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Murder in the 11th House

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by Mitchell Scott Lewis




  Murder in the 11th House

  A Starlight Detective Agency Mystery

  Mitchell Scott Lewis

  Poisoned Pen Press

  Copyright © 2011 by Mitchell Scott Lewis

  First Edition 2011

  10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

  Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: 2011

  ISBN: 9781590589502 Hardcover

  ISBN: 9781590589526 Trade Paperback

  ISBN: 9781615953301 epub

  All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in, or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form, or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise) without the prior written permission of both the copyright owner and the publisher of this book.

  The historical characters and events portrayed in this book are inventions of the author or used fictitiously.

  Poisoned Pen Press

  6962 E. First Ave., Ste. 103

  Scottsdale, AZ 85251

  www.poisonedpenpress.com

  info@poisonedpenpress.com

  Contents

  Contents

  Dedication

  Acknowledgments

  Epigraph

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Chapter Thirteen

  Chapter Fourteen

  Chapter Fifteen

  Chapter Sixteen

  Chapter Seventeen

  Chapter Eighteen

  Chapter Nineteen

  Chapter Twenty

  Chapter Twenty-One

  Chapter Twenty-Two

  Chapter Twenty-Three

  Chapter Twenty-Four

  Chapter Twenty-Five

  Chapter Twenty-Six

  Chapter Twenty-Seven

  Chapter Twenty-Eight

  Chapter Twenty-Nine

  Chapter Thirty

  Chapter Thirty-One

  Chapter Thirty-Two

  Chapter Thirty-Three

  Chapter Thirty-Four

  Chapter Thirty-Five

  Chapter Thirty-Six

  Chapter Thirty-Seven

  Chapter Thirty-Eight

  Chapter Thirty-Nine

  Chapter Forty

  Chapter Forty-One

  Chapter Forty-Two

  Chapter Forty-Three

  Chapter Forty-Four

  Chapter Forty-Five

  Chapter Forty-Six

  Chapter Forty-Seven

  More from this Author

  Contact Us

  Dedication

  For my father, a wonderful writer.

  Acknowledgments

  To my agent, Sandra Bond with deepest gratitude. To Barbara Peters, Robert Rosenwald, and Jessica Tribble at Poisoned Pen Press for your wonderful advice and insights, and for taking a chance on a new voice. Thank you so much.

  To my dear friend, Fiona Druckenmiller; words can never express my humble gratitude for your unwavering friendship, faith, and support. Thank you from the bottom of my heart. To Roberta Cary, for your generous understanding and wisdom. And to Natalie Lico, for your steadfast camaraderie and affection.

  And finally, to Carl Lennertz, my editor, teacher, sparring partner and friend, without whom this work simply would never have existed. Your vision and talents are awe-inspiring. And your Job-like patience allowed me to make a dream come true. I will never be able to thank you enough. I am forever in your debt.

  Epigraph

  The man is nothing. The work is all.

  —French proverb

  Chapter One

  David Lowell was up before five. He left his townhouse on East Ninety-third Street and walked out into the darkness. Only Wall Streeters headed for the subway and diner workers serving the first coffee were up this early. Although it was an unseasonably mild November, the early morning chill forced him to pull the collar of his leather jacket up around his neck. He left his ponytail tucked in.

  It was late autumn, and most of the trees had long since lost their flamboyant costumes. A few luminous oaks and maples had stubbornly refused to relinquish their bright skirts and stood out strikingly against a canvas of aging brick and cold steel. He touched the hair around his ears, his own foliage, faded grey from so many turns on the merry-go-round. How drab is humankind, he thought, so unadorned in its final days. Not gallantly lit up like autumn leaves, a brief colorful flair of brilliance against death’s pale pallet, but washed out and ominous, like the sky before a coming storm. No thought of the inevitable spring, only of the seemingly endless winter.

  He needed to take a long walk. Lost in his thoughts, he strolled from the Upper East Side all the way to Soho, the dark city passing in a fog. He walked up and down the city’s subtle hills as he made his way south. He crossed Spring Street and went down to Canal where he turned left and passed jewelry stores and knock-off purse kiosks. Most were still closed, their barren metal gates stark and uninviting, but a few enterprising souls were already open for business, maybe hoping for a flush insomniac tourist.

  He swung onto Elizabeth and headed north again. The city had changed so much in the past decade it was hardly the same New York. Rezoning, overexpansion, and the continued demise of rent-stabilization had changed the face of Manhattan neighborhoods seemingly overnight. Except for Chinatown, which stubbornly tried to keep its ethnic barriers in place, there were no neighborhoods anymore. Not in the traditional sense. This area was still called Little Italy and had once been the center of communities transplanted from Naples and Rome and the refuge of the “families.” For almost a century, apartments in this neighborhood were rarely robbed and parked cars were hardly ever broken into for fear of retribution. But now walk-ups rented for three thousand a month, and there were more upwardly mobile financiers and rich out-of-towners than tough-looking men in gray suits and old women sitting on stoops trading recipes.

