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Our New Thriller Of The Week Sponsor Is Dirk Wyle’s Bahamas West End Is Murder

Here to sponsor our terrific list of free mystery and thriller titles this week, it’s Dirk Wyle’s Bahamas West End Is Murder, a Ben Candidi Mystery:

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by Dirk Wyle
5.0 stars – 1 Reviews
Lending: Enabled

Here’s the set-up:
As vacationing Ben Candidi and Rebecca Levis sail through International Waters toward Grand Bahama Island, they receive a strange welcome—a sinking cabin
cruiser with a dead man at the helm. Ben knows how to patch bullet holes below the waterline and Rebecca knows how to estimate time of death. And they agree
that the West End marina is the right place to bring the body. To avoid trouble, they play it dumb and treat the cocaine-smuggling marina tenants as the divers
and sport fishermen they are pretending to be. Unfortunately, the mailbox corporation in Miami that owns the yacht ignores Ben’s $100,000 salvage
claim—and the Bahamian police won’t let him move the yacht to Florida. The harder Ben and Rebecca press their claim, the more sinister West End becomes.
Should they cut their losses and run? Or is it too late already?

Each day’s list is sponsored by one paid title. We encourage you to support our sponsors and thank you for considering them.
Authors and Publishers: Interested in learning more about sponsorship? Just click on this link for more information.

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Secrets, lies, and everything in between.When Louella Ward unexpectedly inherits her late grandfather’s assets, she and her brother become the new owners of a crumbling plantation home and the land around it. Soon after receiving the keys, Lou begins to wonder about Bluefield’s hidden secrets....
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Julia Ross is a 48-year-old divorcee who decides to completely upend her life.A year after her divorce, Julia sells everything (including the house), turns her minivan into a camper, and heads to an idyllic beachfront state park in Florida. What is supposed to be a month of sunbathing, hiking...
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One year after a terrible tragedy, the coastal town of West Seven is still recovering from its collective trauma.Deputy Lux Bern is a young rookie police officer with a mysterious past. When an opportunity arises to work with a seasoned detective, Lux jumps at the chance. A girl has gone missing...
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WITH OVER 3,000 5-STAR REVIEWS, MARK KANE MYSTERIES ARE FOR READERS WHO ENJOY GRIPPING MYSTERIES WITH PLENTY OF TWISTS.'⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ 'Couldn't put it down. Great job of writing. I was right there with them.'⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ 'Yet another great book in the series.' I highly recommend this...
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He goes to Kathmandu- the capital city of Nepal for the first time in his life for higher studies. The events that follow are… well, unexpected....
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Lost
By: Nitesh Kumar Roy
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Jerry Smith, an 81 year old retired lawyer, foolishly believes that his only problem is the competency hearing coming up tomorrow in which his spendthrift step-daughter, Diane is seeking to gain control of Jerry's finances. Jerry realizes that Diane will squander his savings in short order if the...
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DIE NOW OLD MAN
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"Ingeniously unsettling. Lazarus provokes thought and dread in equal, unflinching measure." -A.W. Davidson, author of Relics of DawnThey promised a world free of disease and suffering, but at what cost?Kami was strong, stronger than the others, but she couldn't outrun them. Taken and bled for one...
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Sun, Sand and … Murder?Downsized from the FBI’s human resources department on the Virginia mainland, Patience Price is setting up shop as a Counselor at Large in her quirky island town. And she’s making the best of her reinvention, until a high school boyfriend is accused of murder, and his...
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“An ingeniously dark comic thriller about greed, gluttony and murder that is destined for the big screen.” –Best ThrillersAimee Trapnell reluctantly leaves her apartment on Manhattan’s Central Park West to return to her childhood home in Georgia for her father’s ninetieth birthday. Also...
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Step into a riveting adventure novel that will sweep you off your feet with nail-biting suspense, unlikely love, and one man’s search for a treasure that will change both past and future. When two worlds collide with earth-shattering consequences, the first book in the Redemption Series is a...
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Enjoy This Lengthy, Free Excerpt From Steve DeWinter’s Inherit the Throne, our Thriller of the Week Sponsor!

Steve DeWinter’s Inherit the Throne, a Melissa Stone Adventure:

by Steve DeWinter
3.8 stars – 25 Reviews
Here’s the set-up:
Living under a new identity in the tiny Northwestern tourist town at the base of Mount Hood, Melissa thought she had finally escaped her past. That is until an assassin tries to kill her and forces her back into a treacherous shadow world she vowed never to return. That same night an unmanned robotic SUV slams into the limousine of the Vice President of the United States and detonates with several hundred pounds of explosives. Melissa soon discovers that the attack on the Vice President and the attempt on her own life are related. And time is running out to find out who wants her dead and why she alone holds the key to saving the President of the United States. This is the Standard Edition. If you would like extra content such as deleted chapters and a sneek preview of the second Melissa Stone book, then you will want the Enhanced Edition. Either click the + sign next to Kindle Edition in the format section above, or search for “Inherit The Throne Enhanced”.
The author hopes you will enjoy this lengthy free excerpt, which contains the first 8 chapters!

Chapter 1

Carlos Jimenez pushed on the door leading to the employee restroom. The hinges squealed in protest, their cries of pain echoing off the alternating black and white tiles that covered the walls and the floor of the restroom. Jimenez marveled that no how matter how posh or swank the hotel was, the employee restroom always looked like a restroom you’d expect to find in the middle of a deserted highway. He considered himself a professional on the subject of the greater metropolitan DC area employee restrooms, a connoisseur, if you will, as he had seen more than his fair share during his fifteen years on Secret Service detail.

Those fifteen years had brought him through many dark and dingy lower worlds, the Hades of Washington, DC whose every entrance was guarded by the modern-day version of Cerberus, the three-headed dog.

A simple plastic plaque that stated its warning in no uncertain terms.

“Employees Only – No Admittance.”

Special Agent in Charge, Carlos Jimenez had little doubt he entered the very bowels of hell every time he crossed that plaque. And tonight was no different. Jimenez let the door swing fully open before absentmindedly wiping his fingertips on the side of his slacks. His time in the Secret Service brought him to more of these places than he cared to admit, and being promoted to Special Agent in Charge only ensured that he was the first through every door.

His highly trained senses took in the room all at once, and he wished that just once he would open that door and find an employee restroom that was as pristine and polished as the restrooms in the lobby. But then again, he thought, that is the true mark of insanity. Doing the same thing over and over again and expecting a different result.

Jimenez walked into the dimly lit, and fortunately unoccupied, bathroom. He hated having to kick people out, but then again, that was his job. There was no higher calling than keeping the world safe for democracy, but tonight, his job was to keep the bathroom safe for the Vice President of the United States.

He paced out to the center of the room, careful not to slip on the thin film of oily residue that was the unfortunate result of sharing a ventilation shaft with the kitchen. Tonight his job would be easier than usual. The management had posted a sign on the door stating that the restroom was going to be for the personal use of the Vice President of the United States and requested employees to take care of their needs elsewhere. Despite the sign, Jimenez still did his duty and entered the room ahead of anyone else.

The two urinals stood empty. In stark contrast to the coloring of the walls and the floor, they gleamed in brilliant porcelain white, the pungent odor of chlorine the only telltale sign to the cause of their cleanliness. Two of the stall doors stood open with the middle stall closed and a crude handwritten sign stating “out of order” in blocky red letters taped to the door.

As the special agent walked past the broken stall, he nearly did a double take as he thought he saw a shadow move underneath. He paused for only a moment and stared hard under the locked door. Just then a voice broke his concentration. He looked up to see the eager face of the youngest recruit ever to get Vice Presidential detail. An honor that, until this kid had come along, had been his.

“He said to let you know that he’s had quite a bit to drink, and he doesn’t know how much longer he can hold it.”

Jimenez held up, his hand silencing the recruit. He drew his automatic pistol and pointed silently at the locked bathroom stall. The recruit understood and drew his own service weapon and pointed it at the stall door.

Jimenez kicked hard at the door, and the lock gave way with a shriek. The door slammed against the back wall of the empty stall.

Jimenez holstered his weapon and looked at the kid who had stolen his record.

“Let him know it’s all clear.”

Just as Jimenez finished his sentence, a large well-groomed man of six foot two pushed his way into the restroom. “God dammit, Carlos. I swear, you seem to take longer every single time.”

“Just doing my job to keep you safe, sir.”

The Vice President rushed past, unzipping his pants before he even made it to the urinal against the wall. “Now that I’m safe, how about a little privacy?”

Jimenez reached the door and pulled it closed behind him, “Of course, sir. I’ll be outside if you need anything.”

***

As soon as he heard the door close, Andrew quietly lowered himself down from the sling that had held him hidden under the wide imitation marble sinks along the wall opposite the urinals. The Fentanyl had finally kicked in, and the pain had subsided enough that Andrew was able to concentrate on sneaking up behind the Vice President without alerting him that he was even there.

Five years ago if someone had told the highly decorated United States Army Special Forces Captain that, on an otherwise ordinary Thursday night, he would be hiding from the Secret Service in a filthy bathroom waiting to make a move against the second most powerful man in the United States, he would’ve told them to go do something unnatural with themselves. But cancer has a way of changing a man, making him willing to do things he wouldn’t normally consider.

The Vice President finished, zipped up his pants and turned around. Andrew understood the reason for the sudden look of confusion on the Vice President’s face. He was staring into the face of someone who looked exactly like him.

“What the…” was all the Vice President could utter before Andrew swiftly stabbed the needle into the arm of the career politician and plunged the entire contents of the syringe deep into the muscle tissue. The Vice President stared down at the needle sticking out of his arm and then back up to look Andrew squarely in the eyes. The chemical worked quickly, and as the Vice President realized he was losing all muscle control, his eyes sought out the doorway that led to an entire squadron of heavily armed and highly trained men whose job it was to protect him.

He opened his mouth to scream for help, but the only noise he made was a low moan accompanied by a gurgling sound right before he collapsed into Andrew’s arms.


Chapter 2

William Hartford sat motionless in his red leather wing chair. The single green banker’s light perched on the corner of his antique leather-topped desk provided the only illumination in his twelve thousand square foot Washington, DC apartment.

The glass of Blair Athol Whisky sat untouched on the end table by the side of the leather wing chair. Hartford had poured and ignored it. The ice was gone leaving only a thin layer of clear water to reflect the banker’s lamp as it floated on top of the amber liquid. A twelve-year-old single malt whiskey should never be treated with such disdain.

Hartford let the cool September wind rustle the papers on the desk behind him. As the wind picked up and papers began to shift across the desk, Hartford leaned forward and pushed the window to just within an inch of closed. This would permit the night sounds to drift in without interfering with the arrangement of the files on his desk.

In stark contrast to the antique Georgian mahogany wood and the dark green tooled leather top of the hundred-year-old partner’s desk, a small LED clock burned bright blue on the far right corner. The time showed as 11:32 p.m., and Hartford used these last few moments of each day to reflect as he glanced at the clear liquid floating on top of the whiskey. He’d been sober now for twelve years, three months and five days, and during that time had managed to become a respected politician. He was so well-trusted that he had been voted almost unanimously to preside over Congress for the last two years. But with the change in leadership expected in the upcoming election, his time in a position of power was coming to a close.

The phone on the leather-topped desk rang.

He was used to late-night calls from all around the world, even on a politically uneventful Thursday night, and answered after only the second ring. The caller ID showed up as blocked, but the soft melodic voice he recognized instantly.

“In one week you will be President of the United States.”

“Hannah!?”Hartford sat up in shock and absently reached for the glass of whiskey before stopping himself short. Twelve years, three months and five days was not that long, after all.

“Are you ready for what I have spent over a decade preparing you for?” The soft voice betrayed the sinister nature of her statement.

“Without you, I would never have gotten this far, but how you can be so sure that you can actually make me the President?”

“The Presidential Succession Act will make you President. I’m only clearing the way.”

A small-town city councilman, who spent every weekend in a drunken stupor, was the last person that should have been selected to become the leader of the most powerful nation in the world. But Hannah had told him that if he sobered up and promised to stay away from the devil’s nectar, she would make that happen for him.

For the last twelve years, three months and five days, he had kept his side of the bargain, and, as he was maneuvered up the ranks of the political ladder, it was obvious that she was keeping hers.

Not bad for someone he had never met face-to-face. They always spoke over the phone, or, in recent months, he met with her second in command.

He glanced at the glass of whiskey.

This dependency.

This crutch.

Hannah had proven to him that he was better off without it, that success was more achievable when it was left out of his life.

He had been silent for too long, and Hannah said exactly what Hartford needed to hear. “Play it my way, and we both get what we want.”

“Why now?”

“Because the window of opportunity is fast closing. I have to strike while the iron is hot.”

The call ended with a click that sounded more final than anything Hartford had ever heard in his life. Dealing with Hannah was like talking to a bad doctor. You never understood what they meant until it was too late.

Like an avalanche on a snow-packed mountain, now that it had started, not even William Hartford, The Speaker of the House of Representatives himself, could stop it.

As soon as he became Speaker of the House, Hartford was just two heartbeats away from the throne of the most powerful country in the world.

And to make matters worse, Hartford was not in control. Even if he wanted to change his mind, it was already too late. It was too late twelve years ago when he put aside his own personal issues and went along with the most ludicrous scheme he had ever heard in his life.

