Discover millions of ebooks, audiobooks, and so much more with a free trial

Only $11.99/month after trial. Cancel anytime.

Corruption City: A Novel
Corruption City: A Novel
Corruption City: A Novel
Ebook174 pages2 hours

Corruption City: A Novel

Rating: 2.5 out of 5 stars

2.5/5

()

Read preview

About this ebook

A young law professor is hired to clean up a city strangled by corruption 
Nemo Crespi’s organization has a hand in everything from gambling rackets to hotels to newspapers. To combat him, the governor needs a special prosecutor he can trust, someone free of political ambitions . . . someone like John Conroy, a twenty-nine-year-old law professor as unlikely for the prosecutor job as anyone. Cynical, hardscrabble Conroy is reluctant to accept, until he realizes that the work will put his theory—that all power corrupts—to a welcome real-life test. It will be a formidable mission, and not just because of the caliber of the enemy. Conroy’s own father, a cop promoted to the role of chief investigator, has a close friend in Crespi’s ranks, and he knows his fair share of dirty secrets. As the investigation gains speed, Conroy and those closest to him will have to grapple with the full reach of the vicious syndicate. This ebook features an extended biography of Horace McCoy.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateJan 15, 2013
ISBN9781453292037
Corruption City: A Novel
Author

Horace McCoy

Horace McCoy was born near Nashville, Tennessee in 1897. During his lifetime he travelled all over the US as a salesman and taxi-driver, and his varied career included reporting and sports editing, acting as bodyguard to a politician, doubling for a wrestler, and writing for films and magazines. A founder of the celebrated Dallas Little Theatre, his novels include I Should Have Stayed Home (1938), Kiss Tomorrow Goodbye (1948), and They Shoot Horses, Don't They? (1935), which was made into a film. He died in 1955.

Read more from Horace Mc Coy

Related to Corruption City

Related ebooks

Thrillers For You

View More

Related articles

Related categories

Reviews for Corruption City

Rating: 2.5 out of 5 stars
2.5/5

2 ratings0 reviews

What did you think?

Tap to rate

Review must be at least 10 words

    Book preview

    Corruption City - Horace McCoy

    EARLY BIRD BOOKS

    FRESH EBOOK DEALS, DELIVERED DAILY

    LOVE TO READ?

    LOVE GREAT SALES?

    GET FANTASTIC DEALS ON BESTSELLING EBOOKS

    DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX EVERY DAY!

    The Web’s Creepiest Newsletter

    Delivered to Your Inbox

    Get chilling stories of

    true crime, mystery, horror,

    and the paranormal,

    twice a week.

    Corruption City

    A Novel

    Horace McCoy

    Contents

    Chapter One

    Chapter Two

    Chapter Three

    Chapter Four

    Chapter Five

    Chapter Six

    Chapter Seven

    Chapter Eight

    A Biography of Horace McCoy

    Chapter One

    AT EIGHT MINUTES AFTER four o’clock in the morning a fire alarm sounded in the city: box 314, on the corner of South Front and Poplar Streets, in the warehouse district. The normal complement of equipment responded—four engine companies, two truck companies, a salvage company, a squad car and a battalion chief.

    A five-story warehouse was ablaze from top to bottom, the flames roiling through the already glassless windows as if they were being shot off launching platforms.

    By God, she sure went in a hurry, the battalion chief said, reaching for the radio telephone to call for a four-alarm assignment. What the hell they got in there, anyway—hi-octane gas?

    The battalion chief soon found out. Not hi-octane gas but hard-paper. It was the warehouse where the newsprint of the most powerful newspaper in the state, the Star-Journal, was stored—260,000 tons of Powell River, B. C, paper, stacked three deep in rolls of 64 ¾ inches high and weighing approximately 1,750 pounds each—five floors of newsprint burning simultaneously and making a great solid rectangle of flame.

    Long before the fire was brought under actual control, the smart boys from the Arson Bureau and the chemists from the Police Laboratory were poking around. By nightfall, while the ruins were still smoldering and the stink of wet charred paper still hung over the neighborhood, they were able to submit an official report.

