Out In The 1950s Film Noir Night-
With Cornel Wilde’s Shockproof In Mind
From The Pen Of Frank Jackman
Jenny
Marsh grew up on the wrong side of the tracks, the 1930s Great Depression wrong
side of the tracks that made it very wrong, made it much worse for the ninth child
of a drunken father and a hard-pressed mother trying to keep nine growing
hungry mouths fed. And not succeeding.
Trying to raise nine kids in a small one room cold- water flat in expansive
Westminster just outside Los Angeles. So all Jenny knew was wants, all she knew
was nots, not this not that, all she knew was cramped spaces and not room to
breathe, no room to do anything but claw her way out, claw her way out just as
fast as she could. Any way she could. With anybody she could, knowing that if
there was a role call count at the Marsh household one child more or less would
not be missed. She would not be missed especially since Jenny as the last child
was the end of the road on the hand-me-downs.
That was the way her sweet young life had played out, kind of the child
left behind of the lot and while she never spoke of it one way or the other,
never expressed any bitterness about it publicly; she early on saw the writing
on the wall and acted accordingly. Kept her thoughts, her emotions, and her angers
in check, from the rest of the brood. But any outsider could see, any observant
outsider could see, she was holding some flames, some burning desires
inside.
At
thirteen, not being much of a student, and not having anybody looking over her
shoulder to see that she attended school one truant day Jenny met Soldier
Johnson down at the arcade, down at the Santa Monica pier. Soldier the
well-known and feared leader of the biker corner boy gang in Westminster saw
her budding womanly figure, her dark blue eyes, her long brown hair grabbed her up without a second thought
(although he was married, very married as she found out later, too much later)
and staked his claim to her. Needless to say she lost her virginity to him
quickly. But she also lost, lost in the shuffle of being paid attention too, of
the thrilling thought of being some man’s girl, of being the small time boss
man’s girl, her moral compass. While Soldier never abused her, never hit her
like some of the gang members did with their women, or anything like that he
had an evil hold on her, on her needs and on her naïve in this wicked old
world. After a couple of years of her undying devotion he felt no compulsion
about pimping her to the squares a few times when he was strapped for cash. She in love, or just tired of wanting obliged
him as her walking daddy, no questions asked, and while hustling for tricks at the bars in Westminster and
later along Hollywood Boulevard, accumulated a few thirty day stays in
county for her efforts.
That arrangement
went on until Soldier Johnson drew to an inside straight one night, got caught
in a jam with some rival chieftain of the Inglewood bikers, picked up a dime for
manslaughter and flew the coop to the Q (San Quentin, if you didn’t know). He
left Jenny, who said she would wait for him (that was when she found out he was
married, married with two kids) stranded, stranded walking the streets picking
up an odd trick or two without the benefit of her walking daddy to protect her.
Thus she was picked a couple more times for the thirty day cure. So times were
no question tough, although not as tough as hanging around some nine to a room
cold water flat at least that is how Jenny scoped the scene. Then Harry came
along.
Yes, for
the record, Harry picked her up one night on the streets when he had a manly urge
and she was walking, walking from hunger, so their romance, and whether you or
I see it that, way it was a romance, was not something built from watching some
melodramatic movie. But for Jenny Harry had something, had something to hold
onto. See Harry was a college guy, a guy
who came from some blueblood family back east that had fallen on hard times and
so Harry was left to do the best that he could do. And for Harry the best that
he could do, the best that he wanted to do, was to be a gentleman gambler. And
for the most part he was good at it. Jenny was enthralled, since her idea of a
good man turned out to be a guy like Harry. Harry who moreover taught her how
to dress, taught her some gentle manners, and taught her how to talk without
swearing out every other word. Our Harry was a regular Professor Higgins. Well
almost. See Harry took his gentleman gambler job seriously, seriously enough to
scorn the idea of working when times were tough, times when lady luck was
against him. So well-dressed, well-mannered, well-spoken from time to time Jenny
had to work in some high-end whorehouse that Harry knew of until his luck
changed. She didn’t mind, not after all Harry had for done for her, not after
he was the first man who cared for her, really cared for her. She would do
anything for Harry, anything.
And as
luck, bad luck, would have it she was taken up on that pledge one night when
the other shoe dropped. It seemed some guy, another gentleman gambler, Frank
Little, was spreading the word that Harry’s luck was, well, enhanced, was
helped along by a little manipulation. Jenny who couldn’t stand to hear
anything like that about her walking daddy in a fit of anger blasted him with a
couple of shots in the heart that night. As so for protecting her walking daddy,
for protecting her man’s reputation, Jenny drew dime up at the Women’s Prison
in Los Gatos. Harry said her would get her help, get her out somehow, and stand
by her. And funny thing he did, did stand by her and did grease enough palms to
get her paroled after five years. So it must have been some kind of love Harry
carried for Jenny, although you and I might not appreciate the finer points of
that love.
But this
California parole stuff is a drag. Jenny couldn’t, couldn’t do a million
things, including being seen with the likes of Harry. What she could do was get
a legitimate job, one approved of by her parole officer. That turned out to be
serving them off the arm working for Jeff, Jeff Morse, who owned a hash house
on the Pacific Coast Highway above Malibu. Jeff, a friend of the parole
officer, was supposed to enforce the regulations to the letter. So for a while,
a fairly long while, about a year, there was a tug of war between Jenny and
Jeff over her relationship with Harry since she was seeing him on the sly. At
one point Jeff, fed up with covering for Jenny, had her down at the station all
ready to be sent back to Los Gatos so things were dicey. But here is the funny
part throughout these tussles Jeff and Jenny were kind of falling for each other, falling hard once
Jenny started to see that Harry all about Harry (with Jeff egging that idea on
by reminding her that she did the time for Harry not the other way around).
After a few months (and more than a few nights under the sheets over at Jeff’s apartment)
they were married.
So Jenny
tried to break it off with Harry. But guys like Harry don’t get to be guys like
Harry by taking a hit to their pride and pocketbook so Harry threatened to
expose he knew about her and her whoring days. Jeff would not like that, for
sure. So one night, a night very much like the night Frank Little went to his
just rewards Jenny put a couple of random slugs in Harry. And that action started
a whole cascade of madness once Jenny explained to Jeff what Harry was trying
to do. And Jeff bought her story, bought it without rancor. So he too became an
outlaw as they fled town not sure whether Harry was dead or alive but also not
wanting to stay aroundto find out.
So they
bummed around, Jeff working odd jobs, and Jenny keeping house, keeping on the
move though, waiting, always waiting for the other shoe to drop. And somehow
through this entire trauma Jenny developed a moral compass, or the one she
always had hidden showed up, because she was the one who said they had to go
back and face the music. And they did. Here is how things get a little crazy in
human existence though when it came time for Harry to press charges he passed,
passed when he saw the Jeff-Jenny set-up as real. Yes, that Jenny must have had
something, even if she did come from the wrong side of the track.
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