    “I’ve been asked by the chief to form a special detail,” He told me - and by extension everyone else in the room, as his hands effortlessly took apart the Tommy gun and reassembled the pieces. Then he looked directly at me. “Your name came up. As a consultant, of course. As did a number of others too.”

    I didn’t argue, or protest that I wasn’t a cop. I just sat down, and listened. Because of course I wasn’t a cop - they knew that as well as I did. And strictly speaking, nothing made it my business at all, unless you counted curiosity. But strictly speaking, I hadn’t had any business in a month, Gilks was an old friend, and he'd asked me to be here - and probably put my name in consideration, as well.

    "A special detail?"

    "That's right." And that was all he called it then, the special detail. One day, he would have to limp his way up to the stand, and tell a grand jury that ‘My primary duties were to keep down the gangster killings and to try to keep some of these rough guys under control,’ but that was years away, and he hadn’t had time to work it out to such a concise explanation yet for the kind of work he wanted us to do. He hadn't set a trap for Big Chris Johns yet; using his own guns to prove he was a killer. He hadn't forged an alliance with Philip Tattaglia, Frankie's budding rival. Back then, we didn't know just what he was capable of. And we had no reason to suspect.

    "There have been a number of crimes we've had to keep out of the papers. Murders of poor immigrants, entire families being butchered." He began. "More and more every day. This detail is to investigate these crimes, to find these killers, and to find out who is behind them."

    And so I sat and listened as he gave these eighteen men the particulars: if they joined up, they’d be taking the fight to people the law usually didn't touch - who the law usually couldn't touch. Well, most of the men in that room recognised a few of the names, at least - we’d all heard of Jack, because Jack ‘The Enforcer’ Toletti had killed a man a few weeks ago - a fat bookie - and nobody had kept that out of the papers. Jack was a local boy, a powerhouse of a man who took pride in never needing a gun - his fists were enough - who as a young man had had dreams of making it in Hollywood. He gravitated to running dice games and sticking up joints around Cleveland and Chicago until he drew the attention of the old Capone mob, who’d put him to work, and once they’d found out that he could think as well as be the muscle they couldn’t get enough of him.

    And there were other ‘persons of interest’ who Gilks rattled off. Big Chris Johns, a London east-ender who quietly lorded over the money-lending business and related rackets, or Tommy Hagen, the playboy refugee from New York’s Murder, Inc, and Frankie Pentangeli. Most of the cops had never heard of Hagen, the man they were told ran the rackets in their city, or Frankie either, who Tom worked for.

    “You’ll be working with these,” Gilks continued, as he hoisted the Tommy gun and slid in its circular 50-round drum. The men who he'd invited all inspected the weapon, with the avid interest of a man who may be soon be entrusting his life to the object he is studying.

    The deal was: those who took the job would continue to be listed on the rosters of their old stations while operating out of two rusted old Fords. They would not make arrests. If someone had to be booked, they’d call in Homicide, Vice, or Robbery. They would also be available for other quiet jobs, as the Chief who’d put this whole thing together saw fit. It wasn’t all doom and gloom, they would have cash at their disposal, a Secret Service Fund to pay informants who might help them gather intelligence on the likes of those men. But they would have no office. They’d be meeting on street corners, in parking lots, and up in the hills. In effect, they would not exist.

    Gilks didn’t hang around for question time, he gave the eighteen men - and myself, by implication - a week to ponder his usual job offer and some advice from an old lieutenant at the 77th who said an assignment like that could get you in good with the chief, or even make you a hero.

    I looked around at the tough guys, and wondered how many of them would go for it. Then I sighed. “I’ll sleep on it.” I told him.
     
    Last edited: Jan 20, 2020
  3. Threadmarks: Great Detective 1 - 2.5
    ketch117

    ketch117 A wicked cricket critic's dinner napkin

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    SECOND YEAR - Part 1

    Facts do not exist, there are only interpretations.

    Facts do not exist, there are only interpretations. Friederich Nietzsche said that, and while we’ve got our differences he was on to something there, if you ask me. But I’m getting ahead of myself.

    Well, about a year ago, I’d told Bernie Gilks that I would sleep on it, but in the end I hadn’t done much sleeping. I’d driven back to my office, sat at my desk with the window open, and got to doing some serious thinking while I listened to the groundswell of traffic. It had been a slow and quiet day, but time doesn’t stop for anyone. Not really. If I strained my ears, I fancied I could hear the distant wail of sirens, the police or the fire department arriving to stamp out whatever trouble it was.

