Listen to this story on the podcast.
For a sweet house, right on Santa Monica Beach, it was unbelievably easy to break into. Mickey found a window he could open with a putty knife, so the double-locked doors were a joke. And Lana disabled the alarm within the forty-five-second grace period before it would have triggered. They were in and no one knew. What a great way to kick off the honeymoon.
Mickey couldnât imagine hijacking anything else that could have brought them any closer to heaven. Lana had told him sheâd always dreamed of a house on the beach and heâd delivered: salt air, pounding surf, white sand, five-million dollar love nest whose owner was en route to Europe.
Lana strolled out of the alarm closet, clapping her hands to beat off the dust. Mickey loved the sway of her hips, the trill of her laugh, the smell of her skin, how her jet black bangs set off her turquoise eyes, the way she knew how to do things: clean a squid or repair a zipper or break down a Beretta. Heâd known he wanted to marry her by their second date.
He wrapped his arms around her and ran his tongue between her lips. She toyed with it for a moment, then yanked off his shirt. He pulled her sweater over her head. She slid her hand over his fly. He was already hard.
She stroked him through his pants as she backed him across the great room toward the wall of windows overlooking the moonlit Pacific. They knocked over a glass-shaded lamp but neither reacted when it shattered on the floor. She slammed him down on the couch and went straight for his belt buckle. He wrestled with her jeans. The heat was intense.
Their clothes were barely off but he could already feel her tremble. This was record time for her, which only excited him more. Her tremors were intensifying and he was along for the wild ride.
Then she froze.
Had he done something wrong? âWhat?â
She put her finger to his lips, then whispered, âDidnât you hear that?â
He had not.
But then he did. Almost lost in the oceanâs roar: scritch scratch. Like a mouse clawing at the inside of a wall. Someone was having trouble getting a key into one of the front-door locks.
They scrambled to pull on clothes.
âYou said this place was going to be empty,â said Lana.
âThatâs what Wally told me.â
âWally One-nut? You trusted that inbred idiot?â
Mickey knew he should have double-checked Wallyâs intel. The guy was famous for blunders. But the deserted beach house had seemed so perfect that Mickey let romance cloud his judgment. Now, because of Wallyâs bad data, Mickey felt like a nitwit, a feeling he was getting to know all too well. Thatâs what happens when you fall for a chick whoâs smarter than you. But did it have to happen on the first night of their honeymoon?
Scritch scratch.
Mickey crossed to the wall by the door, to be behind it when it opened. Lana rushed into the kitchen area, grabbed a chefâs knife from the block, and dropped out of sight behind the island.
The scritch scratch finally clacked as the the deadbolt shot.
Mickey listened to the sound of the key moving to the second lock, the one in the door-handle that probably cost as much as his car. He felt the familiar rush of danger. That exhilaration was one of the main attractions of his line of work. He glanced toward Lanaâs hiding place, relieved that she was there for him, knife in hand, ready to spring. My wife has my back. It had a nice ring to it.
The oversized door swung open, ramping up the sound of the crashing waves. A man stood stock still in the doorway. Did he sense something wrong?
Behind the door, Mickey peered through the spyhole. The fisheye gave him a funhouse-mirror view of the manâs profile. He was wearing a tuxedo and seemed off-balance as he turned to grab the huge stainless door handle. He now faced the spyhole and Mickey could see panic in his eyes.
The man headed back outside. He knows weâre here, thought Mickey, heâs going for help. Mickey was about to run after him when he heard the man throw up on the pavement in front. Mickey relaxed, silently flexing his hands to relieve his tension.
The man stumbled back into the house and did a face-plant on the seagrass carpet.
Mickey closed the door. Lana slowly approached the man who lay on the floor like a sandbag. She knelt to feel for a pulse.
âHeâs still breathing,â she said.
âLetâs get the fuck out of here,â said Mickey.
âGive me a second.â
She searched the manâs pockets. He had a wallet, some keys, some breath mints and something that stopped her cold.
âHello,â she said and held up a glassine envelope filled with white powder.
âWhat is it?â he said.
Lana squeezed the edges of the envelope to pop it open. Dipping her little finger inside, she scooped some powder under her nail and touched it to her tongue. She grimaced.
âBitter,â she said. âNot numbing like coke. Iâm guessing smack.â
She closed the packet, then grabbed a Kleenex from a nearby dispenser and wiped the glassine clean.
