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1968-An Ear to the Ground
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Table of Contents
One
Two
Three
Four
Five
Six
An Ear to the Ground
James Hadley Chase
Copyright © 1968
One
I heard this story from Al Barney, a beer-sodden beachcomber who haunts the waterfront of Paradise City, always on the lookout for a sucker to buy him a beer.
At one time, so I was told, Al Barney was the best skin diver on the coast. He had picked up a lot of money teaching diving, spearing sharks and laying the wives of the rich tourists who infest this coast in the season. But the beer rained him.
Al was an enormous man, weighing around three hundred and fifty pounds with a beer belly on him that rested like a balloon on his knees when he sat down. He was around sixty-three years of age, burned mahogany brown by years in the sun, balding, with an egg-shaped head, steely, small green eyes, a mouth that reminded me of a Red Snapper and a flat nose that spread half over his face from a punch he had had — so he told me — from an unreasonable husband who had caught him in the hay with his wife.
I had written a novel that had clicked lucky, and I had now enough spending money to escape the cold in New York, so I had come down to Paradise City which is on the Florida coast, knowing I could well afford to spend a month there before I got back to more work. I checked in at the Spanish Bay Hotel: probably the best and most deluxe of all the hotels in Florida. It only catered for fifty guests and offered a service that fully justified the cost of the final tab.
Jean Dulac, the manager of the hotel, a tall handsome man with impeccable manners and the polished charm that is unique to the French, had read my book. It had made a hit with him, and one evening as I was sitting on the floodlit terrace after one of those magnificent meals the Spanish Bay Hotel always provided, Dulac joined me.
He told me about Al Barney.
Smiling, he said, ‘He’s our very special local character. He knows everyone, knows everything about this City. It might amuse you to talk to him. If you are looking for material, you’ll certainly get something from him.’
After a week of swimming, eating too much, lazing in the sun and fooling around with a number of girls with beautiful bodies but no minds, I remembered what Dulac had told me about Al Barney. Sooner or later, I would have to get down to another book. I had no ideas, so I drove over to the Neptune Tavern on the oily waterfront where the sponge fishing boats docked and found Barney.
He was sitting outside the Neptune Tavern on a bollard, a can of beer in his hand, staring moodily at the boats as they came and went.
I introduced myself, telling him that Dulac had mentioned his name.
‘Mr. Dulac? Yeah . . . a gentleman. Glad to meet you.’ He extended a big grimy paw that was as soft and as yielding as a steel hawser. ‘So you’re a writer?’
I said I was.
He finished the can of beer, then tossed it into the harbour.
‘Let’s go get us a drink,’ he said and heaved his enormous bulk off the bollard. He led me across the quay and into the gloomy, dirty Neptune Tavern. A coloured barman grinned at him as we came in, his eyes sparkling. I could see from his expression that he knew Al had landed yet another sucker.
We drank and talked of this and that, then after his third beer, Al said, ‘Would you be looking for a story, mister?’
‘I’m always looking for a story.’
‘Do you want to hear about the Esmaldi diamonds?’ Al peered hopefully at me.
‘I’ll listen,’ I said. ‘What have I to lose?’
Al smiled. He had an odd smile. The small Red Snapper mouth curved up. He looked as if he were smiling, but when I looked into the small green eyes, there was no smile there.
‘I’m like a beat up old Ford,’ he said. ‘I go five miles to the gallon.’ He looked at his empty glass. ‘Keep me filled up, and I go like a bird.’
I went over to the grinning barman and got that problem straightened out. Al talked for four solid hours. Every time his glass was empty, the barman came over with a refill. I’ve seen drinking in my time, but nothing to match this.
‘I’ve been around this little City now for fifty years,’ Al said, staring at the beer in his glass with its white frothy head.
‘I’m a guy with his ear to the ground. I listen. I get told. I put two and two together. I’ve got contacts with the cops, the newspapers, the guys who know all the dirt. . . they talk to me.’ He took a long drink of beer and belched gently. ‘You understand? I know the stoolies, the jail birds, the whores, the black boys who are always invisible, but who have ears. I listen. You get the photo, mister? A guy with his ear to the ground.’