    Twenty four hours a day somebody is running, somebody else is trying to catch him. Out there in the night of a thousand crimes, people were dying, being maimed, cut by flying glass, crushed against steering wheels or under heavy tires. People were being beaten, robbed, strangled, raped, and murdered. People were hungry, sick; bored, desperate with loneliness or remorse or fear, angry, cruel, feverish, shaken by sobs. A city no worse than others, a city rich and vigorous and full of pride, a city lost and beaten and full of emptiness. It all depends on where you sit and what your own private score is.

    He was a cop, and with that came certain inescapable facts, but I wasn’t - I had a private licence, and that was all. And that meant I was possessed of certain freedoms. So there were a pack of serial killers running around - that wasn’t my problem, not unless I decided it was. Anyway, I wasn’t some kind of gumshoe - I had just fallen into the life of one somehow.

    That was as far as that speculation got me. Six hours later, well, I got my first look at just what they were keeping out of the papers. Two years later, that first impression was still bothering me. Not because of how terrible it had been - though it had seemed to be, at the time - I’d seen things far worse since, the sort of things that make it difficult to believe in common humanity and your own eyes, that made even a murder like that seem nothing more than the mischief of an unruly child. But it was because that was when I made up my mind - all the thinking had just been foreplay, just my brief flirtation with rationality. But I’m an emotional being, I needed a sharp shock to make me change lanes like Gilks had asked me to, and that murder, that had provided it.

    The unit had come around to me, when I made our first breakthrough. We’d managed to collect enough evidence to put Tommy Hagen through a trial that lasted six months and change, was broadcasted upon innumerable radio stations, spawned two dozen related books, and cost American taxpayers at least half a million dollars. That had been our first great success, and the unit had only been a week old. We’d thought they were all going to be that easy.

    In retrospect, what happened next was probably inevitable.

    It had been a week or so since our investigation had entered a new phase - A week since I’d shaken the rain from my hat and walked into the room, to find everything had changed, and decidedly for the worse. Nobody - none of the unit, had said a word, they stepped back politely and I could feel their eyes on me. A little light trickled in, but the curtains were drawn. It was eerily quiet.

    There were no pictures on the walls. A few big, squashy-looking couches and chairs of a dark burgundy colour. Pat motioned me over to him and pointed to the bedroom. “In there, Mitch,” he said. That was all the talking anyone had done since I’d arrived, and that was the last of it. He let me uncover the body and feel the cold face.

    “Where did he get it, Pat?” We’d been on first name terms for about six months by then - if he had a wife and kids, I would have met them by now. In the end, I wasn't the on'y one in the 'special unit' to have their doubts - all in all, it had been me and six uniforms - with Gilks in the background, giving us our marching orders.

    “Right in the guts. The killer carved the nose off a forty-five and gave it to him low.”

    Well, I threw back the sheet and felt gorge rise in my throat. Dom was in shorts, his hand still clutching his belly in agony. The bullet went in clean, but where it came out left a hole big enough to put a fist into. Very gently I pulled the sheet back and stood up. It wasn’t a complicated setup - you didn’t need to be a detective to figure out what had happened. A trail of blood led from the table beside the bed. Under him the throw rug was ruffled and twisted. He had tried to drag himself along the carpet, but never reached what he was after.

    His police positive, still in the holster, was looped over the back of the chair. That was what he wanted. With a slug in his gut he never gave up trying to get it either.

    Is God happy with the poisoned cat dying alone in convulsions in an alleyway? Is God happy that life is cruel and that only the fittest survive? The fittest for what? Dom was worth ten of the man who’d done this - whoever he was. No, if God were omnipotent and omniscient in any literal sense, he wouldn’t have bothered to make the universe at all. There is no success where there is no possibility of failure, no art without the resistance of the medium. Is it blasphemy to suggest that God has his bad days when nothing goes right, and that God’s days are very, very long?

    “What do we know?” I looked around the room. Dom had never invited me over - he was a private sort of guy, and anyway who’d want the likes of me skulking around their house?

    “You can see for yourself.” Pat replied. “Not a burglary, that’s for sure. Nothing’s missing.”

    “Nothing’s missing, but a few things aren’t right.” I pointed to the chair, still overbalanced under the weight of the .38. “Did you move that, Pat?”

    “Nobodies touched a thing. Anyone who did would have to answer to me.”

    “Well, someone moved the chair.”

    Pat looked puzzled. “So someone moved the chair. So what?”

