Tag Archives: mystery

Double Frame Blitz

 

Double Frame cover

Sam Quinton, Book 3

Mystery

 

Date Published: March 8, 2022

Publisher: Camel Press

Sociology professor Felix Thayer is brilliant but hateful. A near genius in his field, but impossible to get along with. When his colleague Michael Hartness is found murdered in his office, it doesn’t surprise anyone that Thayer is arrested for the crime. Everyone who knew the two men pretty much saw that coming. But why would Thayer have committed the murder in a manner so careless as to almost ensure his being fingered as the culprit? It’s almost as if the guy wanted to be caught.

That’s what Thayer’s wife needs to know. She doesn’t really care whether her husband’s guilty. She just has to know why he’d be so careless and hires Sam Quinton, full-time gym owner, part-time private eye, and former professional wrestler, to find out. But as Quinton investigates the crime, he finds there may be more to the affair than the animosity of two men. And when the local Mafia begins dogging his steps, he figures he’s on the trail of something that someone wants kept under wraps.

Excerpt

In the middle of a Monday afternoon I was working on the arms, doing concentration curls, when a good-looking older woman stepped into my gym.

That in itself wasn’t unusual. Mainly due to the efforts of Lisa Nolan, my manager, The Blaster, despite its name, has become something of a Mecca in the Providence area for women, both middle-aged and gracefully edging beyond, to come work out. And because most of them tend to work hard at keeping in shape, they usually veer toward the good-looking side of the equation.

This particular woman, however, didn’t appear at all in the mood to work out. Instead, her eyes made a quick circuit of the place, making note of the scattering of clients engaged in all sorts of planned, strenuous activity, then alighted on me, off in the corner and doing my curls.

Even from across the room I could see her nod briefly, as if confirming something to herself, then make a straight line in my direction.

Somewhere, by my guess, in the late forties, she wore black slacks and a charcoal-gray sweater with burgundy argyles, perfectly complementing both the gloomy March weather outside and her thick black hair, which held only a few streaks of gray. She obviously didn’t see the need to color her hair, and giving her a quick appraisal, I found myself in agreement.

I put down my dumbbells and waited for her to come over. When she did, she stood fidgeting for a moment, her look of cool poise drooping a bit.

When she got close, I could see her eyes were a striking royal blue color.

Mr. Quinton?”

That’s me.” I grabbed a water bottle from underneath the bench I was sitting on and took a swig.

I’m interested in hiring you,” the woman said.

I don’t do individual sessions,” I said. “I can take you over to talk to Lisa. She handles most of our formal scheduling, and I’m sure –”

No, I,” the woman paused, took a breath and shook her head a trifle. “I’m not looking for a trainer.”

Aah,” I said, the light dawning.

I need a detective.” She peered closer at me while keeping her expression blank. I was wearing gym shorts, a tank-top tee shirt and white Puma’s. My face was still a little flushed from the curls, and at the end of a one-hour workout I probably needed a shower.

Pardon my appearance,” I said. “I wasn’t expecting to see any clients this afternoon.”

The woman looked around, her gaze sweeping the gym, before coming back to me. “You are a detective, aren’t you?”

Yes, I am.”

Then I need to hire you.”

I perked up at the word “need,” not “want.” “What sort of work?” I asked.

She frowned as she looked down at me. “Detective work. That is what you do, isn’t it?”

I shook my head. “What I meant was what sort of case. What do you need help with?”

Her face crumpled a bit, and a hint of moisture seeped into her eyes. She shook her head slightly, and I wondered if she was going to turn around and head back out the door.

Then she took a deep breath, squared her shoulders and stood up a little straighter.

My name is Susan Thayer,” she said. “Does that explain the kind of work I need?”

Thayer.”

Correct.”

As in Dr. Felix Thayer?” I asked.

She nodded, and looking closely, I could see two parallel tears sliding down her cheeks.

Oh yeah. I don’t know if that explained everything, but it explained an awful lot.

About the Author

Kevin R. Doyle

A high-school teacher, former college instructor and fiction writer, Kevin R. Doyle is the author of numerous short stories, mainly in the horror field. He’s also written three crime thrillers, The Group, When You Have to Go There, and And the Devil Walks Away and one horror novel, The Litter. Recently, he’s begun working on the Sam Quinton private eye series. The first Quinton book, Squatter’s Rights, was nominated for the 2021 Shamus award as Best First PI Novel. The second book, Heel Turn, was released in March of 2021. More information can be found at kevindoylefiction.com.

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Murder at the Olympiad Blitz

 

 

Murder at the Olympiad  cover

Mystery, Thriller

 

Published: October 2021

Publisher:‎ Atmosphere Press

An American tourist is murdered in a gay sauna in Puerto Vallarta, Mexico. Amanda Pennyworth, the American consul to that vacation resort, risks her career and her life to find the culprit. Amanda works with a junior officer of the Tourist Police in the search for suspects in the secretive underworld of this popular vacation spot. When a young Mexican boy is arrested by the impatient and brutal police chief on flimsy evidence, Amanda is convinced that it is a terrible mistake. But no one is willing to listen to her: certainly not the arrogant chief of police; not the boy’s parents who seem to blame her for the murder; and not the cynical American Ambassador who only wants to avoid an international incident. It’s up to her.

This is the second in a series of novels featuring the amateur sleuth, Amanda Pennyworth who finds, much to her surprise, that among her duties as consul for the United States is the dangerous pursuit of murderers.

Other books in the Amanda Pennyworth mystery series:

Zona Romantica cover

 

Zona Romantica

 

When Amanda Pennyworth began her assignment as American Consul in the beautiful resort city of Puerto Vallarta, Mexico, she had no inkling she would be called upon to solve the mysterious disappearance of a famous expat writer. However, when he vanishes—the victim of a kidnapping—Amanda is drawn into the desperate search to save his life. Negotiating the competing layers of Mexican police: the Federales, the local constabulary, and the tourist police, she is pulled deeper into what she realizes too late is a cunning and deadly plot.

