Big Doc stood with me at the end of his cosmetic counter, watching
the usual driftwood of an all-night drugstore as it ebbed and
flowed; Big Doc's place is toward the north end of the Loop District,
in Chicago.
The cop came in for his drink of coffee. Then with a wisecrack
for Big Doc as he drank it he wiped his lips with his sleeve and
returned to his rounds. Two taxi drivers argued at the end of
the soda fountain over the relative merits of their cars. The
usual stumble-bum fumbled through the door, mumbled his plea for
enough money to "buy a flop for the night," shrugged
at the implication that what he really wanted was whisky, and
ambled on again. The taxi drivers raced outward at the sight of
a fare. The place was still.
This lasted, however, only for a moment. Suddenly the door burst
open to the energetic push of a laughing young girl, while six
others crowded in behind her, dividing to various parts of the
store. Big Doc waddled forward to wait on this giggling trade;
one wanted a small bottle of perfume, another called for gum;
she was dying for a piece of gum, she said. Three others crawled
upon stools at the soda fountain and demanded cherry and lemon
drinks. Two others merely indulged in look-wishing, like kids
in a candy store.
I was left alone to watch them and wonder about them seven
unusually young, healthily beautiful kids, the oldest of whom
could not have been more than nineteen. Where had they been, all
seven of them, suddenly to troop in here at midnight? They all
seemed to know Big Doc; therefore, they could not be transient
show-ponies. Besides, they were too uniformly pretty and fresh-looking
for chorus girls, and they had none of the hard delineation about
their legs which bespeaks today's tap and precision dancers. Their
conversation could not be heard at this distance; certainly, however,
it was light, giggly and immature. At last, they all went out,
and Big Doc slowly returned to his place beside me. He seemed
a bit downcast. I said:
"That was the most uniformly pretty bunch of girls I've
seen in a long time."
He looked up.
"Yeh," came noncomittally. "They're mostly all
like that. Must order 'em to specifications. It gets under my
hide."
"What gets under your hide?"
"Kids like that. What chance have they got? You couldn't
prove it to them, though. Every one of 'em thinks she's due to
be rich in a couple of years."
"What is it? Some kind of a contest?"
"Yeh, in a way," drawled Big Doc. "To see who's
first to the gutter. That's a part of the early shift, out of
Cicero Danny's two-dollar whorehouse, going off duty!"
So this was why every pimping nighthawk taxi driver in Chicago
always ended his salestalk with mention of Danny:
"Of course, a gent like you wouldn't want to be seen going
into a joint like that, but let me tell you, pal, if you really
want good-looking kids, you ought to hit one of Danny's joints!
He's got the real stuff. Young, you know; pretty as hell. But
a guy like you wouldn't want to go into one of them dumps no
sittin' around, no buyin' a drink, no conversation, no nothin'
except the two bucks in the old cash register, the maid with the
towels and you in and out of the room with the dame in fifteen
minutes. Of course, the gals don't last long, but what the hell's
that to Danny? What the hell's it to the girls when they come
there, for that matter? All they know is they got a chance to
turn enough tricks to make a hundred bucks a week. That's dough
when you've been working for pennies. Besides, by the time they
wake up to the fact that their pimp's taking it all away from
'em, Danny's looking for a new crowd, and the pimp drags 'em to
some other town where he tells 'em they can make twice as much
and give it all to him."
With that in mind, I asked Big Doc:
"You seem to know those girls: How long have they been in
the racket?"
"Oh, some of them a couple of months. A few of 'em only
showed up three weeks ago. None of them have got more than six
months to go. Change the faces, you know."
"Do they ever tell you where they come from?"
Big Doc grinned.
"Listen, what are you trying to pull, social-worker stuff?
You know where those kids come from a part of 'em right
from high school, here in Chicago. Or from South Bend, or Aurora,
or Peoria, or Des Moines. Where do whores come from?" he
asked derisively.
"But wonderful-looking kids like that?"
"Danny is syndicate," he answered. "Syndicate
is politics. Where would swell-looking dames come from if you
were high up in politics and able to take your choice of all the
beautiful kids that pimps can produce these days? Where do whores
come from?" he sneered again. "Go get yourself a cup
of coffee!"
"Now, wait a minute Doc. You weren't so hard-boiled when
you came back here a minute ago."
He hesitated.
"No I wasn't. It isn't any fun to see kids like that going
to hell. I used to try to talk to 'em, get 'em to change their
minds. Tried to tell 'em where they're headed; asked 'em why they
didn't go out and get a job somewhere, marry a good guy, have
a home, something to look forward to. You know what I got, don't
you? One of those baby-faced stares and: 'Me work for pennies?
Don't be s-i-l-l-y!' "
"Then you're not so hard-boiled!"
"Hard-boiled hell!" he exclaimed, the veneer gone now.
"With the business I do in clap-and-syph medicine, and be
hard-boiled? Me giving a handout to some kid less than thirty
years old, when I remember what she looked like in 1927? And maybe
you think it's fun to listen to a girl junky beg for a shot, to
have to tell her no no no!, when she's dragging
the very heart out of me! I wished the damned little devils wouldn't
come in the store. Every time I see 'em, I want to give 'em a
kick in the fanny and send 'em home. But hell, that's where most
of 'em got started!"
There was no argument with which to deny Doc's philosophy; the
story is told too often every night in the dance halls, the taverns,
the Bar B-Q's, the Dine and Dance. Over and over it is repeated
in the parked car, the dim booths of the Greasy Spoon, the dimmer
ones of the chop-suey "parlor":
"Listen baby, why be a damn fool? You've got what it takes.
You poor little sap, wasting your life, working for pennies!"