***The Life And Times Of Michael Philip
Marlin, Private Detective- The October Of The Red-Eyed Moon
Don’t tangle with, don’t mess with, don’t, well don’t okay with red-headed dames, just move on, move on just as quickly as your two feet will carry you. This is not some shop-worn advice from some scolding mother looking out for her Johnnie or Jimmie, like mothers have been doing since Eve, maybe before, but straight from a guy who knows, a guy who almost tangled with, almost messed with a red-headed dame. A guy named Michael Philip Marlin. Marlin, a well-known Ocean City (just outside Los Angeles then, incorporated into the city now) gumshoe who had been around starlets, around their beds too, and movie people should have known from that first look she threw at him at Mindy’s Bar over on Wiltshire right over the line from Ocean City in Los Angeles one October night that she was poison. Should have known to walk away.
From The Pen Of Frank Jackman with
kudos to Raymond Chandler
Comment on this sketch:
As those who have followed this
series know, and for those who don’t here is the skinny, these sketches are
based on conversations that Joshua Lawrence Breslin, the old-time journalist
for the East Bay Eye and half the
other, mainly unread, radical journals and newspapers in this country, had with
the late well-known Los Angeles private detective Michael Philip Marlin’s son,
Tyrone Fallon, a while back. Mr. Fallon, who also is the private detection
business, decided after a great deal of cajoling by Joshua to provide him with
some of the stories that his father had told him as he was growing up in the
1950s about cases that he, or in some cases other well-known detectives, had
been involved in. Marlin’s idea was to give his son some of the do’s and don’ts
of the business in case he ever decided to try his hand at it. Joshua then told
them to me over a long period when we met, usually at a bar when both of us
were misty-eyed for some old time stories, and I have kind of run with them in
my own way.
Most of the stories stand on their
own but this one, The October of The
Red-Eyed Moon, requires some explanation since it involved Marlin warning
Tyrone away from red-headed women, period. The odd part of that is that
Tyrone’s mother, the famous 1940s femme
fatale roles actress Fiona Fallon, who may or may not have married Marlin
but who had this love child with him, was nothing but a flaming red-head who
passed on that characteristic to her son. So I am not sure, and perhaps you are
too, about taking Marlin’s advice on this one. Read on.
********Don’t tangle with, don’t mess with, don’t, well don’t okay with red-headed dames, just move on, move on just as quickly as your two feet will carry you. This is not some shop-worn advice from some scolding mother looking out for her Johnnie or Jimmie, like mothers have been doing since Eve, maybe before, but straight from a guy who knows, a guy who almost tangled with, almost messed with a red-headed dame. A guy named Michael Philip Marlin. Marlin, a well-known Ocean City (just outside Los Angeles then, incorporated into the city now) gumshoe who had been around starlets, around their beds too, and movie people should have known from that first look she threw at him at Mindy’s Bar over on Wiltshire right over the line from Ocean City in Los Angeles one October night that she was poison. Should have known to walk away.
You know the look, that slinky
dress, black, strap falling off the shoulder come hither look that red flame
hair falling off the other shoulder as was the fashion then, catching the eye
of every man in the room. Saying without saying, “I need a man for some heavy
lifting and you look like the type to handle it.” Something like that with the
tag-line, the lure, “I will make it worth your while.” And it doesn’t take a
real smart guy, a guy who has been around, hell all it takes is any guy over
about twelve to know to know what that “make it worth your while” meant.
So Marlin tumbled, and maybe it was
that dress or maybe it was that gardenia perfume of hers that hit him as she
walked over to his stool at the bar, but he tumbled. And maybe you can’t blame
the guy, any guy especially after a few drinks, a few scotches, but that tumble
was a close thing too, a close thing, except the red-headed dame in question,
Rita Alden, wound up dead, very dead on the bed in Marlin’s apartment and he
laid very unconscious from a cold-cock blackjack on the floor beside her.
Naturally the coppers, the public coppers, the Los Angeles coppers who had no
love lost for keyhole peepers like Marlin had he ready for the big send-off,
ready for Q if it came to that, when they arrived at that scene responding to
an anonymous call. That too was a close call.
But we had better step back to a
couple of days before that fatal October night to explain why Marlin, a
strictly Ocean City denizen, a guy who had had nothing but trouble in previous
encounters with the cops in Los Angeles, hell, with anybody connected with L.A.
wound up talking to a red-headed dame at Mindy’s and thinking, or half-
thinking silky sheets thoughts about this Alden woman. See Rita’s husband,
better ex-husband, Jack, a private-eye himself, kind of, a real bedroom peeper,
doing divorce work, Hollywood bedroom stuff, for his coffee and cakes, hired
Marlowe, knowing that what he had was too big for a window-peeper to handle.
And what Jack had, on tape hidden in
a safe spot, was that he had overheard some very interesting conversations
between Ocean City Police Chief Warren Holmes and one Max Webber, a well-known
West Coast gangster (previously from the East Coast before his luck ran out
there and he headed west, and found gold) about making that fair city wide open
for gambling, booze, drugs, and loose women. All the Chief wanted was a big cut
of the profits ( the request granted, although less than he asked for) and that
Max keep the gunsels and shoot-outs out of town (not granted since Max needed
to take care of guys and protect his turf from poachers, deadly gun-carrying
poachers). And smart Jack, wise from all those peeps got the whole conversation
on tape, and photographs too.
What Jack wanted Marlin to do was
act as an emissary to the two parties, Holmes and Webber, wanted to have him
feel them out about a big pay-off for keeping quiet. Marlin, not normally
interested in such work, at that moment was well behind in his office rent,
room rent too, and so he swallowed, swallowed hard and agreed to do the talking
when Jack flashed five one hundred dollar bills his way. That and a case of
Jack Daniels to tie the bow. Problem, big problem was that somehow Max, the
Chief, or both, got wind of what Jack had and before Marlin could make his
pitch one Jack Alden was fished out of the bay with two slugs through his
heart. (Ocean City, snotty Ocean City, unlike L.A. had few dealings with
low-life private eyes and so it was easy to gather information when one of them
hit town.)
