The Devil Himself: A Novel
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About this ebook
Based on real events, The Devil Himself is a high-energy novel of military espionage and Mafia justice.
"I'll talk to anybody, a priest, a bank manager, a gangster, the devil himself, if I can get the information I need. This is a war." -- Lt. Commander Charles Radcliffe Haffenden, Naval Intelligence Unit, B-3
In late 1982, a spike in terrorism has the Reagan Administration considering covert action to neutralize the menace before it reaches the United States. There are big risks to waging a secret war against America's enemies---but there is one little-known precedent.
Forty years earlier, German U-boats had been prowling the Atlantic, sinking hundreds of U.S. ships along the east coast, including the largest cruise ship in the world, Normandie, destroyed at a Manhattan pier after Pearl Harbor. Nazi agents even landed on Long Island with explosives and maps of railways, bridges, and defense plants. Desperate to secure the coast, the Navy turned to Meyer Lansky, the Jewish Mob boss. A newly naturalized American whose fellow Eastern European Jews were being annihilated by Hitler, Lansky headed an unlikely fellowship of mobsters Lucky Luciano, Bugsy Siegel, Frank Costello, and naval intelligence officers.
Young Reagan White House aide Jonah Eastman, grandson of Atlantic City gangster Mickey Price, is approached by the president's top advisor with an assignment: Discreetly interview his grandfather's old friend Lansky about his wartime activities. There just might be something to learn from that secret operation.
The notoriously tight-lipped gangster, dying of cancer, is finally ready to talk. Jonah gets a riveting---and darkly comic---history lesson. The Mob caught Nazi agents, planted propaganda with the help of columnist Walter Winchell, and found Mafia spies to plot the invasion of Sicily, where General Patton was poised to strike at the soft underbelly of the Axis. Lansky's men stopped at nothing to sabotage Hitler's push toward American shores.
Eric Dezenhall
Eric Dezenhall co-founded the communications firm Dezenhall Resources, Ltd., and serves as its CEO. His first book of nonfiction, Nail ‘Em!: Confronting High-Profile Attacks on Celebrities and Business, pioneered techniques for understanding and defusing crises. The author novels such as Jackie Disaster, The Devil Himself and Spinning Dixie, he lives in the Washington, D.C. area.
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Reviews for The Devil Himself
2 ratings2 reviews
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Intriguing story well told.
- Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5a very quick pleasant read
Book preview
The Devil Himself - Eric Dezenhall
Prologue
Fever Dreams of February 9, 1942
Pier 88 on the Hudson River, Manhattan
After I lost Havana to Castro—and most of my worth—in ’59 during the Cuban revolution, I spent a month in an oxygen tent back home in a Miami Beach hospital with a heart attack. I had a fever so high from the inflammation around my lungs, my wife, Teddy, brought in a rabbi because they didn’t think I was going to make it. I have a fuzzy memory of doctors and nurses scraping around me saying, Mr. Lansky, are you breathing better now?
I don’t remember if I answered them or not, what with all the medicine.
You hear crazy stories about when a person comes back from what these meshuga psychics call a near-death experience,
how they see a white light and their loved ones calling them home. That’s not what happened to me. I wasn’t being escorted into heaven by some goyish saint; I was dreaming over and over that I was a welding foreman during World War II under contract from the navy, standing under a million sparks.
As my oxygen tent wheezed in and out, I was lost inside my own head, working on the biggest cruise ship in the world, the French liner Normandie, which was docked at Pier 88 in Manhattan. The job: convert the Normandie into a transport vessel to deliver American troops into the arms of that paper-hanging Nazi psychopath with the black toothbrush under his nose. By next month. Christ, I thought, standing smack in the middle of the Grand Salon. The Dodgers could have banged out a doubleheader in this space.
Now, to be clear, I was never really a foreman on the Normandie, but the ship played a big role in my life during the terrible years of the war, and I came to know more about it, I suppose, than just about anybody else. Also, I had done a lot of mechanical work on the fleet of cars I used to run booze during Prohibition, so I knew a thing or two about this kind of labor.
As I looked through the sparks across the Grand Salon, I kept thinking: It could have been any of them, or it could have been none of them. Fifteen hundred men—sailors, contractors, welders, God knew who else—grinding into each other on a ship that was even bigger than the Titanic had been. We all know how that story ended.
Nobody knew what the hell he was doing. That was the one thing that all these Jack Armstrongs could agree on.
