Juvenile Delinquent
Page 1
JUVENILE DELINQUENT
Manny Moon, the agile one-legged detective, is back on a case involving the son of his old friend Ed Brighton.
Young Joe Brighton had been found by the police standing over the dead body of Bart Meyers, president of the Purple Pelicans—a juvenile gang to which Joe belonged. The knife used to kill Bart belonged to Joe’s father, and the police believed they had an open-and-shut case.
But Manny didn’t think Joe was a killer and when he started investigating he uncovered some very dangerous information that exposed a gang of dope peddlers. Manny had to keep one step ahead of them to save his own life and clear Joe from the murder charge.
JUVENILE DELINQUENT
by RICHARD DEMING
a division of F+W Media, Inc.
For my father,
Fred Kemp Deming
Contents
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Also Available
Copyright
1
I was having breakfast at my usual hour, noon, when Ed Brighton dropped by to see me. When I opened the door I was a little startled, not only because he hadn’t visited my flat for some years now, but because it’s always a little startling to be confronted unexpectedly by a man as big as Ed. He goes six feet six and weighs approximately two hundred and seventy-five pounds, most of it muscle except for a slightly rounded stomach.
When I had recovered from my surprise, I said, “Hi, Ed,” and held out my hand.
He shook it jerkily, at the same time giving me a rather uncertain smile, and I got another surprise. He was stone cold sober.
But he had the jitters so bad he was nearly shaking apart. Which wasn’t surprising. You can expect them if you suddenly sober up after keeping yourself at a certain alcoholic level for five straight years.
At forty Ed Brighton was still in pretty good physical shape in spite of his heavy drinking, largely because his job involved heavy labor and daily he sweated out a good deal of the whisky he’d consumed the night before. But his eyes were always a little puffy and he always smelled faintly of alcohol. At least before today. Today his eyes were perfectly clear and he smelled only of clean shaving lotion.
As I stepped aside to let him come in and he moved past me into my front room, I said, “I’m just having breakfast. Like a cup of coffee? Or maybe a coffee royal?”
He shook his head. “No whisky, thanks. Maybe some coffee, if you don’t have to make it extra.”
I led him out to the kitchen, poured him the last cup from the pot and sat down across from him to resume my meal of sausage and eggs.
“You off the stuff temporarily?” I asked curiously.
“Permanently,” he said.
I grinned at him. “Sure. I swear off permanently myself every time I get a hangover.”
“I’ve got a reason to stop.” He raised his coffee cup, spilling a little even though he held it with both hands.
“You thought you had a reason to start five years ago too,” I said around a mouthful of sausage.
When he remained silent, I said, “Maggie was a wonderful gal, and maybe losing her was an excuse to hit the bottle. But five years seems like a long time to need an anesthetic. I’ve never preached to you before, because I believe in letting people live their own lives. But trading everything you had for the bottle wasn’t very kind to young Joe.”
He took another sip of coffee and managed to get the cup back on the saucer with only a faint rattle. “Joe’s my reason for swearing off, Manny,” he said huskily. “If it isn’t too late. It took a sledge hammer over the head to make me see what I’ve done to him, but it’s a permanent cure. I’ll never take another drink as long as I live.”
“You finally woke up to what a slum environment was doing to him, eh? I could have told you that three years ago.”
“I wish to God you had.” Then he added moodily, “Not that I’d have listened. I was too busy feeling sorry for myself to see what bringing a kid up in a neighborhood that breeds nothing but criminals would do to him.”
I took a bite of egg. “Now he isn’t that bad, Ed. Joe’s a little too big for his pants, but he’s a long way from a criminal.”
“That’s what you think,” he said with a mixture of savageness and despair. “He’s in jail right now on a murder charge.”
I laid down my fork and blinked at him. “Young Joe?” I asked incredulously.
“Young Joe,” he affirmed. “Or, more accurately, Knuckles Brighton, as he’s known by his fellow members of the Purple Pelicans.”
“The Purple Pelicans? What in the devil’s that?”
“A so-called club,” Ed said wearily. “Bunch of teenagers. They all wear purple jackets and hats with purple bands. It’s supposed to be just a social group, but in reality it’s a juvenile gang. I think they must pull petty crimes like stealing hub caps and so on, because they seem to have a lot of spending money. I never stopped to wonder where Joe got his until this happened. I was too busy trying to make the distillers work overtime. But now I realize he’s had a devil of a lot more to spend for the last couple of years than I ever gave him.”
“A teenage gang, eh?” I said thoughtfully. “One of those bunches that carry switch blades and zip guns?”
Ed nodded. “When they arrested Joe, they found a switch knife on him, and both a knife and a zip gun on the dead kid.”
“What happened?” I asked. “The Purple Pelicans have a rumble with some other gang, and Joe accidentally killed somebody?”
Ed shook his head. “Worse. On something like that, they’d probably only stick him with manslaughter. He’s clipped for premeditated murder, for knifing the leader of his own gang. The cops think it was a fight over leadership. They caught me when I was drunk last night, and before I knew what had happened, and got out of me that Joe was vice president of the damned club. I also kindly identified the murder weapon for them before I learned it had been found sticking in young Bart Meyer’s chest.”
