"♪ (theme music playing) ♪" "Mannix s6e08 The Upside Down Penny" "Hi." "I want to see Mr. Joe Mannix." "Okay?" "Well, he's busy right now, can I help you?" "No, I don't want a girl detective." "I'm Mr. Mannix's secretary." "Oh, well look, can you tell him I've got a case for him?" "It's important, and I'm supposed to be home by 5:30." "Well, may I have your name, Mr..." "It's not Mister." "Just Kenny." "Kenny Brooks." "I live at 216 Loma Road." "Peggy, uh, you can put this in the Cummings file." "Well, hi." "He doesn't look busy to me." "This is Kenny Brooks." "Kenny has a case for you." "How do you do?" "Look, uh, why don't we talk in my private office?" "Okay." "Okay, Kenny, now why don't you sit down right there, and we'll have a little talk." "Now, just what's the case?" "I brought $1.85, and I get two more dollars on Saturday." "Now, wait a minute, uh, let's not worry about my fee until I know what the case is, okay?" "Okay." "I want you to find my stamp book." "Your stamp book?" "My Uncle Jimmy gave it to me." "He's not really my uncle," "I just call him that because he knew my father." "My father's dead." "Anyhow, he gave me this stamp book of his, and I lost it." "You see, I promised not to take it out of the house." "But you did?" "Well... yeah." "Does your mother know you're hiring me?" "I told Mom and Uncle Jimmy I was coming to see you." "Did they say it was all right?" "Sure, but Uncle Jimmy said forget it." "He'd get me another album." "But it's my fault." "I wanted that stamp book ever since I was a little kid." "So he gave it to me last week for my birthday." "I broke my promise." "I wanted to show it to some of the kids." "Well, Kenny, uh, maybe it would be easier if you just let your Uncle Jimmy buy you another stamp album." "But it's not the same." "It's like, you have a dog and lose it, people will get you another dog just because you're crying." "They don't understand." "It isn't the same dog." "Yeah, I, uh..." "guess you're right." "When did you have it last?" "Saturday." "We rode our bikes down to the pier." "We threw baseballs and watched the merry-go-round, and things like that." "You think you left it there?" "Billy Kypur said I put it on the counter at the baseball game." "Then he said he saw me leave it on the bench at the merry-go-round." "But he's not sure?" "Billy Kypur's never sure." "Well, why don't I have a look around and I'll get back to you, okay?" "Thanks, Mr. Mannix." "I've already asked a lot of people, but people only pretend they listen to kids." "They'll listen to you." "You just sit tight." "You see, he wasn't busy at all." "You're taking the case." "Yeah, a chance to pick up an extra $1.85." "And a chance to spend a day at the beach." "A buck 85 here, a buck 85 there." "It all adds up." "♪ ♪" "(carnival music plays)" "BARKER:" "Three balls for a quarter." "Step right up." "Oh, hey!" "Even the losers win." "Here you are." "Three balls for a quarter." "Three balls for a quarter." "Try your luck." "Step right up." "Three balls for a quarter, mister, step right up." "Try your aim." "You knock everything off the pedestal, you win a big prize." "Hey, uh, how's your memory?" "So-so, why?" "Well, I need some information." "Information booth's down at the end of the pier." "Of course, they don't know everything." "There were some kids here Saturday." "One of them thinks he might have left his stamp book on your counter." "Stamp book?" "Yeah, you know." "An album?" "Yeah, that's what I thought you said." "Listen, they've left everything from catchers' mitts to comic books, but never a stamp album." "Here, look for yourself." "See?" "Yeah." "Well, thanks anyway." "There you are, pal." "Gee, thanks!" "(carnival music plays)" "You serious?" "All I see is kids." "Well, this kid was probably carrying a stamp album." "I tell you, Mister, unless he was playing a piano and riding a giraffe," "I wouldn't remember him, and that's the truth." "Well, he thinks he might have left the stamp album over there on that bench." "And it disappeared." "Maybe somebody stole it." "You couldn't prove it by me." "I had a horse stolen right off that rig two years ago." "Gemini might have seen it, but I doubt it." "Who's