CHAPTER I
BILLY BYRNE
Billy Byrne was a product of the streets
and alleys of Chicago’s great West Side.
From Halsted to Robey, and from Grand Avenue to Lake
Street there was scarce a bartender whom Billy knew
not by his first name. And, in proportion to
their number which was considerably less, he knew
the patrolmen and plain clothes men equally as well,
but not so pleasantly.
His kindergarten education had commenced
in an alley back of a feed-store. Here a gang
of older boys and men were wont to congregate at such
times as they had naught else to occupy their time,
and as the bridewell was the only place in which they
ever held a job for more than a day or two, they had
considerable time to devote to congregating.
They were pickpockets and second-story
men, made and in the making, and all were muckers,
ready to insult the first woman who passed, or pick
a quarrel with any stranger who did not appear too
burly. By night they plied their real vocations.
By day they sat in the alley behind the feedstore
and drank beer from a battered tin pail.
The question of labor involved in
transporting the pail, empty, to the saloon across
the street, and returning it, full, to the alley back
of the feed-store was solved by the presence of admiring
and envious little boys of the neighborhood who hung,
wide-eyed and thrilled, about these heroes of their
childish lives.
Billy Byrne, at six, was rushing the
can for this noble band, and incidentally picking
up his knowledge of life and the rudiments of his
education. He gloried in the fact that he was
personally acquainted with “Eddie” Welch,
and that with his own ears he had heard “Eddie”
tell the gang how he stuck up a guy on West Lake Street
within fifty yards of the Twenty-eighth Precinct
Police Station.
The kindergarten period lasted until
Billy was ten; then he commenced “swiping”
brass faucets from vacant buildings and selling them
to a fence who ran a junkshop on Lincoln Street near
Kinzie.
From this man he obtained the hint
that graduated him to a higher grade, so that at twelve
he was robbing freight cars in the yards along Kinzie
Street, and it was about this same time that he commenced
to find pleasure in the feel of his fist against the
jaw of a fellow-man.
He had had his boyish scraps with
his fellows off and on ever since he could remember;
but his first real fight came when he was twelve.
He had had an altercation with an erstwhile pal over
the division of the returns from some freight-car
booty. The gang was all present, and as words
quickly gave place to blows, as they have a habit of
doing in certain sections of the West Side, the men
and boys formed a rough ring about the contestants.
The battle was a long one. The
two were rolling about in the dust of the alley quite
as often as they were upon their feet exchanging blows.
There was nothing fair, nor decent, nor scientific
about their methods. They gouged and bit and
tore. They used knees and elbows and feet, and
but for the timely presence of a brickbat beneath
his fingers at the psychological moment Billy Byrne
would have gone down to humiliating defeat.
As it was the other boy went down, and for a week
Billy remained hidden by one of the gang pending the
report from the hospital.
When word came that the patient would
live, Billy felt an immense load lifted from his shoulders,
for he dreaded arrest and experience with the law
that he had learned from childhood to deride and hate.
Of course there was the loss of prestige that would
naturally have accrued to him could he have been pointed
out as the “guy that croaked Sheehan”;
but there is always a fly in the ointment, and Billy
only sighed and came out of his temporary retirement.
That battle started Billy to thinking,
and the result of that mental activity was a determination
to learn to handle his mitts scientifically—people
of the West Side do not have hands; they are equipped
by Nature with mitts and dukes. A few have
paws and flippers.
He had no opportunity to realize his
new dream for several years; but when he was about
seventeen a neighbor’s son surprised his little
world by suddenly developing from an unknown teamster
into a locally famous light-weight.
The young man never had been affiliated
with the gang, as his escutcheon was defiled with
a record of steady employment. So Billy had known
nothing of the sparring lessons his young neighbor
had taken, or of the work he had done at the down-town
gymnasium of Larry Hilmore.
Now it happened that while the new
light-weight was unknown to the charmed circle of
the gang, Billy knew him fairly well by reason of
the proximity of their respective parental back yards,
and so when the glamour of pugilistic success haloed
the young man Billy lost no time in basking in the
light of reflected glory.
He saw much of his new hero all the
following winter. He accompanied him to many
mills, and on one glorious occasion occupied a position
in the coming champion’s corner. When
the prize fighter toured, Billy continued to hang around
Hilmore’s place, running errands and doing odd
jobs, the while he picked up pugilistic lore, and
absorbed the spirit of the game along with the rudiments
and finer points of its science, almost unconsciously.
Then his ambition changed. Once he had longed
to shine as a gunman; now he was determined to become
a prize fighter; but the old gang still saw much of
him, and he was a familiar figure about the saloon
corners along Grand Avenue and Lake Street.