    I stood up. “After the killer shot Dom, he pulled himself toward the chair. But the killer didn’t leave after the shooting. He stood here and watched him grovel on the floor in agony. Dom was after that gun, but he never reached it. He could have it the killer didn’t move it. No, this bastard stood by the door laughing while Dom tried to make his last play. He watched him bleed. He watched him suffer. And he kept pulling the chair back, inch by inch, until Dom gave up. This was no ordinary murder, Pat. This is as cold-blooded and as deliberate as I ever saw one.”

    “Christ.” Well, that just about summed up my feelings too, Pat old mate.

    That was a week ago. It’d been in the newspapers, of course - you’d better believe that a home invasion ending with a cop gets one in the gut makes the newspapers - while the rest of the special unit tried to figure out what happened now. We’d done some good work, but the biggest fish we’d managed to catch was Hagen, and they were fighting back. Just ask Dom.

    Perhaps it was something perverse in Gilks, that made him seem almost gratified by the news. “He was onto something. Find out what.” He'd told me.

    And so, that's what I'd been doing for the past week.

    On an early evening when there is nothing much doing anywhere else, I was known to take it upon myself to go around to Good Time Charley's little speakeasy in West Forty-seventh Street, which he used to call the ‘Blind Tiger’ (although I don’t know why, because it was a simple fact that nobody else would call it anything except ‘the little speakeasy in West Forty-seventh Street’). Nobody would call him anything save Good Time Charley either, although at least in that particular case there weren’t other options suggesting themselves. Even I never learned his real name - he never told me, though in all truth names make no difference to me, never have, and they certainly hadn’t back on Broadway, because the chances were good that no matter what name a guy happened to be know by investigation will determine that it is not his square name.

    Back then I was always meeting people with descriptive names, names like ‘Razor Eddie’ and ‘Nick the Greek’, one more or less didn’t mean a thing to me. So, as far as I am concerned, and most of Broadway too for that matter, Good Time Charley was the name for him - as good as any other. And better than most; Good Time Charley always was a good fellow, a great sport and a friend of everybody’s, he came from the Far East after the war with the plan of making his fortune in the West. A lot of people had that plan, and it must have been working out for a few of them because fortunes were being made in the West all the time, but that never happened to Good Time Charlie, which was a shame since you never met a harder working man.

    Unfortunately, he hadn't the knack for it. Making a fortune, I mean. He had once, not so long before the story begins, been possessed of a much livelier spot in Forty-eighth Street which he used to call the Crystal Room, and it had used to be a very pleasant place to go to, what with Good-Time Charley having a good big band to go with a floor show with a bevy of beautiful and talented dancers who weren’t afraid to try new things, and everything else a man could wish for a good time. Everybody used to visit every now and then to give Good-Time Charley a friendly play, though very few people cared to do any drinking there, because his liquor was not meant for anybody to drink except the customers.

    But good things come to an end, and about a year before this story a bunch of G-guys had stepped into the joint on a dark night and busted it wide open, confiscating all of Charley's stock of merchandise while they were at it. It seemed that these G-guys were - and probably still are - members of a squad which came on from Washington, and being strangers in the city they weren’t to know that Good Time Charley's joint was not supposed to be busted up, so they went right ahead and busted it up, just the same as if it were any other joint.

    Well, this action caused a great deal of indignation and controversy in many quarters, and a lot of citizens took it on themselves to advise Charley to see somebody about it. But Charley did no such thing, he was a born gentleman in nature if not breeding, as well as being a good sport, and when placed in adversity he rose to the occasion. In fact, he was likely to say that if this was the way the government is going to treat him after the fact that he still walked with a limp after his time in France, why, all right. But he was not going to holler copper about it, although Charley would have added that he had his own opinion of Mr. Hoover, at that.

    Personally, I greatly admired Charley for taking the disaster so calmly and his commendable fortitude in the eye of disaster - particularly since Charley was a great hand for playing the horses with whatever dough that he made out of old place, and had a knack for picking losers. What was worse, in this particular season the guys who play the horses were being murdered by the bookies all over the country, and most hadn’t Charley’s character in adversity, so were in terrible distress.

    Now, in those days Charley mopped his own floors to save money, had his daughter help out waitressing, and didn’t have a stage to put a band on even if one cared to play at a dive like his little speakeasy on West Forty-Seventh Street - instead, a Glen Miller record gave the place what ambience it had. He had managed to find a band once, but the result was a bit too self-consciously bohemian for my taste, and Charley’s as well - too many folks had started hanging around with artist written all over them, and we’d all stopped coming until they did as well.

