So Young, So Wicked (1957) is a hit-man novel, but it is one where Craig deftly maneuvers the reader into identifying with and trusting and believing the mob hit-man who has killed numerous targets for his mob bosses and agrees to murder a fifteen-year-old drum majorette for reasons that are unknown and make it look like an accident. Garrity tells the story from his perspective and throughout much of the novel you think about him as this poor chap forced to kill a defenseless fifteen-year-old -Leda- for no good reason. And, despite some initial qualms, he goes about his business professionally, setting up an identity in the town, dating the girl’s aunt, and plotting to drown the poor girl when she is swimming with her boyfriend in the local creek, plotting to run her off the road, and thinking about all manner of nasty ends to put her to. Indeed, even though he is never clued-in to the why of murdering the teenage girl, Garrity never thinks once about running off with her to save her of warning her or of fleeing to South America. What is so brilliant about this novel is that Craig sort of tricks the reader from beginning to end into thinking Garrity is one of the good guys even though, if you look at who he is and what he does, it turns out Garrity is one of the bad guys. He just seems more convincing in arguing his innocent motives than most would.
In fact, the interesting thing we are told right at the start is that the whole reason that the mob wants Garrity involved is that he looks like a “real handsome, clean-cut young guy that looks like he ought to be a salesman or something. You’re the only one could get away with it.” Garrity tells us that he is by trade a pianist and came up one night to find his young wife and Johnny Callan doing the dirty deed. When the men did battle, she turned out to be wicked, standing over them “all pink and white and soft in her nakedness, with a look on her face that he had never seen on a woman’s face before.” And, she kicked Garrity over and over in the temple and the groin when he fell, laughing, and dressing as he lay there unable to get up. See how cleverly Craig has us feeling for Garrity and seeing him as the victim who was wronged.
Garrity spotted Callan eight months later and “slowly and methodically, with no regard for his hands (pianist hands), to beat him to death.” That’s his first murder and we as the reader still feel for Garrity and see him as the good guy who was wronged. In any event, that killing led to him being arrested and the mob making him a deal that would let him go free. But, of course, once bought, you stay bought, and that was not the last murder the mob would have him do. Garrity becomes a professional killer and, when he is given the assignment, of knocking a fifteen-year-old off, he thinks about the odds of getting away with it, not whether it is wrong or not -although, of course, he tells us that he has no choice. The mob will take him out if he does not perform.
The tricky part of the assignment is that Garrensville is small-town U.S.A. and Leda is the town sweetheart and, even at her age, turns every man’s head when she walks down the street. And Garrity does not know how he will get away with it, but he sets up making time with the girl’s aunt, who is only 26, and a knockout herself. Ultimately, Garrity is a creep who seems to be romancing both of them, inviting them both out to rendevous with him in the woods by the creek. But again, the writing masterfully fools us, making us think that Garrity is a good guy, forced to do bad things, even as he lays in wait, thinking about drowning the teenage girl.
Of course, the title is So Young. So Wicked, and there is more to Leda than meets the eye. Garrity may in fact have met his match. But, again, even when he is caught red-handed, the story is told so skillfully from his point of view that you still as a reader identify with him and think of him as not such a bad guy, just a dude caught in a bad situation.