NTB STORY Ideas
Chicago taught me two lessons before I learned long division: don’t look hungry, and don’t look scared. The Marines added a third—never lie to yourself about what you’re willing to do. By 1956 I’m out, pensioned, limping on a knee that clicks in bad weather. I’ve got a small office over a barber shop, a battered desk, a file cabinet that smells like dust and old cigarette paper, and a phone that rings only when someone’s desperate enough to pay for truth. The client is Patrick Donnelly, South Side construction—Irish, respectable, the kind of man who pays for church windows and expects God to notice. He’s being squeezed. Not with broken legs or tire irons. With paperwork. Permits delayed. Inspections multiplied. Union grievances that appear like clockwork. And a “consulting” fee—cash, regular, quiet—delivered through a front company with a clean letterhead and dirty hands. He wants me to find the extortionist and make it stop. Extortion has a rhythm. It repeats. It leaves patterns the s...