âWhat are you doing?â he asked.
âHedging our bets.â
Mickey had no idea what she was planning, but this honeymoon was clearly taking a hairpin turn in a new direction.
Holding the envelope by its edges, she pressed the unconscious manâs fingers onto the glassine. Then she wrapped the packet in the tissue and set it aside.
She returned to her search. Mickey felt his anxiety building.
âTime to go,â he said. âIf he comes around while weâre here, weâre talking felonies.â
âHang tight. This guy could be our ticket.â
âYou donât want to do hard time. Look what State prison did to your mother. You want to end up like her?â
Lana looked up empathetically. Mickey had met her mother soon after theyâd gotten engaged. Theyâd picked the woman up at her halfway house and taken her to Dennyâs. When Lana went to the ladiesâ room, her mother offered to sell Mickey a happy ending after lunch. It had been an unpleasant afternoon for all.
âBabe,â said Lana, âI promise you Iâll never be like my mother.â
She shuffled through the manâs wallet and found a business card. âAvery Blain,â she read. âEsquire. Beverly Hills law firm with six names including his.â She held up another card. âMember of the Jonathan Club. This is looking more and more like a cash cow. And we, my blushing husband, are going to suckle the teats.â
âYou mean sell that dope on the street?â he said.
âPlease,â she said contemptuously. He knew it was a put-down, but he didnât get it.
She fanned the contents of Averyâs wallet like a poker hand, enticing him to pick a card. He reached out and plucked a photograph from the array.
It was a snapshot of a red-haired woman with an infectious smile. She was tall and well-padded but shapely, about Lanaâs age, maybe ten years younger than Avery Blain.
âYou think this is his wife?â He flipped the photo for Lana to see.
They were startled by a loud belch and looked down at Avery, still lying with his face on the floor, his visible eye an amalgam of sky blue and rummy red. He stared at Lanaâs feet but his expression implied no comprehension of what, much less whose, they were.
âYou in or out?â asked Lana.
Mickey felt a fresh flush of excitement. He answered her question by stripping off his belt and binding Averyâs hands behind his back. Their flirtation with felony had become a full-blown orgy. Life with this woman was going to be a kick.
Lana grabbed a dishtowel and tied it around Averyâs eyes.
âTalk to him,â said Mickey.
That was her job. Whenever they ran a scam, Lana did the talking. She was the one with the people skills.
She bent down and spoke softly in Averyâs ear. âCan you hear me?â
He struggled to free his wrists.
âRelax, Avery,â she said. âWeâre not going to hurt you. We just want to make sure youâre calm before we talk. Okay?â
She patted his knee encouragingly.
âI canât miss my flight.â
She shot Mickey a glance then turned back to Avery.
âWhere are you going?â she asked.
âMy hands are stuck.â He was still too groggy to grasp his situation.
âDoctorâs orders. Youâve had too much to drink.â
Mickey straddled a chair, crossing his arms on its back, to watch Lana work.
âI canât see,â said Avery.
âIf you want to make your flight youâll have to trust me,â said Lana. âWhere are you flying?â
âAix en Province,â said Avery, pronouncing it âaches.â
Mickey didnât know what the correct pronunciation was but he was pretty sure this wasnât it. He asked, âAre you going alone?â
âHuh?â Avery turned toward the voice as if surprised that another person was there.
âHe wants to know if youâre meeting up with anyone in Aix en Province?â said Lana, pronouncing it âex.â Mickey suspected she knew. He felt a small burst of pride.
âWhat?â said Avery, still boozy.
âMaybe the woman whose picture youâve got in your wallet?â she asked.
âSheâs divorcing me.â
He let out a sob.
âGreat,â said Mickey. âA fucking basket case.â
The disapproval in her glance irritated him.
âWhy donât you do something helpful?â she said to Mickey. âMaybe find something we can use to get him upright.â
She turned back to Avery and tenderly wiped his brow, chanting âItâs okayâ in a soothing voice, as if calming a child. A tear escaped the blindfold and dripped into Averyâs ear.
â˘
As she tried to soothe Avery, Lana watched Mickey search the drawers and cabinets in the kitchen area. She felt bad about dismissing him like an underling, but she was annoyed that he seemed so slow on the uptake. Could it be that sheâd never noticed how dense he was? Or was he folding under pressure? Apparently, she didnât know him as well as sheâd thought.