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Excerpt
Chapter 1

Rodrigo slowly backed out from the utility closet, banging the mop hoisted over his shoulder against the door. Turning around, he tried twice to prop it against one of the stools next to the bar, but each time it fell onto the tile floor with a clatter. In his right hand, he carried a bucket of water, so full that it slopped over the edge when he set it down next to the counter.

“Watch what you’re doing, damn it!” Antonio cried, without looking over the ledge to measure the spill. “Did you inspect all the rooms?”

“Yeah.”

“Well?”

“Number 201 has still got has stuff in it. At least there are clothes on the hook and the towel is gone.”

“And the key hasn’t been turned back in either,” Antonio said as he glanced at the rack behind him. “So the guy must still be around. Have you checked everywhere?”

“Not yet. Just going to.”

“Well, get to it. He’s probably sleeping it off somewhere. Wake him up and get him out of here. We’re not running a fucking hotel!”

Antonio was tired and hot and anxious to close up. The temperature outside, even though it was after 2:00 in the morning had to be at least 90 degrees, and inside, give it even three or four more despite the fans that just blew the heat around like the hot breath of desire. He turned around again and reached up to the console behind him and switched off the music. The sudden quiet, as the steady disco beat died out, felt like relief from a throbbing headache he didn’t know he had. Then, touching a switch on the wall, he turned on the fluorescent lights. The red glow from the recessed overhead lamps that had disguised every fault and feature with a romantic blur dissolved into a flood of stark white exposing the dark, uneven floor, the blemished and cracked grey walls. The unforgiving glare was bright enough to wipe any illusions, and ended the allure of this palace of dingy dreams. Further on, there was the dark well of a staircase that led down to the level below. The steps behind him that led up to private rooms.

“Make sure you check in the sauna and steam area,” he shouted after Rodrigo, who was just disappearing around the curve in his descent.

Once on the basement level, Rodrigo walked across the dim corridor and stopped in front of the wooden enclosure of the sauna. He peered into the small glass window on the door, but the light was off and he could barely make out the shapes of the benches. Opening it up, the heat spilled out, sweeping over him. He could smell the combination of wood resin and sweat. But the room was empty.

He walked further on to the glass door of the steam room. Pulling it open, he entered the damp gloomy space, edged past the tile-covered bench on the right side, and then turned around a corner into the darkened back area. Condensation from the ceiling dribbled on his forehead and he wiped his eyes to get a better look. There was just enough light to see a shape stretched out on one of the side benches.

“Vamos, Amigo, estamos cerrados,” he said. And then repeated his words in English—louder this time. There was no response, so he moved closer. He could see now that the person was entirely naked, resting on a towel. He reached down and shook the man’s shoulder.

“Wake up!” he said. “Get up!”

There was still no response.

Then, with both hands, he seized the man’s dangling left arm and tried to pull him up. But the unexpected dead weight was so much that the man slipped onto the floor instead.

“Damn!” he shouted. “Damn! He’s dead drunk!”

Retracing his steps, he hurried halfway up the staircase where he paused and called out to Antonio:

“Found someone, but he’s drunk and I couldn’t wake him up. What should I do?”

“Fuck!” cried Antonio as he walked around the edge of the bar. “I’ll come down with you and together maybe we can carry him out. How big is he?”

“Couldn’t really tell. Just lying there on the floor. It’s dark you know.”

“Okay, Okay.”

The two of them descended the stairs and Rodrigo switched on the overhead lights at that level.

“And when we’re done,” he added. “Make sure you mop the floor in there. God only knows what….”

Rodrigo held the door of the steam room and then propped it open with a rubber shim that had rested inconspicuously against the wall. Antonio waited for him and together they edged around to the dark alcove. The man was still lying on the floor.

“Is this how you found him?”

“Well, yes; not exactly. I mean, I tried to get him up, but couldn’t. He’s too heavy and out cold. That’s why I called you.”

“OK, then you grab his legs and I’ll take his shoulders and we can steer him out of here and onto one of the benches outside.”

“Damn, that’s a lot; dead weight,” Rodrigo groaned, hoisting his ankles.

“Stop complaining! I’ve got him, so just back up and don’t drop him….Come on, Amigo. Wake up and help us out a bit!”

They struggled, half dragging the naked body out of the steam room, but instead of putting him on one of the benches or the worn couch at the side of the sauna enclosure, they just left him lying on his back on the floor.

“OK, Amigo, wake up. Last call! We’re closed!” Antonio said, bending over and looking at the man’s face.

“Definitely an American or at least a foreigner. Get a towel, Rodrigo, and cover him up while I try to wake him.”

Antonio crouched down on his haunches and felt the man’s face. It was warm, but there was no reaction. He grasped an arm, raised it up and then let it drop.

Rodrigo returned with two towels and placed them over the man’s body.

“Do you think he’s dead?” he asked suddenly.

“How should I know? Don’t know how to tell,” Antonio answered. “He’s not cold. And not stiff.”

“Feel for his pulse. I seen them do it on television. Feel his neck. That’s what the detectives always do.”

“Okay.”

Antonio put his fingers around the man’s neck and waited. “I don’t feel anything. How am I supposed to know?”

“Those TV detectives can always tell, right away.”

“Yeah, but I’m not a detective! I think I’m going to have to call the police.”

“That won’t be good for business if he’s dead. Do you think he stayed in the steam room too long?”

“Don’t be crazy; it’s not warm enough in there to wilt a flower. Probably just had a heart attack or something. But he’s awfully young for that.”

“Do you see those red marks on his throat? Looks like maybe he was strangled.”

“He seems dead, so I guess he was. But you’re an expert now?”

“Just what I seen on American shows. Bruises where you press down hard. I don’t know nothing.”

Antonio stood up and walked toward the staircase: “Stay there, Rodrigo, I’m going to call the Tourist Police. In case he moves, let me know.”

“He ain’t gonna’ move. For sure.”

“Anyway.”

Reaching the main floor, Antonio walked quickly around the bar and through the door in back leading into the small office that also fronted the entrance, where customers standing behind a wire grill, passed their money through and picked up keys to lockers or retiring rooms and a towel and plastic flip flops. It was also where he kept his cellphone. He dialed the number and a sleepy voice answered:

“Tourist Police.”

