Kemper cruised South Miami. He began the game by marking who knew what.
Mr. Hoover knew everything everything. SA Boyd's "retirement" was cloaked in FBI paperwork: if Bobby sought corroboration, he'd find it.
Claire knew everything. She'd never judge his motives or betray him.
Ward Littell knew of the Kennedy incursion. He most likely disapproved of it--Bobby's crimebuster fervor deeply impressed him. Ward was also an ad hoc infiltration partner, compromised by the Darleen Shoftel wire job. The job shamed him--but gratitude for his THP transfer outweighed his guilt pangs. Ward did not know that Pete Bondurant killed Anton Gretzler; Ward did not know that Mr. Hoover condoned the murder. Bondurant terrified Ward--a sane response to Big Pete and the legend he inspired. The Bondurant matter should be kept from Ward at all cost.
Bobby knew that he was pimping for Jack--supplying him with the numbers of especially susceptible old flames.
Questions and answers next: practice for deflecting skepticism.
Kemper braked for a woman lugging groceries. His game snapped to the present tense.
Bobby thinks I'm chasing leads on Anton Gretzler. I'm really protecting Howard Hughes' pet thug.
Q: You seem bent on crashing the Kennedy inner circle.
A: I can spot corners a mile off. Cozying up to Democrats doesn't make me a Communist. Old Joe Kennedy's as far right as Mr. Hoover.
Q: You "cozied up" to Jack rather fast.
A: If circumstances had been different, I could have been Jack.
Kemper checked his notebook.
He had to go by Tiger Kab. He had to go to Sun Valley and show mug shots to the witness who saw the "big man" avert his face off the Interstate.
He'd show him old old mug shots--bad current Bondurant likenesses. He'd discourage a confirmation: you didn't really see mug shots--bad current Bondurant likenesses. He'd discourage a confirmation: you didn't really see this this man, did you? man, did you?
A tiger-striped taxi swerved in front of him. He saw a tigerstriped hut down the block.
Kemper pulled up and parked across the street. Some curbside loungers smelled COP and dispersed.
He walked into the hut. He laughed--the wallpaper was freshflocked tiger-striped velveteen.
Four tiger-shirted Cubans stood up and circled him. They wore their shirttails out to cover waistband bulges.
Kemper pulled his mug shots out. The tiger men circled in tighter. A man pulled out a stiletto and scratched his neck with the blade.
The other tiger men laughed. Kemper braced the closest one. "Have you seen him?"
The man passed the mug strip around. Every man flashed recognition and said "No."
Kemper grabbed the strip. He saw a white man on the sidewalk checking his car out.
The knife man sidled up close. The other tiger men giggled. The knife man twirled his blade right upside the gringo's eyes.
Kemper judo-chopped him. Kemper snapped his knees with a sidekick. The man hit the floor prone and dropped his shiv.
Kemper picked it up. The tiger men backed off en masse. Kernper stepped on the knife man's knife hand and slammed the blade through it.
The knife man screamed. The other tiger men gasped and tittered. Kemper exited with a tight little bow.He drove out I-95 to Sun Valley. A gray sedan stuck close behind him. He changed lanes, dawdled and accelerated--the car followed from a classic tail distance.
Kemper eased down an off-ramp. A hicktown main street ran perpendicular to it--just four gas stations and a church. He pulled into a Texaco and parked.
He walked to the men's room. He saw the tail car idle up to the pumps. The white man dawdling by Tiger Kab got out and looked around.
Kemper shut the door and pulled his piece. The room was smelly and filthy.
He counted seconds off his watch. He heard foot scuffs at fiftyone.
The man nudged the door open. Kemper yanked him in and pinned him to the walL He was fortyish, sandy-haired, and slender. Kemper patsearched him from the ankles up.
No badge, no gun, no leatherette ID holder.
The man didn't blink. The man ignored the revolver in his face.
The man said, "My name is John Stanton. I'm a representative of a U.S. Government agency, and I want to talk to you."
"About what?"
Stanton said, "Cuba."
9
(Chicago, 12/11/58)
S Snitch candidate at work: "Jewboy Lenny" Sands collecting jukebox cash.
Littell tailed him. They hit six Hyde Park taverns in an hour-- Lenny worked fast.
Lenny kibitzed. Lenny cracked jokes. Lenny passed out Johnnie Walker Red Label miniatures. Lenny told the story of Come-San-Chin, the Chinese cocksucker--and bagged his coin receipts inside seven minutes.
Lenny was a deficient tail-spotter. Lenny had unique THP stats: lounge entertainer/Cuban bagman/Mob mascot.
Lenny pulled up to the Tillerman's Lounge. Littell parked and walked in thirty seconds behind him.
The place was overheated. A bar mirror tossed his reflection back: lumberjack coat, chinos, work boots.
He still looked like a college professor.
Teamster regalia lined the walls. A framed glossy stood out: Jimmy Hoffa and Frank Sinatra holding up trophy fish.
Workingmen walked through a hot buffet line. Lenny sat at a back table, with a stocky man wolfmg corned beef.
Littell ID'd him: Jacob Rubenstein/AKA Jack Ruby.