Hartford grabbed the glass of amber liquid, spilling a little of the watered-down whiskey onto the leather-topped desk. He gulped down the entire contents of the glass in a single swallow and let the warm liquid burn his throat and sear the inside of his nostrils. He would not be the first United States President who had overcome a drinking problem in his past.


Chapter 3

Jonathan Wilkes snapped shut the sleek black Motorola RAZR V3 and dropped it into the nearest trash can on the street. He had received confirmation from Hannah to proceed and wouldn’t need to use that phone ever again. When it was time to contact her again, he would purchase a disposable phone using cash.

Wilkes checked the pace of traffic and crossed the street to join the growing crowd of protesters.

The former United States Marine Corps Force Reconnaissance warrior gripped the nylon backpack that was slung over the shoulder of his Port Authority black leather bomber jacket. Wilkes generally preferred to wear the durable and ready-for-action Battle Dress Uniform, but despite coming in a variety of camouflage patterns and solid colors, he decided he would blend in better if he wore civilian clothes.

Good call. As soon as he stepped into the crowd of protesters he noted that there were at least fifteen other men in black leather jackets and blue jeans and not a single person in BDUs. Wilkes quickly scanned the crowd looking for potential accomplices and found them huddled together in front of the window of a shoe store closed for the night. They cast furtive glances around as they passed something small between them, each taking a turn.

They were perfect.

Wilkes strode over and stopped a couple feet outside the circle. He quickly evaluated the small group of boys and noted that the oldest couldn’t have been more than seventeen. They obviously thought that forming a circle would magically keep anyone from smelling what it was they were really up to. A sudden exchange of whispers caused the entire group to simultaneously turn their heads and look at Wilkes.

“We ain’t got nothin’ for sale.” The 17-year-old was obviously the leader. Probably because he was their supplier.

“I just wanted to know if you boys can help me and my friends out,” Wilkes nodded his head towards the crowd of protesters. “You see, the Vice President’s motorcade is gonna come by in about fifteen minutes, and I’ve got a few cartons of eggs in my bag. You interested?”

“What are you protesting?”

Wilkes smiled. “Does it really matter?You wanna throw eggs at the VPs limo or not?”

Heads pivoted back-and-forth among the circle of boys as they looked at each other trying to determine if this was a trap or not. All eyes finally settled on the leader who looked back at Wilkes and flashed a big grin exposing several gaps were teeth should have been. “You only live once, right?”

Wilkes slid the backpack off his shoulder and bent down to unzip the bag. He lifted the first carton of eggs out of the backpack and held it out to the leader.

“Take the eggs out of the cartons here and spend the next few minutes working your way into the crowd. Try not to stick together. Remember, the key word here is to blend in. The Vice President’s car will be the second limousine six cars back from the front of the motorcade. Now, don’t any of you get too excited and start throwing eggs early. Wait for the Vice President.”

One of the boys, who couldn’t have been more than fifteen, took a carton of eggs and held it up to show the others.

“Hey – organic free range, nice.”

Wilkes handed out the rest of the egg cartons. “Only the very best for the leaders of our country.”

Eggs were quickly dispersed among the small group when the leader paused and looked at Wilkes. “What about you, man, you gonna take an egg?”

“Already got one,” Wilkes replied, as he slipped an egg out of the pocket of his black leather bomber jacket. “Remember – wait for the Vice President’s car.”

“We got it, man.”


Chapter 4

Andrew carefully laid the Vice President down on the gritty bathroom floor. It took him only a few moments to change shoes with the Vice President. Andrew was already dressed in exactly the same suit and tie so that the switch could be made in as little time as possible. The only thing that he couldn’t replicate was the transponder built into the heel of the Vice President’s left shoe, and so a quick swap ensured that both visually and electronically Andrew was now the Vice President of the United States.

Andrew stood up and looked at himself in the grimy mirror. Multiple several-hour surgeries had made him look exactly like the man lying unconscious on the floor, and for the past six weeks, a vocal coach taught him how to speak and sound just like him.

He practiced flashing the world renowned smile in the mirror, and then suddenly doubled over the sink. The breakthrough pain was getting more severe each time. With one hand gripping the side of the rust-stained sink, he reached into his pocket and pulled out the bottle of Fentanyl tablets. Andrew stared at the large red warning letters on the bottle in his trembling hand. He actually laughed out loud as he read that among the dangers of overdose was a high probability of death. This warning label did not apply to him. He would be dead in less than half an hour anyway.

He popped the top of the bottle with his thumb and let go of the sink long enough to pour the remaining four tablets into his waiting palm. One by one he nestled the tablets into his cheeks just behind each molar. They dissolved quickly, and he glanced at the sleeping body on the floor. A wave of emotion flooded over him, and he instantly snapped to attention. With a fluid practiced motion, his hand jerked to his brow in salute.

“United States Army – 5th Special Forces Group. Captain Andrew Stovall at your complete disposal. It is my distinct pleasure to die in your place, Mr. Vice President.”

The sleeping man never stirred, never even reacted to what Andrew had just said. He released his salute and let his hand drop to his side. The shaking was subsiding, and that meant it was time to fulfill his duty. The public would never know of the sacrifice he’d made for his country. But then again, the cancer would have taken him in less than six months anyway, and he didn’t do this for a medal.

He did this because it had to be done.

He did this because he believed in the oath he had taken to protect the leaders of this great nation.

Andrew pulled open the bathroom door just enough to slip out into the hallway. It wouldn’t be a good idea to have anyone outside this door look in and see his doppelganger lying prone on the alternating black and white discolored tiles.

The concerned face of Carlos Jimenez, Special Agent in Charge, was the first thing Andrew encountered in the hallway.

“Are you alright, sir?You were in there quite a while.”

Andrew immediately employed his six weeks of vocal training. “Like I said before, Carlos, I just had a little too much to drink. I’ll be all right. I think I’m ready to leave now.”

“Of course, sir. The motorcade’s right this way.”

Jimenez pointed down the hallway with an outstretched open palm. Just like Moses raising his staff over the Red Sea, as soon as the Special Agent in Charge raised his arm to point the way, a sea of Secret Service agents parted to either side of the hallway.

Andrew scanned the hallway in front of them and then turned to look back the opposite direction, searching the faces of every hotel employee.

Jimenez touched him briefly on the elbow. “This way, sir.”

A sudden wave of terror enveloped Andrew as he searched the faces of the hotel employees in both directions of the hallway. His frantic actions must have alarmed the Secret Service agents closest to him as their gun hands instinctively started moving for their holsters.

“Is there anything wrong, sir.”

Andrew glanced at Carlos Jimenez, hoping that his fear was not reflected in his eyes. “I, uhh…”

Someone coughed down the hallway and made several of the agents jump reflexively. Andrew looked at the banquet server who had just coughed, and instantly all anxiety flowed out of every muscle as, when their eyes met, the banquet server gave an almost imperceptible nod. The Vice President would be safe.

Andrew quickly turned to the lead Secret Service agent and flashed the Vice President’s award-winning smile. “I am so sorry, Carlos. I think I had more to drink than I planned. I was disoriented for a moment there. You know how it is, too many employee bathrooms in too many hotels.”

Carlos Jimenez searched his eyes looking for the answer to a question he didn’t even know he was asking.

“Take me home.”

The Special Agent in Charge visibly relaxed, and he finally let go of Andrew’s arm.

“Right this way, sir.”


Chapter 5

Jonathan Wilkes cradled the egg in the palm of his hand while he made his way through the protesters. He glanced around to see that all the pothead kids had done exactly as he asked. They all stood waiting amongst the crowd.

The man with the megaphone hadn’t stopped shouting his political diatribe since Wilkes first arrived, and he wondered how the man could sustain saying the same thing over and over again without tiring or getting bored of himself.

I guess he likes hearing himself talk, Wilkes thought. But that still didn’t explain how the rest of the people in the crowd put up with it.It’s true what they say, some are born leaders while the rest are born followers.

Jonathan Wilkes had been a leader of men, strong men, not like the sheep that surrounded him now. He commanded one of the most active Force Recon units within the Marine Corps Special Operations Command, designated as Detachment One. Detachment One was the pilot program that brought Marine Force Recon units and the United States Special Operations Command together to work side-by-side.

Wilkes led his unit through numerous successes in multiple theaters. That is until the United States Marine Corps Forces Special Operations Command was officially activated on February 24th of 2006. With the formation of this new layer of political significance, the United States Marine Corps had become directly involved with SOCOM and no longer required the pilot program.

The first action of MARSOC was the disbanding of Detachment One leaving Master Gunnery Sergeant Jonathan Wilkes without a unit to command and a promotion to the Marine Corps Mountain Warfare Training Center that took him out of harm’s way.

Wilkes had always envisioned that he would die during a combat operation, and running simulated exercises up and down a snowy mountain along the California-Nevada border was not his idea of combat operations.

So he left and became a mercenary for hire. Wilkes quickly made a name for himself as the one who could get the job done. He wondered why he had not left the service sooner. The pay was much better, and the danger was far more consistent. He could work back-to-back contracts if he wanted without waiting for someone higher up in the chain of command to decide to deploy him or not. This was the life he was meant for; this was the life that gave him meaning.

The sound of distant sirens pierced through the thick night. They were still far enough away that Wilkes could only hear them when mister megaphone paused to take a breath. A cell phone rang, and mister megaphone instantly stopped shouting as he reached into his jacket pocket to answer the phone. He listened for a moment and then shoved the phone back in his pocket. “Ladies and gentlemen, I just received word that the Vice President is headed this way.”

The crowd immediately reacted as a single organism, and everyone in the front of the crowd seemed to grow three feet taller as they lifted signs and banners into the air, each one hand-lettered and all detailing their discourse with the decisions of the current administration.

“Aw, shit!”, muttered Wilkes, as he looked at the wall of signs and banners along the edge of the street. There was no way they would hit the limo with those in the way. Wilkes made his way to the closest pothead.

“Hey, buddy, tell your friends to get in front of those signs. And hurry. He’ll be here any second.”

“You got it, man.”The kid dashed into the crowd being a little more obvious than he should have. “Hey, guys, get to the curb. He’s coming.”

Wilkes breathed a sigh of relief as the kids all recognized their friend’s voice and made their way to the street, eggs in hand. Wilkes also moved forward. He hadn’t wanted to expose himself this much, but it was more important that his special egg made contact with the Vice President’s limousine.

He moved to the front of the line to stand right next to mister megaphone and hoped that if questions were asked, he would be remembered as just another one of the protesters in a black leather jacket and blue jeans.

Wilkes looked down the street and noted all the signal lights turning green marking the path that the Vice President was about to take. The volume of the sirens exploded into a monstrous wale as two police motorcycles rounded the nearby corner followed closely by the long procession of vehicles in the motorcade. Wilkes counted out the vehicles and prayed that the potheads had enough brain cells left to remember his instructions.

The Vice President’s limousine rounded the corner, and Wilkes knew it was now or never. He glanced down the street and caught the eye of one of the kids and nodded. He then turned his full attention to the speeding limousine, pulled his arm back and hurled the egg to where he knew the limousine was going to be in half a second.

His egg made direct contact with the roof, the small magnetized object hidden inside sticking instantly to the reinforced bulletproof limousine. As if on cue, a hail of eggs sailed from within the crowd. Most of them splattered all over the Vice President’s limousine while others missed and smeared the pavement with their slimy residue.

The Metropolitan police dispatched to monitor the protesters sprung into action and barked orders at the young kids who were now dashing in all directions.

Wilkes spotted the lead officer making his way over to mister megaphone.

And him.

He stepped backwards and let the crowd envelope him as he stripped off his black leather jacket and quickly handed it to someone as he stepped past. “Here, hold this.”

Just like a sheep, the man took the jacket that was thrust into his stomach.

Out of the corner of his eye, Wilkes watched the man who look confused, but he had already disappeared into the crowd, and the man never even saw him.


Chapter 6

Jacob Jordan hunched over the ruggedized clamshell of his Panasonic Toughbook. At only seventeen, he didn’t feel the effects of such poor posture over an extended period of time, but the cold September wind whistled through every crack and crevice in the un-insulated downtown warehouse and bit into his fingertips as he typed furiously on the keyboard. He paused for a brief moment to flex his fingers and rubbed his hands together.

His peripheral vision was suddenly blotted out by a massive shape. “What’s fuckin’ taking so long?”

Jacob glanced up at Henderson, whose six foot five, 260 pounds of pure muscle took up his entire view.

“I thought you said you were ready.”

Through a series of well-placed bruises, Henderson had taught Jacob that having an IQ of over 140 didn’t mean you were smart. Jacob quickly looked back at the monitor of his Toughbook and didn’t make eye contact for his response. “The city upgraded the firmware on some of their traffic cameras last weekend. ARGUS can handle the reduced input, but I thought, while I had time, I could update the adaptive module and see if we can’t talk to all the visual devices.”

“What the fuck did you just say!?”

“I really wish you wouldn’t use that kind of language around me.”

“What!?What language?English?You want me speak in Russian? Vay nemnogaya derymo!”

“You’re the little shit,” Jacob muttered under his breath.

