High Country Nocturne - [64]
Understanding history meant acknowledging when the facts didn’t go your way, when they challenged or undermined your thesis. Some detectives would cherry-pick facts to assemble a case. Only shoddy historians did that. History was an argument without end. A criminal investigation resulted in a conviction that was rarely overturned, even if the suspect was innocent.
History was especially about distance and objectivity. Unfortunately, I had lived part of this history, being the first deputy on the scene.
“Sounds good to me,” Melton said. “Sounds like what I need here. But don’t worry about footnotes.”
The man had such a wry wit.
I said, “What about the chain of command?”
“You’ll report directly to me,” he said, “like you did with Peralta.”
That was good. Melton had brought in or promoted thugs to the highest ranks of the department. Hard asses with a history of brutality complaints who relished his campaign against illegal immigrants and poor people in general. And as a former academic, I had never really been welcomed by many of Peralta’s commanders, either. The only thing they hated worse than a meddling professor was a reporter.
“You can’t help him, you know. That’s an FBI case, and you can only get in the way. Or worse. You could be charged with obstructing if you start digging around. These feds, believe me I know, they see the suspect’s friend meddling and they don’t like it. It might even cause them to think you’re an accessory.”
I nodded. “How do you know I’m not?”
“Because I’ve checked you out. I know your work. I trust my gut.”
“And you blackmailed me over Lindsey.”
He shook his head and blew out a breath. “No, David. I was trying to help you. I’m going to help you and Lindsey.”
My ass, I thought, wondering about his real motivations besides self-aggrandizement. Sliding the wallet back in the evidence bag, I asked him about forensics.
“I’m going to send it to the lab to test for latest prints and DNA,” he said. “It’s hard to know what we’ll find. But there are photos of the wallet and its contents in your murder book.”
I folded my hands and leaned back. “What’s next for me?”
He pulled out a notepad and scribbled, tore off a sheet of paper in the paperless county office, and placed it on the desk.
“She found the wallet. Go talk to her. That’s all I’ll say. You can approach it with fresh eyes.” He pulled a box out of his cargo pants and handed it over. Business cards. “Do you have a check?”
“A check?”
“So I can get you in the system for direct deposit.”
I pulled one out of my wallet and gave it to him. Keep your friends close and your enemies closer-and get paid for the trouble.
He stood and started to leave. “I’ll hook you up with an IT person so we can get you access to the MCSO computers. A few things have changed since you left. Got a Homeland Security grant to upgrade the system.” He smiled. “Good hunting, David.”
As the door closed, I slipped some business cards in my pocket and remembered the person who had first taught me the Sheriff’s Office computer system, a young deputy named Lindsey Faith Adams.
This was the first time in a couple of hours that I had really thought of her. It made me wonder if this was a natural recharge mechanism or if something was missing inside me. Or, worse that a cold, detached spectator was living in my soul.
“Lie down with the devil,” Lindsey had said.
And wake up in hell.
Chapter Twenty-seven
A century earlier, the Great War was raging. It swept away four empires, sixteen million lives, the first great era of globalization, and it changed everything. The belief of constant progress in the West was forever destroyed. A foolish, harsh peace set up an even deadlier world war twenty years later.
We live in the shadow of the Great War still, even if most people don’t realize it. Right down to the vernacular: no man’s land. Trench coats. Blotto. Brass Hats. Shell shock. Push up the daisies.
It was the last war fought by poets.
In Flanders fields the poppies grow…
Dulcet est. Decorum Est.
Kipling, who lost a son in the war, echoed the book of Ecclesiastes, providing the words engraved in the ubiquitous British monuments: Their name liveth forevermore.
He also captured the cynicism of the later war-poets and the Lost Generation:
If any question why we died
Tell them, because our fathers lied.
My grandfather was too old to be drafted and already married. Grandmother told me much about the war when I was a child, especially how she blamed it on “Kaiser Bill.” Newer scholarship would dispute it but I doubt that would change her mind. She was ahead of her time in blaming Woodrow Wilson for the flawed peace. Some revisionists argue that the United States should not have entered the Great War at all.
Arizona was only two years past statehood when war broke out in Europe. Phoenix’s population was about fifteen thousand. The cotton farmers made big money from the war. Frank Luke, born in Phoenix, became the state’s first ace and the first airman from anywhere in America to win the Medal of Honor. He died in action in 1918. He was twenty-one years old.
