Which only revved the engine in me. “So, anybody else ever told you that?” I asked. “Having a doubt, I mean.”
Vinnie’s right shoulder lifted slightly, then fell again. Beyond that, nothing.
“The thing I could never figure is, what would have been worth it, you know? To you, I mean. Even, say, a hundred grand. Even that would have been chump change compared to where you were headed.”
Vinnie shifted slightly, and the fingers of his right hand curled into a fist, a movement I registered with appropriate trepidation.
“And to lose that fight,” I said. “Against Douggie Burns. He was over the hill already. Beaten to a pulp in that battle with Chester Link. To lose a fight with a real contender, that’s one thing. But losing one to a beat-up old palooka like—”
Vinnie suddenly whirled around, his eyes flaring. “He was a stand-up guy, Douggie Burns.”
“A stand-up guy?” I asked. “You knew Douggie?”
“I knew he was a stand-up guy.”
“Oh yeah?” I said. “Meaning what?”
“That he was an honest guy,” Vinnie said. “A stand-up guy, like I said.”
“Sure, okay,” I said. “But, excuse me, so what? He was a ghost. What, thirty-three, four? A dinosaur.” I released a short laugh. “That last fight of his, for example. With Chester Link. Jesus, the whipping he took.”
Something in Irish Vinnie’s face drew taut. “Bad thing,” he muttered.
“Slaughter of the Innocents, that’s what it was,” I said. “After the first round, I figured Burns would be on the mat within a minute of the second. You see it?”
Vinnie nodded.
“Then Douggie comes back and takes a trimming just as bad in the second,” I went on, still working to engage Irish Vinnie, or maybe just relive the sweetness of my own vanished youth, the days when I’d huddled at the ringside press table, chain-smoking Camels, with the bill of my hat turned up and a press card winking out of the band, a guy right out of Front Page, though even now it seemed amazingly real to me, my newspaperman act far closer to my true self than any role I’d played since then.
“Then the bell rings on Round Three and Chester windmills Douggie all over again. Jesus, he was punch-drunk by the time the bell rang at the end of it.” I grinned. “Headed for the wrong corner, remember? Ref had to grab him by the shoulders and turn the poor bleary bastard around.”
“A stand-up guy,” Vinnie repeated determinedly, though now only to himself.
“I was amazed the ref didn’t stop it,” I added. “People lost a bundle that night. Everybody was betting Douggie Burns wouldn’t finish the fight. I had a sawbuck said he wouldn’t see five.”
Vinnie’s eyes cut over to me. “Lotsa people lost money,” he muttered. “Big people.”
Big people, I thought, remembering that the biggest of them had been standing ringside that night. None other than Salmon Weiss, the guy who managed Chester Link. Weiss was the sort of fight promoter who wore a cashmere overcoat and a white silk scarf, always had a black Caddie idling outside the arena with a leggy blonde in the back seat. He had a nose that had been more dream than reality before an East Side surgeon took up the knife, and when he spoke, it was always at you.
Get the picture? Anyway, that was Salmon Weiss, and everybody in or around the fight game knew exactly who he was. His private betting habits were another story, however, and I was surprised that a guy like Irish Vinnie, a pug in no way connected to Weiss, had a clue as to where the aforementioned Salmon put his money.
“You weren’t one of Weiss’s boys, were you?” I asked, though I knew full well that Vinnie had always been managed by Old Man Melinas.
Vinnie shook his head.
“Spiro Melinas was your manager.”
Vinnie nodded.
So what gives? I wondered, but figured it was none of my business, and so went on to other matters.
“Anyway,” I said. “Chester tried his best to clean Douggie’s clock, but the bastard went all the way through the tenth.” I laughed again.
The bus groaned, shuddered in a blast of wind, then dragged forward again.
“Well, all I remember is what a shellacking Douggie took.”
Vinnie chewed his lower lip. “ ’Cause he wouldn’t go down.”
“True enough. He did the count. All the way to the last bell.”
Vinnie seemed almost to be ringside again at that long-ago match, watching as Douggie Burns, whipped and bloody, barely able to raise his head, took punch after punch, staggering backward, fully exposed, barely conscious, so that it seemed to be a statue Chester Link was battering with all his power, his gloves thudding against stomach, shoulder, face, all of it Douggie Burns, but Douggie Burns insensate, perceiving nothing, feeling nothing, Douggie Burns in stone.
“Stayed on his feet,” Vinnie said now. “All the way.”
“Yes, he did,” I said, noting the strange admiration Vinnie still had for Douggie, though it seemed little more than one fighter’s regard for another’s capacity to take inhuman punishment. “But you have to say there wasn’t much left of him after that fight,” I added.
“No, not much.”
“Which makes me wonder why you fought him at all,” I said, returning to my real interest in the matter of Irish Vinnie Teague. “I mean, that was no real match. You and Douggie. After that beating he took from Chester Link, Douggie couldn’t have whipped a Girl Scout.”
“Nothing left of Douggie,” Vinnie agreed.
“But you were in your prime,” I told him. “No real match, like I said. And that... you know... to lose to him... that was nuts, whoever set that up.”
Vinnie said nothing, but I could see his mind working.
“Spiro. What was his idea in that? Setting up a bout between you and Douggie Burns? It never made any sense to me. Nothing to be gained from it on either side. You had nothing to gain from beating Douggie... and what did Douggie have to gain from beating you if he couldn’t do it without it being a... I mean, if it wasn’t... real.”
Vinnie shook his head. “Weiss set it up,” he said. “Not Mr. Melinas.”
“Oh, Salmon Weiss,” I said. “So it was Weiss that put together the fight you had with Douggie?”
Vinnie nodded.
I pretended that the infamous stage play that had resulted from Weiss’s deal had been little more than a tactical error on Vinnie’s part and not the, shall we say, flawed thespian performance that had ended his career.
“Well, I sure hope Weiss made you a good offer for that fight, because no way could it have helped you in the rankings.” I laughed. “Jesus, you could have duked it out with Sister Evangeline from Our Lady of the Lepers and come up more.”
No smile broke the melancholy mask of Irish Vinnie Teague.
I shook my head at the mystery of things. “And a fix to boot,” I added softly.
Vinnie’s gaze cut over to me. “It wasn’t no fix,” he said. His eyes narrowed menacingly. “I didn’t take no dive for Douggie Burns.”
I saw it all again in a sudden flash of light, Douggie’s glove float through the air, lightly graze the side of Vinnie’s face, then glide away as the Shameful Shamrock crumpled to the mat. If that had not been a dive, then there’d never been one in the history of the ring.
But what can you say to a man who lies to your face, claims he lost the money or that it wasn’t really sex?
I shrugged. “Hey, look, it was a long time ago, right?”
Vinnie’s red-rimmed eyes peered at me intently. “I was never supposed to take a dive,” he said.
“You weren’t supposed to take a dive?” I asked, playing along now, hoping that the bus would get moving, ready to get off, be done with Vinnie Teague. “You weren’t supposed to drop for Douggie Burns?”