Death of a Pusher

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Death of a Pusher Page 10

by Deming, Richard


  Wynn said to Carl, “If you locate Grimaldi, just stake him out and report in. I don’t want the arrest loused up, because I’m hoping to squeeze the name of his wholesaler out of him.”

  That was exactly what I had suggested and had been slapped down for. Apparently it wasn’t the merit of the idea Wynn objected to, but my effrontery in having an original thought.

  Lincoln said, “Yes, sir. We understand.”

  I handed Carl the slip of paper on which I had written Grimaldi’s last known address. “You can start here, but I’ll bet a beer you draw a blank. This is where he lived six months ago, before he went off parole.”

  “No bet,” Carl said gloomily.

  He and Hank Carter walked out of the squadroom.

  Wynn said to me, “Last night Sergeant Carter talked to the landlady where Charles Kossack formerly lived. He didn’t get anything. I don’t suppose there’s much point in hitting her again.”

  If he were asking for an opinion, he wasn’t going to get one. I was beginning to develop the same defense Hank Carter used.

  “I suppose the quickest way to locate Kossack would be stoolies. You have any underworld contacts, Sergeant?”

  “A few,” I said.

  “Then let’s go visit them.”

  I looked at him. “Together?”

  “Of course. Why not?”

  I doubt that Robert Wynn had any personal stoolies, for a cop as unbending as he was couldn’t get the time of day from anybody linked to the underworld. Wynn would treat anyone with a record like dirt.

  I said, “It would be a waste of time, Lieutenant. My contacts would clam up if I brought along another cop.”

  He looked surprised. After a moment, he asked, “Are your contacts any good?”

  “I think so. I have one who knows practically everything that goes on in the underworld.”

  “Who’s that?”

  I shook my head. “Part of the deal is that nobody knows we’re even acquainted.”

  “You can’t withhold information from a superior officer,” Wynn said testily.

  “Captain Spangler says I can, sir. Even he doesn’t know who my contacts are.”

  This wasn’t quite true, because Spangler did know some of my underworld contacts, at least by name. But the captain understood that a cop has to guard his private sources of information if he doesn’t want them to dry up, and I knew he’d back me if Lieutenant Wynn decided to make an issue of it.

  Wynn decided not to. A trifle irritably he said, “All right, Rudowski. Go see what you can dig up. I’ll visit the landlady again and see if Carter missed anything. Check in here by phone at noon.”

  “Yes, sir,” I said, and walked out of the squadroom.

  People become police informers for a variety of reasons. Some hope for a break in case they themselves eventually land in a police net. Some squeal for pay, which has to come out of the cop’s own pocket because there isn’t any fund to cover such expenditures. Some inform through jealousy or because of grudges. None of these are very reliable, though I’ve used all on occasion with some degree of success.

  The most reliable type of informer is an old lag who feels indebted to you for once giving him a break.

  Dan (Boxer) Wilshire was such a man. He didn’t get his nickname from any pugilistic ability. “Box” is underworld jargon for “safe,” and in his prime Wilshire had been king of the safecrackers. He was credited with over a million dollars in scores when the state had salted him away on a life sentence as a habitual criminal when he was forty-five. Fifteen years later he was released on parole, a prematurely old man at sixty. He was now seventy-two.

  I knew Boxer well because he’d lived on my beat along the riverfront ten years back when I was a rookie. He had decided to go straight after his release from prison, partly because a news syndicate paid him a pretty good sum for the story of his life, but mostly, I think, because arthritis had ruined the sensitivity of his fingers. He was greatly admired by unreformed crooks for his past exploits, though, and occupied a sort of professor emeritus position in the underworld. When he was released from prison, he was reputed to still have hidden somewhere a set of the finest box tools in existence. There were also the usual rumors of a hidden hoard of money, but Boxer insisted he had always spent it as fast as he stole it, and because of later events, I was inclined to believe him.

