Purvis proudly told the press he had an “ironclad case,” an opinion the jury didn’t share. Even before Touhy was cleared, underworld word was the Karpis-Barker gang had pulled the Hamm snatch; if Purvis was any kind of investigator he’d have heard that too — I heard it, and I wasn’t anywhere near the case.
Almost immediately, Purvis hit Touhy with another kidnapping charge — that of Jake “The Barber” Factor, no less, a notorious if slick international con man with Capone ties. Everybody in town knew that Factor was just looking to avoid extradition to England, that he’d kidnapped himself (with a little help from his Capone connections) and framed Touhy.
Everybody but Purvis, apparently; he’d bought it — and managed to sell it to a jury, this time, because poor old Roger “The Terrible” was doing ninety-nine years at Joliet. And no sooner had the prison doors shut than Frank Nitti — at the helm of the Capone Outfit — waltzed into Des Plaines.
Purvis had come off looking good in the press, however, though the Little Bohemia episode, last April, had finally caught “Little Mel” with his pants down. (I heard Purvis didn’t like being called Little Mel to his face, but that’s how everybody referred to him behind his back.)
Purvis had had a tip that Dillinger and his gang were holed up in the Little Bohemia Lodge way at the top of Wisconsin. He and a couple handfuls of other agents piled into three little planes and flew to Rhinelander, where they connected with Division of Investigation agents from St. Paul. The hastily assembled task force commandeered some local cars and drove another near-fifty miles over snow-covered secondary roads. Two of the four cars broke down along the way, and by the time the sixteen agents reached Little Bohemia, half of them were riding the running boards, chattering with cold.
They approached the lodge on foot, moving through the pines, flashlights in hand. As the agents reached the lodge, which was brightly lit, three men exited the front door and went quickly to a coupe in the nearby parking area, and Purvis ordered his men to open fire. One of the three men was killed instantly; the other two were wounded.
Purvis and his agents had just killed a Civilian Conservation Corps worker and wounded a CCC cook and a gas-station attendant. Meanwhile, John Dillinger, among others, having seen the flashlights, had gone out the back way. Baby Face Nelson stopped long enough to shoot up some feds. And hours later Purvis collared some of the gang’s molls, who’d been huddling in the basement with the lodge’s staff, while the feds had pummeled the place with machine-gun fire.
This time the press had Purvis for supper. There were demands for his resignation aplenty, but his boss J. Edgar Hoover had made a show of standing behind his boy — at the same time bringing reliable, methodical Sam Cowley in to take charge of the Dillinger case...
There was no secretary or receptionist in an outer office, at the Chicago field office of the Division of Investigation. There was no outer office. It was just a big open room full of desks, without any partitions. Agents were scurrying around with papers in hands, going from desk to desk conferring with their brethren, and the typewriters clicking and phones ringing and electric fans whirring mixed with street sounds coming from open windows, making a cacophony that had to be talked over.
One of the agents, seated at a desk near the door, looked up from a typewriter with irritation; apparently being close to the door got him stuck with receptionist-type duties.
“Can I help you?” he said sharply. He had a smooth rosy-cheeked face and light blond hair and, like everybody in the room, had his coat off but his tie snugged at his collar. He looked like he didn’t shave yet.
“I’d like to see Sam Cowley,” I said.
“If you’re with the press, you should know by now that all reporters are barred till further notice from this office.”
“I’m not from the press. I’d like to see Sam Cowley.”
“The inspector’s out of the office,” he said, crisp as dark toast. All these guys looked like college kids. Which they were — attorneys and accountants who, in better times, might be earning some real dough in private practice.
“When will he back?”
The rosy-cheeked agent had already looked away from me and back at what he was typing.
“Tomorrow,” he said, not looking at me. Typing.
I put my hand on the typewriter, on the platen, and kept it from turning; he looked up at me with round outraged eyes.
“I pay your salary, junior,” I said. “Let’s have a little service, here. And some respect while you’re at it.”
He sighed and smiled, just a little. “You’re right. My apologies. It’s hot.”
“Yeah. Ever since Little Bohemia.”
His smile faded momentarily, then returned; just a ghost of a smile, but it was there.
“You’ll have to speak to Chief Purvis, if this can’t wait till tomorrow. If it’s about John Dillinger, that is.”
“How did you know it was about Dillinger?”
“You asked for Cowley. Dillinger’s his only case. And the only other guy that works on Dillinger is Chief Purvis.”
“Every crank call you get, every little tip—”
“Goes straight to Cowley and Purvis. Separate copies to each desk.”
“Interesting. Could you tell me where Chief Purvis’ office is?”
“This is the only office we have, mister. And that’s Chief Purvis back by the window, in the corner.”
I should’ve spotted him before, but he was so small he was blocked. He was the only man in the room wearing his suitcoat, a smartly tailored light gray. The only difference between his desk and anybody else’s was that it was slightly bigger and glass-topped. And by an open window, where something approaching air was wafting in, along with street noise.
I walked down a path between the desks and Purvis looked up from his work and in a rather high-pitched Southern drawl said, “You’re Nathan Heller, aren’t you? Sit down.”
I had to admit (to myself) I was impressed; we’d only met once — Eliot had tersely introduced us and we shook hands — and had nodded at each other another time in the Federal Building, in a manner that didn’t necessarily mean we were acquainted and/or recognized one another.
Like the guy Polly Hamilton was dating, Melvin Purvis was a dapper little man. He was only a couple years older than me, but still the oldest man in the room. He pushed aside a report he was reading, closing the file folder and smiling at me. His hair was brown with a stray lock dangling onto his forehead, his face heart-shaped with pointed, chiseled features, like a ventriloquist’s dummy. The eyes in that wooden face, however, were sharp and dark.
“I’m surprised you remember me,” I said.
“Ness introduced us. He doesn’t think much of me. That’s all right. I don’t think much of him. No offense meant.”
“None taken.”
“I just find your friend Ness, well — I find his penchant for press agentry a little much.”
I resisted the urge to tell Little Mel that the thing he and Eliot had most in common was that particular penchant.
Instead, I said, “Some positive press wouldn’t hurt you, right now, would it?”
He smiled on one side of his face; it made a dimple bigger than Shirley Temple’s.
“I can’t blame you for that crack,” he said. The Southern accent seemed soothing on this hot day. I wondered if Purvis being from the South had given him the ability to take heat like this in stride, sitting there in his coat like that.