I said I got it and what was all this about the Esmaldi diamonds?
Al put his hand under his dirty sweat shirt and scratched his enormous paunch. He finished his beer, then looked at the barman who grinned happily and came over to supply the refill. These two worked together like a piston and rod.
‘The Esmaldi diamonds? You want to hear about them?’
‘Why not?’
He regarded me, his little green eyes flinty.
‘You could turn it into a story?’
‘I don’t know. . . I could . . . how can I say without hearing about it?’
He nodded his bald, egg-shaped head.
‘Yeah. Well, if you want to hear about it, it’ll take time, and although you might not believe it, mister, time is money to me.’
I had been warned by Dulac about this very thing, so I nodded.
‘That’s okay.’
I took from my pocket two twenty dollar bills and handed them to him. He examined the bills, heaved a great sigh that raised his belly half off his knees, then put the bills carefully away in his trousers pocket.
‘And beer?’
‘All the beer you want.’
‘A little food too?’
‘Yes.’
For the first time since I had been with him, his smile seemed genuine.
‘Well then, mister.’ He paused to gulp more beer. ‘This is the way it was . . . the Esmaldi diamonds . . . it happened two years ago.’ He rubbed his flat, broken nose as he thought, then he went on, ‘I got all this dope from the cops and from my contacts . . . you understand? I’m a guy with an ear to the ground. Some of it. . . not much . . . is guess work . . .putting two and two together, but most of it is fact. It began in Miami.’
Abe Schulman, so Al Barney told me, was the biggest fence in Florida. He had been in the business for some twenty years, and it was quite a business.
***
When the rich arrived on the Florida coast with their wives, their mistresses and their molls, their women had to be smothered in jewels — a status symbol. If you hadn’t diamond necklaces, emerald and ruby brooches with earrings to match and jewel studded bracelets up your fat arms, you were looked upon as white trash. So the jewel thieves from all over descended on the Florida coast like a swarm of wasps, their skillful fingers collecting a harvest. But jewels were no use to them . . . they wanted cash and here was where Abe Schulman came in.
He dwelt behind a glass door on which was a legend that read in tarnished gold letters:
DELANO DIAMOND MERCHANTS
Miami — New York — Amsterdam
President: Abe Schulman
It was true that Abe did have minor connections with Amsterdam. From time to time he made some kind of deal with certain Dutch diamond merchants: enough to justify a small income tax return and to explain why he dwelt in a tiny, shabby office on the sixteenth floor of a block overlooking Biscayne Bay.
But the real guts of his business was handling hot jewels, and in this he di
d extremely well, stashing away the cash — it always had to be cash — in various safe deposits in Miami, New York and Los Angeles.
When one of his contacts brought him some loot, Abe was able to say exactly how much this loot was worth. He would then pay one quarter of his evaluation. He would then remove the stones from their settings and walk the stones around to one of the many jewellers who he knew didn’t ask questions and sold the stones for half their market price. In this way, working steadily now for the last twenty years, Abe had accumulated a considerable fortune: enough for him to retire on happily, but Abe just couldn’t resist a bargain. He had to keep on, although he knew he was always taking a risk and the police could descend on him at any minute. But it now had become a compulsive thing with him: something he not only enjoyed, but which gave him the incentive to live.
Abe was a short, roly-poly man with hair growing out of his ears, his nose and from his shirt collar. Little clumps of black hair grew on the backs of his small, fat fingers so when he moved his hand on his desk, you had the impression of a tarantula spider coming towards you.
On a hot sunny day in May, just two years ago, Al Barney told me, Abe was sitting at his shabby desk, a dead cigar clamped between his sharp little teeth, regarding Colonel Henry Shelley with a watchful, blank expression that told anyone who knew Abe he was ready to listen, but not to believe.