  He continued to stroll uptown toward his destination, walking slowly and methodically. Gradually the city awoke and people spilled out of the buildings onto the roads and sidewalks. He meandered through midtown, jostled by commuters and harried employees hustling to work, most glad to still have a job.

  At the corner of Twenty-fourth Street, he stopped into a deli for some pre-cut fresh melon and a corn muffin to get him through the morning’s paperwork and phone calls. He had picked up a donut but put it back down with a sigh.

  Leaving the store and turning down the side street, he went into the second building, took the elevator up to the sixth floor, entered the offices of the Starlight Detective Agency and began his day.

  ***

  The prospective client, arriving promptly for his afternoon appointment, was a tall nervous man, almost totally bald. His large misshapen nose twitched repeatedly. He shouldered into the office, pushing through the mahogany door hard enough to make it to bang against the wall.

  “May I help you, sir?” Stationed at the reception desk, Sarah unconsciously pushed her bright red hair back behind her ears in preparation for battle.

  “Is this a detective agency?” He let the question fly with disdain.

 
“That’s what the sign says, unless the business changed overnight.” Sarah couldn’t resist the wisecrack delivered with a big smile. She was used to the type of clientele her boss attracted, and this guy wasn’t going to get her goat.

  “What the hell kind of name is Starlight Detective Agency, anyway?”

  “Do you have an appointment, sir?”

  “An appointment? Yeah, yeah, I made an appointment. Name’s Waldo Jefferson. A friend recommended your company, said this guy’s some sort of genius. But I’m beginning to have my doubts.”

  He looked around at the office, its Spartan decorations rather dreary-looking, save for the fresh flowers that Sarah brought in every few days. She was amused when he actually ran his finger across her desk looking for dust. She thought people only did that in the movies.

  “What a dump,” he said.

  “I like it.” She beamed again. “Anyway, yes, Mr. Jefferson, you are scheduled for 1:00. If you’ll just have a seat, Mr. Lowell will be with you in a few moments. Would you like some coffee while you wait?”

  “Huh? Coffee? No thank you.”

  Sarah got up to close the door, and returned to her typing.

  Jefferson walked over to the couch, sat, and fidgeted.

  “Listen,” he said, “I’m having second thoughts about this.”

  Just then the door to the inner office opened and David Lowell exited with an elderly woman, her frail hand holding his arm for support.

  The woman was drying her eyes. “Oh,” she said, her voice quivering, “I can’t thank you enough. I’m just glad to put closure to all this mess.”

  Lowell smiled empathetically, and patted her hand. “The truth is always better. It will free you from all your burdens.”

  “It will, and thank you, you dear man.” She got up on her tiptoes and kissed him on the cheek, then exited.

  “Dearest Sarah, what’s up next?” Lowell tugged on his neatly-tied salt-and-pepper ponytail. Although not quite five-nine, his bearing and body language gave the impression of a taller man.

  “Mr. Jefferson is here to see you.” She tilted her head toward the couch, her eyebrows lifting.

  “Ah, Mr. Jefferson, yes. David Lowell. Please, come in, come in.”

  Lowell pointed the way to the inner office. Just before disappearing, Lowell turned and gave Sarah a wink, a tacit thank you for her patience with the client.

  Sarah winked back as the inner door closed with a click.

  ***

  Lowell walked around his huge desk, gesturing toward the two large, leather chairs.

  “Now Mr. Jefferson, what can I do for you?” Lowell sat after his client seated himself.

  “You were recommended by a friend, Jake Lerner,” he grunted.

  “Yes, Mr. Lerner. I did some work for him a few years back, and he was quite satisfied, as I recall. I trust you will be as well.” Lowell turned toward a computer screen and began typing.

  “Well, that remains to be seen. My problem is a bit more complex than Lerner’s. You see my wife is missing…”

  “What’s your birthday?”

  “I beg your pardon?”

  “Your birthday. Date, month, year.”

  “Well, I ah, that is…June 14th, 1948. But for God’s sake what does that have to do with anything.”

  “Hmm, born around noon, I would guess.”

  “At 12:17 p.m. to be exact,” Jefferson replied, obviously annoyed.

  “Of course,” Lowell said, looking at the man’s features, “a Capricorn ascendant.” He studied the screen for a moment. “Ah, you’ve got a T-Square with the Moon in Virgo, squaring Jupiter on one side, and the Sun-Uranus conjunct on the other. You’ve got quite a temper, haven’t you? It probably stems from your parents’ relationship and their ultimate divorce.”

  “What the hell is this, astrology?”

  “I thought you knew my technique, Mr. Jefferson. Didn’t Mr. Lerner tell you?”

  Jefferson jerked his hands up off his knees and slapped them back down. “Oh, my God! I’m in a nut house.”

  “Mr. Jefferson, I assure you that I am just as sane as you. Perhaps more so, now that I see your chart.” Lowell chuckled and pulled on his ponytail again.

  “This is great. I’ve got a missing wife, two screaming kids, and Lerner sends me to a psychic Sherlock-freaking-Holmes.”

