Operation Underworld (33 page)

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Authors: Paddy Kelly

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BOOK: Operation Underworld
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“Are you suggesting that we’re helping usher in this new super crime wave you foresee?”

“No, not suggesting it at all. I’m saying it outright! What the hell do you think is going on up at Great Meadows? You think for a New-York-City-second those bums give two shits about you and your top secret operation? Those bastards have forgotten more about working both sides of the fence than you and I will ever know!” He sat back to take a breath, then continued the lecture. Haffenden was enamoured with Polakoff’s passion.

“They’re not interested in helpin’ you unless it’s helpin’ them. They’re consolidating the Unione to strengthen and regain the control they lost when Lucky went up the river.” Haffenden was no dunce, certainly he had thought about this angle of the operation. He just didn’t think it was so obvious to those on the fringe.

“And as long as school’s out, Satch, let me ask you this. You think there’s not gonna be a public outcry when the truth comes out about this operation? Heads will roll! The first schmoe to stumble down the path who thinks it’s politically expedient to expose anyone involved in your little spy ring, will be singin’ like Bing Crosby at a War Bonds concert! And he won’t give a rat’s ass about the nation’s best interest, whether it’s now or after the war. Lucky knows it’ll be your side to leak the news, and that means anybody with anything on him will be in trouble.” Both of the men sat quietly for a moment. Polakoff was embarrassed he had cursed so much. “That’s why I’m against this shit.”

Haffenden sat in silence, considering his defeat. He needed final confirmation. “I hate to pose the question, Moses. But I have no choice. Does this mean you’re not going to help us?” Haffenden became conscious that his hand rested on the envelope and quietly let it slide off. He took a deep breath. A blank look came over his face and he stared out of the window.

“Do you know that boy’s mother wrote to me every month for the rest of her life. Cookies on my birthday, too. How the hell did she know it was my birthday?”

“The New York Bar register,” Haffenden deduced.

“Huh! Son-of-a-bitch!” He released his briefcase, sat forward in his chair and looked Haffenden in the eyes.

“Alright, god-damn it! But there are some ground rules we’re gonna get straight first.”

“You have my undivided attention, Mr Polakoff.”

“First and foremost, we get this visitor routine shit straightened out. Last time I was up there it was a freakin’ fiasco! I seen better organised riots, fer cryin’out loud!”

“I’ll call DC this afternoon.”

“Lansky’s responsible for everything, not me. I’m strictly window dressing. Dorothy Lamour in a
Road
movie, get it? Along for the ride, nothing more.”

“Anything else?”

“I go up there once a week, no more. That trip is murder, especially in winter. That’s non-negotiable, I don’t care if the Nazis are landin’ in Jersey! Are we in agreement?” Polakoff asked.

“Yes, Moses, we’re in agreement.”

Polakoff stood, shook Haffenden’s hand and turned to walk away. Haffenden followed close behind and once out on the street, Polakoff turned to Haffenden.

“Would you really have tried to reactivate me?” In the distance, a siren sliced through the thin, crisp air, and quickly faded.

“I wouldn’t have had a chance in hell. You’re way over the age limit.”

Moses smiled in appreciation of the tactic. “Prick!”

Owing to the drop in temperature the aviary was quieter than usual. Hoover was walking over to the trash basket to deposit his empty Coke bottle when he heard footsteps echoing through the bird house.

He looked at the man approaching him, and took a seat on a wooden bench facing a giant glass cage containing assorted birds of the great northwest. The man sat down next to him and removed his hat. It was treasury agent Johnson.

In an unusually subdued tone, Hoover opened the conversation.

“What’s going on?”

“The Navy’s got some kind of operation going. Not sure about the whole thing, or all the details.” Johnson was in league with Hoover, but only to an extent.

“What kind of operation? Information? Espionage stuff?”

“Like I said. None of our guys have the full dope.”

“Well, is it local, national or what?”

“All we know at this point is they’re havin’ some kind of trouble, and the whole thing might collapse.”

“There’s gotta be some kinda paper trail. Records, something!”

“There’s a book. A little black book.”

“Tell me!”

“Apparently it has the names, dates and places of all the contacts associated with the operation.”

“And chain of custody is followed to the letter?”

“With these clowns? Figure the odds!”

“Can you get it?”

“I think so, yeah.” Johnson was hedging his bet. His men not only had the book, they had it hidden in a safe spot.

“I want that book!”

“Actually, I thought it would be safer to copy it and return it.” Johnson was considering his retirement benefits.

“No. Get it, copy it and stash it somewhere. This way we have leverage against them if there’s an investigation from another agency later on.” Johnson liked the sound of that and nodded his consent.

“Won’t they say something once it’s missing?”

“To who? The Boy Scouts?” Hoover asked sarcastically.

“Who knows you’re working for me?” Not knowing who in Washington knew about this mysterious operation, Hoover was exceptionally cautious.

“No one. There’s only three treasury guys at the third district and they all report to me. They know about the book, but have orders to keep quiet to everyone downtown and to report to me if something looks fishy.”

“What about money for outside help or miscellaneous expenses?”

“We’re covered. We have our own sources.”

A small group of school children paraded through the aviary, holding hands and chatting away excitedly. The teacher directed the giddy children to the display in front of the two men, and began to lecture. Hoover and Johnson stood up.

“I want that item. By Friday!” Hoover reiterated.

“Friday’s not good,” he said apprehensively.

“Why the hell not?”

