The Gutter and the Grave (2 page)

BOOK: The Gutter and the Grave
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“Yeah?”

“That was a terrible thing,” he said. “I mean, the whole business. The thing with your wife, and then the police taking away your…”

“Let’s forget it, Johnny,” I said.

“From what I heard…I mean, I heard you were a good detective.”

“I was,” I said.

“When they take away a man’s license…”

“He stops being a private detective,” I said. “He moves to the Bowery. Okay? Can we drop it now?”

“It must have been quite a blow,” Johnny said.

“It’s always a blow to find out your wife’s unfaithful,” I said, and then I stood up. “I’ll see you, Johnny.” I started to walk away, and he put his hand on my arm.

“No, look, wait a minute,” he said. “I’m sorry. I didn’t realize it still bothered you.”

“It does,” I said. It still bothered me. It bothered the hell out of me, and I didn’t feel like sitting there discussing it with a guy I hadn’t seen in ten years.

“Okay,” he said, “we’ll forget it, okay?”

I almost laughed out loud. Forget it! I’d spent the
past five years trying to do just that. And now Johnny Bridges spoke the magic words, and we’d forget it. Bang! Johnny Bridges, Sorcerer’s Apprentice.

“What do you want, Johnny?” I said. “I was on my way to getting drunk.”

“I need your help, Matt,” he said.


My
help? How can I help you?”

“You used to be a detective…”

“Used to is right. I’m not any longer. I have no license. You said you read the newspapers. All right, you know they yanked my license.”

“Yes, I know. But still, you used to practice…and you were good.”

“So?”

“So…I…need help, Matt.”

“Are you talking about an investigation?” I said.

“Yes. Sort of.”

“Count me out,” I said. I started to go again. He came up off the bench and stepped into my path.

“Matt, listen…I’d go to a regular detective agency, but I can’t afford it.”

“That’s unfortunate,” I said. “Why don’t you go to the police?”

“Because I don’t want this thing to…look, can I explain it to you a minute? Can I just explain it to you?”

“I’m getting thirsty,” I told him.

“I’ll buy you a drink. Will you listen then?”

“Sure. Come on.”

We went to a bar on Fourteenth Street. I didn’t take him to any of the Bowery places, which were a lot less
expensive, because I thought they might embarrass him. The bar we went to served both bankers and bums. We went to a booth at the back. Johnny ordered a gin and tonic. I ordered rye neat. When the drinks came, I threw mine down and asked for another. I threw that one down, too, and Johnny ordered a third for me and then began sipping at his gin-tonic.

“So what’s the story?” I said.

“I’m a tailor,” he told me.

This shouldn’t have surprised me because his father had been a tailor, but I guess the seersucker suit threw me. Besides, in this day and age, you don’t think of young men entering professions like tailoring or baking or cobbling. You just don’t.

“I’m in business with another guy,” he said. “Up in the old neighborhood. Maybe you remember him. Dom Archese?”

“No, I don’t remember him.”

“Well, that’s because he’s older than us. He used to hang around with Frankie Di Luca, that bunch. He’s a wonderful guy, Dom. Married, settled down. You know. But…” He stopped and shook his head. The bar was silent except for the whir of a giant fan in one corner of the room. The fan didn’t help the heat much. Even in his seersucker suit, Johnny Bridges was beginning to sweat.

“You’re having trouble with Dom?” I said. “Is that it?”

“Well, I don’t know, that’s the problem. I mean, he’s a wonderful guy, Matt, honest he is. He didn’t know
anything about running a tailor shop when we first started. I knew it from my father…well, you remember him.”

“Yes.”

“Sure. But Dom didn’t know a thing. He’d just got married, and he was looking for a good steady business, so he asked if I could use a partner in the shop. The business came to me when my father—God rest his soul—passed away, you see.”

“I see. So you took Dom in, is that right?”

“Yeah. Well, I didn’t
take
him in exactly. He bought in. After all, it was an established business with a lot of steady customers. Actually, I was glad to have a partner. The work was really too much. Even now, we have to hire a presser. And Dom caught on right away. I mean, he still doesn’t do any of the actual tailoring work, that’s not something you pick up overnight, you know. But he’s great with the customers, and he knows how to press, and eventually he’ll learn how to sew, too. Not that there’s very much of that to be done, tell the truth. Nowadays, a tailor shop is mostly dry-cleaning and pressing. Except for sewing up a ripped seam every now and then. You know how it is.”

