A murdered male stripper. A missing go-go dancer. A city councilman on the hook. Can
When the body of a young man is
found in a popular midtown park, police and local media quickly pin the
brutal killing on a homeless gay kid with AIDS. But Homicide Detective Sgt.
Kendall Parker isn’t convinced, even when the suspect is accused of assaulting
a police detective with a deadly weapon.
City leaders want the heinous
murder solved yesterday and they jump at the chance to pin the crime on the
drug-craving teen. Besides, it’s an election year and remaining in office is
their top priority, even at the sacrifice of the young man. Sgt. Parker isn’t
easily persuaded and is determined to prove Hopper’s innocence, despite protest
from his colleagues and the great citizens of Atlanta . And all threatens to expose the deep secret Parker has
carefully hidden from his comrades for years.
Pretty Boy Dead
Wilde City Press (November 6, 2013)
Excerpt:
The call came through Sergeant Kendall Parker’s
cell during his regular morning coffee run to the Landmark diner on Cheshire Bridge . Moments later, the detective slapped a blue light on the roof of his
silver-blue cruiser and sped through the Morningside neighborhood, an
overpriced in-town section on the northern fringes of the city. He turned off Cheshire Bridge to Piedmont
Road and
punched the accelerator after maneuvering around a few startled drivers. The
traffic proved thicker than he’d expected this morning, forcing him to jockey
along Piedmont
Avenue
and zigzag through the southbound lanes. The call had directed him to Piedmont Park , a popular one hundred and sixty-eight acre triangle of land in the
heart of Midtown, originally named for its crop-producing milieu connecting
downtown and the tony Buckhead community lying northeast of the city. A body
found in a runoff ditch at the park’s southernmost corner had provided no
identification or apparent cause of death. Dumped several days ago, the body
had washed downstream after last night’s heavy spring rain.
Turning
east onto Monroe, Parker spotted a pair of blue and whites angled on 10thStreet
across from Grady High School’s new football and track field. Early rising
joggers sprinkled the gravel running track that circled the perimeter of the
field, several gawking at the flashing lights invading their area.
The Criminal Investigation Division dispatched at
least three investigators to the scene of every death in the city: two from
Homicide and another from either Sex Crimes or the Robbery unit. CID personnel received their orders from the homicide
detective on call even though the homicide sergeant ultimately ran the
investigation. Sgt. Kendall Parker led the charge today. Most referred to him
by last name only. Parker was a major-crimes investigator for the department, CID , his rank Master Sergeant, a ten year veteran with
APD , the last six with the Homicide Squad.
Parker ran two wheels of his car over the curb and
killed the motor, extricating his linebacker frame from the vehicle and
striding across the grassy plane toward the dark blue uniform standing at the
perimeter of a paved walking trail. He flashed his badge to a beat cop standing
guard at the scene, who pointed him in the direction of the body without
introduction.
Head down to protect his face from assault of
thorns, he trudged through a thicket of overgrowth and underbrush, the branches
snatching at his trousers and poking through the fabric, nicking his flesh. He
emerged at the crest of a wide drainage ditch. Looking out, he noticed the
storm basin sliced through the southeastern edge of the park and vanished
through a giant steel cylinder set beneath 10th Street . He came upon a second cop sitting on the angled
concrete about thirty yards from the body and stuck out his badge
again.
“Anyone touched the body?”
“No
sir,” the man called as he shielded his eyes from the sun with an upraised arm
and stood to meet the sergeant. “Ain’t let nobody down there, sir,” he said,
jutting out his chin toward the corpse below. “Waitin’ for the MPO.” He
followed along, becoming alarmed when Parker didn’t stop. “You can’t go down
there.”
The
sergeant reached the precipice of the concrete gully. A body lay tangled in a
web of branches and debris, face up in a flow of shallow water. The stiff
appeared wrapped in a type of overcoat, raincoat, or dark canvas outerwear. A
strong odor often associated with a bloated corpse drifted in the breeze.
Parker squatted, angled his six –foot four inch frame to make the steep trek
into the ditch and walked the edge of water this side of the cadaver, careful
not to contaminate the scene.
“Ignore
me. I won’t touch a thing,” he said, cursing the cop under his breath. Damn
rookie.
The officer’s faced glowed red. He perched himself
in a spot above the basin, jotting the detective’s name and badge number in his
spiral notepad while, no doubt, awaiting his supervisor.
The
detective pushed mirrored shades over his head of thick, dark curls and
withdrew a pocket notepad that was as much a part of him as the badge he had
clipped on his belt. He noted the time, location, and weather conditions.
Surveying the area, he sketched out the scene while completing a spiral search,
working his way toward the remains. A crime scene crew would trudge the same
route when they arrived to videotape the area scene, but Parker needed his own
notes for later recall.
“Call
came in at 6:42
a.m. ,” a voice said from
behind the sergeant.
Parker scowled and glanced over his shoulder,
recognizing Timothy Brooks, an overzealous rookie detective recently assigned
to the squad.
Brooks clambered into the gully, slipping and
sliding on his backside until the heels of his large wingtips caught hold at
the bottom of the ditch, but not before his right foot landed in the
water.
“Watch it,” Parker pointed and snapped. “You’ll
fuck up the scene.”
“Sorry.” Brooks stepped back shaking water from his
shoe. “Homeless man spotted the body at first light.” He continued without
missing a beat and brushed the seat of his pressed khakis. “Perelli’s taking
his statement up near the toilet-house. Dispatch traced the call to the
emergency phone up there.”
Brooks
sported a wide, Cheshire cat grin as he approached his new boss and stopped
several feet from the body, tucking both hands in the flat-front pockets of his
trousers. The beat cop resting on the embankment ventured forward.
Parker shook his head and waved his arms at both of
them. “Get the hell back.”
Brooks
obliged, retracing his steps double-time and shuffling the objecting officer
back up the embankment. The cop shouted expletives indecipherable to Parker as
he turned his attention back to the cadaver. Brooks had to learn his preference
for spending a few minutes alone at a fresh crime scene, so best start now.
Parker viewed the precious time alone a ritual of sorts, a rite of passage
earned by years of long hours spent investigating the deaths of others. He’d be
chastised by his commanding officer later.
A
body commanded the heart of any homicide. Parker’s badge required him to
confront the remains, regardless of circumstance or condition. Years of
experience had taught him emotional detachment was the key to any successful
investigation and although that theory may work for some, deep down inside he
knew better. Soon, he’d relinquish a piece of his soul to this abandoned
corpse, as with every other that followed. Truth be told, he died a little
death at the beginning of every homicide investigation.
To purchase, click http://tinyurl.com/PrettyBoyDead
4 comments:
23exciting opening, Jon. and your detective sounds hot - of course, they have to be, don't they?751A
I watch Law & Order: Special Victims almost every night on USA, I love the sex stories, I can't help it. Your just a few paragraphs already had be embroiled with what's happening, can't wait for it to come out. I'm ready to order.
Great set-up, Jon, and a great tone for a police mystery. Looking forward to reading the rest as soon as possible!
Thanks Victor, Mick & Lloyd, (and Eric for posting); I've been so busy this morning and didn't realize the excerpt had posted. Thanks for the vote of confidence - I'm scared as hell as the novel releases in two days on Wilde City _Press - about two weeks later at other e-tailers.
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