Title: Shadows in the Fog
Author: Greg Messel
Publisher: Sunbreaks Publishing
Pages: 353
Genre: Mystery Thriller
Format: Paperback/Kindle
Purchase at AMAZON
The
story begins on a stormy morning in February of 1959. The front page of
the morning paper is dominated by news of the plane crash which killed
rock ’n roll stars Buddy Holly, the Big Bopper and Richie Valens.
Private
Eye Sam Slater is hired to perform what he thinks is a routine two-day
job as a favor for a friend. However, it all goes terribly wrong when a
young San Francisco policeman is gunned down while sitting in a parked
car with Sam.
The murder sets off a chain of events which will
pull Sam and his wife and partner, Amelia, into a dangerous web of
intrigue in the dark, shadowy alleys and back rooms of San Francisco’s
Chinatown.
In the winter of 1959, Amelia resigns as a TWA stewardess and is now Sam’s full time partner in the private eye business.
Sam
and Amelia inadvertently come in conflict with the San Francisco mob
boss after helping a crusading newspaper reporter who is working to
expose corruption in Chinatown. Now a mysterious dark car follows the
Slaters every where they go. Sam and Amelia discover a hidden world of
corrupt cops, gambling parlors, brothels and human trafficking exists
right under their noses.
At the same time, a rising California
politician hires Sam and Amelia to find his daughter who disappeared
without a trace three years earlier. The search is prompted by the
sudden appearance of a letter from the woman, who was presumed dead.
As
Sam and Amelia pursue these cases, they discover that all the clues
lead them back to Chinatown. The Slaters want to avoid taking on the San
Francisco crime lords head-on. However, when Amelia is kidnapped in an
alley during the Chinese New Year’s celebration, Sam plunges himself
into danger desperately searching Chinatown to find her before it’s too
late.
The reader will be drawn into fast moving events which
culminate in a harrowing conclusion as Sam Slater races against the
clock on a foggy night in Chinatown.
“Shadows In The Fog” is the
fifth book in the the award winning Sam Slater Mysteries Series but is a
stand-alone thriller in the tradition of great whodunits.
First Chapter:
Baby-faced
San Francisco Police Detective Charlie Young sat at dusk in Golden Gate
Park in his 1955 light blue Ford Fairlane awaiting the arrival of
private eye Sam Slater.
Charlie’s boyish face reflected his angst
as he absent-mindedly bit his lower lip and clenched his jaw. Young
unfastened the top button on his white shirt and loosened his tie. He
felt like he was choking to death.
He bounced his right leg in a
kind of jitterbug move as was his nervous habit. Charlie was like a
coiled spring ready to explode as he sat in his car parked at the curb
on the winding two lane road outside the Conservatory of Flowers.
The
sun began to disappear into the Pacific Ocean, which was not visible
but just a few miles to the west of the park beyond the trees. Long
shadows fell on the park and in a few minutes it would be dark.
Clenching
and unclenching his fists, Charlie scanned the area for any suspicious
people lurking in the fading light. He had a nagging feeling, in spite
of the precautions he had taken, that out there in the darkness, someone
was watching. His eyes darted from side to side as he checked the rear
view mirror for any sign of Sam. The sidewalks and the lush lawns
surrounding the landmark conservatory were largely deserted at this hour
on a winter evening.
He glanced at his watch. Sam should arrive at any minute.
Then
without warning, Charlie was temporarily blinded by some headlights in
his rear view mirror as a car emerged out of the darkness.
Sam
pulled his red and white 1957 Chevy in behind the cop’s car and killed
the headlights. Charlie blinked his eyes to try to adjust to the reduced
illumination.
Sam opened the passenger side door of Young’s Fairlane and slid into the front seat.
“Hello Mr. Slater, thanks for meeting me here,” Charlie said in greeting.
Sam seemed unnerved. “Why are we meeting here? I don’t like meeting on a dark street in the park.”
“I
understand sir, but I’m afraid I’m being watched. I thought it was best
that we meet under the cover of darkness. This is an isolated area of
the park and I can see in both directions.” Sam disagreed and looked
askance at the skittish cop sitting behind the wheel fidgeting and
obsessively checking his rear view mirror.
“We could be sitting in
my office in complete privacy with the door closed—safe and sound, but
you refused…whatever…let’s just get this over with.”
Sam was
anxious to rid himself of Charlie Young and his problems. He hadn’t
wanted to take this job anyway. The troubled young cop was worried that
his wife was seeing another man. Sam hated these kinds of jobs and took
it only as a favor to his friend, San Francisco Police detective, Vince
Marino.
“What did you find out, Mr. Slater? I mean what’s going on with Eve? What’s she doing all day?”
