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"No."
Preston sighed. "Then for G.o.d's sake, stick to a.s.signments where you won't have to make those choices. Use the superior inteffigence the good Lord gave you."
Ed looked at his uniform. "I'll use that intelligence as a detective."
Preston smiled. "Detective or not, you have qualities of persistence that Thomas lacked. You'll excel, my war hero."
The phone rang; De Spain picked it up. Ed thought of rigged j.a.p trenches--and couldn't meet Preston's eyes. Dc Spain said, "It's Lieutenant Frieling at the station. He said the jail's almost full, and two officers were a.s.saulted earlier in the evening. Two suspects are in custody, with four more outstanding. He said you should clock in early."
Ed turned back to his father. Preston was down the hall, swapping jokes with Mayor Bowron in a Moochie Mouse hat.
CHAPTER THREE
Press clippings on his corkboard: "Dope Crusader Wounded in Shootout"; "Actor Mitchum Seized in Marijuana Shack Raid." _Hush-Hush_ articles, framed on his desk: "Hopheads Quake When Dope Scourge Cop Walks Tall"; "Actors Agree: _Badge of Honor_ Owes Authenticity to Hard-hitting Technical Advisor." The _Badge_ piece featured a photo: Sergeant Jack Vincennes with the show's star, Brett Chase. The piece did not feature dirt from the editor's private file: Brett Chase as a pedophile with three quashed sodomy beefs.
Jack Vincennes glanced around the Narco pen--deserted, dark--just the light in his cubicle. Ten minutes short of midnight; he'd prpmised Dudley Smith he'd type up an organized crime report for Intelligence Division; he'd promised Lieutenant Frieling a case of booze for the station party--Hush-Hush Sid Hudgens was supposed to come across with rum but hadn't called. Dudley's report: a favor shot his way because he typed a hundred words a minute; a favor returned tomorrow: a meet with Dud and Ellis Loew, Pacific Dining Car lunch--work on the line, work to earn him juice with the D.A.'s Office. Jack lit a cigarette, read.
Some report: eleven pages long, very verbal, very Dudley. The topic: L.A. mob activity with Mickey Cohen in stir. Jack edited, typed.
Cohen was at McNeil Island Federal Prison: three to seven, income tax evasion. Davey Goldman, Mickey's money man, was there: three to seven, down on six counts of federal tax fraud. Smith predicted possible skirmis.h.i.+ng between Cohen minion Morris Jahelka and Jack "The Enforcer" Whalen; with Mafia overlord Jack Dragna deported, they loomed as the two men most likely to control loansharking, bookmaking, prost.i.tution and the race wire racket. Smith stated that Jahelka was too ineffectual to require police surveillance; that John Stompanato and Abe Teitlebaum, key Cohen strongarms, seemed to have gone legitimate. Lee Vachss, contract trigger employed by Cohen, was working a religious racket--selling patent medicines guaranteed to induce mystical experiences.
Jack kept typing. Dud's take hit wrong: Johnny Stomp and Kikey Teitlebaum were pure bent--they could never go pure straight. He fed in a fresh sheet.
A new topic: the February '50 Cohen/Dragna truce meeting-- twenty-five pounds of heroin and a hundred and fifty grand allegedly stolen. Jack heard rumors: an ex-cop named Buzz Meeks heisted the summit, took off and was gunned down near San Bernardino--Cohen goons and rogue L.A. cops killed him, a Mickey contract: Meeks stole the Mick blind and f.u.c.ked his woman. The horse was supposedly long gone unfound. Dudley's theory: Meeks buried the money and s.h.i.+t someplace unknown and was later killed by "person or persons unknown"--probably a Cohen gunman. Jack smiled: if LAPD was in on a Meeks. .h.i.t, Dud would never implicate the Department--even in an interdepartmental report.
Next, Smith's summary: with Mickey C. gone, mob action was at a lull; the LAPD should stay alert for new faces looking to crash Cohen's old rackets; prost.i.tution was sticking over the county line--with Sheriff's Department sanction. Jack signed the last page "Respectfully, Lieutenant D. L. Smith."