Only the government could cook up a scheme like this, I thought: Today’s task was a real valentine. I had to direct a couple hundred men to remove the decorative stanchions in the Grand Salon on the Normandie’s promenade level.
The enormous room looked like a war zone: Wobbly scaffolding was propped up along all four walls and against the four stanchions, which looked like giant lipstick tubes. Just as flashy, too. Heavily lacquered with high-performance chemicals and fire-engine red like a baboon’s ass. Or maybe some kind of flower. The French were big on flowers, weren’t they? And the murals on the walls they were going to have to scrape down must have been worth some real gelt.
The wooden floor was a minefield of red linoleum rolls. The Grand Salon was, after all, going to become the troops’ recreation center with pool tables, weights, boxing equipment, and basketball hoops. Wedged against the scaffolding were massive heaps of kapok-filled life preservers packed in burlap. More than fourteen hundred cartons in all, just delivered from the Brooklyn Navy Yard.
Knox, the navy secretary, assured President Roosevelt that he could turn the conversion around fast. By next month. That’s what it said on the paper on my clipboard. America gets caught with our knickers down at Pearl Harbor, and the navy brass tries to make up for it by kissing Roosevelt’s ass with this fairy-tale schedule.
I thought of a joke I once heard: Cohen is shipwrecked alone on a deserted island for twenty years. Eventually, a great navy destroyer finds him. The imposing captain comes ashore and sees that during his long desertion, Cohen has built two magnificent buildings and asks him what they are. Cohen points to the first one and lovingly announces, This is my synagogue where I go every day to pray to my glorious God.
Then the captain points to the other building and asks, What’s that one over there?
Cohen frowns and angrily says, "That one? That is a synagogue I wouldn’t go in if my life depended on it!"
The folly of it all. A synagogue built for the purpose of not worshipping in it. And, now, in its infinite wisdom, the government was going to change the name of this ship from Normandie to the USS Lafayette. I remembered reading about the French big shot Lafayette in grade school. Friend of George Washington’s. The United States snagged the Normandie when France fell to Hitler in 1940. Everybody’s a ganef.
Sure, I thought, that’s what this gunmetal whale needed, a new name. It was like asking a guy that just got hit by a train if he wanted some chicken soup on the grounds that it couldn’t hurt.
The first order of business was getting my welders to burn through the lacquered stanchions so they could dismantle them.
Of the hundreds of men around me, I recognized the faces of maybe three. Skulking around one of the kapok heaps, I noticed a small, boyish sailor with short blond hair and a baby’s skin, fingering a blowtorch. I wanted to yell at the kid to stop loafing and get his ass over here to take his assignment. Just as I was about to talk, the boy turned his head, showing an awful blaze of acne. The sailor’s two faces had a comic-book contrast, like one of those Dick Tracy freaks. Repulsed, my vocal chords froze up, and I turned my attention to a less revolting target, a fresh-faced civilian welder standing a few feet away.
You!
I shouted, feeling a little guilty about attacking the attackable. My voice echoed through the great hall.
The civilian pointed to himself and meekly said, "Me?"
"No, Winston Churchill, he’s standing right behind you, schmuck," I said.
The young civilian turned around only to find out that the British prime minister was not there. Go figure. When I came into New York harbor from Eastern Europe as a small boy, never did I imagine there would be ten schlemiels for every scholar between those soaring skyscrapers that stole my imagination.
God help us, I thought, as other men began to gather.
Do you geniuses think these stanchions are gonna dismantle themselves? Now fire up your torches and start slicing through ’em. And watch those flames with all this rubbish lying around!
The men climbed the scaffolding and began blasting the stanchions with blue-tipped flames. Within minutes, the air was riddled with a chemical scent.
Sparks flew in a frantic motion, shooting from the scaffolding and landing on things that shouldn’t have been there—the remaining wood floor, carpeting, and the mountains of life-preservers beneath bone-dry burlap.
The wild movement of the sparks, as they mixed with the frigid air blowing in off the promenade deck, made me think of fireflies that had gone insane. I would never have supervised my men so loosely under these conditions, but the order had come down that this was all about speed. It wouldn’t take a pyromaniac wizard to light up this ship and roast her like the man-made glutton she was. It took balls to go out to sea in one of these. How the hell did they float? Too damned big, screw what they say about physics.
