Monday, March 14, 2016

An Excerpt from Beachhead, a Crime Novel by Jeffery Hess

Omnimystery News: An Excerpt courtesy of Jeffery Hess

We are delighted to welcome back author Jeffery Hess to Omnimystery News today.

Last week we had a conversation with Jeff to discuss his new crime novel Beachhead (Down & Out Books; March 2016 trade paperback and ebook formats) and today we are pleased that he has agreed to share an excerpt with our readers, the first chapter.

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Tampa, Florida, August 13, 1980

SCOTLAND ROSS HEARD A NOISE HE didn't immediately recognize as the sound of a boot heel on the living room tile. He stood barefoot in boxer shorts; elbows propped on the pedestal sink in his bathroom, his index fingers strangled red by the tension of waxed, white dental floss. The better part of the day had been spent sautéing his brain in vodka, but he never missed a night, no matter how late he worked, or, since losing his job, how much he drank, or how tired he was, or how long it took. It was three o'clock in the morning. Since he'd been on parole, he no longer had to face the painful memories sober in that dead time before unconsciousness. The noise had made him lose track of where he left off. He paused the taut string in front of his open mouth — anticipated the next footstep, but heard only the hiss of florescent bulbs that attached yellowness to everything in the room.
  He dug the floss in the tight space between his bottom front teeth, and tugged back and forth. Most likely it was Dana in the other room. She had a key and was the only reason he'd moved to St. Pete. Being his sister meant she could come and go as she pleased. No questions asked. Being a booze whore meant periodically she got too drunk to go home and in too bad of shape for any man with a roof over his head to take her in and do what he wanted. She'd crashed at Scotland's a few times in the year he'd been a free man and a civilian. She probably kept the lights off in an effort not to wake him this time.
  "Hello?" he called, walking into the hall, untwining his index fingers, looking both ways.
  It could be that red-head from the Publix on Gulf Drive desperate for another overnight trip to tingle town. Or it could be some coked-up loon out to score enough cash for more drugs or maybe some psychopath jonesing for the thrill of homicide. The only thing of value in the place was a few bucks stashed in a shoebox beneath the old Webley .32 he'd bought from a carny behind the Tilt-A-Whirl at the State Fair back in February.
  Chilled air from the living room moved across his bare skin, while sweat beaded on his forehead. The bathroom light went dark behind him. His vision became orange and brown spots, like soup stains. "What the fuck?" he called into the darkness as he dropped his floss. He had no proof that the Webley shot straight, but even if he could get to it quick enough, he wouldn't know where to fire. He crouched and swung wide at the soup stains in front of him, trying to protect himself. The last time his heart raced this fast had been with a skinny kindergarten teacher with disco hair. His adrenaline spiked differently now — a fight of some sort was unavoidable. He felt it in his stiff fingers, which throbbed with his pulse. His eyes hadn't adjusted yet and he felt naked despite his boxer shorts. He groped his way back toward his bed hoping to get to his revolver and use the mattress as cover if shots were fired, but stumbled over the corner of the bed opposite the door and smacked his head on the nightstand. His fingers came back dry after he searched his skull for blood, but his ears rang with a high frequency hum that sounded like the flush of a public toilet. His breath cycled fast and shallow, filling just the top portion of his lungs. He needed to deepen his breathing, slow his heart rate, and calm his mind so he could think rationally — just as he'd learned in Leavenworth.
  With the room lost in flashes of orange and brown, he focused on his breathing. He stood, shook his head to clear his vision, but failed. He reached and felt the rough-hewn paneling as he groped his way toward the door. With his other hand, he threw blind jabs. The rattle and hum of the wall unit air conditioner in the living room filled the quiet. Cold air carried the smell of cologne. Scotland never wore cologne. He jabbed and listened for footsteps.
  Without a sound, someone grabbed Scotland's wrist in mid-air, twisted it behind him, and crimped his windpipe in a headlock, all in one fluid motion. As a bouncer, Scotland had earned a living using his muscle and practiced moves. Now he found himself the disgruntled drunk on the wrong end of a choke hold, his right arm pinned behind his back and his lungs demanding oxygen in a new way. He hoped the elastic in his boxers held.
  Even with his breath shallow, Scotland got a nose-full of the cologne the guy wore. It was a strange thought to register in his brain, but he guessed dime-store Brut. It made him cough, and he took advantage of that moment to try and push back with his legs, but he was barefoot and his calloused heels provided no traction. He dug in on the balls of his feet but he was anchored. Locked in the choke hold. The arm twisted behind his back had somehow become part of the hold. Any struggling to break free only deepened the grip around his throat.
  The guy with the death grip pushed against the back of Scotland's skull and kicked his bare ankles to get him moving. An awkward march forced him out of the bedroom into the area between the living room and the kitchen that was meant to hold a small dining table. Scotland never had what Floridians called a dinette, but rather a few square feet of open floor space where he did push-ups and sit-ups every morning, right on the Mexican tile.
  Scotland's cinder block duplex sat in a line of eight rented units on each side of the street, all with matching lawns in need of mowing and driveways with oil stains. It was late. The neighbors worked during the day and would be asleep now, but maybe if gunshots woke them, they'd report them so he wouldn't fester on the floor for the critters and insects.
  Beams of light shone from the bedroom and from the streetlight outside the kitchen window, casting the living area in shadows. The muted TV glowed blue and gray with the snow of an off-air station. His vision adjusted, but he still couldn't get a full breath.
  "What the fuck is going on?" he tried to say, but couldn't manage more than a gurgle.
  He made out the shadows of three men, counting himself. They were all silent. The faucet leaked into the kitchen sink with patient drips while Scotland's heartbeat thundered. He pawed at the forearm around his throat. Swung back with his left fist, but hit nothing. The guy holding him had the speed to evade and the grip to hold onto all two hundred fifteen pounds of Scotland. He had to give the fucker credit, he'd never been this immobilized. Not even as a twelve-year-old, when the Casta brothers jumped him outside the Stop & Shop on their way home from school.
  Between shallow breaths, he heard the same boot heel as earlier as it clicked across the kitchen floor. With the sound came the smell of cigars.
  "You have no idea how disappointed I am."
  The first syllable chilled through Scotland. He always had a talent for recognizing voices he'd heard even once. He could name the celebrity selling floor polish or dog food on the radio, or when facing away from the television.
  "Kinsey?" he mumbled through a jaw locked by the other guy's grip.
  "Don't act like this is a surprise, son," Kinsey said.
  Scotland should never have gotten mixed up in that card game a couple weeks ago. The stakes got way over his head, but he couldn't leave a loser. In moments like that, he never thought about repercussions, only rewards. This is what it got him, this time. "Who's the asshole you brought with you?" he asked.
  The guy who held him applied more pressure, doubling Scotland over until he felt pain sear his armpit and his ribs. It felt like muscle ripping off of bone. From his hunched over position, Scotland's face was roughly waist-high to the two guys. The one holding him down wore tan, bell-bottom polyester pants that crested over the tops of black platform shoes. Kinsey wore brown pants with starched creases down each leg that pointed to the toes of leather cowboy boots. They looked like burgundy mirrors, hand-shined and stitched with gold thread.