“Is Captain Morelos there?”

“No. Sorry. He’s been transferred to Oaxaca.”

“Then can I speak to whoever is there?”

“You can tell me what’s the problem. If I decide it’s important I’ll pass you on to anybody.”

“Listen. This is serious! I’m Antonio Lopez at the Olympiad sauna. We got a customer that we can’t seem to wake up. I think he might be dead.”

“Did you try his pulse? Maybe he’s just drunk.”

“More than that, I’m afraid. You need to send someone around. Right away. I got to close this place up.”

“OK, OK. I’ll see if anyone is here and I’ll send them over.”

“How about sending a doctor or maybe an ambulance too? So you can get him out of here.”

“We’ll see about that when we get there.”

The police car pulled up in front about a half hour later. A tired looking officer dressed in crumpled fatigues and a middle-aged woman wearing slacks and a sweatshirt and carrying a black bag—someone who might have been a doctor or the Medical Examiner but without a uniform—came through the open doorway, up the stairs, and rang the bell in the entrance alcove. Antonio buzzed them inside.

“I’m Captain Gonzalez,” said the officer, pushing into the entranceway. “Just happened to be on duty and about to go home when you called. This is Senora Sanchez.” He seemed peeved by the interruption to his day. “Where’s the body?”

“I don’t want no trouble; we never had no trouble here,” Antonio said, as he guided them to the staircase and then down into the basement level. He turned to look at them as they followed: “He hasn’t moved since we took him out of the steam room.”

“So you moved him?” the examiner shook her head as she was pulling on a pair of plastic gloves. “That’s not very smart. Shouldn’t have.” She walked over to the body and crouched down, placing her fingers along the artery of his neck. She picked up and flexed his limp arm and then noticed the blotches on his neck.

“Do you think you could shine a flashlight on these marks,” she asked the officer. I can’t be sure, and won’t know until I have him back at the station, but it looks like he was strangled. You can see some bruising. And not too long ago. No signs of rigor yet.”

Then standing and addressing Antonio: “Do you have any identification for him? He looks like a foreigner. Could be about 25 years old or so.”

“Use your pass key and go look in his room again, Rodrigo, bring his clothes and anything else you find in his room,” Antonio ordered.

“Just a minute,” interrupted the woman. “I’m coming with you. And you’re not going to touch anything, understand?”

“But I already have…awhile ago. And I don’t need the key; I left the door open.”

“Come along and be quiet,” she said.. “Just show me the room and then stay out of my way! Anything else you did to corrupt the crime scene?”

Rodrigo was about to answer but thought she would just accuse him again.

So the two climbed up the staircase to the upper landing in silence while Antonio and the officer remained below staring down at the body.

“I don’t want no trouble,” said Antonio, in a tone that sounded more like a question than an assertion. “We never have no trouble here.”

“Yes, you said that before. But looks like you’ve got a lot of trouble now. Not much else I can say right off. But certainly it looks like a murder, and a foreigner too. Can’t think of anything worse for you. We’ll have to close your place down for a few days… maybe a week or two. Tomorrow, I’ll send a team to look for fingerprints. And don’t be surprised if you find a few things out of order.”

“But Officer; how long? We have to clean the rooms!”

“You’re not listening very carefully. You need to think about how you can help us instead of mopping the floors. And when we’re done here tonight, I want you and your helper to lock up. And plan to stay shut until I tell you to. Don’t have to tell you not to touch anything. And you’ll have to come to the station of course… a lot of questions to answer…but later.”

Approaching the row of cubicles on the second floor above the bar, Rodrigo led the Medical Examiner to the open door of 201. He switched on the single bulb light inside, which cast a weak glow around the tiny space, and let her step in first because there was scarcely any room to turn around. She entered and sidled along the raised wooden platform bed that was covered in some sort of plastic material and a crumpled sheet. The wall abutting it was mirrored up to the ceiling. Toward the far end there was a small built-in table. On top of it was a plastic water bottle, and above, to the right was a wall hook with a pair of jeans and a T-shirt still hanging.

Taking both items of clothing down, she spread them out onto the platform and turned the pockets of the jeans inside out. Both in front were empty except for a few coins on the right side. Reaching underneath, she took a wallet out of the back right pocket. It was empty except for a vehicle insurance card. In the dim glare, she could make out the name “Jeremy Blackman” with an address in Los Angeles.

“Was the door to this cubicle unlocked when you came to check on him?”

“I don’t remember, Senora; what I mean is, I always use my key so I wouldn’t know if it was or wasn’t, would I?”

“Do you have some system of lock-boxes? Somewhere he might have put money, credit cards, a passport?”

“No.”

“And did you did find the room key anywhere on the body?”

“No. I didn’t see that neither. It would have been on an elastic band. Guys put them on their wrist or ankle sometimes.”

“You’re sure it didn’t fall off when you carried him out of the steam room?”

“Yeah, I’m pretty sure, but I’ll go back and look again.”

The Medical Examiner gave him an exasperated look, but said nothing further. She backed out of the room and walked swiftly along the corridor and down the two flights of stairs back to where the body was stretched out on the floor. Rodrigo followed, staying carefully well behind her.

“I’ve got an I.D. for him, some sort of insurance card from Los Angeles, but it looks very likely that he was robbed,” she told Captain Gonzalez. “No cash, no credit cards, no passport. Whether that has anything to do with his death is, of course, for someone else to prove. And I looked, but there was no key inside the cubicle, as you can see, none on his wrist and there was nothing in his pockets. Maybe when you do a more thorough search, you’ll find it.” Addressing Antonio, she continued: “Did anyone turn in the key?”

No Senora. Whoever did this I think has taken the key with him.”

Perhaps. We don’t know that yet. Maybe it will turn up when we’ve done a more thorough search.”

As for the cause of death,” she said, turning to the Captain Gonzalez, “I’ll have a report for you tomorrow sometime once you get the body back to my lab. And I’ll tell you definitively if it was murder or not. But it looks like it.”

“Thanks Senora,” the officer mumbled. “I’ll deliver the body as soon as I can get an ambulance here. In the meantime, can you give me the insurance card? If that’s him and he’s an American, I’ll have to notify the Consulate.

