by Henry, Kane,
“Yes.”
“Parker.”
“Yes, Lieutenant?”
“I want you to come over to Max Keith’s place.”
“Keith?”
“Right away.”
“Why?”
“Business.”
“Business? Like what?”
“Like murder.”
I kept the receiver close to my ear. I said, “Why you calling me, Lieutenant?”
“Tell you when I see you. You coming, or do I send for you?”
“I’m coming.”
“You know where it is?”
“Yes.”
“How soon, Pete?”
“Ten minutes. It’s near enough.”
“Good boy, fella. Thanks.”
There was a click and the connection was dead. I replaced the receiver and slid out of bed. I brought my clothes to the living room, flicked a glance at the clock. It was eleven-ten. Murder, Parker had said. It hadn’t excited me — blood doesn’t excite a surgeon. Violent death is a constant item in my affairs, part of my stock in trade. Max Keith, Parker had said. But we hadn’t gone into it. It had been, perforce, a laconic conversation: pithy. Pithy. What a word. Was Max Keith the murderer, or the murdered, or had murder occurred in the presence of Max Keith? I’d find out soon enough.
I dressed rapidly and quietly, grabbed a quick eye-opener, snatched a cigarette, and went to the bedroom door. “Okay,” I said. “Okay in there.” There was a rustle of movement, then the usual harsh-soft gargling sounds of unpleased awakening. Distinctly I said, “Go home. Do you hear? Go home now, right now. It’s very important. Go home. At once.”
Max Keith, fair-haired boy of his profession, guiding genius of Keith Associates. Max Keith, press agent. There are other names: publicists, promotional attorneys, publicity counselors, exploitation engineers, press relations advisers — the appellations grow more esoteric in direct ratio to the size of the fees and the importance of the clients. Max Keith did not go in for flights of fancy. Beneath the gold block letters spelling out Keith Associates on the entrance door of his sumptuous offices in Rockefeller Plaza appeared, in smaller gold block letters, the simple legend, Public Relations Counselors. This counseling, mystical as it may be, afforded him a tremendous income, a reputation as a big-spending playboy, an ever-changing retinue of resplendent females and a penthouse apartment on Park Avenue: Six Hundred Park Avenue, to be exact.
Max Keith was about forty-five years of age, tall, slim, chipper, charming, well-tailored, well-mannered and slightly supercilious. He was effusively greeted in the night clubs, he was a member in good standing of the best after-hours bottle clubs in the city and the perkiest of the damozels of the evening perked at their most incandescent in his presence. It was rumored that he had recently been engaged, or was about to be engaged; I didn’t know, and I didn’t care. I’d heard that he’d been married once, a long time ago, and then divorced. His engagement — or his impending engagement — came as somewhat of a shock to those within his social circle and filtered through to me: Max Keith was so much the perfect bachelor. Personally, his charm was lost on me. I had done a little job of work for him, once, and it had thrown us together for about a week. I had seen him silken and mush-mouthed, and I’d seen him brutal and short: his personality was as elastic as an actor’s age. He was a tough man to figure, and it was neither my job nor inclination to figure him; so I let it lie. As a matter of fact, I had only this day turned down a short assignment he had proffered. It had conflicted with a date, and the date had been more important.
Six Hundred Park Avenue was a narrow twelve-story white-faced building near Sixty-fourth Street, ten minutes from where I live, which is Central Park South and Sixth Avenue. I paid the cabbie, pulled open a heavy wrought-iron glass-backed door and pushed the button adjacent to Keith in the beautifully clean marble vestibule. A voice croaked through the intra-edifice telephonic system, “Yeah? Who is it?”
“Chambers. Peter Chambers.”
“Who?”
I shoved my lips close to the round sieve-like brass appurtenance set squash in the middle of the push-button-and-name apparatus attached to the wall. “Chambers,” I yelled. “Peter Chambers.”
