instance, is known as a shifty worker in Baltimore. Well, Denny talks to eight or ten likely boys, one at a time. âHowâd you like to pick up a piece of change out on the Coast?â he asks them. âDoing what?â the candidate wants to know. âDoing what youâre told,â the King of Frog Island says. âYou know me. Iâm telling you this is the fattest picking ever rigged, a kick in the pants to go throughâair-tight. Everybody in on it will come home lousy with cushâand theyâll all come home if they donât dog it. Thatâs all Iâm spilling. If you donât like itâforget it.â
âAnd these birds did know Denny, and if he said the job was good that was enough for them. So they put in with him. He told them nothing. He saw that they had guns, gave âem each a ticket to San Francisco and twenty bucks, and told them where to meet him here. Last night he collected them and told them they went to work this morning. By that time they had moved around the town enough to see that it was bubbling over with visiting talent, including such moguls as Toots Salda, Bluepoint Vance and the Shivering Kid. So this morning they went forth eagerly with the King of Frog Island at their head to do their stuff.
âThe other talkers tell varieties of the same tale. The police found room in their crowded jail to stick in a few stool-pigeons. Since few of the bandits knew very many of the others, the stools had an easy time of it, but the only thing they could add to what weâve got is that the prisoners are looking for a wholesale delivery tonight. They seem to think their mob will crash the prison and turn âem loose. Thatâs probably a lot of chewing-gum, but anyway this time the police will be ready.
âThatâs the situation as it stands now. The police are sweeping the streets, picking up everybody who needs a shave or canât show a certificate of attendance signed by his parson, with special attention to outward bound trains, boats and automobiles. I sent Jack Counihan and Dick Foley down North Beach way to play the joints and see if they can pick up anything.â
âDo you think Bluepoint Vance was the actual directing intelligence in this robbery?â the Old Man asked.
âI hope soâwe know him.â
The Old Man turned his chair so his mild eyes could stare out the window again, and he tapped his desk reflectively with the pencil.
âIâm afraid not,â he said in a gently apologetic tone. âVance is a shrewd, resourceful and determined criminal, but his weakness is one common to his type. His abilities are all for present action and not for planning ahead. He has executed some large operations, but Iâve always thought I saw in them some other mind at work behind him.â
I couldnât quarrel with that. If the Old Man said something was so, then it probably was, because he was one of these cautious babies whoâll look out of the window at a cloudburst and say, âIt seems to be raining,â on the off-chance that somebodyâs pouring water off the roof.
âAnd who is this arch-gonif?â I asked.
âYouâll probably know that before I do,â he said, smiling benignantly.
IV
I went back to the Hall and helped boil more prisoners in oil until around eight oâclock, when my appetite reminded me I hadnât eaten since breakfast. I attended to that, and then turned down toward Larrouyâs, ambling along leisurely, so the exercise wouldnât interfere with my digestion. I spent three-quarters of an hour in Larrouyâs, and didnât see anybody who interested me especially. A few gents I knew were present, but they werenât anxious to associate with meâitâs not always healthy in criminal circles to be seen wagging your chin with a sleuth right after a job has been turned.
Not getting anything there, I moved up the street to Wop
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