Power
(Faces of Evil #3)
by
Debra Webb
Agent Jess Harris is back in another thrilling installment of Debra Webb's Faces of Evil series.
Jess is ready to start the next chapter in her life as the new deputy chief of Birmingham's major crimes division. But with her first love, Chief of Police Dan Burnett, acting as her new boss, it looks like Jess won't be able to put the past behind her that easily.
Jess has decided to focus all of her attention on work when a celebrated ballet instructor is found dead by one of her students. Though Jess's instincts tell her otherwise, the death is ruled an accident, and the case is assigned to another division. Still, Jess can't shake the feeling that there's more to the story, and her investigation leads her into the worlds of Birmingham's gang culture and its powerful elite.
Now Jess's investigation has dug a little too deep, and there's a target painted on her own forehead. Will she be able to solve the crime before her own life is in jeopardy?
Preview Excerpt
Cotton Avenue, Birmingham, Alabama
Monday, July 26, 2:45 p.m.
I need an estimate on time of death as soon as possible."
The young doctor who Jess
suspected was new to Jefferson County's coroner's office shot her a look
from his kneeling position next to the victim. "Chief Harris, I just
got here. There's an order to the steps I'm required to take."
Definitely new. Once he'd played his part at enough crime scenes he
would understand that there was nothing orderly about murder.
Jess rearranged her lips into a
smile that was as far from patient as the harried expression on the
inexperienced ME's face. "I'm well aware of those steps, Doctor,
but"—she glanced down the long center hall to ensure herself that
Sergeant Harper was successfully keeping the potential witnesses away
from the French doors and windows that overlooked the mansion's palatial
gardens—"I have six little girls out back who are in various stages of
hysteria and their mothers are chomping at the bit to take them home. I
need time of death so I can question them with some reasonable grasp on
the timeline we're dealing with here."
Before their mothers got any antsier and decided to lawyer up, Jess kept to herself.
The fact was she had heard enough
rumors about the typical dance mom mentality to understand that once
the shock of this tragedy wore off, things would change. Not only would
lawyers be called in but the ladies would close ranks to protect
whatever secrets they felt compelled to keep, particularly if those
secrets carried any ramifications whatsoever on their daughters'
placement on the food chain of this exclusive dance studio.
Technically, Jess was supposed to ask if they wanted to have their
attorneys present during questioning, but mere technicalities had never
hampered her before. With the level of panic among the girls as well as
their mothers when Jess first arrived, who would be surprised if she
failed to ask if one or more wanted their attorney present?Unmoved by Jess's explanation, Doctor What's-his-name shifted his attention back to the victim sprawled in an unnatural manner on the unforgiving marble floor. "Like I said, there are steps. I'll get to that one momentarily."
Jess pressed her lips together to prevent saying something she would regret. What was it about this younger generation that prompted such flagrant disrespect? She hitched her bag higher on her shoulder. When she was his age, early thirties she guessed, Jess would never have sassed her elders. She wouldn't do that now, for pity's sake. The notion that she was nearly a decade older than the ME was considerably depressing, but it was a reality she'd learned to deal with since whizzing past the dreaded forty milestone.
Whoever said that sixty was the new thirty was so very full of crap. Forty wasn't even the new thirty.
Well—she pushed her glasses up
the bridge of her nose—there wasn't a thing she could do about getting
older. The insolence, however, she refused to stand for. Just because
the still-wet-behind-the-ears ME was cute didn't mean she intended to
ignore his attitude. "Excuse me ..." He gazed up at her with egregious
reluctance. She lifted her eyebrows in question. "Doctor ...?"
"Schrader. Dr. Harlan Schrader.""Well, Dr. Schrader, I understand you have steps, but if you would kindly just get your little thermometer out of your nifty bag and give me an approximate time of death I promise I'll be out of your way." She propped her lips into a smile she hoped wasn't too blatantly forged and added the perfunctory magic word, "Please."