“Good luck with that!”

“What?”

“You know as well as I do, what; she makes trouble.”

The officer turned to Antonio who had moved away from the body, recoiling as if it was contaminated: “I want a list of names: everyone who entered today and, if you can, the time that this person arrived.”

“I’m sorry Officer, but we don’t keep a list of names. This ain’t a hotel.”

“OK, then, passport numbers or ID numbers for any locals will do.”

“Might not be complete.”

“Aren’t you supposed to check everyone who enters? What kind of a place is this?”

Antonio took a step backwards and almost sat down abruptly onto one of the benches along the wall.

“I’m sorry, Sir, yes, we usually check ID’s for the age of the person. And we generally write down the ID number. But maybe if Rodrigo was at the window, he might have forgotten to. He’s not very careful sometimes. So you’ll have to ask him. But listen: we never had trouble, here. And we have to be discrete, you know.”

“Well, in this case, I think you’ve got considerable trouble….Hardly the time to be worried about anyone’s reputation. Do you remember him—the victim—when he arrived and if he was alone?”

“I think maybe I was the one who checked him in. I seem to remember there were two them: Americans, I think, about the same age… young anyway. So if they actually came together, then one of them has obviously left alone. I can’t tell you exactly when; probably Rodrigo checked him out. You know it’s very simple process. They just shove their towels and sheets into a hamper by the exit and return their shoes and keys. I’m not sure I’d remember anyone leaving specifically. Sometimes I just buzz them out without looking if I’m busy at the bar. But ask Rodrigo; maybe he….” Antonio was intentionally vague; not because he knew something and didn’t want to say, but he figured if he sounded unreliable, the policeman would stop asking him questions.

“Then I’ll want that list of those entries you have before I leave.”

“I’m not sure I should give it to you,” Antonio said, after a pause. A look of dread spread over his face. “People who come here don’t want to have their names known. It could cause terrible trouble for me if you investigate them. I’m sure you understand.”

Gonzalez scowled and took a step toward him: “That’s not my problem. If this is a murder, and I think it is, any one of your clients could be the killer. I need those ID numbers. You’re to give me list before I leave. I don’t give a damn about anonymous or about your business.”

He then turned his gaze to the assistant who was sitting on a bench down at the end of the corridor. Rodrigo looked up anxiously when the policeman approached.

“Do you remember two Americans? The person lying here and maybe a friend of his? Did you see them together or check the other one out?”

Rodrigo stood up and stared blankly for a minute:

“I never pay any attention to the guys here whether they’re American or not,” he said, backing up against the bench he had been sitting on.

“Never make eye contact, because if you do…. I just work here; I’m not one of them!”

“I don’t care what you are or aren’t. Just tell me, did you see them together?”

“Not that I remember. But I do know that one American left earlier because I had to ask him for his towel. He’d left it in the locker area and I certainly wasn’t going to get it for him. But he may not be the one you mean. We get lots of foreigners here.”

“So that man you remember didn’t have a room?”

“I guess not. I didn’t check his key. But that wouldn’t be unusual. If two guys came together why would each need a separate room? But then this isn’t a place where anyone wants to explain what they’re doing or why. So who knows?”

“Do you remember what time it was? Approximately?”

“I don’t know. Maybe around 11:00 or so. I usually go outside for a few minutes around that time. Get some fresh air. Could have been then or when I came back in.”

“So you really don’t know.”

“That’s right. I don’t pay no attention. I just do my job without looking. I don’t get paid to see things.”

Gonzalez stared at Rodrigo for a moment and then decided that he kept repeating himself because of nerves. And probably knew nothing more. But he would keep an ear open for anything suspicious about him just the same. He wasn’t sure he could trust anyone here. And the whole place…maybe the late hour…and a foreigner murdered! He could expect nothing but trouble.

About the Author

James Gilbert

James Gilbert is the author of four published novels, two of them in the Amanda Pennyworth Mystery Series. Two of his short stories have been awarded prizes by the F. Scott Fitzgerald Short Story contest (2017 and 2021). In his previous academic career, he was Distinguished University Professor at the University of Maryland specializing in modern American cultural history. As a historian, he published eleven American History books in modern American culture on subjects ranging from Twentieth Century World’s Fairs to the conflict between science and religion. One of his publications was a New York Times Notable Book of the Year.

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Message in a Bullet Blitz

 

Message in a Bullet cover

 

A Raymond Mackey Mystery, Book 1

 

Mystery

 

Date Published: September 30, 2021

Publisher: OTF Literary

Raymond Mackey is a struggling crime writer. His friends call him Mack. But friends are in short supply these days. Mack’s thirty years as a homicide detective came to the kind of abrupt, ignominious end that tends to make friends dry up and blow away. It matters little that Mack was never actually a mole working for a shadowy, seemingly omnipresent mob boss. Somehow, the evidence was there anyway and the scandal ended everything for him overnight. Lucky to stay out of prison, Mack lives in a netherworld of forced retirement, spinning his memories of old homicide cases into pulp fiction and working part time as a shopping mall cop. His wife Marlo, the greatest criminal investigator Mack has ever known, has been dead of pancreatic cancer for nearly five years. That leaves his ancient Smith-Corona Corsair, a pack of Camels, a bottle of Old Forester, and Marlo’s bourbon-loving cat, Phil, as Mack’s only company.

Almost. Because Mack also keeps himself company. The psychiatrists call it Depersonalization-Derealization Disorder. Mack calls it Triple-D. But crazy also works. It means he watches himself, usually from an overhead perspective, as though someone has tied a floating camera to a back beltloop on a long string. It makes him feel watched, and not by someone inclined to judge him kindly. So Raymond Mackey comes complete with his own Greek chorus. “Watch yourself, Mack,” people tell him. He has no choice.

