Johnny Fletcher and Sam Cragg have faced many a tough problem in their lives, but never one so dismal as the one they come up against now. Circumstances beyond their control (and for once, beyond their ability to twist, sidestep, or disregard) force the boys either to take jobs in order to cat or to sit out a Chicago winter on a park bench. So, fighting every inch of the way, they become the employees of "the Leather Duke," Chicago's biggest operator in the leather business.Most leather workers grind drearily along for years with nothing to break the monotony. Not so Johnny and Sam. Before they've been there half a day, Sam finds a corpse where he should have found a barrel of leather counters. Then the uproar begins. Whether they're fighting in poolrooms in Little Italy, mixing it up at Turnverein dances, or merely adding a fine new lustre to their well-developed art of deadbeating, these two lads are at it every minute. Johnny Fletcher fans will find this full of excitement. So will everybody else.
Криминальный детектив18+Frank Gruber
The Leather Duke
Chapter One
Mort Murray was the cause of it all. Mort Murray, publisher of
Mort Murray had let them down. In their hour of need, he had failed Johnny Fletcher and Sam Cragg. Yes, he had failed to pay his rent and the sheriff had put a padlock on his door. So he had been unable to send the books that Johnny had ordered by Western Union, collect.
And now Johnny and Sam were walking the streets of Chicago homeless and hungry. They had caught fitful snatches of sleep in the Northwestern and Union Depots, but you can’t really get a good night’s repose in those places. The benches are hard and there are always policemen and station attendants to annoy you.
Things were bad.
Silently, Johnny and Sam turned north on Larrabee Street and silently they walked past the dingy factory buildings of the near North Side. People were working in those buildings, lifting barrels, wrestling crates and cartons, and operating whirring machines. It rained and snowed; sometimes the wind howled and sometimes the sun shone brightly. But those people in the buildings were oblivious to it all. They came to work at eight o’clock in the morning, they toiled all day and at five o’clock they went home. They went to work in these factories as boys and girls, they fell in love and were married. They raised children and the children in their turn went to work in the same factories. There was no end to it. Oh, yes, they changed jobs sometimes, these workers. They quit one factory and went into another. The work was the same, more or less, the pay was the same, a little more or less, and the hours never changed.
“Sam,” Johnny Fletcher said, as they walked along, “we’ve got to get a job.”
“Sure,” agreed Sam, then ten seconds later came to a complete halt.
“I said we’ve got to get a job. We’re up against it. I’ve thought and I’ve thought and I can’t see any way out of it. We’ve got to get a stake, and the only way is to get a job.”
“But, Johnny!” cried Sam. “You’ve never done any work, you’ve never held a job in your whole life...”
Johnny exhaled heavily. “Oh, yes, I have. In my youth, I had two jobs — not one, two. I worked in a grocery store once, delivering orders and another time — for five weeks — I worked in a bowling alley, setting up pins. What about you — have
“Me? Oh, sure, before I started wrestling I had a job for a year, driving a truck.”
“What kind of a truck?”
“A sand and gravel truck. Sometimes I hauled a load of cement. That was easy, unloading those little hundred-pound sacks of cement.”
“Then this job ought to be a cinch.”
“Which job?”
Johnny pointed at a squat, five-story building across the street. “Towner Leather Company,” he read. “There’s a sign next to the door, Man Wanted.”
A shudder ran through Sam’s body. “No, Johnny, no,” he whispered hoarsely. “Not a leather factory.”
“What’s wrong with leather? It’s one of the most useful articles in the world. They make shoes with it. And the harness the farmers use on their horses is made of leather. Why, if it wasn’t for leather, the farmers couldn’t drive their horses and if they couldn’t drive horses, they couldn’t plow ground to raise potatoes and corn and wheat. No, Sam, we couldn’t live without leather.”
“Sure, Johnny, I admit it. Leather’s important. I’ve got nothing against leather. It’s just... well work...! We’ve been together a long time, Johnny. Twelve years. In all that time we ain’t never had to work before. You always figured out something.”
“I know, but I’ve been thinking lately — maybe I’ve been wrong. Maybe it isn’t right not to work. Look at all these people in these buildings; they’re not walking the streets. They’ve got homes, they get three square meals a day. They save their money and when they get old they can quit working...”
“You mean they work like hell so they can quit working?”
“That’s right.”
“That shows how silly it is, Johnny. Why should we work all our lives, just so we can quit working? We’re not working now.”
“Your argument’s sound, Sam, but we haven’t had breakfast and we didn’t have dinner yesterday. Not to mention lunch. So we’re going in here and get a job.”
“Yeah, but it says Man Wanted, Johnny,
“We could toss for it, if we had a coin, but since we haven’t, why not leave it to the gods? Or the foreman or whatever they call the fellow who hires men. We’ll both go in and ask for the job and whoever he picks, why that’s it.”
“But don’t you think he’d pick the first one to go in?”
Андрей Валерьевич Валерьев , Андрей Ливадный , Андрей Львович Ливадный , Болеслав Прус , Владимир Игоревич Малов , Григорий Васильевич Солонец
Фантастика / Космическая фантастика / Научная Фантастика / Криминальный детектив / Современная русская и зарубежная проза / Самиздат, сетевая литература