Read The Fools in Town Are on Our Side Online
Authors: Ross Thomas
“You mean to the four firms that I dealt with?”
“Yes.”
Orcutt nodded slowly. “Yes, I can see that you'd be interested in that. I was really
quite
specific. The candidate should be unattached, not too old, possessed of
some
social graces, presentable, and willing to undergo a slight risk. Availability was another consideration, of
course, because our lead time is just
slipping
away. He should also have a certain amount of experience in clandestine activities, either for government or for private industry. Preferably he should belong to
some
minority group, but I had to give up on that one. He should have rather deep insight into human nature, be slightly skeptical but not so much that it clouds his judgment, and above all he must be intelligent. Not book smart, mind you, but quickish, cleverish, sharpishâ”
“Shrewdish?” I offered.
“You're
teasing
again. I
do
like that. But to continue. He should also be articulate. Not a salesman, mind you, but sincere and well spoken.”
“And you think I'm all that?”
“No one is, Mr. Dye. But you possess a majority of the qualifications. Ones that Homer, Miss Thackerty, and even I lack. You will, shall I say, round out our team. Now that you're virtually one of us, I can tell you about our project.”
The city that Victor Orcutt wanted me to corrupt had a population of a little more than two hundred thousand and was located on the Gulf Coast somewhere between Mobile and Galveston. It was called Swankerton but the local wits had long ago changed that to Chancre Town, which, Orcutt said, had some basis of fact.
He went on for quite a while and I half-listened, knowing that a recitation of facts and names and statistics was no substitute for personal appraisal. Necessary was on his fourth Scotch without visible effect and Carol Thackerty, still looking bored, kept her vigil at the window. I liked to look at her. Her profile offered a high calm forehead, a straight nose, not at all thin, just delicate, or some might even say aristocratic. She had a good chin, rounded and firm, which swept gracefully back to her long, slender neck.
Victor Orcutt had stopped talking and was looking at me as if he expected a remark or a question. I decided on a question. “What's the deadline?”
“The first Tuesday in November.”
“This year?”
“This year.”
“It's not enough. You can't even shake down city hall for the Heart Fund in two months.”
“We'll have to,” Orcutt said. “There's absolutely no lead time, Mr. Dye. The persons whom I'm dealing with in Swankerton have been dilatory. They now recognize full well that they started late. Very late. That's why I was able to demand my fee and that's why I'm able to offer you fifty thousand dollars for two months' work.”
“That's too much money for two months' work,” I said. “But I won't argue about it. It just means that I'll have to do something that I don't want to do. Something tricky probably. But the real reason I'm taking it is because Gerald Vicker wants me to. And the only reason he wants me to is because he thinks something nasty might happen to me. So do you, or you wouldn't make the ante so high. Vicker worries me. He worries me enough so that I'll go along until I learn what it's all about.”
“This seems to be a long-standing feud between you and Vicker, Mr. Dye,” Orcutt said.
“It's more of a vendetta than a feud and it goes back about six years.”
“What happened?”
“He used to work for the same people I did. I got him fired.”
“Jealousy? Rivalry?”
“No. It was because he killed someone.”
“Who?”
“The wrong man.”
We talked some more about Swankerton and then Homer Necessary announced that he was hungry. “Just a minute, Homer,” Orcutt said and turned to me. “Your decision is firm, Mr. Dye? You will go to Swankerton with us?”
I looked at Orcutt, took a breath, then sighed and said, “When do we leave?”
He rose and clapped his hands together in pleasure. I thought for a moment that he might even do us a little dance. “Tomorrow morning.
There's a direct flight, but we still have
so
many things to discuss. You'll join us for dinner?”
“Fine,” I said.
“But not here. I just can't
abide
hotel food. Any hotel. Homer, go down and get the car. Carol, call Ernie's and make a reservation for four. A good table, mind you. Do you know Ernie's, Mr. Dye? It's on Montgomery.”
I told him no.
“It's marvelous. Simply marvelous.”