When one of Mack’s old informants goes missing and Mack’s face turns up in a dead man’s camera, his past comes roaring painfully back to life. Now the police want him for questioning, the mob want him dead and it’s increasingly difficult to tell who, exactly, is working for whom. As a mercilessly hot Chicago summer finally breaks and it starts to rain bodies, Mack finds himself past his prime for this kind of action. Retirement has added weight and subtracted agility. He hasn’t fired a weapon in years. His antiquated cell phone will not stop ringing with a mysteriously blocked number. In the end, as Mack watches himself from above, it is razor-sharp instinct, cheap consumer electronics and his dead wife that offer his only hope.

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Cracker Town cover

Red Farlow Mysteries, Book 5

 

Mystery

Date Published: 09-14-2021

Publisher: Tirgearr Publishing

 

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Town’s secrets cloak ruthless killer for decades

 

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EXCERPT

Chapter One

 

Red Farlow’s disdain for cold cases ran deep. They dredged up some long-ago, heinous murder when reopened, which haunted him at night and hovered like a black cloud all day. For months.

 

Unsolved crimes also reminded Red of his failures.

 

A triple murder from 1973 clobbered him with a phone call first thing that morning. He’d investigated a family slain at home. Neither the police nor Red found the killer.

 

Years later, surviving son Randolph Goings wanted to visit Red in Savannah.

 

The private investigator agreed to the meeting and set a time for the next afternoon.

 

***

 

Red felt the day’s heat after he got up the morning of his meeting with Goings, and the cold case burned inside his head.

 

The day broke as warm as the previous evening, and by seven that morning, the thermometer outside his office window read eighty-five degrees. But he couldn’t complain, as the sky was mostly clear, save for nimbostratus clouds gathering to the east. No doubt, they dumped rain miles offshore in the Atlantic Ocean.

 

He checked his phone weather app’s radar, and, sure enough, the rain clouds headed his way.

 

Red pictured Randy Goings at age eighteen in the early seventies. As a young GBI agent, Red investigated—with his boss, Matthew Bailey—the murders of three family members in Valdosta, Georgia. Randy was the son who discovered the bodies of his parents and young sister.

 

That was decades past. Red figured Randy would be in his sixties.

 

Red stepped out his front door. It was a good time to walk the sidewalks and squares of the old southern city. He had other things to attend to. Red picked up the morning newspaper and fondled its rubber band. Birds sang. Cars chugged around Chippewa Square behind the slow trot of a mule-drawn carriage filled with sightseers. The trollies rattled past, always running behind schedule, and carried countless other visitors for their jump-off, jump-on adventures in the old city.

 

Soon, the day would boil up to around ninety-five. But right then, a tolerable one in the morning’s Atlantic breeze.

 

He stepped back into his house and opened up the paper as he walked into the kitchen for coffee.

 

After his brief phone conversation with Randy Goings, Red had doodled his memories of the triple murder. No suspects were arrested. No one held accountable. His hand and pen moved across a clean notebook sheet. A circle started out with a dot and moved into a spiral. He retraced the curved lines, keeping the drawing smooth in places and jagged in others. Blotches from the pen formed, and he moved his nib around in the tiny puddles, spreading the ink to fill in any gaps.

 

Soon he’d filled the page with near blackness.

 

A haunting image.

 

In the morning, Red went about his daily routine, following up on current cases. At one point before noon, he lapsed back into the old case with a productive intent. He thought about and wrote what he remembered about the family in Valdosta.

 

Picking up his notebook and pocketing the fountain pen, Red walked down the street for a ham and cheese baguette for lunch and returned to eat at his desk. Thirty minutes later, the doorbell dinged.

 

Red walked downstairs and, on the way to answer the bell, admired a vase of fresh daisies that sat on a wood pedestal of unknown but stout vintage. His wife Leigh insisted on an array of blossoms in her psychotherapy practice’s waiting area.

 

He opened the door and greeted a tall, gray-haired man in blue slacks and a white shirt. A beautiful woman dressed in a pale peach suit stood beside him. The man carried what appeared to be a large aging briefcase, whose sides bulged against a brass latch.

 

“Mr. Farlow, I’m Randy Goings,” the man said.

 

“Good morning. Come on in the house,” Red said and nodded to the lady. “Ma’am.” He took note of Randy’s polite formality. “Please, Randy, call me Red.”

 

“Red, this is my wife, Linda Barrett-Goings,” Randy said.

 

“It is my pleasure, Linda. Won’t you both please step up to my office?”

 

They followed as Red led the way up the eighteen-eighties staircase to a spacious room overlooking the square.

 

“My goodness, the private investigations business must pay pretty well,” Randy said. Red noted the formality seemed to have eased a bit.

 

“This is my wife’s family home,” Red told them. “She generously allotted space to me after we married a few years back. She’s a psychotherapist. Her office is on the first floor, as you may have noticed from that brass plaque by the front steps.”

 

“I find that very interesting, Red,” Linda said. “I’m a psychology professor at Emory in Atlanta.”

 

He took in Linda’s bright smile.

 

“Well, welcome to Savannah,” he said. “What can I get you in the way of refreshment? I have iced tea, coffee, a variety of fizzy and still waters, and the best espresso this side of Ditta Artigianale in Florence, Italy.”

 

Randy and Linda laughed. She asked for a seltzer and Randy coffee.

 

The Goings went into Red’s office and sat together on his sofa. In a few minutes, Red came in with a tray of the drinks. He returned to the kitchen and prepared two doppios of espresso for himself.

 

They broke the chill of the impending conversation with talk about Savannah. Red already knew the thin, icy path, of course. It came with bad memories frozen over by decades of mourning. The kind you know that in the crying, you can’t bring your loved ones back. But still, those left behind shed tears. For years.

 

“Red, I remember the first time we chatted, right after that horrible night,” Randy said. “In the whole experience, you were the kindest, most sensitive cop who interviewed me. And believe me, I got a lot of tough questions from some hardnosed police detectives and sheriff’s deputies. They, of course, went on the absolute notion that I killed my family. You and Agent Bailey disabused them of the idea. I thank you for it.”

 

Red nodded as he looked at the couple. He saw well-educated, successful people. People who likely spent their entire careers in a city.

 

“We’re here to speak with you about my tragedy so many years ago,” Randy said. Linda took a tissue from her purse. “My family’s killer was never found, as you know. We want the case reopened and examined from information I have in my father’s files. Too, we think modern crime-solving technology might help to track down the person or people who did this.”