"Okay." He held up his gloved hands in a show of dramatic surrender. "I'll do that right now."
"Thank you, Dr. Schrader."
Jess stepped to the door and
surveyed the activity beyond the official vehicles cluttering the
cobblestoned drive that encircled the massive fountain in front of the
house. The historic mansion sat in the middle of seven elegant and rare
acres. With any luck the towering oak and pecan trees with their
low-slung branches prevented street traffic from identifying the
official vehicles ominously gathered. At the street, BPD uniforms
guarded the gated entrance to the property in an effort to keep the
curious and the newshounds at bay once word hit the airwaves. Having the
press show up in droves, and in this posh neighborhood they definitely
would, complicated any investigation. Frankly, she was surprised the
impressive residence didn't come with its own private security team.
Oddly, there was no security, not even at the ornate, towering entry
gate, and no housekeeping staff—at least not today.
The crime scene techs had already
documented the scene with photographs and video. Prints and trace
materials were being collected now in hopes of discovering some sort of
usable evidence. Sergeant Harper had gotten the call from BPD's finest
at one forty-eight. He and Lieutenant Prescott had rushed over without
mentioning that as of today they were no longer assigned to Crimes
Against Persons. Suited Jess just fine. Sitting on her laurels until a
case was assigned to her new SPU, Special Problems Unit, wasn't how
she'd wanted to start off her first week in the department.
Then again, foul play had not been established in this case as of
yet. Jess considered the position of the body in the foyer next to the
grand staircase. It appeared the victim, Darcy Chandler, had fallen over
the upstairs railing to her death. Or she'd jumped. Either way, her
death was, to their knowledge thus far, unaccompanied and obviously of a
violent nature. An investigation was standard protocol.When she first arrived Jess had followed the techs up the stairs and checked the landing. Her attention wandered there now. The hardwood floor was clear of debris and substances that might have posed a trip hazard or made it slippery. The railing didn't meet the height criteria for current building codes, but with historic homes, and this one dated back to the mid-1800s, features like the railing were grandfathered in. A good thing for those who appreciated history, not so good for Ms. Chandler.
The only odd aspect of the scene
Jess had noted so far was that Ms. Chandler's very expensive
fuchsia-colored Gucci pumps, which exactly matched the elegant sheath
she wore, sat next to the railing on the second floor. The careful
placement gave the appearance that she had removed the shoes and
positioned them just so as if she feared scarring her favorite pair of
designer shoes while taking her fatal dive. Judging by the meticulous
organization of her closets as well as the pristine condition of the
house in general, the victim was unquestionably a perfectionist to some
degree. That could very well explain the decision to remove and set
aside her shoes. Maybe. But in Jess's opinion the shoes merited a closer
look.
"I would estimate time of death," Dr. Schrader announced, drawing
Jess's attention back to him as he checked his wristwatch, "at between
twelve noon and one."Less than two hours before the arrival of the BPD. "Thank you, Dr. Schrader."
The glance he cast her way
advised that her gratitude was not appreciated any more than her pushy
approach had been. She'd have to find a way to get back in his good
graces another time. Maybe a gift certificate from one of the trendy
shops in the Galleria would do the trick since the polo, sports jacket,
and stone-washed jeans he wore could have been stripped right off the
mannequins adorning the storefronts of said shops.
Right now, however, a woman was dead and that was Jess's top
priority. She could make nice with Dr. I'm-Too-Sexy-for-Manners later.Armed with the vital piece of information she needed, she headed for the French doors at the end of the long hall that cut through the center of one of Birmingham's oldest and grandest homes. She squared her shoulders, cleared her throat, and exited to the terrace that flowed out into the gardens designed by some master gardener who hailed from England. And who, according to a bronze plaque that boasted the bragging rights, descended from the gardener of the royal family.