Victor Orcutt did the ordering and everything was as good as he said it would be. We had the
Tortue au Sherry; Dover Sole Ernie's
with a bottle of
Chablis Bougros; Tournedos Rossini
with some more wine, this time
Pommard Les Epenots.
There was a Belgian endive salad followed by a crêpe soufflé, coffee, and cognac. It was all simply marvelous and it only cost Victor Orcutt $162.00.
Orcutt sent Necessary for the car while he headed toward the rear, either to compliment the chef or to pee. That left me with Carol Thackerty. She put a cigarette between her lips and I leaned over to light it.
When she had it going she smiled and said, “I understand that you grew up in a whorehouse.”
“That's right.”
“Well,” she said, “we have that much in common. So did I.”
Â
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It must have been in the autumn of 1939 that I first met Gorman Smalldane. I
was five then, going on six, and sober, and Gorman Smalldane was thirty-four and a little drunk. It was either a Monday or a Tuesday night, about ten o'clock, and I was at my usual post outside the door of Tante Katerine's joy emporium, waiting to greet customers. There weren't many and I was glad when the taxi drew up and the man in the blue suit jumped out, paid off the driver, and checked the polished brass plate to make sure that this was Number 27. That was all the identification that Tante Katerine's establishment ever had. It was all it needed.
Smalldane pushed through the brick wall's wrought-iron gates, which Tante Katerine claimed came all the way from New Orleans, and made his way towards me, tacking only a little now and then. I was wearing my fancy uniform with the pillbox monkey hat. My face was powdered and painted and for added splendor two of my front teeth were missing.
Smalldane stopped in front of me, all six feet three inches of him. He cocked his blond head to one side and studied me carefully. Then he cocked it to the other side and studied me some more. After that he shook his head in mild disbelief and walked around me to see whether the view was any better from the rear. In front of me once
more, he bent from the waist until his face was no more than six inches from mine and I could smell the whiskey. It was Scotch. “Now just what in fuck's name are you supposed to be, little man?” he said.
“The humble greeter of clients, my lordship,” I lisped because of my teeth, backed up a step, and bowed. Then I launched into a lisping, Australian-accented, English version of the official welcome with all of its bows and flourishes and leers.
Smalldane stood there listening to it all and shaking his head from side to side. When I was done, he bent down from the waist again and said: “You know what I think you are? I think you are a gap-toothed sissy, that's what.”
I gave him the full benefit of my black and white smile, bowed again, and said in Cantonese, “And your mother, drunken pig, was an ancient turtle who coupled with a running dog.” I'd picked that one up someplace.
Still bent down, Smalldane smiled and nodded his head as if in full agreement. Then he straightened up, put his hands on his hips, and said softly: “You should guard that dung-coated tongue of yours, my little pimp for poisonous toads, or I will rip it from your mouth and shove it up your rectum where it can flap in the breeze of your own wind.” His Cantonese was as good as mine, his imagery more vivid.
He didn't scare me. Nothing scared me then, probably because I was spoiled rotten. But Smalldane did impress me with his size and his brilliant command of the foul invective. I bowed again, quite low, and made a sweeping gesture toward the door. “This way, my lordship, if you please.”
“Here you go, sonny,” he said and tossed me an American half-dollar.
“A thousand thank yous, kind sir,” I said, another archaic phrase that someone had taught me, but whichâbecause of my absent teethâcame out with all the sibilants missing.
Smalldane went through the door and I followed, partly because I was curious, partly because business was slack, but mostly because I wanted the cup of hot cocoa that Yen Chi, Tante Katerine's
amah
, prepared for me nightly.
I was right behind Smalldane when the madame of the house swept into the large entrance hall. She stopped abruptly, her eyes widened, and her hand went to her throat, a dramatic ploy that she copied rather successfully from either Norma Shearer or Kay Francis. I had watched her practice it often enough before her vanity table mirror. But now, for once in her life, she abandoned her pose and ran with arms outstretched toward Smalldane, crying, “Gormy!” at the top of her voice. He wrapped her in an embrace and kissed her for a long time while I watched with clinical interest. That's one thing about being reared in a whorehouse: displays of affection and emotion will never embarrass you.