Henderson responded with such fluid speed that during a single blink of his eyes, Jacob went from sitting with the Panasonic Toughbook on his lap to listening as the hardened magnesium alloy case clattered on the gray concrete floor of the warehouse. Jacob’s feet dangled just below Henderson’s knees.

“You wanna run that by me again, Sunshine?”

“Were supposed to be working together, Henderson.”

“We are working together. My job is to keep you in line.”

Jacob could smell the tinge of alcohol on Henderson’s breath and readied himself for another lesson plan. Just then, Jacob’s micro receiver ear bud hissed to life.

“White Wolf to Red Wolf and Blue Wolf, come in.”

Jacob wondered if Wilkes understood the significance of naming him and Henderson Red Wolf and Blue Wolf since, in military exercises, the red and blue teams were always adversaries.

“This is Red Wolf. Go ahead, White Wolf.”

“Is Blue Wolf ready?”

Jacob didn’t answer right away, so Henderson, who still had him suspended by the lapels of his jacket, shook him a little giving him the look of, you’d better respond.

“Uhh, yeah, I’m ready.”

“Good. Everything is in place, and you should start getting a strong signal in about ten minutes.”

“As soon as the signal is confirmed, I’ll boot up the Blitzkrieg simulator and send out the mobile unit.”

“Roger that. White Wolf out.”With a final crack of static, the communication was severed.

“Hear that, you little turd, you need to be ready.”

“I was good and ready when you picked me up with your Sasquatch hands.”

And with that remark, Henderson let go. Jacob landed clumsily and almost collapsed to his knees but didn’t want to give Henderson the satisfaction. Instead he used the momentum to lean forward and collect the Panasonic Toughbook.

“You better not have broken this, or we’re all screwed.”

“I didn’t break nothin’.”

Jacob flipped the Panasonic Toughbook over and was relieved to see the screen was still displaying the running program. As he ran the final diagnostic, he looked around the freezing cold warehouse, and his eyes settled on the back of his partner, the psychopathic killer, who was fiddling with something in a wooden crate.

Good.

Let him fiddle with whatever he wants to.

As long as he doesn’t bother me.

This certainly wasn’t the life he expected when he graduated in the top of his class from Tel Aviv University at age twelve. When the Interdisciplinary Center for Technological Analysis and Forecasting, the Israeli government’s multidisciplinary think-tank, offered him a fully-funded scholarship to work for the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, known as DARPA, in the United States, Jacob knew that Ha-Shem had finally shown favor on him, and all those hours spent in prayer at the shul had not been wasted.

A sharp sound brought Jacob back to the present just as Henderson swung around from the wooden crate and pulled back on the charging handle of his Heckler & Koch XM8 compact carbine. The loud snap of the charging handle returning to its original position echoed in the hollow metal corrugated warehouse. Jacob only had a moment to notice that the 100-round drum magazine was already loaded when Henderson pointed the XM8 right at him and pulled the trigger.


Chapter 7

“Jesus!” Jacob was on his feet in an instant, and the Panasonic Toughbook once again clattered onto the concrete floor of the warehouse.

“Never heard a Jew pray to Jesus before.” Henderson lowered the empty XM8 compact carbine and laughed. He stopped laughing and cocked his head a little as he looked at Jacob. “Oh, my God, did you just piss your pants?”

Jacob didn’t need to look down as he could feel the warmth running down his legs. “Fuck you, Henderson!”

Henderson laughed even harder.

“Fuck you!”

The Panasonic Toughbook laying face down on the floor emitted a sharp beep. Henderson immediately stopped laughing. The Toughbook beeped again.

“Pick it up, tough guy, or I’ll use bullets next time.”

For the second time in two minutes Jacob scooped up the Toughbook from the floor and was again relieved to see that it still functioned. Panasonic wasn’t kidding when they said that these laptops were built to handle just about anything you could throw at them — or throw them at.

Henderson was instantly at his side as if nothing had just happened. “Is that the signal?”

Jacob didn’t look up but instead focused his full attention on the display. He thought about not answering, but knew that would only provoke the already overly violent Henderson. “Signals coming in strong. Open the rollup door.”

“Are you ready to release the R/C car?”

“It’s not a remote-controlled car. It’s a fully autonomous ground mobile combat system with real-time adaptive decision-making.”

“You control it with your computer, right?”

“I program in the parameters of its mission orders, yes.”

“Then it’s an R/C car.”

“It’s a six million dollar modern marvel in autonomous robotics.”

“Then it’s a fuckin’ expensive R/C car.”

“Just open the door.”

“Are you giving me orders now, squirt?”

“I just want to get this over with and get away from you as quickly as possible.”

“Finally, something we can agree on.”

Henderson strolled over to the chain dangling in a loop next to the corrugated steel door. He grasped the chain in both hands and started working hand over hand slowly raising the rollup door like an ancient medieval castle gate, like he was preparing to release a dragon from the depths of the dungeon. That wasn’t too far from the truth. Jacob looked over at the quiet Audi Q7 painted by the manufacturer in a jet black color aptly named Phantom Black Pearl.

A couple of swift keystrokes initiated the Linux command window enabling Jacob to type the command strings that would be encrypted and transmitted to their dragon. He paused for a moment reviewing the dynamic dispatch cascading messages before softly depressing the enter key. Moments later, the twelve-cylinder diesel engine in the Audi Q7 roared to life.

Jacob watched as the Deep Green computer system that filled the entire two front seats of the passenger compartment communicated in response with the protocols and commands being sent by his Panasonic Toughbook. He watched silently as one by one, Deep Green booted up the software agents it would employ during tonight’s mission.

He watched as the Urban Reasoning and Geospatial Exploitation Technology (URGENT) program confirmed it was communicating with the Autonomous Real-Time Ground Ubiquitous Surveillance – Imaging System (ARGUS-IS). Jacob was most proud of the add-on he had worked into the ARGUS that enabled it to connect directly to the District Department of Transportation traffic camera system. Independently, URGENT and ARGUS were scary smart computer programs, if smart was the word for it, but together, under the command of Deep Green, they gave the Audi Q7 something not available in any dealership. The factory-provided GPS told the Audi where it was, ARGUS told it where everything else was, and URGENT made it smart enough to get where it wanted to go without hitting anything that it didn’t want to hit.

The final program booted up. This was the belle of the ball. The Real-Time Adversarial Intelligence and Decision-Making (RAID) software made the Audi intelligent. Without this program, none of the other programs, even in combination, could turn an SUV into a lethal targetable weapon. RAID made sure that they would be able to hit a moving target with precision accuracy.

Jacob listened to the soft rumble coming from the SUV. It was a much quieter sound than he expected from a six-liter V12 turbocharged direct injection diesel engine. He had already disabled the electronically-capped top speed of 155 mph, and with an engine producing 500 horsepower in such a large vehicle, this was something that no manufacturer of limousine armor had intended to come up against. To make matters worse, the remaining interior space of the Audi was filled with C-4 plastic explosives formed into shaped charges that would direct all their explosive force straight at whatever the Audi collided with.

The Audi Q7 V12 model was not available for sale in the United States, and it was sobering for Jacob to think that the only one to actually travel the streets of Washington, DC would have such a limited run. He stared at the screen as Deep Green ran its final diagnostic checks.

A rattling thunk made Jacob look up. Henderson was walking back from the open loading door, and the quiet night sounds drifted into the freezing cold warehouse. “Hurry up and release the beast.”Henderson was enjoying this far too much. “We’ve got more to do tonight.”

Jacob hated being put in these situations; being forced to work with people like Henderson. But then again, somebody with his past had relatively few options.

The launch command waited in a separate window. Using the built-in Panasonic Toughbook’s touchpad, Jacob switched window controls. “Stand back.”With his eyes closed, he pressed the enter key. The all-wheel drive of the Audi Q7 propelled its dragon out into the world to unleash its fiery destruction on an unsuspecting town.


Chapter 8

Andrew perched on the edge of the back seat and watched as the dimly lit buildings of Washington, DC at night blurred past the limousine window. He felt like he was standing still while the rest of the world was streaming by. When that first egg hit the top of the car, he almost jumped out of his skin. It had sounded so loud, like a gunshot. Then more followed, hitting the sides and the top. Andrew was immediately pressed backward into the soft leather seat by the sudden acceleration as the motorcade sped away from the scene.

Well, they got that part right. This meant that the rest, no matter how incredible it sounded, was most likely true. It was probably the most overused plot in low-budget sci-fi movies, but Andrew knew that somewhere, out there in the night, there was an intelligent robotic killing machine looking for him. There was nothing left for him to do but sit back and wait.

Knowing the end was drawing near, Andrew naturally reflected on his life. But all he could focus on was the whirlwind year he was about to complete. Ten months ago, after the surgery, Andrew learned the informal medical term “new lease on life.” He set out to make his bucket list, the list of things he always wanted to do but never took the time. And now he finally had the time.

But when a sharp stabbing pain forced an emergency evacuation by helicopter from the peak of Half Dome in Yosemite, Andrew learned a new medical term only six months into his “new life.” Metastatic cancer. What this meant for him was that not only had the cancer come back, it came back in more places than it had started.

And now, four months later, here he was.

Sitting in a limousine posing as the Vice President of the United States.

Waiting to die.

He reflexively winced through every intersection as the convoy of vehicles screamed through at high speed. At this hour there was almost no traffic, and every cross street provided ample opportunity for a high-speed side-impact collision.

This was taking way too damn long.

Andrew suddenly glanced up at the roof of the limousine. An overpowering desire to live washed over him. He knew why that first egg sounded so loud. Maybe he could reach it?Pull it off and throw it out into the street?There were other treatments he could try. He didn’t have to die right now, did he?

Andrew shook his head as his vision blurred slightly. He knew that this euphoric thinking was a direct result of the opiates in his system caused by the breakthrough pain medication.

Still, he had a lot to live for, didn’t he?

Of course he did.

That settled it.

Andrew leaned to his left and fingered the controls to roll down the back window. A strong wind immediately blew around inside the cabin of the limousine. They must’ve been traveling at least seventy miles an hour.

With the window rolled down all the way, Andrew sat with his back to the window and reached up behind him to grip the door frame where it met the roof. With a single motion, he lifted himself up and out and sat down on the edge of the closed door. The wind threatened to pull him the rest of the way out of the limousine, and he splayed his legs on opposite sides of the door’s interior to create an anchor for himself.

The wind buffeted him fiercely.

He squinted against the harsh conditions and scanned the roof of the limousine for what he knew must be there. And then he saw it. The tiny magnetic transponder sat just this side of dead center on the roof.

If he could just reach it.

Clamping his legs to the frame of the car, he pushed a little higher to give himself a longer reach. Flashing lights from his right drew his attention away from the tiny device. He glanced over at the Chevy Suburban filled with Secret Service agents. They were frantically flashing their headlights at him.

What did they think that would achieve?

Did they think that he didn’t know what he was doing?

He returned his full attention back to the device that sat, mockingly, just out of his reach. Losing leverage but gaining more reach, Andrew pushed up ever so slightly with his legs.

Just a little further.

He almost toppled out of the limousine when a motorcycle officer appeared on the opposite side right into his field of view. The loud roar of the wind rushing past at over seventy miles an hour made it almost impossible to hear the officer, but not quite. “Get back in the car!”

With his left arm splayed forward on the roof to provide additional stability, Andrew made one final push and gripped the tiny object with his fingertips. A second motorcycle officer joined the first, and they took turns hollering questions and commands at him. Andrew tugged at the device. It resisted slightly before releasing its magnetic grip and came free into his fingers.

He had done it!

He waved the device in front of him showing it to the two motorcycle officers with a big smile on his face. “I got it!”

And then his face fell as he looked past the two motorcycle officers to see the blurred grill of an SUV heading straight for them at impossible speed.

As soon as the Audi Q7’s bumper made contact with the second motorcycle, the collision detectors triggered the shaped C-4 charges, which focused all of their explosive power directly at the limousine right in front of it.

It happened so quickly that Andrew never even felt the end of his life.

 

Inherit The Throne (A Melissa Stone Adventure) by Steve DeWinter, $2.99 in the Kindle Store

Steve DeWinter’s Inherit The Throne is our new Thriller of the Week Sponsor!

New Thriller of the Week Sponsor Steve DeWinter’s Inherit The Throne is here to sponsor the free mystery and thriller titles offered in our Free Kindle Book listings, below!

 

Inherit The Throne
by Steve DeWinter
3.8 stars – 25 Reviews
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:
Living under a new identity in the tiny Northwestern tourist town at the base of Mount Hood, Melissa thought she had finally escaped her past. That is until an assassin tries to kill her and forces her back into a treacherous shadow world she vowed never to return. That same night an unmanned robotic SUV slams into the limousine of the Vice President of the United States and detonates with several hundred pounds of explosives. Melissa soon discovers that the attack on the Vice President and the attempt on her own life are related. And time is running out to find out who wants her dead and why she alone holds the key to saving the President of the United States. This is the Standard Edition. If you would like extra content such as deleted chapters and a sneek preview of the second Melissa Stone book, then you will want the Enhanced Edition. Either click the + sign next to Kindle Edition in the format section above, or search for “Inherit The Throne Enhanced”.