“I
really don’t think you have anything to worry about concerning your
wife,” Sam began, but the cop didn’t seem to be listening because he was
distracted by a slow-moving car that suddenly flashed its high beams
into the Charlie’s car. As the car drew closer, its headlights blasted
into their eyes obscuring their vision.
Sam shielded his eyes to
try to see the car, which veered out of the traffic lane and pulled up
so close to the cop’s car that the driver’s side doors almost touched.
Sam would later recall that the cop acted like he knew the person in the
car because Charlie began to roll down his window. It was as if they
were planning to talk.
Charlie only partially lowered his window before a hand holding a gun emerged from the approaching car.
Bang! Bang! Bang! Bang! Bang!
An explosion of gunfire riddled Charlie’s car, shattering the windows.
Five
shots rang out in rapid succession. The young cop took the brunt of the
gunfire and convulsed as the bullets slammed into his head and upper
body. Sam scrambled for cover and tried to dive onto the floor of the
car, but he didn’t fit, so he opened the passenger side door and rolled
out on the damp grass by the curb.
Sam heard the squealing of
tires as the gunman’s car drove away into the darkness. He never got a
look at the assailant from his position on the grass next to the car.
Sam’s
face and overcoat were covered with blood and he felt sure that he had
been hit. He sensed it. Sam had seen a lot of men shot during the war
and his own time in combat terminated when he was wounded in Germany.
He
was a bloody mess and there had been bullets ricocheting all around the
car. He pulled open his topcoat and feared the worst when he discovered
blood splattered all over his suit jacket. Sam frantically looked for
the source of all the blood in the faint light provided by the
streetlight and the interior light of the car.
It was then that he found a bullet hole in his bloody raincoat just over his heart.
He
pulled back his raincoat and saw a similar hole in his suit coat. He
had taken a bullet but he was puzzled to see very little blood on his
white shirt.
Sam paused to brush away some blood that trickled
down into his eye as he reached into his vest pocket to pull out the
silver cigarette case that Amelia had given him for Christmas. The
cigarette case was dented by a round from the assailant’s gun and had
potentially saved Sam’s life.
Sam collapsed onto the damp grass
and breathed a sigh of relief. He had escaped a potentially life
threatening shot by just inches and a twist of fate.
Sam peered
into the young cop’s car which was covered with blood. Charlie was
slumped on his side and not moving. Sam crawled on his hands and knees
to try to re-enter the car to see if he could help Charlie but it was
obviously too late.
The cop had been shot in the jaw on the left
side of his face and Sam could also see a wound in his neck gushing
blood. Charlie’s glassy eyes stared into the darkness. He was already
dead.
“What happened here?” a voice said, startling Sam said.
He turned to find a man in a raincoat and hat standing on the sidewalk behind him.
“This man has been shot. He’s a San Francisco Policeman. I need you to call the cops and an ambulance.”
“Are you all right?”
“I’m not sure. Just hurry!”
The
man in the raincoat hustled toward a phone booth just outside the
observatory. Sam was bewildered by the sudden turn of events. It was
supposed to be a routine report about the cop’s wife.
Sam never
got to deliver good news for the Charlie Young. His wife wasn’t cheating
on him. The sudden violent attack was the last thing Sam expected at
the rendezvous in the park.
Sam felt something wet running down
his forehead into his eyes. He swiped at it with the back of his hand
and discovered it was blood—the cop’s blood which had been splattered
all over Sam in the shooting.
Sam wondered what he must have looked like to the man in the raincoat.
The
interior of the car was a gory mess with blood dripping from the
interior roof of the car, the driver’s side window shot out and blood
splattered on the windshield. Sam looked over his shoulder and saw the
man in the raincoat in the phone booth. The police should arrive at any
time.
Sam rose to his feet and leaned on the open car door. He tried to clear his head and comprehend what had just occurred.
He
was spooked just seconds before the shooting when he saw the car
heading towards them with the high beam headlights on. Sam was surprised
that the paranoid young cop seemed unfazed by the approaching car. It
was like he recognized the car. Suddenly Sam felt a little woozy and
tumbled back onto the grass, reclining while he awaited the arrival of
the police. He pulled his silver cigarette case out of his pocket and
attempted to wipe it clean with his hand. The inscription on the case
was “To My Dearest Sam. All My Love, Amelia.”
Sam’s
thoughts turned to Amelia. He felt so lucky to be loved by her and the
inscription reminded how much he cherished his life with her. A life
that nearly ended just moments ago.
The word “Dearest” had been
obliterated by the round dent from the bullet. Miraculously, Sam Slater
was not lying dead in the front seat next to the young cop.
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