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Friday, September 29, 2023

Franky Lyons, A Lake Street Pimp - The First Day

Franky Lyons sat a small round table with two of his fellow operators.

They were sitting at his table, in his bar. Together the three of them controlled all the skin trade between Miller field and Chicago Avenue, and he was their chief.

The heavy rain had forced them inside but they kept watch over the action from Franky’s table in the window, monitoring the girls who were out in the weather getting soaked.

The three of them had been sitting together for a few hours, sipping brandy and comparing notes. They were all eager for life to return to normal now that the war between Karl Thorrson and Colonel Forrester had come to an end.

Things were changing on strip; they had been for the better of a year and now all of them were kicking up to giant gangster from Norway, an ominous figure who had suddenly emerged as the biggest-meanest guy in town.

It didn’t matter to Franky who he kicked up to, all that mattered to him was turning the wheel, keeping cash in his safe, clean girls on the street and having the right supply of dope to keep them in line. He was a merchant not a soldier…he was a business man, he enjoyed his work and he was good at it.

The three pimps sat in the window beneath the sign outside that had Franky’s name on it beaming brightly in the dark with the a neon-glow, watching as the beat cops went up and down the strip with their long coats and plastic wrapped hats, swinging their billy-clubs.

They were supposed to keep a watchful eye on the cars pulling up to the side of the street, the girls jumping in and out, the packages of dope getting exchanged for handfuls of cash, and the bag men carrying the loot to the drop spots.

As long as the beat-boys did their job, Franky surmised, there would be no need for any of the three of them to get wet that night.

The storm was fierce, but it was just another night on Lake Street to him and his partners.

When Franky saw Karl Thorrson walk into the tavern across the street however, he felt a sense of dread, like a bowling ball sinking in his stomach; the sight cut against Franky’s sense of good order.

He liked things predictable.

The new crime boss walking the strip by himself during this downpour was anything but predictable.

Neither of his cohorts had noticed the anomaly and Franky didn’t say anything to them. He waited and watched and ordered another round of drinks from his bar maid, Estell.

It wasn’t until the lightning struck and the crowd began to gather outside of the Round-Up that Franky gave any indication that there was something amiss…but of course, by then everyone knew.

When he saw Thorrson running away from the scene as if he were fleeing the site of a murder, with two beat cops and another guy whom he did not recognize in hot pursuit, Franky decided to alert his friends to what was happening, then he sent them out to get the news.

Going out into the rain was not what they wanted to do, but they got their things together and did as they were told; they had work to do.

Franky went to the telephone and dialed his contact, Lieutenant Standish, with the Park Police.

When the Lieutenant got on the phone he was cold as ice, but he said he would send a radio car with a couple of uniformed Rangers down to check things out, than he hung up with no-so-much as a thank you.

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