City of Devils: The Two Men Who Ruled the Underworld of Old Shanghai

City of Devils: The Two Men Who Ruled the Underworld of Old Shanghai

by Paul French

Narrated by Paul Chan

Unabridged — 9 hours, 5 minutes

City of Devils: The Two Men Who Ruled the Underworld of Old Shanghai

City of Devils: The Two Men Who Ruled the Underworld of Old Shanghai

by Paul French

Narrated by Paul Chan

Unabridged — 9 hours, 5 minutes

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Overview

By Paul French, New York Times bestselling author of Midnight in Peking-winner of both the Edgar Award for Best Fact Crime and the Crime Writers' Association Gold Dagger for Non-Fiction-comes a rags-to-riches tale of two self-made men set against a backdrop of crime and vice in the sprawling badlands of Shanghai. City of Devils is a dynamic audiobook that will captivate listeners everywhere.

Shanghai, 1930s; it was a haven for outlaws from all over the world: a place where pasts could be forgotten, fascism and communism outrun, names invented, and fortunes made-and lost.

“Lucky” Jack Riley was the most notorious of those outlaws. An ex-U.S. Navy boxing champion, he escaped from prison and rose to become the Slots King of Shanghai. “Dapper” Joe Farren-a Jewish boy who fled Vienna's ghetto-ruled the nightclubs. His chorus lines rivalled Ziegfeld's.

In 1940, Lucky Jack and Dapper Joe bestrode the Shanghai Badlands like kings, while all around the Solitary Island was poverty, starvation, and war. They thought they ruled Shanghai, but the city had other ideas. This is the story of their rise to power, their downfall, and the trail of destruction left in their wake. Shanghai was their playground for a flickering few years, a city where for a fleeting moment even the wildest dreams could come true.


Editorial Reviews

The New York Times Book Review - Gary Krist

French…recounts all of this with great energy and brio. He writes in the knowing, slang-filled idiom of Shanghai's Shopping News, a gossipy English-language newspaper he quotes repeatedly throughout…It's hard to go wrong with dope, decadence and the demimonde. This may be Shanghai as seen through a cinematic Western lens, but there are few more fascinating places—in fiction or in fact.

Publishers Weekly

★ 04/16/2018
Drugs, gambling, vice, and banditry power China’s seaport mecca in this rollicking true crime saga. Historian French (Midnight in Peking) recreates Shanghai between the world wars, when its extraterritorial status—the United States, European nations, and Japan legally controlled parts of the city—made it a booming metropolis and home to a teeming expat community of Jews fleeing Nazism, Russians fleeing bolshevism, and shady Westerners fleeing their pasts. French’s panorama centers on Joe Farren, a Viennese Jew who became a dance-show impresario and casino-owner; and Jack Riley, an escaped convict from Oklahoma who ran slot machines, smuggled heroin, and financed Farren’s classier enterprises. In French’s wonderfully atmospheric portrait, Shanghai is a tapestry of grungy dive bars, swanky nightspots, drunken soldiers, brazen showgirls, Chinese gangsters, corrupt cops, and schemers like “Evil Evelyn,” a madam who enticed wealthy wives with gigolos and blackmailed them with the resulting photos. The 1937 Japanese military occupation darkens the party with war, privation, and despair. French’s two-fisted prose—“When Boobee hops on a bar stool, lights an opium-tipped cigarette, and crosses her long legs, the sound of a dozen tensed-up male necks swinging round is like... a gunshot”—makes this deep noir history unforgettable. (July)

From the Publisher

Summer reading pick by the Los Angeles Times, Men’s Journal, Newsweek, Bookish, Financial Times, and Bloomberg

A Vulture, BBC.com, CrimeReads, National Book Review, NY Post, and Criminal Element Pick of the Month

“Shanghai, in Mr. French, has its champion storyteller.”—The Economist

“Few writers are more expert at mingling crime narrative and social history, journalistic precision and novelistic sweep, than Paul French. His books paint times and places so beguiling and tell stories so vivid and harrowing that, within pages, we’re utterly in their dark thrall. If you love Richard Lloyd Parry and David Grann, don’t miss City of Devils.”

