
I ordered a mug from the bartender, who had a massive skull and tiny dark eyes and a sullen kiss of a mouth.
I salted the brew as I tossed him a nickel. “Hear you had a raid here this morning.”
He ignored the question. “This hall’s for union members only.”
“Jeez, it looks like a saloon.”
“Well, it’s a union hall. Drink up and move along.”
“There’s a fin in it for you, if you answer a few questions.”
He thought that over; leaned in. “Are you a cop#8221;
“No. Private.”
“Who hired you?”
“Goldblatt’s.”
He thought some more. The tiny eyes narrowed. “Let’s hear the questions.”
“What do you know about the Gross kid’s murder?”
“Not a damn thing.”
“Was Rooney here last night?”
“Far as I know, he was home in bed asleep.”
“Know where he lives?”
“No.”
“You don’t know where your boss lives.”
“No. All I know is he’s a swell guy. He don’t have nothin’ to do with these department store shakedowns the cops are tryin’ to pin on him. It’s union-busting, is what it is.”
“Union busting.” I had a look around at the bleary-eyed clientele in their patched clothes. “You have to be a union, first, ‘fore you can get busted up.”
“What’s that supposed to mean?”
“It means this is a scam. Rooney pulls in winos, gets ’em day-labor jobs for $3.25 a day, then they come up here to pay their daily dues of a quarter, and blow the rest on beer or booze. In other words, first the bums pass out ad fliers, then they come here and just plain pass out.”
“I think you better scram. Otherwise I’m gonna have to throw you down the stairs.”
I finished the beer. “I’m leaving. But you know what? I’m not gonna give you that fin. I’m afraid you’d just drink it up.”
