Detective Flint Box Set: A Detective Story Box Set Books 1-3

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Detective Flint Box Set: A Detective Story Box Set Books 1-3 Page 26

by Nancy McGovern


  “Well, honey,” Matt attempted to support Flint, “the environment is kinda nice.”

  “Don't call me honey until you graduate from the academy and get your shield,” Tori barked at him.

  “Yes dear,” Matt said with a sigh. “Why did I agree to become a cop? The private sector is much easier.”

  Flint grinned. But looking at Melinda, he stopped grinning. She was dressed in a fancy green evening dress with her hair up in a stylish bun. She was beautiful. “Now Melinda, listen to me, before you send me to the slammer, let me explain.”

  “So explain,” Melinda growled.

  “I thought it would be nicer if we all shared a quiet evening at a joint... place... restaurant... that doesn't require me to wear a suit and tie.”

  “You're wearing a white hockey jersey and blue jeans,” Melinda snapped. “I should have known... I should have known...”

  Haley giggled to herself. “So this is what it's like to belong to a family.”

  Melinda rolled her eyes and tossed a thumb at Flint. “Honey, you can have this one for free because I'm never going to get this guy into a suit and tie.” Melinda looked at Flint, sighed, and grabbed a menu. “Might as well order.”

  “Guess so,” Tori said and grabbed the second menu. “So Haley, what are your plans now?”

  “Well,” Haley said, “I've decided to continue living at my grandparents’ house and start nursing school here in Los Angeles. My uncle is coming for a visit. We're going to try and make amends with each other. It's a start.”

  “What about your old man?” Flint asked, picking up a menu.

  Haley shrugged. “Glenda may be going to prison, but she's still determined to ruin his life. You heard what she said.”

  “Yeah,” Flint said. “Glenda Frost is going to write a book in prison exposing your old man for the rat he is.” Flint shook his head. “That woman is still dangerous, Haley. Never forget that.”

  Haley leaned across the table and patted Flint's hand. “That's why I have you.”

  Hearing her cell phone ring, Tori reached down into a pink purse and pulled out her phone. “It's the Chief... Hey Chief... Flint, sure, he's right here.”

  Tori handed Flint the phone.

  “What's up, Chief,” Flint said. “Got it... Where? Do we have time to eat... Okay, okay, no need to bite my neck off, Arnold and I will get out butts in gear.”

  Flint ended the call and tossed Tori her phone.

  “What's the news, partner?” Tori asked.

  “Back to Mansion lane,” Flint said, standing up. “We have a homicide. Melinda, drive Haley home, will you?”

  “Sure.” Melinda smiled at Haley. “Maybe you and I can stop for milkshakes?”

  “I would like that.” Haley beamed.

  “What about me?” Matt asked.

  Tori leaned down and kissed Matt on the cheek. “My place, tomorrow morning for breakfast, big guy.”

  “Mr. Flint,” an elderly Chinese woman asked, “you leave so soon? You not eat yet.”

  “Sorry momma,” Flint said, “gotta run. I'll swing by tomorrow.”

  Walking out of the restaurant with Tori, Flint looked up into a clear night sky. “Rain finally stopped,” he said, stretching his back.

  “How's your head?” Tori asked, taking a deep breath of fresh night air. In the distance, she could hear the Pacific Ocean going to sleep. A row of palm trees began to sway in the night air. As far as Tori was concerned, life was good and she was grateful to be alive.

  “Hurt some,” Flint answered. Watching the palm trees sway back and forth in the night air, he leaned against his car. “You know, Arnold, its night like this that make me feel good inside. I know I don't say it often, but sometimes it's just good to be part of this messed up world.”

  “It sure is, partner.” Tori smiled. “Now, let's go see what's waiting for us on Mansion Lane.”

  Flint smiled. Closing his eyes he listened to the palm trees talk to each other for a few seconds and then got moving. A new case was waiting.

  The End (of Hunted In Hollywood!)

  Continue for The Deadly Desert…

  DETECTIVE FLINT

  Book 3:

  The Deadly Desert

  By

  J.T. Dawson

  &

  Nancy McGovern

  Chapter 1

  Field Trip

  Flint elbowed Tori in the side.

  “Got a mint?” he asked.