  Scotland struggled for a little room under his chin, just long enough to take a clean breath. He tried to pry some slack around his neck, but the grip wouldn't budge. He tried to turn his head — he wanted to see how far he was from the kitchen counter, where he'd left a knife with a wood handle next to a block of sweating government cheddar before he'd collapsed in bed. He needed that knife, now. He mumbled, "This is bullshit, Kinsey."
  Kinsey snapped his fingers and the guy released Scotland and backed away.
  Scotland rested with his hands on his knees, sucking in good air. His throat felt like a garden hose kinked by a shovel, but he wouldn't show Kinsey and his thug that it bothered him.
  His buddies would never believe this story, and they believed everything Scotland said. His closest friends were three guys he'd worked with at Sharky's, two line cooks and a waiter. They ate up every story Scotland told about his Navy days in Pusan, Subic Bay, and Hong Kong with laughter, "Hell yeah!" and "Tell another one!" but they'd never believe this.
  As he stood, Scotland moved his head side-to-side and stretched his jaw. He rolled his shoulders forward and back and flexed his major muscles as a way of taking inventory. His sight had adjusted enough to see the other guy stood a head taller than Kinsey, but still a good couple inches shorter than Scotland. He guessed the guy topped out at one hundred sixty pounds. No more imposing than any other swinging dick you'd see in line at the bank, except for the ridiculously blond hair hanging down to his neck.
  Kinsey looked exactly as he had the night Scotland had met him at the card game. Waves of dark hair covered his ears, the front slung low diagonally. His beard was the same dark shade as his hair. Scotland had guessed mid-thirties that night at the card game. Like then, Kinsey wore a short-sleeved white dress shirt with the collar open, as if he'd just taken off his tie. All business despite the Purina Feed & Grain ball cap he wore.
  "If it's all the same to you," Kinsey said, hands on his hips, "I'd rather dispense with the small talk and get right to business this fine evening. Okay there, son?" He moved assuredly, his posture perfect, but not stiff. Scotland imagined a young Kinsey training with his mother by walking with a book on his head. The only posture training Scotland got was at boot camp, where his Company Commander barked, "Stand up straight, you big, dumb redneck." Yelling never bothered Scotland, but the "dumb redneck" stuff had raised anger in his veins. Despite that, he'd kept secret his three years of college.
  This conversation with Kinsey felt like the same thing. Scotland crossed his arms over his bare chest. Hugged his forearm to his heart. Pretended to scratch his shoulder. "Look," he said. His mouth ran dry before he finished the word. He didn't know what to say next, but figured it better be something this asshole wanted to hear if there was any chance of keeping things friendly. "I got laid off. I'm none too happy about it myself."
  "You must've played football in high school," Kinsey said.
  The comment washed over Scotland like cool air from the wall unit AC. Instead of sports, Scotland had started bagging groceries when he was fourteen. He mowed lawns for five dollars apiece before that. Did both all through high school. During his time at college he augmented his student loans by tutoring algebra. "Nope."
  "What a waste," Kinsey said. "You'd've made a hell of a linebacker, son."
  "If I had a dime for every time I heard that … " Scotland shrugged. "I wouldn't owe you any money."
  Kinsey reached up and grabbed Scotland's hand, pulled his arm straight, stared at Scotland's forearm. The tattoo had the distinct shape of a football with a triangle at the end near his wrist. He'd gotten the tattoo in the time between being released from The Castle and getting the fuck away from the Navy and Kansas for good. The tattoo had taken less than an hour and only cost him sixty bucks, but he forever had a reminder to be a better man.
  "I bet there's a fascinating story behind this tattoo."
  Scotland pulled his arm free. He didn't like to talk about it. It was not meant to be a conversation starter.
  Kinsey toed one of the empty vodka bottles on the tiled floor and it rolled in a trail of glass-on-glass noise.
  Scotland never drank at home before he lost his job.
  Kinsey's boot heels clicked to the kitchen, where he fingered a full-page ad for Daytona that Scotland had tacked on the fridge with a magnet shaped like an alligator. In the ad was the most perfect beach-front cottage Scotland had ever seen. He imagined cooling off in the blue pool as muscle cars drove on the beach, pictured himself behind the wheel of a '67 'Cuda and becoming the guy in his bathing suit standing with his gorgeous wife by the pool surrounded by a white picket fence. Atop the scene was DAYTONA in yellow script. At the bottom, blue text read "Sun, Surf, and Muscle Cars." Scotland wanted to live in that place. Wanted that life. His classmates from college used to brag of spring breaks there, about the parties and the bikinis. Nothing had worked out for him in Tampa like he thought it would.
  "You didn't bust into my place to hear a sob story," Scotland said. "You want your money. I don't have it."
  "The fishing ban cost you your job, if I recall correctly." Kinsey said.
  Scotland may have mentioned this the night they met. He could have talked about it now. Could have told him about getting the job almost a year ago and how happy his parole officer had been about the steady employment. Could have showed him the scars and improperly healed knuckles from keeping the peace at Sharky's most nights. None of that was Kinsey's business. Instead, Scotland offered the briefest summary he could think of. "Yeah."
  Kinsey's features contracted with a flash of recognition followed by a smile. "You don't say?" He looked over to the other guy, who also smiled.
  Scotland stood on the balls of his feet, ready to spring if provoked.
  "Relax, son," Kinsey said. "If I was so inclined, you'd be dead as a doorknob by now."
  Scotland shook his head and felt the kink in his throat slowly returning to normal. In a different situation, like when they'd played cards, the way that guy butchered the English language made him laugh. Instead, he ignored the malapropism because this twisted bastard insinuated death like it was nothing more than discussing the weather.
  "Isn't that right, Platinum?" Kinsey asked his buddy.
  The guy nodded and clapped his hands twice. "Yes, sir, Mr. K."
  Scotland turned his head to see the man standing with his arms crossed over his chest, his fists leveraged to make his biceps look bigger. It made Scotland laugh. "Platinum?" He turned back to Kinsey. "Is he some kind a rump ranger?"
  Platinum grunted and took a step with his arms still crossed. "Did that feel like a hug to you, smartass?" he said.
  "All right," Scotland said, trying to slow things down as he did anytime he found himself outnumbered. "This will be easier for all of us if we remain friends."
  That line had often kept things from getting physical at Sharky's. Sometimes, those same words only escalated the violence. He still hadn't figured out any pattern when he'd lost the job.
  "That's a fine idea, son. I am happy to receive your long-overdue offer of friendship."
  "Well then, Kinsey," Scotland said as he worked his jaw up and to the left to stretch out the remaining stiffness, "between friends, I gotta tell you, your poker game was rigged. Way I figure it, I don't owe you shit. So let's wrap up this little visit so I can get some sleep."
  Kinsey looked at Platinum and then to Scotland. "Rigged?"
  "Marked cards. Inside dealer." Scotland should never have played on house credit, but every time he wanted out he'd win a hand, and a pile of chips. Bet bigger. Lose bigger.
  "Ah." Kinsey took a few steps in his direction. "We have no way to prove it was or it wasn't. So that is a mute point, son."