Only the rich and self-proclaimed fabulous would display the pedigree of the guy who cut the grass and watered the roses. Where Jess lived she was lucky if the guys who wielded the lawn mowers and weed whackers spoke English much less shared their pedigrees. That information would likely get them deported. Not that Jess minded one way or the other as long as the job was done properly. Considering she spent the better part of her formative years in a carousel of foster homes, she wasn't one to judge.
Sergeant Chet Harper met Jess just outside the grand doors. "I don't know how much longer Lieutenant Prescott can keep the girls calm and their mothers compliant. One's already demanded to know if they're suspects."
Jess resisted the urge to groan. "Thank you, Sergeant."
Prescott, the girls, and their
mothers were seated in the butterfly garden. As soon as Harper had
called, Jess had instructed him to see that the girls did not discuss
the incident among themselves or with anyone else. Not an easy task.
Particularly once the mothers had started to arrive and to demand to see
their children. The girls all had cell phones and had called their
mothers while the assistant teacher called 911.
Guess who showed up first? Not
the police or EMS. Which guaranteed the scene had been contaminated
repeatedly by little fingers and feet as well as curious and horrified
mothers.
God, she didn't want to think about it. Whether a murder had occurred
or not, the scene should be handled with the same vigilant protocol.
"FYI," Harper added with a knowing glance above his stylish Ray-Bans, "Andrea insisted on calling the chief."
Jess did groan this time. Andrea
Denton, Chief of Police Daniel Burnett's stepdaughter from his last
failed marriage and a survivor from the first case Jess had worked with
the Birmingham Police Department scarcely two weeks ago. Funny, this was
the third case Jess had supported since returning to her hometown and
Andrea had been a part of all three. The poor girl apparently had a
knack for being in the wrong place at the wrong time.
"I suppose he's coming," Jess commented, trying valiantly not to show
her disappointment. There was nothing like having the boss watching
over her shoulder on her first official case as a deputy chief. Even if
the boss was Dan—a man with whom she had a difficult-to-define off-duty
relationship. Leaving the bureau and returning to her hometown was
supposed to have uncomplicated her life. Not.Clearly she had been delusional to believe for one second that she could exist in the same city, much less department, with Dan and avoid complications.
"He is."
Marvelous. "Any luck locating the
husband?" Darcy Chandler, the one and only daughter of one of the
city's most noteworthy families, was married to some apparently equally
famous Russian dancer, now retired and teaching ballet classes to the
children of Birmingham's who's who. "What's his name again?"
"Alexander Mayakovsky," Harper reminded her. "Haven't located him yet. His cell still goes straight to voice mail.""Since this is where he works, he's obviously not at work." Frustration and impatience creased Jess's brow. She consciously forced the lines away. She had enough wrinkles, all of which had taken up residence in all the wrong places on her face. Not that there was a right place, she amended. What she didn't have was the vic's husband. The worst part of working an unattended death, whether accidental, suicide, or homicide, was informing the next of kin.
"Go to the vic's parents. Maybe
they'll have some idea where he is. Get as much information as you can
before you give them the bad news." As coldhearted as that tactic
sounded, it was the only way to glean coherent information in a timely
manner. And when a person died some way other than by natural causes, he
or she deserved a timely investigation. Since Darcy's parents hadn't
shown up, there was reason to believe unofficial word hadn't reached
them yet.
That would change very soon.
"Yes, ma'am."
Harper went on his way and Jess steeled herself for entering foreign territory. "You can do this," she murmured.
As she approached the mothers, their prepubescent daughters clinging to their bosoms, all six women started talking at once.
Jess had interviewed every manner
of witness and person of interest, including more than her share of
sociopaths and a handful of psychopaths, but she'd never dreaded
conducting interviews more than she did at this very moment.
Children absolutely, completely, and utterly unnerved her. Give her a run-of-the-mill serial killer any day of the week.
Debra Webb was born in Scottsboro, Alabama, to parents who taught her
that anything is possible if you want it badly enough. She loved telling
stories and began writing at age nine.
You can buy a copy of Power from these bookstores
Release Date
(March 26, 2013)
My Rating
5 Stars
My Review
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