Chase’s 1944 novel “Just the Way It Is” is set in two twin Midwestern towns, Fairview, the old dying factory town, and Bentonville, the rapidly expanding manufacturing town thirty miles away. The golden age of Fairview had passed. Bentonville was the new one with the brightly painted shops an swift trolley cars. Bentonville had grown up so swiftly, we are told, that its political system was riddled with graft and the police were controlled by the politicians and they in turn were controlled by a gambling syndicate. There were so many poolrooms and gambling houses in Bentonville that even the children gambled. The novel explores power struggles and corruption in the two towns. There are more than two groups at war with each other and each power broker has his own power source. Tod Korris was the face of the gambling syndicate and Vardis Spade was the real racket boss but no one knew who he was or even what he looked like.
Although it might feel at times like an ensemble piece, Harry Duke is the main character, an independent man who has all the connections in the two towns and has a nasty reputation on account of a self-defense killing some years earlier that everyone thinks was his aggressive side. Duke is warned by a woman’s voice on the phone to leave Bellman alone and go south because the woman did not want to see Duke dead. This piqued his interest, however, rather than scared him off.
There are two women featured in the novel, playing sort of the angel and the devil roles. Clare Russell is the crack news reporter for the Clarion, Sam Trench’s paper. Clare wanted to expose the rackets in Bentonville, but was warned to keep her nose out of it. Clare was dating Duke’s best friend, gas station owner Peter Cullen, and, although sparks clearly flew about when she met Duke, she resented Duke’s influence over Cullen, accusing him of leading Cullen into a life of graft and bad stuff. Throughout the novel, the budding romance between Clare and Duke keeps reappearing with neither of them willing to admit to the attraction and both of them sparring because of Clare’s distrust of the gambler.
The other featured woman in the story is Lorelli, who was the quintessential syndicate man’s moll who lived in the back of a gambling house with Schultz, another syndicate figure, and, although starting to run to heaviness, was attractive enough that she could still spin men’s heads. She is portrayed as money-hungry and quick to latch onto the most powerful figure. There is one scene in which Schultz is unhappy with her and nearly strangles her to death with a noose, but is stopped by Duke, who despite his tough guy exterior, always seems to play a knight in shining armor.
The story involves a struggle for power and a mysterious purchase of seemingly worthless shanties on the edge of town. No one seems to know who to trust or who will betray whom. Duke soon finds himself coming across bloody corpses wherever he looks and Lorelli always seeming to be nearby and figuring in it.
In all, it is a quick-moving novel of the type of small-town corruption Chase is always willing to expose.