Макс Коллинз - True Crime

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True Crime: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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Chicago, 1934. Corruption and intrigue run rampant among the cops and the politicians, who vie for power with organized crime. Sally Rand dances at the World’s Fair, gangster Frank Nitti holds court in a posh hotel suite, Baby Face Nelson and Ma Barker and her boys terrorize the countryside, and G-man Melvin Purvis makes J. Edgar Hoover’s reputation while the street in front of the Biograph Theater runs red with blood.
Into this turbulent and dangerous world steps Nathan Heller, a tough but honest private eye trying to make a living in hard times. But his search for a farmer’s-daughter-turned-gun-moll catapults him into the midst of a daring assault on Hoover’s empire and a police plot against the elusive John Dillinger that leaves some crucial questions unanswered.
Heller’s investigations send him undercover into the bucolic world of farmhouse hideouts and dusty back roads — until, back in Chicago’s Loop, the sound of machine-gun fire brings the curtain down suddenly on an entire outlaw era.

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Barney seemed offended by my lack of manners. “Nate, come on — I’m the one who insisted he join us.”

Zarkovich half-stood. “I apologize for intruding.”

Barney really was embarrassed now, put a hand on Zarkovich’s arm, stopping him. “You’re not intruding. Let me get you that beer—”

I slid out of the booth and stood. “I’d just like to get business out of the way, first. We’ll be back down later, Barney. We’ll both let you buy us a beer — if you’ll be around awhile.”

Barney’s face settled into a distrustful mask. “Uh, sure, Nate. I’m just waiting for Pearl to get back with what’s left of my money. I’ll be here half an hour or so at least.”

Zarkovich thanked Barney for his hospitality and followed me out onto the street, in the shadow of the El, where we went in the door between the cocktail lounge and the pawnshop and up the stairs to my office, where I unlocked the door and ushered him in. We hadn’t said a word on the way.

I opened a window and got back behind my desk and Zarkovich stood till I gestured for him to sit, in one of the chairs opposite me. He took off his hat, and I invited him to take off his suitcoat; he smiled politely and, despite the heat, declined.

“I thought we should talk,” he said.

“I wonder what about.”

“You seem to be ahead of me, Mr. Heller.”

“Let’s drop the ‘mister’ horseshit, okay, Zarkovich? Anna Sage still owns two houses in East Chicago, so you’re here today collecting from her, right?”

His handsome face was impassive.

I went on. “Only this trip Anna happened to tell you a story, and it interested you. A story about a man one of her girls has been seeing.”

He nodded.

“What Anna told you was she thinks the man might be somebody famous,” I said.

He nodded.

“Now I wonder who that somebody famous might be. The Dionne Quints? Charlie McCarthy? John Dillinger?”

He had big hands; he clasped them together and then cracked his knuckles. It sounded like the Saint Valentine’s Day Massacre.

He said, “Your remarks don’t amuse me, Heller.”

“They were for my own benefit. It’s my office, after all. What the hell.”

“This is a serious business, you know.”

“No. Do tell.”

“You’re just a penny-ante private cop who used to be a penny-ante Chicago cop, Heller. You’re nothing special. You were on the take like everybody else.”

“You’re repeating yourself. You already said I was a Chicago cop.”

“Funny. Just don’t be so high and mighty. Some graft comes my way, all right? I don’t deny it. That doesn’t make me a bad cop. If times weren’t so hard, I—”

“Wouldn’t be wearing a hundred-dollar suit and a ten-dollar tie? I don’t care if you’re a grifter, Zarkovich. If you weren’t, you’d be unnatural, a saint or something. And I wouldn’t feel comfortable around you.”

“You feel comfortable around me, do you?”

“Yeah. I’m at home. I know where you’ve been and where you’re going.”

“I could say the same thing about you. Mind if I smoke?”

“I don’t care if you burn.”

Zarkovich gave me a little twitch of a smile and took out a silver cigarette case, selected a cigarette and inserted it in a black holder, and lit up.

“How did your meeting with Purvis go?” he asked.