  Scotland ignored Kinsey's mispronunciation again.
  Kinsey patted the back of his hat before continuing. "But let's be perfectly honest with one another, son. You would've gladly taken my money if you'd've won." He paced a bit then came to rest with an elbow propped on the back of the stool near the counter.
  Scotland stood tall, his shoulders wide, arms out. "Ten grand is pocket change to a heavy hitter like you." Scotland wasn't sure if he'd been able to hide the contempt in his voice long enough to sell the false compliment.
  Kinsey slapped his hand on the counter. "The value of my pocket change is greater than any man's life if he's on my shit list, son."
  Scotland shook his head. "I don't have shit for money, so I guess you're going to have to kill me. Or die trying."
  "Killing you," Kinsey continued, "doesn't solve our best interests. I mean, you've got no way to pay me back and you're too proud to come tell me so." Smugness filled every inch of the rock he called a face. "I can only imagine what it must be like to be in your position. I do, however, know for a bona fide fact that I wouldn't enjoy it. No sir. But let me tell you, son, necessity is the brother of invention, and I've invented a solution."
  Scotland looked at the darkened ceiling. "Mother," he said, to no effect.
  Kinsey walked into the kitchen and leaned on the counter near the sink. "Don't play possum with a country boy, Scottish."
  Scottish. Scotland had been called every variation of his name in high school, during his time in college, the Navy, and Leavenworth, but never this. And he hated the way Kinsey said it.
  Kinsey picked up the knife and pushed the orange block of cheese away with the blade. "Now see here," he said. "The deal I'm offering you is to take it out in trade."
  "Trade?" Scotland grunted a laugh. "Give me a fucking break."
  Kinsey charged Scotland, who dropped into a fighting stance, fists chest high, feet spread front and back. Kinsey stopped and nodded to his buddy, who grabbed Scotland by the throat in a grip that felt like a gator jaw closing on his windpipe. More pressure applied than before. Scotland hadn't seen the move coming. He couldn't believe it went down so fast, but there he was being choked and bent over in pain, again.
  Kinsey yanked Scotland's head back by his hair. Stared him dead in the eye as he pressed the tip of the cheese knife into the narrow exposure of throat between Scotland's chin and Platinum's forearm. Kinsey got down low, in Scotland's face. "I could slit your damn throat right here." His teeth were clenched and spit formed in the corners of his mouth. "I could slit it and bleed you like a buck in the woods."
  Scotland thought about driving his weight backward with his legs to try and catch Platinum off balance enough to break his hold or maybe grab the knife. He tested the maneuver with a push of his left leg, but there was no movement. Pinned as he was, Scotland felt certain he'd pass out from lack of oxygen, perhaps die as a result before Kinsey broke his skin. He clung to consciousness. Listened to the AC's hum and that steady drip in the kitchen sink.
  Kinsey lowered the knife.
  Scotland didn't have clearance enough at his throat to attempt an exhale of relief.
  Kinsey reared back and punched him in the left eye. The bastard's fist was like a cue ball driving a straight into the socket. Scotland's vision changed to a strobe effect before he even felt the pain. He strained to raise his hands to cover his face, to defend himself from another blow, but he still couldn't move. If he didn't lose the eye and lived to tell the tale to his buddies from Sharky's, he'd gladly sport the shiner as proof.
  Kinsey smacked the other side of Scotland's face twice with an open palm. "Stay with me, son," Kinsey said, tugging on Scotland's chin. Kinsey let go and walked back to the kitchen. Let the knife clang into the stainless steel sink. "Now, by trade I mean in services that you'll render on my behalf. You follow me, son?"
  Scotland grunted, more in frustration than acknowledgment. His vision was a swirl of reds with flashes of blinding white. He gasped twice before he realized he was no longer being choked. He took in short breaths and braced his hands on his knees. After a moment, he stood and took a few aimless steps, raising his hands. He grabbed the top of the refrigerator to keep himself upright. He stared at the Daytona Beach scene on the ad as he gasped in three more full breaths without consciously exhaling. Even if he could beat that bastard to the knife, Scotland wasn't sure he'd have enough in his tank to do anything with it. He swallowed. "What kind of services?"
  Platinum stood by the window, his ass only inches from a potted cactus on the sill that Scotland hoped the guy would sit on.
  Scotland looked out the window toward the palmetto scrub surrounding his small backyard. Caught his breath. Pulses in his left eye made everything look as if underwater. Exhaustion and his hangover added to the unpleasantness. If he'd been dressed, he'd have had his lighter in his pocket and he'd spin it around that portion of his thigh. But there were no pockets on boxer shorts.
  "I'm not goin' to lie to you." Kinsey's face smoothed out and he smiled with teeth like a TV weatherman. "Some of the tasks you'll be assigned might encroach on the letter of the law. But we know you're on parole, which means you'll be extra careful."
  That Kinsey knew this information surprised Scotland. "Is that right?"
  Kinsey nodded and kept his smile. "You volunteered for military service. A decision that very well could have cost you your life in battle. That tells me you're brave."
  Scotland gave his full attention.
  Kinsey continued, leaning an elbow on the barstool again. "While on shore leave you were arrested for beating up your brother-in-law, which I can only assume was in the honor of your sister. That shows great loyalty. Doing so cost you two years in Navy prison — time you spent without a lick of trouble, which tells me you're good at taking orders. And your record this past year you've been on parole is whistle clean. That proves you've assimilated back into civilian life without a chip on your shoulder."
  Scotland felt a flush in him at the same instant he smelled the cheese sitting on the counter. The scent distracted him from Kinsey. It had been a long time since anyone said anything nice about Scotland. The cheese smell made him hungry.
  "And yet," Kinsey said, "you lost a son, which tells me you have a fire in you."
  That last detail stopped Scotland cold. His ribs clenched and he felt a dry heave well up in him as the image of the infant's casket filled his mind. He felt his arms flung across two and a half feet of white ash, a wood chosen because baseball bats are made of it and that was the only way of sharing the game with his son.
  Sadness and guilt gripped Scotland's chest. He ignored the pressure, stayed strong in front of these two bastards. "How the hell you know so much of me?"
  Kinsey didn't smile, but his eyes betrayed a happiness Scotland resented. "I don't let just anyone into my life, Scottish."
  Scotland turned to look at Platinum, who stood silent, shaking his head.
  "Now, you do a few odds and ends for me and your debt goes down," Kinsey said. "Get us back to even and we stay friends. Once we're square, you can stay on and keep money you earn." He rested his hands on his belt buckle. "Mutual interests, mutual benefits."
  "And if I say no?" Scotland asked, before he could control his curiosity.
  Kinsey laughed. "You're not going to refuse, son." He looked around at the shabby furniture and the empty bottles. "You're already in the shits, but I can cripple you in more ways than one. But let's not talk about the nasty underbelly. It's simple, son. My deal's better."
  Scotland watched Kinsey's mouth as he talked. It moved fast, like a salesman's, and Scotland had always hated salesmen. He shut his eyes to better see that beach scene in the ad for Daytona. Nothing good could come from getting mixed up with a guy like Kinsey, but he had no choice, other than telling the little bastard what he wanted to hear.
  "Fine," Scotland said, tucking his forearm behind his back. "Where and when?"

