Dead in a Bed
“A new Henry Kane thriller is something of an event. This virile American writer is a master of mystery and mayhem.”
—True Detective
I WENT TO THE BATHROOM. I PARTED THE CURTAINS, after divesting myself of my pajamas, so that I could step into the tub in order to take my shower, but I did not step into the tub because, if I would have, I would have stepped upon the lady who was lying there. The lady did not belong in my tub. Nobody belonged.
She had a good, long-legged, well-rounded figure, all of which I was able to observe because the lady was unencumbered by clothes. She lay nude, supine, inert, smiling wistfully. Both of us were naked but only one of us reacted—me. The lady was beyond reaction …”
DEAD IN BED
HENRY KANE
a division of F+W Media, Inc.
Table of Contents
Cover
Title Page
One
Two
Three
Four
Five
Six
Seven
Eight
Nine
Ten
Eleven
Twelve
Thirteen
Fourteen
Fifteen
Sixteen
Seventeen
Eighteen
Nineteen
Twenty
Twenty-One
Death is the Last Lover
Also Available
Copyright
ONE
AT NINE o’clock in the morning, on Friday June fifteenth, the telephone pealed and if ever a peal was unappealing that pitiless peal at nine A.M. was it. I had set my alarm for eleven which was bad enough—I had crumpled into bed at five—and I was tosspot-jealous of every tossing moment of slumber I had allotted to me. At first I thought it was the alarm but when the pried-open eyes finally focused and I saw the time, I knew it was the phone. The damned contrivance kept ringing like a toxic tocsin with a venomous clapper, but unremitting, and there was only one way to stop it. With a feeble curse at the shade of Alexander Graham Bell, I lurched across the bed and lifted the receiver. “Now what the hell?” I said to the mouthpiece.
An excited voice said: “Mr. Chambers! Mr. Chambers!”
“Yes, Mr. Chambers?” I mumbled. “What can I do for you?”
“No, no, I’m not Mr. Chambers. Are you?”
“Of course I’m Mr. Chambers. I hope I’m Mr. Chambers, Who’s this?”
“Mr. Chambers?” he said.
“Christ, I thought we’d settled that. I’m Chambers, Peter Chambers. Now who’re you and what do you want?”
“Gosh, I thought I’d got a wrong number or something. This is Jack Medford here.”
“Oh no.” My groan was brief but abysmal. “You got the right number, Jack, but you got the right number at the wrong time. Go back to sleep. Good-bye. Call later at a godly hour.”
“Please! Please, Mr. Chambers! It’s important!”
“Nothing is important at the crack of dawn—except sleep.”
“Not the crack of dawn, sir. It’s nine o’clock.”
“To me, today, it’s the crack of dawn, and if to me, today, the crack of dawn is at nine o’clock …” But rancor had recessed. Maybe it was the “sir” that had done it. Maybe it was the urgency in his voice. Maybe it was because he was a nice kid who had had some rough going and with whom I sympathized. Or maybe it was because willy-nilly sleep was shattered and I was awake. I said, “What’s the matter, Jack?”
“Trouble, Mr. Chambers.”
“Oh no not again.”
“Not me, Mr. Chambers.”
“Who?”
“My father.”
“Your father?”
“I’ll be right over, Mr. Chambers. I’ll be there in ten minutes,” And he hung up.
What are you going to do? Youth is impetuous and Jack Medford was an impetuous youth of twenty-three. He was also the son of an old and dear friend, Charles R. Medford, a widower since the boy was five, and Charles and I had bucked some stormy gales on behalf of young Jack during his turbulent surge through adolescence. Jack was out of college now, he was a sculptor, avant-garde and rather good, and, of course, selling nothing; he was supported but not spoiled, accurately and stringently, by his father. Jack had a studio at Fifty-seventh Street and Seventh Avenue and my apartment is on Central Park South near Sixth Avenue and Jack had said ten minutes and it would not be more, perhaps less. I clambered out of bed, lugubrious and hung, wondering what sort of fracas the boy and the father had got into this time.
