Murder in Hell's Kitchen

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Murder in Hell's Kitchen Page 30

by Lee Harris


  She didn’t answer that. “It’s a great picture. We look so happy.”

  “We were happy.”

  “Dad’s framing his. He can’t keep his eyes off it.”

  “A man with good taste.”

  She smiled at the picture after they hung up. There was a letter in the mail from Mike Fromm. He and his son were planning a trip to New York next month. How was the first week of December? She thought it was just fine. The tree at Rockefeller Center would be up and lighted, New York at its brightest.

  The ordeal in Chinatown still gave her nightmares. She knew that working in insurance would never give her bad dreams, and for a couple of days after she left the hospital, she had thought it was really what she wanted. And then something changed. She couldn’t let go of the job. Or maybe it couldn’t let go of her. It was part of her in a way that nothing else in her life was. Who would she be without it?

  She called Flora Hamburg and they got together for dinner, Flora with her white hair and shopping bag and her weapon on her ample hip. Flora never said a word, never asked her what she wanted to do. But when she picked up the check, she reached into her shopping bag and pulled out a framed copy of the famous picture.

  “You look great,” Flora said. “Even that son of a bitch Hackett looks good.”

  There had been article after article in the papers. The mayor was deliriously happy with the success of the squad. First-Grade Detective Jane Bauer was emblematic of the best of the police force. Her partners were great men, and the squad had more than proved itself.

  And then there was Jane Bauer herself. She was grateful the past was past, more grateful than she could articulate that she was alive and well enough to work. The investigation of the murder of Arlen Quill had turned into the case of her lifetime, almost the last one, she thought, with a familiar echo of fear. She sensed a pride that she kept to herself in what she had accomplished: the observations that had become leads, the frail strands of possibility that she had picked up and run with till they panned out. Who could have imagined a simple homicide would lead to a complicated international conspiracy?

  It was over now, the questions answered, the last of the pieces neatly fitting into the puzzle, time to move on, time to tie up the last loose end in her life.

  She got a fire going, made herself a mug of coffee, and got the phone. Sitting down in her favorite chair, she dialed the number of Lisa Angelino.

  If you enjoyed this mystery, look for these

  novels featuring intrepid investigator

  Christine Bennett

  THE APRIL FOOLS’ DAY MURDER

  by Lee Harris

  For his favorite charity, the high school drama

  club, Willard Platt fakes his own murder as an

  April fool stunt. But the repeat performance later

  that day is the real thing. And some say he

  deserved it. Investigator (and ex-nun) Christine

  Bennett is troubled by Willard’s widow, who roams

  the road at night, and his son, who has a troubled

  marriage and bizarre secret life. Behind this

  family’s respectable facade, violent passions are

  seething. For this is not the first tragedy to strike

  them. Nor will it be the last.

  Published by Fawcett Books.

  Available wherever books are sold.

  It’s party time for a killer. . . .

  THE HAPPY BIRTHDAY MURDER

  by Lee Harris

  Sleuth Christine Bennett is moved by two poignant

  mementos treasured by her late Aunt May. The first

  is a sad little note mourning the death of a young

  man lost in a Connecticut wood; the other, an obit-

  uary honoring a wealthy local manufacturer who

  committed suicide just after his splendid fiftieth

  birthday celebration. Why did her aunt never

  mention these virtually simultaneous tragedies?

  With her investigative instincts irresistibly whetted,

  Chris slices through the layers of the past,

  and uncovers the horrible truth that murder was

  just the icing on the cake.

  Published by Fawcett Books.

  Available wherever books are sold.

  Mayhem knows best. . . .

  THE MOTHER’S DAY MURDER

  by Lee Harris

  Investigator (and former nun) Christine Bennett is

  appalled when a young woman claims to be the

  natural daughter of Sister Joseph, beloved Superior

  at St. Stephen’s and Chris’s dearest friend. But after

  the girl is murdered, all the evidence leads the

  police to believe she was telling the truth—and that

  Sister Joseph is the prime suspect. As Chris franti-

  cally searches for the truth, it seems only a miracle

  can save Sister Joseph from a life behind bars.

  Published by Fawcett Books.

  Available wherever books are sold.

  By Lee Harris

  Published by Fawcett Books:

  THE GOOD FRIDAY MURDER

  THE YOM KIPPUR MURDER

  THE CHRISTENING DAY MURDER

  THE ST. PATRICK’S DAY MURDER

  THE CHRISTMAS NIGHT MURDER

  THE THANKSGIVING DAY MURDER

  THE PASSOVER MURDER

  THE VALENTINE’S DAY MURDER

  THE NEW YEAR’S EVE MURDER

  THE LABOR DAY MURDER

  THE FATHER’S DAY MURDER

  THE MOTHER’S DAY MURDER

  THE APRIL FOOLS’ DAY MURDER

  THE HAPPY BIRTHDAY MURDER

  Books published by The Ballantine Publishing Group are available at quantity discounts on bulk purchases for premium, educational, fund-raising, and special sales use. For details, please call 1-800-733-3000.

  A Fawcett Book

  Published by The Ballantine Publishing Group

  Copyright © 2003 by Lee Harris

  All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. Published in the United States by The Ballantine Publishing Group, a division of Random House, Inc., New York.

  Fawcett and colophon are registered trademarks of Random House, Inc.

  www.ballantinebooks.com

  www.randomhouse.com

  eISBN: 978-0-307-41614-8

  v3.0

 

 

 


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