David Goodis: Five Noir Novels of the 1940s and '50s (Library of America) (62 page)

BOOK: David Goodis: Five Noir Novels of the 1940s and '50s (Library of America)
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He wanted to run down there and beg them to stop it. It was a silly notion and he smiled bitterly, knowing how silly it was. They called that area the Hellhole, and for more than one good reason. Along Skid Row the uninformed were firmly advised, “
Don’t walk too far south on River Street. Stay away from the Hellhole.” In the past month it was more than just a matter of avoiding getting mugged or slugged or dragged into an alley. It was the idea of keeping away from the cobblestone battlefield where the combat was on an all-out basis. They were fighting with the white-hot fury that men display when they forget that they are men. In the Hellhole, these nights, they were having race riots.

Phillips had no idea how it had started. He knew that no one was sure about that. He remembered that around a year ago some Puerto Ricans had moved into the tenements down there and then more had come. And some more. And then they were saying there were too many Puerto Ricans moving in. The talk went on for a while but it was just talk and gradually it died down. Then all at once, five weeks ago, there was a riot. A few nights later there was another riot. Some people were hurt but there was no serious damage and for a week things were quiet and it looked as though the trouble had ended. But then they rioted again and it was mean ugly fighting and three men died. In the fourth riot there were two dead and one blinded with lye and several taken to the hospital, badly cut up. Tonight was the seventh riot and Phillips wasn’t sure how many had died altogether but he knew the number was considerable. He told himself it was very bad and getting worse and he wondered how it would end. Or whether it would ever end.

He told himself to stop thinking about it. After all, it was a matter of geography and this was Skid Row and the Hellhole was three blocks away. He was here on Skid Row and the Hellhole was a million miles away. And so was yesterday, and so were all the memories of the little mining town.

The thing to do was play it Whitey’s way and not let it touch him, let nothing touch him. He turned his head and looked at Whitey, knowing that Whitey’s eyes would be aimed at the empty bottle and the only thought in Whitey’s brain would be the need for another drink.

But Whitey wasn’t looking at the bottle. Whitey sat there sort of stiffly, his mouth halfway open. He was staring at something on the other side of the street.

2

P
HILLIPS FROWNED
slightly. He studied the look of rapt attention on Whitey’s face. Then he looked across the street to see what Whitey was staring at. He didn’t see anything unusual over there. It was just some Tenderloin scufflers coming out of a hash house and a man walking south on River Street and a woman walking north. The woman was nothing to look at. She was fat and shapeless and walked with the exaggerated wiggle of a very lonely female hoping for company.

Bones was saying, “We gotta find a way to get a drink. That’s all it amounts to. We just gotta get a drink.”

“That’s right,” Whitey said. But he didn’t seem to realize he was saying it. The words came out mechanically. He sat there stiffly and went on staring at something on the other side of the street.

“What is it?” Phillips asked. “What’re you looking at?”

Whitey didn’t answer.

“The woman?” Phillips asked. “You looking at the woman?”

Whitey shook his head very slowly. Then, more slowly, he started to get up from the pavement. He was almost on his feet when he changed his mind and sat down again. He shrugged and turned his head and looked at the empty bottle. He grinned at the bottle as though it were telling him something funny. He spoke to the bottle, saying, “All right, I’ll try it.”

“Try what?” Phillips said.

“I’ll try it and see what happens,” Whitey said to the bottle. The grin on his face was vague and it went along with the dragging whisper coming from his lips.

“What is this?” Phillips said. He touched Whitey’s shoulder. “What’s wrong with you?”

Whitey didn’t seem to hear. He went on grinning at the bottle and he said, “Sure, I might as well try it.”

Then it was quiet and Phillips and Bones looked at each other. Bones shrugged as though to say there was no way to figure Whitey, and no use asking him what was on his mind.

