Dark Duet
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Synopsis
'The British, once they take the gloves off - once they forget to play cricket, to be English gentlemen - they are the toughest things on earth,' says one German espionage agent to another in Dark Duet. And the trouble with Michael Kane, hero of this spy thriller is that he never plays cricket with Nazi spies ... ' Dark Duet seems to me damn good' Raymond Chandler
Release date: January 21, 2014
Publisher: Orion
Print pages: 288
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Dark Duet
Peter Cheyney
a steel filing-cabinet.
Outside, between this office and the corridor, was another even smaller room. In it MacMurray, a big, broad-shouldered, truculent-looking man, dozed over an evening paper. He wished Fenton would
go home.
MacMurray—who had been “lent” by C.I.D. Central Office, and who spent most of his time wishing he was back there—divided his attention between the Greyhound Racing news
and wondering about Fenton. MacMurray was curious about Fenton. Damned curious. He wondered why it should be necessary for him to stay put in the outer office for twenty-four hours at a stretch
whilst Fenton sat at the desk in the other room waiting for telephone calls that seldom came, or spent an odd hour going through the filing-cabinet making pencil notes on folders. Folders which
MacMurray never saw.
He did not like being curious. But there was no way of satisfying his curiosity. His orders were to take his instructions from Fenton and to keep his mouth shut. Excellent orders, thought the
plain-clothes man, and none the less excellent because he could not have done anything but keep his mouth shut. He had nothing to talk about.
Fenton, sitting at the desk in the other office, seemed at first glance to be as nondescript as the furniture. He was in the late fifties. His hair was thin, but what there was of it was
plastered artistically. His moustache was small, well-brushed. When you looked at him carefully, noted his good, well-cut, if old, clothes, you thought he might have been a senior Civil Servant or
possibly a retired Army officer. It wouldn’t matter what you thought anyhow. Fenton never answered any questions, maintained a background in which questions were not asked.
He moved the desk-lamp a little nearer so that the light fell on the papers he was examining. He looked at his watch. It was seven o’clock—a dark, cold, wintry night, with a sharp
rain beginning to fall. He yawned. He leant back in his chair, produced a cigarette-case, lit a cigarette, wondered how much longer he was going to sit in the little office . . . waiting.
Fenton thought that you were always waiting for something. From the moment you were born till the time when death was imminent, you were waiting for something—something good or bad. It
might be the right woman, or a divorce to get rid of the wrong one—or some money, or revenge—or a chance to make good. But you were always waiting. And it was annoying. The telephone
rang. Fenton sighed. He took off the receiver. He said:
“Yes. . . . Yes, sir. . . . I’ve got all the information we had on her . . . there’s nothing new on her at all, sir. . . . No . . . no real dossier and no official
record. . . . But we know quite a lot about her. . . . Hold on, sir, I’ll let you know in a minute . . .”
He put down the receiver, went to the filing-cabinet, unlocked a drawer, pulled the steel file out and began to check through the carefully-filed folders inside. He took one out, went back to
the desk, opened the folder, picked up the receiver.
He said: “She’s here as Mrs. Marques. She came from Norway, a reputed refugee—a rich refugee. She’s supposed to have money—both in Lisbon and New York.
She’s very clever, sir—awfully clever. The C.E. people definitely attribute the sinking of the Maratta Star to that quarter. . . . You remember the Maratta Star, sir?
It was one of the ships that were taking children to Canada. . . . Yes, sir . . . they got it . . . a submarine was waiting for it. . . . Not a very nice business, sir. . . . They found a dozen of
the children in an open boat twelve days afterwards, dead from exposure. . . . That was Mrs. Marques all right, sir. There are a lot of other things too—some of ’em not so
bad—some, if possible, worse. . . . Oh . . . she’s done that too, has she, sir!” He began to smile a little. “Well, if that’s so, sir, then even you might
begin to get annoyed with her. . . .
“Well, what are you going to do, sir? You can’t move through the Department of Home Security, can you? There is nothing official on the woman. . . . You can’t prove
anything. . . .” Fenton shrugged his shoulders. His smile became more incisive. “Well . . . if you think the case merits it you could always use Process 4 or 5. . . .” He paused.