The Grand Salon had grown beastly hot, and somebody opened wide one of the great sliding doors that led to the promenade deck. Suddenly, a hissing sound came from somewhere very, well, wrong. It was as if the devil himself had blown the kapok mountain range a kiss that sent flames tearing across the burlap, and blasting the Normandie onto the top of Hitler’s trophy case. The room exploded. All I could feel was searing heat as the holocaust began.
In my corner vision, I made out the ravaged side of the young, blond sailor from before. Turning his face to his more pleasant side, the sailor nodded at me, then slid, with his back against the huge sliding doors, out to the promenade deck and into the canyons of Manhattan.
* * *
On the other side of the world that same week, the Third Reich found a new use for a powerful pesticide called Zyklon B. The Nazis had been using the gas to destroy rats and other vermin, but when facing the Americans on the battlefield became a reality, Hitler demanded greater efficiency from his internal functions. Nazi engineers then set in motion a new industrial procedure where throngs of concentration camp workers,
mostly my people from Eastern Europe, were forced to strip completely, then were corralled into huge underground bathing centers
with fake showerheads. Once they were inside, Zyklon B pellets would be released into the chambers, suffocating everybody in minutes. When this phase was done, the chambers were ventilated, and the bodies were taken on stretchers to a crematorium that could process more than a thousand a day. As Roosevelt was being snookered about how the Lafayette was coming along right on schedule, a man called Eichmann was being read the riot act for the disappointing consumption rate at the crematoriums. Meantime, Senator Nye from one of those Dakotas was saying the Jews were a bigger threat to America than Hitler.
As I recovered from my fever in the oxygen tent and needed less medication, sometimes I still saw sparks and two-faced men. I saw the acne-scarred sailor himself dropping the Zyklon B pellets down a pipe into the killing chambers. In some versions of the dream, the sailor was a Nazi brownshirt, a giant ripping apart children by their limbs as they ran through the woods. I told myself I was crazy to think that the two-faced sailor from my dream had started the fire on the Normandie.
One morning, a nice young nurse came into my hospital room and said, Mr. Lansky, you’re getting stronger, so we’re going to take you to a nicer room.
So I told this poor girl that I should have done more to protest the safety conditions on the great ship, as if it were my fault. How could such a thing happen in the Port of New York—not only the busiest ocean-liner hub in America, but the main entry point for the nation’s immigrants, imported fuel and raw materials, not to mention its primary on-ramp to the heartland’s highways and railroads? I told the poor girl that there’s so much compromise in life that sometimes you don’t have it in you—you just dig in and be who you are even if you know it’s not good for you. The nurse must have thought I was nuts, or maybe she was used to people on strange medications talking such nonsense.
Whether my racing thoughts settled on the sparks or on the two-faced men that peppered my life, what I kept coming back to was that it could have been any of them, or it could have been none of them.
I.
The Whole Megillah
He not busy being born is busy dying.
—B
OB
D
YLAN,
It’s Alright, Ma (I’m Only Bleeding)
The Intern: Jonah Eastman,
1982
When you grow up with these guys, you know they’re nothing special. Everybody on the outside, the vast consumer public, though, assigns all these mystical skills to them. My favorite is that they killed President Kennedy. You know, the mob. Mafia. Whatever.
If you actually knew them, you’d know there was no way. A crime like that was way above their pay grade. All the mob ever was, was a loose affiliation of crooks that only wanted to steal as much as they could steal for as long as they could without ending up in the clink or on a slab. Assassinate the president of the United States—whose brother was the famously vindictive attorney general—and keep it quiet for twentysome years? Come on, the only people on the grassy knoll that day in Dallas were the wackadoos who needed their world ordered in such a way as to ascribe all forms of inexplicable mendacity to a shadowy group that couldn’t step forward to defend itself. (Mafia: Help, I’m being defamed!
)
There’s another banal reality: If the mob killed President Kennedy, the guy who pulled the trigger would be in a strip joint that night going up to strippers: Yo, Bambi, Tiffany, you hear the news?
The strippers would say, Oh, it’s so awful they killed the president.
The triggerman would fiddle with his collar, sniff that wiseguy smirk: Awful, huh? You wanna know what really went down?
Then, impressed, the two whores would go in the back room and get to work on Vinnie Bag-a-Donuts, or whoever he was, then tell everybody they banged the guy who iced the president. The moron would be in custody before sunrise.
Look, it wasn’t like these gavones had the choice between Yale Law School and breaking kneecaps, and chose breaking kneecaps. Different skill set, and sometimes the cliché of squandered talent collapses under the weight of no talent at all.