“Okay,” came the metallic retort. “Don’t holler, for Chrissake. Okay.” Then there was a sound-off irking click, and then the buzzer on the inner door set up a rasp. I pushed through a second wrought-iron heavy glass-backed door, this with shirred curtains backing the glass-backing, and I went to one of two automatic elevators, flicked a finger at the top button and floated upward soundlessly.
The door to Max Keith’s apartment was open, and a uniformed cop was holding it open. “Chambers?” he said.
“Yeah.”
“Come in.”
I went through, and he remained stationed at the door.
First there was a little foyer, and then there was a large foyer, and then there was an enormous drawing room peopled by six busy males, one languorous female, and one cadaver, very male and very dead. I recognized three of the busy males, all out of Homicide: Detective Lieutenant Louis Parker; Detective Sergeant Bob Fleetwood, a great fingerprint man; and Detective Sergeant Carl Walsh, an ace photographer. I recognized the cadaver: Max Keith, his head pulpy and part of his face thick-covered with drying blood — and I assumed the man-near-the-little-black-bag who was kneeling near him was a doctor from the Medical Examiner’s office. I did not know the languorous female. She was in a far corner of the room, talking to Parker. She was a tall blonde with petulant eyes and a rosebud mouth. She was stacked inside of a gold party dress, and stacked is the word. The dress billowed on bottom and pouted on top. The arms were bare, the back was bare, and most of the chest was bare, up-tilted and milk-white. The petulant eyes were blue, the blonde hair piled-on-head in a complex shining coiffure, and the small rosebud mouth kept being sucked in, the lower lip bitten.
One of the men whom I did not recognize looked up, hat on head, from an inspection of the drawers of a huge carved-glinting desk, said, “Yeah? What’s with you?”
Parker detached himself from the languorous blonde. “It’s all right,” he said. “He’s for me.”
“All yours, Lieutenant.” He went back to his examination of the contents of the drawers.
Parker came to me, said, “Hi,” took my arm, led me to the blonde, said, “You two know each other?”
The blue eyes were cool, puckering as they appraised me. “Never had the pleasure,” she said.
I said, “My loss.”
There seemed to be a smile in back of the eyes. “Were you a friend of … of …” The eyes skimmed to the center of the room where the body lay, then came back to me.
“An employee,” I said. “On occasion. Piece work.”
“Oh.” Now there was no smile. Expression retreated. The blue eyes were blue eyes: opaque, remote, disinterested.
Parker said, “Ruth Rollins. Peter Chambers.”
“How do you do?”
“How do you do?”
Parker said, “Will you excuse us for a few minutes, Miss Rollins?” She moved to a chair, sat down, extended a hand to a cigarette box, placed the cigarette between her lips. Parker lit it for her. “Just a few moments,” he said, touching my elbow, leading me through an archway into a smaller room, a study, the walls book-lined, the furniture of deep-red leather.
“Why me?” I said.
“Two reasons. This is the first.” He dug a hand into his jacket pocket and brought out a torn-out sheet of a desk diary and handed it to me. The date was today. Beneath that, two items were scrawled in black pencil: Peter Chambers — and further down on the sheet, Brad Hartley, 7:30.
“This is from his desk pad,” Parker said. “Here at home.”
I returned the sheet. I said, “What happened?”
“We don’t know yet, practically just got here. Given the place a thorough look-see, and that’s about all.”
“But you know something.”
“We know he�
�s dead. We know his head was bashed in. With a candlestick, a gold candlestick.”
“Gold candlestick. Nothing but the best for Max Keith.”
“Look, who’s asking the questions here, anyway?”
“Let me do it for a while, then we switch.”
“Well, do it fast.”
“Okay. Same question. What happened?”
“We got a call about five after eleven. We came here. And we found him. The boys are giving it the business. That’s it.”
“Where do I come in?”
“Smack square on his desk was his calender-diary with that sheet on top. I figured I’d have you in right at the beginning. Like I said, two reasons. One. This sheet. Two. You once handled some business of his.”
“How do you know?”