The phone rang. "Narcotics, Vincennes."
"It's me. You hungry?"
Jack kiboshed a temper fit--easy--what Hudgens just might have on him. "Sid, you're late. And the party's already on."
"I got better than booze, I got cash."
"Talk."
"Talk this: Tammy Reynolds, co-star of _Hope's Harvest_, opens tomorrow citywide. A guy I know just sold her some reefer, a guaranteed felony pinch. She's tripping the light fantastic at 2245 Maravilla, Hollywood Hills. You pinch, I do you up feature in the next issue. Because it's Christmas, I leak my notes to Morty Bendish at the _Mirror_, so you make the dailies, too. Plus fifty cash and your rum. Am I f.u.c.king Santa Claus?"
"Pictures?"
"In spades. Wear the blue blazer, it goes with your eyes."
"A hundred, Sid. I need two patrolmen at twenty apiece and a dime for the watch commander at Hollywood Station. And you set it up."
"Jack! It's Christmas!"
"No, it's felony possession of marijuana."
"s.h.i.+t. Half an hour?"
"Twenty-five minutes."
"I'm there, you f.u.c.king extortionist."
Jack hung up, made an X mark on his calendar. Another day, no booze, no hop--four years, two months running.
His stage was waiting--Maravilla cordoned off, two bluesuits by Sid Hudgens' Packard, their black-and-white up on the sidewalk. The street was dark and still; Sid had an ardight set up. They had a view of the Boulevard--Grauman's Chinese included--great for an establis.h.i.+ng shot. Jack parked, walked over.
Sid greeted him with cash. "She's sitting in the dark, goofing on the Christmas tree. The door looks flimsy."
Jack drew his .38. "Have the boys put the booze in my trunk. You want Grauman's in the background?"
"I like it! Jackie, you're the best in the West!"
Jack scoped him: scarecrow skinny, somewhere between thirty-five and fifty--keeper of inside dirt supreme. He either knew about 10/24/47 or he didn't; if he did, their arrangement was lifetime stuff. "Sid, when I bring her out the door, I do not want that G.o.dd.a.m.ned baby spot in my eyes. Tell your camera guy that."
"Consider him told."
"Good, now count twenty on down."
Hudgens ticked numbers; Jack walked up and kicked the door in. The arclight snapped on, a living room caught flush: Christmas tree, two kids necking in their undies. Jack shouted "Police!"; the lovebirds froze; light on a fat bag of weed on the couch.
The girl started bawling; the boy reached for his trousers. Jack put a foot on his chest. "The hands, slow."
The boy pressed his wrists together; Jack cuffed him onehanded. The blues stormed in and gathered up evidence; Jack matched a name to the punk: Rock Rockwell, RKO ingenue. The girl ran; Jack grabbed her. Two suspects by the neck--out the door, down the steps.
Hudgens yelled, "Grauman's while we've still got the light!"
Jack framed them: half-naked pretties in their BVDs. Flashbulbs popped; Hudgens yelled, "Cut! Wrap it!"
The blues took over: Rockwell and the girl hauled bawling to their prowler. Window lights popped on; rubberneckers opened doors. Jack went back to the house.
A maryjane haze--four years later the s.h.i.+t still smelled good. Hudgens was opening drawers, pulling out d.i.l.d.oes, spiked dog collars. Jack found the phone, checked the address book for pushers--goose egg. A calling card fell out: "Fleur-de-Lis. Twenty-four Hours a Day--Whatever You Desire."
Sid started muttering. Jack put the card back. "Let's hear how it sounds."
Hudgens cleared his throat. "It's Christmas morning in the City of the Angels, and while decent citizens sleep the sleep of the righteous, hopheads prowl for marijuana, the weed with roots in h.e.l.l. Tammy Reynolds and Rock Rockwell, movie stars with one foot in Hades, toke sweet tea in Tammy's sw.a.n.k Hollywood digs, not knowing they are playing with fire without asbestos gloves, not knowing that a man is coming to put out that fire: the free-wheeling, big-time Big V, celebrity crimestopper Jack Vincennes, the scourge of gra.s.shoppers and junk fiends everywhere. Acting on the tip of an unnamed informant, Sergeant Vincennes, blah, blah, blah. You like it, Jackie?"