He brooded a minute, then added almost as an afterthought, “Joe says he didn’t kill the kid.”
Ed explained that the knifing had taken place in the basement club room of the Purple Pelicans, and Joe had been caught practically red-handed. The police had raided the place on an anonymous tip that a marijuana party was in progress, and found nobody on the premises but Joe and the dead boy. Joe insisted he had walked in only a few moments previously for a prearranged meeting with the juvenile gang leader, and found him dead when he arrived.
But the murder weapon, still sticking in the boy’s chest, was a hunting knife which had belonged to Ed Brighton for years. Ed hadn’t had occasion to use it for years, and as a matter of fact had even forgotten he owned it, but he recognized it immediately because a small cross was burned into the plastic haft. It had been so long since he’d thought about the knife, he couldn’t even tell the police where it had been kept, but he assumed it must have been in a small trunk at the rear of his closet, which he used as a storage place for similar little-used items. The police assumed Joe had found it while r
ummaging through the trunk and had been carrying it around stuck in his belt with the jacket buttoned over it, as the knife didn’t possess a sheath.
“What’s Joe say?” I asked.
“That he never saw the knife before. He asked the cops with some logic why he’d carry a hunting knife when he already had a switch knife, but they just brushed that off.”
“When’d all this happen?”
“Last night about ten. I was drunk, as usual, so I didn’t really get into action until this morning, when I went down to headquarters to talk to both Joe and the cops. What I came to see you about, Manny, is … well, I don’t know the ropes about stuff like this. I thought maybe you could talk to the boy, arrange for a lawyer and so on. And if you think Joe’s innocent after talking to him, poke around and see if you can uncover anything to clear him.”
“Sure, Ed. Be glad to.”
“About your fee,” he said hesitantly. “I’m not very well fixed right now, but I make pretty good wages down on the dock when I work, and when I’ve been off the liquor awhile …”
He let it die off when he saw my face redden.
“Well, you do this kind of work for a living,” he said defensively.
“Just mention it again and I’ll flatten out your pointed head for you,” I informed him.
“That’ll be the day,” he said in automatic retaliation, but I could see the relief in his eyes.
I’d known Ed Brighton for fourteen years, ever since I walked out of St. Vincent’s Orphan Asylum to conquer the world armed with nothing but a high-school diploma and the blessing of tough old Father Eugene. Ed, then twenty-six, was foreman of the dock-walloper gang I worked for down on the riverfront, and also a part-time fight trainer.
It was Ed who stepped into the argument the day big Iggy Swartz, foreman of a rival stevedore crew, decided his thirty-pound weight advantage wasn’t enough to whip me and increased his odds by bringing a brass knuckle duster into the fight. I was only twenty at the time, and didn’t know there was a more scientific way to fight than standing toe-to-toe and slugging it out. Iggy’s knuckle duster left me with a slight permanent bend to my nose and one eyelid which ever since has drooped a fraction of an inch lower than the other, but in the end his tactics caused him more damage than they caused me.
Ed Brighton took him by the back of the neck and the seat of the pants, raised all two hundred and ten pounds of him overhead and slammed him face first into the side of a brick building. It was six months before Iggy got out of the hospital, and he never fully recovered his looks.
If that gives you the impression Ed Brighton had a mean disposition, you couldn’t be more wrong. He was one of the easiest-going men I ever knew. But the riverfront is a tough environment, and even dock workers with sunny dispositions are likely to get into occasional scraps. Ed didn’t often, because even the ruggedest of the other foremen were leary of tangling with him. Possibly this had something to do with the fact that at twenty-six he weighed only twenty pounds less than he did at forty, and not an ounce of it was fat.
Ed never fought pro himself, because he was too slow for the ring, but he was an excellent trainer. It was he who introduced me to the fight game and acted as my trainer for my three pro fights. When that career blew up in my face because the boxing commission discovered the manager I’d picked was crooked before either Ed or I discovered it, and I went to work as a private cop, the two of us still remained friends. Once or twice a month I was invited over to his house for dinner. I got to know and like his wife Maggie and his young son Joe as well as I liked Ed. I always thought of him as sitting on top of the world. He was beginning to gain sufficient reputation as a fight trainer to be able to drop his dock work and go into it full time, he was saving money with the intention of buying a small farm and converting it into his own training camp, and he was nuts about his family.
Too nuts, I guess. When Maggie was killed in an auto accident five years before, Ed just went to pieces.
I won’t detail the steps of deterioration he went through, but it took Ed Brighton exactly one year to drink up his savings, lose the option he’d bought on the farm, and slide from a fight trainer with a growing reputation back to a dock day laborer. And not even a foreman.
The neat little cottage out in the West End went too, of course. The past four years Ed and Joe had lived in a two-room cold-water flat in the heart of the slum area. Ed worked fairly steadily and he made good wages when he worked, but he couldn’t control his expensive habit of drinking. And there was never enough left over from his bar bills to keep Joe and him in very fine style.