Megan Abbott, Edgar award-winning author of You Will Know Me and Give Me Your Hand

“It’s hard to go wrong with dope, decadence, and the demimonde . . . French recounts all this with great energy and brio.”—Gary Krist, The New York Times Book Review

“Historical true crime that transports you back to the decadence and deranged beauty of 1930s Shanghai—a place that rivaled Prohibition Chicago for colorful miscreants and bruisers, including an ex-Navy boxer who became the Slot King of Shanghai.” —Newsweek, "Best 50 Books of 2018 (so far)"

“French combines the skills of a scholar with the soul of Dashiell Hammett.”—Boris Kachka, Vulture.com, 7 Books You Should Read This July

“Nothing lasts forever: In 1930s Shanghai, the no-holds-barred gangster scene was run by an American ex-Navyman and a Jewish man who’d fled Vienna. Their milieu — and its end — comes alive.”—Carolyn Kellogg, Los Angeles Times

“Move over Weimar: Paul French’s City of Devils, a history of glam and seedy interwar Shanghai’s refugees and criminals, is nostalgic noir at its best.”—New York Magazine

“An engaging and salacious tale of the Shanghai underworld.”—CrimeReads.com, “The Most Anticipated Crime, Mystery, and Thriller Titles of 2018”

“In City of Devils, Mr. French burrows into the unsavory side of the metropolis, focusing on the less photogenic elements of the age: drugs, guns, gangs, gambling and graft. Derided at the time as “Chicago on the Huangpu” for its lawless nature, the Shanghai Mr. French depicts seems flagrantly corrupt and dangerous, but strangely enticing… In contrast to the sort of hazy nostalgia that elides many sordid tales of old Shanghai, “City of Devils” casts a sharp, clear light on the shady characters who—no less than their legitimate counterparts—played a role in creating Shanghai’s now-mythic golden age.”—Maura Cunningham, Wall Street Journal

“Drugs, gambling, vice, and banditry power China’s seaport mecca in this rollicking true crime saga…. In French’s wonderfully atmospheric portrait, Shanghai is a tapestry of grungy dive bars, swanky nightspots, drunken soldiers, brazen showgirls, Chinese gangsters, corrupt cops, and schemers like “Evil Evelyn,” a madam who enticed wealthy wives with gigolos and blackmailed them with the resulting photos…. French’s two-fisted prose…makes this deep noir history unforgettable.”

Publishers Weekly *STARRED REVIEW*

“Fast-paced, plot-twisty... In addition to this suspenseful yarn, the author paints a striking portrait of a Shanghai on the eve of Japanese occupation…. A Casablanca without heroes and just the thing for those who like their crime stories the darkest shade of noir.”—Kirkus *STARRED REVIEW*

"City of Devils is classified as “literary non-fiction," which basically means that it’s a well-told, well-written historical narrative. Set in a nearly lawless Shanghai in the 1930s, the book follows two self-made men (“Lucky Jack” Riley, the slots king of Shanghai, and “Dapper Joe” Farren, the ringleader of a series of nightclubs) as they rise, then fall, in a true-crime noir set in a debauched city on the eve of its own downfall." —James Tarmy, Bloomberg

“City of Devils is more than just Jack and Joe’s stories. It’s the story of old Shanghai. It’s the story of racial and class divides. It’s the story of a city between world wars and the fall of the “Paris of the Orient” during the second. And it features a cast of dozens, all brought back to life with vivid detail and panache by Paul French . . .The amount of research that went into City of Devils is staggering—and yet French’s prose is never dry. He has a singular knack for infusing hot, beating blood into men and women long dead, throwing us back into the wild and raucous parties of Shanghai’s Badlands. This reads like an adventure novel rather than the meticulous result of years of scholastic digging. From the very introduction, you’ll be hooked. I honestly can’t remember the last time a work of nonfiction was so compelling and readable; I devoured half of the book before I came up for air.”—Criminal Element

"A true tale that reads like Humphrey Bogart or Robert Mitchum should have starred in the film adaptation...I enjoyed City Of Devils tremendously, as a piece of history come to vivid life, and as a meditation on hubris, overreach and how some people’s innate craving for adventure can lead to disaster."—Los Angeles Review of Books, China Channel

For readers who can’t get enough fast-paced true crime books, City of Devils by Paul French is unquestionably the right book to pick up this summer.”—Bookish

"With the narrative rhythm of classic noir and the polyglot slang of 1930s Shanghai, French, winner of an Edgar and a Gold Dagger for his true-crime best-seller Midnight in Peking (2012), tells a fast-paced, page-turning yarn about the rise and fall of two of the city’s crime kings.... This gripping history is interspersed with gossip-rag excerpts and swirling rumors as the tension mounts, Shanghai’s complicated international politics intensify, and the war begins."—Booklist