I had been sleeping raw. I washed my teeth, combed my hair, and put on pajamas. I collected the clothes I had dropped at bedside and hung them away. I went to the living room for hair of the dog and hair of the dog tasted mangy. My tongue felt as though it were in the wrong mouth and there were cobwebs on my palate. It had been a wet night.
I had crawled the pubs with Alfred Surf who published books. I had been Alfred’s guest because Alfred was bent upon soliciting my talents, such as they are, but before the night was over he was no longer bent, he was fractured, as was I. Alfred was selling me on the pros of the con. He wanted me to collaborate with one Barry Howard on a book to be titled Confessions Of A Con Man. He did not tell me too much. He sort of whet my appetite as he wet my whistle, wetting his own in the process, and when we had rolled into The Brasserie at four A.M. for scrambled eggs we were both as looped as a sailor’s knot. We had an appointment for noon today at my office in order to discuss the project without benefit of alcoholic stimulus.
Now I had another shot of booze to straighten me away, shivered it down, and dragged feet to the kitchen for the preparation of coffee. I had just poured it steaming black when the buzzer sounded. Cup clattering on saucer I opened the door for Jack Medford. “Come in, come in,” I murmured sadly and he did and let the door slam which promoted further clattering of cup on saucer.
He was wearing jeans and a sweat shirt and still he looked like a romantic pirate out of folklore. He was tall and slender and dark with features as chiseled as one of his statues. He had black hair and black eyes, a restless muscular grace, the ease and intensity of a swashbuckler, and a jutting arrogant stubborn chin. He had a rolled-up newspaper wedged under one arm but because he was Jack Medford it appeared as a sword in the sheath of armpit.
“All right, destroyer of sleep,” I said, “so you had another fight with you father about more money and now you come with your troubles to Uncle Peter.”
“No. I don’t need money. I’ve got all the money I need.” The voice destroyed the illusion of the pirate. The voice was young and sweet and soft and kind: the voice gave off the flickers of insecurity which I, of all people. knew existed within him.
“All the money you need,” I said. “How so? Have you got yourself a patron?”
“Yes I have.”
“Somebody filthy rich? Somebody like Penelope Arlington?”
“Somebody exactly like Penelope Arlington.”
“And who could be exactly like Penelope Arlington?”
“Penelope Arlington.”
It figured. Penelope Arlington was easily old enough to be his mother and Penelope Arlington knew him since he was eight years old but he was grown now, young and virile and handsome, and Penelope Arlington had a trenchant penchant for men who were young and virile and handsome, and she could afford their services, or, better, to be serviced.
“Uncle Peter, at this crack of dawn,” I said, “would be bored to distraction by tales of love no matter how aberrated or, for that matter, tales of tail no matter how aberrated. I’ve got my own love-life to live and I’m living it. Congratulations on the patron and I trust you’re plumping to earn your keep, or should the word be pumping? Now why in hell did you wake me
up?”
He drew his sword but did not point it. He unrolled it, flattened it, and extended it toward me. I gave him the coffee and took the newspaper. It was a morning tabloid opened to page three. He drank my coffee while I read his paper. My eyes were drawn to the
lead story because it had a picture of Charles R. Medford. The lead story was topped by the headline: BANKER EMBEZZLES $100,000. The opening paragraph stated: “Charles R. Medford, 48, Head of the Loan Department of the New York National Bank, 500 Fifth Avenue, went out to lunch at 12 o’clock noon yesterday carrying an attache case which, it is alleged, contained $100,000 in cash, and vanished. The loss was not ascertained until 3 o’clock yesterday at which time police were called in. The investigation was kept under wraps and the story did not break until 9 o’clock yesterday evening when Donald P. K. Sloan, President of New York National, called in reporters and made the announcement. Medford has disappeared without trace.” The rest of the story was fill, but I read every word of it, learning nothing more pertinent than “police are investigating.” When I was finished, Jack Medford was finished with my coffee.
