- Home
- Kane, Henry
Kisses of Death
Kisses of Death Read online
Kisses of Death
HENRY KANE
a division of F+W Media, Inc.
Table of Contents
Cover
Title Page
The Case of the Wayward Wife
One
Two
Three
Four
Five
Six
Seven
Eight
Nine
Ten
Eleven
Twelve
Thirteen
Fourteen
Fifteen
Sixteen
Seventeen
Eighteen
Nineteen
Twenty
Twenty-One
Twenty-Two
Twenty-Three
Twenty-Four
Twenty-Five
Twenty-Six
Twenty-Seven
Twenty-Eight
Twenty-Nine
Thirty
Hang By Your Neck
Also Available
Copyright
THE CASE OF THE WAYWARD WIFE
“If Hollywood gives an Oscar for pornography, this portfolio wins it. Sixty-six highly artistic color poses of starlet Valerie Kiss … co-starring a young Apollo blissfully unaware of the hidden camera.”
“Entertaining … except that Valerie Kiss is suddenly my client, and one person is already dead over this lurid little portfolio.”
“A nice way to start a caper …”
Here is the famous Peter Chambers in a racy triple case: an irresistible client, an unmatchable fingerprint, and an impossible killing.
ONE
I WAS seated in my briefs in the kitchen having breakfast. It was Saturday, June 17, nine-thirty of a hot day in spring. Friday night’s newspaper was propped against the sugar bowl and I was sipping coffee and reading about murder, rape, divorce, delinquency, and political missile rattling, when the phone rang. I relinquished the literature, went to the living room, picked up the phone, said, “Hello?”
“Mr. Chambers?” It was a woman.
“Yes,” I said.
“Peter Chambers?”
“Yes,” I said.
“May I see you, Mr. Chambers? On business?”
“Yes, of course. When would you like?”
“Right away, if you please.”
“Who is this?”
“Mrs. Kiss.”
“I beg your pardon?”
“Mrs. Valerie Kiss.”
“Do I know you, Mrs. Kiss?”
“No.”
Kiss. It is a name. It is not somebody making a joke at nine-thirty in the morning during breakfast. Once before, several years ago, I had had a client by the name of Kiss—Justine Kiss. I had then checked the Kisses in the Manhattan telephone book. There had been eighteen Kisses listed. Kiss is a name.
“Are you a relative of Justine Kiss?” I said.
“No. Why?” She sounded annoyed.
“Just that Kiss is an unusual name. I thought perhaps Justine had recommended—”
“Mr. Felix Davenport recommended you to me.”
Felix Davenport was an old friend, a well known actor on the Broadway stage, but for the past three years Felix had been living on the West Coast wasting his talent but earning a huge income as the straight man to a comic in a television series.
“Oh,” I said, “you’re from Hollywood?”
“I’m from New York.”
“But Felix—”
“Look, please, Mr. Chambers, it’s very important that I see you as quickly as possible. May I come over?”
“Sure. Do you know the address?”
“Yes.”
“How soon will you be here?”
“Fifteen minutes all right?”
“Fine,” I said.
“Thank you,” she said and hung up.
I was showered and shaved. I cleaned up the kitchen by putting the dishes into the sink. That took two minutes. I dressed quickly but carefully as is fitting when the client is a lady and the lady is a stranger. That took ten minutes. With three minutes to spare, I was about to light a cigarette, when the bell rang. My lady was either prompt by habit or the matter was as urgent as she had intimated.
The matter was as urgent as she had intimated.
TWO
SHE WAS tall and willowy with beautiful ankles. She was long legged and tiny waisted and high hipped and provocatively chested in an expensive green summer dress without sleeves. She had a small nose and enormous eyes, the nose tilted and the eyes brown. She had poise, she had posture, she had presence, she had luminous auburn hair expensively coiffured. She carried a black patent-leather handbag and the graceful ankles, nylon sheathed, rose up out of spike-heeled black patent-leather pumps. Her skin was fair, white, smooth, and carefully tended, and her hands were long-fingered and delicate. She was distressed; naturally she was distressed—she had insisted upon visiting a private detective early on a Saturday morning—but she did not stress her distress; she was contained, reasonably calm, somehow remote. She had quality. It was written all over her. She had class, Class A. She smiled and said, “Mr. Chambers?” and she extended her hand and I took it and shook it. It was cool and dry with a firm but not flirtatious clasp. She shook my hand and then let go. She said, “I know I am an intrusion so early on a Saturday morning but you must forgive me.”
