Don't Look Behind You Read online

Page 20

He lay there with his hands bloody as he gripped his punctured belly and he tried to scream, but it hurt too much.

  I leaned back against the desk and had two smokes while I watched him sob, whimper, and finally die.

  But just before his lights went out, I bid him goodbye, my way.

  “No, sucker,” I said, “I win.”

  A TIP OF THE PORKPIE

  Because my approach to completing Mickey Spillane’s unfinished novels is to set them in the period during which he began them, I find myself working from materials that were contemporary to my famous co-author but which require me to forge a novel that is a period piece bordering on an historical novel.

  In that spirit, I wish to acknowledge Peppermint Twist (2012) by John Johnson, Jr. and Joel Selvin with Dick Cami, for information about the legendary Peppermint Lounge. Although the Genovese crime family’s involvement in the club is well-known, the treatment of the mob’s role here is fictional.

  I also wish to thank and acknowledge my wife Barb Collins, with whom I write a very un-Spillane-like mystery series about antiquing, who gave me two extremely important suggestions that improved this book a great deal. Thanks also to my partner Jane Spillane, Titan editor Miranda Jewess, my lost brother Nick Landau, and my friend and agent, Dominick Abel.

  ABOUT THE AUTHORS

  MICKEY SPILLANE and MAX ALLAN COLLINS collaborated on numerous projects, including twelve anthologies, three films, and the Mike Danger comic book series.

  SPILLANE was the bestselling American mystery writer of the twentieth century. He introduced Mike Hammer in I, the Jury (1947), which sold in the millions, as did the six tough mysteries that soon followed. The controversial P.I. has been the subject of a radio show, comic strip, and several television series, starring Darren McGavin in the 1950s and Stacy Keach in the ’80s and ’90s. Numerous gritty movies have been made from Spillane novels, notably director Robert Aldrich’s seminal film noir, Kiss Me Deadly (1955), and The Girl Hunters (1963), in which the writer played his own famous hero.

  COLLINS has earned an unprecedented twenty-two Private Eye Writers of America “Shamus” nominations, winning for the novels True Detective (1983) and Stolen Away (1993) in his Nathan Heller series, and for “So Long, Chief,” a Mike Hammer short story begun by Spillane and completed by Collins. His graphic novel Road to Perdition is the basis of the Academy Award-winning Tom Hanks/Sam Mendes film. A filmmaker in the Midwest, he has had half a dozen feature screenplays produced, including The Last Lullaby (2008), based on his innovative Quarry novels, also the basis of Quarry, a current Cinemax TV series. As “Barbara Allan,” he and his wife Barbara write the “Trash ’n’ Treasures” mystery series (recently Antiques Swap).

  Both Spillane (who died in 2006) and Collins received the Private Eye Writers life achievement award, the Eye.

  MIKE HAMMER NOVELS

  In response to reader request, I have assembled this chronology to indicate where the Hammer novels I’ve completed from Mickey Spillane’s unfinished manuscripts fit into the canon. An asterisk indicates the collaborative works (thus far).

  M.A.C.

  I, the Jury

  Lady, Go Die!*

  The Twisted Thing (published 1966, written 1949)

  My Gun Is Quick

  Vengeance Is Mine!

  One Lonely Night

  The Big Kill

  Kiss Me, Deadly

  Kill Me, Darling*

  The Girl Hunters

  The Snake

  Complex 90*

  Murder Never Knocks*

  The Big Bang*

  The Body Lovers

  Survival… Zero!

  Kiss Her Goodbye*

  The Killing Man

  Black Alley

  King of the Weeds*

  The Goliath Bone*

  ALSO AVAILABLE FROM TITAN BOOKS

  LADY, GO DIE!

  MICKEY SPILLANE & MAX ALLAN COLLINS

  Hammer and Velda go on vacation to a small beach town on Long Island after wrapping up the Williams case (I, the Jury). Walking romantically along the boardwalk, they witness a brutal beating at the hands of some vicious local cops—Hammer wades in to defend the victim.

  When a woman turns up naked—and dead—astride the statue of a horse in the small-town city park, how she wound up this unlikely Lady Godiva is just one of the mysteries Hammer feels compelled to solve…

  “Collins knows the pistol-packing PI inside and out, and Hammer’s vigilante rage (and gruff way with the ladies) reads authentically.” Booklist

  “A fun read that rings true to the way the character was originally written by Spillane.” Crimespree Magazine

  TITANBOOKS.COM