— ♦ —

Jeffery Hess
Photo provided courtesy of
Jeffery Hess

Born in New York and raised on Florida's Gulf coast, Jeffery Hess served six years aboard the Navy's oldest and newest ships and has held writing positions at a daily newspaper, a Fortune 500 company, and a university-based research center. He is the editor of the award-winning anthologies Home of the Brave: Stories in Uniform, and Home of the Brave: Somewhere in the Sand (Press 53). He's an alum of the University of South Florida and holds an MFA in creative writing from Queens University of Charlotte. His writing has appeared widely in print and online. He lives in Tampa, where he leads the DD-214 Writers' Workshop for military veterans.

For more information about the author, please visit his website at JefferyHess.com and his author page on Goodreads, or find him on Facebook and Twitter.

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Beachhead by Jeffery Hess

Beachhead by Jeffery Hess

A Crime Novel

Publisher: Down & Out Books

Amazon.com Print/Kindle Format(s)BN.com Print/Nook Format(s)Kobo eBook Format

It's 1980 on Florida's Gulf coast. Sun, drugs, gambling debts, and dirty deals push Navy-prison parolee, Scotland Ross, deeper into the life of crime he never wanted.

His sister's life, a potential newfound love, and his own freedom are all on the line as he tangles with a redneck gangster intent on becoming the state's next governor.

Will Scotland make the right choice or the one that keeps him alive?

Beachhead by Jeffery Hess. Click here to take a Look Inside the book.

A Conversation with Crime Novelist Trey R. Barker

Omnimystery News: Author Interview with Trey R. Barker

We are delighted to welcome author Trey R. Barker to Omnimystery News today.

Trey's new crime novel, No Harder Prison (Down & Out Books; March 2016 trade paperback), is published today and we recently had the chance to catch up with him to talk more about his work.

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Omnimystery News: Tell us a little more about No Harder Prison. It's a stand-alone, right? But you also write crime novels featuring a recurring character.

Trey R. Barker
Photo provided courtesy of
Trey R. Barker

Trey R. Barker: No Harder Prison is a stand-alone. It's something I wrote a few years ago based on a news story I read in the New Orleans Times-Picayune, about a guy who, when he got outta the cut, had to take all the doors off in his apartment. Bathroom door, bedroom doors, cabinet doors, everything. He'd learned, in his years in prison, that scary — and maybe deadly — things hid behind closed doors. From that I banged up No Harder Prison, starring Dana Oldham.