Whitey stood up again. He put his hands in the pockets of his
ragged overcoat and hunched his shoulders against the wind coming from the river. He approached the curb and then stopped to pick up a cigarette stub. The cigarette was less than half smoked and he started to put it in his pocket, then tossed the stub to Bones.

Bones reached inside his coat and found a safety match and lit the cigarette. He took a long drag and handed the cigarette to Phillips. They sat there on the pavement sharing the cigarette and watching Whitey as he crossed the street. They were waiting to see what he would do when he was on the other side. He looked very small and shabby as he crossed River Street and it didn’t seem to matter who he was or where he was going or what he intended to do. But they watched him as though it were very important that they pay careful attention. They had the unaccountable feeling that he was something special to watch.

They saw him arriving on the other side of the street. On the sidewalk he stopped for a moment to pull up the collar of his overcoat. Then again his hands were in his pockets and he was walking. He was walking slowly, his white hair wind-blown, his legs moving off stride as he went along River Street in a sort of lazy shuffle.

“South,” Phillips murmured. “He’s headed south.”

“That’s going toward the Hellhole.”

“No,” Phillips said. “He wouldn’t go there.”

“Well, where’s he going?”

Phillips didn’t reply. He squinted through the glare of the Skid Row lights, watching the small white-haired figure going south on River and coming to the end of the block and still going south.

“He’s damn sure going toward the Hellhole,” Bones said.

Phillips took the cigarette from Bones’s mouth and put it in his own. He sipped the smoke through his teeth and it came out slowly through his nose. He didn’t taste it going in or feel it coming out. He listened for the sounds of street fighting from the Hellhole but now there was no sound down there. Only the darkness.

Something was shining far down there in the darkness and it was the white hair of the small man walking south on River Street.


We oughta go after him,” Bones said.

Phillips nodded slowly.

“Let’s go,” Bones said.

But neither of them moved. They sat there on the cold pavement with their backs against the wall of the flophouse. They watched the thatch of white hair getting smaller and smaller and finally it vanished altogether. They looked at each other and for some moments they didn’t say anything.

Then Bones stared glumly at the empty bottle and said, “We need a drink. How we gonna get a drink?”

Whitey was on the east side of River Street three blocks away from Skid Row. He was walking very slowly and every now and then he stepped into a doorway and stayed there a few moments. Once he crossed to the west side of River and stood beside an empty ash can, bent over it as though he were rummaging for something in the trash. But he wasn’t looking inside the can. His head was turned slightly from the can and his eyes were focused on the man moving south on River.

It was the man he had seen walking past the hash house. The man was very short, around five-four, and extremely wide. The man’s arms were unusually long, and came down past his knees. He moved somewhat like a chimpanzee, his head jutting forward and down, his arms swinging in unison as he went along in a bowlegged stride. He wore a bright-green cap and a black-and-purple plaid lumber jacket. He was walking without haste but with a certain deliberateness, his hard-heeled shoes making emphatic sounds on the sidewalk.

There was no other sound. There were no other people on the street. In the tenements the windows were dark. There were countless mongrels and alley cats and sewer rats in this area but none were visible now. It seemed that all living things were hiding from each other. The silence in the Hellhole was colder than the wind slicing in from the river.

On the pavement and in the gutter there were certain souvenirs of what had happened here tonight. There were broken bottles and the splintered handles of baseball bats and a lot of red stains, still wet. There was the cracked pane of a store window and the smashed front door of a tenement, the door leaning far out on its hinges. There were strips of torn clothing and
someone’s hat ripped across the crown and wet red smears on it.

Whitey saw all of that but it had no effect on him, it had no place in his thoughts. He wasn’t conscious of the fact that he was down here in the Hellhole. His full attention was centered on the man in front of him.

He saw the man turning off River to go east on a narrow side street. He quickened his pace just a little, came onto the side street, and saw the man stopped near a dimly lit lamppost, looking toward an alleyway. The man made a move toward the alleyway, then stopped again. The man stood there as though trying to make up his mind whether to enter the alley. Some moments passed and then the man shrugged and continued on.