“Crazy?” he said as he laid away cup and saucer.
“But crazy,” I said. “Your father’s no crook and we both know it.”
“That’s why I’m here,” he said.
“Do you know anything about this?’
“Just what you read in the paper.”
“Did the cops get to you?”
“Sure, but you know how I feel about cops.”
“I don’t give a damn how you feel about cops. They talked to you?”
“Yes.”
“When?”
“Yesterday.”
“When yesterday?”
“About eight o’clock.”
“They waited until eight o’clock?”
“I didn’t get back to the studio until eight o’clock. During the afternoon I was at the museum. At five o’clock I had a date with a gal for cocktails. I got back at eight and there was a detective waiting for me. He took me downtown and they questioned me till I was blue in the face but there wasn’t a thing I could tell them.”
“Did they check you out on that gal for cocktails?”
“What do you think? They even brought her in and gave her the old third degree. A real nice kid too. A poet—poetess I suppose she should be called. Her father’s one of the most famous surgeons in this town.”
“She corroborated?”
“Of course she corroborated. We were at the Pierre for cocktails and chatter. After a while, they let her go. After a while, they let me go too.”
“What time was that?”
“Eleven o’clock. That’s when I called you, right after I got out of that damned station house. I kept calling you till about four. Then I figured I’d pass it until this morning.”
“Yeah,” I said. “Yeah.” I went to the kitchen, poured more coffee, and came back to him. I found a cigarette, lit up, sipped and smoked. “Do you have any ideas on this?” I said.
“Nothing, except something must be way out cockeyed.”
“Your father’s no crook.”
“We’re unanimous on that, Mr. Chambers.”
I smoked. I sipped. I said, “When did you see him last?”
“Wednesday. Wednesday evening. We had a date for dinner. He came over to the studio. We went over to Whytes for a fish dinner. Then we came back to the studio and sat around talking.”
“Any special subject?”
He sat down. He crossed his long legs. “Penelope Arlington,” he said. “He had learned about it and he disapproved.”
“Why?”
He sighed. His face was very young, and very worried. “According to him, he disapproved of the fact that she was my patron, that she was giving me money.”
“And according to you?”
“I think it was much more complex than that. You know as well as I that years ago he had had an affair with Penelope. Sure now, they’re friends, good friends, and all the rest of that crap, but it’s my opinion that he was disturbed by the fact that the son was following the father, you know what I mean.”
“Yes I think I do. And did you two have one of your famous battles?”
“No. It was all man-to-man mature-type talk.” He stirred suddenly, slapped his knees, stood up, paced. “Mr. Chambers, I think you know how I feel about my father. We might fight like hell but I love the old son of a bitch, I’d die for him. This thing has got me worried, it’s got me nuts, I wasn’t able to sleep a wink all night. My father couldn’t steal.”
“I agree. Absolutely.”
“This thing is some kind of weird mistake or else—it’s a dame. You know my dad. He’s always been a hot guy for the chicks. You know that as well as I do, maybe better.”
“Let’s say … as well as you do. Has there been a new one recently?”
“Yes.”
“What name?”
“How the hell would I know? My father doesn’t confide in me.”
“But it seems that you do know.”
“Penelope told me. He met her at a party at Penelope’s.”
“When?”
“A couple-three months ago or so.”
“Did you mention any of this to the cops?”
“You know my opinion of cops. The answer to your question is no.”
“Did they ask?”
“Whatever they asked, I answered. I volunteered nothing. They asked me if my father had ever remarried. I said no. They asked me if I knew the names of any of his girl friends and I gave them the names of any girl friends I knew. They did not ask me if I did not know the names of any of his girl friends—and so there was no mention of this latest flame.”
“Well, that shouldn’t be too hard for us to find out, should it?” I started for the phone but he stopped me.