“That’s the kind of business I’m in,” I said.
“Thank you for being so sweet,” she said. Her voice was deep, slow, trained, cultured, somehow familiar. All of her was somehow familiar but I could not place it.
She sat down in a soft-pillowed easy chair, sank in. She crossed her legs and the slender ankles plumped up to the kind of rounded calves that caused one to become rampantly curious about the thighs, so I looked away.
“Do I know you?” I said.
“Do you?” she said.
“I feel as though I do but I can’t put my finger on it.”
She looked upon her wrist watch which, like all the rest of her, was obviously expensive, and she said, “We have an appointment at eleven o’clock.”
“We?” I asked.
“At 527 Madison Avenue. At eleven o’clock. It’ll take us about ten minutes to get there from here, yes?”
“Yes.”
“Before that, I have about ten minutes of explanatory matter for you. But before that, if you so desire, you may talk about whatever you want, ask any questions you wish.”
“Do I know you?” I said again.
“My name is Valerie, Valerie Kiss, Mrs. Jonathan Kiss. Does any of that mean anything to you?”
“Not a thing. But I’d swear I—”
“My professional name was Valerie Dayton. Any bells?”
Bells, not gongs, little bells, began to tinkle. Valerie Dayton. Sure. Of course. Seven, eight years ago, it had been a stage name, a motion picture name, a television name. I had seen her in a couple of lead roles on Broadway, I had seen her in a couple of secondary roles in movies, and I had seen her in countless supporting roles in countless television epics: westerns, easterns, southerns, violence-shows, and emasculated social-significance dramas. “Sure,” I said. “Valerie Dayton. Sure.”
“I married,” she said, “and I married well. Second marriage, as a matter of fact. First marriage still had to do with the career, but I got wise, it was not for me. I didn’t have—” She shrugged and scraped out her cigarette. “—the guts, the drive, the perseverence. I had the talent and the training but I just couldn’t take the grind. I got married and quit show business.”
“When?”
“Three years ago. I married a rich-type fella, a banker-fella, and I retired, sour grapes sort of, from show biz.”
“Which explains the recommendation from Fel
ix Davenport.”
“A long time ago Felix told me, ‘If you’re ever in real trouble, see Peter Chambers. He’s in the phone book.’ “
“Are you in trouble, Mrs. Kiss?”
“I believe so.”
“You believe so?”
“I’m not sure.”
“What kind of trouble do you believe you’re in?”
“Blackmail trouble.”
That’s trouble, even if you only believe you’re in that kind of trouble. I sighed and extinguished my cigarette. It was not going to be easy for the lady. Blackmail trouble requires confession and confession is difficult when you must look upon the eyes of your confessor and is doubly difficult when the eyes of the confessor are straining not to look upon the curves of your calves. I glanced at my watch. There was time. I stood up and said, “Would you like a cup of coffee, Mrs. Kiss?”
“Oh yes, very much, thank you.”
“Be with you in a minute,” I said and went to the kitchen.
THREE
THERE IS a conundrum for the gods always asked by every host—why is it that stale coffee is invariably praised by an unexpected guest? I heated up the old coffee, poured it into my best china, and brought it to the living room, a cup for her, a cup for me. I sipped once, enthusiastically if emetically, and put the cup away on the mantel. She sipped and continued to sip and drained the cup and said, when she handed it back to me, “Delicious, absolutely delicious. Perhaps some day in different circumstances I shall inquire into your secret of making coffee.”
“Blackmail,” I said.
“Pardon?” she said.