 

Red sipped his espresso. “First, Randy, tell me something of what you found in your father’s files,” he said. “Then, we can discuss the techno stuff.” Randy brought up his worn briefcase, similar to ones Red had seen many times in courtrooms and not unlike his battered leather satchel.

 

“My father left a substantial number of files,” Randy said. He withdrew a folder without opening it. “They include his own manuscripts and articles for professional journals. And his personal notes about patients he saw at Central State Hospital. For many years, I ignored the many boxes. Right after the funeral, the college called and asked that I clear out my father’s office. Luckily, he’d only been there a few months, and most of his hospital files remained in our house.”

 

Randy’s tone became more solemn as he spoke.

 

“When did you start plowing through these?” Red asked.

 

“That’s a long story,” Randy replied. “First, let me tell you I am nearing retirement from the Bernstein, Robb, Goings, and Whaley law firm in Atlanta. I’ll remain available for client matters for many years as life allows.”

 

Red nodded. He listened.

 

“For a long time after the murders, I ignored the files,” Randy went on. “But I started going through them, one box at a time, about ten years ago.”

 

He paused and looked down at the brown-speckled folder in his lap and, with his right index finger, tapped hard on the file two or three times. He appeared close to tears.

 

“I found the patient notes to be interesting,” Randy said and paused. Collecting himself, he went on. “I could not resist delving into them despite Linda’s precautionary advice that I should not. I did this not out of some voyeuristic thrill of reading about other people’s secret lives. Rather, I wanted to find threads that might lead to my family’s murderer or murderers.”

 

Red arose and fetched more coffee for Randy. Linda had barely touched her water. He soon returned with a carafe.

 

“Did you think going in that a patient might have killed them?” Red asked as he poured the black liquid into his client’s cup.

 

“I saw that as a possibility, yes,” Randy said. “Most of his patients were incarcerated for their mental illness after committing a crime. Not all, certainly, but many were killers, whether by rage or perhaps because of their mental condition.”

 

He picked up his coffee and sipped. “I thought one of his patients might have threatened him or revealed why someone killed my family. And who committed the crime. Admittedly, I batted around in the dark. Understand, I’m a trust and estates attorney, not a criminal lawyer, and unsure of what I sought.”

 

Randy shook his head in frustration.

 

“What have you found thus far?” Red asked.

 

“Just this. A man whom my father counseled claimed authorities wrongly incarcerated him for a murder in south Georgia,” Randy said. “Now, I know most prisoners say they didn’t do the deed that got them where they landed. However, this man offered details in his statements of who killed a young woman back in the fifties.”

 

Red’s mental bells went off. “Tell me more, Randy.”

 

The attorney related the story pieced together from his father’s notes. Over several years, a patient talked endlessly about why he was sent to Milledgeville and how it was a mistake. The man had mental issues as a child. According to Walter Goings’s notations, people regarded him as a “retard” and slow learner. The man had a below-average IQ, but he was able to perform certain tasks at school.

 

“Do you know who the patient was?” “That’s the thing. My father didn’t include any real names in his notes,” Randy said. “He had his own system of keeping the files ordered by nicknames he applied to each patient. For anonymity, given the sensitivity of the information. The man in question was called ‘Bible Salesman,’ who sold the Good Book in a place named Cracker Town.”

 

***

 

Two hours into their meeting, thunder clapped over the house. In a few minutes, a cascade of rain thumped against the window panes and pelted the sidewalk and street below.

 

Nobody commented about the sudden downpour.

 

“Any clue as to where this patient was from?” Red asked. “Cracker Town stirs some familiarity. Have to think about it.”

 

“No,” Randy answered. “What I am hoping to find is a legend matching the client’s nicknames with full names. From that, we should be able to track down other information about them through state archives.”

 

Red considered Randy’s line of reasoning. He regarded state records as a major source of intel. By law, medical records were private. Thus, accessing the files, even if found, might prove difficult. Also, the state destroyed records every ten years.

 

“You have a plan. But as you said, the key is finding out that name and the patient’s hometown,” Red said. “As to the technology side of solving cold cases, DNA has reopened a lot of criminal profiles. Past crimes have been solved, and many wrongly incarcerated people have been set free. DNA also has tracked down people who escaped initial judgment for their criminal activity. First off, have you asked the state to reopen the case?”

 

Randy shook his head. “Yes, but no such luck, Red. A defense attorney in my firm approached the state on my behalf. They told him nothing doing without clearcut evidence about the patient’s alleged crime. His contact also cited the number of years that have passed.”

 

Wind gusts tossed trees on the square below and thumped against the windows.

 

Red asked how much they knew about DNA in criminal cases.

 

“That’s what Linda and I have been discussing,” Randy said. He turned to his wife.

 

“Red, we’ve known someone at the state crime lab for years. She filled us in on the reality of DNA criminal identification,” she said. “We know that obtaining the samples might be a challenge, particularly from people who’ve been dead for many years.”

 

Red nodded and suggested the place to start was arranging for Randy to submit a DNA sample for analysis.

 

“After that, we need to try to locate any DNA records of, say, the mother of the young woman who was killed,” Red said. “Roadblocks and decades aside, we can give it a shot. All of what you say strikes familiar chords. I remember something about a young woman killed in the mid-fifties from my investigation into your family’s deaths. She lived and died in Cracker Town, a Damville, Georgia neighborhood. I’d have to consult my files to determine if her case is relevant.”

 

Randy’s voice wavered. “Add to that, Red, my other little brother or sister to be. Killed in my mother’s womb.” Tears rolled down his cheeks. He retrieved a white handkerchief from his pants pocket and wiped his face.

 

“I’m so sorry, Randy,” Red said. “You suffered so much at a young age.”

 

Suddenly, the downpour subsided and settled into a steady rainfall. Randy shook his head. “I never imagined this would be so difficult. All of the horror of those days, weeks, months, and even years come tumbling back.”

 

After a pause in the conversation, Randy asked where the bathroom was. Red directed him down the side hall to the back of the second floor.