  Tori shook her head. “All out,” she answered in a sleepy voice. “Flint, we've been in this mansion all night. Can't we leave?”

  Standing in a large windowless parlor that smelled of cherry tobacco smoke, Flint fought back the exhaustion eating at his mind and body. He walked across the soft green carpet to an antique wooden bookshelf and began exploring the books. “Nice parlor... makes me feel like I'm back in the 1950's.”

  Tori folded her arms. Glancing around the parlor, she admired the vintage furnishings that complimented the burgundy walls. And somehow, the absence of windows gave the room a cozy feeling that melted into her mind the way warm chocolate melts into the mouth of a happy child sitting around a lazy campfire. “Why are we in this room, Flint? Mr. Parson's body was found upstairs in his bedroom.”

  “Well,” Flint said, turning away from the bookshelf, “when we first arrived I roamed around alone for a few minutes while you were upstairs. When I entered this parlor, I noticed that that carpet had traces of wet shoe prints on it, leading from the door to this bookshelf.”

  Tori rolled her eyes. “And you're just now telling me this?”

  “Hey,” Flint snapped back, “this place was crawling with reporters when we arrived. Henry Parsons was a well-known actor, Arnold. Whoever killed him alerted the media.” Flint fought back a yawn. “You should know by now to never show your cards until your ready to make a play. As far as we know, the killer was present tonight, watching our every move.”

  Tori kicked at the carpet. “Yeah, I know. I'm exhausted, Flint, okay? I just wanna get outta here. I need my beauty sleep.”

  “Tell me about it,” Flint said with a grin, maintaining a safe distance. “Listen, Arnold, the killer was in the parlor and we need to find out why.”

  “Okay, Flint, you're the boss.” Tori sighed. Walking over to the bookshelf, she elbowed Flint out of the way and began examining the books. “Nothing here but old classics.”

  “Yeah,” Flint said and began rubbing his bottom lip with his right fingers. “Arnold, this mansion was built in 1931. It's the second largest mansion on Mansion Lane, besides the O'Mally Mansion.”

  “What are you getting at?”

  Flint paced around the parlor. “A person could get lost in this mansion, Arnold. There's a private viewing room, a basement so big that you need a map to help you find your way around, three public staircases and a private staircase, an elevator, more bedrooms than I can count... this place is something else.”

  “I get that, Flint, okay,” Tori said becoming impatient. Allowing a yawn to escape her mouth, she watched Flint pace around. Then she realized Flint was tossing her clues in order to make her think and learn. Kicking herself for missing the invitation, Tori began chewing on the words Flint had spoken. “Flint, are you implying there might be hidden passages located somewhere in this mansion?”

  Flint smiled. “The wet shoe prints I found stopped at this bookshelf. You'll notice that all the books are in alphabetical order... except one.”

  Turning back to the bookshelf, Tori reexamined the books. That's when she noticed that all the books were, indeed, in alphabetical order. Rolling her eyes across shelf one, Tori read each book title and then dropped her attention down onto the second shelf, and then third, finishing with the fourth shelf. “Flint, all the books are in order. Which book is out of order?”

  Flint walked back to the bookshelf. Kneeling down, he pointed to a book covered with an expensive brown leather cover. “This one.”

  Tori focused on the book Flint pointed at. “
That's Dickens... 'A Tale of Two Cities' ...seems to be in order to me.”

  “Really?” Flint asked. “What letter does the title of that book begin with?”

  “The letter 'A'... but Flint, usually...” Tori paused. Staring into Flint's eyes she understood. “Unless you're trying to be clever, right?”

  “Right,” Flint replied in a grateful voice. “Okay, now that I have your mind on track, do me a favor and pull that book out for me, will you.”

  Tori watched Flint take a few cautious steps away from the bookshelf. “Hey, why me?”

  “You're the rookie and I'm the boss,” Flint replied.

  “And you're a jerk.” Looking down at the book, she drew in a deep breath, closed her eyes, and with a nervous hand, quickly yanked the book free. Only the book wouldn't pull out. Only the top was coming loose, and as it tipped back a few inches, a loud metallic click snapped into the air. Tori shot to her feet and backed up to Flint. “What the…?”