    The fire was no accident; it had been set carefully with chemicals of high vapor pressure and extreme volatility. It was obviously the work of expert arsonists. The Bureau announced that it had determined that the torches used great quantities of carbon disulphide, methyl alcohol, ethyl alcohol and ethyl ether.

    A little past seven o’clock the next morning, a hundred and sixty miles upstate in a small private office in the east wing of the dirty graystone state capitol building, Lou Walzer, owner and publisher of the Star-Journal, Dave Fogel, district attorney of the county which encompassed the city, and the governor, Aaron Duncan, met secretly.

    There is no doubt about it in my mind, absolutely none, Walzer said. "It’s the work of Nemo Crespi’s syndicate. Time and time again—behind half a dozen different fronts—he has tried to buy the Star-Journal. That’s why he organized his teamsters’ union—he couldn’t buy us, so he decided to control our supply lines. He did exactly the same thing with the hotels—he couldn’t buy them, so he took over the laundries that do their work. Then the union hiked our cost from ninety to fifteen hundred dollars a load. Get that—fifteen hundred dollars drayage on a single truckload of newsprint. We told ’em to go to hell. We were prepared for violence, but nothing like this. You’d think the arrogant bastard would be satisfied to own the gambling rackets and control the night clubs. But not Crespi. He wants the whole shooting match: hotels, newspapers, bus lines, all the docks—"

    Sober-faced, the governor nodded. I agree, he said. The situation is out of control. What do you suggest?

    You’ll have to appoint somebody to clean it up, Walzer said. You’ll have to give him extraordinary powers. Crespi isn’t joking about this and there’s no sense in us joking. Our man’s got to have more damn legal authority than any man’s ever had. The unlimited right of subpoena. Dangerous or not, that’s the only way this thing can be handled.

    I agree with that, too, the governor said. Who’ll it be—you Fogel?

    District Attorney Fogel shook his head. "No. Not me. I tell you frankly, there’s not a move that my men make that Crespi doesn’t know about almost before it happens. He’s sitting on top of a five-hundred-million-dollar-a-year empire and he’s got it protected—from judges on the bench to spies in my office, probably. I’m an ambitious man and I’d like to smash the syndicate because I know what that would do for my political future. But under the circumstances ... Whoever you appoint must be a man with no political ambition, who will work completely independently of my office."

    The governor lighted a cigarette, looking thoughtful. Someone with no political ambition, he said. Suddenly he smiled. I know. I’ll call my old law professor at the state university. He picked up the telephone. Get me the attorney general, he told his secretary. Then get me Dean Roughead at College Station.

    The fame of Dean Weir Roughead had spread far beyond the limits of his own campus. A great hulk of a man in the Whitmanesque pattern, unconventional, sometimes shocking, he had seen pass through his musty lecture room a succession of students, of whom one rose to the White House, three to the bench of the Supreme Court of the United States, seven to governors’ mansions in various states and hundreds to public positions of lesser importance.

    He was sitting on the toilet bowl in the bathroom of his tiny bachelor’s cottage behind the Law School, trimming his classic beard in a woman’s adjustable make-up mirror that he had hooked around his neck, when the call from the governor came through.

    He was still trying to trim his beard five minutes later, after he had talked to the governor, when a pot banged to the floor in the kitchen. He reached around and opened the bathroom door. John? That you?

    Good morning, sir. The coffeepot slipped. Dean Roughead twisted his head around and looked out the door at John Conroy, who, every morning during the school term, came to have coffee with him.

    This, the dean said, is the kind of coincidence that removes the halo from the head of science. You know who just called me on the telephone? The governor.

    Where’s the coincidence in that?

    The coincidence, the dean said, is you.

    Me? John said. What are you talking about?

    The dean explained about the job of special prosecutor, and about Nemo Crespi.

    But he didn’t offer the job to me. He said for you to find someone who—

    "I’ve found him. I’m offering it to you, John boy."

    No, John Conroy said, pouring himself a cup of coffee.

    Is the doctor afraid to administer his own medicine? Roughead asked.

    I wouldn’t touch it with a fifty-foot pole, John Conroy said.

    Do you know what it would mean to a man to break the Nemo Crespi syndicate?

    "If it can be broken—"

    The district attorney’s office, the governor’s chair, a seat in the Senate. Glittering temptations, my boy.