    When I arrived it was a slow evening and there were few customers in the place. Charley had lent a tolerant ear to my late-night grousings on more occasions than I cared to remember, so nobody looked surprised to see me. He was a big fellow in perpetual need of a shave, with hairy forearms. He wore suspenders, held a cigar in his jaw at all times (though he never lit it), and when the place wasn’t busy (which was most of the time), he had a way of standing with his hands spread on the counter and his big square head lowered, gazing out through the open doorway into the street with a far-off look in his eye, as if he were remembering a long-lost love or a fight one time that he won. He didn’t say much. He was either a bit dumb, or very wise, I could never decide which. Either way, I liked him - but so did everybody.

    Charley, not being an overly familiar sort, had given me the barest nod when I came in despite our history. I wondered if he knew my name. Probably not. He knew what I did for a living, at least, though I didn’t remember him ever mentioning it. Honestly, I was just glad to be working.

    I took my drink with a nod, and acted like it was just another Saturday night. A customer was signalling from the far end of the bar, and Charley went off to serve him. I sat and thought about this and that.

    For instance, why was the first sip of beer always so much better than the second? That was the kind of philosophical speculation I was prone to, hence my reputation as the thinking man’s detective. I thought a bit about the man I was supposed to be meeting as well, but not too much. He wasn’t here, but the drinks was. Maybe the temperature was the answer. It wasn’t that the second sip was going to be all that much warmer than the first, but that the mouth, having had the the first cool rinse, knew what to expect the second time around and adjusted accordingly so the element of surprise was absent, with a consequent falling off in the pleasure principle.

    The customer Charley was with was taking his time. He was a middle-aged guy with a broken nose. I know just about everybody - it pays in my line of work to know the answers ahead of time, and recognised him right away - Mickey Kalecki. In the roaring twenties he was a bootlegger. He came out of the crash with a million dollars, paid up his income tax, and went society. He fooled a lot of people but he didn’t fool me, even then, over a decade before J. Edgar Hoover’s FBI acknowledged the existence of the mafia.

    He was a person of interest, but not to me. Anyway, I was still busy speculating upon one of the great mysteries of the universe. Hmmm. Well, it seemed a reasonable explanation, but was it sufficiently comprehensive to satisfy the magnitude of the question? Then Charley came over and I was able to take off my thinking cap.

    “Hey, Good Time Charley? What sort of drink you got that ain’t too strong?”

    Without turning his eyes, Charley replied. “Half a drink.” Charley never said more than he had to - if that. He aspired to laconic, saw himself as a regular Broadway Gary Cooper. I slapped half a buck into his open palm, and he poured me a second, since the first had gone over so well.

    I’d just about made ready to get started, when a man entered. He was tall, he was lean. Black suit, black hair. His skin was pale and he needed a shave. He would always need a shave. He had curly hair and heavy eyebrows that almost met over his thick nose. And he had a gnarly-looking glass eye. He tugged on his cuffs a little bit, squinted around him for a few moments, looking everywhere but at me. Then he walked into the room, and made himself comfortable out of the way - unless you wanted to leave, for some reason. Then you’d have to walk right up to him. The eye which was made of glass wasn’t pointing in the same direction as the other one. But his good eye was on me, and not going anywhere else. Or maybe it wasn't. Honestly, I couldn’t tell which eye is the real one - some detective I turned out to be.

    His boss followed him in a moment later. I recognised him right away - there was no mistaking him. Everyone else in the joint were pausing to stare at him with a sort of ecstatic fixity of expression, like gormless immigrants catching their first sight of the Statue of Liberty. He was well worth looking at, dressed in one of those spiffy Italian suits that his cousin Enzo tailored for him - the pinstripes glinted and flexed like sinews, and the pocket square was luminous. His hair was perfect too, each strand cut off straight and square at the end by another cousin, Art the Barber, who ran a little place in the decidedly poor end of town. His eyes sweep the place, not exactly smiling but with a decidedly avuncular glint in his crinkly old-guy eyes. He exuded authority. I had the sense that if he moved to the window the centre of gravity might shift and the whole room might tilt everyone into the garden. Seemingly satisfied, he crossed the room to talk to Good Time Charley - as was only fitting, it being his place.

    "Get me a scorch, neat. Single malt, if you have it." He told Charley, then looked around the joint and assessed it as the kind of place that wouldn't have a single malt. Most bars those days did not. The Scots had to suspend distilling it during the Great War, and it's not a quick process.

    “Can’t help you out there. I got American.” Charley told him, confirming his expectations.

    “Taste anything like it?”