Gemini?" "An artist." "Draws you while you sit." "I let him use that bench for his studio." "Brings a crowd." "And he was working Saturday?" "All day." "Nice young fellow when he's sober." "But Gemini is twins, you know." "Yeah, I know." "But you say he was at the bench Saturday?" "Yeah, and he did pretty good, too." "Where can I find him?" "He keeps a place down on Ocean Alley." "I should say his girl keeps it." "What's the number?" "44 Ocean Alley." "Ah, well, thanks a lot." "Oh, and, uh, keep an eye out for horse thieves." "He's gone!" "Don't ask me where." "He's just gone." "Packed that ratty old suitcase of his and left." "Hope he stays away this time." "Do you mean that, or are you just saying it to see how it sounds?" "Of course I don't mean it." "He's a rat." "But I love him." "Maybe I can help you find him." "What does a private investigator want with Gemini?" "I'm looking for something he may have found." "Well, I don't know, Mr. Mannix." "Where do you begin to look in this town?" "It's not another girl." "I don't think." "Well, I'd say the, uh, odds are definitely in your favor." "We had this fight a couple days ago." "He thinks he's never going to make it as an artist or anything, and when he gets to feeling sorry for himself, he drinks and we fight." "Now you say he took a suitcase." "Can he afford to travel?" "No, I don't think so." "He was talking crazy." ""Who needs you?" "My Aunt Tilly died and left me a small inheritance." Off he went." "Did he have an Aunt Tilly?" "I don't think he has any relatives at all." "He invented an Aunt Tilly and an Uncle Foxworth just to have some relatives to talk about." "What's his real name?" "John Boling." "But he's Gemini, all right." "Believe me." "You have a picture of him?" "Sure." "Self-portrait." "Looks just like him, too." "The rat." "He's good." "Hey, mind if I borrow this?" "I'll have a snapshot made." "Sure." "And by the way, who are these others?" "Sketches of people he drew Saturday, I guess." "Why don't I take them along?" "If I can put names to any of them, they may help us find him." "Sure, anything." "Here, you can put them in this." "Uh, thank you, Jackie." "If I come up with anything, I'll let you know." "He's really a beautiful guy when he's all together." "I miss him." "Taking the good with the bad..." "I miss him." "Now, don't sell the ranch." "Maybe I can get him back to you before he's run through Aunt Tilly's fortune." "(car door closes)" "(engine starts)" "(tires screech)" "♪ ♪" "(engine revving)" "(engine revving)" "(tires screeching)" "(tires screeching)" "(gunshot)" "(bullet ricochets)" "(gunshot)" "(siren approaching)" "(siren wailing)" "(siren wailing)" "What's going on?" "Who was in that other car?" "I don't know." "They sure weren't art lovers." "I hope you're not putting your money away for your retirement," "Joe, 'cause you're not going to make it." "Every time I come here for information, I get a lecture." "Advice." "Come on, Art." "Joe, two guys chase you, run you off the road, take some shots at you, and you don't even file a complaint." "Well, against whom?" "The car had no front license plate." "I didn't get a close look at them." "Now, what about this Gemini?" "John Boling?" "Not much." "Well, a couple of arrests." "Drunk on a public beach." "Not exactly one of our master criminals." "Any, uh, fresh addresses on him?" "The latest is the one on Ocean Alley." "You've got that." "Joe, if you're ready to tell me what case you're working on, maybe I can be of some help to you." "I told you, Art." "This kid lost his stamp album." "I'm trying to find it for him." "Oh, yeah, Peggy said." "You're working day and night for $1.85." "You know the trouble with you, Art?" "The truth just doesn't satisfy you." "(doorbell rings)" "Mr. Mannix?" "That's right." "Please come in." "I hope you didn't mind about Kenny coming to see you." "I mean, he was so upset about his album." "I didn't mind at all." "I never thought you'd have the time..." "Kenny is pretty hard to resist." "He got here right after you called." "He's in the living room." "As soon as I paint the racing stripes on it, I'm through." "Looks just great, Kenny." "Kenny, Mr. Mannix is