  Eventually the money paid him by the news syndicate ran out, and Boxer found himself reduced to living on a remittance sent him by a married daughter. This was enough to get him by, but apparently it hurt his pride. Two years after his release, at the age of sixty-two, he made one last try for a score.

  I was a rookie, only six weeks on a beat, when I caught him redhanded with his kit of safecracking tools trying to jimmy a rear window at the Meiner Department Store warehouse. Possession of the tools alone would have sent him back to prison with no hope of another parole.

  Boxer turned white as a sheet when I flashed my light on him. Dropping the jimmy to the ground, he stood with slumped shoulders, looking utterly defeated.

  I turned my light on the window. There was a small dent in the wooden sill where he had forced in the jimmy, but apparently I had come along before he could exert any leverage, for the lock wasn’t broken.

  I said, “Let’s sit down and have a little talk, Boxer.”

  We sat on a couple of wooden crates behind the warehouse and conversed for some time. After the talk we walked down to the dock, and I watched him fling his expensive tools one at a time as far out into the river as he could. When the satchel followed the last of the tools, he straightened his shoulders and breathed a sigh of relief.

  “I’ll never forget this, kid,” he said. “And rest easy if you think maybe you made a mistake. I’ll never even look at another box, so help me.”

  So far as I know, he had kept his word. When I moved up to plainclothes, I started collecting for the favor. Actually, though I had always liked the old man, it hadn’t been entirely youthful idealism which made me give him a break. It had occurred to me weeks before he made his slip that he would make a wonderful source of underworld information if some cop could gain his confidence. So, when I caught him, I was calculating possible future benefits at the same time as I was being compassionate.

  I didn’t rub it into the ground, because he was no ordinary informer. As a matter of fact he didn’t consider himself an informer at all. I only tapped him when I needed specific information, never for a general picture of what was going on in the underworld, and he never voluntarily came to me with information. What information I got from him was given because he liked me, not through a sense of obligation. If Boxer announced that some hood I was inquiring about was a friend of his, that was that. I knew the hood would never hear from him that I had inquired about him, but I also knew that further questions would only offend the old man’s dignity.

  Boxer Wilshire now lived in a basement flat on the East Side only a couple of blocks from the river. You went down some concrete steps into a cellarway and turned the handle of an old-fashioned bell on a barred iron gate.

  The door immediately behind the gate opened and Boxer peered through the bars. When he recognized me, he smiled broadly and unlocked the gate. After I passed through, he carefully locked it behind me again, closed the door and led me across the front room into the kitchen.

  “Have a seat, kid,” he said, pointing to a round table covered with oil cloth. “Coffee?”

  “Sure,” I said.

  A pot was already simmering on the stove. It always was. He poured two cups and sat across from me. His lined face looked ten years older than his seventy-two years, and his shoulders were somewhat more bent than when I had seen him last, but his eyes were still clear and bright and his body still sturdy.

  The coffee was as strong and bitter as it always was. After sampling it, I said, “How you been, Boxer?”

  “Good, except for this damned arthritis.” He held up both clawlike hands. “I couldn’t open a piggy ba
nk with these things. What’s on your mind?”

  “You know a Charlie Kossack?”

  “That knothead?” he said contemptuously. “All he knows how to do is use a gun.”

  “He been using one recently?”

  Boxer pursed his lips. “Not that I know. But the word is that he’s trying to line up a partner to knock over a couple of big jobs.”

  “I already know that,” I said. “You haven’t heard of him using a gun on somebody recently, have you?”

  The old man’s eyes widened. “You mean a hit? He’s no hired gun, far as I ever heard. He’s just a heist artist.”

  “I wasn’t thinking of him knocking anybody over for hire. But sometimes partners fall out. He’d been working on Benny Polacek to throw in with him on these jobs he had planned.”

  “Oh, that. Afraid I can’t help you there. I hadn’t even heard he was dealing with Benny.”

  “Have you heard any rumors as to who might have hit Benny?”

  A withdrawn look appeared in his eyes. “Nothing definite enough to repeat.”