“Entry in his books here at home. One week’s work. Fifty dollars a day — three hundred and fifty dollars. Two things about that one. One. What was the work about? Two. You can sort of give us a rundown on the guy. Who, better than you? You were with him for a week. When?”
“Six months ago.”
“Okay. Let’s hear.”
“Easy does it, Lieutenant. You want three hunks. One, the desk item of today. Two, the item about six months ago. Three, a character analysis as only Chambers can deliver. All I want is one hunk: what happened?”
He grinned, nudged knuckles under my chin. “This Ruth Rollins, she’s engaged to him. She was here, with a little group. She left at ten o’clock. As per previous appointment, she returned here at eleven. The door was ajar.”
“How’d she get in … downstairs?”
The grin was wider. “She’s got keys.”
“Like that?”
“So it seems. Anyway, according to her, the door was ajar up here. She came in and found him like that, dead on the floor, the candlestick near. She fainted, came to, called us.”
“Then what?”
“Then nothing. We arrive, en masse. The dame is slightly hysterical. I put the boys to work, and I work on getting her into shape. I also call you. You arrive. I’ve got her simmered down. That’s it. right up to now.”
“You didn’t question her at all?”
“Only the quickies. We practically only just got here, remember?”
“Then maybe you ought to go back to work. My stuff’ll keep. I’m here — for as long as you want me. First things first, Lieutenant.”
“Okay. But just for now — do you know why your name is down on his desk pad for today?”
“Yes.”
“Spill that.”
“He called my office this afternoon. He wanted my services. Just for this evening.”
“Services?”
“Bodyguard.”
“You think it had anything to do with this shindig he had here tonight?”
“I wouldn’t know. He said it wasn’t really important, he’d just like to have me around.”
“For how long?”
“He didn’t say. Maybe he planned on going out later on. I don’t know. I do know that I turned it down.”
“Why?”
“I had a previous engagement.”
“Business?”
“Social.”
The little man with the black bag came in. He said, “Excuse me, Lieutenant. I’m through here.”
Parker said. “How’s it shape?”
“Dead from a crushing blow on the skull. I’d say there’s no doubt that candlestick was the weapon. Fractured skull, probably. Autopsy’ll clear that. Time of death coincides with the lady’s report — sometime within the last hour or so. Autopsy’ll help on that too. Want me to send the wagon up for him?”
“Yes. Do that.” The three of us went back into the big drawing room. The little man smiled at everybody and made his exit. Parker said, “Miss Rollins.”
The lady looked up.
“I think we’d better chat,” Parker said, “in the next room, the study.”
“Wherever you wish, Lieutenant.” Her hand trembled as she tapped out the cigarette. It was the left hand, and the ring finger gave off at least five carats of blue-white solitary diamond.
The man at the desk came to us with a folded legal-type document. He said, “This ought to interest you, Lieutenant.”
“Thanks, Steve.” Parker took the paper and then herded us toward the study. I looked back into the drawing room, watched the activity. Fleetwood was dusting for fingerprints. Walsh was using an assortment of cameras, and flash-bulbs kept exploding. Steve was back at the desk. The other man was stretched on the floor taking measurements. The head of the corpse was covered now with a thin white towel. On a nearby table, also on a white towel, was a long smooth heavy gold candlestick, slightly spotted. There were drinking glasses, some still containing liquor, on various other tables. A liquor cabinet was open, and an ice bucket sat on top of it. I turned away, and joined Parker in the study. Ruth Rollins was seated. Parker was reading the legal document. He handed it to me, and I read it as I listened to him.
He said, “All right, Miss Rollins. Just a little background, please, before we come to the events of this evening.”
“Certainly, Lieutenant.”
The blue-backed paper I was holding was a will. It was dated this year, two months ago. The attorney was Frank Conaty, Five Hundred and Forty-five Fifth Avenue, New York City. I smiled at that. Frank was the lawyer I had casually recommended to Keith six months ago when he’d mentioned that he’d had a falling out with his own big-dome boys. The will was one page, and simple. It mentioned the fact that his divorced wife had no claims on the estate, had waived all rights as part of a financial agreement drawn up during the time the divorce was pending. Then it bequeathed his entire estate, share and share alike, to two people: Ruth Rollins; and his only living relative, a sister, Julia Keith.