“So this Dom Archese—is it Dominic?”

“Yes, Dominic. Everybody calls him Dom, though.”

“This Dom Archese is a married man who bought into the tailor shop because he wanted something sturdy and solid and apparently had a little money to play around with.”

“Five thousand dollars,” Johnny said. “That’s what it cost him. I probably could have got more, but actually I needed a partner and was glad to have him. He’s a wonderful guy.”

“You said that before.”

“Well, he is.”

“Then what’s the trouble?”

“Well, I don’t know. Dom’s not a rich man, you understand. That five grand was probably his life savings. He’s got some government bonds, and maybe a little in the bank, and some insurance to take care of Christine—God forbid anything should happen to him.”

“Christine? Is that his wife?”

“Yes. But what I’m trying to say is that he isn’t a rich man, and maybe he’s in some kind of financial trouble or something, I don’t know. It’s the only way I can figure it.”

“Figure what?”

“The thefts,” Johnny said.

“Someone’s been stealing something?”

“Yes,” Johnny said. “From the cash register.”

“How much? Large amounts?”

“No. No, that’s just it. The thefts have been small. Ten dollars at a time. Sometimes fifteen dollars. Until this last one.”

“How much was the last one?”

“Fifty dollars.”

“That still isn’t very large,” I said.

“Well, it’s large enough to be serious,” Johnny said.

“How much has been stolen altogether?”

“Two hundred and thirty-five dollars.”

“Over how long a period of time?”

“About six months, I think. In any case, that was when I noticed the first shortage.”

“Did you tell Dom about it?”

“Yes. He said I probably added wrong. Then, when I found the second theft, a couple of weeks later, I told him again.”

“And what did he say that time?”

“The same thing. He’s either a very trusting person, Dom, or else…” Johnny shrugged. “I don’t know what to think.”

“Who else works in the shop?”

“A kid named Dave Ryan. He’s our presser.”

“Does he handle the cash register at all?”

“No.”

“But he could get into it when you or Dom aren’t around, couldn’t he?”

“No. If both of us are out of the shop, we lock the register.”

“Then he does sometimes work alone in the shop? When both of you are gone?”

“Yes. He presses at night sometimes. I told you, there’s a lot of work to be done.”

“But the register is locked?”

“Yes.”

“So you figure it’s Dom who’s been dipping into the till?”

“That’s right.”

“Well, what do you want from me?” I said.

“Matt, I don’t know what to do. How can I blow the whistle on my partner and friend? How can I go to the police? If he’s taking the money, he must have a damn good reason.”

“Why don’t you talk to him? Tell him…”

“And suppose I’m wrong? Suppose it isn’t him? Suppose…I don’t know…suppose somebody’s sneaking in at night or something? Jesus, I don’t know what to do, Matt. That’s why I came down to see you. I’ve been all over the Bowery looking for you. Finally, some guy told me I might find you in that park outside the school. Won’t you help me, Matt?”

“By doing what?”

“Come up to the shop. Look over the register, look over the windows. Maybe somebody’s getting in at night and forcing the drawer. I can’t tell, but I’m sure you could.”

“Do you ever leave any money in the register at night?”

“Yes. Usually about fifty bucks or so. Just enough to start the next day. It saves the trouble of taking it out and then bringing it back in the morning.”

“Mmmm. Then there is the possibility…”

“Will you help me, Matt?”

I thought about it for a while. Did I want to go back to the old neighborhood, see people I’d known when I was a kid? Did I want more memories to add to the memory I already carried, the memory of first meeting Toni, that goddamn corny meeting as she was coming off the Triborough Bridge, laughing, her blonde hair
caught by the November wind, walking with the Randall’s Island football crowd, carrying a pennant in her hand? Did I want that memory to come welling back, and with it all the other ghosts, all the shadows I’d been drinking away for five years?

“No,” I said to Johnny. “I’m busy. I can’t help you.”

“Busy doing what?” Johnny asked. He paused, seemed to weigh his next question, and then said, “Getting drunk?”

“Yes,” I said, “getting drunk. Do you have any objections?”

“It seems to me…”

“It seems to me a smart man stops when he’s ahead,” I told him. “I’d hate like hell to have to knock down an old neighbor.”