"City of Devils is an astonishing achievement, magically transporting the reader back to Old Shanghai, then sweeping us through its streets and its bars in a gripping, breakneck ultra-noir narrative reminiscent of vintage Ellroy."—David Peace, Author of Tokyo Year Zero

"A brilliant neo-noir about the rise and fall of two refugee outlaws at the end of Shanghai's golden age in the 1930's. Not since JG Ballard's Empire of the Sun have I read a book that has so captured the decadence, pulchritude and madness of the "Paris of the Orient"...French's prose is economical, razor sharp and lyrical...If you're interested in Shanghai, World War Two in the east, I cannot recommend City of Devils highly enough."—Adrian McKinty, Award-winning author of the Detective Sean Duffy Series

"To understand the “surrealist city,” as present-day Shanghai is enigmatically called, Paul French’s City of Devils is an absolute must. A solid, ground-breaking historical true-crime narrative, it is written with such vivid, well-researched details and totally captured me—a native Shanghainese—as if in a time capsule of the heretofore-unknown past passions and pathos of the city."—Qiu Xiaolong, Award-winning author of Inspector Chen series

"Few epochs stir up quite so much intrigue, mystery, and glamor as Shanghai in the 1930s: a divided city, a bustling port, a crossroads for the world, and a kind of frontier outpost where the citizens largely made up their own laws....City of Devils represents the very best of historical true crime: learned, gritty, and raucous." CrimeReads.com

“A vivid and well-researched account of a gaudy, wild and cosmopolitan place as it hurtles towards its ultimate and violent demise.”—Financial Times *critics pick*

“A story with the dark resonance of James Ellroy’s novel “L.A. Confidential” and the seedy glamour of Alan Furst’s between-the-wars mysteries...Reader advisory: By the time you are done with this extraordinary book, you will believe in devils, too.”—Mary Ann Gwinn, Newsday

"A fascinating, cautionary tale of hubris and greed."The Sun (Malaysia)

"City of Devils keeps you gripped from the start to the finish. It’s written in the fast-paced style of a noir detective novel and brings the opulence and squalor of 1930’s Shanghai vividly to life with a remarkable attention to historical detail and brilliant portrayals not just of the two major protagonists but the rich supporting cast of characters… I can’t recommend [it] highly enough."—Richard Brown, Medium

"It’s not often that I come across a history book whose most standout feature is its style…[A] very well written account of an oft-discussed time in a place that almost never gets mentioned. Paul French has a real gem in City of Devils.”—The Mercury (Kansas)

"French is steeped in stories of old Shanghai, and his understanding of the time and period allows him to build a fully-realized world around his compelling characters. A large part of the book’s joy is in its detail: the fashion, the drinks, the drugs, the cars, the bars, the slang."—Asian Review of Books

"Astonishing...meticulously researched...French takes you deep into those Badlands, grips you by the throat and doesn’t let go."—BookReporter

"[Paul French] is finally back…Meticulously researched and eloquently written, [City of Devils] captures the feel of the time period and the lawlessness that seemed to flourish in Shanghai’s International Settlement...Thrilling."—Elizabeth M. Lynch, China Law & Policy

"This enthralling piece of non-fiction takes you into the lives of some of the times’ most notorious criminals, and gives you a completely different perspective of the city, and perhaps another reason to visit!"—The Beijinger

"The atmospherics are redolent."—Mark I. Pinsky, New York Journal of Books

"Brings interwar Shanghai to life in a gritty work of narrative non-fiction...a vivid picture of the city's nightlife and criminal underworld...it is a fascinating tale of a city on the edge."—Post Magazine (UK)

“Reads like a compelling noir novel…Spoiler: no one here comes to a good end, but the intrigue and drama is so outrageous that you won't miss the happy ending. City of Devils could inspire a great modern noir film, one directed by John Woo and starring Ryan Gosling and Christian Bale.”—Military.com

Library Journal

03/01/2018
Shanghai-based French, whose Midnight in Peking was a New York Times best seller, tells the story of Jack Riley and Joe Farren, who made their fortunes off the music halls, bars, theaters, slot machines, and all-'round vice that ruled 1930s Shanghai.