Ruth Rollins was saying, “… so, after being adjudged Miss North Carolina, I competed in the Atlantic City national contest, with absolutely no success at all, but it did land me a small movie-starlet contract with Warner’s. This was some time ago, please remember. My contract lasted the usual six months — I had no talent in that direction whatever.”
“In what direction did you have a talent, Miss Rollins?”
I looked at Parker. If he was being sarcastic, it didn’t show. Certainly, she took it as a straight question.
“I had become interested in publicity work. I had met a young man who was with the Publicity Department at MGM, and, somehow, he got me a job there. I did very well there, I believe. I remained on the staff for six years. Then, when the economy wave hit, the department was cut to the bone, and I was one of those released. I came east, with a recommendation.”
“To whom?”
“To Keith Associates. Mr. Keith employed four major assistants, all men. There was a spot open for a woman who was experienced in the field. One of Mr. Keith’s friends on the west coast talked with him on the phone, talked about me, and when I came to New York, I went to Mr. Keith’s office, and after two interviews, I was hired.”
“When?” Parker said.
“About five months ago. We became interested in one another, and three months ago we were engaged.”
Parker took the paper out of my hands, gave it to her, and waited as she looked it over. He said, “Any idea that you were a beneficiary under his will?”
“Yes,” she said. She returned the will. “He told me about it, showed it to me.”
“I see. How old are you, Miss Rollins?”
“Twenty-nine.”
Maybe. Maybe yes. Maybe no. Twenty-nine is safe. You can be twenty-nine for a long time.
“All right,” Parker said. “Let’s get to this evening.”
“There’s nothing much really. I knew he was going to be home, had some sort of business engagement right here at home. I didn’t know with whom. I knew it was set for seven-thirty. At about nine, I decided to drop over, and I did. I found one person here, a Mr. Brad Hartley, a client of Mr. Keith’s.”
“The Brad
Hartley?”
“Yes, sir. Of Hartley and Simmons, Investments. Seat on the stock exchange, all that. One of Mr. Keith’s big clients. There are nine big clients, in all. These he handled himself. We of the staff took care of the rest of the people.”
“So?”
“I had a drink, and I was going to leave, I didn’t want to intrude on what I thought was some sort of important deal. But then others dropped in.”
“Who?”
“First, Ralph Adams.”
“Who is he?”
“One of our staff. The most important one, for that matter. A young man, but oldest in point of service in the firm. There had been some rumors recently of a rift between him and Mr. Keith. Anyway, Ralph dropped in, slightly drunk, slightly sullen. Then came Mr. Keith’s sister.’’
“Julia, isn’t it?”
“That’s right. She came, bearing a present. That gold candlestick. Mr. Keith hardly looked at it. Julia unwrapped it, put it on the mantelpiece over the fireplace. Nobody even touched it.”
“I don’t understand.”
“There was an embarrassing situation going on just then. Ralph had had a couple of quick drinks, and was beginning to take out his grievances on Mr. Keith, right there in front of Brad Hartley. Keith was dodging, parrying, carrying it off as some sort of rib, and I was helping. That’s when Julia arrived. And that’s when the candlestick got placed on the mantel, without anybody paying any real attention. Mr. Keith finally disengaged himself from Ralph, told Julia he had something important to say to her, and they went into this room, the study.”
“And what happened to Ralph?”
“I worked him out of the apartment. I got him downstairs, and into a cab. When I came back here, there was an argument raging between Mr. Keith and Julia.”
“Where?”
“Here in the study. But we could hear every loud remark out in the drawing room. We couldn’t hear when they lowered their tones, but we could hear most distinctly when the namecalling took place, and the threats.”
“Was everybody drunk?”
“I wouldn’t say that. Everybody had had a few drinks. Even Julia had helped herself to some crême de menthe on ice.”
“What was the argument about?”