Whitey had ducked into a doorway and now he came out and resumed following the man. His pace was slackened again and he stayed close to the tenement walls, ready to use another doorway in case the man turned for a look. As he approached the lamppost he heard something that made him glance toward the alleyway. It was a quick glance and he couldn’t see it distinctly and he kept on walking. He told himself to forget about the alleyway and what was happening there. Whatever it was, it had no connection with the man he was following. But then he heard it again and it seemed to reach inside him and beg him to stop.

He stopped. He listened to the sound coming from the alleyway. It was a gurgling, rattling noise. And then the faint voice saying, “Please. Please. Help me.”

Whitey turned and walked quickly to the alleyway. He entered the alley and the glow from the lamppost showed him the brass buttons and the blue uniform. The policeman was sitting in the alley, his head down very low. His cap was off and his hair was mussed and the top of his head was all bloody.

The policeman looked up and saw Whitey and said, “Get an ambulance.”

“I’ll hafta phone.”

“Use a call box. Call the station house. Ask for the Thirty-seventh District.”

“Where’s the nearest call box?”

The policeman opened his mouth to reply. The sound that came out was more gurgling and rattling. His head went down again
and then he was falling over on his side. Whitey caught hold of him.

“The call box,” Whitey said. “Tell me where it is.”

The policeman gurgled very low in his throat.

“Tell me,” Whitey said. “Try to tell me.”

“It’s on—” But the policeman couldn’t take it further than that. His head was leaning against Whitey’s chest and his hands clutched at Whitey’s arms. Now he made no sound at all and his full weight was on Whitey. As Whitey knelt there holding him to keep him from falling, there was the sound of an auto and then the beam of a searchlight. Whitey turned his head and blinked in the glare of the light shooting into his face. He blinked again and saw the black-and-orange police car parked out there. The door opened and he saw the policemen getting out and running toward him.

They were young policemen and their faces were expressionless. One of them was grabbing for a revolver and having trouble pulling it from the holster. The other policeman grabbed Whitey’s shoulder, couldn’t get a good grip on the shoulder, and decided to hook his fingers around the back of Whitey’s neck.

“Let go,” Whitey said. “I’m not running.”

“You telling me?” the policeman said. He tightened his hold on Whitey’s neck.

“That hurts,” Whitey said.

“Shut up.” The policeman pulled Whitey to his feet. The other policeman had managed to get the revolver from the holster and was now trying to put it back in. Finally he got it in and then he knelt beside the injured policeman, who was now face down in the alley. He rolled the man over on his side and looked at the face. The eyes were half open and the mouth sagged at the corners. The color of the face was gray with streams of red running down the cheeks and dripping from the lips.

“It’s Gannon.”

“Bad?”

“Dead.”

The policeman stood up. He looked down at the body and then he looked at Whitey.

3

T
HE STATION
house of the Thirty-seventh District was on Clayton Street, six blocks west of the river and four blocks west of the Hellhole. It was a one-story brick structure that had been built some thirty years ago. At both sides of the front entrance there were frosted-glass lamps. In the glare of the lamplight Whitey stood between the two policemen. He was handcuffed but they weren’t taking any chances with him. They were very young policemen and new to the force and this arrest was very important to them. One of them gripped Whitey’s arm and the other had hold of his trousers. He looked very small standing there between the two tall policemen.