Colonel Henry Shelley looked like one of those old, refined Kentucky aristocrats who own acres of land and a number of racehorses, who spend their lives either at every race meeting or sitting on their Colonial porches watching their faithful darkies doing the work. He was tall and lean with a mass of white hair, worn a little long, a straggly white moustache, a parchment yellow skin, deepset, shrewd grey eyes and a long, beaky nose. He wore a cream lightweight suit, a string tie and a ruffled shirt. His narrow trousers ended in soft Mexican boots. Looking at him, Abe had to grin with admiration. It was a beautiful performance, he told himself. He couldn’t fault it. Here, before him, seemed a man of considerable substance and culture: a refined, worldly old man who anyone would be proud to entertain in their rich homes.
Colonel Henry Shelley — that, of course, wasn’t his real name — was one of the smoothest and smartest con men in the business. He had spent fifteen years of his sixty-eight years behind bars. He had made a lot of money and had lost a lot of money. The names of the rich who he had swindled read like a Society Blue book. Shelley was an artist, but he was also improvident. Money slid through his old, aristocratic fingers like water.
Abe was saying, ‘I’ve got the guy you’ve been looking for, Henry. It’s taken time. It hasn’t been easy. If he doesn’t satisfy you, we’re in trouble. There isn’t anyone I can find better.’
Henry Shelley touched off the ash of his cigar into Abe’s ashtray.
‘You know what we want, Abe. If you think he’s right, then I guess he will be right. Tell me about him.’
Abe sighed.
‘If you knew the trouble I’ve had finding him,’ he said. ‘The time I’ve wasted on useless punks . . . the telephone calls . . .’
‘I can imagine. Tell me about him.’
‘His name is Johnny Robins,’ Abe said. ‘Good appearance. Age twenty-six. At the age of fifteen, he worked for the Rayson Lock Corporation. He worked there for five years. There is nothing he doesn’t know about safes, locks and combinations.’ Abe jerked his thumb at the big wall safe behind him. I thought that was pretty good, but he opened it in four minutes flat. . . I timed him.’ Abe grinned at Shelley. I don’t keep anything in it, otherwise I wouldn’t be sleeping so well. He left Rayson and became a racing driver . . . he’s crazy about speed. You’d better know right away that Johnny is a little tricky. He has a quick temper. There was trouble on the race track and he got fired.’ Abe shrugged his fat shoulders. ‘He busted someone’s jaw . . . could happen to anyone, but this guy who got busted happened to be the top shot on the track, so Johnny got the heave-ho. He then got a job at a garage, but the boss’s wife got hot pants for him, so that didn’t last long. The boss caught them at it and Johnny busted his nose.’ Abe chuckled. ‘Johnny sure is a mean hitter. Anyway, the boss called the cops and Johnny busted one of them before the other busted him. He spent three months in a hick jail. He told me he could have walked out any time he wanted. The locks were that simple, but he liked the company. Besides, he didn’t want to embarrass the warden who he got along with, so he stayed. Now, he is rearing to go. He’s young, tough, good-looking and a beautiful baby with locks. How does it sound?’
Shelley nodded.
‘Sounds right to me, Abe. You told him anything about our set-up?’
‘Only that there’s big money in it,’ Abe said, walking his fat, hairy fingers along the edge of his desk. ‘He’s interested in big money’
‘Who isn’t?’ Shelley stubbed out his cigar. ‘Well, I’d better talk to him.’
‘He’s at the Seaview Hotel, waiting for you.’
‘He’s registered there as Robins?’
‘That’s right.’ Abe looked up at the ceiling, then asked, ‘How’s Martha?’
‘Not as happy as she could be.’ Shelley took out a white silk handkerchief and touched his temples with it. It was a trick Abe admired: it showed class.
‘What’s biting her then?’
‘She’s not happy about the cut, Abe.’
Abe’s fat face tightened.
‘She’s never happy about any cut. I can’t help that. Anyway, she eats too much.’
‘Don’t change the subject, Abe.’ Shelley crossed one long leg over the other. ‘She thinks your offer of a quarter is a swindle. I’m inclined to agree with her. You see, Abe, this will be our last job. It’s going to be big. The best stuff— the biggest take.’ He paused, then went on. ‘She wants to settle for a third.’
‘A third?’ Abe managed to look shocked and amazed at the same time. ‘Is she crazy? I won’t get a half for the stuff! What does she think I am . . . the Salvation Army?’
