Kitty’s Tale-‘s With
Ava Gardner and Burt Lancaster’s Film Adaptation Of Hemingway’s “The Killers” In
Mind
By Si Landon
[Kitty Collins was a knock-out, was a
gal who guys would jump through hoops for and not think twice about it, who
would lie, steal and double-cross for just to get a whiff of that jasmine, or
whatever the hell that scent was that drove guys dizzy when they were in the
same room with her. This the way that Jim Reardon, the high-priced investigator
for Acme Insurance described her in a note that he left in his records of the
Ole Andreson case, the case that would make him that high-priced investigator
back in 1946. John Colfax was looking through Reardon’s files one day trying to
figure out how his mother Kitty had wound up doing a long stretch in for her
part in a murder and robbery scheme, the famous Tip Top Hat Company payroll job.
They had grabbed $250,000 cash, not a lot now maybe just walking around money
in but a big number then-a number worth cutting guys up for and cutting guys
out of. When the cops picked up Kitty at her palatial home outside of
Philadelphia after his father, Jim Colfax, had been killed by one of his
confederates, a guy named Dum Dum who was looking for the dough that went
missing she was frantic that the dying Jim (everybody had called him “Big Jim”
then) exonerate her, get her off the hook for the murder of the hat company
guard and the dough. No dice. Big Jim passed before he could say word one, one
way or the other.
After Kitty had been convicted of the
felony murder and sentenced to that twenty to thirty year stretch her parents
had decided that it was better to raise John without him, only two at the time,
knowing too much about what had happened to his mother and father. Had told him
early on that they had died in some car crash. Later when he was an adult
somebody recognizing the name “Big Jim” Colfax when John was “in his cups” at
Jimmy’s Grille in Pottstown where he had been raised and had mentioned that his
parents had died in a car crash a guy put him wise, told him that was all
hogwash and filled him in on the real reason that Big Jim had died-and his
mother had spent her life in stir (she died there in some kind of poetic
justice just before she was to be released some twenty years later). That night
he confronted his grandparents about the matter. They confessed to what they
had done without giving many details since they had forgotten many of them in
their dotage.
They did tell him that if he was
interested in finding out more details about what really happened that he
should check and see if Jim Reardon was still at Acme Insurance in Philadelphia.
As it turned out Reardon had retired some years before after a successful
career and was living in Tom’s River over in New Jersey. A couple of weeks
later he went to Tom’s River and met up with Reardon. Reardon had told him that
he had too forgotten many of the details of the case, although he remembered
without guidance or guile that John’s mother was a beautiful woman, a woman to
twist a guy up. He offered to let John look at the files, his personal files of
the important cases he had worked on which he kept in his basement. John
eagerly agreed that he wanted to see the files. The next day he came back to
Reardon’s house and spent the entire afternoon going through the papers at a
table Reardon had set up down in the musty basement.
The key document that John found was
a diary, no more of a journal that Kitty apparently kept during her younger
days, had kept for several years before the robbery, and during the time of the
robbery ending just before his father was killed when Kitty had placed a
notation in the book that she was off to meet Reardon and was fearful that he
was getting too close to the truth of what happened back then to Ole Andreson,
to the Swede as everybody called him. The most startling news he received from
his perusal of the journal was that despite her protestations of innocence she,
not his father Big Jim, had been the driving force behind the robbery. Had
spent the better part of her young womanhood plotting to “hit the motherlode,”
her expression and take a ride on easy street (John’s term for what she had
been looking for). He confronted Reardon with that journal and asked what he
knew about it. Reardon confessed that he had picked up the journal from Kitty’s
bureau drawer after she had been marched off to the police station but that he
had never bothered to look at it since the case was now closed and he had about
ten other cases that his boss was driving him crazy to finish up. The journal
made for chilling reading, made John unsure about whether he would have wanted
to meet his mother if he knew where she was and knew what was in the journal.
Reardon let him keep the journal and a few weeks later he gave it to his
newspaper friend, Larry Larson, to make sense of what had really happened in the
famous, maybe infamous, Tip Top Hat company case. Here’s what Larry was able to
do with the material. Si Landon]
Kitty Colfax, nee Collins, had been
brought up on the wrong side of the tracks, Irishtown, in Pottsville, Pa and from
as young age she could remember she had dreamed about escaping lie among the
coal slags, among the dirty, drunken shanty Irish too. She was aided
considerably in her dreams by her startling good looks, her long black at those
coal slags hair, a tidy body and big ruby red lips. Early on she figured that
she could use that beauty to her advantage. That and a cold, calculated sense
that every man was nothing but putty in her hands once they got a whiff of that
scent she was wearing that said femme fatale (the jasmine she wore from early
on only added to the effect). Almost naturally she used sex, the sex act, acts
to get something from a man (boys at first, that was how she got her first
bottle of jasmine perfume, her “trademark”) losing her virginity one night when
she was fourteen. Everything later flowed from that understanding of the world,
the man’s world that she was going to trample on.