Lenny brought his coin sacks. Ruby brought a suitcase. It was a probable vending cash transfer.
There were no empty tables adjoining them.
Men stood at the bar drinking lunch: rye shots and beer chasers. Littell signaled for the same--nobody laughed or snickered.
The barman served him and took his money. He downed his lunch quick--just like his Teamster brothers.
The rye made him sweat; the beer gave him goose bumps. The combination tamped down his nerves.
He'd had one THP Squad meeting. The men seemed to resent him--Mr. Hoover slotted him in personally. An agent named Court Meade came on friendly; the others welcomed him with nods and perfunctory handshakes.
He had three days in as a THP agent. Including three shifts at the bug post, studying Chi-mob voices.
The barman cruised by. Littell raised two fingers--the same way his Teamster brothers called for refills.
Sands and Ruby kept talking. There was no table space near them--he couldn't get close enough to listen.
He drank and paid up. The rye went straight to his head.
Drinking on duty was a Bureau infraction. Not strictly strictly illegal-- like wiring fuck pads to entrap politicians. illegal-- like wiring fuck pads to entrap politicians.
The agent working the Shoftel post was probably swamped--he hadn't sent a single tape out yet. Mr. Hoover's Kennedy hate seemed insanely misguided.
Robert Kennedy seemed heroic. Bobby's kindness to Roland Kirpaski seemed pure and genuine.
A table opened up. Littell walked through the lunch line and grabbed it. Lenny and Rubenstein/Ruby were less than three feet away.
Ruby was talking. Food dribbled down his bib.
"Heshie always thinks he's got cancer or some farkakte disease. With Hesh a pimple's always a malignant tumor."
Lenny picked at a sandwich. "Heshie's a class guy. When I played the Stardust Lounge in '54 he came every night. Heshie always preferred lounge acts to the main-room guys. Jesus Christ and the Apostles could be playing the big room at the Dunes, and Heshie'd be over at some slot palace checking out some guinea crooner 'cause his cousin's a made guy."
Ruby said, "Heshie loves blow jobs. He gets blow jobs exclusively, 'cause he says it's good for his prostate. He told me he hasn't dipped the schnitzel since he was with the Purples back in the '30s and some shiksa tried to schlam him with a paternity suit. Heshie told me he's had over ten thousand blow jobs. He likes to watch 'The Lawrence Welk Show' while he gets blown. He's got nine doctors for all these diseases he thinks he's got, and all the nurses blow him. That's how he knows it's good for his prostate."
"Heshie" was most likely Herschel Meyer Ryskind: "active in the Gulf Coast heroin trade."
Lenny said, "Jack, I hate to stiff you with all these coins, but I didn't have time to go to the bank. Sam was very specific. He said you were making rounds and only had limited time. I'm glad we had time to nosh, though, 'cause I always enjoy watching you eat."
Ruby wiped his bib. "I'm worse when the food's better. There's a deli in Big D that's to die for. Here, my shirt's just spritzed. At that deli it's spray-painted."
"Who's the money for?"
"Batista and the Beard. Santo and Sam are hedging their bets political-wise. I'm flying down next week."
Lenny pushed his plate aside. "I've got this new routine where Castro comes to the States and gets a job as a beatnik poet. He's smoking maryjane and talking like a shvartze."
"You're big-room talent, Lenny. I've always said so."
"Keep saying it, Jack. If you keep saying it, somebody might hear you."
Ruby stood up. "Hey, you never know."
"That's right, you never do. Shalom, Jack. It's always a pleasure watching you eat."
Ruby walked out with his suitcase. Jewboy Lenny lit a cigarette and rolled his eyes up to God.
Lounge acts. Blow jobs. Rye and beer for lunch.
Littell walked back to his car lightheaded.Lenny left twenty minutes later. Littell tailed him to Lake Shore Drive northbound.
Whitecap spray lit the windshield--booming wind had the lake churning. Littell cranked up his heater--too hot replaced too cold.
The liquor left him cotton-mouthed and just a tad woozy. The road kept dipping--just a little.
Lenny signaled to exit. Littell leaped lanes and eased up behind him. They swung down into the Gold Coast--too upscale to be Vendo-King turf.
Lenny turned west on Rush Street. Littell saw high-toned cocktail spots up ahead: brownstone fronts and low-key neon signs.
Lenny parked and walked into Hernando's Hideaway. Littell cruised by extra-slow.
The door swung back. He saw two men kissing--a little half-second teaser blip.
Littell double-parked and switched jackets: lumberjack to blue blazer. The chinos and boots had to stay.
He walked in bucking wind. The place was dark and midafternoon quiet. The decor was discreet: all polished wood and forest-green leather.
A banquette section was roped off. Two duos sat at opposite ends of the bar: older men, Lenny and a college boy.
Littell took a seat between them. The bartender ignored him.
Lenny was talking. His inflections were polished now--devoid of growl and Yiddish patter.
"Larry, you should have seen this wretched man eat."
The bartender came over. Littell said, "Rye and beer." Heads turned his way.
The barman poured a shot. Littell downed it and coughed. The barman said, "My, aren't we thirsty!"
Littell reached for his wallet. His ID holder popped out and landed on the bar badge-up.