here." "Hi, Mr. Mannix!" "You find it yet?" "Not yet, Kenny." "I'm James Cavanaugh." "Uh, that would make you Uncle Jimmy." "Uncle, race car mechanic, you name it." "Kenny tells me you gave him the stamp album." "As a birthday present." "All this isn't really necessary, Mr. Mannix." "I admit I was a little disappointed when Kenny broke his promise to me..." "Don't worry, Uncle Jimmy." "Mr. Mannix will get the album back for me." "I'm sure trying, Kenny." "Was it very valuable?" "Oh, it was worth a few dollars, I suppose." "No more." "Why?" "Well, someone was following me yesterday, took a couple shots at me." "Hey!" "Shot at you?" "I can't understand." "And neither do I, yet." "I can't believe a stamp album would give anybody a reason to take a shot at you, Mr. Mannix." "It's when I'm shot at for no reason at all that it bothers me." "Well, that settles it, Kenny." "If it's lost, it's lost." "If you think you're being shot at just to find the album, then I think we should drop the whole thing right now." "Uncle Jimmy, please!" "Be glad to pay you for whatever time you've spent." "I've already made my deal with Kenny." "Thanks anyway, Mr. Cavanaugh." "Maybe I've seen him, maybe I haven't." "Well, let's take one "maybe" at a time." "Maybe you've seen him?" "Why do you want to know?" "Well, he may be trying to sell a stamp collection that belongs to a client of mine." "Whole collection?" "Possibility that you've seen him seems brighter." "Yeah." "Two days ago." "But he only had one stamp." "One stamp?" "An upside down Pan-American 1903 Exposition, one cent." "A one-cent stamp." "How much was it worth?" "It was centered, mint condition, original gum, never been hinged." "How much more than one cent?" "Well, it's got a market value of, uh, close to $3,000." "I offered him 2,000." "Can I see this stamp?" "He wouldn't sell it." "When I told him what I'd pay, he just walked out, sort of dazed." "Like he had just come into a small inheritance." "Into something." "Did he give you an address?" "No." "But I gather he lives close to a bar, if you know what I mean." "Yeah." "Well, look, if, uh, he does come in again, would you give me a call?" "I'd appreciate it." "Whole collection, you say?" "That'd make him rich." "And if I don't catch up to him fast, he stands a good chance of dying poor." "And that's the truth, Mr. Crawford." "Mannix went to a lot of stamp dealers." "About ten of them." "Well, we know our friend took out a contract on Mr. Mannix." "And we know that Cutter has that contract." "He tried to deliver yesterday on the highway." "Yeah, but, uh, why?" "Now, you said that Cutter did check out that folder Mannix had with him?" "But he didn't find what he was looking for." "Our business associates in Marseilles still insist there's a half a million missing." "But how do we know that they didn't skim it themselves?" "I mean, uh, before the shipment." "They questioned their people." "They questioned them almost to death." "They're clean." "Well, that leaves us with nothing." "Nothing but a suspicion about our friend." "A very expensive suspicion." "So, what do we do?" "I think it's time we had a talk with Mr. Mannix." "Let me know as soon as you hear, Vivian." "Thanks a lot." "Any word from the world of stamps yet?" "The Philatelic Society is checking, but nothing so far." "Uh, you've got a visitor." "Jackie Miller." "Hi." "Oh, did you find him yet, Mr. Mannix?" "No." "The rat-- he really went in his hole." "Uh, has he mentioned anything in the past few days about stamps?" "What kind of stamps?" "The kind you collect and put in a stamp book." "Doesn't sound like him." "Why?" "Well, I think that a certain stamp album may be his Aunt Tilly's inheritance." "Did he steal it?" "Well, let's just say he didn't turn it in to the lost and found." "Now, I'm trying to find it, and so is somebody else, but I'm afraid they're going to be a little rougher about it." "Oh, I got an idea." "About-About how to find him, I mean." "That's why I came." "Those are liquor stores." "Gemini always calls those two places to have things delivered." "I was gonna call myself, but it really should be a man's voice." "Ah, it may work, at that." "Um, you better... talk