Shadow of the Bomb (A Snap Malek Mystery)
Page 1
Praise for Robert Goldsborough
THREE STRIKES YOU'RE DEAD
"Goldsborough, best known as the heir to Rex Stout via his half-dozen Nero Wolfe novels, creates a prewar Chicago that is at once sinister and appealing. He also weaves an engaging subplot involving Dizzy Dean and the Chicago Cubs' drive to the 1938 World Series. An enormously entertaining caper." –Wes Lukowsky, Booklist 100th Anniversary Issue
"Robert Goldsborough, the man who so brilliantly brought Rex Stout's Nero Wolfe and Archie Goodwin back to literary life, has returned with a new detective, all his own – and that's cause for any mystery fan to rejoice! Goldsborough is a master storyteller, providing crackling dialogue and plot twists around every corner – readers are in for a real treat!" –Max Allan Collins, author of Road to Purgatory
MURDER IN E MINOR
"Goldsborough has not only written a first-rate mystery that stands on its own merits, he has faithfully re-created the round detective and his milieu." –Philadelphia Enquirer
"Mr. Goldsborough has all of the late writer's stylistic mannerisms down pat." –The New York Times on Murder in E Minor
"A smashing success…" –Chicago Sun-Times
"A half dozen other writers have attempted it, but Goldsborough's is the only one that feels authentic, the only one able to get into Rex's psyche. If I hadn't known otherwise, I might have been fooled into thinking this was the genius Stout myself." –John McAleer, Rex Stout's official biographer and editor of The Stout Journal
Also by Robert Goldsborough
Snap Malek Mysteries From Echelon PRess
THree Strikes You're Dead
Nero WOlfe Mysteries from Bantam Books
Murder in E Minor
Death on Deadline
Fade to Black
The Bloodied Ivy
The Last Coincidence
Silver Spire
The Missing Chapter
Robert Goldsborough
Shadow of the Bomb
A Snap Malek Mystery
Echelon Press Publishing
This is a work of fiction. Actual names, characters, places, and incidents are used fictitiously with the utmost respect. With those few exceptions, any other resemblance to actual events, locales, organizations, or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.
Echelon Press Publishing
9735 Country
Meadows Lane 1-D Laurel, MD 20723
www.echelonpress.com
Copyright © 2006 by Robert Goldsborough
ISBN: 1-59080-491-0
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews. For information address Echelon Press.
First Echelon Press paperback printing: October 2006
Cover Art © Nathalie Moore
2005 "Best in Category" Arianna Award Winner
www.GraphicsMuse.com
Printed in the USA
Dedication
To my good friend Marvin Green, whose experiences as a University of Chicago student in 1942 suggested this tale.
Chicago
Prologue
Lord, he was exhausted. This had been his longest day yet in what he had come to call "the basement." When he finally got out, he was too tired to even drop in at the U.T. for a nightcap. The unrelenting deadline pressure was bad enough, but the damn secrecy made it even worse.
It seemed like everybody he knew on the faculty was asking questions, always more questions. He knew many of them were jealous, of course. That was obvious–and understandable. But he couldn't go anywhere now without the probing, nosing, snooping.
"What is it you're really working on?" became the standard opening query, and when he gave his stock reply about it being "just a metallurgy lab project," he got the eye rolls, tongue-clucking, and arch comments, such as, "Yeah, sure, that's why we never see you in your office." "That's why you're not teaching now." "That's why so many buildings on the campus are boarded up, with those armed soldiers out in front–even at poor old Stagg Field, for God's sake." "Don't give us that met lab crap. Something big's going on, isn't it?"
He wanted to scream, "Yes, dammit, something big is going on, the biggest thing that's ever happened in the history of warfare, and it's happening right under your prying noses. End of discussion–now leave me alone."
But of course, such behavior was out of the question–even though on a couple of occasions he had told some strangers at the U.T. bar that they need not be concerned about how the war would ultimately end. That at least stopped their whining about the pounding we were taking in the Pacific and Europe. But he knew he had to avoid that kind of reaction from now on. And maybe he should also stop hanging around the U.T. for awhile.
He was almost sorry that he had been one of the chosen. But then, he was all too aware of his own brilliance and would have taken great offense if he'd been left out. At first, it was both exciting and patriotic, being a part of history. But now, after the long days and sometimes nights in that dank, gray, windowless pit under the old grandstands, the excitement had morphed into tedium, and each day he felt himself to be an ever-smaller part of history.
True, it was a privilege being around the likes of Fermi and Szilard and other physicists whom he admired, some almost to the point of hero-worship. But his role was so small, and they tended to look down upon him–he could feel it, even though nothing ever was said.
Well, he was home now. He pressed his palms against his eyes and lay his head down on the desk, almost too tired to go into the bedroom and pull on his pajamas.
The knock startled him, but then he figured it must be that garrulous old spinster down the hall, come to borrow of cup of sugar, or maybe flour. She seemed to always be running out of something, although more likely it was an excuse to chat. She was lonesome, although he wished she would find someone else to chatter to about the weather or her leaky kitchen faucet or her darling twin nieces in Topeka or her alcoholic brother up on the North Side who was always asking her for money.