The entrance doors were wide open and Whitey could see it was very crowded in the station house. It was a noisy assemblage and some of them were shouting in Spanish. He saw a Puerto Rican woman pull away from the grip of a policeman and lunge at a yellow-haired man and her fingernails ripped the man’s face. The man stepped back and hauled off and punched her in the breast. Three Puerto Rican men started toward the yellow-haired man and several policemen moved in and for some moments there was considerable activity. One of the Puerto Ricans was completely out of control and Whitey saw the worried looks on the faces of the policemen as they tried to handle him. They couldn’t handle him and two of them were knocked down. Then a very large man wearing the uniform of a police captain came walking toward the Puerto Rican and grabbed his wrist and then very quickly and precisely lifted him in a wrestler’s crotch hold, lifted him high in the air, held him there for a long moment, then hurled him to the floor. There was a very loud thud and the Puerto Rican stayed there on the floor, face down and not moving. Another Puerto Rican shouted something and the Captain walked over to him and shot a fist into his mouth. The American-born prisoners shouted encouragement to the Captain and one of them was grinning and aiming a kick at the Puerto Rican who’d been hit in the mouth. The Captain took hold of the American and put a short
left hook in his midsection, chopped a right to his head, then hooked him again to send him flying against the wall, and when he bounced away from the wall the Captain hit him once more to put him on the floor on his knees.

“Next?” the Captain said very quietly, looking around at the Puerto Ricans and the Americans. “Who’s next?”

“You can’t do this,” one of the Americans said.

“Can’t I?” The Captain moved slowly toward the American, who had a black eye and a cut on his face.

“All right, hit me,” the American said. He pointed to his damaged face. “As if I ain’t hurt enough. Go ahead and hurt me some more.”

“Sure,” the Captain said. “Sure, I’ll be glad to.” He said it sort of sadly, somewhat like a doctor telling a patient it was necessary to operate. Then quickly and neatly he threw a combination of punches and the American went down and rolled over and began to moan.

The Captain looked at the other Americans and the Puerto Ricans. “You want riots?” the Captain said. “I’ll give you riots. I’ll give you all you want.”

“We want to be left alone,” a Puerto Rican said in accented English. He pointed to the Americans. “They won’t leave us alone.”

“You’re a goddamn liar,” an American said. “You bastards started it. You started it and we’re gonna finish it.”

“No,” the Captain said. “I’ll finish it.”

“I wish you would,” the American said. He had a swollen jaw and under his nose there was dried blood. His face was pale and he was breathing hard. As he spoke to the Captain he stared at the Puerto Ricans and his eyes glittered. “I wish you’d use a machine gun. Mow them down. Dump them in the river.”

“Shut your mouth,” the Captain said.

“Dirty no-good spics,” the American said. He breathed harder. “They’re no good, I tell you. They’re lousy in their hearts, every last one of them.”

“You gonna shut up?” the Captain said.

“They’re filthy. Filthy.”

“And you?” said the Puerto Rican who had spoken. “You’re not filthy?”

“We’re Americans,” the American said, his voice cracking with the strain of holding himself back from leaping at the Puerto R
ican. “We were here before you.”

“Yes,” the Puerto Rican said. “And so were the sewer rats.”

The Captain stood there between them. He looked from one to the other. His big hands were clenched and his big body bulged with power. But now he couldn’t move. He couldn’t open his mouth to say anything. He stood there in the middle and his eyes were dull and had the helpless look of someone caught in the jaws of a slowly closing trap.

The American went on shouting at the Puerto Rican and finally the Captain growled very low in his throat, reached out, and grabbed the American’s hand by the fingers, twisting the fingers to bend them back from the knuckles.

“I told you to shut up,” the Captain said. He went on twisting the man’s fingers. The man’s knees were bent and he was halfway to the floor, his eyes shut tightly. The Captain growled again and said, “You’ll shut up if I hafta rip your tongue outta your mouth.”

Then it was quiet in there and Whitey saw the Captain releasing the man’s hand and walking back to the big high desk at the far side of the room. The Captain called out someone’s name and a policeman took hold of a man’s arm and brought him toward the desk. At that moment a man wearing a gray overcoat came out of a side room and crossed the floor to the front door, coming outside to face the two policemen who held Whitey.

“What are you standing here for?” the plain-clothes man said. “Why don’t you take him inside?”

“We were waiting, Lieutenant.”

“Waiting for what?”

“For things to quiet down in there.”