  The detective snorted. “If you must compare me to a fictional character I would much prefer Sherlock-freaking-Holmes’ brother, Mycroft, the intelligent member of that family. He never had to deal with the public.”

  “I didn’t know Sherlock Holmes even had a brother.”

  “Nasty and illiterate, nice combination.” Lowell regarded him steadily.

  “This is too much. I’m leaving.”

  “I figured you would.” Lowell looked down at the man’s natal chart. “But before you go let me just tell you. Your wife isn’t missing; she ran away from you with a man who is more likely than not an Aquarian or a Leo. It is someone you’ve known for a long time, whom you considered a friend. You may hear from her around the full moon on the tenth. You are a brutish and cruel man who pushed her to this. She should have left you years ago.”

  “Why you… I should sue you.”

  Lowell barged ahead. “You also seem to have a problem with your kidneys; probably a susceptibility to recurring infections. Venus squares Neptune in the natal chart. It should manifest again in the next few months. Also you may have a heart attack in about eighteen months if you don’t deal with your blood pressure. Whether it is fatal or not has to do with you and your attitude. The Sun-Uranus conjunct shows a propensity toward heart trouble or strokes, and you are about to have some difficult aspects.”

  “I didn’t ask you…”

  “When you were about seven, your parents divorced and you lived with your father until his death, when you were around twenty-one. After that you probably lived alone until your marriage. You never forgave your mother for deserting you, and you have taken it out on every woman who has been unfortunate enough to come into your circle.”

  Jefferson’s face had turned bright red. His breathing was short and, as he tried to stand, he had to steady himself against the arm of the large chair. “How could you know all that?”

  “Of course, all of this is just a guess, and should not be misconstrued as a diagnosis or an opinion.”

  Jefferson got up from the chair, never taking his eyes off of Lowell. “You’re the devil,” he said, as he headed for the door.

  “There’s no charge for this visit. Good day.”

  Jefferson opened the inner door and strode quickly through the small waiting area.

  Sarah looked up from her computer. “Shall I make you another appointment?”

  Jefferson’s turned back to her, his eyes opened wide. Shaking his head, he grabbed the carved knob of the door, pulled it open and rushed out into the hallway, rudely leaving the door open.

  Sarah shrugged, got up, gently closed the door, then came back to her desk and called in an order for a late lunch for two.

  ***

  When Sarah brought lunch in, Lowell was sitting at his oversized desk engrossed in his work, his head bowed. Three computer screens sat on top, and all were aglow. Against the far wall on a wooden console, a TV was muted and set to CNBC. Stock and commodity quotes passed unceasingly across the bottom of the screen.

  “Where should I put it?” said Sarah.

  He picked his head up. “Oh, I don’t care. Put it on the table.” Then he put his head back down.

  Sarah had been working at Starlight Detective Agency for about three years. Her boss was snobbish and demanding. And he was the smartest man she had ever met. He also paid her more than twice what she might have made anywhere else.

  The workload wasn’t any
thing she couldn’t handle. True, there was the occasional extra job that required her to impersonate someone or engage in some leg work, which had so far resulted in her being shot at several times and almost run over once. But each time she had been well compensated for her efforts. He was a little strange, and his friends and clients tended toward the unusual, but considering the uniqueness of the situation, it wasn’t as bizarre as it could have been.

  Maybe working for an astrological detective in New York qualified her for some sort of reality show. She’d look into that.

  She put the food on the coffee table and returned to her desk.

  ***

  Lowell stood up, stretched and went over to the table. He had been engrossed in his work for hours and had forgotten about lunch. He unwrapped the wax paper and walked over to the window with half the sandwich. He leaned over a glass tank and spoke to two large black and red turtles.

  “Hello, Buster,” he said to the first, as it stuck its head out for a noon scratch. The second lumbered toward his outstretched finger and received its reward. “Hello, Keaton,” he said to the second. They were red-eared sliders he had bought on Canal Street when he opened the offices. The size of his thumb when he got them, they were now each a foot in length and growing. They would soon need a bigger home.

  He gave them some of his sandwich and went back to his desk, picked up the phone, and hit speed dial #3.

  “Solomon Smith Barney,” said a female voice. “I mean Citi Smith Barney… oops, Morgan Stanley.” A big sigh. “I’m sorry, who do you want?”

  “Roger Bowman,” said Lowell.

  A moment later, a man came on the line. “This is Roger.”

  “It’s David Lowell.”

  “Hey, Starman, when are you coming down to say hello?”

  “Soon. What do you see in the metals?”

  “The spreads look a bit bearish, as does the daily moving average.”

  “I’m getting a strong sell signal as we head into the waning moon.”

  “You getting out?”

  “Yes,” replied Lowell, a mouthful of sandwich muffling his response. He swallowed. “Sorry, I haven’t had time to stop for lunch all day. I’m going to flatten my position. The New Moon on Sunday is void of course, so I would look for a false run-up the early part of the week. After it drops again you should buy —sometime around Thursday.”

 

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