After a decade in prison, Dana is being released. And he drives right into a shitstorm of bullets and stolen money and threats. As the novel progresses, the threats get worse, the amount of snatched money increases, and Dana finds himself just as lost as when he was in prison.

Dana is a good man, or at least the Dana I know is. He's got some stiletto-sharp edges but his heart is the heart of a good man; an innocent man (wrongly convicted because the DA at the time hid exculpatory evidence that should have kept Dana from ever being arrested). He wants to put his life back together, say prayers for his dead Mamas, rediscover his brother and niece, and play a little blues guitar.

Dana wants what we all want, what shrink David McClelland calls the affiliation need — the need to feel a sense of belonging. That's a great and mighty fine term but no one thinks about all that psychobabble stuff. People just boogie on down the road, trying to keep their heads straight and not wanting to be alone.

Dana is no different, nor are the other characters in the book. A low-rent thief, two low-level soldiers working for a gun-runner and looking to leave their mark though in very different ways. Even Dana's brother Del, who wants to keep moving up at his job and raise his daughter right.

It's a novel of belonging, or of trying to belong, in spite of what other people to do drive wedges and stakes through the heart of the affiliation need. Ultimately, No Harder Prison is, like almost all my fiction, a love story.

Good luck figuring out who loves what.

Stephen King once wrote that a short story was a quick kiss in the dark while a novel was like a satisfying love affair. If that's true, then a series is a long term relationship, with the ups and downs, challenges and triumphs of a spouse. In a series, the reader gets to see characters grow and change, become older, less certain of themselves, perhaps die or maybe worse … walk away from their calling.

Jace Salome is my on-going series character (Slow Bleed and the forthcoming East of the Sun). She's in her middle twenties and as I write this, is only a year or so into her job as a jailer at the Zachary County Sheriff's Office (ZCSO). She's been lost for most of her life, wandering in the might-have-been of her mother's death at the hands of a drunk driver. She grew up with her grandmother and joined the ZCSO on a lark, but as it happens, she has a talent for law enforcement and enjoys it. Perhaps, someday, she'll leave the jail and go to the road, but for now she's happy where she is.

OMN: What are your intentions on character development with Jace?

TRB: Here's my problem with authors who keep their characters roughly the same … eventually it gets to be as boring as whale shit. It's the same song with just another verse … imagine Charlie Daniels' Uneasy Rider, which is a perfectly fine song for five minutes … on an endless loop with another new couplet every fifteen seconds for the rest of forever. Holy shit blow my brains out now.

If the characters aren't growing and trying new things, meeting new people, falling in and out of love, deciding they really don't like broccoli but totally love Forty Creek whiskey, then why are we reading? Why are we investing time with them?

I specifically made Jace a female in her twenties because I'm a guy in my forties. I wanted to explore something different, something seriously outside my comfort zone. And I put her at the beginning of her career because every time I discover a new character, even one I come to love, he or she is already who they are. They are already a captain of the Chicago PD violent crime unit, or a homicide detective in Balto City, or a coroner in Seattle or whatever. I, as a writer and reader, as a living, breathing human, want to see how Jace gets to where ever she's going. If she moves from the jail to the road, I want to know how that happened. What did she do well to get moved up? If she moves from the road to investigations, what big cases did she solve?

If I couldn't let the characters breathe, grow and change, I'd stop writing them out of sheer boredom.

OMN: Into which genre would you place your books?

TRB: I tell people I hate labels and organically I suppose that's true, but I also go straight to the mystery/crime or travel writing or history section in a book store. I'll browse other sections and frequently buy from those other sections, but I know what I prefer and that's where I go first. Do I believe labels and sections hurt books and authors? I don't know. Maybe I used to, but I'm not sure I do anymore. If someone loves crime novels and that's all they want to read, then let them chill in that section and buy to their heart's content. If they aren't ballsy enough to venture into other sections, that's on them, but as long as they want to support writers, give them the sections and labels that make them comfortable. Perhaps, if all their crimes novels were mixed in with all fiction, they'd find it overwhelming and not buy anything. I don't know.

My novels? Eh … call 'em novels. If you need more than that, check the mystery/crime shelves.

OMN: How much of your own personal or professional experience have you included in your stories?

TRB: Every word I write is based on something; I've stolen it all, like any good writer! (Parenthetically, it's the same with every writer on the face of the planet and if they tell you otherwise, they're full of shit. Humans are built on socialization and experience and it is not-possible to turn off 200,000 years of DNA programming).

All my characters are composites of everyone I've ever known or met. Maybe it's a physical trait, or a way of speaking, or a way of looking at the world, but it's come from someone somewhere. The fun is taking those boring people you know and giving them some odd trait you saw from the old wino pissing in the gutter or the slightly deranged Elvis-reincarnate that hangs out at the Dollar General and see what happens. Or taking that asshole you work with for forty damned hours a week delivering furniture and give him the heart of your pastor and see what cooks up.

The situations, the crimes and inhumanity, comes almost exclusively from something I dealt with in my day job or heard about from another cop. I take them and grind them through a MixMaster until they fit what I need but they all have some basis in truth somewhere.

OMN: Where do you most often find yourself writing?

TRB: An easy one, this. I compose at my computer. As I write this, I've got a lamp that has a tall, narrow shade made of pink fringe burning in the corner. I have a 60 minute hour glass on the other side of my desk. The top of my desk is littered with the detritus of life. Some pay stubs, tax documents I'm gathering for my annual IRS check-in. Taped to the side of my monitor is a strip of photos of me and a dear friend … the kind of pix you get in one of those 4-for$1 photo booths (except they ain't no fucking dollar anymore!). And no, for those of you who know me, the pictures are perfectly G-rated.

Mostly.

My environment is simple. I turn on Jazzradio.com or Pandora and compose. When I compose, the music has to be instrumental. When I edit, it can be vocal. When I'm hot and bothered and need to hit a deadline, it tends to be metal because that moves me faster. Usually there's a glass of whiskey within reach and frequently something sweet to keep my sugar high going.

