Joe Gores - Spade & Archer

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A wonderfully dark, pitch-perfect noir prequel to
, featuring Dashiell Hammett’s beloved detective, Sam Spade. It’s 1921 — seven years before Sam Spade will solve the famous case of the Maltese Falcon. He’s just set up his own agency in San Francisco and he gets off to a quick start, working cases (he doesn’t do domestic) and hiring a bright young secretary named Effie Perrine. When he’s hired by a prominent San Francisco banker to find his missing son, Spade gets the break he’s been looking for. He spends the next few years dealing with booze runners, waterfront thugs, banking swindlers, gold smugglers, and bumbling cops. He brings in Miles Archer as a partner to help bolster the agency, though it was Archer who stole his girl while he was fighting in World War I. All along, Spade will tangle with an enigmatic villain who holds a long-standing grudge against Spade. And, of course, he’ll fall in love — though it won’t turn out for the best. It never does with dames.

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Toomey got out of his big leather chair to shake Spade’s hand and gesture him into an armchair, also leather, that smelled of saddle soap. Toomey was in his sixties, white-haired, well barbered, his nails manicured, with a broad, bony face, an unforgiving mouth, and direct blue eyes. He had captained his own five-master around the Horn before the turn of the century, was still thick in the arms and broad in the shoulders, and was not at all dwarfed by his massive padded swivel chair.

“How is Miles working out, Spade?”

“He may have a line on where the stolen goods are being stored. That’s why I want that list. Do you have ideas of who the thieves might be? Union agitators, maybe?”

“Personally, I don’t care who they are, just so long as you stop them without any publicity.” He shrugged his big shoulders. “At this point that is paramount. No publicity. Of course the Longshoremen’s Association, the Blue Book people, would love it to be Harry Brisbane and his ilk, but I don’t think so.”

Spade put a hint of skepticism in his voice. “Why’s that?”

“Harry was a crewman on one of the last ships I captained. Just a kid then, but an honest kid. They tried to bribe him in twenty-four, but he wasn’t having any of that.”

“Who was it offered him the money?”

“I don’t remember. Probably Stan Hagar. He’s Blue Book union heart and soul. Hates Harry Brisbane and the I.L.A. union.” Toomey shoved an envelope across the desk. “Here’s your list of stolen goods.”

36

Bound Feet, Natural Feet

Sam Spade was on his way out the door at 7 in the morning when his phone rang. He went back inside to pick it up and answered it standing. Effie Perine sounded sleepy but smug.

“The Angel Island is leaving for the immigration station from the Nippon Yusen Kaisha Line Pier Twenty-four at eight thirty. Ray Chong Fat has fixed it so they’ll think you’re a customs official named Nick Charles who needs a translator.”

“Thanks, sweetheart. I’ll bring a bulging briefcase and try to look official.”

Spade changed into a heavy coat and pulled on a woolen knit cap. Twenty minutes later he was walking onto Pier 24 at the foot of Harrison.

Two dozen Japanese men and women were boarding the 144-foot steamer. Spade towered over most of them by nearly a foot. At the head of the gangplank an officious man with a clipboard singled him out.

“State your name and business.”

“Nick Charles,” said Spade. “Special customs agent to—”

“Oh, sure.” The man made a check beside an item on his clipboard. “A translator named Ray Chong Fat will be waiting for you at the immigration station.”

It was a short trip; Angel Island lies in Richardson Bay between Tiburon and San Francisco, an irregular rocky oval covered with trees and vegetation and rimmed with pale sandy beaches. Spade stood at the railing, rolling and smoking cigarettes and watching the island materialize out of the fog.

After the luggage was stored in the shed at the end of the long curving immigration pier at China Cove, the passengers trooped toward the administration building, set back and up from the beach. A slender black-haired dish-faced Chinese man Effie Perine’s age fell into step with Spade.

“Mr. Charles? Ray Chong Fat. I hope I can translate those documents for you.” He lowered his voice. “You’re helping a paper daughter named Mai-lin Choi who passed through here?”

“If she did.”

“She did. I was the translator at her interrogations.”

The immigration station was a vast complex of fifty buildings, dominated by a sprawling two-story administration building, with tan walls and a peaked tile roof. Farther up the slope were the detention barracks, the power plant, and the hospital.

The day was gray, blustering, the fog still swirling, the wind off the bay stabbing at their backs as they walked. As they mounted the steps of the administration building, Chong Fat shivered in his skimpy Immigration Service uniform and said abruptly, “Thirty percent of all Chinese immigrants are deported without ever setting foot in America.”

“So seventy percent make it in. Not bad odds.”

The administration building smelled of damp paper and stale coffee and disinfectant. It was cold and echoing, with linoleum-covered floors and rows of tiny cubicles. In one, a dull-eyed emaciated Chinese youth in a rumpled jacket and unmatched pants was sitting in a hard-backed chair at a glass-topped table. Across from him were two middle-aged Americans in dark suits and ties, one balding with glasses, the other black haired with a small precise mustache. No one was speaking.

Chong Fat led Spade up creaking wooden stairs to a small office on the second floor. He sat down behind the desk while Spade drew up a chair across from him. Chong Fat gestured at Spade’s briefcase, spoke almost in a whisper.

“You brought papers to spread across the desk?”

“Sure. Did you find any record of the Reverend Sabbath Zhu Pomeroy ever passing through?”

“No record,” said Chong Fat, still low voiced.

He opened the bottom drawer of his desk and brought out a folder, took out a bulky transcript marked “Mai-lin Choi.” As Spade half-hid it among his jumble of meaningless papers on the desk, he said loudly, “I hope you can translate this for me.”

Spade started reading the transcript, making squiggles on a pad to make it look like he was taking notes as Chong Fat talked in a high, hesitant voice to sound like he was translating into English the characters he was reading in Chinese.

Spade read:

How many steps are there to the front door of your house?

Three.

Who lives opposite your house?

Chin Doo-yik. He lives with his wife.

Describe his wife.

Ng Chee, natural feet.

Didn’t that man have children?

No.

How many houses in your row?

Four.

Who lives in the third house in the second row of houses?

Leong Yik-gai.

What clan does he belong to?

I never heard his family name.

Do you expect us to believe you lived in that village and don’t know the clan names of the other people living there?

Not Leong Yik-gai’s. He never told anyone his family name. He is always away somewhere. He has a wife, one son, and a daughter living in that house.

Describe his wife.

Woo Fong. Bound feet.

Spade finished, slid the transcript back to Chong Fat, who returned it to its folder and quickly put it back in the drawer.

“Thank you very much, Mr. Chong Fat,” said Spade in a loud, hearty voice, gathering up his meaningless papers. “You have saved the Customs Service a week of hard work.”

When Spade entered the office, Effie Perine was still there even though it was well after 6 o’clock. She was all business. “Mai-lin and Reverend Zhu will meet you at St. John’s Methodist Church, Washington and Stockton, tomorrow at one p.m.”

“Good. Those interrogations out on Angel Island are mainly nonsense — who lived in the fourth house in your row, did his wife have bound feet or natural feet?”

“They weren’t able to trap her or confuse her?”

“They never came close. She’s smart and quick-witted enough to be Sun Yat-sen’s daughter. Everything she told us checks out. We can’t say the same for Zhu. No record.”

“You said clergymen come and go as they like.”

“He still would have had to pass through Immigration and Customs. So he either got here illegally or was born here. When Miles comes in tomorrow, tell him to meet me at the Green Street warehouse at midnight. Tonight, grab your coat, I’ll buy you dinner at Julius Castle. Anything you want on the menu.”

37

Reverend Pastor Sabbath Zhu

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