The plain-clothes man smiled dimly. “That’s good thinking, Bolton. That’s the kind of thinking gets promotions.”

“I don’t know what you mean, Lieutenant.”

“I mean your timing. You were timing it just right. Waiting until it was quiet and you’d have the Captain’s undivided attention. Then make the grand entrance. Come in with the murderer.”

The policemen didn’t say anything. They knew he was having fun with them. This one had a habit of having fun with everyone.
Usually they didn’t mind and they kidded him back. But now it was an important arrest, it was a homicide and the victim was a policeman. Certainly it was no time for the Lieutenant to be having fun.

The Lieutenant stood there smiling at them. He hadn’t yet looked at Whitey. He was waiting for the policemen to say something. Behind him, inside the station house, another commotion had started, but he didn’t turn to see what was happening in there.

Finally one of the policemen said, “We weren’t timing it, Lieutenant. Only timing we did was according to the book. Used the radio and made the report. Waited there for the wagon to come and get the body. The wagon came and got it and now we’re taking this man in. I don’t see why we’re getting criticized.”

“You’re not getting criticized,” the Lieutenant said. His tone was mild and friendly and only slightly sarcastic as he went on: “I think you’ve done very nicely, Bolton. You too, Woodling.”

The two policemen glanced at each other. They could feel the sarcasm and they wondered how to handle it.

The Lieutenant put his hands in the pockets of his overcoat and leaned back just a little on his heels. He said, “I’m sure you’ll get a commendation from the Captain. He’s gonna be very pleased with this arrest. It’ll come as a pleasant surprise.”

“Surprise?” Patrolman Bolton said. “I don’t get that. Ain’t he been told about the murder?”

“Not yet,” the Lieutenant said.

“Why not?” Bolton was frowning. “We sent in the report thirty minutes ago.”

The Lieutenant glanced at his wrist watch. “Twenty minutes,” he corrected. Then he flipped his thumb backward to indicate the noisy action inside the station house. “The Captain’s been very busy these past twenty minutes. I figured it was best not to bother him.”

“Bother him?” Bolton came near shouting it. “For Christ’s sake, Lieutenant—”

And Woodling was chiming in, “Listen, Lieutenant, this is serious.”

The Lieutenant nodded very slowly and seriously. “I know,” he said. And then for the first time he looked at Whitey. He gave a
little sigh and said to Whitey, “You sure picked a fine time to do it.”

“I didn’t do it,” Whitey said.

“Of course not,” the Lieutenant said conversationally. Then he shifted his attention to the two policemen. “We’ll have to wait a while before we tell the Captain.” Again he glanced at his wrist watch and at the same moment his head was slightly turned, he seemed to be measuring the noise from inside the station house. He said, “I think we’ll have to wait at least fifteen minutes.”

“But why?” Bolton demanded.

The Lieutenant spoke slowly and patiently. “I’ll tell you why. When a man has diarrhea you don’t give him a laxative. You give him a chance to quiet down.”

“But this—” Woodling started.

“Is dynamite,” the Lieutenant finished for him. And then, not looking at anything in particular, sort of murmuring aloud to himself, “If I had my way, I wouldn’t tell the Captain at all. He’d never get to hear about it. I think when he hears about it he’s gonna get sick. Real sick. I only hope he don’t burst a blood vessel.”

The two policemen looked at their prisoner. Then they looked at each other. They didn’t say anything.

The Lieutenant went on talking aloud to himself. “As if things haven’t been bad enough. Getting worse all the time. And now we got this.”

“Well,” Woodling said, tightening his hold on Whitey’s arm, “at least we got the man who did it.”

The Lieutenant gave Woodling an older-brother look of fondness and gentle schooling. “You don’t get the point. You’re thinking too much in terms of the arrest. Try to forget the arrest. Think about the Captain.”

The two policemen stood there frowning and blinking.

