“So then you have no case?”
“…I have no case. I need you to go get me one.”
If I was the private eye who cleared the Blonde Tigress, I’d be in demand with every criminal lawyer in town.
“I can meet with her,” I said, “any time today.”
Now a guy can get some pretty funny thoughts sometimes. And by funny, I mean stupid. But while I’d been around, I was only twenty-eight, and I couldn’t keep from wondering if some exotic, erotic encounter might not occur between the Blonde Tigress and me, behind the closed door of that First District Station interrogation room. The matron standing guard would hear the muffled sounds and wonder what might be happening in there, between the curvaceous blonde gun moll and that handsome six-footer with the reddish brown hair, and dare she interrupt?
I was expecting the combination Jean Harlow and Mata Hari that the papers had been pumping, and in my defense I must say that they’d taken some fairly fetching photos of Eleanor Jarman. And the woman seated at the scarred table in a brick-walled enclosure whose windows were barred and throwing appropriately moody shadows-was certainly attractive, albeit in a quiet, modest, even mousy way.
Her hair was not tawny, at least not by my standards-more a dishwater blonde, curling-ironed locks framing her heart-shaped face. I’d call her pretty, or anyway pretty enough, with big gray eyes that dominated her face and a nice mouth, full lips lightly rouged. Prisoners awaiting trial were allowed street clothes-in this case, a simple white dress with angular blue stripes and a white collar with a bow, the stripes giving the faintest unintentional prison-uniform touch. She had a nice hea but “voluptuous” was torturing a point.
She gave me a big smile and stood and held her hand out for me to shake. The smile was disarming-I might have been a brother she hadn’t seen for some time.
“Thank you for this, Mr. Heller,” she said warmly, as I took a chair at the table, her at the end, me alongside.
“I haven’t agreed to take the job, Mrs. Jarman,” I said, and took my hat off and tossed it on the table. “I said I’d have a talk with you and see.”
Her smile remained but she put the teeth away and nodded. “It’s because Mr. Backus can’t afford to hire you. But what if
“Could what?”
“Afford to hire to you.”
I squinted at her. “How could you afford to hire a private detective if you can’t afford your own lawyer?”
She shrugged and half a smile lingered. “That was strategy, Mr. Heller. I could’ve hired a lawyer, not an expensive one, but I do have some money salted away. It’s just, well…”
And I got it.
“If you could hire a criminal attorney,” I said, “it would make you look more like a criminal. Somebody pulling off heists all summer could afford counsel. Smart.”
“I’m not rich. But I could offer you one hundred dollars.”
“I charge ten a day and expenses. That’ll take you a fair way.”
“Fine. I’ll have it sent over to your office.”
“You’re not what I expected.”
She grinned. “Not a Tigress?”
“Not the femme fatale the papers paint, and not the victim Sam Backus would make you, either.”
“What, then?”
“A smart, resourceful cookie.”
“Thanks. Could I call you something besides ‘Mr. Heller’?”
“Sure. Nate’ll do. And I’ll call you Eleanor.”
They had provided a pitcher of ice water and I served us up some. The breezy afternoon was making its way through windows that were open onto their bars.
“Do you need to hear my story, Nate, before you say yes?”
“I want to hear your story, but I already said yes to your hundred dollars.”
She had a whole repertoire of smiles, and she gave me another one, a chin-crinkler. But the gray eyes had a sadness that fit neither her happy kisser nor her business-like brain.
She started with the story of her life, which didn’t take long, because it wasn’t much of one. She was from Sioux City, Iowa, daughter of immigrant German parents who died in a flu epidemic when she was fourteen, just the right age to start working as a waitress in a joint near the stockyards. She married Leroy Jarmanwho told her she deserved better, and gave her two sons and put her to work as a laundress. Earlier this year, after Jarman took a powder, she moved to Chicago, where she continued to do laundry in her little apartment while taking care of her two boys. A neighbor introduced her to George Dale, and her life changed.
“George never said what he did for a living,” she told me. “I always figured it was something a little shady, but hell, I ran a beer flat in Sioux City, so who was I to talk? Anyway, he always had plenty of dough and we lived in nice apartments.”
Then she got to the meat of the matter: the crime.
She and her boy friend George and George’s friend Leo were on their way to a Cubs game at Wrigley Field. They were running early and decided to stop and do a little shopping; George had spotted the clothing store sign and pulled in, saying he needed some shirts. They had all three gone inside.
“George was talking to Mr. Hoeh up in front,” she said. Her eyes were not on me; they seemed to be staring into her memory. “The old man was getting shirts from behind the counter and laying boxes out for George to see. Leo wasn’t interested, and just hanging by the door. I was in the back of the store, looking at ties and other boys clothing-my sons are nine and eleven-and was caught up in making some selections.” Now she looked at me, gray eyes wide and earnest. “Then I heard the sound of a scuffle.”
“Was the old boy still behind the counter?”
“No, he was coming around after George, who was heading out.”
“Leaving you in back of the store?”
“No, that’s the other thing that alerted me that something was wrong-George was calling, ‘Eleanor! Hurry!’”
“What did you think was happening?”
“Honestly, I had no idea. I guess I thought the old man had gone off his rocker or something. Leo was there at the door, holding it open, but Mr. Hoeh was attacking George. Then all of sudden George had this gun….”
“You didn’t know George had a gun?”
She shook her head. “And the old man wrestled with George, had a hold of his wrist and twisted the thing around, and it went off!”
“And the old boy got hit?”
“No!
I shrugged. “It was his store. A guy his age, builds a business, he might do anything to defend it. Go on.”
“I know Mr. Hoeh was old, but he was big and tough, slugging and swinging, and I almost jumped on his back, trying to pull him off George, trying to stop this.”
“You must’ve have known it was a hold-up by now.”
Sheshook her head firmly. “No. I wasn’t thinking, not rationally, anyway. It was all so fast. I just knew George was in trouble and this crazy old man was attacking him.”
“All right. What happened then?”
She swallowed; no smiles now. “The old man shoved me away. That’s when George shot him. Twice.”
I drew in a breath; I let it out. “And Mr. Hoeh died before he made it to the hospital.”
“I know.” She was shaking her head, eyes glued to the scarred table top. “I’m so sorry. I had no idea