Theyâd been together only six months, so his marriage proposal had come as a surprise. She couldnât decide if he was hopelessly romantic or deluded by lust. Joyfully spontaneous or dangerously impetuous. To his credit, the manâs tongue was a witching stick for her erogenous zones, discovering nerves that turned her to jelly. And she was a sucker for the way his dark five-oâclock shadow set off his sweet baby face. Granted, he was no Rhodes scholar, but he made her laugh.
Mickey pulled a roll of duct tape out of a catchall drawer and gave her a victory grin.
âLetâs get old Avery off the floor,â he said.
Mickey made Avery close his eyes, then swapped the dishtowel for duct tape wrapped around his head.
âHey!â said Avery. âWatch the hair.â
âI avoided your ears, didnât I?â said Mickey.
Typical male response, thought Lana. But Mickey was still better than most. For one thing, she felt certain he would never hit her. That just wasnât his style. And taking the fear out of love was nine-tenths of the battle.
Mickey dragged an armchair over from the dining room table and helped Avery up and in. As Mickey started taping, Avery finally fathomed his predicament.
âWhat the hell is going on here?â he said. âWhat do you want?â
âWe want money, asshole,â said Mickey. People skills be damned.
âJust take what you want and get out. All my cash is in my wallet.â
âWe donât want your petty cash,â said Lana. âWe want a payday.â
âA big one,â said Mickey.
âI donât negotiate with terrorists.â
Avery sounded confident, as if he was used to dealing with thugs. Lana suspected he practiced criminal law.
âWell, we donât take crap from junkies,â said Mickey and slapped Averyâs head hard enough to send him tumbling over in his chair. His head hit the mat carpeting with a sickening thud. It happened so fast it was over before Lana could react. Mickey shifted his weight to deliver a follow-up kick.
âThatâs enough!â she said, stepping between the two men. When she put her hand on Mickeyâs chest to hold him back, her fingers were trembling.
Mickey gave Avery a last look of contempt, then crossed the room to stare out the window. Lana watched him brood at the roiling black Pacific. She and Mickey had run plenty of cons together, and a few had gotten physical. But it had always been a matter of self-defense. Sheâd never seen him get aggressive before. She felt something like indigestion in the pit of her stomach.
Lana tried to pull Avery upright but the weight was too much for her.
âA little help?â
Mickey came back and righted the chair. âSorry,â he said. To her, not to Avery. But she could tell Mickeyâs fury wasnât spent. His jaw was ticcing all over the place.
âWhy donât you go downstairs,â she said. âFind some financial statements. Theyâll either be in files or on his computer. Let me work my magic alone.â
His fist clenched as he glared at Avery and she thought Mickey might try for one last shot. She was afraid she wouldnât be able to stop him. But then he turned and stomped down the stairs. Mickey was accustomed to two-bit swindles and low-risk burglaries. Kidnapping and extortion were much more serious crimes. She suspected the stakes were chafing his nerves.
Lana pulled a chair up close to Avery for an intimate conversation. She usually entered negotiations by trying to build a relationship with her mark. The blindfold made that problematic.
âHowâs your head?â she asked.
âSobering fast,â he said.
âLook. Youâre a named partner in a Beverly Hills law firm. Iâm sure youâve got a lot of high-powered friends and clients. You have a beautiful home on the beach. You have a lot to lose. My husband and I understand itâs in our interest to make this relatively painless for you. Weâre reasonable people. We donât want to take so much that you think itâs worth a risk to try to get it back. We want your upside to be greater than your downside so youâre motivated to cooperate. We need your payout to be small enough that your lifestyle doesnât change because if anyone else finds out about your heroin hobby or our little agreement, who knows where that might lead? So the idea is to make everybody happy, including you.â
âI donât negotiate with terrorists,â he repeated, but this time his voice lacked conviction.
âWeâre not terrorists, Avery. Terrorists destroy things. We donât want to destroy you. We just want enough money to make us feel like our risk has been rewarded. If we go away happy, weâll go away forever. Thatâs not terrorism. We donât want to destabilize anything. Weâre not anarchists, weâre business people. You give us what we want and youâll never see us again. Wouldnât that be the best solution all around?â
âThe best solution would be for you to cut me loose and leave,â he said.
She smiled. âIf our relationship is going to work out, you need to be face the truth about the situation youâre in and be smart about getting out of it. Doesnât that make sense? Be honest.â
âHonesty is a two-way street,â he said. âYou expect me to believe that lowlife husband of yours will just leave and not come back?â
Avery fidgeted against his bindings.