Kirkus Reviews

★ 2018-05-01
Fast-paced, plot-twisty true-crime tale of the kingpins of Shanghai's Old City, land of miscreant opportunity.The old "Terry & the Pirates" comic strip had it right: The mysterious East was just the place for an enterprising lawbreaker to homestead. So it was for a sad sack named Jack "Lucky" Riley, who changed his name after releasing himself on his own recognizance from a stateside prison. He skipped across the Pacific to the Philippines and "buddie[d] up with the Navy boys and jump[ed] a U.S. Army transport heading for Shanghai." In his past life, Riley had boxed for the Navy, and he knew his way around a ring and a gaming table. It wasn't long before he graduated from flophouse to better digs and began to run his own gambling empire, clashing with a tightly run syndicate of Viennese Jews headed by "Dapper" Joe Farren, whom the press styled as a kind of China-based version of Flo Ziegfield. Other figures, including tequila smuggler Carlos Garcia and New York mobster "Yasha" Katzenberg, enter and exit French's (Midnight in Peking: How the Murder of a Young Englishwoman Haunted the Last Days of Old China, 2012, etc.) carefully constructed stage, each one up to no good. In addition to this suspenseful yarn, the author paints a striking portrait of a Shanghai on the eve of Japanese occupation, which would bring many a crime empire to its knees. Before then, foreign governments were as keen on divvying up the spoils as the gangsters were. Even if one jurist intoned that "we will have no Chicago on the Whangpoo," French's hard-boiled narrative makes it clear why Chinese partisans resented the presence of the foreign barbarians, to say nothing of unfortunate collaborators like Cabbage Moh, whose head ended up on a pole "as a reminder that nobody gets to play both sides in their Shanghai."A Casablanca without heroes and just the thing for those who like their crime stories the darkest shade of noir.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940169225921
Publisher: Macmillan Audio
Publication date: 07/03/2018
Edition description: Unabridged

Read an Excerpt

CHAPTER 1

Born Fahnie Albert Becker, the custodians called him John. His origins were a subject of rumour and conjecture, an ever-changing story as the years and then the decades passed. But the man who would be Jack Riley to all in Shanghai was probably born in a Colorado logging camp near Manitou Springs in 1897, the son of a certain Nellie Shanks and Albert Azel Becker. His old man, a violent alcoholic, was gone before his son's first birthday. His mother, broke and deserted, dumped him in a Tulsa orphanage, where the custodians beat the boys and left them hungry at night. Becker decided to bail when he was seven. He bummed around and somehow reached Denver, where he got a job polishing brass and emptying spittoons in a nightclub, sleeping out back; the joint was part casino, part dive bar, part brothel.

At seventeen he found a home and a family in the United States Navy. He shipped out of San Francisco for Manila on the U.S.S. Quiros as an apprentice seaman for two years on Yangtze Patrol, the 'Yang Pat' of the United States Asiatic Fleet. The Quiros was part of a squadron that patrolled upriver from Shanghai to Chungking and all ports in between, protecting U.S. citizens and interests, guarding the tankers of John D. Rockefeller's StandardOil Company, the up-country terminals of Texaco, and the packed warehouses and go-downs of British-American Tobacco.

Discharged in 1919, Becker couldn't think of anything better to do than re-enlist for another tour, this time Manila to Shanghai. Nights off he spent playing craps in the Hongkew and Chapei sailor bars and drinking along Blood Alley with money won in prizefights out back of the bars. Righteous bucko mate, rated fighter, all-round good guy. Then he was back aboard and upriver to Wuhu, Nanking, and Chungking, his downtime spent boxing on deck, going ashore to play baseball, or shooting craps in the mess. The Yang Pat rotated and the Quiros headed home. John Becker was honourably discharged in 1921.

John Becker stepped ashore in San Francisco and wandered the port towns of California, staying in one-night cash-only flops, eating corned beef in sawdust-floored restaurants or chop suey in all-night Chinese diners, oyster shells crunchy underfoot. Then came Prohibition, and he switched to speakeasies and shebeens, sucking down rotgut hooch, sandpaper gin, and near beer. Eventually he ran out of money and headed back to Oklahoma, to Tulsa County; the only city he could vaguely call home, though his memories of that orphanage and the violent custodians were far from warm.

He got a gig at a taxi company. He knew engines, and the company could save a mechanic's wage by having him service his own vehicle. In 1923 Becker was still driving drunks home on the late shift, but he knew for sure Tulsa was a bust. Darktown was in cinders after the Greenwood race riots, and crime was out of control.