“Eleven o’clock at 527 Madison.”
“Yes,” she said and suddenly coffee was no longer of the essence. For a moment her lower teeth caressed her upper lip and then she stood up and amenities vanished and small talk was dead. She paced, clasping and unclasping her hands. “I’m not sure,” she said. “Actually, I’m not sure.”
“Mrs. Kiss,” I said, “are you being blackmailed?”
“No.”
“Then what—”
“I believe I’m about to be blackmailed.”
“Oh.”
“But even as to that, I’m not certain.”
“Oh.”
“But I don’t believe there can be any other explanation.”
“For what?”
She sat down again. “This morning, Mr. Chambers, at a quarter after nine, I received a phone call, a most peculiar phone call.”
“At your apartment?”
“Yes.”
“Where do you live?”
“Brentwood Apartments. Seventy-fifth and Central Park West. Twenty-fourth floor, penthouse apartment. The call was from a woman. She said she had some interesting pictures to show me. She asked me to be at her office, 527 Madison Avenue, at eleven o’clock. I asked her what sort of pictures. She said it was something she didn’t care to talk about over the phone. I told her I’d be at her office at eleven.”
“I see,” I said. “Pictures. What sort of pictures, Mrs. Kiss?”
“I don’t know.”
“But you must have some idea.”
“I have no idea.”
“But you are assuming that this is some kind of blackmail deal. You’ve stated that you believe that you’re about to be blackmailed. That’s correct, isn’t it?”
“Yes, that’s why I’m here.”
“Then you must have some idea about those pictures.”
“None. No idea.”
It didn’t make sense. It never does when the client is lying. Clients have many reasons for withholding the truth. Embarrassment is the chief reason when the subject is blackmail. The very basis of blackmail is material which one wishes to keep undisclosed. Confession is never easy. I switched the tack. I said, “Did you discuss this with your husband?”
“My husband wasn’t at home.”
“At nine-fifteen on a Saturday morning?”
“He went out, at about nine o’clock, on some sort of business.”
“I see. So you got this phone call. Then what did you do?”
“I looked you up in the phone book and I called you here.”
“For what purpose?”
“I wanted somebody on my side. Somebody with experience. Somebody who could protect me.”
Softly I said, “You felt … you needed protection?”
“Wouldn’t you?”
“Not unless I was aware that pictures existed that might be incriminating.”
The brown eyes were stubborn. “I am not aware of any such pictures.”
“Now look, Mrs. Kiss.” I sat down near her. “A private detective is in a profession which is something akin to a doctor, a lawyer, a psychiatrist, sometimes even a priest. There is a need, perforce, for intimate disclosures, confidential communications. That is, if you trust the person to whom you come—”
“Felix said you were the best. He mentioned you frequently, as the best, honest, honorable—”
I did not take a bow. I shrugged. “Then you’re going to have to trust me, Mrs. Kiss. My purpose is not to pry. I have no personal interest. But if I’m to work with you on this, if you want—as you have put it—my protection, then you must acquaint me with the facts. I must have something concrete to know what in hell I’m working on. You can even tell me to mind my own damned business, you can even point-blank refuse to tell me, but wriggling around, being evasive, fabricating, lying—that’s out. Please, do you understand me?”
“Yes,” she said.
“All right, then, please, this question. Have you ever posed for photographs that you wish you had not posed for?”
“No. Never.”
“How old are you?”
“Thirty-two.”
She didn’t look it but what woman does? Thirty-two is a happy age. A woman of thirty-two is wise, experienced, fulfilled, sophisticated, at the bloom of her beauty but with sufficient guile and knowledge to keep that beauty never looking more than twenty-five.
“How long have you been an actress?” I said.
“Off and on, since I was graduated from college, since I was twenty-two. Modeling and acting. At the beginning I did a good deal of modeling and a little acting. Later, it was a good deal of acting and a little modeling.”
“Now going all the way back, right to the beginning, did you ever pose for the kind of pictures—”
“No.”
