Catalog

Record Details

Catalog Search



Dead midnight  Cover Image Book Book

Dead midnight / Marcia Muller.

Muller, Marcia (author.).

Summary:

Detective Sharon McCone is pressured into taking on a chilling investigation that has more twists and turns than any previous case and soon circles around to bring the danger home.

Record details

  • ISBN: 089296765X
  • ISBN: 9780892967650
  • Physical Description: 289 pages ; 24 cm.
  • Publisher: New York : Mysterious Press, [2002]

Content descriptions

General Note:
Series numeration from NoveList.
Subject: McCone, Sharon (Fictitious character) > Fiction
Women private investigators > California > San Francisco > Fiction.
Publishers and publishing > Fiction.
Suicide victims > Fiction.
Women private investigators > Fiction.
FICTION / Mystery & Detective / Women Sleuths.
San Francisco (Calif.) > Fiction.
Genre: Detective and mystery fiction.
Mystery fiction.

Available copies

  • 42 of 44 copies available at Evergreen Indiana.

Holds

  • 0 current holds with 44 total copies.
Show Only Available Copies
Location Call Number / Copy Notes Barcode Shelving Location Status Due Date
Adams PL Sys. - Decatur Branch MFIC MULLER DEA (Text) 34207000857806 Adult Fiction - Mystery Available -
Bloomfield Eastern Greene Co PL - Bloomfield Main FIC MUL (Text) 36803000484050 FICTION Available -
Brazil PL - Brazil MULLER (Text) 38160000448819 Second Floor, Fiction Available -
Brookston Prairie Twp PL - Brookston MYS MUL Sharon McCone Bk 21 (Text) 38209000020191 Mystery Available -
Cambridge City PL - Cambridge City M MUL (Text) 76893000227968 Mysteries Available -
Carnegie PL of Steuben Co - Angola FIC MYS MULLER (Text) 33118000088689 Adult: Mystery Available -
Centerville Center Twp PL - Centerville FIC M MUL Bk.21 (Text) 76895000036625 1st Floor Fiction Available -
Coatesville-Clay Twp PL - Coatesville MF MULLER (Text) 78321000001777 Adult Mystery Fiction Available -
Covington-Veedersburg PL - Veedersburg FIC MUL (Text) 32808000018125 CVBPLV Adult Fiction Available -
Fayette Co PL - Connersville MYS MUL (Text) 39230030584591 Adult Books Available -

Loading Recommendations...

Chapter One Monday

APRIL 9

At one time or another, it happens to everyone. A call comes late at night, bringing news of the death of someone close, and with it a nightmarish sense of unreality. You entertain selfish thoughts: Why is this happening to me? Then you immediately feel ashamed because tragedy has not actually struck you. You, after all, are still alive, healthy, and reasonably sane.

Practicalities intrude, because they are a way of keeping the pain at bay. To whom to break the news, and how? What arrangements must be made? How badly will your life be disrupted? But in the end it all boils down to loss and finality -in my case, loss and finality heaped upon recent losses and betrayals.

My call came at eleven-twenty P.M., from a deputy sheriff in Humboldt County, some two hundred and seventy miles north of San Francisco. Deputy Steve Brouillette. I'd spoken with him several times over the past six months, but he'd never had any news for me. Now he did, and it was bad. My brother Joey was dead at age forty-five. By his own hand.

Friday

APRIL 13

"I'd hate to think we're going to be making a habit of this." My brother John's remark, I knew, was intended to provide comic relief but, given the nature of the situation, it was destined to fail. I looked up at him, shielding my eyes against the afternoon sun, and saw his snub-nosed face was etched with pain. He slouched under the high wing of the Cessna 170B, one hand resting on its strut, his longish hair blowing in the breeze. With surprise I noted strands of white interwoven with the blond of his sideburns. Surely they hadn't been there at Christmas time?

"Sorry," he said, "but it's a thought that must've occurred to you too."

My gaze shifted across San Diego's Lindbergh Field to the west, where we'd earlier scattered Joey's ashes at sea. Joey, the family clown. Joey, whom we'd assumed had never entertained a somber thought in his life. The dumb but much loved one; the wanderer who was sorely missed at family gatherings; the worker who more often than not was fired from his low-end jobs but still managed to land on his feet.

