Dose of Murder, Mystery and Mayhem
114 pages
English

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114 pages
English

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Description

Come join us for some murder, mystery and mayhem. Walk through many different styles of mystery all warmed up with a hint of the erotic.Selfies - Michael BrackenWhen a slender blonde asks questions about photographs he took of her mother, private eye Carl Flock revisits his past as a divorce attorney's camera-slinging hired peeper in "Selfies."Ghost in the Image - P.R. ChaseThe first of P. R. Chase's short stories featuring Emily Thorpe, the resourceful and inquisitive leader of a paranormal investigation team in Victorian-age London. Her unique sensitivity to exokinetic energy leads her down the streets of London and the passages of her memories as she frees a haunting spirit--residing within her.Share the Wealth - Albert TucherWhen a suburban prostitute loses her professional detachment with a client, and he becomes the suspect in his wife's murder, what else can she do but investigate the case in her own unique way?Phoenix Rising - Casey PascalLily Phoenix is a brilliant young agent working for The Bureau with a reputation for getting the job done. She's also beautiful and in demand for assignments in the company of the city's industrial and scientific greats. Despite having seen more of the dark under-belly of society than the majority of those she protects, her focus on work has left little room for her to gain experience of life. That same lack of experience has given her imagination the freedom to wonder what she might be missing. When an audacious crime is committed at The Society of Scientific Enquiry's annual dinner, Phoenix instinctively moves into action, but as the situation strays into the realm usually only inhabited by her wildest fantasies, she is forced to decide between her duty and her desire.No More Tears - Logan ZacharyThere are more things than steam and sweat in the locker room today. After a fight that leads to a death in at the fitness center, tensions are high as ex-partners argue about ... shampoo. Detective Joe DeCarlo is having a bad day, and his workout is doing little to de-stress him. Paavo Wolfe is trying to help him clean up his act and solve the crime in the shower room. But someone is dead and another person has forgotten to buy the shampoo, but there will be No More Tears in the locker room.Swapping Surveillance - Edmond FumkiA beautiful lady private detective considers her life and career while sitting in the company car waiting for the suspect that she is to follow to appear. When he does, his trail leads her into a life changing situation of humiliation and pleasure.The Missing Piece - Morrigan CoxLillian was used to having her heart broken. But she wasn't used to being needy. Not in front of Dexter Drummond. She has a past with the Private Dick and it's not a pretty one. He wanted a life in law more than he wanted her, and now she's forced to go to him for help... with her husband. It's an old crutch for her, but she's desperate enough to try even if it only twists the knife of betrayal deeper in her gut. Just when she thinks it couldn't get any worse, there's an offer of help from another part of her past. Santoro Giulietta has always been the extra wheel in her past with Dexter. The man with eyes darker than her troubles and a mouth as dirty as it is talented. She doesn't want his help, but sometimes what you need and what you want get mixed up and you end up looking for the Missing Piece.Fill in the blanks - Hollis QueensThings heat up when Yvette finds herself teamed up with her hero, Detective Scarlett Warren, in a race to uncover the previous night's debauchery. Will they be able to sort through the booze-soaked clues from the party or will they be distracted by their growing passion?

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Publié par
Date de parution 26 octobre 2016
Nombre de lectures 0
EAN13 9781785385902
Langue English

Informations légales : prix de location à la page 0,0200€. Cette information est donnée uniquement à titre indicatif conformément à la législation en vigueur.

Extrait

A Dose of Murder, Mystery and Mayhem
Edited by
Nicole Gestalt
featuring stories from
Michael Bracken Albert Tucher
Casey Pascal P.R. Chase
Logan Zachary Edmond Fumki
Morrigan Cox
and
Hollis Queens




A Dose of Murder, Mystery and Mayhem
Published in 2016 by
House of Erotica
www.houseoferoticabooks.com
an imprint of
Andrews UK Limited
www.andrewsuk.com
Copyright © 2016 House of Erotica under exclusive licence from the individual authors
The rights of the authors have been asserted in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1998
This book is sold subject to the condition that it shall not, by way of trade or otherwise, be lent, resold, hired out or otherwise circulated without the publisher’s prior written consent in any form of binding or cover other than that in which it is published, and without a similar condition being imposed on the subsequent purchaser.
The characters and situations in this book are entirely imaginary and bear no relation to any real person or actual happening.



Introduction
A Dose of Murder, Mystery and Mayhem brings together an eclectic mix of stories from P.I.’s to mischievous maids and a mix of changing room detectives thrown in - there is something for everyone who likes their erotica tinged with intrigue.
When a submission call is put out into the world you never know quite what sort of stories you will get sent back - that is part of the excitement of putting together an anthology. I will admit I was both nervous and excited to read the submissions. When they started to trickle in I wasn’t disappointed. The stories I have selected show off a number of different styles that have been the core of all good mystery stories for many years.
So whether you like your stories with a bit of grit or more light hearted cosy mystery all there stories pack a bit of heat and I hope you enjoy!
Nicole Gestalt
August 2016