 


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WITH OVER 3,000 5-STAR REVIEWS, MARK KANE MYSTERIES ARE FOR READERS WHO ENJOY GRIPPING MYSTERIES WITH PLENTY OF TWISTS.'⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ 'Couldn't put it down. Great job of writing. I was right there with them.'⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ 'Yet another great book in the series.' I highly recommend this...
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Brenda Wallace’s Brilliant Prey Is Our Thriller Of The Week Sponsor, Here’s A Free Excerpt!

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Brilliant Prey

Brilliant Prey

by Brenda Wallace
4.7 stars – 6 Reviews
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled

 

Here’s the set-up:

Even a genius can be played for a pawn by a cunning and deadly manipulator.Lauren James is a former psychiatrist, still reeling from her husband’s suicide and the subsequent miscarriage that swept away her tidy life the year before. On the anniversary of his death, she opens what she hopes to be a “Welcome to Mensa” envelope and pulls out a threatening puzzle along with the identical suicide note she had burned the previous year. Unraveling the twisted clues, Lauren embarks on a harrowing journey drawn in by a child’s neglected grave, a professor from the island of St. Croix, and a U.S. Supreme Court nominee. When Lauren discovers the reason behind her husband’s shocking death, she must struggle with her deepest convictions and whether killing is acceptable if it saves more lives.

Brilliant Prey by Brenda Wallace, Kindle price .99

Here’s an excerpt to get you started:


Chapter One

 

One word bled through the folded page when Lauren pulled it from the envelope. “Mensa,” she murmured. She had always believed that a person testing in the top two percent of intelligence scores was a genius. Now she didn’t.

 

“Well, go ahead and open it,” her sister, Angie, said, stomping a high-heeled boot. Red clay slopped off the ornately tooled leather and onto Lauren’s white bamboo floor.

 

Lauren cocked her head, twisting a strand of hair into a painful rope when the anticipated “Welcome” message did not appear. Those Mensans did say she passed after all, but maybe they’d made a clerical error. Beneath the MENSA letterhead lay a series of dark random dots.

“What is it? Yuck.” Angie leaned a wooly head in front of the letter, blocking her view.

 

“I don’t know.” Lauren moved the document back into her line of sight. The scattered blotches were a strange reddish-sepia tone. She shook her head. If she didn’t know better, she would think these drops were…”Dried blood?”

 

Angie pushed closer, reached out toward the page, and then yanked her hand back without touching it.

 

Using an index finger, Lauren smudged one orb the size of a dried pea. It cracked. She rubbed the tainted hand over her blue jeans, and then turned the page over for an explanation. Six hangmen with X’s for eyes had been drawn there using the same fluid.

 

Above the hangmen game, a spidery script read SIX GUESSES EACH. A short word blank was associated with each stick-figure man. In the last word blank, the number 131,313 was scratched in needle-thin print, filling in the blanks with the odd rusty ink.

 

“I’m good at hangman, you know,” Angie said, whipping a pen out of her purse with a magician’s finesse.

 

“Right. I know.”

 

On a piece of junk mail lying on the kitchen table, Lauren jotted their hangmen solutions one by one above the number. The words came too easily: “hated lit set un I’m 131,313.” The hair prickled across her skin, feeling like the legs of a scrambling scorpion. Rubbing her arms, she felt the answer lurking.

 

Angie’s bronze face blanched. “Oh no. It’s about the Devil.”

 

“We’ll see.” Grasping the paper, Lauren held it next to the Tuscan globe that hung above her dinette. She detected something in the ginger hues. A watermark. Squinting, she muttered, “Georgia Pacific.” She gazed out her condo’s bay window at the rolling postal truck, wondering whether the document might hold a message of significance. “Let’s try the computer.”

 

The scent of holiday cinnamon welcomed her into a polished oak-filled office. She’d thrown a Christmas centerpiece in there, trying to make the place feel homey.

 

“Look.” Angie pointed as they walked in. The computer paper box was labeled “Georgia Pacific.”

 

“Maybe the hangman solutions are a palindrome.” Lauren pulled out a blank sheet, lay it on the computer desk, and began writing the numbers and letters in backward sequence. The words ‘set, un and I’m’ became ‘minutes.’ “That works.” She read the reverse phrase ‘313131 minutes ’til detah.’ ‘Detah?’ An anagram in a palindrome? She glanced at her sister. “Are you seeing what I’m seeing? 313,131 minutes ’til death?”

 

“Call the police,” Angie said, her pupils spreading in shining cobalt pools.

Lauren massaged her forehead. “No. I bet it’s related to that Mensa murder mystery event they’re holding at the Crescent Moon Inn in several months.”

 

“Maybe. If you don’t call the police, I will. I don’t think I’m overreacting just because of-”

 

“No. It might just be another type of test.” Could there be an organization coiled within the organization for those of even higher intellect? Wasn’t there a 99.9 percent order? Lauren didn’t think she could make it into yet another level. It was a fluke that she made it in at all. They just happened to ask questions that she could answer on the actual Mensa test. Having practiced some Mensa mini-tests online, she nailed some and flunked others. She belonged in Densa, not Mensa.

 

Glancing at the computer clock, she noticed that a minute had passed since she solved the palindrome. Another minute closer to death. Maybe it would be considered inappropriate, but she decided to risk taking a copy of the document with her to the MensaOK welcome meeting. She whirled the chair around to face her sister. “I-”

 

“Careful. There’s something shiny on the front there,” Angie said, pointing yet staying clear of the page.

 

Turning the paper over, Lauren angled the dotted front of the sheet beneath the bright office light. She could see some faint shimmering lines radiating from a central point, creating a two-dimensional dandelion. The paper dented inward with each jab of her finger. Gold glittered within the ridges of her fingertip, resembling a sparkling eye shadow. “Why would anyone put eye shadow on a Mensa challenge?” She tried to push away the knotted dread. “I’m going to try something.”

 

She photocopied the face of the sheet, then traced dot-to-dot. Lauren felt hopeful when one-dot series yielded an “M.” But as she wrote a “7,” she suspected that a person could find these same letters and numbers in a pepper spill. She considered chromosomal patterns, but that didn’t fit. Equations? Nothing fit.

 

Genetics wasn’t her forte. Mathematics wasn’t her forte. The Mensans would eventually discover that she didn’t have a forte. Well, now she had the time and money to augment her education, although higher learning had failed her…and her husband. What a pair they’d been…a couple of overeducated idiots presuming to lecture others on the inner workings of the mind.

 

“Well, you look like you’re going to be all right,” Angie said, rubbing her temple. “This is just giving me a headache. I came by because it’s the one-year anniversary of, well, you know. I just can’t believe he did what he did on your birthday. I just-” She pressed her hand to her mouth as if to staunch the flow of words.

 

“Uh-huh. Sorry. Didn’t mean to get so engrossed. Probably need to get home to your family.”

 

Angie whipped out a fire truck red cell phone and stared at it. “Yep. They’re wondering where I am. Don’t worry. Go ahead with your puzzle. You don’t need to walk me to the door. But, please call me if you need me.” She trotted from the office. “Oh. And happy birthday,” she called out as the front door slammed.

 

 

There will be nothing happy about my birthday…evermore, as her friend, Poe, would say. Stooping, Lauren picked up the envelope that had dropped out of her own back pocket. She studied the return address, but the impersonal Mensa address failed to provide any information.

 

The postmark revealed that the letter had been mailed two days before from Falls Church, Virginia. Images of foliage collaged against quaint cottages stirred peaceful memories of a visit to Arlington, Virginia, seven years earlier. She and Romy were so in tune then. Was that to be the peak of her life? Change channels. Nothing like reminding herself for the 365th time that it was time to move on.

 

Shifting her stance, she flicked at the corner of the postage stamp. It looked and felt like a typical U.S. flag postage stamp, rigid enough to require a salute. Flipping over the envelope, she used a manicured fingernail and peeled a soiled curl of sticky tape off the back seal. Was it double sealed or re-sealed?

 

“Wait,” she muttered. The envelope bulged in the middle like a flattened fortune cookie, the bump revealing a small opaque square remaining within. How had she missed that?

Leaning forward, Lauren realized why she had chosen not to see it. Same size. Same shape. Her pale trembling fingers unfolded the hand-written message.

 

Sweetheart,

 

I realize that this is devastating to you at the moment, but I assure you that this is the preferable choice.

 

Lauren gasped. “Oh no.” This could not be happening again. The same note. The handwriting. Written on the same damned song sheet. Gloomy Sunday. It was his. Her body felt like it was filling with thick, wet concrete. She clutched the edge of the desk and steadied herself. Missing her chair, she sat down hard on the floor. She returned to the resurrected death note.

 

The fault is solely mine. The only explanation I can provide to you is that the deaths are mounting. I am not the murderer, but I am guilty nonetheless.

All of my patients will require a new therapist and I encourage you to consider this very rewarding possibility for your future.

 

I led a satisfactory life. I am completely lucid and go in peace. Now run next door and discuss this matter with Weldon. He will understand how to appropriately word the Certificate of Death so that my royalties remain uninterrupted. These and the retirement funds should leave you and the coming child comfortable. Immediately destroy this note.

 

With deepest affection, Romy

 

Lauren whispered, “I did, Romy. I did destroy this note. One year ago today.”

 

 

 

Chapter Two

 

“Hi…,” he said, waiting.

 

Lauren wanted to ignore the man almost filling the backlit doorway of the stucco community center where the Mensans met. She’d been up again past two a.m. studying the blood spots until they’d begun to swirl together and she was now convinced that only some genius inside that building could solve her puzzle. The man’s lewd eyes scanned her with the intensity of an MRI and his every huff reeked of French Onion.

 

“Lauren.” Reflexively, she turned her head away.

 

“I see you got one of those, too.” He watched for her agreement.

 

“One…what?” she asked with distant politeness. She flinched, expecting another moist spray with his words.

 

“Dot puzzle, for want of a better description. This must be a Mensa Challenge.” His greasy pallid locks fell forward as he scrutinized the copied document in her hand. Lauren was glad she’d decided to bring a copy rather than attempting to explain that original parchment with blood all over it. Within his right hand he gripped a crumpled duplicate of the front of her document; yet his copy was blank on the back where the hangmen should be.

 

With her fingers, she squeegeed his warm spittle from her cheek. “Did you get only the puzzle?”

 

“Pardon me?” He used this excuse to lean in closer.

 

“Just the one spotted page?” Her eyes gave him a shove, but he missed it.

 

“Yes. One page. What do you mean? Did you get something more?”

 

Let’s see. How do you say ‘Just a resurrected original of my husband’s suicide note and a threatening hangman game’ and then terminate the conversation? Scooting backward, Lauren tried to move around his massive wall of flesh and into the Mensa meeting room.

 

“Here, let me take your wrap. I’m sitting over there next to the chips and queso.” He smiled as if making an amusing joke about his paunch, then winked and nodded toward a couple of empty folding chairs in the back. Removing her coat, she draped it across her arm. She wandered across the modest room to the cooler, scooped a cupful of ice, and poured herself a Coca-Cola. Focusing on the bubbles helped her maintain a sense of normalcy.

 

Lauren settled into a chair between two middle-aged females and feigned an inordinate interest in her ice cubes. She spied an additional copy of her special puzzle on the table in front of her neighbor, who sported a name-tag labeled “Miriam.” Just the thought of a nametag made Lauren sweat.

 

“Thank you,” she murmured in surprise as the pasty-faced greeter, Orval, pinned a tag at the top of her right breast, piercing the cashmere of her sweater in the process. Lauren could not believe she had just thanked the man for that breach of personal boundaries, but it was too late to be undone.

 

“Would you like a smidge of Crown Royal in that?” He gestured toward her Coke. She might have said “yes” if someone else had made the offer, and yet Orval was the reason she needed that drink. Her gaze searched all the tabletops for duplicate suicide notes, but she was relieved to see only more copies of the speckle test. Could fifty identical death notes push her over the edge? Maybe a week-long stay at Point Tranquility that Angie kept pushing was worth serious consideration.

 

“It’s Egyptian hieroglyphics,” Orval said, having now added Crown Royal to his breath that mingled with the fumes of his cheap cologne. His fingers traced her paper. “This is the symbol meaning ‘to walk’ or ‘to run.’ Now, this hieroglyphic is a crown that means a country or foreign country. The combined symbols mean to walk or to run in a foreign country.”

 

Lauren could not see a crown at all.

 

A woman in the corner spoke up. “What if it’s a diagram of blood specks splattered on the rug of a room?” There was an immediate buzz among the fifty-plus participants. Lauren studied the specks from this novel perspective. Is this the murder that Romy alluded to in that note? The outline of a headless body with an outstretched hand appeared within the splatter. Hesitant, she touched its arm.

 

Lauren turned to Miriam. “Who created this challenge?”

 

“No one knows,” Orval said, his shadow looming over her.

 

Orval had answered so quickly that Lauren wondered if the man had created the Mensa Challenge. Yet, how would he have included her husband’s handwritten message?

 

“These are stars.” Miriam’s second chin jiggled with the announcement. “When Caleb gets here, he will tell us exactly what constellations these are. He’s our astronomer.”

 

“No. They can’t be stars because of the gray lines here.” Orval, the lumpy Egyptologist, did not want to be shown up, but he had a point. “What constellation would this be?”

