Neon Mirage

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Authors: Max Allan Collins
Tags: Nathan Heller
head, frustrated. “He was their idea.”
    Meyer Lansky’s idea, probably; but I thought it best to leave that unsaid. I was already hearing more from Guzik than I cared to, my curiosity aside.
    “I like Jim,” he said. “We’ve had our disagreements. But I think we can come to terms.”
    “You’d still like to buy him out.”
    “Or go partners. Heller, you got to understand our point of view. Back in 1940, after Jim was convicted on that tax rap, he was on probation—he was ordered by the court to stay out of the racing information business. We ran Continental for him, while he was on probation—we sank money in that we lost. Large sums of money, getting this new business off the ground, after Annenberg had to fold up. Of course Continental went on to be a big success, but without our backing, it couldn’t have gotten started. We feel we already own a part of Continental, based on this indebtedness.”
    “None of this is on the books, though. You couldn’t go to court over it.”
    “No.” Guzik’s thin smile connected his jowls again. “I get a charge out of Jim, taking us to court, on this, on that. He’s just taking a page out of my book—he knows I sue at the drop of a hat.” He grunted. “I’m paying those judges—why shouldn’t I put ’em to use?”
    I sipped my wine.
    Guzik sipped his, got reflective, said: “You know how you buy a judge, Heller? By weight—like iron in a junkyard. A justice of the peace or magistrate can be had for a five spot. Municipal court judge’ll cost you ten. Circuit or superior courts, he wants fifteen. And you can’t buy a federal judge for less than a twenty-dollar bill.”
    “Ragen got a court order against you, though. And he’s got you tied up in litigation right now.”
    Guzik shrugged. “I’m not the only guy in town with money. Jim’s got money, too. Judges don’t care who’s paying.”
    “I’ve already advised him to retire. To sell to you.”
    “That’s wise. I think Jim will come to his senses, too. He needs to understand that we—I—did not do this thing. He needs to understand that he’s up against a man who is sick in the head.”
    “Siegel, you mean.”
    “They don’t call him Bugs because he has fleas. You know me, Heller. You’ve known me a while, and you knew of me before you knew me. Am I lying when I say that it’s well-known I stand for a sound business approach? That I always say, don’t kill a guy when you can pay him off?”
    “I’ve heard that,” I said. And I had.
    “All I want to do is negotiate with Jim. Reason with him.” He shook his head again. “These Irishmen. I remember when Dion O’Bannion got himself in hot water. He was running twenty-some handbooks, forty-some speaks, seventy-some houses. I was ready and willing to buy him out. I offered him a six-figure sum for his territory. Said we’d pay him two grand a month, take in all his people in our Outfit. But he wouldn’t budge. Not an inch. These Irishmen.”
    The aforementioned Scalise and Anselmi, they of the baseball bat banquet, had, of course, assassinated O’Bannion in his flower shop back in ’24. So despite all this talk of business and negotiation and reason, Guzik was still threatening to kill Ragen, if he didn’t sell.
    “What do you want from me, Mr. Guzik?”
    “I want you to do what you did for me before. Be a neutral intermediary.”
    “I’m not neutral. I work for Jim. His niece is my girl. I’m just giving it to you straight, Mr. Guzik.”
    “I appreciate that. But I only mean that you’re somebody both parties can trust. All I want you to do is get the message to Jim that we did not do this thing. That it is Siegel’s work—that Siegel is a madman and will try it again. I can’t stop it. Maybe someday somebody will stop Siegel; but right now his stock is high with his friends out East. I need to maintain good business relations with them.”
    “So Siegel is Jim’s problem.”
    “He would be my problem—one I could

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