a little, you know." "(dialing)" "MAN (over phone):" "Kelly's." "Hi, this is Gemini." "Uh, where's that order I called for?" "Knock it off." "Pay up the $27 you owe me, and we'll take your orders." "(line clicks)" "I'm afraid his credit isn't too good at, uh, Kelly's." "Royalton Party Store." "(dialing)" "(phone ringing)" "Royalton Party." "Uh, hi, guys." "Hey, this is Gemini again." "W-What happened to my order?" "Are you putting me on?" "That was yesterday, man." "You better get yourself a calendar." "Are you sure?" "Come on, man." "I'm busy, okay?" "Hey, w-w-wait a minute." "Where'd you send it?" "To the old address?" "No, the apartment." "You paid, for a change." "Are you sure you got the right address?" "Hold on." "350 Marina Street" "Apartment 51, right?" "Hey, well, I guess it's here." "Hey, guys, it's a great party." "Now you better stay here with Peggy." "There may be trouble." "Joe, be careful." "It doesn't make sense to get shot for $1.85." "While I'm gone, you two can decide on the price." "♪ ♪" "♪ ♪" "Who is it?" "Gemini?" "Who wants to know?" "I'm Joe Mannix." "What else are you?" "I'm a private investigator." "I want to talk to you." "Look, give me a chance to get dry." "I, uh, just got out of the shower." "Hold it, Mannix." "What is this?" "Friend of mine wants to talk to you." "Some other time, huh?" "I'm here visiting someone." "You visit with us first." "Come on." "Well, well, well..." "Harry Crawford." "Mr. Mannix." "I'm going to ask you a few questions... but only once." "Listen to Mr. Crawford." "(sighs)" "What kind of questions?" "Well, first, we know that a friend of ours paid to have you killed." "I'd like to know why." "He's your friend, ask him." "What's your interest in this artist character, Gemini?" "Well, I, uh, paid him to draw my picture, he didn't deliver it." "What are you working on?" "Who hired you?" "Sorry, that's confidential." "Your professional silence will last a long time in the cemetery." "Yeah... talking to you will get me in the same place." "I warned you, Mannix." "I expect you two to get a name out of him or he leaves here in the meat wagon." "Okay, Mannix, recess is over." "On your feet." "Come on, come on." "Over here." "Come on!" "Hands on your head." "Okay, Mannix, you got about five seconds and the clock is running." "Hold it." "Hey, you decided to talk?" "There's no sense in dying for someone else." "Oh, I'm disappointed in you, Mannix." "He's not as tough as we heard." "Well, I know when I'm up against a couple of pros." "So, talk." "I, uh, wonder if I could have a drink first." "Sure. (snaps fingers) Get him a drink." "Okay, Mannix, let's hear it." "Oh, not that kind of drink." "Here, burn rubber." "20 bucks?" "Right." "(tires squeal)" "(tires squeal)" "(tires squeal)" "Who roughed you up, Joe?" "At least you can tell me that." "Oh, a couple of strong-arm boys." "And all of this is over some lost stamp album, huh?" "It looks that way." "What'd you get on the car?" "The car turns out to be a very popular model." "A needle in a couple of haystacks." "Yeah, figures." "Tell me, Art, has Harry Crawford been mixed up in anything lately?" "Crawford?" "Oh, looks like I hit a nerve." "Well... we got a tip that Crawford was supposed to be involved in a big narcotic purchase a while ago." "Came in from Marseilles." "We helped stake out the location where the sale was supposed to take place." "And?" "And it never took place." "According to the word we got, the sale took place at a different location with a different set of people." "There's been a rumble ever since." "Apparently, somebody skimmed a half a million dollars off the sale." "That's nice skimming." "Joe, were Crawford's boys the ones that put you through the meat grinder?" "Yeah." "I'll have them picked up." "No, don't do that, Art." "You lock them up, and my case comes to a dead end." "I don't lock them up, and you'll come to a dead end." "(phone rings)" "Malcolm." "Oh, hi, Peggy." "Yeah, he's here." "Joe?" "Yeah, what's up, Peggy?" "The only big stamp collection that changed hands recently according to the local Philatelic Society, is the Amherst collection." "Who bought it?" "It was sold privately two weeks ago through