During this period Billy neglected
the box cars on Kinzie Street, partially because he
felt that he was fitted for more dignified employment,
and as well for the fact that the railroad company
had doubled the number of watchmen in the yards; but
there were times when he felt the old yearning for
excitement and adventure. These times were usually
coincident with an acute financial depression in Billy’s
change pocket, and then he would fare forth in the
still watches of the night, with a couple of boon
companions and roll a souse, or stick up a saloon.
It was upon an occasion of this nature
that an event occurred which was fated later to change
the entire course of Billy Byrne’s life.
Upon the West Side the older gangs are jealous of
the sanctity of their own territory. Outsiders
do not trespass with impunity. From Halsted to
Robey, and from Lake to Grand lay the broad hunting
preserve of Kelly’s gang, to which Billy had
been almost born, one might say. Kelly owned
the feed-store back of which the gang had loafed for
years, and though himself a respectable businessman
his name had been attached to the pack of hoodlums
who held forth at his back door as the easiest means
of locating and identifying its motley members.
The police and citizenry of this great
territory were the natural enemies and prey of Kelly’s
gang, but as the kings of old protected the deer of
their great forests from poachers, so Kelly’s
gang felt it incumbent upon them to safeguard the
lives and property which they considered theirs by
divine right. It is doubtful that they thought
of the matter in just this way, but the effect was
the same.
And so it was that as Billy Byrne
wended homeward alone in the wee hours of the morning
after emptying the cash drawer of old Schneider’s
saloon and locking the weeping Schneider in his own
ice box, he was deeply grieved and angered to see
three rank outsiders from Twelfth Street beating Patrolman
Stanley Lasky with his own baton, the while they simultaneously
strove to kick in his ribs with their heavy boots.
Now Lasky was no friend of Billy Byrne;
but the officer had been born and raised in the district
and was attached to the Twenty-eighth Precinct Station
on Lake Street near Ashland Avenue, and so was part
and parcel of the natural possession of the gang.
Billy felt that it was entirely ethical to beat up
a cop, provided you confined your efforts to those
of your own district; but for a bunch of yaps from
south of Twelfth Street to attempt to pull off any
such coarse work in his bailiwick—why it
was unthinkable.
A hero and rescuer of lesser experience
than Billy Byrne would have rushed melodramatically
into the midst of the fray, and in all probability
have had his face pushed completely through the back
of his head, for the guys from Twelfth Street were
not of the rah-rah-boy type of hoodlum —they
were bad men, with an upper case B. So Billy crept
stealthily along in the shadows until he was quite
close to them, and behind them. On the way he
had gathered up a cute little granite paving block,
than which there is nothing in the world harder, not
even a Twelfth Street skull. He was quite close
now to one of the men—he who was wielding
the officer’s club to such excellent disadvantage
to the officer —and then he raised the
paving block only to lower it silently and suddenly
upon the back of that unsuspecting head —“and
then there were two.”
Before the man’s companions
realized what had happened Billy had possessed himself
of the fallen club and struck one of them a blinding,
staggering blow across the eyes. Then number
three pulled his gun and fired point-blank at Billy.
The bullet tore through the mucker’s left
shoulder. It would have sent a more highly organized
and nervously inclined man to the pavement; but Billy
was neither highly organized nor nervously inclined,
so that about the only immediate effect it had upon
him was to make him mad—before he had been
but peeved—peeved at the rank crust that
had permitted these cheap-skates from south of Twelfth
Street to work his territory.
Thoroughly aroused, Billy was a wonder.
From a long line of burly ancestors he had inherited
the physique of a prize bull. From earliest
childhood he had fought, always unfairly, so that
he knew all the tricks of street fighting.
During the past year there had been added to Billy’s
natural fighting ability and instinct a knowledge
of the scientific end of the sport. The result
was something appalling—to the gink from
Twelfth Street.
Before he knew whether his shot had
killed Billy his gun had been wrenched from his hand
and flung across the street; he was down on the granite
with a hand as hard as the paving block scrambling
his facial attractions beyond hope of recall.
By this time Patrolman Lasky had staggered
to his feet, and most opportunely at that, for the
man whom Billy had dazed with the club was recovering.
Lasky promptly put him to sleep with the butt of
the gun that he had been unable to draw when first
attacked, then he turned to assist Billy. But
it was not Billy who needed assistance—it
was the gentleman from Bohemia. With difficulty
Lasky dragged Billy from his prey.
“Leave enough of him for the
inquest,” pleaded Lasky.