 

Red and Linda sat in silence for a few moments.

 

Red spoke first. “He’s a very lucky man to have you, Linda,” the private detective said.

 

Linda smiled. “Red, you just can’t imagine, but I am the lucky one.”

 

Randy returned and sat down. From his briefcase, he withdrew another manila folder, its fresh color contrasting with the older file. “To get started, I’ve copied some records and notes for you to review. On top is the patient ‘Bible Salesman.’ Several others are underneath his.”

 

“What drew you to Bible Salesman’s file?”

 

As the rain continued, a glimmer of sunlight streaked through the window.

 

“As I read the person’s profile, I presumed him to be a male first of all. My father only counseled men in the prison area, or so he told me,” he said. “The notes tell a story that convinced me this man might be innocent of killing the young woman, wherever that occurred. Certainly, I’d like your impressions after reading all of these, but Bible Salesman grabbed my interest immediately.”

 

Randy expressed his doubts that any of the others in his father’s file could have done him wrong. Several had died.

 

“If they passed away and my father marked their files as such, I didn’t include them for you to review,” he said. “In fact, I didn’t review any of those.”

 

Randy handed the folder to Red, who suggested he have a week or so before their next meeting. He asked Randy to arrange to provide a DNA sample.

 

They also discussed Red’s fees and expenses, which Randy agreed to without any questions. He wrote a two-thousand-dollar check to get started. Red gave him a contract to review and sign before they met again, along with a receipt for the initial payment.

 

“Don’t know your schedule, but I have to be in Atlanta in ten days. Tuesday, the twelfth of September,” Red said. “Might we meet Thursday or Friday?”

 

Randy checked his phone calendar. “Yes, why don’t we meet at my Midtown office on Thursday?” He handed Red a card with the address. “You know the building?”

 

“Indeed, I do,” Red said.

 

“I’ll see you there at two then,” Randy said.

 

Thunder rumbled. Rain started again in earnest.

 

They rose from their seats, and Red escorted the husband and wife downstairs. Red handed them his big golf umbrella for the wet walk to their car.

 

Savannah’s beautiful summer day had turned into the more typical weather of the season. He’d have to check on the tropical storm developing several hundred miles east of Puerto Rico. A hurricane potentially in the making.

 

***

 

Red settled into his seat after dinner out with his wife, Leigh. They tried a new seafood restaurant in a shopping mall. They swore never to return.

 

Besides eating bad food, they got drenched in the storm.

 

Now freshly showered and in dry, comfortable clothing, Red looked out the window at the rain falling on the square.

 

He opened the file folder with pages from Walter Goings’s counseling days at Central State Hospital and thumbed through the sheets, all brittle and some torn. Red looked for links to south Georgia and anything indicating tension between patient and therapist. He found very little about anyone who might want to harm Doctor Goings.

 

The fourth file he picked up was code-named Bible Salesman.

 

The man spoke a great deal about the agony of growing up in a small, unnamed town somewhere in Georgia. The man described the ups and downs of his education. He told of one teacher who tutored him after school for several years. When she left his life, he gave up on his education and dropped out of school when he was fifteen.

 

The notes also described the man’s years in the hospital. There Bible Salesman learned about lunacy boards, which presided over countless criminal suspects and ruled they’d be better off in the state mental hospital than a prison. A judge convened a lunacy board and sent Bible Salesman to Milledgeville for treatment after his arrest on suspicion of a young woman’s death.

 

The patient didn’t know why the lunacy board in his county sent him there. He just didn’t understand how things like that worked. Walter Goings tried to explain it all to Bible.

 

Red scanned the other files. According to Doctor Goings’s notes, one patient had been abused by his mother when he was eight years old. He later killed his older sister.

 

Another account described a child’s mutilation by cigarette burns. The man murdered his mother and grandfather for their mistreatment.

 

There were serial rapists. A congregant allegedly assaulted his pastor’s wife after she refused to drink battery acid in a North Georgia church service. The notes in this file told a story of sexual abuse, but it was unclear who actually forced themselves upon whom. Did Doctor Goings’s patient assault the woman or had the pastor’s wife herself abused the man as a teenager? Murky waters.

 

A lot of accounts raised many questions; few answers came forth.

 

It was almost midnight when Red decided to pack it in and start again the next morning.

 

As he straightened the files, a torn piece of newsprint fell out of the stack. On it was written a brief note in a shaky hand. “Sorry I mist you Doctor Going. See you soon. Cleet.”

 

The bells tolled in a far-off place inside Red’s brain.

 

Cracker Town.

 

And Cleet.

 

Ah yes, Cleet Wrightman.

 About the Author

W.F. Ranew

W.F. Ranew writes the Red Farlow Mysteries series from Tirgearr Publishing,
the latest of which is book five, Cracker Town.

Ranew is a former newspaper reporter, editor, and communication executive.
He started his journalism career covering sports, police, and city council
meetings at his hometown newspaper, The Quitman Free Press. He also worked
as a reporter and editor for several regional dailies: The Augusta (Ga.)
Chronicle, The Florida Times-Union, and The Atlanta
Journal-Constitution.

He lives with his wife in Atlanta and St. Simons Island, Ga.

 

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Cyber Count Blitz

 

Cyber Count cover

A Kat Munro Thriller Book 2

Financial Crime, Mystery, Crime thriller

 

Release Date: December 10, 2021

Publisher: Paperback Writer’s Publishing

Has cyber-crime escalated to murder?

Forensic accountant Kat Munro puts her traumatic past behind her and begins dating journalist Connor O’Malley, whose investigations into online crime attract the wrong kind of attention. When a colleague’s teenage son goes missing, and his friend’s body is discovered, Kat finds herself working with DS Adam Jackson again.

The murder enquiry leads Adam to an exclusive London school where allegations of drugs, gaming fraud and child pornography abound. As he gets deeper into the investigation, Adam is forced to face issues in his private life while suppressing his feelings for Kat.

The faceless hackers become desperate, and Connor is found drugged with his research missing. Can Kat and Adam put the past behind them to solve a series of seemingly unrelated incidents before someone else becomes the victim of an elusive cyber-crime network?