"Well, this is quite a surprise," he said as he pulled open the door. "I didn't hear the buzzer."
"I didn't have to use it," his visitor replied with a thin smile. "Somebody was just leaving and held the door for me down in the foyer. Very nice of him. I happened to be in the neighborhood, and I thought you wouldn't mind my dropping by. So this is your place? Pleasant. Hope I'm not catching you at a bad time," the visitor said, stepping inside without waiting for an answer.
"No, not at all, I just didn't expect you–or anybody else, for that matter. Yes, this is simple though comfortable, like I think I've mentioned to you before. Small but efficient kitchen, and as you can see, plenty of room for a desk, which I refer to as my off-campus office," he said, gesturing to a corner of the living room. "And in there is the bedroom." He pivoted and turned his back to his visitor. "Can I get you something to–"
What came next was child's play–akin to a steer being roped by a veteran cowpoke. In an instant, the looped and knotted cord dropped over his head. He got his hands under the garrote as it tightened around his neck, but it was too late to even yell.
He thrashed about, gasping and grasping, as the struggle moved across the living room in the direction of the bedroom. His visitor had the element of surprise and the leverage, however, steadily increasing the pressure. He tried to retaliate, jabbing backwards ineffectively with one elbow and then the other. In desperation, he lunged in an attempt to break loose before taking his last agonizing breath…
Chapter 1
November 1942
"Looks like those Limeys and their tough bastard of a general, Montgomery, have ol' Rommel on the run in North Africa," Packy Farmer of the Herald American proclaimed approvingly between drags on his gnarled little hand-rolled cigarette as he scanned the front page of the Sun. "Could just be the beginning of the end for the goddamn Jerries."
Anson Masters huffed and passed a hand over his freckled bald pate, possibly hoping to locate a surviving hair. "Sad to say that's wishful thinking, Cyril," the dean of the Police Headquarters press corps countered, using the given name Farmer detested. "We're in this mess for years and years. Don't count on the Germans and their wehrmacht to go away anytime soon."
"Oh, hell, what do you know about it, Antsy?" Farmer shot back. "You've never been closer to warfare than the time you ducked behind a squad car on South Wabash, when that whorehouse got raided and some second-rate hoodlum panicked, ran out the front door, and started shooting at anything that moved. But he missed you, as I recall."
"Hey, don't go making sport of our fine Mister Masters," Dirk O'Farrell of the Sun cut in somberly. "The old gentleman here was just doing his job–covering the news of this great metropolis–and I salute him for the effort." The amazing thing was that he spoke those words without the slightest trace of sarcasm, indicating that O'Farrell had a promising future as a dramatic actor or a politician.
At this point, allow me to step forward and set the stage. The individuals who have been speaking, along with myself and one Eddie Metz of the Times (you'll meet him soon enough, but don't hold your breath–he's not worth it), comprise the press corps, as in reporters, at Police Headquarters,
1121 S. State St., Chicago. We all have been here, representing our respective newspapers, for more years than each of us cares to admit, although in O'Farrell's case, he's on his second Chicago paper. The lanky, white-haired journeyman, who's about the same age as Masters–roughly their early sixties–was with Hearst's Herald and Examiner until it merged with the American in '39 to form the Herald American, if you're still with me. Farmer, with his thin mustache and black hair parted in the center and slicked down with brilliantine, looked like Hollywood central casting's version of a riverboat gambler. Before coming to Chicago in the early '30s, he had worked on papers across the country, leaving a trail of bad checks, angry women, and vengeful husbands. After the Hearst papers' merger, he landed the Herald American's job at Police Headquarters, while O'Farrell became odd man out, or one too many here. Dirk got stuck on rewrite for said Herald American and wasn't happy about it: When Marshall Field started his Chicago Sun three days before Pearl Harbor in December of '41, Dirk was in their offices like a lightning bolt, and he got his old Headquarters beat back, albeit with a brand-new daily.
Me, I'm with the Tribune, one of the five big papers in this town, and with the largest circulation by far. And, as I realize from looking at the words above, you don't know that Anson Masters' employer is the Daily News, the second-best paper in the city next to the Trib or the best, depending on your perspective.
There is one other desk in the dismal press room with its dirty, peeling, pea-green walls, and grimy windows facing the elevated tracks. It belongs to the City News Bureau of Chicago, more commonly known as City Press, a local news service that feeds police, government, and courtroom news to all of the daily papers as well as the radio stations. It serves as a journalism training ground in that its woefully paid reporters are usually young, many fresh from college and in some cases even from high school, and they get rotated from beat to beat around town. Many later end up on daily papers, as I myself did.
One change wrought by this war is that City Press began hiring young women to fill the ranks depleted by enlistments and the draft. One of them, a young redhead named Joanie, just out of the journalism school at Northwestern, was at least for now a member of our press room crew, ending its all-male composition. She seemed very bright and eager to learn, and her presence has had the effect of cleaning up our language to some degree.