Now you have to know Marlin a little
like Jake Armor, former L.A. Detective Jake Armor, then the head of the Bunco
squad in Ocean City did when Marlin was on the force back there in 1930, 1931,
a guy full of the fight for some rough justice in this wicked old world to
understand that he took Jack’s death, hell, murder personally. So, no Marlin
was not going to take that dough Jack gave him and say good riddance. Marlin
was not build that way. Jack was a client and so Marlowe was going to stick his
neck and his nose into this until somebody screamed uncle. And that was why he
stepped into Mindy’s that red wind October night looking for a certain
red-head, a red-head who had once been married to one Jack Alden.
See this Rita, ex-wife or not, was
working the blackmail racket with her ex so she too would have a big pay-day
and drift back east where she was from.
So they met as previously described, Marlin bought her a couple of drinks, had
a couple himself and she loosened up enough to kind of come on to him straight
and hard. Now Rita wasn’t a looker, no way, in fact she was kind of plain of
face except that flaming red hair (courtesy of Irish forbears) but she had a
figure that made up for that, a figure that had had many a man talking to
himself about how to get next to that.
Frankly she knew what her appeal was, and also knew that to get anywhere in the
world she would have to use every trick, every sexual trick in the book to get
what she wanted. Marlin had her sized up as “easy,” that she had maybe spent
some time doing street tricks and so she knew all the tricks. Still the scotch,
the red wind night, her perfume, too much but working, had him thinking, no,
what did I say before, half- thinking bedroom thoughts as they talked about
what she knew about Jack’s tapes and photographs. She, they agreed it would be
better off to get out of Mindy’s and over to her place on Bayview in the
city.
Like I said Ocean City was a small
town and after they left Mindy’s and went to get Marlin’s car in the parking
lot they were waylaid by two thugs. That was the last Marlin remembered before
he came to with coppers, including Jake Armor, sprawled all over his room. The
first cops on the scene, a couple of patrol car goofs, didn’t believe Marlin’s
story, and neither did Jake when he got the call on the swat box after he
arrived on the scene, about Jack Alden and his schemes. But they didn’t have
enough to hold him and so Jake figured, figured right as it turned out, that
that cold-cock bump would lead him into desperate pursuit of whoever did it to
him, and to Rita. So off he went the next day looking for knock down drag out
revenge. That is where he got some help from a copper over there, a guy named
Albert Pina, a detective who was a straight shooter and who was disgusted by
Max Webber and his crowd making his town a cesspool of vice and corruption (he
was unaware of his chief’s agreement with Max at that time, or so he told
Marlin).
The first order of business was to
find Rita’s killer and here Albert was a real asset. From his sources he found
out that a free agent gunsel named Shorty Murphy had been seen around Rita’s
apartment that dead night. Pina found out where Shorty hung out and they, he
and Marlin, went to make the collar, and also find out, find out officially who
ordered the hit. They found Shorty hanging out at Jersey’s Pool Hall across the
street from Ocean City Police Headquarters, Albert slammed him against the
wall, cuffed him, and then placed him in his private automobile. Marlin thought
that a little odd but said nothing as he got in the front passenger seat of
Albert’s auto. Albert gunned the vehicle and headed for the far end, the
secluded end of the Ocean City beach, around Squaw Rock, the local kids’
hangout during the day but quiet at night. He then proceeded to give Shorty the
third-degree, and then some. Eventually Shorty cried uncle and named Max Webber
as his man. He swore that on his mother’s grave. Then Albert just left Shorty
there, left him to fend for himself, also a little odd.
With Shorty’s forced confession
Albert and Marlin headed to Max Webber’s Kit-Kat Club, a watering hole and
casino up in the hill above town. They entered the club were and stopped by the
head bouncer, Albert showed his badge and asked for Max. They were led to a
back office where Max was counting receipts. Albert, gun drawn, confronted Max.
Max naturally denied Shorty’s story, said why would he bother with some
cheapjack private eye or red-headed whore when he had the town sewed up, sewed
up tight and had all the politician and cops bought and paid for. He flicked
his wrist saying, “Get out of here and don’t bother me anymore about red-headed
whores only good for street tricks and going down on high- school boys down at
Squaw Rock for quarters.” Albert went
crazy at that remark and fired a couple of shots in Max’s direction, one of
them hitting him in the shoulder.
As Albert got ready to another shot
it finally hit Marlin that Max was right. Why would he ruin his whole operation
for some petty blackmail scheme. And that is when Marlin remembered something
about that night Rita was killed, as he was coming out of his unconsciousness.
The smell of a man’s shaving lotion, a smell that the perspiring Albert was
giving off just then. He took out his gun, directed Albert to stop shooting and
Albert turned around ready to shoot. Marlin put two slugs near the heart.
Albert died on the way to the hospital.
It came out later that Albert had
been a lover scorned. He had been Rita’s boyfriend in high school and they were
to be married. Rita backed out went out west and Albert followed. She eventually
married Jack, it didn’t take since he had no dough she went back to Albert for
a while then dumped him again. Albert kept tabs on her though. When Jack
offered to cut her in on the blackmail angle Albert thought she was going back
to him and he went crazy. He killed Jack. Then when he saw Marlin with Rita he
flipped out again. He had intended to kill Marlin as well except Marlin was
coming out of his coma. And you wonder why Marlin told Tyrone don’t tangle,
don’t mess with red-heads. Especially in the October red-eyed moon night.
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