  So there were rumors as to why Benny had died and who had pulled the trigger, I thought. But maybe they implicated someone Boxer regarded as a friend.

  I took a stab. “How well do you know Goodie White, Boxer?”

  Boxer Wilshire stared at me for a long time, then took a sip of his coffee. “You can’t live in the Twelfth Ward without knowing Goodie. Guess I know him as well as anybody in this part of town. He’s done me favors. I’d vote for him if they hadn’t taken my voting privilege away.”

  That was that. If the underworld rumor was that Goodie White had taken care of Benny Polacek, I wasn’t going to hear about it from Boxer Wilshire.

  I sipped my coffee before asking, “Hear any rumors about what kind of jobs this Charlie Kossack plans to pull?”

  Boxer shook his head. “Just that he considers them big. Big in his book probably means a supermarket, where the take might be one or two grand. It wouldn’t be anything like the Brinks robbery. He’s pretty small time.”

  I said, “Know where Kossack lives?”

  The old man considered. “I think I heard he’s got a flat at the Axton.”

  The Axton Apartment Hotel was on Clarkson Boulevard, only about three blocks from Benny Polacek’s apartment.

  I said, “Ever hear of a Harry Grimaldi? Also known as Harry Gamble.”

  Boxer thought for a moment. “Rings a vague bell. Another small-time punk, isn’t he? A pusher or something?”

  “Uh-huh.”

  “I don’t know much about him, or where he lives. He’s hardly important enough to keep track of.”

  That seemed to be all the information I was going to get this trip. I finished my coffee and left.

  CHAPTER 16

  I was driving my own car, not a police undercover car, so I couldn’t get police calls. I happened to have my car radio on, though, so I heard the special bulletin.

  The announcer broke into the middle of a recorded tune to say, “We interrupt this program to bring you a news flash. One hour ago, at nine-thirty A.M., two masked men held up and robbed a payroll truck which was transmitting the weekly payroll of the Whittington Steel Company from the Merchants’ and Traders’ Bank to the steel plant. Payroll guard Arthur Prentiss, thirty-three, was shot and killed by one of the bandits.

  “The well-planned robbery took place in midblock on Twenty-first Street between Dover and Spence Streets. According to the driver of the payroll truck, John Kendall, a heavy truck roared out of the alley as he started to pass it, and it struck him broadside, driving the armored car up on the sidewalk and into a brick wall. The force of the collision caused the rear door of the armored car to open. As the truck driver, wearing a stocking mask over his head, leaped from the cab and covered Kendall with a sawed-off shotgun, a similarly masked bandit came up from the alley on the opposite side of the street. As guard Arthur Prentiss, probably dazed by the accident, started to emerge from the rear door, the second bandit shot him down with a revolver.

  “As the truck driver covered Kendall and several pedestrian witnesses with his shotgun, the second bandit carried two large payroll bags from the armored car to a car parked in the alley. Both bandits then leaped in their car and drove away.

  “Eyewitness descriptions of the bandits varied. Estimates of the truck driver’s height range from five feet six to five feet ten, estimates of his weight from one hundred seventy-five pounds to over two hundred. The second bandit is described as from five ten to six feet and weighing from one-fifty to one-seventy-five. All witnesses agree that the truck driver was heavy-set and the other man slimly built, however. Both men wore tan coveralls, painter’s caps, and white cotton work gloves.

  “Police believe the truck was probably stolen and are checking its registration. No figure on the amount stolen is yet available. Further details will be reported by this station as they come in.”

  More work for Robbery Division, I thought. It sounded as though it would be a tough one. It had all the earmarks of a highly professional job, which probably meant out-of-towners, because there weren’t any local guns slick enough to pull such a smooth job.

  Because I had just been discussing him with Boxer Wilshire, it fleetingly crossed my mind that it would be coincidental if Charles Kossack had been one of the bandits. I dismissed the idea, though, because according to his past record, and also according to Boxer’s estimate of the man, a big-time job such as this was out of his class. He was more the type to knock over filling stations and liquor stores. It hardly seemed likely that a joker stupid enough to get himself arrested twenty-six times would suddenly develop enough organizing ability to plan this professional a score.