“You talk a good game, Matt,” he said, and he stood up. He reached into his pocket for some change to leave on the table. “What are you afraid of?” he said. “The police? This wouldn’t be an official investigation. It would just be an old friend doing a favor.”

“When did we become such good old buddies?” I said.

“For Christ’s sake, we grew up together.”

“Does that make us brothers? Go to the police. Or else get yourself a bona fide private detective. Don’t come running to a Bowery bum.”

“Is that what you are, Matt?”

“What the hell did you think I was? A society swordsman? A pedigreed dog trainer? I’m a bum. Me. Matthew Cordell, bum. I sleep in flophouses or on park benches when I can’t afford a pad. I’m drunk
twenty-five hours out of twenty-four, and I get my whiskey money by panhandling. I’m a bum. Do you want me to yell hallelujah?”

He shook his head and looked at me. “I didn’t think it was possible,” he said. “I didn’t think a dame…”

“Shut up, Johnny.”

“…could take a guy who was a
man
and turn him into…”

“Shut up!”

“Sure. Thanks for listening, Matt. I’ll work it out some way. Thanks a lot.”

“Get the pity out of your eyes,” I said. “I don’t need it.”

“You need something, pal,” he said.

“Oh, go the hell back to 118th Street. Who asked you to come down here, anyway? Who needs you?”

“I need you,” he said.

“Sure.”

“I do. Matt…please. Won’t you help me?” He put his arm on my sleeve, and I’ve never been able to kick a man in the teeth when he suddenly begins begging. “Please, Matt, I’m…I’m ready to lose my mind with this damn thing. Please. Help me.”

“No.”

“I’ll pay you. I can’t afford much but…”

“I don’t want your money.”

“Then will you help me? Will you please…”

“Jesus Christ, can’t you leave me alone?” I said.

The table was suddenly silent. Johnny kept looking at me. I kept looking at my hands.

In a small voice, I said, “Can’t you just leave me alone?” He didn’t answer. He kept staring at me. Finally, I raised my head and met his eyes. “I’ll…I’ll just take a look at the…the windows and doors,” I said. “And the cash register. Just to let you know if…if someone’s been getting in at night. But that’s all. I don’t want…”

“Thank you, Matt,” he said.

* * *

The sky had turned black outside. Clouds had moved in over the river and were banked overhead now, ready to burst. There was a smell in the air, the sweet air-rushing smell a city gets just before an electric storm. The lights in some of the shops had already come on as the city grew darker. It was going to rain like hell.

We caught a cab and headed uptown. The tailor shop was on First Avenue between 118th and 119th. It was just a small shop, with the usual dry-cleaning posters in the window, the posters that somehow never look professional but seem to have been run off by an art student in a basement. There was also a small sign in the window which read:
WE DO EXPERT HAND TAILORING
. A heavy padlock hung on the front door.

“Nobody here?” I said.

Johnny looked at his watch. “We close at six,” he said. “Dom is probably home already.”

“Were you in the shop today?”

“Yes.” Johnny took out a key ring and began searching for the right key.

“When?” I said.

He found the key and unlocked the padlock. “I came in around noon, and left at two. I went down to the Bowery. To look for you.” He swung open the door and snapped on the lights. The rain had still not started, but it wouldn’t be long now. “This is it,” he said.

The shop was the kind of shop you don’t find around much anymore. Two sewing machines were near the window, and opposite them was the counter over which business was done, the cash register at the extreme right. Behind that was a row of cabinets in which the finished clothes hung, waiting to be claimed. A curtained doorway bisected the clothing racks. I assumed the doorway led to the back of the shop. I also assumed the pressing was done in the back.

“There’s the cash register,” Johnny said.

I went over to it and studied it for a few minutes. “It doesn’t look to me as if it’s ever been forced,” I said. “Where’s your key?”

He took out his key ring again and handed me the key. I unlocked the register and opened it. As Johnny had said, there was about fifty dollars in small bills and change left in the register to start the new day. There were no marks on the drawer. I slammed it shut, locked it again, and handed the key ring back to Johnny.

“Is that the only entrance door?” I said, gesturing at the front door.

“No, there’s another at the back of the shop. And a lot of windows that open on the airshaft.”

BOOK: The Gutter and the Grave
5.12Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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