“In this case, Sir, I would suggest Process 5. .. . . You would probably save a lot of people’s lives that way. . . . Very well, sir. . . . You needn’t worry any more about it.
I’ll take the necessary steps. Just forget it . . . write the lady off in your mind. . . . Good-night!”
Fenton hung up the receiver. He was smiling. He sat for a little while looking straight in front of him at the expanse of black-out curtain that shrouded the window. After a while he pressed the
bell-button on the desk. The man from outside came in. Fenton said:
“I’m going off now, MacMurray. If anything urgent turns up you can ring me at home. But I don’t think it will. I think we’ve finished our urgent business for
to-day.”
He smiled. MacMurray nodded and went back to the outer office.
Fenton went to the hatstand in the corner of the office. He put on his overcoat and hat. He went back to the telephone. He dialled a Mayfair number. After a minute he said:
“Hello . . . Kane? How are you . . .? There’s a little business for you. . . . You can get the details from your usual contact. . . . I’ll have a chance to talk to him on my
way home. He’ll make the necessary arrangements if he can. . . . Yes, it’s one of those things. . . . Process 5. . . . You understand? And remember this is England . . . see? Play it
carefully. . . . Good-night, Kane. . . .”
He hung up. He said good-night to MacMurray as he went through the outer office. He walked down the corridor towards the lift, whistling softly to himself.
When he’d gone MacMurray went into the inner office and looked round. He tried the locks on the filing-cabinet. He went into the outer office, closed and locked the door between the two
offices. He set up a folding-bed in one corner and laid out some blankets on it and a pillow. He took an automatic pistol from his hip pocket and put it under the pillow. He locked the door leading
to the corridor, lit a spirit stove and put on it a small kettle. Then he undressed. He lay on the camp-bed reading the last edition of The Star, waiting for the kettle to boil.
II
Kane was tying his tie in front of the cheval glass when the telephone rang. He answered it and afterwards resumed the process of tie-tying. He felt a little sick in the
stomach. He was not quite certain whether this feeling was the result of the telephone call or too many double Martini’s after whisky. He thought it did not matter anyhow.
He was tall and slim. But his shoulders were good and his hips very narrow. He appeared lithe. He moved as if he were putting very little energy into the process; as if he could produce much
more vitality if necessary. His hands were peculiarly long, narrow and compact for so large a man, and his feet were small. He looked like a man who would be able to dance the tango very well . . .
to do most things well . . . if he wanted to.
The sensitive mouth, the humorous and Celtic cut of the cheekbones, the set of the lips, indicated that he was not wanting in humour. Yet this attribute stayed with the lower part of his face.
Above the cheekbones and nose—which was long and quivered at the end when he smiled, so that you wanted to look at it all the time, especially if you were a woman—there appeared a
peculiar indefinable grimness. Not a definite grimness associated with a heavy type of face, but something fleeting; certainly not permanent. Directly you had assured yourself that it was there it
disappeared and the brow opened and the eyes smiled, and you believed you were wrong. You were . . . but not the way you thought.
Kane opened a box of Player’s cigarettes that stood on the dressing-table near the mirror, and lit one. One side of his face was almost framed in a wave of unruly dark brown hair. And the
end of the eyebrow beneath it curled up in a mischievous Machiavellian manner. If you had been watching Kane you would have decided, if you were a man, that you liked him. And if you were a woman,
that you liked him, but that you wouldn’t take many chances about it. Not too many.
His clothes hung well on him. When he crossed the room to get an overcoat out of the wardrobe, his walk indicated that he was impatient about something. Yet the indication was belied by the
almost casual way in which he put on the coat and a black soft hat.
With the hat on he looked more attractive than ever. He adjusted it at the right angle in front of the cheval glass. He liked it to be just so. He fumbled in his pockets for some gloves, and
wondered if there would be a cab anywhere near Queen Anne Street.