"Yeah, it's subtle."
"No, it's circulation nine hundred thousand and climbing. I think I'll work in you're divorced twice 'cause your wives couldn't stand your crusade and you got your name from an orphanage in Vincennes, Indiana. The Biggg Veeeee."
His Narco tag: Trashcan Jack--a nod to the time he popped Charlie "Yardbird" Parker and tossed him into a garbage bin outside the flub Zamboanga. "You should beat the drum on _Badge of Honor_. Miller Stanton's my buddy, how I taught Brett Chase to play a cop. Technical advisor kingpin, that kind of thing."
Hudgens laughed. "Brett still like them prep.u.b.escent?"
"Can n.i.g.g.e.rs dance?"
"South of Jefferson Boulevard only. Thanks for the story, Jack."
"Sure."
"I mean it. It's always nice seeing you."
You f.u.c.king c.o.c.kroach, you're going to wink because you know you can nail me to that moralistic s.h.i.+tbird William H. Parker anytime you want--cash rousts going back to '48, you've probably got doc.u.mentation worked around to let you off clean and crucify me-- Hudgens winked.
Jack wondered if he had it _all_ down on paper.
CHAPTER FOUR
The party in full swing, the muster room SRO.
An open bar: scotch, bourbon, a case of rum Trashcan Jack Vincennes brought in. d.i.c.k Stensland's brew in the water cooler: Old Crow, eggnog mix. A phonograph spewed dirty Christmas carols: Santa and his reindeer f.u.c.king and sucking. The floor was packed: night.w.a.tch blues, the Central squad--thirsty from chasing vagrants.
Bud watched the crowd. Fred Turentine tossed darts at Wanted posters; Mike Krugman and Walt Dukeshearer played "Name That n.i.g.g.e.r," trying to ID Negro mugshots at a quarter a bet. Jack Vincennes was drinking club soda; Lieutenant Frieling was pa.s.sed out at his desk. Ed Exley tried to quiet the men down, gave up, stuck to the lock-up: logging in prisoners, filing arrest reports.
Almost every man was drunk or working on it.
Almost every man was talking up Helenowski and Brownell, the cop beaters in custody, the two still at large.
Bud stood by the window. Garbled rumors tweaked him: Brownie Brownell had his lip split up through his nose, one of the taco benders chewed off Helenowski's left ear. d.i.c.k Stens grabbed a shotgun, went spic hunting. He credited that one: he'd seen d.i.c.k carrying an Ithaca pump out to the parking lot. The noise was getting brutal--Bud walked out to the lot, lounged against a prowler.
A drizzle started up. A ruckus by the jail door--d.i.c.k Stens shoving two men inside. A scream; Bud cut odds on Stens finis.h.i.+ng out his twenty: with him watchd.o.g.g.i.ng, even money; without him, two to one against. From the muster room: Frank Doherty's tenor, a weepy "Silver Bells."
Bud moved away from the music--it made him think of his mother. He lit a cigarette, thought of her anyway.
He'd seen the killing: sixteen years old, helpless to stop it. The old man came home; he must have believed his son's warning: you touch Mother again and I will kill you. Asleep--cuffs on his wrists and ankles, awake--he saw the f.u.c.k beat Mother dead with a tire iron. He screamed his throat raw; he stayed cuffed in the room with the body: a week, no water, delirious--he watched his mother rot. A truant officer found him; the L.A. Sheriff's found the old man. The trial, a diminished capacity defense, a plea bargain down to Manslaughter Two. Life imprisonment, the old man paroled in twelve years. His son--Officer Wendell White, LAPD--decided to kill him.
The old man was nowhere.
He'd jumped parole; prowling his L.A. haunts turned up nothing. Bud kept looking, kept waking to the sound of women screaming. He always investigated; it was always just wisps of noise. Once he kicked in a door and found a woman who'd burned her hand. Once he crashed in on a husband and wife making love.
The old man was nowhere.