  Flint didn't respond. He watched the bookshelf begin to slide to the left, revealing a gray metal door. Once the metal door was clearly revealed, the bookshelf came to a rest. “Neat.”

  “Neat... I nearly faint and all you can say is 'Neat'! Oh, one of these days, Flint.” Running her fingers through her hair, she shook her head. “One of these days.”

  “Come on,” Flint ordered. After walking over to the metal door he paused, studied the material, design, and thickness, and then focused on a simple brass doorknob. Reaching out his hand he tried to the doorknob, which turned. “Neat,” he said again, pulling the metal door open.

  Tori watched, then bent down and drew out her gun. “I'm right behind you.”

  Flint eased his eyes into a dark hallway. Feeling a draft hit his face, he carefully placed out his right hand and began patting the right wall. “Bingo,” he said, finding a light switch. A row of dusty white glass globes attached to the ceiling began to glow with a weak light just about sufficient to illuminate the wooden hallway lined with a brown carpet. “Ready?” he asked Tori and pulled out his gun.

  “Let's go,” Tori said.

  “Shoot at anything that moves, and that is an order.”

  “Trust me, I will.”

  Flint stepped into the hallway, waited for Tori, and then began walking forward, feeling as though he was walking down a strange corridor leading back in time. “This hallway is leading away from the mansion,” he told Tori in a low voice. “We're walking north. The mansion faces east to west.”

  Tori let her eyes soak in the dark wooden walls. “Flint, we're talking about some real money, here.”

  “Yeah,” Flint agreed, then suddenly stopped.

  “What?” Tori asked, alarmed.

  “Melinda checked on Parsons for us when she got back to the station. Parsons was flat broke...well, in a rich man's sense. The man only had a little over four million dollars left out of his vast fortune.”

  “Whoever killed Henry Parson didn't kill him for money then, is that what you're saying?”

  “I'm not sure,” Flint answered. “Henry Parsons was ninety-five years old. The man was famous back in the late 1940's through the late 1950's. He then dropped off the face of the earth. He accumulated millions by investing his own fortune into stocks. Then in the late 1980's he began a Tourist Company called—”

  “Old West Tours,” Tori finished. “I know, Flint. I spoke with Melinda, too. He and his wife Amanda Parsons relocated to a town in Nevada called Dry Cliff, south of Virginia City, and I'm talking about the real Virginia City, not the Virginia City Ben and his three sons lived close to.”

  “A lot of old deserted towns out that way,” Flint said. “Melinda said Parsons and his wife didn't fare well but kept the business going anyway.”

  “Cover up for something?” Tori asked.

  “You're reading my mind,” Flint said. “Come on.”

  Flint followed the hallway until it came to a dead end at a wooden door.

  “End of the line,” Tori said, looking behind her. “You try the door, I'll cover our backs.”

  With a steady left hand, keeping his gun at the ready in his right hand, Flint opened the unlocked door. A dark room appeared. Cautiously Flint eased forward a couple of feet. Checking the inside right wall for a light switch, he felt the dark room staring at him with curious eyes, examining his mind and intentions. Finding a light switch, Flint hit it. A simple overhead light came on. “Interesting,” Flint said.

  “What?” Tori asked, backing up to the door. Looking over her shoulder, she saw Flint walk into a room about the size of the parlor. Only the room was almost completely empty – just old wooden walls, a brown carpet, and an old black safe made of iron sitting against the far back wall.

  “Keep watch,” Flint said. Putting his gun away, he walked through the room. He stopped at the safe and knelt down. The door to the safe was cracked open. Drawing in a deep breath, Flint smelled the dying scent of a man's cologne. “Parsons was in here not long ago,” he called out to Tori.

  “I assumed that. The same cologne I smelled on his body is lingering out in this hallway... faint, but there,” Tori answered.

  Flint nodded. Staring at the safe, he made a few mental notes, then moved forward. He reached into the front pocket of his overcoat and pulled out a pair of plastic gloves. As he put them on, he looked over the safe to see if he could spot any wires. The last thing he wanted was to activate a trap by pulling open the safe door. Unable to spot any wires attached to the safe or any other signs of a trap, he reached forward with his right hand and slowly pulled the safe door open. “Aha.”

  “What?” Tori asked.

