***The
Life And Times Of Michael Philip Marlin, Private Investigator –The Scorched World
From
The Pen Of Frank Jackman-with kudos to Raymond Chandler
As readers know Tyrone Fallon, the
son of the late famous Southern California private operative, Michael Philip
Marlin (Tyrone used his mother’s maiden name for obvious reasons), and private
eye in his own right told my old friend Peter Paul Markin’s friend Joshua
Lawrence Breslin some stories that his illustrious father told him. Here’s one
such story although not about himself but about an operative for the largest
detective agency on the West Coast, John “Stubs” Lane. (Stubs nick-named for a
habit picked while sitting alone endlessly in cold cars driving cold coffee and
picking out cigarette stubs from the ashtray after the deck ran out). Marlin
let Stubs tell it in his own voice and I will do so here.
*******Oh sure I have a million stories to tell about my experiences now that I have retired after forty years working as an operative (peeper, shamus, gumshoe, private dick or whatever your dig at name for us) with the International Operations Organization. Stories about murder and mayhem, deceit and deviousness, strange mental states and cold-bloodedness. Yes I have seen it all the worst side of mankind (male and female okay, and sometimes the women were the worst capable of things no guy would even think of doing no matter how much he hated whoever he hated), the backbiting, the scratching eyes out to beat someone out of something, the heat of passion, and not in the bedroom where it belongs, turning to dust. Not a pretty sight and not for the faint-hearted which is why I lasted for forty years, forty years of slugging it out to get a little rough justice in this wicked old world, and some days just for the pay. Right now my mind in on one of the last cases, the Bradford case, not because it was the worst, far from it, but because it didn’t make sense, didn’t make sense that a couple of well-off young women would go over the deep end for no real reason. Let me tell you about it
It
all started when John Bradford, the biggest banker in San Francisco (yes he was
some distant descendant of somebody on the Mayflower
crew although that doesn’t, I don’t think, explain what happened, not by any
reasonable accounting) came to the agency looking for help when his two
daughters, Anne and Prudence, went missing after not checking in for about a
week. We had done a previous case with Mr. Bradford over an employee
embezzlement scheme and so he came back to us on that recommendation.
You
might well ask why if he was worried about his missing daughters, maybe having
been kidnapped or worse, he didn’t go to the police, the FBI or something like
your average guy would do. That is where the rich, and in his case the very rich,
are different. They are worried about image, maybe about what would that Mayflower forbear think, or the country
club set so they want things, including messy things and maybe especially messy
things hushed up. They can also afford to pay for extra service, extra service
that hard- pressed police forces could not or would not provide. Besides in
this case the two young women had something of a history of walking on the wild
side and so hush it was just in case they were involved in some freefall caper.
And so it landed on the agency’s lap and the boss assigned me to the case since
he believed from what Bradford told him (not all of which he told me since
Bradford worked on a need- to- know basis) that it would involve no heavy
lifting, meaning no shooting or fists, something easy as I eased into
retirement.
Here
is the way it went down, I started with the servants at the Bradford estate to
see if they knew anything. Nothing, except some information about the pair
having packed several suitcase before they left. None of them saw that as
unusual since they had done that before even on short trips. Then I went the
rounds of friends, relatives and acquaintances but no dice, no dice mainly
because their friends were apparently working under some national security
directive about giving information to a cop, public or private. A breakthrough
did come when I went to the Knick-Knack Club, a place, a watering hole for the
young, rich, and infamous where the young women hung out.
That
tipster, who shall remain anonymous just in case the forces of evil that were
unleashed decide to do something further about it, told me that I should check
with a guy named Johnny Firestone because they had often been seen in his
company. At first that name did not ring a bell but checking back with our
agency files I found out that the name should have been ringing many bells.
Johnny, or rather his father and then him when the father retired, was
knee-deep in the drug trafficking business in the Bay Area which meant some big-
time operations. It also seemed that Sonny Boy had branched out into high-end
pornography. High-end meaning that the models were rich, wicked, perverted or whatever else made them get their
kicks.
So
I followed that trail over to a converted warehouse in Haywood where Sonny Boy
did his shoots. What would happen, and what did happen with Anne and Prudence,
was that Johnny would get them high, high as kites, for a while and then
suggest that modelling scam.
In
this case both young women were eager to get their kicks that way. Before it
was all over though some shots were fired, some fists flew and a very large sum
of Bradford money changed hands in order to get all the negatives and all the
prints bought and burned. Last I heard the girls were married to some
stockbrokers who are clueless about what their brides are capable of. Good
luck, good luck reigning that pair in.
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