It was a typical morning in the Headquarters press room–coffee, cigarettes, and spirited badinage, all suggestive of work avoidance. We each had reached the stage where we were essentially putting in our time, although as the best writer by far in this crew, I still had aspirations.
"Hey Snap, anything new on your request?" O'Farrell asked as he leaned back, feet on his desk. He was referring to my ongoing appeals to Trib management to be made a war correspondent.
"Of course not," I grumped. "Again last week, the assistant managing editor gave me the old litany: Cromie, Noderer, Gallagher, Korman, Thompson, and so on."
"Well, you do have to admit that's a pretty damn strong lineup," Farmer put in. "Especially Bob Cromie dodging Jap bullets at Guadalcanal and that wild man Thompson jumping out of airplanes, for God's sake." He was referring to Jack Thompson, a Trib reporter assigned to North Africa, who had parachuted with the U.S. troops, a first for a foreign correspondent.
"A bit of showboating, if you ask me," Anson Masters proclaimed. "Anything for a headline." Masters' Daily News was the only other local paper with a major investment in war correspondents, so if you choose to read envy into his comment, be my guest.
"Shame you can't enlist, Snap," O'Farrell said with genuine sympathy. "You're getting up there, but you're still of an age where they could take you if you hadn't…"
"If I hadn't had rheumatic fever on my medical records," I said, completing Dirk's sentence. "Even though that was back when I was thirteen."
"Hell, Malek, you can't go blaming the good ol' U.S. Army. They wouldn't want you croaking of a heart attack in the middle of a battle, would they?" Eddie Metz wheezed between puffs on a Spud, one of the low-grade wartime menthol smokes. Eddie, all five-feet-four of him, if you include the unkempt mass of hair crowning his flat head like a floor mop, was usually the last one to jump into any press room discussion, and as usual he had the least to contribute.
"No, Eddie, the country certainly wouldn't want me croaking on the battlefield," I said to him in a world-weary voice. "Heaven forbid I might die from something other than a gunshot wound or a hand grenade."
O'Farrell leaned forward, palms down on his desk. "Now, back in the first war–"
"Aw, come on, Dirk," Packy Farmer cut in, "not the same old stories about your so-called exploits as a doughboy with Black Jack Pershing's American Expeditionary Force in France in '18. We've heard all we want to about your bravery under fire, although we have yet to see a medal."
O'Farrell shrugged and threw his hands up. "All right, since you boys don't choose to learn from history, I'll just keep my valued war experiences to myself. You all will be the poorer for it."
"We will try to live with that deprivation, Dirk," Anson Masters said dryly. "May I suggest that it's time we get to work and earn our keep?" As the senior member of the press room, he invariably called a halt to our morning bull sessions and signaled the true start of the work day. For me, the least-lazy member of the Headquarters crew, that meant my daily trip to the office of the Chief of Detectives, Fergus Sean Fahey, very likely the savviest man on the force.
I had drawn the Detective Bureau years before. It is by far the best beat in the old building, and when I got transferred–or demoted–to Headquarters after problems with the bottle that cost me my marriage and very nearly my job, my fellow press room habitués strongly suggested I take on the homicide beat. The reason they gave was that because homicide generates the most news and the Tribune has the biggest news hole by far of any paper in town, I was the logical choice. The reality, however, was that none of them wanted a beat that entailed real work. As we all shared each other's information anyway, making a joke of the phrase "competitive journalism," whatever news I got from Fahey and his crew would become theirs as well.
As for my drinking, I've never totally quit, but I now limit myself to beer, and only a modest amount of that. Most of the time anyway.
I sauntered into Fahey's small anteroom and was greeted by the smiling and easy-on-the-eyes
face of one Elsie Dugo. She had been guarding the chief's door almost as long as I had been making frontal attacks on it.
"Well, if it isn't Steven 'Snap' Malek, intrepid boy reporter and man about town," she said, batting her eyelashes with exaggerated coquetry.
"Aw shucks now, little lady, ah just came ridin' into town this very mornin' and thought ah might get a few minutes with your local U.S. marshal."
"Well, cowpoke, shake the trail dust off your chaps and I'll see if our local marshal is available." She spoke into the intercom and got a crackling reply that sounded vaguely like "send him in."
Fergus Fahey, stocky, gray of hair, and ruddy of face, sat behind his battered brown desk, shuffling papers. He didn't look up as I eased myself into one of his two ancient and unmatched guest chairs.
"Good morning, sir, so nice to see you again," I said, tossing my pack of Lucky Strikes onto his blotter. "Just remember, now that it's white instead of green, we're helping the war effort." I was referring to the fact that Luckies had recently switched their package color from green to white because they said green dye was needed for the war effort.
"You really believe that hooey?" Fahey asked as he pulled out a cigarette and fired it up.
"Nah, but it makes for a good radio commercial with that tag line, 'Lucky Strike green has gone to war.' And you can't beat the publicity."