Joey, a suicide.

"Yes," I said, "it's occurred to me. First Pa, now this." "And Ma and Melvin aren't getting any younger." "Who is?" I moved away and began walking around the plane. A red taildragger with jaunty blue trim, Two-fivetwo- seven-Tango was my prize possession, co-owned with my longtime love,Hy Ripinsky. I ran my hand over the fuselage, checked the elevators and rudder-preflighting, because I felt a sudden urge to be away from there.

John followed me. "I keep trying to figure out why he did it."

I went along the other side of the plane without responding.

As he gave me a boost up so I could check the fuel level in the left tank, he added, "What could've gone that wrong with his life? That he'd kill himself ?" "I don't know."

John hadn't wanted to talk about Joey when I'd arrived last night, and he'd been mostly silent on today's flight over the Pacific and later at lunch in the terminal restaurant. Now, in the visitor tie-downs, he seemed determined to initiate a weighty discussion.

"I mean, he had a lot going for himself when he disappeared. A good job, a nice woman-"

"And a crappy trailer filled with empty booze and pill bottles." I eased off the strut and continued my checks. "From what Humboldt County told me when they called, the shack where he offed himself had the same decor." John grunted;my harsh words had shocked him. Shocked me, too, because up till now I hadn't been aware of how much anger I felt toward Joey.

I opened the engine cowling and stared blankly inside. One of those strange lapses, like walking into a room and not knowing what you went there for. Jesus, McCone, I thought, get a grip. I reached in to check the oil, distracted by memories of my search for Joey.

When Pa died early in the previous September, we hadn't been able to reach Joey at his last address, and it wasn't till the end of the month that John traced him to a run-down trailer park near the Mendocino County hamlet of Anchor Bay. By then he'd disappeared again, leaving behind all his possessions and a brokenhearted girlfriend. I immediately began a trace of my own, but gave up after two fruitless months, assuming that-in typical Joey fashion-he'd resurface when he was good and ready. Then, this past Monday, the call from Deputy Brouillette. Joey had been found dead of an alcohol-and-barbiturate overdose in a shabby rental house in Samoa, a mill town northwest of Eureka. His handwritten note simply said, "I'm sorry."

I shut the cowling and climbed up to check the right fuel tank. I was replacing its cap when John spoke again. "Shar, haven't you wondered? Why he did it?" "Of course I have." I twisted the cap-hard, and not just for safety's sake-and lowered myself to the ground. Why was he doing this now, when he knew I wanted to leave? "We should've realized something was wrong. There must've been signs. We could've helped him."

I wiped my oil-slick fingers on my jeans. "John, there was no way we could've known."

"But we should've. He was our brother." "Look, you and I lived with Joey for what was actually a very short time. He was five years older than I, and for the most part we went our separate ways. I doubt I ever had a real conversation with him. And as far as I know, all the two of you ever did together was stick your noses under the hoods of cars, drink beer, and get in trouble with the cops. During the past fifteen years, Ma's the only one who got so much as a card or a call from him. Half the time we didn't know where he was living or what he was doing. So you tell me how we could've seen signs and known he needed help." John sighed, giving up the illusion. "I guess that's what makes it so hard to deal with."

"Yeah, it is."

I took the keys to the plane from my pocket, and his eyes moved to them. "So where're you headed?" "Hy's ranch for the Easter weekend, then back to San Francisco. I've got a new hire to bring up to speed at the agency, and a Monday lunch with an attorney who throws a lot of business my way."

"Gonna keep yourself busy, keep your mind off Joey." "Is that so bad?" He shook his head.

Not so bad to try to forget that sometimes people we love commit self-destructive acts that are enough to temporarily turn that love to hatred.

(Continues...)



Excerpted from Dead Midnight by Marcia Muller Copyright © 2002 by Pronzini-Muller Family Trust. Excerpted by permission.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site. Copyright © 2002 Pronzini-Muller Family Trust
All right reserved.


Additional Resources