He made the Bureau, partnered up with d.i.c.k Stens. d.i.c.k showed him the ropes, heard out his story, told him to pick his shots to get even. Pops would stay nowhere, but thumping wife beaters might drive the nightmares out of his system. Bud picked a great first shot: a domestic squawk, the complainant a longtime punching bag, the arrestee a three-time loser. He detoured on the way to the station, asked the guy if he'd like to tango with a man for a change: no cuffs, a walk on the charge if he won. The guy agreed; Bud broke his nose, his jaw, ruptured his spleen with a dropkick. d.i.c.k was right: his bad dreams stopped.
His rep as _the_ toughest man in the LAPD grew.
He kept it up; he followed up: intimidation calls if the f.u.c.kers got acquitted, welcome home strongarms if they did time and got parole. He forced himself not to take grat.i.tude lays and found women elsewhere. He kept a list of court and parole dates and sent the f.u.c.kers postcards at the honor farm; he got hit with excessive-force complaints and toughed them out. d.i.c.k Stens made him a decent detective; now he played nursemaid to his teacher: keeping him half sober on duty, holding him back when he got a hard-on to shoot for kicks. He'd learned to keep himself in check; Stens was now all bad habits: scrounging at bars, letting stick-up men slide for snitch dope.
The music inside went off key--wrong, not really music. Bud caught screeches--screams from the jail.
The noise doubled, tripled. Bud saw a stampede: muster room to cellblock. A flash: Stens going crazy, booze, a jamboree--bash the cop bashers. He ran over, hit the door at a sprint.
The catwalk packed tight, cell doors open, lines forming. Exley shouting for order, pressing into the swarm, getting nowhere. Bud found the prisoner list; checkmarks after "Sanchez, Dinardo," "Carbijal, Juan," "Garcia, Ezekiel," "Chasco, Reyes," "Rice, Dennis," "Valupeyk, Clinton"--all six cop beaters in custody.
The b.u.ms in the drunk cage egged the men on.
Stens. .h.i.t the #4 cell--waving bra.s.s knucks.
Willie Tristano pinned Exley to the wall; Crum Crumley grabbed his keys.
Cops shoved cell to cell. Elmer Lentz, blood splattered, grinning. Jack Vincennes by the watch commander's office-- Lieutenant Frieling snoring at his desk.
Bud stormed into it.
He caught elbows going in; the men saw who it was and cleared a path. Stens slid into 3; Bud pushed in. d.i.c.k was working a skinny pachuco--head saps--the kid on his knees, catching teeth. Bud grabbed Stensland; the Mex spat blood. "Heey, Mister White. I knowww you, _puto_. You beat up my frien' Caldo 'cause he whipped his _puto_ wife. She was a f.u.c.kin' hooer, _pendejo_. Ain' you got no f.u.c.kin' brains?"
Bud let Stens go; the Mex gave him the finger. Bud kicked him p.r.o.ne, picked him up by the neck. Cheers, attaboys, holy f.u.c.ks. Bud banged the punk's head on the ceiling; a bluesuit moved in hard. Ed Exley's rich-kid voice: "Stop it, Officer--that's an order!"
The Mex kicked him in the b.a.l.l.s--a dangling shot. Bud keeled into the bars; the kid stumbled out of the cell, smack into Vincennes. Trashcan, aghast--blood on his cashmere blazer. He put the punk down with a left-right; Exley ran out of the cellblock.
Yells, shouts, shrieks: louder than a thousand Code 3 sirens.
Stens whipped out a pint of gin. Bud saw every man there skunked to n.i.g.g.e.rtown forever. Up on his tiptoes, a prime view--Exley dumping booze in the storeroom.
Voices: attaboy, Big Bud. Faces to the voices--skewed, wrong. Exley still dumping, Mr. Teetotaler Witness. Bud ran down the catwalk, locked him in tight.
CHAPTER FIVE
Shut into a room eight feet square. No windows, no telephone, no intercom. Shelves spilling forms, mops, brooms, a clogged-up sink filled with vodka and rum. The door was steel-reinforced; the liquor stew smelled like vomit. Shouts and thudding sounds- boomed through a heat vent.