Queen Anne Street. . . . He looked into the glass and wondered why the devil he should have a bedroom in Queen Anne Street—that quiet and select backwater of Cavendish Square. He decided
to take the question seriously, and sat down suddenly in a high-backed chair. He smoked the cigarette and wondered why the devil he should live in Queen Anne Street. After a little while he
concluded that it was because it was quiet and a backwater. Maybe, thought Kane, he was getting a little old and beginning to think in terms of quietness and backwaters.
This thought made him laugh. Then he wondered if thirty-eight was old; decided that it didn’t matter anyhow. He threw the cigarette stub away, lit another one and went downstairs.
It was cold outside in the street. He crossed Cavendish Square, went through Hanover Square, Conduit Street, Bond Street and down St. James’s Street.
There were few people about and Kane could hear his own footsteps distinctly. For some unknown reason the usual traffic noises of London seemed stilled. He began to think about Fenton.
Fenton was a one. He took you for granted. But then Fenton took everything for granted. Fenton was the type of Englishman who appeared to be a little grey and faded and undecided and
odd, and who was, in reality, underneath, as hard as seven devils in hell. Definitely hard. You could depend on Fenton for damned little. He was afraid of nothing, but if it suited the book
he’d walk out on you and leave you cold and dangling . . . dangling was about the word for it too. . . . A nice word . . . dangling. . . .
A sudden gust of wind almost blew him into the roadway. He thought November was a hell of a month. As if to justify this thought one or two large snowflakes began to fall. Kane moved nearer the
shelter of the houses.
He came to the post office at the bottom of St. James’s Street. In the shadow between the post office and the Conservative Club a man in an old raincoat was leaning up against the wall.
Kane stopped and said good-evening.
The man said: “We’d better go round the corner. This isn’t a good place to talk, is it?”
“Just as you like,” Kane said. “It seems as good as anywhere else to me.”
The man in the old raincoat led the way down the narrow street by the side of the Conservative Club. He stopped fifteen yards past the side entrance to the Club. He leaned up against the wall.
Kane stood facing him, his hands in the pockets of his overcoat, his shoulders drooped. “I suppose Fenton’s spoken to you?” said the man in the raincoat.
Kane nodded.
“Oh, yes,” he said. There was a peculiar sound of finality in the two words. They indicated somehow that whatever Fenton had said it produced a definite process of thought in
Kane’s mind—a process that was not subject to any alteration.
“Guelvada’s in Surrey,” said the other man, “playing around at some place called Tyrrell’s Wood. I’m going to get a call through to him just as soon as I
can. He’s got a car down there. He can get back pretty quickly.”
Kane said: “There seems to be an awful hurry, doesn’t there?” He took out his cigarette case, lit a cigarette.
“Why not?” said the man in the old raincoat. “Do you want to spin it out?” His tone was mildly sarcastic.
“I don’t like spinning anything out,” said Kane. “But I like to take my time.”
The other man shrugged his shoulders.
“I suppose Fenton didn’t say anything to you about the Maratta Star?” he said.
“No,” said Kane. “And anyway what’s the Maratta Star got to do with it?”
“It was one of the boats that was supposed to take children to Canada,” said the man in the raincoat. “A submarine got it. It was waiting for it. That was Mrs.
Marques—that was. That’s her business. Well, maybe there’ll be some more ships. Perhaps that’s why Fenton’s in a hurry.”
Kane moved his head slightly. He looked down the narrow street towards St. James’s Street. He said:
“That’s all right, but I still don’t approve of being too fast. I don’t like all this quick movement. I don’t like Ernie dashing back from Tyrrell’s Wood in
that car of his. One of these fine days somebody’s going to ask how it is that a Belgian refugee——” Kane grinned suddenly—“I beg his pardon—a free
Belgian—is able to go dashing about the country in a high-power motor car just at any odd minute. Then they’re going to ask questions.”
The man in the raincoat shrugged his shoulders again. It was almost an imperceptible shrug. He looked rather bored.
“Well, supposing they do . . .?” he said.
