***Out In The 1950s Film Noir Night-
With One Girl’s Confession In Mind
From The Pen Of Frank Jackman
Mary Shea knew, knew right from her
early girlhood, that she had no moral compass, had no moral point of view,
although she would have been hard pressed to use those exact terms being a
woman whose thoughts were directed at the moment, or toward the grabbing
future, and not upon reflection. She knew that she was different from the other
girls at the orphanage where she lived back when she came of age. Back in the
benighted 1940s when shortages were all around and wanting was fierce, Mary
Shea fierce. Girls, the other girls, all God- mercifully thankful to the good
Sisters of Mercy for providing them a space to live in like that dormitory bed
with stiff starched sheets that irritated the skin, a single dump-in chest for
personal belongings, and three square gruels a day was a reason to be thankful
for anything.
She had to laugh though when the
other girls, those God-mercy girls, were scrambling all over each other, ready
to scratch each other’s eyes out, in order to be her best girlfriend after word
got out that she liked girls, liked them that way, like them since she had been
cursed with strong sexual feelings to be sated, and liked doing things, nasty
things with girls, under those stiff sheets. And they did too the little
hypocrites. But that was in the past, girl slave captivity past when there no
men around, the good Sisters never found out or looked the other way, and not
fit material to think of now, now that she had left the confines of the
orphanage having come of leaving age and needed to spend her time figuring out
her future, figuring out her dreams. Still she knew she had no moral compass,
and knew sure as hell that she had better grab her chances fast and furious
while she could.
Mary’s first thought was, as if to
put paid to the point about that moral compass, to find a whorehouse to get
some work in, get herself off the streets for a while, maybe meet some sugar daddy who would pay her
freight, and maybe leave her alone enough for her to put her own plans
together. At worse she figured she would save enough money to build her own
business, maybe run her own bordello, a high class joint where only rich johns
and their friends would go. But see in Los Rios, the little town a few miles
from the orphanage there was only one little fly-by-night whorehouse filled
with kicked out floozies strung out on weed or H and frequented by bracero
wetbacks from the local fields on Saturday night, full of bad whiskey, bad
breathe, and bad karma, bad for Mary karma since that place was the end of the
line not the beginning.
So having no known skills, no known saleable
skills in Los Rios Mary started serving them off the arm at Gregory’s Hash
House on First Street down by the pier. And, except for having to fight off
every off-hand sweaty bracero and every lusty sea dog, she found a home there
for a while because room and board above the restaurant was part of the package
(also so she would be at Gregory’s work beck and call when the regular
town-grown waitresses had colicky kids to fret over or had gone unannounced
somewhere with some guy on three day trip to paradise). While not beautiful she
more that passed for a pretty blonde with a decent figure among unbridled men that
came in and so the fighting off part was sometimes a ruse, although harking
back to those stiff sheet orphan bed romps she was still ambivalent about men.
Nevertheless as she gathered in
intelligence about what was going on, or not going on, down at the docks she saw
and heard things that would be a big boost to her plans. So she was kind of
happy that whorehouse didn’t work out especially since she kept coming back to
that part, that still not sure about men, about whether she liked them enough
to have one of them deflower her some sweaty sultry night (hopefully under
satin sheets that she always dreamed about once she heard stiff starched white
linens were not the only kind)
That big boost included knowledge
that old time hood Gregory’s business was just a front, that Gregory was the
middleman for all the illegal stuff coming in off the boats, stuff like
cocaine, mary jane, hash, heroin, unbounded liquor, you name it. What Gregory
also had was plenty of ready cash to make transactions with since, well since
his business was strictly cash and carry. So she knew, knew as soon as she knew
the score about Gregory, that she was going to get that ready cash for herself
and then split town. And so one night, one night when Gregory had too much to
drink , she slipped into his rooms so quickly and quietly that one would have
thought she was a professional sneak thief , had done a thousand such capers,
and grabbed his strong box. Grabbed the box with both grabbing hands, grabbed
as it turned out twenty-five big ones.
Yes Mary hit the mother lode, or at
least that amount of dough seemed that way to her having only scratched for
nickels and dimes in her whole short sweet life. Naturally Gregory, connected
Gregory, squawked to the coppers, got all irate over Mary’s heist since who
else could have done it but her. Mary was no fool and so she asked to speak to
Gregory alone when they went down to the stationhouse. And all she had to say
to him was that she was hip to his whole operation and so if he just didn’t
write it off as carrying costs of doing business she was going to sing, sing
loud and clear. He didn’t like it, swore he would get even, but he saw her
reasoning clear enough. Naturally she had to blow town, blow town fast or get
scalded and so she flew the coop to Frisco town, a good town to get lost in.
And that is where things started to
get interesting now that Mary was a woman of property, a woman on the run with
property. She headed, headed like a lemming to the sea for the cover of the Embarcadero,
Frisco town’s waterfront filled with old warehouses, sailor’s bars, and hash
houses. Her idea was to keep submerged long enough to figure out how to
investment her new found dough, keep low, and keep alive. So she took a job as
a waitress at Dino’s Diner, a place where mainly Balkan nationals hung out when
they were on dry land, a place too where she could see what was up in case she
needed to make a fast get-away.
This Dino was a character, a guy out
of some crime novel, full of the devil but basically harmless, harmless after
Mary de-fanged him, or had his wife Olive de-fang him. (For her efforts with
Dino Olive got Mary into her bed one night since she swung both ways and Mary hadn’t
play hard to get). And so things went on like that for a while until Mary
started to get restless about her future, about those satin sheets that haunted
her dreams.
And that is when she met Steve,
Steve Casper, a local small-time fishing boat owner with big ideas and no dough
who supplied the fish to a lot of restaurants along the wharves. His first big
idea was to try to sweep Mary off her feet. But Mary was too wise and still too
unsure where she stood on the guy question although Steve stirred something in
her, something about sex but she wasn’t sure what, so she was not to be swept
away by some ill-thought out passion. His second big idea was to try to get a
bank loan to buy a trawler and really make some dough. That idea Mary was
unequivocally interested in since she thought that if the venture succeeded and
she made that twenty five thou back on her investment she could slip Gregory
his dough back and all would be square.
Well the venture did succeed, and
she did make the dough back, more than that over the next couple of years but
here is the funny part, well, maybe not funny, but ironic. When she went back
to Los Rios to square things up it turned out that Gregory had split south,
south to Mexico, and some other grift. So nobody was really looking for her, or
hadn’t been for a while. She had nobody to give the dough back. For just a
minute she thought that she had to make restitution somehow and thought to give
the money to that long ago Sisters of Mercy orphanage. Then she thought about those
damn stiff starched linen sheets and laughed that idea off. As for her partner Steve, well, they are
partners under satin sheets now, although every once in a while when Steve is
at sea Olive finds her way under them too.
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