Read [Mike Hammer 03] - Vengeance Is Mine Online

Authors: Mickey Spillane

Tags: #Mystery & Detective, #Hard-Boiled, #Fiction, #General

[Mike Hammer 03] - Vengeance Is Mine

Table of Contents
 
A New Chick
“Just in case you really want to know, she’s the best looking thing I ever saw. I get steamed up watching her from fifty feet away. Whatever a dame’s supposed to have on the ball, she’s got it. My tongue feels an inch thick when I talk to her and if she asked me to jump I’d say, ‘How high?’
 
“...
But here’s something you can tuck away if it means anything to you. I don’t like her and I don’t know why I don’t.”
 
 
Mike Hammer finds plenty of reason’s for not liking the luscious blonde model he’s just met. But she shows him excellent reasons for stringing along with her while he tracks down a gun-crazy killer.
 
Here’s Mike Hammer’s most incredible adventure—murder in Manhattan’s dim-lit rooms, racing action among overwilling photographer’s models, as Mike stalks the vengeance trail. Another blood curdler by Mickey Spillane.
A NEW MIKE HAMMER NOVEL
THE KILLING MAN
 
MICKEY SPILLANE
 
 
MIKE HAMMER, FIRST OF THE LADY-LOVING PRIVATE EYES, IS BACK—in the fastest-paced, sexiest, most brilliantly plotted adventure the great sleuth has ever encountered. Packed with drug ring run-ins, CIA runarounds, smashingly beautiful dames, and a splashily spectacular last-page showdown, it’s action as only Mickey Spillane can deliver it!
COPYRIGHT, 1950, BY E. P. DUTTON, A DIVISION OF PENGUIN BOOKS USA INC. COPYRIGHT © RENEWED, 1978, BY MICKEY SPILLANE
 
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form without permission in writing from the publisher, except by a reviewer who wishes to quote brief passages in connection with a review written for inclusion in magazine or newspaper or radio broadcast. For information address E. P. Dutton, a division of Penguin Books USA Inc., 2 Park Avenue, New York, New York 10016.
 
SIGNET TRADEMARK REG. U.S. PAT. OFF. AND FOREIGN COUNTRIES REGISTERED TRADEMARK—MARCA REGISTRADA HECHO EN DRESDEN, TN. U.S.A.
 
SIGNET, SIGNET CLASSIC, MENTOR, ONYX, PLUME, MERIDIAN and NAL BOOKS are published by New American Library, a division of Penguin Books USA Inc., 1633 Broadway, New York, New York 10019
 