One night he picks up two guys at the Cave House speakeasy out on Charles Page Boulevard. It's a good fare, and Becker has been drinking and feels like he can handle these boys. When they get to the destination, a house in the suburbs, the men tell John Becker to wait while they pick something up, and then they'll head back to town. The meter's still running, he's supping a quart of rye, so what the heck. The men walk up to the house across the lawn, the outline of their hats visible as they open the door and smoke wafts out into the dark night air. There's shouting, commotion, and a shot; the men come out fast, dragging a third who doesn't look like he wants to leave.

If you believe John Becker, he didn't know anything till he heard the shouting and the shot. The men threw the third in the back and jumped in, punching the daylights out of the poor sap. Becker drives them to another house, and they drag the beaten guy in with them, but not before one of the men hands him a hundred-dollar bill and tells him to vamoose. The next day the cops show up and bust Becker for kidnapping. His fare had boosted an illegal dice game, killed one of the punters, and kidnapped another. There's a kidnapping epidemic in the Midwest, and it's re-election year, so the judge is not inclined to go easy. John Becker goes down for thirty-five years in the Oklahoma State Penitentiary, McAlester.

His civvies are confiscated, his head shaved to prevent lice; he's fingerprinted and photographed. On the cellblock: big guards with black batons; seven-by-three-foot cells; a disinfectant-filled bucket for your shit; a deafening siren in case of escape or riot; bad, bad food; men praying; hardened cons deranged with untreated syphilis, sobbing for their mamas; the mad and the bad of McAlester.

Becker plays dice for smokes. He becomes a trusty and gets a job in the shop. An old lag shows him how to make a pair of loaded dice that will always come out the way you want, if you learn to throw them just so and distract the heels. Those hours of pitching with the Yang Pat crew prove useful; he becomes the starting pitcher on the prison baseball team. They head for an out-of-pen game in McAlester City, and when the team heads one way with the guards, Becker heads the other. Walking away, the sweat streaming down his back, he waits for a guard's bullet to smash into his spine. Not running, not turning back, heart beating fit to jumpright out of his chest. But the bullet never comes. He hops a freight running the St. Louis–San Francisco line. He's just skipped out on the lion's share of a three and a half decade stretch.

On the run, he's in a San Francisco boardinghouse down on the Embarcadero — as far west as you can get without swimming. He's spent nights in hobo camps where nobody asks your name. Now he needs to hunker down, stay out of sight, hope Oklahoma forgets about him. He knows he got lucky; he got a second chance. He quits the booze and the smokes — no profit in either. He rolls a drunk tramp on the waterfront and nabs his papers, and he's Edward Thomas Riley now. Fahnie Albert Becker is history. He likes Jack better than Edward, thinks he'll keep the T, and Riley suits just fine too — anonymous, everyday, all-American. There must be thousands of Jack Rileys out there. But some things are more difficult to change than your name.

Jack sits at a small table, rolls up his sleeves, and pours caustic soda in a glass. He takes off his leather belt and puts it between his teeth, then lays two hand towels out next to the glass. He takes three deep breaths, looks out the window at the scrappy backyard of the boardinghouse, and dips the fingers of his left hand in the chemical mix. The acid burns, and he snorts through his nose, forcing himself to dip each finger, then switches to his right hand, breathes really deeply, and repeats the process — thumbs and all. He takes his last finger out and relaxes his jaw, lets the belt fall out on his lap. He manages to wrap the towels around his hands and staggers over to the bed. He lies there for days, in satisfied agony. The whorls on his fingertips are gone, and they slowly heal and harden into callused skin. It ain't pretty, but he's a new man with a new start. He signs on as a mechanic with a tramp freighter heading across the Pacific to the Philippines.

* * *

Jack had liked Manila on his two Navy tours. First he stays at the Seamen's Mission, but then gets wise to where things are really happening. He hangs out at Ed Mitchell's Rhonda Grill, swings by a hole-in-the-wall called Tom's Dixie Kitchen that cooks tender steaks and sells imported Scotch for nine pesos a shot. He laps up the scene at the Metro Garden and Grill Ballroom, watching the Navy boys of the United States Asiatic Fleet drinking iced Pabst. On Christmas Day, the joints round Manila Bay and the Metro are a sea of white hats. It seems those boys can't spend their wages fast enough — booze, girls, dope.