the attorney for the Amherst estate in Pasadena." "Attorney's name?" "Lawrence Riley." "He's in the Honeycutt Building." "Set up an appointment for me, huh?" "I already did." "A half hour from now." "I figured it'd be easier to break one than to make one." "Nice going, Peggy." "Thanks." "I'll, uh, talk to you later, Art." "Joe, you get anything more on Harry Crawford," "I want to know about it," "If I'm still around, you'll be the first to hear." "Are you a stamp collector, Mr. Mannix?" "Well, uh, in a way I am, Mr. Riley." "Indirectly, at least." "I'm afraid I can't tell you anything about the sale." "Nothing at all." "I can understand that." "The Amherst collection is very valuable." "Very." "What I can't understand is why the heirs didn't sell at auction." "It probably would have brought a much higher price." "They wanted a fast settlement." "I think I did quite well for the estate." "They seem more than satisfied." "I should think so." "It's a very satisfactory price, $700,000." "500,000..." "You're not supposed to know that, Mr. Mannix." "Well, it won't go any further, believe me." "A half a million dollars?" "After all, it contained a mint sheet of the 260 Graf Zeppelin 1930." "Uh, how about the upside-down penny" "Pan-American 1903 Exposition." "Well, yes." "Why?" "Well, I have a client who'd just love to take a look at that collection." "I don't care if I ever see the album again, Mr. Mannix." "Honest." "You, uh, mean you're just gonna pay me off and tell me to quit?" "Well, yeah." "Kenny, did your Uncle Jimmy tell you to come here?" "No, but it just isn't worth it." "But I thought you wanted your album back." "A point of honor." "Yeah, well, I guess I changed my mind." "I didn't mean for you to get shot at or beat up." "Well, uh, that's all part of my job." "I guess so." "Only it's not so great when you can see what really happens." "I don't want people to get hurt." "I feel like it's my fault." "Well, it's really not your fault at all, believe me." "You're just saying that." "I can get another stamp book." "It won't make any difference." "Honest." "I really didn't mean that stuff about losing a dog." "Heck, there isn't any comparison between a dog and a stamp book." "Well, I'll tell you what we're gonna do." "Now, why don't you give me the rest of today, okay?" "Okay." "But don't get in any more fights about it, all right?" "I'll do my best." "What do you got on Uncle Jimmy?" "Nothing very exciting in the life of James Cavanaugh, I'm afraid." "Up until now, maybe." "Works in investments, real estate, that sort of thing." "A bachelor, lives at the Moffitt Towers." "Which means the investment business is very profitable." "Moffitt Towers." "Headed there?" "Well, Uncle Jimmy gives out nice birthday presents." "I want to see if he's really a rich uncle." "(doorbell rings)" "(scuffling sounds)" "(two gunshots)" "(tires squealing)" "How many shots did you hear, Joe?" "Two." "A few minutes earlier, and I might have saved his life." "Are you ready to fill me in on this now?" "All I've got are educated guesses." "That's more than I've got." "Well, I think my $1.85 case has got a half-million-dollar punch line." "The stamp album?" "James Cavanaugh may have been the one who handled the narcotics transaction you were talking about." "Think Cavanaugh skimmed the half million?" "I'm guessing." "Crawford wouldn't let him live five minutes." "Unless he wasn't sure." "If Crawford ordered the hit, what made him so sure all of a sudden?" "Well, I think they were close enough to force the truth out of Cavanaugh about the stamp album." "You notice that I'm not writing any of this down, Joe?" "Yeah." "And I can't prove any of it, either," "Unless I can get my hands on that stamp book." "(sobbing):" "He was here." "I don't know what to do." "I couldn't just let him run away." "He wanted you to go with him?" "Yes." "But I don't want to run and hide." "That's no good." "What was he running from?" "Did he say?" "He said he was being followed." "He sounded scared, and I have never heard him sound scared before." "Did he say anything about having the stamp book?" "No." "He just said we could live in the lap of luxury." "Anywhere in the