“He sounds like quite the capitalist. You guys probably would get along great-you’re both Republicans.”
“You must be doing pretty good out there, if you can afford to insult me at long-distance rates.”
“It’s not my nickel. Look, why are Waxey Gordon and Dutch Schultz mixing it up? I thought they were allies.”
“Irving Wexler and Arthur Flegenheimer,” Eliot said archly, using their real names, “are both anticipating the relatively imminent unemployment of yours truly.”
“Huh?”
“They both know beer’s going to be legal, before long, and they’ve set their beady eyes on a big, legitimate market, meaning more customers than they can supply from their present breweries. Schultz has breweries in Yonkers and Manhattan, and Waxey has ’em in Patterson, Union City and Elizabeth. Each wants the other guy’s facilities, and territory.”
“So they’re shooting holes in each other’s gang.”
“Yes. Which is good.”
“Frank Wilson would agree. Why aren’t those breweries you mentioned shut down?”
Eliot laid the sarcasm on with a trowel. “Why, Nate-they’re making near beer there, didn’t you know that? Brewing ’round the clock-even though only a truck or two leaves each brewery each week.”
No doubt hundreds of gallons of real beer flowed via sewer pipes to hidden bottling and barreling plants.
“Eliot, who would Capone be friendlier with, Schultz or Gordon?”
There was a pause. “Funny you should ask. I honestly don’t know if Snorkey has any ties with Wexler, though I’d be surprised if he didn’t.” Then, with studied blandness, he added, “But Flegenheimer was up to the Cook County Jail, not so long ago, visiting Al.”
That made me sit up. “What?”
“Yeah. Lucky Luciano brought the Dutchman around. I understand there was quite a shouting match. Al was serving as mediator for some East-Coast squabble-jail officials let the boys use the execution chamber for their confab…Al sat in the hot squat, like a king on his throne.”
“Jesus.” Even for Chicago, this was beyond the pale.
“Well, Snorkey isn’t going to win his final appeal,” Eliot said edgily, “and he won’t find the federal pen so accommodating. Why are you asking these questions?”
“I have reason to believe Lindbergh’s kid was snatched by Greenberg and Hassel.”
“And you were wondering if it’s within the realm of possibility that Capone’s reach could extend to them?”
“Yes,” I said.
“Yes,” he said.
There was a brief crackly silence.
Then I said, “Okay. Only now I’m not sure what I should do about it.”
“Telling Irey and Wilson is your best shot.”
“Right. Well, thanks, Eliot.”
“Is there anything I can do?”
“Sure. You can apologize for getting me in this shit.”
He laughed, but said, “I do apologize. You’ve been out there a hell of a long time. Maybe it’s time to come home.”
“Soon,” I said, and thanked him and hung up,
So I had decided to talk to Greenberg and Hassel myself.
Evalyn wanted me to approach them and see if I could negotiate the safe return of the baby for her. I said I had the same idea, only if the two copped to the snatch, I’d pull in the feds and we’d nail the bastards.
“No more money gets thrown away,” I said. “Grab the sons of bitches responsible, and let ’em know if their people don’t hand over the kid, they take a hard fall.”
“Can you scare them, men like that?”
“When you put a gun in their mouth, you can.”
“But would the police do that?”
“Evalyn, I am the police.”
It was a little before four when I took the stairs at the rear of the hotel down to the floor below, the eighth, where Means said I’d find the two Maxes. I figured there would be body-guards posted, who’d take me where I wanted to go, one way or the other, particularly with a beer war in progress. I took a deep breath and withdrew the nine millimeter, and hid it behind me before I pushed open the door marked “8”-I knew there’d be muscle to deal with. No way around it….
Only the hall was empty.
For a moment, I was confused; then, slowly, like a heat rash, disgust spread over me.
Had Gaston Means done it again? Sent me, like Evalyn to El Paso, on another wild goose chase? I holstered the nine millimeter and slowly, pointlessly I was sure, prowled the hall.
Then I noticed a door, room 824, on which hung a sign that said “Old Heidelberg.” The lettering was Germanic and I was clearly looking at the logotype of a brand name of beer. Or anyway, “near beer.”
But, again, there were no men posted outside the door. I got the gun out, held it behind me and knocked. There was no answer, so I tried again, and finally the door cracked open and a pasty pockmarked face looked at me past a night-latch chain, skeptically, with eyes blacker and deader than a well-done steak.
“What?” he asked. The single word conveyed both menace and distrust.
“Police,” I said. “I have a warrant.”
The black, dead eyes narrowed and I slipped my toe in the cracked door and shouldered it open, popping the night latch.
My host backed up. He was heavyset and short but with a thin man’s face; his lips were the color of raw liver and his hair was cropped, white and ungreased, and as dead looking as his eyes. He wore a light-brown, expensively tailored suit with a white shirt, the dark-brown silk tie loose around a loosened collar, suit coat open. He didn’t seem to be armed.
“Let’s see the warrant,” he said doubtfully, and loudly, as if trying to warn somebody in the next room.
“It’s right here,” I said, and showed him the nine millimeter; it felt a little unsteady in my hand, but not so you’d notice.
“Shit,” he said, making a three-syllable word of it, rolling the dead black eyes. He put his hands slowly, grudgingly, up.
Shutting the door behind me with my heel, I took in a vast living room appointed in plush modern furniture, in various shades of green, from pastel lime to money-color.
He was shaking a little, but mostly he looked coldly, quietly pissed-off. “How did you get past Louie and Sal?” he wondered.
“I didn’t see Louie,” I said, patting him down with one hand, confirming his lack of hardware, almost choking on his pungent after-shave lotion, “and I didn’t see Sal.”
That confused him a little. “What about Vinnie?”
“I didn’t see Vinnie, either.”
“That’s impossible.”
“This is America. Anything is possible. You Hassel or Greenberg?” It sounded like a Jewish fairy tale.
He licked his liver lips. “Hassel. Maxie’s in the office.”
“Let’s go say hello.”
He led me through the endless living room-a wet bar in one corner was stocked better than a Rush Street speak, and against one wall leaned several fancy pigskin bags of golf clubs. We moved through a bedroom to a closed door, which Hassel grudgingly opened, glancing back unhappily at me.
He went in first, the nose of my nine millimeter in his back, as I followed him into the adjoining, smaller bedroom which had been converted into an office with several desks and filing cabinets. A big fleshy man in his shirtsleeves and suspenders, his suit coat draped over the back of his swivel chair, was hunkered over a ledger book at a rolltop desk against the far left wall, on which an Old Heidelberg neon sign, unlit, mingled with various black-and-white business-related photos. The man at the desk had shiny black hair and a big flat head.
“Maxie,” Hassel said, tentatively.
Maxie waved at him impatiently, without looking back. “Just a minute, just a minute.”
“Maxie…”
Maxie sighed, pushed away from the desk, and without looking at us, said, “Where’s the fuckin’ money go?’ Then he turned and blinked twice, as if that was all the sight deserved, his partner with his hands in the air and a stranger with an automatic pointed in both their general directions. “What the hell’s this about?”
“Put your hands on your knees,” I said.