  “A ticket,” Flint said, pulling it out. He went back over to Tori and showed her the ticket. “This is from Old West Tours, look. Date, May 11th, 1988.”

  “The year Henry Parsons and his wife began the company,” Tori pointed out, her eyes bright.

  Flint looked down. The ticket was about the size of a raffle ticket, brown in color. “Gold Pot, Nevada,” Flint read out, the name of the town printed on the ticket.

  “Now why would Henry Parsons keep this ticket in a hidden room like this?” Tori asked and then quickly answered her own question. “The person who left the wet footprints in the parlor wanted this ticket.”

  “Could be,” Flint added, “that Parsons was killed because of this ticket.”

  “But why?” Tori asked, lowering her gun.

  “You tell me,” Flint said, shoving the ticket into his front pocket and taking off the plastic gloves.

  “Well, let's see... if Mr. Parsons and his wife created Old West Tours as a cover-up for something, it could be that the person who left the wet footprints in the parlor knows what they were covering up... and the ticket you found is the answer.”

  “Getting smarter by the day,” Flint said. “Listen, here's what we're going to do. We're going to go get some sleep and then give Melinda a hard day. I need her to run... we need her to run... Parsons’ genealogy line for us. While she's going that, you and I are going to do some digging on everyone who paid a visit to Old West Tours.”

  “Melinda is going to divorce you before you two even get married,” Tori said. “You know, it wouldn't hurt you to take her out to a really nice restaurant, Flint. Melinda is a nice woman. Smarter than you, by the way, and she works hard. And more than that, she cares about you, you stubborn ox. Your little stunt back at the Chinese restaurant last night was a real slap in the face, too. It was also downright rude. Melinda was looking forward to spending the evening at a nice restaurant with you.”

  Flint sighed miserably. “I know, Arnold, I know. I'm just no good in places that make you wear a tie and a suit. I feel all stuffy and crammed up. I'm also... I mean, I know Melinda cares about me and all, but... well...”

  “What?” Tori pressed. “Will you stop punching at shadows?”

  “Look, I've already tried the whole love thing... Got married, wore a tux, made the vows... and what happened? The answer is standing right in front
of you, single, divorced, and scarred. My ex-wife liked those fancy restaurants. She liked fancy cars, houses, clothes, the works. Arnold, I'm a simple man.”

  “Melinda isn't your ex-wife, Flint,” Tori pointed out. “Melinda is a decent woman that works hard and lives off of a budget like the rest of us. Every woman likes to be taken out someplace nice every now and then.”

  “I get that, Arnold. I'm not stupid. And you missed the point,” Flint growled. “Keep your mind on the case and out of my personal life, got it?”

  “Got it... yeesh, bite my head off, will you,” Tori said.

  Hearing a sound coming from the down the hallway toward the parlor, Flint snatched out his gun. “Let's go,” he whispered. Running past Tori, he bolted toward the parlor. Tori followed.

  Reaching the metal door, Flint slowed to a stop. Bracing himself for a gunfight, he quickly threw his head around the door, examined the parlor, and then leaned back. “Parlor is empty, come on.”

  Tori felt a horrible fear tug at her heart. Being shot once was horrible enough. She wasn't prepared to be shot twice. But, Tori thought, running out into the parlor behind Flint, she had a job to do and a partner to back up. Fighting crime meant taking the risk of being killed every single second—a risk that had to become Tori's best friend. “Clear,” Tori yelled.

  “I can see that,” Flint said, spotting the parlor door standing open. Turning to Tori he checked her nervous face. “Hey, are you okay?”

  Tori aimed her gun at the open parlor door. “When William shot me... the bullet really shook me up. I'm still a little on edge, but I'll be all right.”

  Nodding, Flint jogged over to the parlor door. Hearing the main front door open and slam shut, he thundered out of the parlor. Running down a hallway lined with expensive hardwood flooring and pictures of old people who were probably related to Henry Parsons, Flint aimed his body toward the main front door. He slid to a stop in a foyer covered with white tile, then went for the front door. Looking over his shoulder, he saw Tori barreling toward the foyer. Not wasting a second, Flint yanked the heavy wooden door open and ran out onto a manicured front lawn lined with lovely flower gardens and palm trees.

 

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