Steve Rasnic Tem (one of the most incredible writers working today) is an old friend of mine from my Denver days and he and I once talked about writing environments. He enjoyed experimenting with sensory stimuli. Steve's experiments included writing in different rooms in his shambling Victorian home, using different computers or keyboards, writing longhand with different pads or paper or even pens. It was all done to experience different sensory input and see where that put his head while he wrote.

I am neither as ambitious nor as intelligent as Steve so I keep it relatively simple. I jot notes on Evernote on my phone and synch those to my rig to translate later, but that's more about brainstorming on the fly rather than actual composition.

So now we're at the end of this bit of navel gazing and, ultimately, what the 1800 or so words of this interview come down to is … check out my books. Buy one or two, see what you think. If you like them, buy more, buy them as gifts. Hell, buy them as doorstops if you don't particularly dig them. You can check me out on my blog Bullets and Whiskey, though I don't update it as often as I should.

And always remember, even if you don't buy my stuff, buy somebody's. Read and then read some more. And when you get done, read something else. Then start again.

— ♦ —

Trey R. Barker has published hundreds of short stories, plays, poems, and thousands of articles as a former journalist. Currently, he is a sergeant with the Bureau County Sheriff's Office, and an investigator with the Illinois Attorney General's Internet Crimes Against Children task force.

For more information about the author, please visit his website at TreyRBarker.com and his author page on Goodreads, or find him on Facebook and Twitter.

— ♦ —

No Harder Prison by Trey R. Barker

No Harder Prison by Trey R. Barker

A Crime Novel

Publisher: Down & Out Books

Amazon.com Print/Kindle Format(s)BN.com Print/Nook Format(s)Kobo eBook Format

Two hours out of prison and already someone is shooting at Dana Oldham.

Dana has traded the stain of "convict" for the freedom of "wrongly convicted." But before he can get home, his car is shot up and the shooters demand the return of $50,000 Dana swiped from a gun runner. To punctuate their demand, they shoot his niece.

But Dana hasn't stolen anything, and as the amount of stolen money rises, so does the violence directed against him.

No Harder Prison by Trey R. Barker. Click here to take a Look Inside the book.

Today's Selection of Daily Deals for Monday, March 14, 2016

Omnimystery News is pleased to feature a selection of today's Daily Deals found on Monday, March 14, 2016 at 7:30 AM ET …

Hot Blooded by Lisa Jackson

Hot Blooded by Lisa Jackson

A Reuben Montoya and Rick Bentz Mystery (1st in series)

Publisher: Zebra

Kindle Daily Deal Price: $1.99

Hot Blooded by Lisa Jackson, Amazon Kindle format

Click here to take a Look Inside Hot Blooded.

A prostitute lies strangled in a seedy French Quarter hotel room. Miles away, in a rambling plantation house on the sultry shores of Lake Ponchartrain, popular late-night radio host Dr. Samantha Leeds receives a threatening crank call. All in a day's work for a celebrity. Who would think to link the two?

A second hooker's corpse turns up. Samantha's ominous caller persists, along with a mysterious claiming to be a woman from her past — a woman who's been dead for years. With Detective Rick Bentz convinced that the serial killer prowling the shadowy streets of New Orleans is somebody close to Samantha, she doesn't dare trust anyone. Especially not Ty Wheeler, her seductive new neighbor who seems to know more about her than a stranger should.

Somebody has discovered Samantha's darkest secret. Somebody is convinced that lives must be sacrificed to pay for her sins. So far, the victims have been strangers. But as a cunning, cold-blooded killer grows bolder, Samantha wonders in dread if she will be the next to die …

Hot Blooded by Lisa Jackson

Dark Descendant by Jenna Black

Dark Descendant by Jenna Black

A Nikki Glass Mystery (1st in series)

Publisher: Pocket Books

Kindle Daily Deal Price: $1.99

Dark Descendant by Jenna Black, Amazon Kindle format

Click here to take a Look Inside Dark Descendant.

Nikki Glass can track down any man. But when her latest client turns out to be a true descendant of Hades, Nikki now discovers she can't die …

Crazy as it sounds, Nikki's manhunting skills are literally god-given. She's a living, breathing descendant of Artemis who has stepped right into a trap set by the children of the gods. Nikki's new "friends" include a descendant of Eros, who uses sex as a weapon; a descendant of Loki, whose tricks are no laughing matter; and a half-mad descendant of Kali who thinks she's a spy. But most powerful of all are the Olympians, a rival clan of immortals seeking to destroy all Descendants who refuse to bow down to them. In the eternal battle of good god/bad god, Nikki would make a divine weapon.

But if they think she'll surrender without a fight, the gods must be crazy …

Dark Descendant by Jenna Black

The Lion and the Rose by Riccardo Bruni

The Lion and the Rose by Riccardo Bruni

A Historical Mystery

Publisher: AmazonCrossing

Kindle Daily Deal Price: $1.99

The Lion and the Rose by Riccardo Bruni, Amazon Kindle format

Click here to take a Look Inside The Lion and the Rose.

In sixteenth-century Venice three bodies surface in the dark waters of the Canal Grande. Entrenched in a terrible war with the Turks and caught in a political struggle between power-hungry Pope Alexander VI and the newly elected Doge Loredan, the people of Venice fear that a demon has come to exact divine punishment for their sins.

Doge Loredan is determined to find the real culprit before the Pope can turn the people against him. To do so, he hires unorthodox German monk Mathias to investigate the murders. Soon Lorenzo Scarpa, a young printer and nephew to one of the victims, joins in the search. The mystery leads them into Venice's underground printing industry, where they learn of a dangerous book hidden somewhere in the city, a book whose secrets could determine the destiny of the Republic — a book that others are more than willing to kill for.

The Lion and the Rose by Riccardo Bruni

USA Noir by Johnny Temple, editor

USA Noir by Johnny Temple, editor

Best of the Akashic Noir Series

Publisher: Akashic Books

Nook Daily Find Price: $1.99

USA Noir by Johnny Temple, editor, Nook format

Click here to take a Look Inside USA Noir.