There were a number of half-sentences and unintelligible phrases such as “you promised to” and “I couldn't get away” and “over two years without” and “long time” and “it's so good to” and all the rest of the things that two persons who are fond of each other say after a long separation. I stood there, probably smirking a little, and watched and listened.
Tante Katerine spotted me then and beckoned. “Lucifer, dear, come. I want you to meet a very good and old friend of mine, Mr. Gorman Smalldane, the famous American radio correspondent. Gorman, this is my ward, Lucifer Dye.” She must have looked up “ward” someplace because it was the first time I'd ever heard her use it.
“Mr. Smalldane,” I said, bowing stiffly, more in the European than the Chinese manner. One of the girls from Berlin had contributed that. Her name was Use.
“He's an insufferable little prick, isn't he?” Smalldane said. “Who the hell lets him paint himself up like that?”
“I think it's
sehr aufgeweckt”
she said because nobody in Shanghai then had much use for “cute.”
“Looks like you're training him for a job in Sammy Ching's place down on the waterfrontâif the Japs haven't closed it yet. Sailors like little pogey bait like him.”
“Well, you're wrong, Mr. Gorman Famous Smalldane,” Tante Katerine said. “He's just a little boy and he goes to school every day. For three hours.”
“Where?”
“Here. We teach him here.”
Smalldane grinned and shook his head. “I bet he does learn a lot at that. And all of it useful.”
I found the conversation fascinating, doubtless because they were talking about me.
“He can do his multiplication through the twelveses,” Tante Katerine said, her English lapsing as her anger rose. “You want to hear him? What's twelve times eleven, Lucifer?”
“One hundred and thirty two,” the insufferable little prick said.
“There!” she said triumphantly. “See. I bet you can't do that when you are six.”
“I can't do it now,” Smalldane said. “I never got past my elevenses.”
“He also speaks six languages. Maybe even seven. How many could you speak when you were his age, Mr. Know-some-all?”
“That's know-it-all,” Smalldane said, “and I could barely get by in English, but at least I stayed out of Mother's rouge and powder and wore pants, for God's sake, and not her bathrobe.”
“Now you don't like his clothes,” she said, her voice rising. “Now you're making funny of his clothes. Do you know how much that gown cost? Do you know how many I paid for it? I paid fifteen dollars for it American, that's how many.”
“He still looks silly.”
“That's not all he's got. He's got four more just as expensive. And he's got fine American clothes too that come from a famous house of fashion.”
“Sears, Roebuck?”
“Buster Brown, that's who,” she said.
“Jesus,” Smalldane said. “I quit. Look, Katie, I didn't come here to argue about some Australian kid that you've taken to raise. It's been more thanâ”
“I'm not Australian, sir,” I said, “I am an American,” thus proving that there's a little chauvinism in the best of us.
“You didn't pick that accent up in Pittsburgh, kid.”
I stood straight as a plumb line, scrunched my eyes closed, and
recited: “I am six years old and my name is Lucifer Clarence Dye and I was born December 5, 1933, in Moncrief, Montana, United States of America, and my father's name was Dr. Clarence Dye and I live at Number Twenty-seven.”
“Okay, Lucifer,” Smalldane interrupted. “That's fine. I believe you. Relax.” He knelt down so that his head was level with mine and I could smell the Scotch again. “Look, tomorrow I'll tell you what we'll do. You'll play hookeyâ”
“What's hookey?” I said.
“You'll miss school and we'll go down and get you some American clothes and maybe hoist a few at the Shanghai Club.” He looked up at Tante Katerine. “Is old Chi Fo's tailor shop still going, you know, near the American School in the French Concession?”
Tante Katerine shrugged to show her indifference. “The American School was closed two years ago, but I assume Chi Fo is still in business.”
“You mind if I take the kid?”
“Why should I mind? I'm only a poor Russian, exiled from her country to this war-torn land, friendless and alone, who's tried to give a decent home to this poorâ”