Kane echoed the words: “Supposing they do. . . . Well, hasn’t it ever struck you that there might be people who are just as interested in Guelvada’s movements and mine as we
are in those of other people? Somebody’s going to ask too many questions—somebody dangerous I mean—not bloody fools like you and Fenton who sit on your backsides in offices and
think what smart fellows you are—but people like Guelvada and me. If anybody’s going to take the rap then it’s going to be us, isn’t it? You’ll just go on sitting on
your backsides.”
The other man yawned.
“Nonsense!” he said. “I didn’t lose my left hand sitting on my backside.”
Kane nodded.
“That’s all right,” he said. “You have it your way. I still think it’s stupid. Well . . . you’re going to phone Guelvada?”
“That’s right,” said the other. “I think I can give him a tip or two about a very quick contact.” He grinned at Kane in the darkness. “Fenton suggested
that it might be a good thing if you could finish this business off to-night.”
“My God!” said Kane. “You fellows are getting impatient, aren’t you?” He threw his cigarette stub away.
“I should think Guelvada would be back in town by nine o’clock,” said the other man. “If everything is all right he ought to be at the ‘Yellow Bottle’—that pub in Mayfair—somewhere around half-past nine. If I were you I should give him till a quarter to ten. Then you could telephone him there. If he’s got on all right
you ought to be able to go ahead from there—if he’s seen the people I want him to see.”
“All right,” said Kane. “Is that all?”
“That’s all,” said the man in the old raincoat. “Good-night, Michael.”
Kane said good-night. He walked down the narrow street into St. James’s Street.
III
Kane stood just inside the blacked-out stage door, an unlit cigarette hanging from the corner of his mouth. He waited there two or three minutes; then the stage-door keeper
appeared at the head of the stairway and beckoned him. Kane ran up the stairs quickly, followed the man along the corridor, went into the dressing-room. He closed the door behind him, stood leaning
against it.
Valetta Fallon was sitting in front of her make-up glass doing her eyebrows. She was wearing a kimono which had fallen open and showed her legs. Kane looked at them appreciatively. He said:
“I don’t know whether anybody’s ever told you, but you’ve got the swellest pair of legs I’ve ever seen in my life, Valetta.”
She turned her head towards him and smiled.
“I’ve an idea that quite a few men have suggested something like that,” she said. She looked at him seriously, the eyebrow-brush poised in her hand, “but not
during the last nine months,” she concluded. “Won’t you sit down, Michael? There are cigarettes in the box.” She nodded towards it.
Kane hung his hat on the peg behind the door. He sat down. He threw away the unlit cigarette and took a fresh one. He said:
“And why not during the last nine months, Valetta?”
She looked at him sideways along her long eyelashes. Kane thought she was very beautiful. Her features were superbly chiselled; her mouth delicate, sensitive and almost tremulous. Kane, who
liked looking at a woman’s mouth, thought that he could look at hers for hours on end. It was that sort of mouth.
She said: “You sound as if you’re trying to be immoral.” She began to smile again. “Possibly, Michael, you’ve forgotten I’ve been your mistress for the
last nine months?”
He grinned. He looked rather like a mischievous schoolboy. He said: “Why should I forget that?”
She raised her eyebrows.
“I don’t know,” she said, “except that I fail to understand why you should expect me to receive admiration from other people when I’m supposed to be in love with
you.”
Kane nodded.
“Oh, that . . .” he said.
He blew a smoke ring. She put down the eyebrow-brush and turned on the chair. She faced him. She said:
“I wish I knew about you. I wish I knew whether you really are a hard, cynical, extremely tough person, or whether the way you talk and behave is just a pose.”
Kane said: “I don’t think cynics ever pose. They don’t have to. Who would want to pose as being a cynic? Nobody over the age of eighteen admires cynicism. Besides, you
don’t adopt it as a pose; it’s one of those things that are forced on you.”
“I see,” said Valetta. “And how much cynicism have I forced on you, Michael?”
“None at all,” he said with a smile. “Just the opposite. If it weren’t for you I would be absolutely and entirely submerged in the depths of cynicism.”