âLet me lay it out for you,â she said. âYouâre a junkie. Which, I might add, is much more pathetic than being a lowlife.â
âIâm no junkie. Iâm an occasional recreational user.â
âSpare me. What I have that you want is the incriminating evidence with your fingerprints on it. What you have that I want is money. Once I sell you the evidence, weâll have no leverage to come back with. You can shoot up your occasional recreation to your heartâs content.â
Lana felt uneasy about encouraging Averyâs drug use, but if withdrawal symptoms were an unspoken bargaining chip, she wanted to make sure he understood that his dope was in the pot.
âThat heroin isnât evidence of anything,â said Avery. âI can claim you brought it with you and forced me to put my prints on it. The D.A. Wonât even open a case.â
âIâd never call the cops; Iâll let some reporter do that. Iâll send the dope to the L.A. Times from an unnamed addict who wants to come clean. Iâll tell them my dealer is prominent Beverly Hills lawyer Avery Blain whose prints are all over the dope. They may be skeptical, but you know theyâll follow up with the cops, the D.A., the State Bar, your partners, your friends and your neighbors. The publicity alone will kill your reputation. You can kiss your career goodbye, along with this house and your friends at the Jonathan Club. And if the cops find your dealer, you can bet heâll roll over and send you to prison.â
They heard the crackling pop of splintering wood downstairs as if Mickey had crowbarred a locked drawer.
âHeâs looking for your records, Avery. Thatâs step one in the simple resolution of this thing. I need you to show me how much youâve got so we can settle on a figure and wrap this up quietly.â
âMy accountant has all my financials.â
Again, she felt hamstrung by the blindfold. Men lied easily with their words, but their eyes always gave them away.
âYouâre a lawyer, Avery. Youâre going through a divorce. That means youâve been hiding assets. Youâre too smart to trust that to some accountant who might be called to testify under oath.â
âThereâs nothing to hide. Itâs all tied up in the divorce.â
His lips quivered and she sensed his pain. Could he be telling the truth? Her bullshit meter was useless without seeing his eyes. Did they really need to blindfold him? She was certain Avery knew they had him over a barrel.
Lana made a unilateral decision. She grabbed a pair of scissors from a pencil cup on the kitchen counter.
âDonât move,â she said, and slipped a blade under the duct tape to cut through the band around his head. When she peeled it off his skin he winced.
Sheâd had a glimpse of his eyes before, but this was the first time she got a good look. The peek of blue sheâd seen before was now revealed to be a dazzling multitude of hues with the shimmer of a tropical lagoon. He returned her gaze and she felt him assessing her, like a jeweler examining a diamond through a loupe.
She yanked at the tape on his hair and he cried out in pain.
âMy husband didnât give your blindfold a lot of forethought.â
âForethought doesnât seem to be his long suit.â
She had to cut through his hair to free it from the tape.
âIâm afraid youâre going to need a buzz cut to fix this. Maybe shave your head.â
The rhythmic white noise of the surf was suddenly pierced by the sound of a distant siren. Mickey bounded up the stairs looking frightened.
âNobody knows weâre here,â she said. âRelax.â
But he didnât. The siren grew louder.
And then it passed.
Mickeyâs relief was fleeting. âWhat the hell are you doing?â he asked as he registered Averyâs unmasking.
Lanaâs scissors were back under the duct tape, snipping at Averyâs hair.
âWhat difference does it make?â she said. âHeâs not going to call the cops.â
âHeâs a fucking witness!â
She didnât like being criticized, especially not by Mickey. âHeâs got way more to lose from the cops than we do,â she said. âUse your head.â
âYou use your head. What if his dealer finds out we mugged his customer? Avery can describe us. People can find us.â
âYou think I want anyone to find out about this?â said Avery. âYou should listen to her.â
Mickeyâs neck flushed crimson and he brandished his fist. âListen to this, you lawyer fuck!â
Lana grabbed Mickeyâs arm to prevent him from swinging. He turned on her and she saw a feral rage in his eyes that chilled her. He was losing control under pressure. Sheâd had bad luck with men like this in the past. The kind of luck that required hospitalization.
Something snapped deep down inside and she knew her trust in him had died. Her love for Mickey vaporized like a drop of water on a hot skillet.