“The Captain,” the Lieutenant said. He leaned toward them. He took his hands from his pockets and put them behind his back. “You get the drift of what I’m talking about?”

They went on frowning puzzledly.

“Listen,” the Lieutenant said. “Listen to me. And it’s very important that you listen carefully.” He took a deep breath, and
then his lips tightened and the words came out sort of hissing, like sound pumped from a hose. “From here on in,” he said, “you’ll be playing with a firecracker. Whatever you say to the Captain, think twice before you say it. And whatever you do, make sure it’s not a mistake. He’s in no condition to see you making mistakes, not even tiny ones. I’m telling you this so you’ll remember it, and I want you to pass the word around.”

Bolton blinked again. “Are things that bad?”

“Worse than bad,” the Lieutenant said. He was about to say more when Woodling made a warning gesture, indicating that they shouldn’t discuss this topic in front of the prisoner. For a moment the Lieutenant hesitated. Then he looked at the ragged little Skid Row bum, the white-haired blank-eyed nothing who stood there wearing handcuffs. He decided there were just three men present and he could go on with what he was saying.

He said, “This situation in the Hellhole. These riots. It’s got out of control. Two nights ago I’m with the Captain when he gets a phone call from the Hall. The Commissioner. Wanted to know if we needed help. Said he was ready to send reinforcements. Add twenty men to this district, give us seven more cars. You know what that was? That was a slap in the teeth. That was the Commissioner telling the Captain to clean up the floor or give up the mop. In a nice way, of course. Very polite and friendly and all that.”

Bolton spoke in a low murmur. “What did the Captain say?”

“He told the Commissioner to leave him alone. He said he didn’t need reinforcements, he could do this job without help from the Hall, and all he wanted was a promise that they wouldn’t interfere. He said he’d been in charge of this district for nine years and he’d always been able to hold the wheel and if they’d only leave him alone he’d go on holding it.

“Now mind you,” the Lieutenant went on, “that was only two nights ago. So what happens tonight? Another riot in the Hellhole, the worst yet. And something else. Something I knew was bound to happen sooner or later. We lose an officer.”

It was quiet for some moments. Then both policemen turned their heads very slowly and they were looking down at the
small white-haired man who stood between them. And Woodling said quietly to the prisoner, “You bastard, you. You miserable bastard.”

Bolton jerked his head frontward as though he couldn’t bear to look at the prisoner. He swallowed hard. “But—” he started, then blurted, “But my God, they can’t blame the Captain for this.”

“They will,” the Lieutenant said.

“No.” Bolton’s voice was strained. “No. That ain’t fair.”

The Lieutenant shrugged. Then his face relaxed and the seriousness went out of his eyes. He was himself again and his voice went back to the easy, friendly, mildly sarcastic murmur. “Don’t let it give you ulcers,” he told the two youthful policemen. “You’re too young to get ulcers.”

“But this.” Woodling spoke through his teeth, his thumb flicking to indicate the prisoner. “Who tells the Captain about this?”

“I’ll tell him,” the Lieutenant said. “I’ll figure a way to break it to him.” He bit his lip thoughtfully. “Tell you what. I’ll take this man in through the side door. I wanna ask him some questions. Meantime, you go outside and wait.”

The policemen released their holds on Whitey and entered the station house. The Lieutenant looked at Whitey and said, “All right, come with me.”

They walked down the steps and around the side of the station house. The Lieutenant had his hands in his overcoat pockets and moved along with his head down, his lips slightly pursed to whistle a tune in a minor key. It was a song from many years ago and he couldn’t remember past the first few bars. He tried it a few times and couldn’t get it. Whitey picked it up and hummed the rest of it. The Lieutenant glanced at Whitey and said, “Yeah, that’s it. Pretty number.”

“Yeah,” Whitey said.

“What?”

“I said yeah.”

“Can’t you talk louder?”

Whitey shook his head.

BOOK: David Goodis: Five Noir Novels of the 1940s and '50s (Library of America)
8.8Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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