“No good,” he said. “Penelope’s out of town, spending a week in the country. She’s due back this afternoon. As a matter of fact. I’ve a date to call on her this afternoon at five-thirty.”
“Good enough,” I said. “Then at five-thirty this afternoon you’ll find out the name of the dame. How come you never asked her before?”
“It was none of my business. Penelope mentioned it once or twice and that was that. She may not even know the gal’s name. You know how it is with Penelope’s parties, all sorts of people, a lot of them she hardly knows.”
“For whatever it’s worth, you’ll find out at five-thirty.”
“You bet I will.”
“Fine. Now get the hell out of here so that I can begin taking up the slack.”
“Like how?”
“Like having my breakfast and getting dressed and going down to the bank and finding out what this is all about.”
He grabbed one hand of mine in both of his and squeezed. “Thank you, Mr. Chambers.”
“Cut it out.” I pulled free. “What’s to thank me? Your father’s been a friend of mine since you were a wild schoolboy trying to get your stripes as a juvenile delinquent.”
“That’s all past now.”
“I’m sure it is. Now get out of here, kid. Where’ll you be?”
“At my studio until I hear from you.”
“You’ll hear. Now clear.”
“Thank you again, Mr. Chambers.”
“Good-bye, boy.”
I saw him out and went to the kitchen and ate my breakfast. Hangover had been nipped by news from a tabloid. The dust was out of my brain and slumber was out of my bones. I had been a good boy all week, with plenty of sleep, and five hours is enough for any man with an emergency on his mind. I shook my head over the last cup of coffee as I reread the item on page three. It was wild, it was impossible, it was too far-out. There had to be some logical explanation, or illogical explanation, but whatever the explanation it would have to exonerate Charles R. Medford because Charles R. Medford, simply, was not a thief. The police might not buy that but I bought it because I was a friend and if a friend does not know who the hell does? Ch
arles R. Medford was not a crook but according to page three he was sure in a jam. Well, hell, I wasn’t a private richard for nothing and if I couldn’t unjam a friend then it was time I turned in my license and became a politician or something similarly important such as chicken-flicker. First step was to get to the source and the source was the bank but there were a couple of small but necessary steps prior to that such as a shower and a shave. I went to the bathroom.
I live in an old and stately apartment house with large rooms and high ceilings and no stall showers, built long before I was born. Since I was born more modern apartment house have been erected with stall showers but frequently the only way to differentiate between the rooms for living and the stalls for shower is to look up to the ceiling for the shower-head. My bathroom contains a large tub and the shower is part of the bathtub and there are shower-curtains hung on a bar by curtain-rings and the shower-curtains are closed for decor when the shower is not in use and closed when the shower is in use in order that water does not splash the tiles of the floor. I parted the curtains, after divesting myself of my pajamas, so that I could step into the tub in order to take my shower, but I did not step into the tub because, if I would have, I would have stepped upon the lady who was lying there. The lady did not belong in my tub. Nobody belonged.
She had a good, long-legged, well-rounded figure, all of which I was able to observe because the lady was unencumbered by clothes. She lay nude, supine, inert, smiling wistfully. Both of us were naked but only one of us reacted—me. The lady was beyond reaction. I kneeled and touched her. She was cold and rigid. I did no further examination. I stood up, closed the shower-curtains, and trotted to the living room where I put through a call for Detective-lieutenant Parker of Homicide.
TWO
I WAS ACQUAINTED with the lady who lay in my bathtub but did not belong. Her name was Angelina Pisk. She was a waitress now living in unwedlock with a bartender who had left but not divorced his wife. About five years ago she had been the prosecution’s star witness in a proceeding entitled The State of New York versus Hockin Chynik. I had been responsible for the production of the prosecution’s star witness thereby incurring the enmity of the loutish Mr. Chynik which enmity of course is the equivalent of a badge of merit. My collision with Chynik had been engineered by an insurance company.