In this "prequel" to the popular David Mapstone mysteries, author Jon Talton takes us back to 1999, when everything dot-com was making money, the Y2K bug was the greatest danger facing the world, and the good times seemed as if they would never end.It was a time before David and Lindsey were together, before Mike Peralta was sherriff, and before David had rid himself of the sexy and mysterious Gretchen.In Phoenix, it's the sweet season and Christmas and the new millennium are only weeks away. But history professor David Mapstone, just hired by the Sheriff's Office, still finds trouble, chasing a robber into an abandoned warehouse and discovering a gruesome crime from six decades ago.Mapstone begins an investigation into a Depression-era kidnapping that transfixed Arizona and the nation: the disappearance of a cattle baron's grandsons, their bodies never found.
A handsome young New York professor comes to Phoenix to research his new book. But when he's brutally murdered, police connect him to one of the world's most deadly drug cartels. This shouldn't be a case for historian-turned-deputy David Mapstone – except the victim has been dating David's sister-in-law Robin and now she's a target, too. David's wife Lindsey is in Washington with an elite anti-cyber terror unit and she makes one demand of him: protect Robin.This won't be an easy job with the city police suspicious of Robin and trying to pressure her.
Cincinnati homicide Detective Will Borders now walks with a cane and lives alone with constant discomfort. He's lucky to be alive. He's lucky to have a job, as public information officer for the department. But when a star cop is brutally murdered, he's assigned to find her killer. The crime bears a chilling similarity to killings on the peaceful college campus nearby, where his friend Cheryl Beth Wilson is teaching nursing. The two young victims were her students. Most homicides are routine, the suspects readily apparent.
Cheryl Beth Wilson is an elite nurse at Cincinnati Memorial Hospital who finds a doctor brutally murdered in a secluded office. Wilson had been having an affair with the doctoras husband, a surgeon, and this makes her a aperson of interesta to the police, if not at outright suspect. But someone other than the cops is watching Cheryl Beth.The killing comes as former homicide detective Will Borders is just hours out of surgery. But as his stretcher is wheeled past the crime scene, he knows this is no random act of violence.
The private-detective business starts out badly for former Phoenix Deputy David Mapstone, who has teamed up with his old friend and boss, Sheriff Mike Peralta. Their first client is gunned down just after hiring them. The case: A suspicious death investigation involving a young Arizona woman who fell from a condo tower in San Diego. The police call Grace Hunter's death a suicide, but the client doesn't buy it. He's her brother. Or is he? After his murder, police find multiple driver's licenses and his real identity is a mystery.
Содержание: 1. Блаженный грешник 2. Одинокий островитянин 3. Анатомия анатомии 4. Спокойной ночи 5. Исповедь на электрическом стуле 6. Прибавка в весе 7. Пустая угроза 8. Лазутчик в лифте 9. Не трясите фамильное древо 10. Смерть на астероиде 11. До седьмого пота 12. Такой вот день… 13. Дьявольщина 14. Аллергия 15. Милейший в мире человек 16. Победитель 17. Девушка из моих грез 18. Да исторгнется сердце неверное! 19. Как аукнется… 20. Человек, приносящий несчастье 21. Рождественский подарок 22. Изобретение.
Оба романа, помещенные в книге, — об убийцах. Однако психологические портреты этих убийц так различны, как разнообразны и непохожи человеческие судьбы. Что приводит человека к преступлению? И вообще, преступник — это человек или чудовище? Весь ход повествования заставляет читателя не раз задавать себе эти вопросы и пытаться ответить на них.
Книга написана по сценарию известного российского драматурга А.В. Тимма.Шайка Ангелины Виннер продолжает борьбу. Им удается похитить Ольгу Кирсанову, жену убитого хозяина «Империи». Сын Ольги Ваня ради спасения матери отказывается от своих прав на фирму. Враждебный лагерь празднует победу, но… преждевременно! В руках у Лавра козырная карта — завещание, и, обнародовав его, он ломает планы своих врагов. Остановятся ли бандиты, или кто-то снова окажется их следующей жертвой?
Книга написана по сценарию известного российского драматурга А.В. Тимма.Франц Хартман и Ангелина Виннер, подстроившие автокатастрофу, в которой погиб хозяин «Империи» Владимир Кирсанов, намерены идти до конца. Теперь они замышляют убийство его жены Ольги и несовершеннолетнего сына Вани, наследника «трона». Волею случая Лавру суждено сыграть роль доброго ангела в судьбе женщины и ребенка.
Обстоятельный и дотошный инспектор амстердамской полиции Ван дер Вальк расследует странное убийство домохозяйки («Ать-два!»). Героям известного автора детективов предстоят жестокие испытания, прежде чем справедливость восторжествует.
Книга написана по сценарию известного российского драматурга А.В. Тимма. На страницах романа вы встретитесь со старыми знакомыми, полюбившимися вам по сериалу «NEXT», — благородным и великодушным Лавром, его сыном Федором, добродушным весельчаком Санчо и решительной Клавдией. Увлекательное повествование вводит в мир героев, полный настоящих рыцарских подвигов и романтических приключений.