Archive for August, 2004

Watching You

The lunchtime crowd in the Union League’s elegant dining room had been gossiping about the improbable couple long before the yelling started. He was Chris Faber, the local news TV anchorman, and in his usual Armani suit, white shirt and striped tie, he might have otherwise gone unnoticed in the surrounding herd of bankers, politicians and lawyers. His blond hair sported a razor-line part and topped a gaunt, boyish face that was beginning to betray the first lines of middle age. Set before him was a hard roll, a half-finished salad and an empty highball glass. Chris hadn’t been seen at the club for months (not surprising, given his top billing on the Delinquent Accounts list posted in the lobby), but what was really buzzing the room was his companion. She wasn’t another of the post-divorce bimbos that he’d paraded in and out of the club with depressing regularity. This one had strutted into the century-old main dining room like she owned it, a short, beach-ball shaped woman dressed in a stained khaki blazer and blue polyester slacks. No one could place her, despite her pocked, moonscape face and graying hair that stuck-out from her head like a chemical warfare injury. A nearby Philadelphia City Councilman opined that while it was too bad Chris had hit a rough patch, couldn’t he take his tacky new friends somewhere else to eat?

“Why not talk about my contract?” Chris asked.

His guest looked around at the other tables, conscious of the growing attention. “Do we have to do this here? Now?”

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The Widow Wore Silk

The lowlife inside the crack house nailed my partner in the chest as soon as he stepped away from our patrol car. I dragged Jack behind the car, and the second bullet grazed my forehead. By the time the SWAT team arrived, the shooter had turned the gun on himself. I got a medal for heroism and six weeks medical leave; Jack got a flag draped over his coffin.

No one said Jack died because of me; no one had to. I took early retirement and left the Seattle police force. A week later, Jack’s widow called; her voice sounded bright and artificial. “Harrison,” she said, “I want you to have the Darlene.”

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A Favor for Sal: A P.I. Dan Healey Story

The day after Tony Savage was discovered in the trunk of his car on one of the piers off South Street, both garrotted and with two 9 mm. holes in his head, I had a visit from Sal Peluggi, one of the mob street bosses and Tony Savage’s father-in-law.

Sal was of the old school, a big man, well fed, well dressed, about sixty, with a full head of greying hair, always looking freshly barbered. He favored cigars and didn’t worry about his own or anyone else’s lung cancer. He did me the honor of a personal visit instead of sending for me.

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Shooting Incident

Lieutenant McCarthy pulled my Glock out of its shoulder holster, slid the half empty clip out, placed them side by side before him. I couldn’t believe how light it felt when I slid it across his desk.

“The psychologist will be contacting you directly to help you deal with the stress concerning the incident,” McCarthy said, an exaggerated tone of fatherly concern registering in his cigarette affected voice. “And you’ll be assigned desk duty for a couple of days.”

“Is the psychologist part necessary?” I asked. “I already know I have issues. It’s taken me years to drive them deep into the safety of my subconscious.”

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Losing Odds

“Sorry to pull you away from dinner, Doc.”

“No, you’re not,” I grumbled good-naturedly, shooting Lee Prestwick, police chief of Kurgan’s Point, a wry grin as I firmly shut the door of my Jeep Sahara. “So don’t lie,” I challenged my best friend, who at 35 had been an inseparable part of my life from the time we were three-year-old bratty little girls. That point made, I turned my attention to the grim task at hand.

“Under the circumstances, Dr. Triano, I’m being polite.” Lee inclined her head of short dirty blonde hair in the direction of the male body lying motionless on the parking lot pavement between the two paramedics. “Your patient?”

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Officer Down

As soon as he saw the flashing lights in his rearview mirror, Dent glanced down at the speedometer to confirm he was safely under the speed limit. Only then did he pull to the side of the road.

The police cruiser stopped behind him.

While Dent knew that some private investigators had trouble with the local law, he had managed to avoid that complication. He didn’t interfere with their business and they left him alone. Of course today might prove the exception which changed the rule.

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Bio: Mark Agee

My recent publications include “Second Shot” in the June 2002 post of Judas (now the 3rd degree), and “Roadside Attraction” in the November 2002 post of Plots with Guns. I’m a long time Philadelphia area resident with a collection of relatives (and ex-relatives) who solve murders and hype local news for a living.

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Bio: Patrick J. Lambe

Homepage: http://patlambe.com
E-mail:patlambe@patlambe.com

New Jersey was ripped out of Pangaea, along with the rest of the United States, 135 million years ago during the Jurassic period. I was deposited on New Jersey in 1966. Despite our age difference, we’ve had a pretty good relationship. I work as a telephone tech and write crime fiction. You can read the first two chapters of my novel Carlisle’s Marker at Allan Guthries’s Noir Originals. I have short stories published at Plots with Guns, Shots Magazine, Crime Scene and Hardluck Stories. I have short stories coming out in the Dublin Noir Anthology edited by Ken Bruen and the Plots with Guns Anthology edited by Anthony Neil Smith some time in 2005.

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