Suitcase Charlie and Me
by John Guzlowski
I started writing my novel Suitcase Charlie about sixty
years ago when I was 7 years old, just a kid.
At that time, I was living in a working-class
neighborhood on the near northwest side of Chicago, an area sometimes called
Humboldt Park, sometimes called the Polish Triangle. A lot of my neighbors were
Holocaust survivors, World War II refugees, and Displaced Persons. There were
hardware-store clerks with Auschwitz tattoos on their wrists, Polish cavalry
officers who still mourned for their dead comrades, and women who had walked
from Siberia to Iran to escape the Russian Gulag. They were our moms and dads. Some
of us kids had been born here in the States, but most of us had come over to
America in the late 40s and early 50s on US troop ships when the US started
letting us refugees in.
As kids, we knew a lot about fear. We heard about it from
our parents. They had seen their mothers and fathers shot, their brothers and
sisters put on trains and sent to concentration camps, their childhood friends
left behind crying on the side of a road. Most of our parents didn’t tell us
about this stuff directly. How could they?
But we felt their fear anyway.
We overheard their stories late at night when they
thought we were watching TV in a far off room or sleeping in bed, and that’s
when they’d gather around the kitchen table and start remembering the past and
all the things that made them fearful. My mom would tell about what happened to
her mom and her sister and her sister’s baby when the German’s came to her
house in the woods, the rapes and murders.
You could hear the fear in my mom’s voice. She feared
everything, the sky in the morning, a drink of water, a sparrow singing in a
dream, me whistling some stupid little Mickey Mouse Club tune I picked up on
TV. Sometimes when I was a kid, if I started to whistle, she would ask me to
stop because she was afraid that that kind of simple act of joy would bring the
devil into the house. Really.
My dad was the same way. If he walked into a room where my
sister and I were watching some TV show about World War II – even something as
innocuous as the sitcom Hogan’s Heroes – and there were some German soldiers on
the screen, his hands would clench up into fists, his face would redden in
anger, and he would tell us to turn the show off, immediately. Normally the
sweetest guy in the world, his fear would turn him toward anger, and he would
start telling us about the terrible things the Germans did, the women he saw
bayoneted, the friends he saw castrated and beaten to death, the men he saw
frozen to death during a simple roll call.
This was what it was like at home for most of my friends
and me. To escape our parents’ fear, however, we didn’t have to do much. We
just had to go outside and be around other kids. We could forget the war and
our parents’ fear with them. We’d laugh, play tag and hide-and-go-seek, climb
on fences, play softball in the nearby park, go to the corner story for an ice
cream cone or a chocolate soda. You name it. This was in the mid 50s at the
height of the baby boom, and there were millions of us kids outside living
large and – as my dad liked to say – running around like wild goats!
In the streets with our friends, we didn’t know a thing
about fear, didn’t have to think about it.
That is until Suitcase Charlie showed up one day.
It happened in the fall of 1955, October, a Sunday
afternoon.
Three young Chicago boys, 13-year old John Schuessler,
his 11-year old brother Anton, and their 14-year old friend Bobby Peterson,
went to Downtown Chicago, the area called the Loop, to see a matinee of a
Disney nature documentary called The African Lion. Today, the parents of the
boys probably would take them to the Loop, but back then it was a different
story. Their parents knew where they were going, and the mother of the
Schuessler boys in fact had picked out the film they would see and given the
brothers the money to pay for the tickets. At the time, it wasn’t that unusual
for kids to be doing this kind of roaming around on their own. We were
“free-range” kids before the term was even invented. Every one of my friends
was a latch key kid. Our parents figured that we could pretty much stay out of
trouble no matter where we went. We’d take buses to museums, beaches, movies,
swimming pools, amusement parks without any kind of parental guidance. There
were times we’d even just walk a mile to a movie to save the 10 cents on the
bus ride. We’d seldom do this alone, however. Kids had brother and sisters and
pals, so we’d do what the Schuessler brothers and their friend Bobby Peterson
did.
We’d get on a bus, go downtown, see a movie and hangout
down there afterward. There was plenty to do, and most of it didn’t cost a
penny: there were free museums, enormous department stories filled with toy
departments where you could play for hours with all the toys your parents could
never afford to buy you, libraries filled with books and civil war artifacts
(real ones), a Greyhound bus depot packed with arcade-style games, a dazzling
lake front full of yachts and sailboats, comic book stores, dime stores where
barkers would try to sell you impossible non-stick pans and sponges that would
clean anything, and skyscrapers like the Prudential Building where you could
ride non-stop, lickety-split elevators from the first floor to the 41st floor
for free. And if you got tired of all that, you could always stop and look at
the wild people in the streets! It was easy for a bunch of parent-free kids to
spend an afternoon down in the Loop just goofing off and checking stuff out.
Just like the Schuessler Brothers and their friend Bobby
Peterson did.
But the brothers and Bobby never made it home from the
Loop that Sunday in October of 1955.
Two days later, their dead bodies were found in a shallow
ditch just east of the Des Plaines River. The boys were bound up and naked. Their
eyes were closed shut with adhesive tape. Bobby Peterson had been beaten, and
the bodies of all three had been thrown out of a vehicle. The coroner
pronounced the cause of death to be “asphyxiation by suffocation.”
The city was thrown into a panic.
For the first time, we kids felt the kind of fear outside
the house we had seen inside the house. It shook us up. Where before we hung
out on the street corners and played games till late in the evening, now we
came home when the first street lights came on. We also started spending more
time at home or at the homes of our friends, and we stopped doing as many
things on our own out on the street: fewer trips to the supermarket or the
corner store or the two local movie theaters, The Crystal and The Vision. The
street wasn’t the safe place it once had been. Everything changed.
And now we were conscious of threat, of danger, of the
type of terrible thing that could happen almost immediately to shake us and our
world up.
We started watching for the killer of the Schuessler
Brothers and Bobby Peterson. We didn’t know his name or what he looked like,
nobody did, but we gave him a name and we had a sense of what he might look
like. We called him Charlie, and we were sure he hauled around a suitcase, one
that he carried dead children in. Just about every evening, as it started
getting dark, some kid would look down the street toward the shadows at the end
of the block, toward where the park was, and see something in those shadows. The
kid would point then and ask in a whisper, “Suitcase Charlie?”
We’d follow his gaze and a minute later we’d be heading
for home.
Fast as we could.
The novel is available as a Kindle or paperback from
Amazon. Just click here: CLICK.
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Bieganski the Blog exists to further explore the themes of the book Bieganski the Brute Polak Stereotype, Its Role in Polish-Jewish Relations and American Popular Culture.
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