Launched in the summer 2004, the groundbreaking Akashic Noir series now includes over sixty volumes and counting. Each book is comprised of all-new stories, each one set in a distinct location within the city or region of the book. This is the first "best of" volume and it powerfully conveys what the series has accomplished.

Contributors include: Dennis Lehane, Don Winslow, Michael Connelly, George Pelecanos, Susan Straight, Jonathan Safran Foer, Laura Lippman, Pete Hamill, Joyce Carol Oates, Lee Child, T. Jefferson Parker, Lawrence Block, Terrance Hayes, Jerome Charyn, Jeffery Deaver, Maggie Estep, Bayo Ojikutu, Tim McLoughlin, Barbara DeMarco-Barrett, Reed Farrel Coleman, Megan Abbott, Elyssa East, James W. Hall, J. Malcolm Garcia, Julie Smith, Joseph Bruchac, Pir Rothenberg, Luis Alberto Urrea, Domenic Stansberry, John O'Brien, S.J. Rozan, Asali Solomon, William Kent Krueger, Tim Broderick, Bharti Kirchner, Karen Karbo, and Lisa Sandlin.

USA Noir by Johnny Temple, editor

For more deals that may have been found after this post was created, see our Daily Deals page on Omnimystery News for an updated list.

Important Note: Price(s) verified as of the date and time shown. Price(s) are subject to change at any time. The price displayed on the vendor website at the time of the purchase will be the price paid for the book. Please confirm the price of the book before purchasing it.

Today's Selection of Free MystereBooks for Monday, March 14, 2016

Omnimystery News is pleased to feature a selection of Free MystereBooks found on Monday, March 14, 2016 at 7:00 AM ET …

Cappuccinos, Cupcakes, and a Corpse by Harper Lin

Cappuccinos, Cupcakes, and a Corpse by Harper Lin

A Cape Bay Café Mystery

Publisher: Harper Lin

Price: FREE!

Cappuccinos, Cupcakes, and a Corpse by Harper Lin, Amazon Kindle format

Click here to take a Look Inside Cappuccinos, Cupcakes, and a Corpse.

Boogie House by T. Blake Braddy

Boogie House by T. Blake Braddy

A Rolson McKane Mystery

Publisher: Jinx Protocol Publications

Price: FREE!

Boogie House by T. Blake Braddy, Amazon Kindle format

Click here to take a Look Inside Boogie House.

Benicio's Bequest by Susan Roberts

Benicio's Bequest by Susan Roberts

A Novel of Suspense

Publisher: Susan Roberts

Price: FREE!

Benicio's Bequest by Susan Roberts, Amazon Kindle format

Click here to take a Look Inside Benicio's Bequest.

The Last Convert by Bea Schirmer

The Last Convert by Bea Schirmer

A Lukas Novak Mystery Thriller

Publisher: Kinder Press

Price: FREE!

The Last Convert by Bea Schirmer, Amazon Kindle format

Click here to take a Look Inside The Last Convert.

Borderland Bondage by L. L. Byars

Borderland Bondage by L. L. Byars

A Rick Morales Mystery

Publisher: Deo Volente Publishing

Price: FREE!

Borderland Bondage by L. L. Byars, Amazon Kindle format

Click here to take a Look Inside Borderland Bondage.

The Secret of Kolney Hatch by Stefani Milan

The Secret of Kolney Hatch by Stefani Milan

A Novel of Suspense

Publisher: Stefani Milan

Price: FREE!

The Secret of Kolney Hatch by Stefani Milan, Amazon Kindle format

Click here to take a Look Inside The Secret of Kolney Hatch.

Fade Away by Mark Love

Fade Away by Mark Love

A Novel of Suspense

Publisher: Mark Love

Price: FREE!

Fade Away by Mark Love, Amazon Kindle format

Click here to take a Look Inside Fade Away.

Ebony Continental by Dennis Smirl

Ebony Continental by Dennis Smirl

The Sandeen Mysteries

Publisher: Dennis Smirl

Price: FREE!

Ebony Continental by Dennis Smirl, Amazon Kindle format

Click here to take a Look Inside Ebony Continental.

The Latin Cushion by Rosanne Dingli

The Latin Cushion by Rosanne Dingli

A Crime Novella

Publisher: Yellow Teapot Books

Price: FREE!

The Latin Cushion by Rosanne Dingli, Amazon Kindle format

Click here to take a Look Inside The Latin Cushion.

For a summary of all of today's titles, plus any that may have been added since this post was created, visit our Free MystereBooks page. This page is updated daily, typically by 8 AM ET.

Important Note: Price(s) verified as of the date and time shown. Price(s) are subject to change at any time. The price displayed on the vendor website at the time of the purchase will be the price paid for the book. Please confirm the price of the book before purchasing it.

Sunday, March 13, 2016

Powder Burn, A Sam Blackett Mystery by Mark Chisnell, Now Available at a Special Price

Amazon Kindle Countdown Deals are limited-time discounts on Kindle-exclusive books.

Omnimystery News is pleased to present you with one of today's titles … but take advantage of this deal now as the price will go up to its digital list price soon! (See the countdown clock on the book product page to see how much time remains on this deal.)

Powder Burn by Mark Chisnell

Powder Burn by Mark Chisnell

A Sam Blackett Mystery (1st in series)

Publisher: Mark Chisnell

Price: 99¢ (as of 03/13/2016 at 8:00 PM ET).

Powder Burn by Mark Chisnell, Amazon Kindle format

Click here to take a Look Inside Powder Burn.

Sam had given up her Manhattan job, and her cute apartment in Brooklyn. She'd abandoned her astonished boyfriend to the charms of ESPN, and flown off into a new dawn to chase her dream of becoming an investigative journalist.

Three months later, alone in a soulless internet café, she's facing some cold, hard facts; she's unpublished, unhappy and broke. And right then, the gorgeous Pete Halland blows into her life — headed for the mythical Powder Burn mountain to write history and blast into legend.