world." "But I don't want to live in the lap of luxury." "Not if you have to die trying." "I don't understand any of it." "What is this all about a stamp album, anyway?" "Well, I think Gemini accidentally found a stamp album worth a half a million dollars." "Somebody's already been killed today because of those stamps." "Are they gonna kill him?" "Did you say you'd meet him?" "Yes." "Then I called you." "I lied to him." "I've never lied to him before." "I'll try and see he lives long enough to forgive you." "Where is he?" "JACKIE:" "He's at the San Leone Winery." "He used to work there." "Now, why don't you wash your face?" "You don't want him to come back and see you've been crying." "(tires squealing)" "GEMINI:" "Jackie?" "Come on, baby." "Is that you, Jackie?" "Who are you?" "Last time I told you, you jumped out a window." "Well, what do you want?" "Jackie couldn't make it." "She sent me instead." "Well, it won't do, man, so beat it." "Hold it, Gemini!" "I'm not leaving until I get what I came for." "Jackie wants you, I want a stamp album." "Look, you came for nothing Mannix, so you can just leave with nothing." "I know you've got the album." "And I know it's got a half a million dollars worth of stamps in it." "A half a million dollars?" "And it's not worth a dime to you, believe me." "It's evidence in a smuggling case and a murder." "And you could wind up dead if those guys chasing you catch up with you." "Now, you'd better turn over your inheritance before it kills you." "(tires squealing)" "(car doors close)" "We got company." "Who is it?" "You know a back way out of here?" "Yeah." "Use it, call the police." "I'll try and keep them busy." "Go on." "Hold it!" "(snaps fingers)" "(loud banging)" "It's over." "Is this it?" "I guess." "Where's the painter?" "MANNIX:" "I mentioned the word "police" to him, and he split." "Well, let's go, Mr. Mannix." "Where to?" "Mr. Crawford wants to see if you can swim." "♪ ♪" "Well, well, Mannix." "I guess you never got the word." "Crime doesn't pay." "There's no need to amuse me." "Is that it?" "Yes." "Well, I guess it is." "Just how did a man like Cavanaugh get mixed up with you in the first place?" "Well, money is a great common denominator, Mannix." "A lot of people get mixed up with us, but unfortunately, Cavanaugh should have been more careful with his arithmetic." "You found out Cavanaugh had hired someone to kill me, you had to find out why." "Well, Cavanaugh wasn't the type." "A thief, perhaps, but, uh, to hire someone to kill, he'd only do that to save his own hide." "Then we talked Cutter out of his contract." "Cavanaugh knew if I found the stamp album," "I'd discover that it was more than just a kid's birthday present." "He skims a half a million, transfers it into stamps, and hands the whole thing over to a kid in an album." "Now, that's clever." "We could have searched Cavanaugh till doomsday, but as you see, cleverness doesn't pay among my employees." "You got your money back." "What do you want with me?" "Oh, come now, Mannix." "A question like that is beneath you." "You don't think I get shot at without telling the police?" "A Lieutenant Malcolm has been reading over my shoulder ever since I started this case." "Well, then, he'll be disappointed you can't tell him how it ended." "After he fishes you out of the ocean." "Take him below." "Tell the captain to get underway." "(gunshot)" "After him!" "Get down to the dock!" "♪ ♪" "♪ ♪" "Shoot him!" "Shoot them both!" "ART:" "Police!" "Hold it!" "I thought I was kidding." "How did you know to come here?" "Gemini." "He called and said they were taking you swimming." "Ah." "And you knew Crawford had a boat." "On occasion, I've been known to handle two and two, Joe." "(sighs)" "(carnival music plays in distance)" "(children shouting)" "Hey, Kenny, how about a hot dog?" "No, thanks." "You know, I'm really sorry about your Uncle Jimmy." "That's okay." "It's not your fault." "Why did he do it, Mr. Mannix?" "Well, Kenny, grownups do strange things sometimes for money." "Mr. Mannix, I was wondering." "About what?" "Well, I'd rather go on thinking about Uncle Jimmy the way he was before." "Is that okay?" "Yeah, Kenny, I'd say that's okay."