    Charley flexed his muscleman’s shoulders in a shrug. Top-shelf alcohol wasn’t really his thing. He was wearing a tight black sweatshirt, out of which his thick short neck stuck up like a fireplug.

    “Fair enough.” The don conceded, and Charley poured his drink.

    “You want one?” He asked me.

    “I’m working on this beer.” I replied.

    He raised an eyebrow. “You don’t look much like a cop.”

    “That’s not surprising.”

    “Smart guy, eh?” A muscle twitched at the corner of his lip. “I’ll cut to the chase. We know this guy.”

    “Which one do you mean?”

    “The one who killed that couple in 37th last night - and their little girl. Stabbed her to death, three in the belly. Very messy. And the travelling salesman who he murdered a week before that, slit his throat in his own car.” He paused a moment.

    I hadn’t known those two murders had been the same guys work - lately, the opposite was proving true more often or not - there were more maniacs running around than we knew how to count, but like hell was I going to admit that to Don Changretta. “Well, why don’t you tell me all about him?”

    The don took a drink of the whiskey. “Don't rush me - you and me, what got a few things to go over first. Now sometimes, men like you and me, we’re not on the same side. I get that. Fine, that’s the way of the world. But this? No. Fuck that. Some things don’t stand. And there’s been too much of that sort of thing lately. Bad for business.” Business. That was the word he used. He said it as though it was just a job, the way that he made a living on human misery and suffering, peddling in drugs and flesh and stolen goods. Oh, he took steps to minimize that suffering because he was sentimental when it didn't run counter, but after a year on the 'special detail' I could consider myself entirely dispelled in regards to romantic notions about 'neighbourhood friendly gangsters'.

    I wanted to roll my eyes. Instead I managed to look him in his. “What do you know about it?”

    By way of reply, the don slid a little paper with a photograph across the bar. I was reluctant, but I took it.

    “Fits the description, right? My people know him. He’s not with us. Amphetamine freak. Bragged about it, said, well…”

    “You’re very well informed.”

    “Of course I am.” He drummed his fingers on the tabletop, perhaps sensing my reluctance. He was a difficult man to read, even then. “This is only information. I’m sharing it with you - it seems the sort of thing you would wish to know. Or am I mistaken?”

    I nodded, a little reluctantly. "Who put him up to it?"

    "You're the detective. Perhaps you'll put it together." He replied dismissively. “This needs to get done. And now it’s done.”

    “Thank you." I was able to tell him grudgingly. I won't say it didn't cost me. "What do you want from me?”

    “What do I want?” As if the question had taken him by surprise.

    “Yeah.”

    “Not a thing. Not like you’re a cop anyway - even if they do have you running your errands. It’s a nice place for a drink, though - and Good Time Charley looks like he could use the patronage. Might be you’ll see me here again, one night or another. Maybe we’ll talk sometime. Maybe not.”

    I finished my drink, and got up to leave. The Don got to his feet with that old world politeness a little ruined by the fact that I knew that his gentlemanly manners were just his way of restraining his real nature - a cold-blooded gangster, and made for the door. “Be seeing you, Mitch.”

    I had to walk past his man to get out onto the street, which wasn't an experience I cared for, and I made my way across the deserted boulevard. The streetlights floated above in their vaporous auras like lost spirits, never reaching the pavement. The shops on Grant Avenue - groceries, souvenir stands, restaurants, butchers - were all dark except for the odd stripe of neon cutting the night here and there: closed; massage; a COCA-COLA sign; a happy glowing dragon holding a bowl of chop suey - though that was actually an opium den.

    Jimmy is a kid, and looks like one - growing up without a father like so many. He’s industrious - he’ll shine your shoes, if you ask, he does odd jobs here and there if anyone thinks to ask him, and he’s clever, too, though not clever enough not to mouth off if you give him a chance. He supplements his income writing punch little pieces about Broadway for the Morning Item. He writes about the goings-on in night clubs, such as fights, and one thing and another, and also about who is running around with who, including guys and dolls.

    Sometimes this is very embarrassing to people who may be married and are running around with people who are not married - at least to them - but of course Jimmy cannot be expected to ask one and all for their marriage certificates before he writes his pieces for the paper. He’s just the shoe-shiner.

    “Recognise this guy?”

    “Hey, Mitch. Looks like my scene, doesn’t it?” That was Jimmy, for you. He could take everything in his stride.

    "That's what I was hoping you'd say, Jimmy."

    "What'd you say his name was, again?"

    "I didn't. His name is Rufus Sedgewick." An unassuming name for a serial killer. But, as I was to learn, that was the least surprising thing about Rufus.
     
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