Kitty also knew she had to get out of
Pottsville, get out fast so at sixteen she told her parents she was going to
Philly to make her life (she told them she wanted to get married but not to
anybody in Pottsville as a pretext). In Philly she went through a bewildering
series of men [to John] who picked the up tab, kept her, paid her rent although
nobody who had hit the big time, who had serious don’t worry about the future
money. Then one night at a party where she was slumming (and kind of singing
for her supper since they guy who was hosting the party was also paying her rent,
paying for her voice lessons as well) she met Ole Andreson, the “Swede,” who
had come in with a date but blew her off once he got a look at Kitty. Once he
told his story-that he had been a boxer, had broken his hand doing so and so
was moving on, moving into some connections he had with guys in the rackets,
probably act as muscle she sensed that he might come in handy. He certainly had
the built for some tough action (although she also noted that his “member,” his
cock wasn’t that big and he wasn’t much of a lover, couldn’t give her an
orgasm). She had him all tied up though and she knew it, he knew it too. One
night she had been in Joey’s, a restaurant when pugs and other bad boys hung
out, mostly cons and clip artists wearing a stolen brooch, a very expensive
stolen brooch when a copper, a friend of the Swede’s came in to pinch somebody,
to pinch her. The Swede walked in, glammed to the situation and claimed he had
stolen the brooch to the copper after she begged him to do something. Yeah, he
took a fall for her, did three hard ones. She had him down forever if she
needed anything.
Of course a guy doing three hard
ones, even if for her, wasn’t getting her ahead in the world and so she started
stepping out again (she had made it a policy from early on, except for an
off-hand blow job if a guy was giving her something, to only deal with one guy
at a time-unless she needed to use another guy for some caper and that was his
price). That was when she met and shacked up with “Big Jim” Colfax, a guy
moving up in the rackets and a guy who seemed to have a “front” unlike the
Swede who was just a pug, somebody to be used. Funny this Big Jim was seriously
into sex, seriously into kinky action and so Kitty let him have his way-for a
while. A guy like Big Jim though was a guy who liked to lay back and take it
easy-have his boys take up the “collections” on the numbers rackets his was
running on the North side.
That is what Big Jim thought was the big time but
Kitty knew that serious money was not through some middle-level push in the
cheapjack numbers racket. She would keep hammering away at him to listen to her
plans about making a big score and then ducking out and become “legit,” make
some real easy street money from a business start-up. She would go after him
particularly when she had him tied up on the bedposts and she was ready to down
on him. He kept putting her off though.
Kept putting her off until she heard
that the Swede was getting out of prison and then she went full- bore, wouldn’t
do the kinky stuff that consumed Big Jim unless he listened to her plan. The
plan was simplicity itself and she had been working on a variation of the
scheme for some time. Where was there serious money almost laying on the
ground. Banks-or the payroll at some big factory. Banks were too risky but a
payroll with little security and no vaults was a cinch. In Philly then right
after the war when hats for men and women were a big deal the factory had to
the Tip Top Hat Company with a big payroll and nothing more than a door to go
through. They, Kitty figured they needed three other guys besides them for muscle
and firepower if necessary, would be dressed as workers going through the
single guard gate when the shifts changed. Then to the payroll office and the
dough on a Friday morning. Big Jim started to show some interest once Kitty
laid out the scenario and before the day was out they were casing the place
(and it didn’t hurt when she let him do his thing with whips with her). Big Jim
was in.
Of course the Swede would be in once
he saw that she was lined up with Big Jim just so he could get his hands on the
dough to take her away from him (little did the Swede know then that Big Jim
whom she would use to front the whole operation was claiming half of the take
for figuring out the plan). Yeah, Swede was in when he heard the plan with
Kitty sitting provocatively on the bed with that come hither look that meant
she was “available.” The other two guys were more trouble. There had been a
dearth of firepower talent in the town since the war with first-rate guys
heading to Chi town and the Motor City where there was more action. So Big Jim
contacted the best available, the second best, a guy named Dum Dum and a guy
named Blinky. Then Kitty went to work. Took Dum Dum up to her room and let him
have his way with her. Blinky, an old time junkie but a great wheel man when he
was sober, could have cared less about sex but a few bindles of smack, of boy,
of heroin brought him on board (and the promise of enough dough to stay junked up
for a year or two). So that had the five ready to go.
