Dead in the Rose City: A Dean Drake Mystery
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DEAD IN THE ROSE CITY
A Dean Drake Mystery
By R. Barri Flowers
Copyright 2011 by R. Barri Flowers at Smashwords. All rights reserved.
Cover Image Copyright 2010 by CreateSpace
Dead in the Rose City is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are either the product of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, business establishments, or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.
Smashwords Edition, License Notes
This ebook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This ebook may not be re-sold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each recipient. If you're reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, then please return to Smashwords.com and purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.
ALSO BY R. BARRI FLOWERS
NOVELS
State's Evidence (A Beverly Mendoza Legal Thriller)
Persuasive Evidence (A Jordan La Fontaine Legal Thriller)
Justice Served (A Barkley and Parker Mystery)
Murder in Maui (A Leila Kahana Mystery)
Dark Streets of Whitechapel (A Jack the Ripper Mystery)
Killer in the Woods (A Psychological Thriller)
Ghost Girl in Shadow Bay (A Young Adult Haunted House Mystery)
Danger in Time (A Young Adult Time Travel Mystery)
Christmas Wishes: Laura's Story (A Teen Fantasy Novel)
TRUE CRIME
The Sex Slave Murders
SHORT STORIES
Gone But Never Forgotten
The Jury Has Spoken
Vandals
Review of DEAD IN THE ROSE CITY
“Rose City is an interesting blend of classic film noir and rough, modern black cinema... Quick action and tight dialogue make it a jolting thriller, but it’s also got the psychological tightness of a good mystery puzzle. The clues are there...giving you a shot at your own observations.... Good book to put on some slow jazz with and relax, letting your brain work on some problems that are nothing like your own.” — Robert A. Sloan, author of Raven Dance
* * *
MORE PRAISE FOR MYSTERY AND THRILLER FICTION BY R. BARRI FLOWERS:
PERSUASIVE EVIDENCE
“Raw, primal, thrilling, incredible—one of the best books that I have read. I was completely riveted from the first page.” — Romance Reader at Heart
“An excellent look at the jurisprudence system...will appeal to fans of John Grisham and Linda Fairstein.” — Harriet Klausner
“It has all the aspects of a perfect mystery, and thankfully, it isn’t so predictable you figure out what’s going on.” — RAWSISTAZ Reviewers
JUSTICE SERVED
“Vividly written, this book holds the reader’s attention and speeds along.” — Romantic Times
“A model of crime fiction...Flowers may be a new voice in modern mystery writing, but he is already one of its best voices.” — Statesman Journal
“Weaves a magical web, as well as, a tangled one [and] wraps up the mystery thriller beautifully.” — Huntress’ Book Reviews
STATE’S EVIDENCE
“A page-turner legal thriller that begins with a bang and rapidly moves along to its final page.” — Midwest Book Review
“Plot is clever and intriguing with unusual twists, with the suspense escalating rapidly.” — Romance Reviews Today
To my dad, who recently passed away and I sorely miss, and to my mother, who has always inspired me to be the best I could be as an author and a man.
* * *
CHAPTER ONE
I’d just stepped out of the restaurant, the greasy food still settling in my stomach, wondering if I was ever going to get out of the Rose City, when I saw her approaching with a tall man. I did a double take, barely believing my eyes, but trusting the sudden racing of my heart.
It was her—Vanessa King. Still as gorgeous as ever. How many years had it been? Ten? Eleven? Too many to even want to think about. Yet that was all I could do at the moment, especially when she was the best thing that ever happened to me. And I’d thrown it all away for reasons I couldn’t explain.
If only I could turn back the hands of time, things might have turned out differently. Me, Vanessa, and all the joy we could bring to each other.
The day we met years ago was forever ingrained in my mind for more reasons than one...
* * *
The dictionary defines fate as “unfortunate destiny.” Once upon a time, I didn’t buy into forecasts of doom and gloom, much less associate it with my life as a private eye and even more private individual. But then I took on two seemingly unrelated cases and one bizarre thing seemed to lead to the next and even I began to wonder if I was somehow tempting fate.
Before I begin my fateful tale, let me introduce myself. The name is Dean Jeremy Drake, or D.J. for those close enough to be called friends or kin. Otherwise it’s simply Drake. Some call me a pain in the ass. Others see me as a half-breed with an attitude. I prefer to think of myself as a forty-one-year-old, six-five, ex-cop turned private investigator who happens to be the product of an interracial affair.
My parents, who have both since gone to heaven, couldn’t have been more different. My father was Jamaican black, mother Italian white. But for one steamy night they found some common interests and ended up with me for their trouble.
I admit I can be a pain in the ass with an attitude, or a gentle giant with a perpetual smile on my square-jawed face, depending on which side of the bed I wake up on. But that’s another story. Let’s concentrate on this one for now.