I like to think I’m not just a fair-weather friend, but inevitably we drifted farther and farther apart. I still dropped by to see the two of them whenever I happened to be down near the riverfront, but we had less and less in common as time went on. I didn’t care much for Ed’s new barroom pals, mostly dock laborers like himself, whose sole conception of recreation seemed to be to stand at a bar slugging it down until they were stupid drunk, then stagger home, throw up and go to bed. At eighteen a similar group had been my social companions too, but in fourteen years I’d outgrown that kind of social life.
If that makes me a snob, I’m a snob.
I also didn’t care for what I could see happening to young Joe. He’d been twelve when Maggie was killed, but at seventeen he was a far cry from the clean, healthy-minded youngster who used to call me Uncle Manny. It wasn’t just the fact that he’d grown tall and skinny and horse-faced. Kids with a tendency to grow too fast inevitably pass through an ugly stage, and Joe had inherited his father’s bigness. At seventeen he was already six feet four and still growing. He hadn’t even started to fill out. One day he’d be as big and powerful as his father, but now he was just a skinny, gangling colt.
What I didn’t like was the change in his personality. He’d become what too many kids become in a slum environment : a smart young punk with a façade of toughness. He’d quit school at sixteen at the end of his junior year, but so far as I knew spent all his time hanging around pool halls and had never even looked for a job.
I’m not a reformer, and I never once, prior to Ed’s visit to my apartment, suggested to Ed that he snap himself out of it or tried to give Joe any advice. I still regarded Ed as a close friend, but we no longer had much contact. Ed never visited me, so the only place we could get together was in his own social environment.
And I didn’t feel impelled to take up heavy drinking just to prove he was still my friend.
Now I told him I’d drop down the Police Headquarters that afternoon to see what I could find out, and let him know what I learned either that night or the next day.
2
THE relationship between me and Inspector Warren Day is a little hard to define. I suppose you could call it a competitive friendship. There’s little either of us wouldn’t do for the other, but a casual observer who didn’t understand our peculiar relationship would probably think we hate each other’s guts.
In the eight years I’ve known the chief of Homicide, I doubt that we’ve spoken a dozen courteous words to each other. But beneath the surface wrangling is a solid liking based on mutual respect, which neither of us would admit under oath.
When I walked into my irascible friend’s office shortly after one p.m., he raised his skinny bald head to peer at me over his glasses, looked pained and automatically moved his cigar humidor out of reaching distance.
I said, “I brought my own today, Inspector,” took a seat, produced a couple of cigars and offered him one.
He accepted it dubiously, sniffed it before sticking it in his mouth, then shook his head when I offered a light, preferring to chew. I don’t know why Day is so particular about cigar brands, since he rarely lights any of the half dozen a day he consumes, usually just chewing them down until they disappear.
As I lit my own cigar, he said, “If this is a bribe, Moon, it’ll take more than a cigar to fix any murder raps.”
“I didn’t happen to kill
anybody this week,” I told him. “I’m just after information. Understand you’ve got a kid named Joe Brighton down here on some trumped-up charge.”
The inspector’s eyebrows raised. “Trumped up? The young punk’s a killer.”
“Mind telling me what you’ve got on him?”
“Mind telling me why you want to know?”
“His father’s an old friend,” I said. “And I’ve known the kid since he was three. I’m sort of a foster uncle to him. His dad asked me to look into it and do what I could for the boy.”
“Oh.” The inspector was silent for a few moments while he adjusted his mental attitude. He’d been prepared to resist any request I made just to keep in practice, but my personal interest changed things.
Finally he said, “You can’t do anything for him, Moon. His old man should have done something for him years ago. With a razor strop. It’s a little late to start now. Sorry the kid means something to you, because he’s as tough a nut as I’ve seen in a long time. He’s a cinch for life at least.”
“How about giving me the details,” I suggested.
Usually I have to dig out bit by bit any information I get from Warren Day, even when it’s something he intends to release to the newspapers as soon as I leave. This isn’t because he likes me any less than newsmen, but solely because he seems to derive some kind of fiendish satisfaction from making me work. But today he recognized I wasn’t much in the mood for games and gave it to me straight.
“The switchboard got an anonymous call from some female about a quarter of ten last night,” he said. “Claimed she was the girl friend of one of the Purple Pelicans, which probably makes her a teenager. The switchboard operator says she sounded young. She also sounded mad, as though she was getting even with her boy friend for something. She reported the gang was holding a reefer party in their basement club room. The place is at 620 Vernon, just south of Sixth. Fifteen minutes later the narcotics boys raided the joint and nabbed young Brighton just as he was running up the steps. When they shook him down, they found a switch-blade knife over the minimum legal length in his pocket. Then they went on down to the club room and found the dead boy. Another seventeen-year-old named Bart Meyers. He was still warm and the cops figured he hadn’t been dead more than a few minutes when they walked in. There was no sign of a struggle and no evidence that anyone at all aside from the dead kid and Joe Brighton had been in the place that evening. The theory is that young Brighton stuck the knife in him unexpectedly before the Meyers kid could start to defend himself, because the dead boy had both a clasp knife and a zip gun in his pockets.”