In the event the robbery went as planned
except at the end some guard thinking the money being robbed from the company
was his personal stash or something had started shooting and Dum Dum had wasted
him. An overhead cost. The plan was to meet at a cabin that night after they
had split up in different direction when the robbery was completed and they
headed for the cars they had parked across the street from the plant. This is
where things got dicey-or seemed to. They were all to meet and divide the dough
the next morning at another cabin when the coast was clear. What had happened
was that, by design, Kitty had gone to Dum Dum and Blinky and told them the
meeting cabin had burned down and the new meet place was at a farm a few miles
away.
She told the Swede that he was being
cut out, that the others wanted him out but that she loved him, had always
loved him so why didn’t he foul the boys up by showing up at the farm and
grabbing all the dough and head to Atlantic City. She would meet him there. She
left her calling card to make sure he was in-she let him have his way with her
(although she made another note that prison had done a job on his sex drive and
she had to pretend to have an orgasm). The next morning the Swede came through,
grabbed all the dough and hightailed it to Atlantic City with a sack full of
dough. Kitty showed up later in the day. A couple of days later she blew
town-with the dough-leaving the Swede holding the bag. Classic fall guy.
Here’s the deal. The Swede was set up
not only by Kitty but through her by Big Jim. Kitty had bet the farm that Big
Jim had enough smarts to put together a legit business-with her guiding him.
But she wanted all the dough to get the thing rolling. That was why the Swede
was left with egg all over his face. So everybody, everybody being Dum Dum and
Blinky, thought that Swede had crossed them up.
Big Jim, with Kitty in tow, did wind
up setting up a big time construction company and Kitty finally had all the dough
that even her black heart could use. The Swede, well the Swede figuring the
others had him down as the villain disappeared, went underground in some small
town in Ohio working as a gas jockey, all a washed up pug and robber was good
for. Then one day while driving through Ohio on company business Kitty stopped
at a gas station for gas and water. There was the Swede with a stupid sheepish
grin on his face. Kitty was able to hold him off with a promise to show up at
his room after she convinced him that Big Jim had forced her to betray her
man-him. Yeah, this Swede had it bad. Once Kitty got back to Philly though she
implored Big Jim to hire a couple of gunsels and get rid of the Swede for good.
Big Jim, for once, didn’t argue the
matter. He hired a couple of boys to do the job, and they did it as neat as any
hit job had ever been done. They killed him right in his crummy boarding house
room while he was sleeping, an easy hit. That is where Reardon came in. Seems
that the gasoline company that employed the Swede had life insurance on its
employees, Not much but enough to have Reardon smell a rat. So Kitty and Big
Jim would go down for a$2500 life insurance policy. Jesus. Reardon was a
bulldog on the case once he saw that the Swede,
mere gas jockey, had been waylaid for no apparent reason. By dogging it
out, by retracing some footsteps he found that the Swede was no mere gas jockey
but a pretty good boxer whose hands went south on him. He had gotten mixed up
with the local branch of the Philly mob, met the mysterious to Reardon Kitty,
taken the fall for her, and then had taken part in the Tip Top Hat robbery.
The important thing though was that
Reardon figured out that the Swede had been the fall guy-the guy who was
supposed to have skipped with all the dough. That got the pissed off Dum Dum
and Blinky thinking once they read that the Swede had been wasted under
suspicious circumstances. Then the trail led back to Big Jim and Kitty who were
now married and had a son. Dum Dum finally not so dumb wasted Blinky figuring
he was the bad guy. When that proved not to be true he then went after Big Jim.
In the meantime Reardon had figured out that Kitty had betrayed everybody. He
had it almost right except that she one last plea-and that was where the
journal ended. Everybody knows though that Big Jim and Dum Dum had a shoot-out
and had killed each other with Kitty begging Big Jim to get her off the hook as
he lay dying in a pool of blood. We already know Kitty’s end.
Larry thought after finishing up his
piece figured that Kitty’s parents had been right to keep John in the dark. And
after reading this article he was also sure that John would be glad that he had
not met his mother later.
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