Other Books in the Kat Munro Thriller series:

Death Count cover

 

A Kat Munro Thriller, Book 1

 

Financial Crime Thriller

Published: December 2020

Publisher: Paperback Writer’s Publishing

 

Can a conspiracy be uncovered before the Death Count rises?

Forensic accountant Kat Munro fights corporate fraud during the day and kickboxes her demons at night while trying to ignore the nightmares that have plagued her since a car accident changed her life forever.

DS Adam Jackson is haunted by the mysterious disappearance of a friend two years ago.

When the partner of a successful London Investment fund dies in suspicious circumstances, Kat joins forces with Adam to investigate the firm. As they gather evidence of a crime with implications beyond the City, they find that events in their pasts are on a collision course; one which will ultimately put them both in serious danger.

Fast-paced and entertaining, Death Count takes a deadly dip into the world of financial crime.

Amazon

Cyber Count tablet

 

Excerpt

 

Chapter 1

Marshall Tyler stamped his feet to keep warm and tossed his blond curls out of his eyes. It was supposed to be spring in London, but there wasn’t much evidence of that yet. He couldn’t wait for summer when school would finally be done. He would decamp to his parents’ holiday home on the French Riviera for the holidays, where he’d spend each day working out at the gym, working on his tan, and chasing any number of beautiful girls who flocked to the region.

He took another look at his watch, a gift from his mother, an expensive Girard-Perregaux timepiece similar to the one footballer Cristiano Ronaldo favoured. They were late. He’d give them another five minutes, and then he’d return to school and apologise to his mate Harry. Maybe he shouldn’t have gone behind his back to arrange this meeting, but Marshall loved the thrill of what they’d done. Harry wanted to take it slow, but Marshall had seen the opportunity when it presented itself. Despite Harry’s objections, he’d gone ahead and submitted the proposal anyway. Perhaps he was going to be a shrewd businessman like his father after all.

There was a rustle in the weeds near the abandoned building where he’d been instructed to wait. He spun around and caught a glimpse of the mangy red tail of an urban fox disappearing into the undergrowth. The single-level brick structure and surrounding security fence were marked with ‘Keep Out’ signs, overlaid with meaningless graffiti. Plastic bags, food containers and all manner of rubbish had blown into a pile against the wire fence at one end of the site. The lights on the estate lining the streets leading to the old substation had flickered on during the time he’d been waiting, and dusk now blanketed the city.

He looked around at the growing shadows, and a shiver ran down his spine. He couldn’t wait to leave this dodgy part of London behind him. He couldn’t believe, out of all the places where he could have completed his schooling, that his parents had sent him to a boarding school in the East End. It had been his father’s way of providing some counterbalance to the opulent lifestyle Marshall had been born into.

They weren’t coming. Marshall felt the emptiness of disappointment twist his stomach. He took one more look about him, turned his collar up and ducked back through a hole in the broken fence. When he straightened, two men were standing in front of him.

He jumped and took a step back, crashing into the fence. One of the men laughed, a harsh chesty sound. Marshall couldn’t make out much of their features in the gloom, except that they were both broad-shouldered, with knitted beanies pulled down over their ears.

Tyler?” the first one asked.

You’re just a kid.” The second man sounded surprised.

Marshall nodded and swallowed, feeling a sudden dryness in his throat.

Let’s talk around the back, where we won’t be overheard,” the first man said.

Marshall hesitated, unsure whether he wanted to be out of sight of the flats. Still, it didn’t seem to be a suggestion, so he ducked back through the hole in the fence and waited while the two men followed. He took a deep breath and reminded himself that he was the one in charge; he had the thing they wanted. Squaring his shoulders, he led them around the edge of the substation into an overgrown yard that led down to the railway siding.

Do you have it?”

The two men stood blocking his exit.

Has the money been transferred?” Marshall asked. He heard the slight tremor in his voice and hoped that the men didn’t.

Yeah.”

Marshall took out his phone and tapped on the app for the bank account. The balance was unchanged from when he’d looked earlier. “It’s not there,” he said. “I can’t give it to you until I’ve been paid.”

The second man stepped forward and knocked the phone from Marshall’s hand. The screen shattered as it landed at his feet.

You didn’t really think we’d pay your blackmail, did you?” the first man sneered. “Now give it here.”

Marshall felt a frisson of fear. He opened his mouth to call for help, but the men laughed.

No one will hear you, and if they do, no one will come to your aid, not around these parts.”

Marshall took a step backwards, but the first man grabbed him while the second man landed a solid punch to his abdomen, followed by one to his jaw. Marshall’s head dropped to one side, and he struggled to draw in a breath.

Stop, I don’t have it on me,” he rasped. “But I can get it for you.”

The man hit him once more, and Marshall felt pain radiate from the centre of his face. Blood gushed from his nose, spilling down the front of his jacket.

We’ll wait here, and you go and get it,” the first man said, releasing him and pushing him towards the building. “You have thirty minutes.”

And we’ll keep that fancy watch as collateral to make sure you come back.” The second man reached for his arm, releasing the clasp on the strap and slipping the watch from Marshall’s wrist. He held it up to his face for a closer look. “Very nice.”

No,” Marshall said, making a grab for the watch. The man pulled away as Marshall’s fingers grazed the back of his hand. “That was a present from my mother.”

You know what you need to do if you want it and your phone back.”

About the Author

SL Beaumont

SL Beaumont is the author of the award-winning novel Shadow of Doubt, the Kat Munro Thriller series and the Amazon best-selling series, The Carlswick Mysteries.

She lives in beautiful New Zealand, which is only problematic when the travel-bug bites (which it does fairly often)! Her passion for travel has seen her take many long haul flights to various parts of the world. Her love of history helps determine the destination and the places she visits are a constant source of inspiration for her.

Prior to becoming an author, SL Beaumont worked in banking in London and New York.

Shadow of Doubt won the 2020 Indie Reader Mystery/Suspense/Thriller Award and was long-listed for the Ngaio Marsh Award for Best Novel. Death Count was a semi-finalist for both the 2021 Publisher’s Weekly BookLife Fiction Prize.

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