Jack trades up to a room at the Manila Hotel. He gets himself into some craps games and wins himself a stake with those magic Oklahoma State Pen dice. He attends the afternoon tea dances at the genteel Bayview Hotel to tickle the ears of the Navy wives and buys himself some Saigon linen suits to smarten up his act. Early afternoon he takes in the movies at the theatres near the Malacanyan Palace until he realises the seat cushions are teeming with lice; he has to wash his hair with kerosene to kill the bastards. He likes walking the wealthy streets where the rich mestizos and the expat Americans live: the quiet, wide, tree-lined thoroughfares by the Bay or Dewey Boulevard with high-end American compounds, a LaSalle convertible in every driveway.

Down at the Metro, Jack hooks up with a local called Paco who shows him the sights. Paco has a British gal called Evelyn who's got a Russian surname, Oleaga, on account of having been married to a Russian some time back. Paco and Evelyn spot Jack for a bucko-mate-on-the-lam right off the bat. They hang out nightly at Ed Mitchell's before hitting the Metro: determinedly teetotaling Jack on the seltzer, Evelyn on the house Dubonnet cocktails. Paco invariably gets shit-faced with his Manilamen brothers, leaving Jack and Evelyn to talk. Jack breathes in her chypre perfume and digs her fancy cut-glass accent. He tells her he wants out. Manila is a steamy version of Tulsa, but Shanghai is the real deal. She confesses she hates this swamp and wants to go to Shanghai too. Jack tells her to look him up.

A couple of weeks later Paco pulls a bank heist with his brothers on Evelyn's tip-off and walks away with forty thousand pesos. Evelyn had her claws into the manager and sweet-talked everything out of him that Paco needed to know to rob the place right when the teller's drawers were full to bursting. Evelyn asks for her share, and Paco laughs, spits in her face, and slaps her across the room before throwing her out on the street and calling her evil. Evelyn, black-eyed, finds Jack drinking coffee in the Rhonda Grill and tells him the sorry story. Jack takes umbrage on her behalf and walks her back to her Chinatown apartment, where he finds Paco liquored up and smooching a Japanese whore. Jack beats the living crap out of Paco and hands Evelyn her cut, only to watch while she kicks Paco repeatedly in the cojones. Paco was right, Jack thinks, you are evil, Evil Evelyn. She stays the night in his hotel room, leaving the scent of chypre on Jack's sheets. The next morning he takes her to the harbour and watches her board a steamer for Shanghai, Paco already forgotten. Evil Evelyn pecks him on the cheek and says she owes him one.

In Manila Jack sees his first real industrial-size slot-machine operation and the gawk-eyed leatherneck marines lining up to lose their coin on payday. He'd seen slots in Tulsa, but only one at a time in a speakeasy or a blind pig. Nobody had much coin to spare back there. But in Manila, they cover whole floors. He watches the coins go in, the wheels spin, and a fuck of a lot fewer coins come out. Later, a thick-necked guy comes over and empties the back of the machine into a bucket, right up to the brim. Sweet business. Jack gets friendly with the lanky overseer, some ex-army Canadian called Penfold, or Pinfold. He explains the slots business to Jack. Easiest money on God's green earth, no wages wasted on croupiers, machines don't thieve the take, the dumbest hick could figure it out: just pop a peso in the slot, pull the lever, and wave it goodbye. Then do it again ... and again ... and again. It's rigged to the house and pays out ten per cent max on a good day.

It's time to move on. Jack buddies up with the Navy boys and jumps a U.S. Army transport heading for Shanghai. The U.S.S. Chaumont does the run regular and the crew are always willing to do a favour for a Yang Pat vet. Maybe they could carry the odd cargo from Manila for an old U.S. Navy man trying to make a go of it on the China Coast? Maybe they could at that.

* * *

The cold weather lingers late in Shanghai the spring of 1930. Jack Riley's fingers feel the cold bad. He's got a one-room flop with a shared can up in Hongkew that's a pay-by-the-day establishment. It's run by an old Swedish seaman's widow who's soft on sailors and doesn't hassle him for the rent. He keeps warm in his single divan with a leaky old kerosene heater and stashes his clothes in a mothball-smelling closet pushed against the mouldy blue walls. By night Jack's got a gig bouncing the door of the Venus Café, a late-late-night cabaret up on the North Szechuen Road, close by the dive bars of Jukong Alley. Babylonian Jewish Sam Levy runs the joint with his sister-in-law, Girgee, and they take a liking to Jack. Sam schmoozes the patrons while Girgee keeps the business side of things ticking over — ten cents a dance with the White Russian hostesses. Sam's happy to have Jack take care of the door, pay him some, and have his company for the Venus's traditional four a.m. ham and eggs, when the riffraff is sent on its way.