Shelley examined his beautifully manicured fingernails, then he looked at Abe, his shrewd eyes suddenly frosty.
‘If anything goes wrong, Abe, and we get the cops on our collars, we keep you out of it. You know us. We take the rap. You sit here and collect the money. Unless you do something stupid — and you won’t, you’re safe. Martha is sick of this racket. So am I. We want enough money to get out. A quarter won’t give it to us, but a third will. That’s how it is. How about it?’
Abe appeared to think. Then he shook his head, a regretful expression on his fat face.
‘I can’t do it, Henry. You know Martha. She’s greedy. Between you and me, if I gave you a third, I’d be out of pocket. That wouldn’t be fair. If I handle this stuff, I must make a reasonable profit. You understand that?’
‘A third,’ Shelley said gently. ‘I know Martha too. She’s set her mind on a third.’
‘It can’t be done. Look, suppose I talk to Martha?’ Abe smiled. ‘I can explain it to her.’
‘A third,’ Shelley repeated. ‘Bernie Baum is also in the market.’
Abe reacted to this as if someone had driven a needle into his fat backside.
‘Baum?’ His voice shot up. ‘You haven’t talked to him, have you?’
‘Not yet,’ Shelley said quietly, ‘but Martha is going to if she doesn’t get a third from you.’
‘Baum would never give her a third!’
‘He might if he knew he was doing you out of a deal. Baum hates your guts, doesn’t he, Abe?’
‘Listen, you old swindler,’ Abe snarled, leaning forward and glaring at Shelley. ‘You don’t bluff me! Baum would never give you a third . . . never! I know. You don’t try your con tricks on me!’
‘Look, Abe,’ Shelley said, mildly, ‘don’t let us argue about this. You know Martha. She wants a third. She’s willing to peddle our plan around to all the big fences — and you’re not the only one — until she does get a third. She will begin with Bernie. This isn’t for peanuts.
The take will be worth two million dollars. Even if you pick up a quarter of that, you’re making nice, safe money. We want a third, Abe . . . just like that or we go talk to Bernie.’
Abe knew when he had struck bottom.
‘That Martha!’ he said in disgust. ‘I can’t get along with women who overeat. There’s something about them.’
‘Never mind how Martha eats,’ Shelley said, his charming, old world smile now in evidence. He sensed he had won. ‘Do we get a third or don’t we?’
Abe glared at him.
‘Yes, you do, you thief!’
‘Don’t get excited, Abe,’ Shelley said. ‘We’re all going to make a nice slice of money. Oh, there’s one other thing . . .’
Abe scowled suspiciously.
‘What now?’
‘Martha wants a piece of jewellery . . . a bracelet or a watch. Something fancy. This is strictly a loan, but she needs it to swing this job. You remember you promised . . .’
‘There are times when I think I should have my head examined,’ Abe said, but he unlocked a drawer in his desk and took out a long flat jewel case. ‘I’m having this back, Henry. . . no tricks.’
Shelley opened the case and regarded the platinum and diamond bracelet with approval.
‘Don’t be so suspicious, Abe. You’ll end up not trusting yourself.’ He put the case in his pocket. ‘Very nice: what’s it worth?’
‘Eighteen thousand dollars. I want a receipt.’ Abe found a piece of paper, scribbled on it and pushed it across the desk.
Shelley signed his name and then got to his feet.
‘I’ll go along and meet Johnny Robins,’ he said.
‘I wouldn’t be doing this,’ Abe said, staring up at him, ‘if Martha wasn’t handling it. That tub of lard has brains.’
Shelley nodded. ‘Yes, she has, Abe. She has.’
‘I want you to understand, mister,’ Al Barney said to me as the barman brought his fifth refill of beer, ‘that I’m inclined to add a little colour to my stories. If I could spell, I’d write books myself. . . if I could write. So you’ll have to go along with the poet’s licence. It’s just possible what I’m telling you didn’t happen the way I’m telling it. . . don’t get me wrong. . .I’m talking about the little details, the local colour, but when I sit here with a glass of beer in my hand, I’m inclined to let my imagination take some exercise.’ He scratched his vast belly and looked at me. ‘That’s about all the exercise I ever take.’