  I’d once had a few dates with a girl who lived at the Axton Apartment Hotel, so I knew the place fairly well. It was a somewhat run-down building of three stories. Once it had been an exclusive address, but as the residential section moved west, newer and more modern apartments had lured away the Axton’s monied tenants, and its management had been forced to adjust the rents downward to attract a less social-register class of tenants. Rent for a three-room furnished apartment with maid service now ran only sixty a month. Of course the furnishings were thirty years old, the management no longer ever redecorated, and the maid service was rather hit-or-miss. In short it had become something of a dump.

  There was a different man on the desk than there had been when I used to call there. He was a fat man of about fifty wearing a dirty sport shirt.

  I said, “What apartment is Charles Kossack in?”

  “Two-eleven,” he said. “But he’s not home. He went out about eight this morning.”

  “Any idea when he’ll be back?”

  The fat man shrugged. “He didn’t say. He usually stops at the desk for his mail about noon, but that’s usually on his way out. I’ve never seen him up this early before. Want to leave a message in his box?”

  “No thanks,” I said. “He live alone?”

  He gave me a suspicious look. “If you don’t know, you must not be very well acquainted with him.”

  “I’m not.” I took out my wallet and showed him my badge. “My name is Sergeant Matt Rudd. Who are you?”

  After staring at the badge for a time, he said, “Marvin Johnson. I’m just the day desk clerk, Sergeant. You want I should phone the manager?”

  “That won’t be necessary, Mr. Johnson. I’m not planning to raid the hotel. I just want to see one of your tenants.”

  “I hope Mr. Kossack isn’t in any trouble.”

  I said patiently, “I just want to talk to him. Does he live alone?”

  He looked a little uncomfortable. “He’s the only registered tenant in two-eleven. But a friend stays with him off and on.”

  “Who’s the friend?”

  “He’s never introduced her.”

  “A woman, eh?” I said. “She there now?”

  “I really don’t know. If she is, she came in last night when I was off duty. She wasn’t
with him when he left this morning.”

  “I’ll go ring the bell,” I said. “If he comes in while I’m upstairs, don’t mention that he has a visitor.”

  “All right,” he agreed. “We have orders to cooperate with the law.”

  There was an elevator, but I took the stairs to the second floor. No one answered the door at apartment 211.

  Downstairs again I used the desk phone to call the squadroom. Captain Spangler answered the phone.

  “Matt Rudd, Captain,” I said. “Any messages for me from Lieutenant Wynn?”

  “Nope. Haven’t heard from him.”

  “I’m at the Axton Apartment Hotel,” I said. “Charlie Kossack lives here. He’s not home, so I plan to stick around until he shows. Want to take down this phone number, in case Wynn wants to reach me?”

  “Go ahead.”

  I read the number from the dial. “Tell the lieutenant if Kossack doesn’t show by noon, I’ll check back in by phone.”

  “O.K., Rudowski. I’ll give him the message.”

  I had been sitting in the lobby about a half-hour when an attractive but hard-faced blonde of about thirty came in, carrying a suitcase. She was overdressed and over-painted, but she had a nice figure.

  She set down the suitcase at the desk and said, “Mr. Kossack will be along soon. He asked me to get his key from the desk and wait for him in his apartment.”

  The desk clerk’s glance flicked in my direction, but fortunately the woman’s attention was distracted at that moment by a male tenant stepping from the elevator, crossing the lobby and going out the street door. The clerk handed her the key, and we both watched as she lugged the suitcase to the elevator. It wasn’t large, but it seemed to be heavy, for she bent over to one side carrying it.

  When the cage door closed and the indicator showed the car was moving upward, I went over to the desk.

  “Do me a favor, Mr. Johnson,” I said. “When Kossack shows, don’t look my way. You almost tipped off that woman that the place is staked out.”

  “Sorry,” he said apologetically. “I’ll watch myself.”

 

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