Tenderloin Panchatantra

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Waraj Sind

Tale of the Fox

Thursday, March 19th, 2020, at 11:50pm

Rain falls from a cold black sky, turning the streets and sidewalks outside into a impressionistic panorama of glittering facades and faceless pedestrians. From within the comfortable confines of the car, the world outside is rendered down to little more than a distant slideshow as the Bentley Mulsanne slides through the narrow streets of the Tenderloin. Warm air and cool jazz circulate through the Mulsanne's cabin lulling Waraj Sind into a comfortable lassitude. The Tenderloin had been his been his home for over seventy years, and in the flashing strobe of oncoming headlights his mind drifted back to those first early nights after his unnoticed arrival like so many other post-world war refuges seeking to escape their pasts and reinvent themselves on this distant shore.

Before his arrival the Tenderloin had been a Mecca for nightlife and sin, before the Great Quake and Fire, the region had been home to some of the city's best brothels. The 1906 Earthquake and back-fires had erased all that and like a phoenix risen from the ashes the Tenderloin was immediately rebuilt, populated by apartment buildings and hotels. But it was Prohibition that made the Tenderloin notorious with boxing gyms, gambling, billiard halls, speakeasies and all the varieties of nightlife. And the hard-boiled detective fiction of Dashiell Hammett and his most famous character Sam Spade from the Maltese Falcon made the area more famous still and ushered in a new kind of fiction.

All of that had been before his arrival in 1945. The city had been crowded cheek by jowl with returning servicemen who sought out the Tenderloin for its many entertainments and found comfort in the vices of prostitution and drug use that had been driven out of the Barbary Coast by the Red Light Abatement Act. After the war, musicians flocked to bars and clubs, burlesque houses and theaters of the Tenderloin and a new wave of jazz was born. Shortly thereafter the region became home to the Musician's Union and San Francisco's most famous jazz club, the Black Hawk where Dave Brubeck, Miles Davis, Thelonious Monk, Gerry Mulligan, and other jazz greats recorded live albums for Fantasy Records in the late 1950s and early 1960s.

It had been into this decadent hive of culture and vice that Waraj Sind had settled himself.