Both Drury and I bent over him, one on either side of him. The smell of cordite was in the air.
“He must’ve got his hair cut this morning,” I said.
“Why do you say that?” Drury asked.
I hadn’t told Drury that just yesterday I’d seen this man. And I wasn’t about to.
“Just looks freshly cut, that’s all. You can smell the pomade.”
“I can smell the wine. He must’ve been dead drunk. Well, now he’s just dead.”
Drury stood. He said to Chief Rose, “That’s Frank Nitti, all right.”
“His driver’s license says Nitto,” Rose said.
Drury shrugged. “Nitto’s his real name.” He laughed shortly. “He thought ‘Nitti’ sounded more American, I guess.”
I was still bent over Nitti’s body. I carefully lifted the hat off his head. The brown fedora had several bullet holes in it. Five, to be exact.
“Bill,” I said. “Take a look at this.”
I showed him the hat. “How in the hell does one bullet through the head put five holes in your hat? From the angle of the fatal shot, there should be only one hole, about here…” And I put my pinky through that very hole. “What made these others? Mice?”
Drury took the hat and turned it around in his hands, studying it, frowning.
Chief Rose said, “We’ve got witnesses. Maybe they can help explain.”
He took us over to the three railroad workers. Two of them were skinny, in their forties, and looked uncannily alike, although they proved not to be brothers. The third was heavyset and about thirty-five.
Drury identified himself, and one of the skinny ones stepped forward and said he was William Seebauer, conductor; he and the other men, a switchman and a flagman, were on an IC switch engine when it started. He wore wire-frame glasses-which was about all that distinguished him from the other skinny man-and as he spoke he occasionally removed them and rubbed the drizzle of rain off the lenses, nervously.
“It was around three o’clock,” he said, “and we were backing the train south, caboose in front. After we crossed Cermak Road, I saw a man about a block and a half down, going the same direction as us, south, walking on the tracks just over from us. He was staggering. I thought maybe he was drunk.”
“How fast were you going?” Drury asked.
“Not very. When we got up close to him, I was on the platform, and hollered, ‘Hi there, buddy,’ and at that, the guy raised his hand and there was a revolver in it. He fired at me, and I ducked.”
I asked, “How many shots did he fire at you?”
“Two,” Seebauer said. The switchman and flagman standing nearby both nodded at that.
“What happened then?” Drury asked.
“The man was wavering around and I didn’t think his aim was good. He staggered down the embankment”-he stopped and pointed at the fence and Nitti’s body-“and ended up there. Sat down, or fell down. I couldn’t say.”
“And?”
“Well, I ordered the train stopped and we got off and walked back toward him. He was sitting there with his eyes closed. I told the other boys, ‘Watch this guy-he’s nuts. He may be making believe he’s passed out just to take another shot at us.’ So we moved slow. We were maybe sixty feet of him when his eyes opened, and he looked at us. Kind of rolled his eyes.” The conductor swallowed. “Then he raised the gun to his head. He didn’t miss what he was shooting at that time.”
Drury had the other two tell their stories, individually. While that was going on, I went back to the body. I knelt over him. It.
“Shit, Frank,” I said.
A cop nearby said, “What?”
“Nothing,” I said. I got a handkerchief out of my pocket and carefully lifted the gun from his hand; I shook open the cylinder. Three bullets remained. Three had been fired.
Soon Drury came over. “Their stories all match, pretty much.”
“Three bullets fired, Bill.” I showed him the revolver.
He took it, and my hanky.
“That makes sense,” he said. “He fires two shots at the caboose boys, and put one in his head. Two plus one makes three in my school.”
“Really? Tell me, Bill, the day you graduated-how many bullet holes did you have in your mortar board?”
His mouth distorted as he thought that over. “Maybe he wasn’t shooting at the boys on the train. They just heard shots and thought he was.”
“Who or what was he shooting at, then?”
“His own head, of course!”
“And he missed? And his hat didn’t fly off when these misaimed bullets flew through?”
Drury shrugged. “There are always anomalies in a case like this.”
“Anomalies my ass! Is that how you explain evidence that doesn’t suit you? Dismissing it?”
“Heller, you’re just a civilian observer here. Here at my discretion. Don’t cause any trouble.”
“What do you think happened here, Captain Drury?”
He put his hands on the hips of his expensive black topcoat and smirked. “Gee, I’m trying to work up a suitable theory that makes sense with what little we got-namely, three eyewitnesses who saw a guy shoot himself in the head, and a guy with a gun in his hand and a hole in his head. I’m just leaning the slightest little bit in the direction of suicide. What do you make of it, Heller?”
I motioned around us. “Look at these clumps of bushes; the high grass, weeds. He was running, staggering. Drunk? Sure, from the smell of him he’d been drinking. Granted. But mightn’t he been running from somebody?”
“Who?”
“People trying to kill him, Bill. Maybe he was out walking and somebody took a shot at him from those bushes, and he started running away. He was known to take regular walks, you know.”
“No I don’t,” he said. He eyed me suspiciously. “How do you?”
“Never mind. He did take walks. Maybe he walked a regular route-this route. We’re only a few blocks from his house-he was headed home. Somebody took a shot at him, possibly using a silenced gun, and when he returned fire, those caboose crawlers thought he was shooting at them.”
Drury smiled humorlessly and shook his head. “And then an assassin in the bushes shot him in the head just as the railroad boys were approaching, I suppose?”
I looked up at the sky; let it spit on me. “No, Bill. Nitti shot himself. I don’t question that.”
“What do you question, then?”
“The circumstances. I think he fell, fleeing would-be assassins-knocked himself out. Maybe he was blind drunk and fell, what’s the difference? Anyway, when he opened his eyes he saw the hazy image of three men walking toward him-sixty, seventy feet away-and rather than give Ricca the pleasure, he raised his gun to his head in one last act of defiance and ended it all.”
“Ricca?”
I shrugged. “There’s a rift between Ricca and Nitti-and the Outfit’s sided with Ricca.”
“Who says?”
“Everybody knows that. Get out of your office once in a while. Let’s say Ricca put a contract out on Nitti. His torpedoes tried to kill Frank, today, along these tracks, and when the switchman and flagman and their conductor jumped off the train, the torpedoes headed for the hills. Unseen. Only Nitti didn’t know they’d gone. And he mistook the IC men approaching him for his assassins.”
Drury thought about that. “That’s where the bullet holes in his hat came from? They shot at him and missed, these torpedoes of yours and Ricca’s?”
“Yeah. Or Nitti hit the high weeds himself, when the first shot rang out. And then stuck his hat up on a stick or on his finger, to draw their fire. Maybe.” I shrugged again. “Who knows?”
“Anomalies, Heller,” he said. “These things never sort out exactly right.”
“So what do you think?”
“I think he shot himself in the head.”
“Cornered by Ricca’s gunmen, he did.”
“What’s the difference?”
I couldn’t answer that. I walked away from him, my hands in my topcoat pockets. Why did it matter to me? Why did I want to believe Frank Nitti’s final act was one of defiance, not despair?
I felt a hand on my shoulder. Drury.