 
eISBN : 978-1-101-17446-3

http://us.penguingroup.com

To
JOE
and
GEORGE
WHO ARE ALWAYS READY FOR
A NEW ADVENTURE
And to
WARD. ......
WHO USED TO BE
All persons and events portrayed in this book are fictitious. Any resemblance to persons living or dead, or actual events, is purely coincidental.
—M. S.
Chapter 1
THE GUY WAS DEAD AS HELL. He lay on the floor in his pajamas with his brains scattered all over the rug and my gun was in his hand. I kept rubbing my face to wipe out the fuzz that clouded my mind but the cops wouldn’t let me. One would pull my hand away and shout a question at me that made my head ache even worse and another would slap me with a wet rag until I felt like I had been split wide open.
I said, “Goddamn it, stop!”
Then one of them laughed and shoved me back on the bed.
I couldn’t think. I couldn’t remember. I was wound up like a spring and ready to bust. All I could see was the dead guy in the middle of the room and my gun. My gun! Somebody grabbed at my arm and hauled me upright and the questions started again. That was as much as I could take. I gave a hell of a kick and a fat face in a fedora pulled back out of focus and started to groan, all doubled up. Maybe I laughed, I don’t know. Something made a coarse, cackling sound.
Somebody said, “I’ll fix the bastard for that!” but before he could the door opened and the feet coming in stopped all the chatter except the groan and I knew Pat was there.
My mouth opened and my voice said, “Good old Pat, always to the rescue.”
He didn’t sound friendly. “Of all the damn fool times to be drunk. Did anyone touch this man!” Nobody answered. The fat face in the fedora was slumped in a chair and groaned again.
“He kicked me. The son of a bitch kicked me ... right here.”
Another voice said, “That’s right, Captain. Marshall was questioning him and he kicked him.”
Pat grunted an answer and bent over me. “All right, Mike, get up. Come on, get up.” His hand wrapped around my wrist and levered me into a right angle on the edge of the bed.
“Cripes, I feel lousy,” I said.
“I’m afraid you’re going to feel a lot worse.” He took the wet rag and handed it to me. “Wipe your face off. You look like hell.”
I held the cloth in my hands and dropped my face into it. Some of the clouds broke up and disappeared. When the shaking stopped I was propped up and half pushed into the bathroom. The shower was a cold lash that bit into my skin, but it woke me up to the fact that I was a human being and not a soul floating in space. I took all I could stand and turned off the faucet myself, then stepped out. By that time Pat had a container of steaming coffee in my hand and practically poured it down my throat. I tried to grin at him over the top of it, only there was no humor in the grin and there was less in Pat’s tone.
His words came out of a disgusted snarl. “Cut the funny stuff, Mike. This time you’re in a jam and a good one. What the devil has gotten into you? Good God, do you have to go off the deep end every time you get tangled with a dame?”
“She wasn’t a dame, Pat.”
“Okay, she was a good kid and I know it. There’s still no excuse.”
I said something nasty. My tongue was still thick and unco-ordinated, but he knew what I meant. I said it twice until he was sure to get it.
“Shut up,” he told me. “You’re not the first one it happened to. What do I have to do, smack you in the teeth with the fact that you were in love with a woman that got killed until you finally catch on that there’s nothing more you can do about it?”
“Nuts. There were two of them.”
“All right, forget it. Do you know what’s outside there?”
“Sure, a corpse.”
“That’s right, a corpse. Just like that. Both of you in the same hotel room and one of you dead. He’s got your gun and you’re drunk. What about it?”
“I shot him. I was walking in my sleep and I shot him.”
This time Pat said the nasty word. “Quit lousing me up, Mike. I want to find out what happened.”
I waved my thumb toward the other room. “Where’d the goons come from?”
“They’re policemen, Mike. They’re policemen just like me and they want to know the same things I do. At three o’clock the couple next door heard what they thought was a shot. They attributed it to a street noise until the maid walked in this morning and saw the guy on the floor and passed out in the doorway. Somebody called the cops and there it was. Now, what happened?”
“I’ll be damned if I know,” I said.
“You’ll be damned if you don’t.”
I looked at Pat, my pal, my buddy. Captain Patrick Chambers, Homicide Department of New York’s finest. He didn’t look happy.
I felt a little sick and got the lid of the bowl up just in time. Pat let me finish and wash my mouth out with water, then he handed me my clothes. “Get dressed.” His mouth crinkled up and he shook his head disgustedly.
My hands were shaking so hard I started to curse the buttons on my shirt. I got my tie under my collar but I couldn’t knot it, so I let the damn thing hang. Pat held my coat and I slid into it, thankful that a guy can still be a friend even when he’s teed off at you.
Fat Face in the fedora was still in the chair when I came out of the bathroom, only this time he was in focus and not groaning so much. If Pat hadn’t been there he would have laid me out with the working end of a billy and laughed while he did it. Not by himself, though.
The two uniformed patrolmen were from a police car and the other two were plain-clothes men from the local precinct. I didn’t know any of them and none of them knew me, so we were even. The two plain-clothes men and one cop watched Pat with a knowledge behind their eyes that said, “So it’s one of those things, eh?”
Pat put them straight pretty fast. He shoved a chair under me and took one himself. “Start from the beginning,” he said. “I want all of it, Mike, every single detail.”
I leaned back and looked at the body on the floor. Someone had had the decency to cover it with a sheet. “His name is Chester Wheeler. He owns a department store in Columbus, Ohio. The store’s been in his family a long time. He’s got a wife and two kids. He was in New York on a buying tour for his business.” I looked at Pat and waited.

Other books

All Cry Chaos by Rosen, Leonard
The Seventh Daughter by Frewin Jones
Essentially Human by Maureen O. Betita
Lights Out Liverpool by Maureen Lee
Barney's Version by Mordecai Richler
Crackdown by Bernard Cornwell
Waiting for Time by Bernice Morgan