It was raining like the second coming of Noah’s Ark on that day at the tail end of July. I was sitting in my Portland, Oregon office, my feet on the desk as if they belonged there. The Seattle Mariners were on the tube playing the Oakland A’s in sunny California. With three innings to go, the Mariners were getting a major league ass whipping, 11-0. To add insult to injury, there was a rumor that the players were planning to go on strike next month.
Who the hell needed them anyway? I’d had just about all I could take from greedy players, and owners who never seemed to tire of bleeding the fans dry. For me, this was merely a tune-up for the mother of all sports—football. The exhibition season was due to start next month in what might finally be a winning season for the Seahawks, my adopted team and a three hour drive away on a good day with light traffic.
The Mariners had finally gotten on the scoreboard with a solo shot when I heard one knock on my door and watched it open before I could even say come in.
A tall, chunky, white man entered wearing a wrinkled and dripping wet gray suit. He had a half open umbrella in one hand that looked as if he had forgotten to use it, a leather briefcase in the other. “Nasty out there,” he muttered, and let out a repulsive sneeze.
“Tell me about it,” I groaned. You didn’t live in a city like Portland if you expected sunny, dry weather year round, though a soaker like this was pretty rare in late July. I was still partly distracted by the game, when I asked routinely: “How can I help you?”
That’s when he walked up to me, stuck an I.D. in my face, and said: “Frank Sherman, Deputy District Attorney for Multnomah County—”
Only then did it dawn on me that I knew the man. Or at least I used to. Like me, Sherman was an ex-cop in his early forties. He had made that relatively rare jump from law enforcement to criminal law, while I had chosen private investigation work as my answer to justice for all. The closest I’d come to la
w school was the B.A. I’d earned in Criminal Justice from Portland State University. This hardly made me in awe of the man before me. He had gone his way and I had gone mine. Right now, it looked as if our ways had converged.
“Narcotics, right?” I asked, taking my feet off the desk.
He nodded proudly, and ran a hand through wet, greasy dark blonde hair. “And you were homicide?”
“Seems like two lifetimes ago,” I exaggerated. In fact, it had been six years since I turned in my badge and the stress and strain that went with it for a lesser, more independent kind of misery. That Sherman could identify my department meant he had done his homework or my reputation preceded itself. I chose to believe the latter.
“At least we made it out on our own two feet.” Sherman looked down on me with big blue eyes and a twisted smile. He was heavier than I remembered him, by maybe fifteen pounds. No, make that twenty. I turned off the TV to give him my undivided and curious attention. I did maybe a quarter of my work for the D.A.’s office, but I almost always went to them rather than the other way around.
“So is this a social call?” I asked, but seriously doubted. “Or have those unpaid traffic tickets finally caught up with me?”
He lost the twisted smile, and said directly: “I’d like to hire you, Drake—on behalf of the State. Mind if I sit?”
I indicated the folding chair nearest to him—a flea market pickup that was a bargain. “I’m listening...”
Sherman laid the briefcase on the desk, opened it, and removed a folder. “It’s the dossier on Jessie The Worm Wylson,” he explained, handing it to me. “He’s wanted in connection with the sale and distribution of narcotics and methamphetamines. This bastard is personally responsible for most of the drugs poisoning our city and turning our kids into junkies!”
I looked at the face of a bald, dark-skinned black man on the dossier. It said he was thirty-five, six feet tall, and one hundred and seventy-five pounds. Wylson was a resident of Portland and had been in and out of jail most of his life for an assortment of drug and theft charges.
Even if I believed he was the scum of the earth, I had trouble buying that this one dude was behind most of the drugs floating about the city. In my book, that distinction belonged to the Columbia drug cartels and the rich Americans who made getting drugs into this country as easy as addicts getting crack on the inner city streets.
“Why do they call him The Worm?” I had to ask.
Sherman shrugged. “Heard someone gave him that name while he was in the joint, probably because he always seems able to worm his way out of trouble.” He scowled. “Not this time.”
There was something sinister about Sherman’s, “Not this time.” I took another look at Jessie The Worm Wylson, before shifting my gray-brown eyes to the man on the other side of the desk. “If I find him—which I assume you’d like me to do—what makes you think he won’t manage to slip away again?”
Sherman shifted somewhat uncomfortably. “It’s a chance we’re more than willing to take,” he said evenly, “provided you can locate his ass. If I have my way, once he’s in custody, Wylson will be in a cheap, wooden box the next time he gets out.” He sneezed then wiped his nose with a dirty handkerchief. “So what do you say, Drake, will you take the case?”
I glanced once more at the dossier and the man called The Worm. It seemed like a simple enough investigation. But I knew that no investigation ever turned out to be that simple, especially when it involved the district attorney’s office. In fact, finding anyone on the streets of Portland could sometimes be like searching for a hypodermic needle in an urban jungle.
For some reason, I found myself hesitating in jumping all over this case. Like most P.I.’s, I liked to go with my instincts. And, from the beginning, there was definitely something about the case that rubbed me the wrong way. Maybe it was the surreptitious meeting with a member of the D.A.’s office outside the D.A.’s office. Or perhaps it was uneasiness in taking on an investigation that I presumed was still active with the Portland Police Department. Experience told me that they didn’t take too kindly to meddlesome private eyes muscling in on their territory.