She said: “You’re an extraordinary person, aren’t you? Don’t you find anything good in life?”
“Nothing that lasts,” said Kane airily.
She picked up the eyebrow-brush again. She looked in the mirror. “I’ve lasted,” she said.
“You’ve lasted nine months,” said Kane. He stubbed out his cigarette end, put his hands in his overcoat pockets.
“I wonder what that means?” asked Valetta. “Does it mean that you don’t expect me to last much longer or that you hope I won’t last much longer?”
Kane grinned. She found that grin maddening.
He said: “I hope for very little and expect nothing. I’m damned glad of what I get.” He went on: “Let’s be constructive about you. When a woman falls in love
with a man she has to get something out of it, doesn’t she?”
She got up, slipped off the kimono, began to wriggle into her stage frock. She had a superb figure. She hoped he would realise that. It was some time before she said:
“Well, what does she have to get out of it? She doesn’t have to get something out of it, does she, Michael?”
He nodded. He was smiling quite pleasantly.
“She must get something,” he said, “otherwise it’s no soap. When a woman definitely realises that a man is no soap she does something about it, especially a woman like
you, Valetta.”
She smiled at him. She powdered her nose, leaning forward so that the powder should not touch her frock.
“Has it never occurred to you that I may have got something out of you, Michael?” she said.
He raised one eyebrow. “Such as . . .?” he queried.
“Such as a lot of fun for one thing,” said Valetta.
“I wouldn’t describe myself as a particularly amusing type of man,” he said.
She sat down on the chair suddenly, her hands clasped in her lap, looking at him. She was concentrating.
“Neither would I,” said Valetta. “You’re not. But there is something damned fascinating about you. You’re one of those men who don’t require a background.
Have another cigarette, Michael.”
He said: “Thanks.”
She took a cigarette from the box, lit it, handed it to him. He noticed the mark of her lipstick on the end. He drew on the cigarette.
“This is interesting,” he said. “So I’m the type of man who doesn’t require a background. Elucidate that mysterious remark, Valetta.”
She thought for a moment.
“Well,” she said eventually, “one meets some men and one’s only really interested because one knows all about them. For instance, you meet a man. He’s rather
brusque; he seems hard. You wouldn’t be attracted in the normal course of events; and then you find that he’s a man who’s done quite big things in his life. You realise that the
things he’s done have made him tough. They’re responsible for his character. Knowing that, you’re still prepared to be interested in him. If you didn’t know you’d
probably dismiss him from your mind. Do you understand? I’m not very good at explaining what I think,” she concluded.
“I understand,” said Kane. He blew a smoke ring, watched it sail across the dressing-room.
“But you’d be all right anyhow,” she said. “Whatever you were, whatever your job was, whatever you did, you’d still be you. You are a fascinating person.
You are an intriguing person. Quite independently of whatever it is you do . . . which reminds me——” She stopped speaking, looked at him. Her eyes were bright and a
little wicked. Her mouth was smiling. Kane wanted to take her in his arms.
“Which reminds you of what?” he said.
“Do you remember the first time we met, Michael?” she said. “The night they dropped that bomb and blew that place in, with all those people underneath? Do you remember how I
flung myself into your arms for protection? Was I scared!”
“And was I scared?” said Kane.
“I don’t know about that,” said Valetta. “You weren’t too scared to take full advantage of the situation.”
“I beg your pardon!” said Kane.
“There is no need to,” she said. “I thought your technique was superb. But the point I was getting at was this: When we arranged to dine together and I was getting ready to
meet you, I made up my mind to ask you exactly what it was you did, and somehow when the time came I didn’t want to. I thought I’d like to keep you, in my mind, as a rather mysterious
sort of person.”
Kane nodded.
“I see,” he said. “So you’d already put me down as a sort of ‘steady,’ had you?” He grinned at her ironically. He showed a fine set of white
teeth.
“What I thought is my business,” said Valetta. “But the fact remains I didn’t ask you what you were, and when I’d left you and we’d arranged to meet again,
a. . .
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