â˘
Mickey went back downstairs to pick up where heâd left offâsweeping books off the shelves in Averyâs office, looking for a hidden safe.
Use your head. Was that supposed to be some sort of putdown? Because this whole snakepit was her idea. Mickey tried to brush a set of law books off a shelf, but they were too heavy so he tossed them on the floor one by one. Another pain in the ass for the list.
Use your head. Maybe this marriage thing was a mistake. Maybe heâd been too hasty. Heâd been so intoxicated by Lana that heâd wanted to strike fast, before some other guy got his hooks in her. And then the honeymoon had started off with a bang. Even when Avery came along, they still seemed like they were riding high.
But now things looked different. He couldnât believe sheâd cut off the blindfold.
Could she have a soft spot for Avery? The thought had gnawed at Mickey since heâd seen her touch the guy. Only one reason to touch someone youâve got hogtied: to make them talk. And that entails pain. Sheâd stroked his brow like a fucking nursemaid. Sheâd patted his knee. Did she think Mickey was blind?
He gritted his teeth and used all his strength to send thirty pounds of books flying off the shelf.
â˘
Lanaâs mouth was dry from the adrenaline rush of Mickeyâs assault on Avery. She went into the kitchen for something to drink. She opened the fridge expecting a guyâs fridge: beer, leftover pizza, bologna, ketchup, maybe something moldy and unidentifiable. But Averyâs fridge was stocked with vegetables, fresh herbs, fancy stuff in jars. A guy who liked to cook. Sheâd never met one of those before. Mickey couldnât even open a can.
She walked back out cracking open a Perrier, imagining Avery tipping a steak pan, letting the flames lick cognac fumes to light up a flambĂŠ. He wasnât classically handsome but there was something about him she found attractive. Fortyish, full head of silky black hair framed by graying temples, Grecian nose, and those kaleidoscopic blue eyes, radiating intelligence now that heâd sobered up some.
She wondered what heâd be like in bed. Sheâd never been with a man who made his money legally. And never with one who made the kind of money youâd need to live on the beach. Sheâd never known a life without the constant worry of being caught for one thing or another. Life with Avery would be a whole other ballgame.
âYou must be thirsty,â she said.
âA bit.â
She held the bottle to his lips. He parted them and she poured slowly enough for him to drink. When heâd finished, she wiped an errant drop off his lip with her fingertip, then absently licked it off her finger. She watched his eyes follow her tongue.
âYou really know how to pick âem,â he said. âWhat do you see in that jackass anyway?â
âHeâs just being cautious,â said Lana. âMaybe too cautious. But weâre newlyweds. He thinks heâs supposed to protect me.â
She could feel Averyâs keen gaze boring into her innermost thoughts.
âYou seem like the kind of woman who can take care of herself. Why would a woman like you want to haul around baggage like him?â
âYou donât know anything about me,â she said.
âOh, but I do,â said Avery. âI know youâre already disillusioned with this marriage. I know your husband is already starting to irritate you. I know you think you could have done a lot better. And I know you still can.â
She wondered how he could be so perceptive. He was a man, after all. Werenât all men emotional dolts?
She snipped the last of the tape away from his head. His hair looked like it had been vandalized.
âWhat about you?â she asked. âYou say your wife hates you but you cried when I asked about her.â
âBooze tears donât count. Iâm ready for a new beginning.â
âYou should take her out of your wallet,â she said. âSheâs wasting space.â
â˘
Mickey had looked everywhere downstairs for a safe. Heâd checked for places where the carpet wasnât tacked down. Heâd rapped his knuckles between the studs of every wall to make sure they were hollow. Heâd scanned the ceiling for attic hatches. Heâd pulled down every book and some pretty heavy art. He was frustrated and he was tired. Where the hell else would someone keep financial records? As far as Mickey could see, Avery didnât have a computer and he didnât have a safe and he didnât have any files for investments or bank accounts. Could he be totally dependent on his smart phone? Mickey didnât think the financial dealings of a rich guy like Avery could be managed on a four-inch screen, but what did he know?
He stepped into Averyâs office and flopped into the fancy mesh desk chair to regroup. He ran his finger across the hand-crafted birdâs-eye maple trim that edged Averyâs desk and felt something above the top of the right wall of the kneehole. It was a barely-visible slit that he hadnât noticed when heâd first searched the room. He saw a matching slit on the left side. He reached between them and pulled on the trim. A hidden drawer slid out on glides, less than an inch deep, just big enough for Averyâs MacBook.