The Venus is a quiet joint till about midnight, when it becomes a bad-news mix of off-duty marines, British squaddies, Shanghai's foreign lowlife, and slumming swells. Jack is packing knuckledusters and a leather cosh, and there's a cutthroat Bengal razor in his breast pocket if things go truly south. Feet and fists will deal with ninety-nine per cent of the trouble at the Venus, and Jack's rep as a tasty amateur Navy boxer helps some. He's partnered with another ex-Navy tough guy called Mickey O'Brien, who's solid backup. The two hit it off from day one.

He's taken up with a regular at the Venus, Babe Sadlir, who's been in Shanghai 'since Christ only knows when'. Brown-eyed Babe is originally from Nevada via some dark times in San Francisco after stabbing a girl who took her man. She ditched the man, dodged the police, and lit out for Shanghai. Babe is one of the legion of 'White Flowers' of the China Coast, semi-high-class tramps who drift the Settlement, grifting the newly arrived British 'griffins', those young businessmen with money to spend who work at the great corporations, or hongs, as they're known, or the soldiers with pay to waste and the sojourners looking for company while they're in port.

By day you'll find Babe topping up her tan by the pool at the Columbia Country Club, scandalising the taipan wives with her Mei Li Bah cigarettes and short shorts that don't leave much to the imagination. By night you'll find her drinking champagne and snaffling free caviar in her tight-fitting linen dresses — all on some British or French officer's tab at the Cercle Sportif Français. She stays out all night a lot and lets Jack crash at her place in the Young Allen apartments on Chapoo Road. They even get it together occasionally. Jack likes Babe: the jagged scar on her neck from some ancient catfight, how she can't speak without cursing, her blonde ringlets. She teaches him the funny-sounding China Coast pidgin English and a smattering of Shanghainese patter. But she's got an awful bad dope habit and disappears for days, getting glassy-eyed on the divans in Leong's opium den out back of the Moon Palace dance hall, a ballroom with a mostly Chinese clientele, on the Hongkew Broadway. Leong's sweet on her blonde hair, calls her a 'fox spirit girl' and lets her have dope gratis till she can find another sucker to sub her.

Jack finds Sam's four a.m. crew are mostly Jewish. There's Al Israel, who runs the Del Monte Café out in the Western External Roads on Avenue Haig; the Wiengarten brothers, Sammy and Al, who front the Red Rose Cabaret and a bunch of hooch shacks north of the Soochow Creek; Albert Rosenbaum, who'd come to Shanghai from Mexico City via New York; a Swiss heist merchant called Elly Widler, who has you counting your fingers after you've shaken hands with him; and the exhibition dancers Joe and Nellie Farren. Babe knows Nellie from the Majestic; Joe's in tight with the Israelites, being of that persuasion himself.

One night after the ham and eggs Joe tells Jack there's a longstanding craps game close by, out back of the Isis Cinema, organised by the White Russian band that accompanies the silent flicks. There's an old army blanket rather than felt for a shooting surface. Get low down against the wall and roll them dice. The suckers fresh out of California or just off the boat from England let Jack Riley use his very own special rolling bones, his sole souvenir of the Oklahoma State Pen. Six the hard way, easy eight, hard ten. Jack rolls a four, 'Little Joe from Kokomo'; a snake-eyes, comes up with three on each dice and calls it 'Jimmie Hicks from the sticks'. He keeps up the patter to keep the dice flying, the money moving, and nobody looking too closely. The sailor boys and the griffins are in awe of Jack, and they lap up his schtick.

They're long games; they go on till way past dawn. Jack ups the stakes, lures the mugs in, stares down anyone who would like to suggest Jack Riley's dice ain't straight. He prowls the Trenches bar strip after the Venus closes, hearing the Chinese touts crying 'Poluski girls, Poluski girls', taking the punters in the craps games out back of the shacks that run the length of the Scott Road and always building his stake a little higher. The next step is to gain some real estate of his own, put down some Shanghai roots.

(Continues…)


Excerpted from "City of Devils"
by .
Copyright © 2018 Paul French.
Excerpted by permission of Picador.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

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