    For somebody else.

    Well, now, look. You wouldn’t get your hands too dirty. You could wear gloves.

    I’d have to put a clothespin over my nose, too. No, thanks.

    Do you intend to stay here forever—teaching theory?

    Just as long as I can. You’d understand that if you’d grown up in the gutter of a tenement district, where the only place you can see the sky is directly overhead. He finished his coffee and stood up.

    Dean Roughead smiled. Yours is a sad story. You’re afraid. You are, actually. For years you’ve been teaching that power corrupts. A real genuine Lord Acton man. Well, this is power that you’re being offered. Ergo, it corrupts. If it does, it proves your theory and you become the kind of man you despise. If it doesn’t, it proves that what you’ve been teaching is all wrong.

    John looked at him and frowned. Maybe you’d better start teaching psychology instead of law, he said and stalked angrily out of the house.

    The dean laughed, picked up the phone and called the governor, telling him to hold everything, that he had found a man for him, but there was a slight problem of persuading him to take the assignment.

    The governor promised to wait until midnight.

    Oh, it won’t take that long, Dean Roughead said. I know John.

    He was right, too. He knew what he had done, very deliberately, to the serenity of John Conroy’s mind by putting to it a problem in the form of a challenge he knew John would not be able to resist.

    Twenty-nine years old, John Conroy was Professor of Law, the Assistant Dean of the Law School—the youngest man in the history of the state university to be so honored. At nineteen he had been a freshman, at twenty-two graduated; after three years’ intense post-graduate work, he became assistant professor, then full professor and finally was selected by Dean Roughead himself as his assistant.

    Dean Roughead had had protégés before, but none quite like John Conroy. It is sometimes true that when a pseudo-cynic meets an authentic cynic, an explosion results. Dean Roughead thought he was a cynic until John Conroy came along and then he discovered that he didn’t even know the meaning of the word. John Conroy’s cynicism—brutal, violent—was practical and not intellectual; and he needed no analyst to probe for the reason.

    He knew. It was environmental, the residue of his early background—the smell of poverty and sweat, of the family wash drying before the kitchen stove, of his father half-soling his own shoes, of his mother heaped high with the drudgery of tenement chores. None of this had to be; at least it could have been lightened—if his father, Patrolman Michael Conroy, Badge No. 914, had not been so dumb and so pitifully honest.

    Other cops were doing all right; it was a matter of family discussion that John could not help overhearing—Eamon Harrigan, for example. Eamon Harrigan was a long-time friend of his father, a plain flatfoot with not much more seniority, two weeks perhaps, and not as much native intelligence. But Harrigan was several grades above Mike Conroy in the matter of economic comfort. It was very plain, even to John, who was only eight or nine years old then, that Patrolman Harrigan had discovered sources of private income. John made the mistake of mentioning to his father that things would be easier for all of them if he would only follow the example of Harrigan. He never forgot what happened. Mike Conroy beat the hell out of him.

    John thought then that his father was just a big, dumb cop; and year by year the big, dumb cop had not become a glowing beacon in a dissolute world. His contemporaries, not bothered by scruples, had risen high: commissioners, deputy commissioners, inspectors. But Michael Conroy, after thirty years in the department, was still a lieutenant.

    It only proved to John Conroy that the odds were all against an honest man. He believed that men had to cultivate moral qualities along with their practical inventions, and that when these inventions, of which the rackets were one, ran ahead of man’s moral consciousness then man faced destruction.

    To John it was undeniable that society and the underworld had flowed each into the other. And he believed that the man in the street, unless he was an idiot, was aware of this, too, and his respect for institutions of learning and mediums of public information had decreased.

    That same morning, during a classroom lecture, John Conroy decided to accept the assignment of special prosecutor. It was no hasty decision, it came from deep within. He knew that it would give him a chance to prove his theory, and then—if he was right—he could return to the university and teach, not from theory, but from experience, that power corrupts.

    By ten-thirty that night John Conroy had been granted a sabbatical, and at one-fifteen in the morning the governor’s private plane had picked him up at College Station and delivered him to the airport at the state capital, where

    Enjoying the preview?
    Page 1 of 1