 

“There are eighty-eight constellations,” Miriam’s friend, name-tagged Catherine, said. The only constellations Lauren remembered were the Big Dipper and the Little Dipper, but these patterns did not fit those constellations. Several members agreed with Miriam that the point patterns were constellations. No one offered an explanation for the lines.

 

Lauren watched the front door for Caleb’s entrance but the astronomer never showed. Once the welcome speeches were over, she performed an evasive maneuver away from Orval’s watchful eye, finding Catherine speaking to Miriam in a small alcove with a copy machine.

 

“The Big Dipper is a part of the Ursa Major or ‘great bear’ constellation.” Looking up, Catherine studied Lauren’s eyes, apparently spotting her ignorance beneath her best poker face. Using a crispy Cheeto, the woman circled Ursa Major, and then outlined the Big Dipper.

Lauren bent closer to the copied document that Catherine had propped up on a stapler atop a scarred table. The Big Dipper was there but it was just low on the horizon and sideways from what she had expected.

 

“See this large ‘M’-like shape.” Catherine used her finger because the Cheeto marker had been devoured. “This is supposed to represent a queen on her throne. Other times it flips to form a W. Right now she is hanging upside down on her throne. Cassiopeia was eternally chained to her throne to circle the North Star.”

 

I know how she feels. At least she had found the “M” on her own. Lauren leaned backward to glance into the assembly room. Taking a swig of the Coke as if it did contain a shot of Crown Royal, she said, “I see Orval has left. Whew.”

 

Catherine must have caught her exasperated tone. “Oh, Orval is a nice guy.” Miriam bobbed in trusting assent. “He said you remind him of his red-headed daughter. But your hair is more of a…”

 

“Light auburn than red,” Lauren said. “Caleb is an astronomer, I guess?”

 

“Caleb? Oh yes. One of the best. He’s acting Vice President of the astronomy club and he is also their webmaster at the moment. They meet on every second Friday…I believe.” Catherine raised her eyebrows and looked to Miriam, who again bobbed. “I’m the webmaster for our chapter. We’re always searching for interesting articles or stories if you would like to submit a piece.”

 

“Thanks. Maybe I’ll do that sometime,” Lauren said. Perhaps she could fill the hole in her life with new friends, new activities. But it wasn’t a hole, really. It felt more like a caldera. Plus, the articles would need to be interesting.

 

Once home, Lauren headed straight for her Gateway computer. There it was. The website for the Tulsa Astronomy Club. They would be holding a meeting in two days. She would ask Caleb about the puzzle. The bonus would be that she would not have to subject herself to Orval’s lurking presence.

 

Why couldn’t she focus? The grief had dissipated to the point she could peer out from under its soft edges. The resurrected note. The last time she’d seen that note was in her kitchen sink, where the match flame curled it into fragile charcoal.

 

Only two other people had seen the original-her husband, who would never again send another note, and Weldon, her former neighbor who was employed as the city medical examiner. And just as her husband instructed, she had destroyed that note.

 

Weldon had seemed like a considerate and helpful neighbor. Her husband, Romy, had been right…and wrong. As he predicted, Weldon had worded the death certificate to suggest death by accident. Only it took two more soul-wringing months for Romy to die after shutting himself in his self-created gas chamber.

 

Looking back in hindsight, though, she still could not identify the signs. With her psychiatric training, she should be able to label something that had been a little off. As if labeling anything granted anyone more control.

 

Lauren grabbed her current novel as if grasping a lifeline, flipped up the leg rest, and settled into her leather recliner. It was comfortable to fall into her new routine of reading through most of the night. She preferred to keep her mind occupied so she didn’t have time to think. Over-analysis of herself, others, and her problems had produced few answers.

 

The kick of the baby woke her. But when she reached down and gently touched where the book corner pressed into her abdomen, she remembered. Empty. The child was gone. If only she could understand what went wrong.

 

 

 

Chapter Three

 

After allowing herself a buffer in case she became lost, Lauren arrived at the planetarium twenty-five minutes early. The inside of the Madame Curie science museum was vast and edgy in the dim lighting. Bizarre multi-layered shadows leapt about the expanse, emanating from the hair-raising Tesla Coil electricity display. About the time she calmed, the exhibit fired another violet stroke.

 

She crept by a gigantic rotating Jupiter. It displayed a surface simulating rippling purple bands and swirling crimson gases. For a moment she stopped and read the plaque describing the blood-red hurricane that had first been spotted on the gas planet 300 years before. She moved away from the eternal storm.

 

Halting at the tornado exhibit, she gawked at the writhing funnel. It looked like it lived and breathed. She reached to touch it, but it snaked away every time she attempted to feel its misty essence. Lauren wondered if the warmth of her body redirected it.

 

She ambled, her eyes scanning for doors, locating a multitude. Strong animal body odor and the sound of claws on steel repelled her from a nearby entrance.

 

Her attention was drawn upward to a large portrait of Madame Curie swinging above her head. It was troubling to think how the Nobel Prize-winning scientist and her daughter had died. The mother and her child had suffered a slow cruel death from a danger they could not see, hear, smell, taste or feel. Radiation never alerted Marie’s senses. Not even a sixth sense.

 

Lauren stopped at Room 2, the specified meeting room, which was dark and locked. She assumed she was in the right place. Looking again at her Mapquest map, she rechecked the address of the museum. She stared toward the direction of the thuds. A spiny toothpick pricked her as she dug in her purse for her keys.

 

Spotting the heaving metal plate, she relaxed when she connected the vibrations to the earthquake booth. She walked over and stood on one slab, testing the effect of a sheer wave. The sudden drops of the mechanical quake became predictable and limited, not like the free-falls of real life. Lauren exited the small ride.

 

After everything she’d been through, why be afraid of anything? Tiptoeing to peer again through the unlit window, she was startled to both feel and hear a low masculine voice vibrating up her neck.

 

She was embarrassed to decipher the words to the sound: “Excuse me. Let me get that door open for you.”

 

A thirtyish, pleasant-looking dark-skinned man selected a key among many and opened the door for her. “Sorry to frighten you.” She detected an intriguing island accent. A shining coal lock of hair swung against his cheekbone, framing a symmetric visage.

 

“Oh, no. I’m sorry. I didn’t realize anyone else was here.”

 

He entered the secluded room with her. She glanced toward the exit.

 

“You are a new face?” His gaze was direct, amiable.

 

“Mmm-hmm.” Lauren looked at the empty plastic chairs. He was still searching her countenance. She reread her Mapquest map. He relented from his social introductions and walked a few feet away. Shuffling papers drew her attention to the podium. Peeking up, she realized that he was reviewing his notes. He appeared to be concentrating on an outline. Great. I just made a wonderful first impression. “Umm, I’m obviously a novice astronomer. My name is Lauren.”

 

With an open and beautiful smile that involved his entire face, he replied “Hail up, Lauren. It is a pleasure to meet you. My name is Caleb.” His warm palm enveloped her hand.

 

“Nice to meet you, too.”

 

“Welcome to our star party. You are not going to find a nicer bunch of people anywhere.”

 

“Thank you.”

 

Caleb glided to the podium to set up his notebook computer, his muscles moving in the relaxed synchronized rhythm of a large cat. She could not identify a self-conscious moment in the man. And here she was a spring-loaded firing pin.

 

His iridescent skin, braided locks and warm piercing eyes were as exotic and gorgeous as a rainforest bloom. She made a conscious effort not to stare each time he sauntered across the room to greet arrivals. Smoothing the wrinkles of her stained sweatpants, she was surprised to feel a vague stirring.

 

When he began his speech, she forgot his physical beauty as she heard the words of a brilliant mind.

 

“These are several of my favorite photos that I took of the elusive green flash in my home of Saint Croix. And no, they are not of a comic book hero.”

 

The ease of the laughter in the room suggested friendship and admiration.

 

“For those of you who may not know, Saint Croix is the largest United States Virgin Island, and definitely the most important, because I come from there.”

 

She was about to peg him arrogant until the audience chuckled at his apparent joke.

 

“I will present my favorite slide first. This one is off of Mermaid Beach at the Sugar Sands Resort, the best place for limin,’ or as you say in Okie, ‘hanging out.’ So you do not always have to pay high dollar for a yacht to appreciate this awe-inspiring experience.”

 

“Wow,” Lauren whispered as she absorbed the verdant splendor on the slide.

 

“In the islands, we consider it a beneficent stroke of luck to witness a green flash. So I must be one of the luckiest fellows in the multiple universes. But, someone should tell my ex-wife.”

 

A woman sitting in front of her perked up, giving Caleb her full attention.

 

“Exactly at the moment of sunset or sunrise, the phenomena of the green flash can sometimes be seen when the skies are essentially clear and free of dust. For me, I love sunsets, because I am on island time and enjoy sleeping in most mornings.”

 

She gave a small sideways glance to the cheerful group to which she did not belong.

 

“It is necessary to observe a green flash from a location with a good true horizon, unobstructed by buildings or mountains. The open sea is the perfect true horizon. As you can see from this slide, the final sliver of the sun flashes green the moment before it sets. Typically, the flash lasts only a few seconds, but it is worth the wait. You all must come and see this with me. A photo is a poor substitute for the experience.”

 

She was in awe of the emerald luminescence above the tranquil sea. Closing her eyes, she floated with it above the shimmering surface.

 

“The explanation for this event is that the atmosphere refracts optical light. In fact, several of you may already realize this, but because of light distortion, the image of the sun appears above the horizon for several minutes after the sun, itself, has already set.”

 

How interesting. The sun is not really there? She leaned toward him.

 

“The atmosphere refracts or bends optical light that has short wavelengths more than light with long wavelengths. So you see, the shortest violet light wave is bent most, followed by blue, the green, then yellow, orange, and red. Even in the best atmospheric conditions, there is often enough dust to absorb the short violet, blue, and green light waves at sunset so we usually do not see these colors.”

 

As he gulped the crystal water, Lauren admired his light gauzy pants and all the shapes beneath them. Guilt stabbed her when he turned her way and smiled. She attempted to mimic his professional bearing. This is not like me.

 

“Now under clear and near-perfect conditions as just off the coast of Buck Island where I captured this from the yacht The’ Vert, which is French for Green Flash,” he said with an excellent accent, causing an amused titter from the audience. “We see the Sun seems to consist of several overlapping disks of different colors-violet the highest and red the lowest. And when you spot a mirage of an almost colorless yellow sun, as we have right above here, this is a very good portent for seeing the green flash.”

 

The lilting depth of his voice bore similarities in resonance to a deep Steel Pan drum. No wonder it was an island instrument of choice. Her nostrils flared as if she could catch the ocean mist.

 

“Fortunately, the green flash in its entirety has also been captured on my digital movie, here. We see the red disk of the sun setting first, then the orange disk, then the yellow. Because of the overlapping disks, only the uppermost sliver is green. However, in this case, above the sun is the necessary solar mirage, the atmosphere acting as a mirror.”

 

Lauren’s neighbor pointed out the solar mirage to his friend.

 

“This mirage of the sun detaches the green portion of the sun from the rest of the disks, prolonging the setting of the green disk. And we are blessed with the stunning green flash. It is a beatific color explosion.”

 

Grateful to see a replay of the gorgeous emerald flash, Lauren was in awe and yearning, as if the brilliance of the light invaded her eyes and soul.

 

Caleb ended his astronomy speech with “God bless you.” She marveled at the euphoria of being blessed by the sincerity of his wish. What a beautiful blend of man. It took some time for the appreciative listeners to wander away. Seeing her opening, she approached Caleb with the drawing.

 

“I heard someone address you as ‘Doctor.’ Where did you get your graduate degree?”

 

“From the California Institute of Technology. I received my undergraduate degree in Physics at the University of the Virgin Islands in the Science and Mathematics Division. I teach there now.”

 

“Oh. Physics?”

 

“Yes, I know. A lot of people are surprised to learn the Virgin Islands even has a University. It has been there since the sixties. We are not all Marine Biologists majors there, yuh chek.”

 

She was unable to think of a clever response to his ribbing.

 

“You have heard of the Eye in the Sky.” He spoke it like a pronouncement.

 

“Uh. Maybe.”

 

“It is located on eastern Saint Croix.”

 

She searched her memory but came up blank.

 

“It is one of those ten huge antennas we use to explore black holes, quasars, pulsars…like in the movie Contact. I am currently working on obtaining a grant to acquire more antennas.”

 

“Oh.”

 

“Half of the graduates from our Science and Mathematics Division are accepted into graduate and medical schools, including Yale, Cornell, Brown, you name it.” He stood taller when speaking of his Alma Mater.

 

“Wow. That is unusual. Umm. I received this puzzle in the mail I heard that maybe you could help me with.”

 

“You must be one of the new Mensa members?”

 

“Yes, and I got this test. Well, I’m not sure it’s a test, exactly. It’s just I know nothing about astronomy, but I do find it fascinating. Astronomy, I mean. You probably already received this test, too?” He was undoubtedly wondering how such an inarticulate fool wound up in Mensa. While he held and examined the speckled page, she attempted to discretely pull up the loose waistband of her oversized pants, but aborted the attempt when he noticed, and then rubbed her face as a failed distraction.