“The kind of pictures that somebody could unearth and, now that you’re married, use against you for the purpose of blackmail?”
“No! Absolutely no!”
I leaned back in my chair and surrendered to confound-ment. What in hell was she trying to pull and why? Sure there would be a fee, probably a handsome fee, but I was beginning to feel that I was in the middle of something, that I was about to be used but not for the purpose expressed. I don’t like to be used for purposes unexpressed no matter how handsome or ugly the fee. I lit a cigarette, dragged in smoke, and took one more shot out of her. I was determined. Fee or no fee, handsome or ugly, unless I received a satisfactory reply, I’d throw her the hell out.
I smiled and I said politely, “Mrs. Kiss, let’s forget the past and keep it in the present. You say you’ve been married for three years?”
“Yes.” And now the big brown eyes were alive and interested.
“In those three years, Mrs. Kiss, were you ever in circumstances wherein a picture or pictures could have been snapped—all unknowing to you—which might prove, er, embarrassing?”
The brown eyes had long lashes and now the long lashes fluttered and the brown eyes avoided my eyes. A faint glint of perspiration shone on her forehead but of course it was a hot morning. She clasped her hands in her lap, seemingly gently, but the blood was out of the fingertips.
I pushed it, without push. Quietly. “What say, Mrs. Kiss?”
“If you please … I … I’d prefer not to answer that.”
Better. Much better. Now it was in the groove and I was in the act and
I knew why I was being used and I was willing to accept a fee. It was the age-old deal: hanky panky. A married lady had indulged herself in hanky panky. Hanky panky requires a partner. The partner had arranged for pictures and now he was maneuvering to make the hanky panky pay off. Sure she needed protection. Smart gal. If he was selling and she was buying, it was smart to bring an expert to consummate the deal, to pull in all the loose ends, to make it one deal, finished and final. Caveat emptor! Let the buyer beware! Smart gal, and smart to prefer not to answer. Why bleat the whole deal to the private richard before you know how bad the evidence is? A couple of night club photos drinking at The Stork could be explained away, without pay, and without incrimination. Let us wait and see before we bleat. Hanky had called to make the panky pay off, but a woman had called!
“You said,” I said, “it was a woman who called. Correct?”
“Yes. A private detective.”
Private detective. Smart, all around. It wasn’t a couple of drinking photos, hanky and panky slobbering drunk, grinning into a camera at The Stork. It was a real deal with all the trimmings.
“Who was the woman who called?”
“Marla Trent.”
“Stinks,” I said. “You’re all wet on the blackmail.”
“I … I don’t understand.”
“I know Marla Trent. You remember the recommendation Felix Davenport gave me? That recommendation goes double in spades for Marla Trent—from me. Marla Trent wouldn’t mix in blackmail, not on your life, or her life, or mine.”
“Please, Mr. Chambers, let’s go and find out.”
“You bet,” I said. “I’m quite anxious now because I’m curious. Is there anything else you’d like to tell me?”
“There’s nothing.”
My client was still under wraps, hoping against hope, but the glint of sweat on her forehead had now accumulated to beads. She stood up, opened her bag, and patted powder on her face. It was a hot morning.
FOUR
MARLA TRENT was Marla Trent Enterprises, 527 Madison Avenue, New York City. Marla Trent was a lady eye, the very tip of the top of the heap—the famous Private Eyeful. Marla Trent had no need to put her breast a foot forward to win, hands down and buttocks up, the accolade of Most Beautiful Private Detective In The World. Marla Trent was rich and successful, as were her clients. Marla Trent would as lief traffic with blackmail as a leaf would lief traffic with a whirlwind. Marla Trent was acute, astute, a beaut, and, of all things, a Ph.D., and with her figure yet. Marla Trent, in the preen of her teens, had once been runner-up to Miss America in Atlantic City, runner-up only because the dazed judges had not yet been ready to accept Juno as representative of the All-American Girl: Marla Trent stood five-six in stockingless feet and juttingly measured a justly proud 38-23-38 which is about as much woman as any man can dream to handle.