When the wagon arrived Billy had disappeared,
but Lasky had recognized him and thereafter the two
had nodded pleasantly to each other upon such occasions
as they chanced to meet upon the street.
Two years elapsed before the event
transpired which proved a crisis in Billy’s
life. During this period his existence had been
much the same as before. He had collected what
was coming to him from careless and less muscular
citizens. He had helped to stick up a half-dozen
saloons. He had robbed the night men in two
elevated stations, and for a while had been upon the
pay-roll of a certain union and done strong arm work
in all parts of the city for twenty-five dollars a
week.
By day he was a general utility man
about Larry Hilmore’s boxing academy, and time
and time again Hilmore urged him to quit drinking
and live straight, for he saw in the young giant the
makings of a great heavy-weight; but Billy couldn’t
leave the booze alone, and so the best that he got
was an occasional five spot for appearing in preliminary
bouts with third- and fourth-rate heavies and has-beens;
but during the three years that he had hung about
Hilmore’s he had acquired an enviable knowledge
of the manly art of self-defense.
On the night that things really began
to happen in the life of Billy Byrne that estimable
gentleman was lolling in front of a saloon at the
corner of Lake and Robey. The dips that congregated
nightly there under the protection of the powerful
politician who owned the place were commencing to
assemble. Billy knew them all, and nodded to
them as they passed him. He noted surprise in
the faces of several as they saw him standing there.
He wondered what it was all about, and determined
to ask the next man who evinced even mute wonderment
at his presence what was eating him.
Then Billy saw a harness bull strolling
toward him from the east. It was Lasky.
When Lasky saw Billy he too opened his eyes in surprise,
and when he came quite close to the mucker he whispered
something to him, though he kept his eyes straight
ahead as though he had not seen, Billy at all.
In deference to the whispered request
Billy presently strolled around the corner toward
Walnut Street, but at the alley back of the saloon
he turned suddenly in. A hundred yards up the
alley he found Lasky in the shadow of a telephone
pole.
“Wotinell are you doin’
around here?” asked the patrolman. “Didn’t
you know that Sheehan had peached?”
Two nights before old man Schneider,
goaded to desperation by the repeated raids upon his
cash drawer, had shown fight when he again had been
invited to elevate his hands, and the holdup men had
shot him through the heart. Sheehan had been
arrested on suspicion.
Billy had not been with Sheehan that
night. As a matter of fact he never had trained
with him, for, since the boyish battle that the two
had waged, there had always been ill feeling between
them; but with Lasky’s words Billy knew what
had happened.
“Sheehan says I done it, eh?” he questioned.
“That’s what he says.”
“I wasn’t within a mile
of Schneider’s that night,” protested
Billy.
“The Lieut thinks different,”
said Lasky. “He’d be only too glad
to soak you; for you’ve always been too slick
to get nicked before. Orders is out to get you,
and if I were you I’d beat it and beat it quick.
I don’t have to tell you why I’m handing
you this, but it’s all I can do for you.
Now take my advice and make yourself scarce, though
you’ll have to go some to make your get-away
now—every man on the force has your description
by this time.”
Billy turned without a word and walked
east in the alley toward Lincoln Street. Lasky
returned to Robey Street. In Lincoln Street
Billy walked north to Kinzie. Here he entered
the railroad yards. An hour later he was bumping
out of town toward the West on a fast freight.
Three weeks later he found himself in San Francisco.
He had no money, but the methods that had so often
replenished his depleted exchequer at home he felt
would serve the same purpose here.
Being unfamiliar with San Francisco,
Billy did not know where best to work, but when by
accident he stumbled upon a street where there were
many saloons whose patrons were obviously seafaring
men Billy was distinctly elated. What could
be better for his purpose than a drunken sailor?
He entered one of the saloons and
stood watching a game of cards, or thus he seemed
to be occupied. As a matter of fact his eyes
were constantly upon the alert, roving, about the
room to wherever a man was in the act of paying for
a round of drinks that a fat wallet might be located.
Presently one that filled him with
longing rewarded his careful watch. The man
was sitting at a table a short distance from Billy.
Two other men were with him. As he paid the
waiter from a well-filled pocketbook he looked up to
meet Billy’s eyes upon him.
With a drunken smile he beckoned to
the mucker to join them. Billy felt that Fate
was overkind to him, and he lost no time in heeding
her call. A moment later he was sitting at the
table with the three sailors, and had ordered a drop
of red-eye.
The stranger was very lavish in his
entertainment. He scarcely waited for Billy
to drain one glass before he ordered another, and
once after Billy had left the table for a moment he
found a fresh drink awaiting him when he returned—his
host had already poured it for him.
It was this last drink that did the business.