“It’s the thirteenth.”

Chapter Twenty-One

It was just another Tuesday evening. In accordance with the new blackout rules, one by one the lights were switched off on all forty-seven floors and the offices and hallways fell into darkness as the workers gradually filtered out of the East Side skyscraper.

The Ludlow & Peabody Building in the Murray Hill District near the Public Library is at 10 East 40th St. Built in1928, the last year of unbridled prosperity before the Crash, it housed mainly corporate offices. Its brown stonework is topped with a beautiful copper hip roof and rises 48 storeys to claim its place amongst the tightly packed chess pieces of the New York skyline.

As was his routine, the building superintendent stood in the lobby, locking and unlocking the door to accommodate the last of the sporadic flow of typists, secretaries and executives dribbling out of the building, ending another workday.

The head of maintenance strolled across the expansive marble floor towards the superintendent. He was accompanied by a young man in a dark blue uniform similar to the one worn by the two veteran employees. The red embroidery above his breast pocket identified him as belonging to housekeeping.

“Henry, this is Jimmy. The union sent him over this afternoon.”

“What happened to Frank?”

“Beats me. They said he was transferred for personal reasons.”

“Personal reasons? He empties garbage cans, fer fuck’s sake! What happened? He have a disagreement with a mop?”

“All I know is this is Jimmy. Jimmy, this is Henry, the building Super, he’ll help ya get your bearings. I’m outta here. The Yankee game starts in half an hour.”

“So, Jimmy. You got a union card or what?”

“Yeah. I got a union card. You want I should show it ta ya?”

“Yeah. If you would be so gracious as to indulge my wishes.”

Jimmy produced the bona fide yellow, Building Maintenance Union card and in an apologetic tone Henry explained.

“Nuthin’ poisonal, you understand. It was just last week that a guy I used ta woik wit, who knows a guy that was married to a guy’s cousin, seen dem FBI guys nab dem German spies. Ya know? So . . ”

“I get ya drift, Henry. No big deal. Just happy ta be workin’, know what I mean?”

“I know what ya mean! Cleanin’ gear’s in that closet over there, start on 45 and work ya way down.”

Jimmy collected his cleaning gear from the mop closet and headed for the elevators. Henry sat down at the reception desk, tuned in the radio and waited for the Yankees game to start. He put his feet up on the desk and then, out of idle curiosity, watched the brass plated indicator point to the successive floor levels as Jimmy’s elevator car gradually climbed to the top floor.

Jimmy got off on 45 and immediately stashed his cleaning equipment in the store room down the hall. Returning to the elevator, he stared at the indicator for several minutes. It didn’t move, and so he was satisfied that Henry was not on his way up. He checked his watch.

The young man dashed for the stairwell and bounded down the staircase to the forty-first floor. Once there, he walked quickly while consulting a piece of paper he removed from his pocket and began to systematically pan the office doors up and down the hallway.

He stopped in front of suite number 4109, knelt on one knee and produced a small lock-picking kit from his hip pocket. His expertise allowed him entry to the suite in a matter of seconds, and once inside, he referred to a small floorplan of the office taped to the back of the lock pick kit.

It was seven o’clock. He had three more offices to do before Henry began his nightly rounds. Jimmy moved swiftly through his work. Filing cabinets, desks, storage units and cupboards of any size were all carefully searched, and all items replaced exactly as they were found so as to leave no trace of intrusion.

Suddenly, heavy footsteps echoed in the hall, and Jimmy nervously looked at his watch. Eight ten! He had lost track of time on his last office. Henry was ten minutes late.

Jimmy froze as the sound of rattling doorknobs grew louder, and realised that Henry was checking that the officers were locked. Jimmy had not locked the door behind him when he entered the last suite.

The knob rattled, the door opened and there was the flick of a switch. Blinding light flooded the room.

“Jimmy!” Henry scanned the small office. “Jimmy!” he called out again. “Where the hell are you? God-damn it! First day on the freakin’job and ya freakin’disappear on me!” Henry switched off the light, closed and locked the door, and moved down the hall in search of the new janitor.

After he was sure that Henry had had enough time to move onto another level, Jimmy slithered out from underneath the overstuffed couch in the middle of the room, and breathed a sigh of relief.

The next morning Jimmy reported to Commander Haffenden that, with the exception of a few porno magazines, nothing of any significance was found in the suspected office suites he was assigned to search. Similar reports filtered in throughout the day from other agents around the city.

In spite of the fact it was only one day after Polakoff had rejoined the group, the operation was now in high gear. In contrast to its meagre beginnings with Socks Lanza and the Fulton Street Fish Market,
Operation Underworld
now generated a frenzy of round-the-clock activity. So much so that Haffenden was hard pressed to keep pace with the influx of information flooding into the command centre his office suite had now transitioned into.

If the Commander was contented with his handling of the previous crop of problems which had sprouted up in the planting of the operation, he was certainly dismayed at the new bumper harvest of headaches caused by the explosive expansion of this new phase of activity.

The increase in manpower and operational capital were accompanied by a disproportionate increase in paperwork. Captain MacFall issued a second memo requiring Haffenden to forward daily status reports to his office on the progress of the operation. That was three weeks ago. The Commander had yet to forward one status report, and as a consequence HQ had nothing to give DC, which made some people PO’d. All were getting nervous. Rumours began to circulate that Haffenden was in over his head on what increasingly appeared to be a very expensive snipe hunt.

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