American Tabloid - James Ellroy [98]
Cars boomed by. Windowpanes rattled close to the feed-in.
Kabikoff: “Everybody in the loop knows I’m the best smut man in the West. Everybody knows Sid the Yid’s got the best-looking cunt and the boys with the putzes down to their knees.”
Giancana: “Did Sal tell you to ask for a Pension Fund loan specific?”
Kabikoff: “Yeah, he did.”
Montrose: “Is Sal in some kind of money trouble, Sid?”
Traffic noise covered the signal. Littell timed it at six seconds even.
Montrose: “I know Sal’s in the loop, and I know the loop’s the loop, but I’m also saying my own little love shack got burglarized in January, and I got rammed for fourteen Gs out of my fucking golf bag.”
Giancana: “And in April some friends of ours got clouted for eighty grand they had stashed in a locker. You see, right after these hits Sal started spending new money. Butch and me just put it together, sort of circumstantially.”
Littell went lightheaded. His pulse went haywire.
Kabikoff: “No. Sal wouldn’t do something like that. No … he wouldn’t.…”
Montrose: “The loop’s the loop and the Fund’s the Fund, but the two ain’t necessarily the same thing. Jules Schiffrin’s with the Fund, but that don’t mean he’d roll over for a loan for you, just because you shared spit way back when.”
Giancana: “We sort of think somebody’s trying to get at Jimmy Hoffa and the Fund through a goddamn fake loan referral. We talked to Sal about it, but he didn’t have nothing to say.”
Littell hyperventilated. Spots blipped in front of his eyes.
Montrose: “So, did somebody approach you? Like the Feds or the Cook County Sheriff’s?”
Thumps hit the mike. It had to be Sid’s pulse racing. Fizzing noise overlapped the thumps—Sid’s sweat was clogging up the feeder ducts.
The feed sputtered and died. Littell hit his volume switch and got nothing but a static-fuzzed void.
He rolled down the windows and counted off forty-six seconds. Fresh air cleared his head.
He can’t rat me. I wore that ski mask both times that we talked.
Kabikoff stumbled out to the sidewalk. Wires dangled from the back of his shirt. He got his car and punched it straight through a red light.
Littell hit the ignition. The car wouldn’t start—his bug feed ran down the battery.
• • •
He knew what he’d find at Sal’s house. Four rye-and-beers prepared him to break in and see it.
They tortured Sal in his basement. They stripped him and tied him to a ceiling pipe. They hosed him and scorched him with jumper cables.
Sal didn’t talk. Giancana didn’t know the name Littell. Fat Sid didn’t know his name or what he looked like.
They might let Sid go back to Texas. They might or might not kill him somewhere down the line.
They left a cable clamped to Sal’s tongue. Voltage burned his face shiny black.
Littell called Fat Sid’s hotel. The desk clerk said Mr. Kabikoff was in—he had two visitors just an hour ago.
Littell said, “Don’t ring his room.” He stopped for two more rye-and-beers and drove over to see for himself.
They left the door unlocked. They left Sid in an overflowing bathtub. They tossed a plugged-in TV set on top of him.
The water was still bubbling. Electric shock had burned Kabikoff bald.
Littell tried to weep. The rye-and-beers left him too anesthetized.
Kemper Boyd always said DON’T LOOK BACK.
33
(New Orleans, 9/20/59)
Banister supplied files and pedigree notes. Pete narrowed his prospects down to three men.
His hotel room was file-inundated. He was deluged with rap sheets and FBI reports—the far-right South captured on paper.
He got the scoop on Ku Klux Klan klowns and neo-Nazis. He learned about the National States Rights Party. He marveled at the pointy-heads on the FBI payroll—half the Klans in Dixie were Fed-saturated.
Fed snitches were out castrating and lynching. Hoover’s only real concern was KKK mail-fraud minutiae.
A fan ruffled loose file papers. Pete stretched out on the bed and blew smoke rings.
Memo to Kemper Boyd:
The Agency should bankroll a Blessington KKK Klavern. Dirt-poor crackers surrounded the campsite—spic haters all. Klan hijinks would help keep them diverted.