Sherman seemed to be reading my mind. “If you’re wondering why you instead of one of our regular investigators, the answer is simple. I want this asshole off the street! I was told that you do things your own way, and not always within the guidelines you learned as a cop. We both know that sometimes the guidelines can be a bitch when it comes to justice for all.” He sucked in a deep breath. “I’m willing—unofficially—to do whatever it takes to find Jessie Wylson. Of course, the D.A.’s office will cover all of your regular fees and expenses.”
The private investigation business had been fairly good to me by the standards of most trying to make a living as dicks for hire. I managed to stay one step ahead of my debts and have some money left over for recreation. But business had been lean of late and the bills never went on holiday. I could hardly afford to pass up a cash-paying reliable client, assuming that at least a minimal standard of acceptability was met. This one seemed to qualify, though barely.
“Can I keep this?” I held up the dossier, which was my way of saying I was on board.
Sherman smiled. “I was counting on it.” He stood and pulled a card from his pocket, handing it to me. “Keep me informed, Drake. If and when you find him, I want to be there to personally slap the cuffs on.”
I wanted to remind Sherman he wasn’t a cop anymore. But I gave him the benefit of the doubt that old habits died hard, and said: “I’ll be in touch.”
Once the Deputy D.A. left me all by my lonesome, I turned the TV back on. Mercifully for the Mariners, the game was over. Final score: A’s 14, Losers 3.
* * *
The sun had begun to peek through the clouds by the time I left my downtown office which was not far from the Riverplace Marina. It was on the third floor of a building that seemed to house everything from a psychic hotline office to a Jenny Craig weight loss center. I wasn’t complaining though. The rent was affordable and most of the tenants tended to mind their own business.
I was wearing a jogging suit that fit well on my six-foot-five body and my Nike running shoes. People asked me all the time if I ever played basketball. I usually responded truthfully with, “I was lousy at basketball, but give me a baseball bat and I can hit the ball ten miles.” That almost always left them speechless.
I liked to think that I was in pretty good physical condition for the forty and over crowd. Jogging was my forte, so to speak, these days. It was a carryover from my days on the force. Before they brought in all the high tech exercise equipment to keep everyone lean and mean.
I half-jogged, half-walked the two miles on the street parallel to the Willamette River, till I reached my apartment building. It was not far from the Hawthorne Bridge—one of several bridges that connected the city that was separated by the river. Since Portland was so beautiful and pedestrian friendly, I favored being on foot to driving or light rail.
Home for me was an old brownstone on Burnside Street. It was old, but comfortable. Most of the residents fit the same profile: single, divorced, or widowed and available, over thirty-five, and professional in some capacity.
Just as I was entering the building, exiting was another tenant who I seemed to pass by every other day lately. I didn’t know her name or anything about her, but I liked what I saw. She bore a strong resemblance to Halle Berry, only she was better—and sexier!
She looked to be in her mid-thirties with jet-black curly hair that grazed her shoulders, cool brown eyes, and an oak complexion. She had a streamlined, petite figure that I could imagine cuddling up to on a lonely night. If there were such a thing as my ideal woman, she was probably it.
Though my mouth always seemed to go dry whenever I got near her, I managed to utter: “Hello.”
She gave me a faint smile in return, perhaps flattered, but obviously unimpressed. I tried to convince myself that she was just having a bad day. Some other time, pal.r />
I climbed three flights of stairs before I reached my one-bedroom apartment. It was pretty much what you would expect of a single, male, private investigator: not particularly tidy, cluttered, bland, and sorely in need of a woman’s touch. The “right” woman just never seemed to come along and volunteer her services.
I showered, shaved, and stepped into one of two cheap suits I wore on the job. This one was navy blue and the most broken in. I combed my short, black hair that was sprinkled with more gray than I cared to admit. Since high school, I’d had a thick coal black mustache. It was probably the best part of me and hung just over the corners of my mouth, tickling me whenever I yawned.
Dinner was some leftover KFC drumsticks, canned pinto beans, and milk. Afterwards I caught a bit of the news on TV, glanced at the front page of the Oregonian, and pondered my newest case.
* * *
Pioneer Courthouse Square was the place to be if you wanted to mingle with your neighbors and tourists alike, be right in the heart of downtown Portland, and catch some of the city’s best free sidewalk talent.
Nate Griffin had made a name for himself as the Rose Clown, in reference to the annual Rose Festival held in the city. He did everything you expected of a clown and more, including cartwheels, telling bad jokes, and giving an often distorted, comical history of Portland. Nate also happened to be my best street informant ever since my days on the force. Sometimes he was helpful, other times helpless. At twenty-nine, he had succumbed to a life mostly on the streets after off and on bouts with alcohol and drug abuse, and failed opportunities to better his life.