 

“No, I did not receive one, although I heard about it from a friend. Hmmm. That appears to be the Geminids.”

 

“I’m sorry. The what?”

 

“The Geminids is an upcoming meteor shower. The radiant is from the Gemini constellation. These are the Gemini twins, Castor and Pollux.” He pointed at two larger dots. “The meteor shower appears to radiate from Gemini. The radiant is akin to facing and peering down a long straight train track.” He gestured as if the railroad were in front of him. “The two rails appear to radiate from a single point. These lines show the radiant of the meteors.”

 

“I see. Wow. That is interesting. Well, I loved your speech.”

 

His scent was light and airy. “Thank you. I love the subject. The people here are fun, too.” He brightened and glanced at the milling group.

 

Lauren turned her head and made eye contact with a freckled-faced blonde, who revealed a cute gap between her front teeth when she smiled. The young woman made her feel welcome and cozy like a cup of hot chocolate. Tenseness ebbing from her muscles, Lauren turned back to Caleb.

 

“When does this Geminid…meteor shower take place?”

 

Nodding to confirm her pronunciation, he responded, “December fourteenth should be the peak. And we are really lucky to have a young moon that night, so the brightness of the moon will not interfere with the celestial display.” The smile of his eyes was more dazzling than the smile of his lips. His exuberance was contagious.

 

“That sounds very nice. Oh, well, thank you.”

 

“It was truly my pleasure to meet you. Chek you latah.” He strolled back toward the podium.

 

I wish I could bottle that accent and shake it on a gourmet meal. She mumbled, “Me, too.” Her shoulder bumped the door as she attempted a graceful exit. Now, she needed to run.

He turned around. “One curiosity.”

 

“Yes.” She hesitated.

 

“At the bottom of the page, there are several missing stars.”

 

“Really?” She looked at it again as if she would be able to see this, but could not, of course.

 

He approached as she stilled. “It is especially noticeable because everything else is depicted so accurately. See in this quadrant here. The bottom three stars of the constellation Lynx are absent along with this elbow of Ursa Major. Most people are unaware of the constellation Lynx because it is nearly invisible to the naked eye. The constellation acquired its name because you literally need to have the eyes of a Lynx to see it. Look at these two spaces. It is almost as if the stars have been obscured by two tall rectangular shapes, perhaps symmetrical buildings.”

 

“Symmetrical buildings,” she parroted.

 

“I do not know where those might be in Oklahoma.”

 

She pursed her lips to consider this. “Neither do I. I really do appreciate your help and I truly enjoyed your lecture.”

 

“Well, thank you. It is so much more fun when my audience is awake.”

 

She forced her legs to start walking out the door. It had been 12 months since she had enjoyed the company of a fellow human being. Other than her sister.

 

“Is that a copy?”

 

“What?”

 

He pointed to her puzzle.

 

“Oh. Yes. A copy? Yes. Would you like one?”

 

“Certainly. Maybe I could study it more seriously when I can grab a moment.”

 

Her thumbs creased the paper. “I have an original.”

 

“You…have the original?”

 

“The original I received in the mail. The specks look like blood to me.”

 

His head popped up. “Blood? Foh true?”

 

“Well, maybe, I have no idea, really. I haven’t looked at them through a microscope, or run any tests or anything. I thought you might want to see the original…sometime. I could always bring it with me.”

 

“Perhaps I can…sometime. Blood would warrant a thorough examination.”

 

Leaving the copy with him, she felt confident that if anyone could solve the star puzzle, Caleb could. Had Romy witnessed the murders in those buildings?

 

 

 

CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD “BRILLIANT PREY” BY BRENDA WALLACE

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Brenda Wallace’s Brilliant Prey  is sponsoring dozens of great free mystery and thriller titles in the Kindle Store!

 

Brilliant Prey

Brilliant Prey

by Brenda Wallace
4.7 stars – 6 Reviews
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled

 

Here’s the set-up:

Even a genius can be played for a pawn by a cunning and deadly manipulator.Lauren James is a former psychiatrist, still reeling from her husband’s suicide and the subsequent miscarriage that swept away her tidy life the year before. On the anniversary of his death, she opens what she hopes to be a “Welcome to Mensa” envelope and pulls out a threatening puzzle along with the identical suicide note she had burned the previous year. Unraveling the twisted clues, Lauren embarks on a harrowing journey drawn in by a child’s neglected grave, a professor from the island of St. Croix, and a U.S. Supreme Court nominee. When Lauren discovers the reason behind her husband’s shocking death, she must struggle with her deepest convictions and whether killing is acceptable if it saves more lives.

 

 


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WITH OVER 3,000 5-STAR REVIEWS, MARK KANE MYSTERIES ARE FOR READERS WHO ENJOY GRIPPING MYSTERIES WITH PLENTY OF TWISTS.'⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ 'Couldn't put it down. Great job of writing. I was right there with them.'⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ 'Yet another great book in the series.' I highly recommend this...
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Our Thriller of the Week Sponsor is Joseph Flynn’s One False Step: Read The First Four Chapters For Free, Right Here!

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One False Step

One False Step

by Joseph Flynn

Two cops…

Bibi Ferrer, San Diego homicide, receives a warning: billionaire Anson Williams, will be done in by his new wife, Alexandra. Despite her best
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Avice Toussaint, formerly Alexandra Williams, isn’t every man’s idea of a knockout—only those with a pulse. She’s bored with luring wealthy men to their deaths. Problem is, her father wants her to continue. He’s ex-KGB. He kills people who defy him, no exceptions made for family. George Beecher was an SAS commando, a master of combat. He was far less suited to following orders. After his court martial and discharge from the military, he continued to do the only thing he knew how: kill people. This time for money.

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Prologue

San Diego, CA

Friday, May 29th

The way Catholics did things when somebody died, the body was left on view at the wake, but the casket was closed for the funeral Mass. Ansel Williams’ remains, however, looking as good as if he’d just closed his latest big real estate deal, were left on display at the Agnus Dei Church right through the last note of “I Shall See My God,” which brought the service to a close. The irregularity was a small concession to the widow in light of her fifty thousand dollar donation to the parish school’s tuition assistance fund.

Alexandra Williams, young, exotically blonde, and the picture of heartbroken beauty, stepped from her front row pew and approached her late husband’s casket. Every eye in the congregation was on her, none more closely than those of the two homicide detectives, both dressed in black, the female with a large brimmed hat, standing at the back of the church. They had an unobstructed view up the central aisle, got to see the widow and her lost love positioned just so in front of the altar and the stained glass window of the Savior.

“Bitch is milking this for all it’s worth,” Detective Bibi Ferrer whispered to her partner.

Bibi was Cuban-American, thirty-five, with chestnut brown hair, caramel skin, and whipcord muscle tone. Passionate about any injustice, she was having trouble holding her temper as she watched a killer stand over her victim, using the church as a stage set to aid in her pretense of anguish.

“Watch for the tear,” Detective Brady Teague answered softly, just a touch of Irish in his voice. “If she’s artful, it’ll be only the one.”

Brady’s hair was silver and cut short. He was slender with world-weary eyes and a rueful smile. He had the elegance of Fred Astaire in his later years. He’d also put away more killers than any other cop in the history of the San Diego Police Department.

On the verge of retirement, he didn’t have to be at the church that morning, but he had sensed Bibi might need his presence to keep from doing something impulsive. That was, something that could damage either her career or an eventual case against Widow Williams.

The two detectives watched as Alexandra gracefully lowered her head. Most everyone in the church would later say that she was kissing her husband goodbye, but curtains of shining pale hair kept any kiss from actually being seen.

Leaving room for Bibi to say, “She’s telling him, ‘Thanks for the money, sucker.'”

“Watch for it,” Brady told her. “It’s coming right … now.”

As if hearing her cue, Alexandra straightened. But she went Brady’s scenario one better. She placed a red rose on her late husband’s suit coat – and then a single tear fell on the flower. Reflecting light like a drop of blood.

“I’m going to get her, Teague,” Bibi said. “If it’s the last thing I do, I’m going to get her.”

The older detective was still taken by the woman’s stagecraft. The flower, the tear, the timing: it had been brilliant. Anyone who didn’t know better would have been taken in completely.

He looked at Bibi and said, “I’ll be available to consult. Assuming my last thing doesn’t come before yours.”

Each detective put on a pair of sunglasses and slipped outside.

Alexandra Williams had left her late husband, the casket now closed, and was heading for the door. The two detectives didn’t want her to get too close a look at them.

From the curb outside the church, Bibi and Teague watched Alexandra’s limousine pull away, taking note of its direction.

“She’s not going to the cemetery,” Bibi said.

Teague nodded. “The airport would be my guess. No time wasted.”

“Out of the country.”

“Someplace warm, welcoming, and protective of its rich.”

“The rich,” Bibi said. “With the seven hundred and fifty million dollars she took from Ansel Williams, she qualifies for that.”

Teague took Bibi’s arm as if he were leading her out onto a dance floor, not back to their car. “Let her think for the moment she’s won. Let her think she’s safe. Let her think -”

“I won’t follow her wherever the hell she goes,” Bibi said.

Chapter 1

Two months earlier Wednesday, March 18th

Bibi Ferrer went down on one knee to peek under the blue plastic sheet that lay on the manicured front lawn of the Mission Hills home. A dead body, all right, but a canine. Nice looking golden retriever, maybe getting a little long in the tooth, but as carefully kept as the lawn and the Spanish Revival house. No signs of violence. Pooch could have come out of the house to lie in the sun and simply breathed its last.

Bibi dropped the sheet and stood. She looked at the patrol cop fidgeting in front of her, an Anglo kid named Jenson, looked like he should be playing point guard on a junior high school basketball team. She wondered how come, if she was only in her mid-thirties and a cop for just ten years, rookies were already looking like babies to her.

Maybe that was one of the reasons, among many, she liked working with Brady Teague. Next to him, she looked like the teenager. But Teague was taking a personal day, and she’d been called out to look at a dead dog.

“Anybody roll the dog over,” Bibi asked, “see if somebody stuck a knife in her heart?”

The very idea was enough to make Jenson blanch, but he said, “No, detective, I just covered her up. You know, so the crime scene wouldn’t be disturbed.”

Bibi asked, “Do we even know if this is a crime scene?”

“Would you have been called if it wasn’t?” Jenson asked innocently. “And if the dog got stabbed, wouldn’t there be some blood on the ground?”

Bibi was used to working with human remains left on concrete or other hard surfaces where blood puddled and pooled, sprayed and splattered. So she wasn’t sure how profusely dogs bled or how absorbent a thick green lawn was.

“You were right to be careful, officer.”

Bibi looked over at the house where a woman with dark hair was looking back at her from one of the windows.

“That’s the lady who called 911?” she asked.

Jenson nodded and consulted his notebook. “Miriam Haig.”

“And Ms. Haig is important enough to warrant all this police attention for her dead dog because…”

The rookie looked at Bibi as if this was a trick question, one with no right answer. He took refuge in consulting his notebook, which Bibi could see had only two jottings in it. Jenson went with the one he hadn’t already used.

“The sarge told me she used to be Miriam Williams; her ex is named Ansel?”

Jenson’s inflection raised the question of whether that might matter.

When you brought up the name of a megarich real estate developer who was a generous contributor to and a close friend of the city’s new mayor, it certainly did. Because when the money was big enough even political clout could become community property.

“Thank you, Officer Jenson,” Bibi said. “You’ve handled things just right.”

Bibi started for the house, and called back over her shoulder, “Keep an eye on the dog.”

Miriam Haig gave Bibi the best cup of coffee she’d ever had, and one of the better backstories. Both were provided in Miriam’s kitchen, where she wouldn’t have to keep glancing out the window, seeing the blue plastic sheet covering her beloved dog, Shirley.

“I filed for divorce from Ansel after eight years of marriage,” she told Bibi. “After I caught him cheating a second time. Both times he was drunk and he boinked some little tart who was handy.”

“He drink a lot?” Bibi asked.

Bibi’s mother had warned her about men who drank. She and Papi had warned Bibi about everything under the sun and even more that went on in the dark. Living in Miami, they worried all the time about their daughter who had moved so far away. Bibi had left home after almost going crazy from the constant talk of how evil Fidel Castro was; how all the exiles in Little Havana would be avenged someday; and how sweet that venganza would be. Bibi had refused to let Castro ensnare her every thought. She was determined to look forward not back. So after college, she moved to Southern California, where people hardly ever mentioned Fidel and the weather was even better than in Miami.

Miriam Haig shook her head. “Not a lot. Ansel got loaded maybe twice a year.”

“Twice a year for eight years.” Doing the math was easy.

“He didn’t cheat every time he got drunk,” Miriam said.

“Okay,” Bibi conceded, “but you probably think you didn’t catch him every time he cheated, either.”

“I did wonder,” Miriam admitted. “I estimate he cheated one out of every two times he got blasted; I caught him one out of every four times he cheated.”

“So what’s all this got to do with your dog?” Bibi asked. “You think your ex did it?”

“Poison Shirley?” Miriam looked shocked. “Good God, no. I think Ansel’s next.”

The conversation moved to Miriam’s home office. Sitting behind her desk, she took a manila file out of a drawer and tossed it onto the work surface.

“I think his new wife-that skinny blonde bitch-is going to kill Ansel,” Miriam said.