Selfies
by Michael Bracken
I had once supported myself quite well by tailing cheating spouses, taking revealing photographs of their infidelities, and delivering prints and negatives to divorce attorneys and the clients they represented. Social media and changing social mores eliminated much of my business. Cheaters now out themselves through their posts, tweets, and selfies. Sexual activities that had once been illegal even between consenting adults bound by marriage are now the subject of bestselling books and casual discussion among co-workers.
Though a sporadic trickle of clients keeps my balance sheet in the black, I did not replace my buxom receptionist when she accepted a better offer from the insurance company with offices two floors below mine, nor did I replace my curvaceous girlfriend when she received a better offer from a senior partner at the law firm where she works as a paralegal. So, I spend my days surfing the Internet and my evenings trying to remember what it feels like to get laid by a woman who doesn’t charge for massages with happy endings.
Sitting in my office one Tuesday morning, reading the day’s headlines on the local newspaper’s website, I heard a delicate cough. I looked up to see a slender blonde standing in the open doorway. She wore a black sheath dress that hugged her minimal curves, held her purse in one hand and held a manila envelope in the other. She was almost pretty.
“I’m sorry to interrupt,” she said, “but there’s no one out front.”
“My receptionist is on break,” I explained. I didn’t explain that Stella’s break had lasted almost eighteen months. “Do you have an appointment?”
My visitor shook her head. “I’m sorry. Do I need one?”
I made a production of checking my empty appointment calendar. “I have time now,” I said as I motioned toward the two chairs on the visitor side of my desk. “Come in. Have a seat.”
She crossed the room, examined both chairs, and then selected the one closest to my desk.
I asked, “What can I do for you?”
“You did some work for my mother.” She opened the manila envelope, pulled out half a dozen glossy 8”x10” photographs, and spread them across my desk.
In the top photograph, an older, prettier, and quite naked version of the woman sitting on the far side of my desk was impaled beneath an equally naked man half her age who had a distinctive port-wine birthmark on his left ass cheek. I did not need to examine the photographs to remember the woman, though I pretended I did as I sifted through them and felt myself becoming aroused. Janice Shepherd was the only client I ever had so desperate to end her marriage that she hired me to prove her infidelity, and photographing her with her lover had been one of the few times I used a tripod and a timer. I asked, “How did you find me?”
The blonde flipped one of the photographs over and I saw my name and address rubber-stamped on the back. She said, “I hadn’t expected to find you here after all these years, Mr. Flock, but I had to try.”
“Carl.” Like her, I hadn’t expected to find myself in the same office after all these years. I had gone private after three years spent walking a beat in a bad neighbourhood, and, after a few prosperous years that saw me adding a receptionist and subcontracting work to off-duty beat cops I had once worked with, I had thought I was riding a rocket to the top. Instead, I’d gone into free fall. “Call me Carl.”
As Janice’s daughter reached across the top of my desk and we shook hands, she said, “Kathleen Shepherd.”
“What can I do for you Miss Shepherd?”
“I was five when my parents divorced,” she said. “Neither one ever told me why. My father took his own life a few years later, but my mother didn’t pass until recently. While going through her things, I found these.”
Kathleen nodded at the six photographs still spread across my desk. They had been carefully cultivated from several hundred taken over the course of a long evening which left my client satisfied and her pre-Viagra lover spent. I had been careful to make prints of only those photographs in which the woman was identifiable, and I had destroyed all negatives in which any part of the man’s face was visible. “I didn’t realize you were a private investigator,” she said. “I thought you were a photographer.”
“I am when I need to be,” I said.
“So, why did you take these pictures?”
“The same reason I took all the others like these,” I explained. “To help people exit bad marriages.”
“My father hired you?” When I didn’t respond, she said, “Both of my parents are dead, so there’s no one left to protect.”
I didn’t correct her. There’s always someone to protect.
***
When Kathleen Shepherd exited my office a few minutes later, I never expected to see her again. That afternoon, the insurance company downstairs called with an assignment. An auto-mobile accident victim with no identifiable social media presence was claiming a back injury. Two days later I delivered several dozen digital photographs of the man unloading flat screen televisions from the back of a stolen delivery truck. The following week I helped an elderly woman without computer skills locate a long-lost cousin, and I was back to killing time cruising the Internet when Edgar Wainwright invited me to lunch at his club.
I had neither seen nor spoken to Wainwright in several years and was surprised to see how little retirement had changed him. Though his lion’s mane of hair had completed its transition from black to silver and the creases at the corners of his eyes had deepened, he still wore a tailored three-piece suit and still stood ramrod straight when he greeted me.
“How many divorce cases did you work for me?” Wainwright asked after we settled into place at his table and I had my fist wrapped around a tumbler of Jack-and-Coke.
“Several dozen,” I said. I had never known Wainwright to represent a male client in a divorce, and I suspected he hired some of the women I found straddling drunken husbands in cheap motel rooms, but his checks cleared the bank so I never asked questions. “You were my best client.”
“One of them has come back to bite us in the ass,” he said.
Though I had a premonition, I asked, “Which one?”
“The Shepherds,” he said. “Janice and Charles. They had a daughter, must have been five when they divorced, and she was in the office the other day. She had questions about some photos she’d found.”
I didn’t tell him Kathleen had been to see me first. “You spoke to her?”
“No,” Wainwright said. “One of the junior partners told her the attorney who handled her mother’s divorce had retired and suggested she let the matter drop. After he escorted her from the office, he phoned me.”
I sipped from my drink.
“This should never have happened,” Wainwright said. “I told Mrs. Shepherd to destroy the photographs after we had the final decree. There should have been nothing for her daughter to find.”
That the photos still existed had surprised me, but I had not been bothered by their existence nearly as much as Wainwright.
“You need to dissuade Miss Shepherd from asking any more questions about those photographs.” Wainwright opened his wallet and fanned six crisp Benjamins on the table between us. “This should be enough to get you started.”
I scooped up the money, folded it in half, and slipped it into my shirt pocket. Then I finished my Jack-and-Coke and returned to my office to spend time rereading my file from the Shepherd case, refreshing my memory of the events that led to my photographing Wainwright’s client in flagrante delicto.
***
Charles Shepherd came from generations of family money, had been a professor of biblical history, and was president of the state’s largest Bible college at the time of the divorce. Janice Wilson Shepherd came

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