If she throws in her lot with Pete and reports the story for National Geographic magazine it could rescue her ambitions, but he's holding back some crucial information — the question for Sam is … what?

Soon, Sam is up to her neck in snow and the weather is the least of her problems; lost in a secretive Himalayan kingdom with — what could be — a magic sword and a simmering and potentially bloody revolution.

But the father she lost to the war in Iraq was a marine, and he taught her a few tricks in the Vermont backcountry that might just get her out alive — and with a story to tell that could make the front page of the New York Times.

Powder Burn by Mark Chisnell

A complete list of today's featured titles can be found on the Discounted MystereBooks page on Omnimystery News.

Important Note: Price(s) verified as of the date and time shown. Price(s) are subject to change at any time. Please confirm the price of the book before purchasing it.

Review: Thin Ice by Irene Hannon

Mysterious Reviews: Reviews of New Mysteries, Novels of Suspense, and Thrillers

A Mysterious Review of Thin Ice by Irene Hannon. A Men of Valor Novel of Suspense.

Review summary: This is an exciting mystery, a combination of whodunit and whydunit, that will keep the reader guessing the entire time. The resolution to the case is well-thought out. Overall, a strong entry in this trilogy of romantic suspense novels featuring three brothers from different branches of the service. (Click here for text of full review.)

Our rating: 4 of 5 stars

Thin Ice Irene Hannon

Thin Ice
Irene Hannon
A Men of Valor Novel of Suspense
Revell (January 2016)

Available from Amazon.comAvailable from Barnes & NobleAvailable from iTunesAvailable from Kobo

Publisher synopsis: After losing her parents in a car accident and her sister to a house fire, Christy Reed has been mired in grief. Life is finally starting to feel normal again when an envelope arrives in the mail — addressed in her sister's handwriting. And the note inside claims she is still alive.

FBI Special Agent Lance McGregor, a former Delta Force operator, is assigned to reopen the case, but he's coming up with more questions than answers. If Ginny Reed is still alive — who is the woman buried in her grave? Where is Ginny? And is Christy a pawn in a twisted cat-and-mouse game — or the target of a sinister plot? As he digs deeper, one thing becomes clear: whoever is behind the bizarre ruse has a deadly agenda.

Manhattan Revenge, The Specialist Series by John Cutter, Now Available at a Special Price

Amazon Kindle Countdown Deals are limited-time discounts on Kindle-exclusive books.

Omnimystery News is pleased to present you with one of today's titles … but take advantage of this deal now as the price will go up to its digital list price soon! (See the countdown clock on the book product page to see how much time remains on this deal.)

Manhattan Revenge by John Cutter

Manhattan Revenge by John Cutter

The Specialist Series (2nd in series)

Publisher: Endeavour Press

Price: 99¢ (as of 03/13/2016 at 7:00 PM ET).

Manhattan Revenge by John Cutter, Amazon Kindle format

Click here to take a Look Inside Manhattan Revenge.

New York. Jack Sullivan is called to a burglary, where he finds an old friend, Malta, hiding with a broken arm. His attackers called themselves the Meat Hooks — and their home base, a virtual fortress in New York's sex-and-drugs Lower East Side depths, was called the Meat Locker. Here young girls and boys were held captive to satisfy the unholy lusts of the rich, the powerful and the famous, drugged with heroin, protected by corrupt police, and controlled by a man with roots in Hitler's Third Reich. This was the kind of enemy that Jack Sullivan, The Specialist, would wipe out for nothing. So he jumped at the chance to wage a one-man war, a war he was determined to win no matter how many different ways he had to kill …

On his journey, he meets Bonnie, a beautiful and intelligent woman who can match his own mysterious ways of living, disappearing in a heartbeat and leaving him wanting more. Worse, when the Meat Hooks realise he's after them, they make their own plans to take him out …

Will Sullivan be able to track down their location in time? Can he avoid being captured and killed by some of New York's most dangerous criminals? And will he ever see Bonnie again?

Manhattan Revenge by John Cutter

A complete list of today's featured titles can be found on the Discounted MystereBooks page on Omnimystery News.

Important Note: Price(s) verified as of the date and time shown. Price(s) are subject to change at any time. Please confirm the price of the book before purchasing it.

New This Week: Future Furies, The Endless Fire Series by R. E. Kearney

Omnimystery News is pleased to present a mystery, suspense, or thriller ebook that we recently found by sleuthing (as it were) through new or recently reissued titles from independent publishers during March 2016 and priced $4.99 or less …

Future Furies by R. E. Kearney

Future Furies by R. E. Kearney

The Endless Fire Series (1st in series)

Publisher: R. E. Kearney

Price: $3.99 (as of 03/13/2016 at 6:30 PM ET).

Future Furies by R. E. Kearney, Amazon Kindle format

Click here to take a Look Inside Future Furies.

"I know not with what weapons World War III will be fought, but World War IV will be fought with sticks and stones."

Albert Einstein's warning ricochets inside Robert Goodfellow's thoughts as he races to stop the cyber and robotic murders of American and Russian leaders propelling the United States and Russia into war.

Part-time cyberwarrior and conflict avoiding cerebral soldier, Robert has been ordered to locate and protect Pion, the autistic, cyber savant US officials believe is their best, and maybe only chance to prevent catastrophe. Reluctantly joining him in his quest is Mugavus Komfort, a female partner from his past. From the highly advanced, newly independent seasteaded State of SPEA to the ancient African nation of Ethiopia, Robert and Mugavus battle their way through a near-future, dystopian world ravaged by the Endless Fire of climate change, chaos and conflict. US and Russian assassins, predator robots, terrorists and rebels surround and imperil Robert and Mugavus as they struggle to save the world from itself. It's a race against time. In the end will they be too late?

Future Furies by R. E. Kearney

Visit our New Indie MystereBooks page on Omnimystery News for a complete list of titles featured today.

Important Note: Price(s) verified as of the date and time shown. Price(s) are subject to change at any time. Please confirm the price of the book before purchasing it.

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