“You have some reason, other than personal dislike, to think that?” Bibi asked.

The detective, sitting in a guest chair, looked at the manila file but didn’t reach for it.

“Do you watch much television?” Miriam asked.

“Some.”

“News shows?”

“Not unless they’ve got something uplifting on; I get enough crap on the job.”

Miriam gave a cynical laugh. “I got that, too. People acting like shits. I was a news producer for Close Focus. The on-camera airheads got to make the creeps squirm, but I was the one who dug up the dirt.”

“And you dug some up on the new Mrs. Williams?” Bibi nodded at the file that lay between them. “The dirt’s in there?”

Miriam nodded. “What I could find in the last three months on Alexandra Peters.”

“The new wife’s maiden name?”

“Her most frequently used alias.”

Bibi glanced at the file again, and then looked back at Miriam.

“You care to give me a summary?” the detective asked.

“Married twice before she hooked Ansel. Each husband worth more than a billion dollars. Each died unexpectedly. Combined windfall for blondie after the two men died: her own billion-plus dollars.”

That got Bibi’s attention. Maybe Ms. Haig’s suspicions were founded on something more than spite.

“How’d they die, the two husbands?” Bibi asked.

“Husband number one in Texas suffered a fatal stroke; husband number two in Arizona blacked out at the controls of his plane and flew it into a mountain. Both men had been in excellent health before marrying Little Miss Murder.”

Bibi heard the woman’s TV background slip out there. Package the killer for the consumer. But she had to admit, Little Miss Murder wasn’t a bad hook.

“I’ve always heard cops don’t like coincidences,” Miriam said.

“We don’t,” Bibi agreed. “Two men dying like that, I have to think there’s more than the hand of God involved.”

“Here’s who’s involved.” Miriam flipped open the file and pushed it closer to Bibi. An 8×10 glossy photo rested atop a stack of paper. It showed a beautiful adolescent girl standing next to a tall, lean man of about forty with a cruelly handsome face. “She’ll deny it, but that’s Alexandra Peters Williams, approximately ten years ago.”

“Who’s the man?” Bibi knew a bad guy when she saw one.

“His name’s Maxim Petrov. Late of the KGB. See the resemblance?”

“Yeah. Her father?” The likeness was that close.

“Yes,” Miriam answered. “If you know anything about the Cold War -”

“I do.” It was a favorite topic of debate in the Cuban exile community.

“Then you know the KGB were the world’s greatest poisoners. Still are. Look at that poor jerk in London, the one who got the polonium slipped into his tea. But that one was meant to be obvious. To send a message. If they want to be devious, they can kill and leave no trace of a toxin for an autopsy to find.”

Bibi looked at Miriam, wondering how she knew all this.

Maybe it was required reading for somebody who worked in television.

“The Russians have poisons that can cause strokes, can make somebody black out at the wrong time?” Bibi asked.

Miriam nodded.

Bibi took another look at the photo and then closed the file. She picked it up and put it on her lap. She’d be reading Miriam Haig’s dirt, after all. But she had a few more questions.

“How did you come to suspect your ex-husband’s new wife in the first place, Ms. Haig?”

Miriam took a deep breath before answering. “She scared me. She tried to invalidate the trust Ansel set up for my sons and me. She wanted all our money. His and mine.”

“Your ex-husband went along with this?”

“No. Even when we divorced, Ansel was generous. He didn’t bat an eye at losing half his fortune. He knew he could always make more. In fact, he was the one who warned me the bitch was going to sue. He said letting her do it was just a way to humor her because no power on earth could break the trust he set up for the boys and me. And he was right; the judge threw the case out of court. But when she lost, the look that woman gave me made my knees weak. I hated her for scaring me like that, and I decided I’d better know who I was dealing with.”

“Who helped you with your investigation?”

Miriam smiled. “I was a State Department brat. Moved all over the world. Wherever we went, though, my best friends were always the guys in Diplomatic Security. I still keep in touch.”

“So how do you feel now?” Bibi asked. “Now that you’ve got your dirt.”

Miriam Haig’s smile disappeared. “Like a damn fool. After I collected my information, I made a lunch date with Alexandra. I told her nothing better happen to my children’s father or the world would learn who she and her father really are. Maxim Petrov, by the way, is wanted by Interpol.”

“That was foolish, all right,” Bibi said.

“I thought I could scare her.”

“And all you did was get your dog killed.”

Tears welled up in Miriam’s eyes.

“That’s why I called the police. I have Shirley’s death on my conscience; I don’t want Ansel’s death there, too.”

Chapter 2

Thursday, March 19th

Bibi read Miriam Haig’s file, gave it to Teague to read, and talked it over with him.

“Frightening in both concept and scale: the super black widow,” he said. “You’d imagine the truly wealthy would be more careful about whom they let draw close.” He took another look at Alexandra’s photo. “But if you started with this girl’s looks and let them mature into womanly beauty, the men would be the ones making the approach.”

“And these rich fools don’t have lawyers who’d insist on a pre-nup?” Bibi asked.

Teague displayed one of his rueful smiles. “Of course, they do. The dead men’s lawyers are probably more bitter than their next of kin; they’re the ones who had their best legal advice rejected. All because their clients had been so completely bewitched.”

“Yeah, well, casting spells isn’t something I’d know about,” Bibi told him.

Teague’s smile changed to one of indulgence, and Bibi, who could stare down a cobra, looked away. Teague had lost his wife two years earlier, shortly after Bibi had started working with him. He’d accepted her condolences with thanks and a handshake. That was the only physical contact with emotional content they’d ever shared. He’d certainly never cried on her shoulder. Never got drunk and made a sloppy pass at her. Hell, he’d never even let his work slip.

Even so, she’d seen the heartache in Teague’s eyes – anyone could. But he never lost his ability to smile, to marvel at nature, and to be thankful that he was so much smarter than the creeps he put away. After a year, the sorrow in Teague’s eyes diminished and now only an occasional shadow of loss fell over his face.

Being who she was, working with Teague every day, Bibi finally had to ask him, “How’d you do it? How’d you get past the hurt?”

He told her straight. “We knew the end was coming and Bonnie sat me down one night and told me she wanted to reminisce. She wanted to recall as many of our good times as we could. And she wanted me to tape everything. Audio only. She was saddened by how she looked. But her voice, right till the very last, was as youthful as when she first said hello to me. After she passed, whenever I was down, all I had to do to feel better was play one of our tapes. Hear her laugh again. I still listen to the two of us talking like newlyweds. My nephew digitized the tapes for me; now I can listen on my iPod. Right in public if I want. I smile and laugh and sometimes dance a little jig. I’ve seen people look at me like, ‘Hey, that geezer must have pirated something good.'”

Bibi had laughed at the line, and that’s when she started to fall in love with Brady Teague. Hell, he wasn’t that old. Fifty-seven was all. Okay, that was a year older than Papi, but still. She wasn’t sure she wanted kids, but she’d bet he could give them to her, if that’s what she decided. There was time for her and Teague; they could create their own memories.

Except neither of them had taken a step in that direction. But Bibi kept thinking about it. And she suspected the idea had crossed Teague’s mind, too. Maybe she’d have to be the first one to say something.

“We’ve got no jurisdiction in Texas or Arizona,” Bibi said. “Nothing we can do about either of those deaths.”

“And besides a dead dog, we have nothing but the suspicions of a former spouse in our jurisdiction,” Teague added. “No grounds to proceed.”

But then Teague’s look grew pensive, and Bibi knew he’d had an idea.

And his ideas were usually 24-karat gold.

“What?” Bibi asked.

“Exotic poison is one thing,” Teague said, “but my suspicion is the new Mrs. Williams’ father is the one who spikes the punch bowl. It’s likely the marks don’t know about him; he can slip in and do the dirty work while his beautiful, treacherous daughter gives herself a lovely alibi.”

Bibi nodded. She liked it.

She said, “I’m going to talk with Ansel Williams.”

Ansel Williams’ Enterprises – AWE on the understated bronze sign out front – had their corporate offices on La Jolla Village Drive, a mortarboard’s throw from UCSD. The building was two-storied, sited for optimal solar collection and landscaped with drought-tolerant plantings. A valet took Bibi’s car at the curb and assured her it would be returned promptly if she needed to leave in a hurry.

Miriam Haig had set up the appointment for Bibi. Got her an hour of Ansel Williams’ time, if she needed that much. Bibi was impressed. She knew plenty of women whose current husbands wouldn’t be as accommodating.

Williams didn’t keep her waiting long enough to pick up a magazine. He came to greet her in person, too. With what looked like a sincere smile on his tanned and handsome kisser.

Bibi thought maybe Miriam had been a little hasty in filing for a divorce. Having a guy like this even on a most-of-the-time basis would be a pretty good deal. Long as he didn’t get carried away with … nah, she wouldn’t be able to put up with him screwing around on her, either. Not for more than eight years, anyway.

“Pleased to meet you, Detective Ferrer,” he said “I’m Ansel Williams. Please come with me.” Just outside his office, he asked his secretary to hold his calls.

He got Bibi seated in front of his elegant but not oversized mahogany desk, brought her a Perrier with a wedge of lime from his wet bar, and sat down opposite her looking like a billion dollars – one-point-five billion before Miriam got her half of the community property.

“I hope you don’t mind, detective,” Williams said, “but after Miriam called I had you checked out.”

Which made Bibi think about what Teague had said. About how rich guys shouldn’t let just anyone get close. She told him, “I hope I checked out okay.”

“I was impressed by how many cases you’ve solved since you’ve been in homicide.”

“That’s mostly Detective Teague’s doing.”

Williams nodded. “Sure, I hear he’s really something; I had him checked out, too. But what my researcher tells me, you add distinct value to your team.”

It was petty, even hypocritical, but Bibi started to get annoyed. The guy had checked out Teague, too? Who the hell did he … she tapped the brakes on her Cuban temper. Williams was being very nice to her, right out front. And cops never cared whose feelings they hurt when they went snooping. So, she went with Willliams’ compliment, about her adding value.

“I’m a hard worker, Mr. Williams.”

“Smart, too, I’m told. And Miriam was impressed with you. If you’d ever care to work in the private sector, please give me a call. I believe I can offer you a better salary than the city.”

Wouldn’t be hard; San Diego was in debt up to its eyeballs.

“I’m afraid the only thing I know about real estate, Mr. Williams, is that I don’t own any.”

Williams smiled again, this time seemingly brighter than before.

“Work for me and we’ll change that.”

Bibi was good at reading people. She didn’t get the feeling he was coming on to her. Not for sex. Maybe to have her on his side, though. Like he was setting her up for a sale before she’d even known she was in the market. Had her halfway ready to sign up for whatever he was pitching.

No wonder he’d gotten so rich.

“I like putting away bad guys, Mr. Williams. Gives me a satisfaction money can’t buy.”

Williams made a gesture of graceful acceptance. “If you ever change your mind, the offer’s open-ended.”

“Thank you. Your generosity, though, it makes my visit here even harder.”

Williams sat back in his seat. “Allow me to make it easier. Miriam set up your appointment. Doesn’t take much triangulation to figure out where that leads. Alexandra.”

Bibi nodded. “Yes, sir. Has the former Mrs. Williams shared her suspicions with you?”

“No, but I know Miriam’s professional background. She checks people out, too. And that, of course, would tell her that Alexandra has been married twice before and both of her previous husbands met unfortunate ends and left her a great deal of money.”

“Your new wife told you all that?” Bibi asked.

“She did. Both Thomas Buckram and Alan Sanderson died of natural causes, as the coroners in both cases have ruled. When Mr. Buckram died in Texas, Alexandra was shopping in Manhattan. When Mr. Sanderson died in Arizona, she was visiting an aged aunt in Paris.”

The lovely alibis Teague had predicted.

“Your wife has mentioned her family to you?” Bibi asked.

“Only that her Aunt Berthilde is her only living relative.”

“She never mentioned her father then?” Bibi asked.

Williams frowned. The expression wasn’t natural to him and he disposed of it quickly.

“Her father was a Russian naval officer. He perished in a submarine catastrophe in the Pacific off Vladivostok. The news unhinged her mother, and she committed suicide.”

Bibi shook her head. “Miriam Haig has found documentation that Maxim Petrov -”

“Yes, that was Alexandra’s father’s name.”

“Miriam has evidence Maxim Petrov is a former KGB officer; he was seen as recently as three years ago; and he’s a fugitive wanted by Interpol. I’ve confirmed all this.”

Williams forced a laugh, but his tan had paled. “That’s ridiculous. Another man with the same name, that’s what this has to be.”

Bibi had copied everything in the file Miriam Haig had given her. She’d brought the copies with her, and now she placed on Williams’ desk a duplicate of the photo of a young Alexandra Petrov standing next to her father.

The real estate developer stared at the picture, recognizing his new wife when she was a teen. He tried not to look at the image of the man next to her but couldn’t resist.

Bibi told him, “Maxim Petrov is wanted on suspicion of murder. At about the time this photograph was taken in Berlin, there was a warrant for his arrest for crimes he’d committed some years earlier as a Soviet spy in the former West Germany. But when the police went to take him in, he and his daughter had vanished. Left behind was the body of the informer who’d sold Petrov out.”