If that was supposed to throw me, well, I felt steady enough. I didn’t like the idea that I’d been tailed and hadn’t picked up on it; but I didn’t bust out crying.

I said, “I told him I might have seen Dillinger. But I didn’t go any further than that.”

He nodded, the cigarette holder at a jaunty, FDR angle. “Wise. Waiting to talk to Cowley?”

“Yeah. Maybe. If I talk to anybody.”

“Why wouldn’t you?”

“Maybe there’s nothing to talk about; Jimmy Lawrence takes an awful lot of taxicabs for a Board of Trade clerk, but that isn’t illegal.”

“You have your doubts he’s Dillinger?”

“Hell yes. If this guy is Dillinger, he’s the brazenest, coolest lad I’ve ever come across. He goes to public places all over the city, day and night; he bumps into cops without blinking; wears snappy clothes — this is a whole new way of lyin’ low. And he’s apparently unarmed... he doesn’t even look like Dillinger, exactly.”

Zarkovich nodded knowingly, smiled the same way. “Plastic surgery. Good enough to give him a sense of confidence. To go out in public and be an everyday joe. But it’s a false sense of security. Anna recognized him, for one.”

“So she says.”

“So does he. He admitted to her last night he was Dillinger.”

“What?”

“Call her,” he said, pointing to my phone. “Ask her yourself.”

“Why would he admit that?”

“He trusts Anna. She can be warm and motherly, you know.”

“I bet.”

“She’s been nice to him and, as a madam, she seems trustworthy from his point of view... fellow underworld denizen and such like. And Anna’s been known to, uh... rent space out to fellas on the run.”

“I see. And now Anna wants to sell Mr. Dillinger out.”

“What’s to sell out? He isn’t one of her roomers; he’s got his own place, doesn’t he? On Pine Grove Avenue?”

I nodded.

“Is it Anna’s fault the guy confided in her?”

“Zarkovich, what’s this got to do with me?”

He drew on the cigarette holder. “I’d like you to talk to Purvis again — or Cowley. I’d like you to arrange for one or both of them to meet with Anna.”

“Why doesn’t Anna approach them herself?”

“With her criminal record, she could use an intermediary.”

“Why don’t you do it?”

He made a sweeping, magnanimous hand gesture. “I could. In fact, I was going to suggest we go together. You could report what you’ve observed; and I would say Mrs. Sage, an old friend from East Chicago, contacted me about Dillinger, and put us in touch.”

“Why don’t you just leave me out of it?”

He shrugged. “Just trying to be fair. Can’t see the point in working against each other. There’s plenty of money in this for all concerned, Heller. At least twenty grand, to split four ways.”

“Four?”

“Besides you and I, and Anna, there’s my immediate superior, Captain O’Neill. He’s in town today, too.”

“He always accompany you to pick up collection money from madams?”

“Heller, we were in town following up leads on the Dillinger case. We had a tip our man was in Chicago, on the North Side.”

“From Anna?”

“No. From a gambler I know, a Croatian. But never mind that. When I talked to Anna yesterday — not long after she’d talked to you — I realized our man was within our grasp. We have a vested interest in Mr. Dillinger in Indiana, you know.”

“Besides the twenty-thousand-dollar reward money, you mean.”

“Of course. Dillinger’s an embarrassment to Indiana — a native son gone wrong.”

“Is Leach in on this?”

Captain Matt Leach was the Indiana state cop who had devoted his entire career, of late, to tracking down Dillinger. A publicity seeker who made Purvis and Ness seem modest by comparison, Leach was hated by a lot of cops, but he was known to be a tireless, even obsessive pursuer of Dillinger.

“No,” Zarkovich said tersely. “He’s not involved. This is East Chicago business.”

“A minute ago you said Dillinger was Indiana business.”

“Specifically, East Chicago.”

“Why?”

“He killed a cop there.”

“Oh. That’s the one killing they have him for.”

“That’s right. He killed a cop on his way out the door of the First National Bank, killed him with a machine gun. And there were plenty of witnesses.”

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