These guys were in my life before I could walk. I’m Jonah Eastman, and my grandfather is Mickey Price, the Atlantic City mob boss known as the Wizard of Odds. Gambling is his thing. Well, after booze was his thing. When Prohibition ended, he shut down his stills in the New Jersey Pine Barrens and focused on gambling. His investments extended from the back alleys of Philadelphia and Newark out to the carpet joints
of Saratoga, and to the class
strongholds of Las Vegas and Havana. Most of those places are all gone, at least as far as Mickey’s involvement is concerned. When New Jersey okayed casino gambling, Mickey opened up his own boardwalk place in 1978 in Atlantic City, the Golden Prospect Hotel and Casino. He isn’t the owner of record, of course. Official filings listed him as the bell captain. Heh. Mickey and my grandmother Deedee raised me after my parents died, and they’re still there. As am I when I’m not at Dartmouth or working on an internship like the one I’ve got now in the White House.
My whole life I’ve been running from my primordial borscht, not because of the cinematic suffering of my inner child,
but because what I come from is so damned small-time. I would love to have a little inside knowledge that my grandfather’s friends took down a president, but the reality is an endless procession of desperate little ganefs—and most of them are very small—trying to stay one step ahead of cops in suits from Sy Syms.
Maybe everybody goes though this at some point: that awful feeling that what you come from is staggeringly unspecial, that desire to be from someplace exotic, to descend from someone really cool. I remember a dream I had the summer before I went to college in 1980. In my dream, my grandfather was Jonas Salk, a somewhat more respected Jew than Mickey. My last name even was Salk. Jonah Salk. Clever. So I’d get to school, and people would ask, Are you related to the guy who cured polio?
Yeah,
I’d say, and wouldn’t have to do anything else. That would be it: Yeah. Kiss my ass. Skate through life.
Dreams of trading on the polio cure quickly gave way to the crucible of having to make it in this world by myself in spite of who Mickey Price was and is, and who I am and am not. I’m doing okay. I’m starting my junior year at Dartmouth after the New Year in a few weeks, right after I wrap up this internship I’ve got working for Tom Simmons, President Reagan’s image-maker-in-chief,
as the press calls him.
I love my job, which consists mainly of helping to develop media strategy for the president. This isn’t entirely true since I’m regarded as just another smart kid, not anybody with real influence. Still, I get to escort the press in and out of the Oval Office, direct reporters to the right spokesperson, and get to see President Reagan almost every day. I don’t think he knows my name, but he recognizes me, I think, and he’s got a way of tilting his head in the kind of deference that says, Appreciate all you’re doin’, kid.
Or maybe he’s just a politician.
One day a few months ago, I made a comment about a Remington sculpture the president had in his office. His eyes brightened, and he said, You know about horses.
I answered, Yes, I cared for horses when I worked at the Atlantic City Race Track,
which was true. He offered to let me ride with him on one of his Wednesday outings, which I did twice. It was a thrill, believe me, and it made Tom Simmons take note of me over the other political Smurfs.
Simmons was a tennis nut. Sometimes he’d grab my friend and immediate supervisor, Doug Elmets, and me to play on the White House court. Doug and I always kept our tennis gear in our offices just in case.
During one of these doubles games—the fourth guy was somebody from the national security adviser’s office—Doug started ribbing me about being Mickey Price’s grandson. Fascinated, Simmons peppered me with questions about my background, the symbiosis between the Kosher and Cosa Nostras, which I answered without trying to make it seem too sexy. It’s strange the way my roots come back up at me like the taste of corned beef and coleslaw when it wants to, not when I want it to.
* * *
I never thought I’d have to discuss Mickey with Tom Simmons again, but the prospect hit me at the gonad level when one afternoon after Thanksgiving, Simmons’s assistant said he wanted to meet with me alone, something that had never before happened.
Simmons had been with President Reagan since his days as governor of California. He still referred to Reagan as Governor.
More than any other person in Reagan’s orbit, with the possible exception of the president’s wife, Nancy, Simmons was the guardian of Reagan’s reputation.
I showed up to Simmons’s office, which was the one next to the Oval Office, located in the southern section of the West Wing, a few minutes early.
A small, balding man, bespectacled and bemused, Simmons gestured to the burnt-orange sofa in his office and took a seat in a striped chair facing me. He looked me over, his eyes blue and searing like stolen