Secondhand Smoke (Annie Seymour Series #2)

Secondhand Smoke (Annie Seymour Series #2)

by Karen E. Olson
Secondhand Smoke (Annie Seymour Series #2)

Secondhand Smoke (Annie Seymour Series #2)

by Karen E. Olson

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Overview

From award-winning author Karen E. Olson comes a nail-biting mystery from her Annie Seymour series. 

Awakened by a loud commotion, New Haven reporter Annie Seymour wanders outside to discover a favorite Italian eatery engulfed in fire. Even more shocking is the bullet-ridden body found in the debris. Then things get personal. Annie's father, a Vegas casino boss, suddenly arrives in town and the restaurant hires hunky private eye Vinny DeLucia, with whom she has some unfinished business.

Now trying to cut through the smoke to uncover the real story, Annie questions her father's connection to the crime. Between the FBI, her would-be hero Vinny, and some raucous animal rights protestors, Annie must peer through the familiar town houses, worn-out sidewalks, and back alleys of her youth to determine a killer's motives-and avoid being burned next...

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780759568570
Publisher: Grand Central Publishing
Publication date: 09/27/2006
Series: Annie Seymour Series , #2
Sold by: Hachette Digital, Inc.
Format: eBook
Pages: 214
File size: 573 KB

About the Author

Karen E. Olson, a longtime journalist and editor, has been nominated for a Shamus Award, was a finalist for the Gumshoe Award, and winner of the Sara Anne Freed Memorial Award. She has also written the Annie Seymour and Tattoo Shop mystery series. She lives in Connecticut.

Read an Excerpt

Secondhand Smoke

A Mystery
By Karen E. Olson

MYSTERIOUS PRESS

Copyright © 2006 Karen E. Olson
All right reserved.

ISBN: 0-892-96025-6


Chapter One

I smelled smoke. My feet hit the floor before my eyes opened, my nose leading me into the kitchen. I flicked the switch next to the refrigerator, and the light above the stove blinded me for a second before I saw all the dials were on "off." I turned toward the living room, walked around the counter, my eyes searching every nook and cranny until I saw the red glow outside, catty-corner from my brownstone on Wooster Square.

Jesus. I moved to the window and stared. The flames danced between the skeletal limbs of the trees. In my half-sleep state, it was hypnotizing. Until the first siren pierced the air. Shit, I'd go deaf if I stood here. When I moved, my reflection caught my eye-I was naked, standing at my window with the lights on. The clock on the wall read 6:00 A.M. The last time I was awoken at such an ungodly hour, I'd had a dead girl to deal with.

At least I wasn't hung over this time.

I could go back to sleep and pretend I hadn't noticed. But the chorus of sirens below kept getting louder; it would be easier just to drag my ass out there and see what was on fire.

As I got dressed in the bedroom, I glanced outside again and noticed it was snowing. I could see it in the streetlight below my window.And it was coming down pretty hard. Nothing worse than a fucking snowstorm at 6:00 A.M. on Thanksgiving Day.

I found my boots in the back of the closet and rummaged around in a drawer for a pair of gloves. One look in the mirror told me my bedhead was out of control. A hat was definitely called for. I finally found one stuck in the sleeve of my winter coat. A notebook in my pocket, a couple of mechanical pencils, and I was ready.

Yeah, right.

I let myself out the front door of my brownstone, one of my neighbors behind me.

"Annie ..." I heard Amber Pfeiffer's breathy voice. "Annie, wait up."

I turned to see her mousy brown hair sticking up on the back of her head. She needed a hat worse than I did.

"What's going on?" she asked.

"That's what I'm going to find out," I said, not even trying to keep the irritation out of my voice. I'd met her and my upstairs neighbor Walter a couple of months ago. They had proved completely useless as they watched me getting mugged, and I hadn't forgotten it.

And speak of the devil, here was Walter, who bore an uncanny resemblance to a pit bull, coming down the stairs with a cup of coffee. "Something's on fire," he said, proving that perhaps he was at least as smart as a pit bull. He barely glanced at me-we'd never bonded-and smiled at Amber, pulling a ski cap down over his crew cut with one hand and offering to get her a cup, too.