Mickey smiled. Maybe he wasnât so stupid after all. He opened the notebook and watched it wake up. Averyâs desktop resolved; no password required. The shmuck had assumed he was safe in his own home. Mickey felt a thrill of accomplishment in having shattered that complacency.
He clicked on a Wells Fargo icon and found himself staring at a login screen.
â˘
Lana watched Mickey top the stairs with a MacBook Air, grinning at her like a gladiator presenting his opponentâs severed head to the Queen.
âLookee what I found,â he said. âJust need a few passwords from my buddy Avery.â
âChange of plans,â she said. Mickeyâs face morphed from confusion to suspicion and back as she raised her arm. She was holding a gunâAveryâs Glockâaiming at Mickeyâs heart.
âWhat the hell?â said Mickey.
âSurprise,â said Avery. He lifted his hands. They were no longer taped to the chair. He swung his legs forward. She had cut him free.
âYou conned me into marrying you, Mickey,â she said. âYou pretended to be someone youâre not.â
âBaby, I love you.â
âHoneymoonâs over,â she said. âIâm moving on.â
âWith him?â He shot Avery a sneer.
âOnly losers slap people around for no reason,â said Avery. âSmart women donât find that attractive.â
Mickeyâs jaw was working overtime again. He looked at Lana. âYouâre dumping me for a fucking lawyer?â
She was enjoying Mickeyâs humiliation more than sheâd thought she would. She gave Avery a lusty grin.
âI like a man who thinks things through,â she said. âIt makes me want to do dirty things.â
Mickey erupted. ââYou fucking bitch!â He launched himself at her.
Lana fired a shot into his chest.
Mickey went down. He took a labored breath and sucked air through his wound. Sheâd hit a lung. Mickey stared at her disbelievingly. His lips moved but he couldnât speak.
She felt unsettled. Sheâd never shot anyone before. She looked at Avery to make sure heâd caught it all on video. He held the iPhone up for Mickey to see.
âYou shouldnât have gotten violent,â said Avery. âNow itâs self-defense.â
âSee, Mickey?â She kissed her fingertips and touched them to Averyâs lips. âHe thinks things through.â
âGo ahead,â said Avery. âFinish my thought.â
Lana pointed the Glock at Mickeyâs forehead and fired again.
She stared at Mickeyâs corpse as the relentless pounding of the ocean slowly washed the gunshotâs echo from her ears.
âTill death do us part,â she said.
Avery wiped his prints off the packet of heroin, knelt beside Mickey and pressed the dead manâs fingerprints onto the glassine. Then he slipped the envelope into Mickeyâs pocket.
âHereâs what we tell the police,â said Avery. âYou were unhappy in your new marriage. You went for a walk on the beach to think about it. I saw you and struck up a conversation. When you heard I was a lawyer you asked if I knew anything about annulments. I invited you up to discuss it. Your husband must have been following you. He barged in, raving like a lunatic. I tried to get the gun I keep in the sideboard, but he jumped me and it fell. He knocked me down and dove for the gun but you grabbed it first. He threatened to kill you and I started a phone video in case you wanted to press charges. Thatâs when he attacked you. You were afraid for your life. You had to shoot him.â
âSo much to remember.â
âIâll do the talking. As your attorney, Iâll advise you not to speak.â
They heard the wail of an approaching siren. Someone must have heard the shots.
Lana stared out at the crashing waves reflecting the moonlight like small explosions of neon white. A tear rolled down her cheek. Sheâd always dreamed of a life on the beach.
Craig Faustus Buck is an L.A.-based journalist, nonfiction book author, TV writer-producer, screenwriter, short-story writer and novelist. Among his six nonfiction books, two were #1 NYT bestsellers. He wrote the Oscar-nominated short film Overnight Sensation. He was one of the writers on the seminal miniseries V: The Final Battle. His first noir novel, Go Down Hard, is forthcoming from Brash Books and was First Runner Up for Killer Nashville’s Claymore Award. His indie feature, Smuggling for Gandhi, is in preproduction. Stark Raving Group published his novella, Psycho Logic
in 2014, the novella’s prequel, his short story “Dead End,” is an Anthony Award nominee. “Honeymoon Sweet” was previously selected for inclusion in the Bouchercon 2014 anthology.

Leave a Reply to pattyCancel reply