Ansel Williams looked up at Bibi.

“This is the man your wife told you was a naval officer,” Bibi said.

“She…she must have been afraid to tell me the truth.”

Bibi said, “I’ll go along with that.”

“I mean, nobody would want to acknowledge someone like a KGB killer.”

“Mr. Williams, look at the picture again. Do you see any strain on Alexandra’s face, any sign that she’s being compelled to stand there with her father? I don’t. If anything, it seems to me they’re both humoring whoever took the photo. There’s a bond between them.”

Williams’ head bobbed in reluctant agreement.

“But I love her,” he said.

Bibi put the rest of the Alexandra Peters file on Ansel Williams’ desk. She got to her feet, ready to leave. Knowing she’d likely blown any future job offer from AWE.

“Just to make things plain, sir,” Bibi said. “In my opinion, your life is in danger. And if you ever see Maxim Petrov, make sure you have help nearby.”

Disbelieving, Williams looked at Bibi. “But why would Alexandra want to kill me? She has more money than I do, for God’s sake.”

Bibi said slowly, “But remember how she got it. And for some people, they can never have enough. Whatever your present security arrangements are, Mr. Williams, I truly hope you’ll update them.”

“To keep me safe from my wife?”

“And her father.” Bibi turned to go, but Williams stopped her.

“You know why I married Alexandra, detective?”

“One look and it’s plain to see.”

“Yes, she’s stunning, but there have been others just as beautiful.”

Bibi waited to hear the rest.

“I got tired of screwing around, giving in to stupid impulses I should have outgrown. I’d already lost Miriam, lost being a full-time father to my sons. But with Alexandra, she…”

He drifted away and this time Bibi brought him back.

“She what, Mr. Williams?”

“She both thrills me and scares the hell out of me. I thought with her I’d have to stay faithful. If I didn’t, she’d kill me.”

Chapter 3

Friday, May 15th

According to everyone Bibi talked to, there was no sign that Ansel Williams had ever been unfaithful to Alexandra, but six weeks after Bibi had warned him his life was in jeopardy, he was dead. One moment he was standing at the helm of his seventy-three-foot Reichel/Pugh racing monohull, Saber, bringing it smartly about, the next moment he had fallen overboard into the blue Pacific.

Two members of the crew said they saw the captain’s eyes roll back in his head immediately before his hands fell from the wheel, his legs crumpled, the snaphook on his safety harness flew apart and he pitched off the steeply heeled deck. A strong swimmer, Williams should have been all right even though he wasn’t wearing a life jacket. At the very least, he should have been able to break the surface and wave for help. But whatever had put him into the deep kept him there.

The only reason his body had been recovered was that crewman Ron Peranowski, a former Navy diver, cleaved the water mere seconds after Williams did and by the greatest luck had been able to find his skipper twenty feet below the waves and haul him to the surface. But by then it was too late. The slack, unconscious man had swallowed too much water, and in the choppy sea, every time Peranowski opened Williams’ mouth to try to force the water out another wave filled him anew. By the time Williams was pulled back aboard his boat, there was no chance for resuscitation.

An extensive post-mortem ordered by the San Diego County D.A. revealed that Williams’ body showed no sign of anemia, carotid stenosis, congestive heart failure or pulmonary embolus. Additionally, the deceased’s personal physician said he had no history of hypoglycemia or hypotension, and had, in fact, passed his annual physical, only six months prior, with flying colors.

In short, there was no clear medical reason why Ansel Williams should have blacked out at that particular moment. But then both the coroner and Williams’ doctor had to admit that often no cause could be found for why people fainted. Some events were simply medical mysteries.

Why the snaphook securing Williams’ safety harness to the boat had failed was another puzzle. Its structural collapse had been so complete that it had apparently fragmented into many small pieces all of which were lost to the sea. Metallurgical tests done on the snaphooks of everyone else on the yacht showed no cracks, metal fatigue or any other defect.

Alexandra Williams not only cooperated with the investigations into the circumstances of her husband’s death, she demanded that they be conducted with the greatest vigor.

But after two weeks without progress in answering either of the critical questions, the loss of consciousness by Williams and the loss of integrity by the snaphook, the authorities had no choice but to release Ansel Williams’ body to his wife for burial.

Chapter 4

Friday, May 29th

Bibi Ferrer sat with Her Honor Paula McKay in the mayor’s office on the eleventh floor of the City Administration Building. Mayor McKay’s predecessor in office had become famous for saying of San Diego, “The city is broken.” Things still weren’t looking up.

One of the attempts at reform by the previous administration had been a new city charter amendment requiring voter approval for any future pension and benefit increase for municipal employees. A referendum on that very issue was scheduled for that fall and the first poll taken showed voters were opposed, 84% to 16%, with nobody forecasting a turnaround in sentiment.

Yet another reason for Bibi to feel frustrated in her job.

“I was told you and Brady Teague were at Ansel Williams’ funeral today,” the mayor said. “I didn’t see you there.”

Bibi said, “We were at the back of the church.”

“You know what I was hoping, Bibi? I was hoping Ansel’s coffin lid would slam down and break that damn woman’s fingers.”

Bibi smiled, but she said, “You’d never shoot it that way.”

Paula McKay had three Academy Awards at home, one each for editing, writing, and directing. A double hyphenate in her heyday. She’d decided to come home to San Diego after the only agent she’d ever had was killed by his boyfriend of twenty years. The killer had been a dear friend of Paula’s, too, and had even asked her to pay for his defense attorney. She’d declined and now he was on Death Row, watching one appeal after another being denied, as he made his way ever closer to a date with a lethal injection.

Partly as a way to keep busy and take her mind off the tragedy, partly because her work experience had included riding herd on groups of lunatics, Paula had decided to run for mayor and see if she could help her hometown out of the mess in which it was mired.

Her main opponent had been the chief of police, and most of the department brass had supported him. Anyone on the SDPD who didn’t support the chief was supposed to keep his damn mouth shut. Something Bibi Ferrer never could do. She’d been one of Paula McKay’s earliest and highest-profile supporters. She had been the first person, after the mayor-elect’s husband, to get a hug from Paula in front of the TV cameras on election night.

Papi had seen a TV replay of the embrace and called that night with his own views. “A woman as mayor? Instead of the chief of police? And you think this is good?”

To which Bibi had replied, “What country is this, Papi, this place where we both live? For that matter, what century is it?”

Her father’s silence told her they lived in different worlds and different times. All he could say was, “Your mother wants to talk with you.”

Her mother had congratulated her on her new fame and asked how soon she would be coming home. To get married. Start a family.

Bibi wanted to say when Miami freezes over. Or Castro finally dies. Whichever comes first. But all she did was invite her mother to visit San Diego. She would introduce Mami to her fellow detectives, especially her partner. She thought it would be better if her mother met Teague without having Papi around.

“Did you know Ansel was having a financial problem?” the mayor asked Bibi.

The detective sat back in her chair. “Don’t tell me he was broke.”

Mayor McKay laughed. “Far from it. But the sub-prime mortgage debacle caused him some trouble. He needed a line of credit fast, but the banks aren’t handing out cash to real estate developers these days.”

“How much did he need?”

“A hundred million dollars.”

Bibi blinked. “I just can’t understand money that big.” Then she blinked again. “He didn’t get it from -”

“Yes, he did. His dear wife came through for him on a moment’s notice.”

“Goddamn,” Bibi said. “Won’t that make her look like an angel of mercy?”

“Indeed, it will. But it was a smart move for another reason, too. Without the money, Ansel would have taken a big loss, maybe three hundred million. So she not only bought good will, she maximized her inheritance.”

Bibi ground her teeth a moment before the mayor spoke again.

“Have you come to ask for a favor, Bibi?”

There had never been any quid pro quo for Bibi’s help in getting Paula elected, and Bibi had been a big help getting some conservatives and especially women to vote for the “Hollywood Carpetbagger,” as the former chief of police had dubbed his opponent. With the corruption scandals that had plagued the city, it was out of the question that Bibi would receive a sudden, major promotion within the SDPD, and she was hardly the type to ask for a leg-up into the movie biz. But now there was something Bibi wanted and both women knew it.

“I’d like you to make a phone call on my behalf,” Bibi said.

“To?”

“Chief Constable Raynold Chism of the Constabulary of St. Bertram.”

The mayor asked, “How do you spell his name?”

Bibi told her and provided the chief constable’s phone number.

“And what would you like me to tell this man?” the mayor asked.

“That I’d appreciate any cooperation he can give me in investigating one of his country’s richest citizens.”

“Alexandra Peters?”

“Yes.”

“You found out that’s where she lives – between husbands?”

“Miriam Haig called me this afternoon. She’s very angry that her sons have lost their father … and she’s ashamed she was too afraid to come to Mr. Williams’ funeral.”

“Does Miriam think she’s in real danger? Do you?”

“Alexandra Peters is responsible for three deaths, as far as I’m concerned. She kills for money, which she’ll never get out of Miriam Haig, but for all we know she could kill for spite, too. She lost her try at Miriam’s money. So she might be ticked off. Yeah, I’d say Miriam could be in danger. Her boys, too.”

Mayor McKay nodded. Made a note. Underlined it twice.

The she asked Bibi, “Is St. Bert still a British possession?”

“Independent for nine years.”

“And how does an immigrant become a citizen there?”

“St. Bert isn’t looking for anybody’s wretched refuse; you need a minimum net worth of one million dollars to apply for citizenship, and ten million would be better. When you qualify a thousand times over, like Alexandra, they’re probably pretty quick about doing the paperwork.”

The mayor smiled and said, “You’ve done your homework.”

“Got it from Miriam.”

“Does Brady Teague want to go, too?”

“No.” If things got crazy, Bibi didn’t want Teague to get in trouble.

She might need him to bust her out of jail.

“You think I’ve got the pull to help you, Bibi?” the mayor asked.

“You’re already a well respected politician, Paula, and with your show biz background, people know you anywhere your movies have played. And St. Bertram likes to maintain good relations with the U.S. So, yeah, I think at the very least you can get the chief constable not to lean on me while I poke around.”

“Maybe I can,” the mayor said, “but you’d have to play by their rules.”

“Absolutely,” Bibi said with a straight face.

“From what I remember of my one visit to St. Bert, it’s a pretty expensive place just to vacation. Your paycheck probably won’t go too far.”

“I have some savings,” Bibi said.

The mayor shook her head. “Ansel Williams was my friend. He was a good man, despite his weakness for women. I’ll take up a little private collection to underwrite your efforts. Strictly unofficial – as I’m sure I’ll tell a grand jury someday,” she added with a laugh. “How much time do you think you’ll need?”

“I’m owed seven weeks vacation time,” Bibi answered. “Let’s see what I can do with that.”

 

Don’t stop reading now! Buy One False Step by Joseph Flynn, Kindle Price: $2.99

Announcing Our New Thriller of the Week, Joseph Flynn’s One False Step

This week, Joseph Flynn’s One False Step is sponsoring dozens of great free mystery and thriller titles in the Kindle Store!
Here’s the set-up:
Two cops…
Bibi Ferrer, San Diego homicide, receives a warning: billionaire Anson Williams, will be done in by his new wife, Alexandra. Despite her best
efforts, Bibi fails to prevent Williams’ death. Worse, she can’t prove Alexandra is the killer. All she can do is follow Alexandra to her Caribbean lair, the
island of St. Bertram. Things are even more personal for retired Chicago police captain Terry Dunne. His younger brother is killed by a contract assassin. His only clue: The hit-man might have unfinished business waiting for him on St. Bertram.
Two killers . . .
Avice Toussaint, formerly Alexandra Williams, isn’t every man’s idea of a knockout—only those with a pulse. She’s bored with luring wealthy men to their deaths. Problem is, her father wants her to continue. He’s ex-KGB. He kills people who defy him, no exceptions made for family. George Beecher was an SAS commando, a master of combat. He was far less suited to following orders. After his court martial and discharge from the military, he continued to do the only thing he knew how: kill people. This time for money.
One plan . . .
Bibi and Terry cross paths. Not wanting to alert their prey, they decide to shadow each other’s killer. Get the goods on the killers and see that justice is done. It’s a plan…but when do those things ever work out?

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WITH OVER 3,000 5-STAR REVIEWS, MARK KANE MYSTERIES ARE FOR READERS WHO ENJOY GRIPPING MYSTERIES WITH PLENTY OF TWISTS.'⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ 'Couldn't put it down. Great job of writing. I was right there with them.'⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ 'Yet another great book in the series.' I highly recommend this...
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Sun, Sand and … Murder?Downsized from the FBI’s human resources department on the Virginia mainland, Patience Price is setting up shop as a Counselor at Large in her quirky island town. And she’s making the best of her reinvention, until a high school boyfriend is accused of murder, and his...
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“An ingeniously dark comic thriller about greed, gluttony and murder that is destined for the big screen.” –Best ThrillersAimee Trapnell reluctantly leaves her apartment on Manhattan’s Central Park West to return to her childhood home in Georgia for her father’s ninetieth birthday. Also...
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Step into a riveting adventure novel that will sweep you off your feet with nail-biting suspense, unlikely love, and one man’s search for a treasure that will change both past and future. When two worlds collide with earth-shattering consequences, the first book in the Redemption Series is a...
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