Amber declined, and I skirted around her during the distraction, trying to get a head start on them. But they stayed on my heels, and as we got closer, I saw that most of the neighborhood had turned out as well. Who gives a shit about a little snow when there's a raging fire down the street?

I tried to ignore Amber's patter, something about how I must know a lot about fires since I report about them for the newspaper, as I gingerly crossed the street, squinting through the snow and smoke to see what was on fire.

It was Prego. Probably the best Italian restaurant in the entire city, in my personal opinion. I couldn't get enough of their lobster ravioli. Washed down with a fine glass of Chianti, it was a perfect meal.

I slipped on the slick sidewalk and fell on my ass.

"Shit."

"Good to see you, too," said a familiar voice, and I looked up into Vinny DeLucia's eyes. I hadn't seen him for about two months, but I wasn't surprised to see him here, since his apartment was just a block away in the other direction on the square. I had imagined that when I saw him again, I might have the upper hand. And here I was with a wet butt, looking anything but attractive.

He held out his hand, and I grabbed it, pulling myself up. "Long time no see," I said. I glanced around, but Amber and Walter had finally gone off on their own and were talking to someone else now, several feet away.

Vinny's eyes lingered on mine, and he smiled that sexy smile that turned me into Jell-O. "You look good."

"Fucking liar," I said, brushing the slush off my jeans.

Vinny chuckled, his resemblance to Frank Sinatra once again throwing me off guard. "I forgot how charming you are."

I felt a tingle that I hadn't felt in a long time, but there was something in the way. "How's your fiancé?" I asked.

The smile disappeared, and he shrugged but didn't say anything.

So that was the way it was. I was disappointed, since he'd told me his feelings for her had waned. If his kisses were any indication, well, they had been in big trouble. But maybe they'd worked it out. Which sucked for me, since I still harbored unconsummated feelings for him.

I couldn't spend valuable time thinking about this. "I have to find out what's going on with the fire, okay?"

I moved past him, deeper into the smoke and to the corner of the square, but I could still feel his eyes on me.

I sidled up to the small wrought-iron fence that circled the square, but I couldn't get any closer because of all the commotion. Flashing lights blinded me as firefighters' silhouettes moved as if in a silent movie, the shouts and loud truck engines their music. The one-story white wooden building squatted on a little plot between two three-story architecturally historic gems. The only things keeping the houses from catching fire were two fairly wide driveways on either side of the restaurant and two walls of water cascading from hoses held by the firefighters.

Prego had never flaunted its reputation, rather quietly understated it with a small oval sign by the front door that announced its identity in black and gold. The sign was illuminated by the streetlamp with a sort of halo effect as flames leaped ferociously from the windows around it.

It was a goddamn shame.

I grabbed the sleeve of one of the firemen as he moved in front of me, and I stared into his sooty face for a moment before recognizing him.

"Al, it's me, Annie. Is the chief around?" I shouted over the din.

His heavy glove pointed a few feet away. "Thanks!" I shouted again, but I didn't think he heard me.

Len Freelander had been fire chief for exactly one week. The last time I'd seen him was at his swearing-in ceremony. He'd looked dapper in his dress uniform, his hair tucked neatly under his cap, his hands in white gloves. This morning, despite the snow, sweat poured out from under his hat; his hands were red and chapped from the freezing water, his yellow jacket practically black from the smoke.

"Any idea how this started?" I shouted.

He stared at me as if I were from Mars.

"Annie Seymour? The Herald?" I reminded him.

His eyes flickered with recognition. "Oh, yeah." He shook his head. "No, no, we can't make any speculations at this point."

We heard a shout, and Len started running. My own adrenaline was pumping, so I ran after him.

"I'm bringing the guys out. The structure's not sound," I heard a fireman tell him as we got closer to the restaurant. And after a pause: "There's a body in there. We can't get it out."

I felt an arm around my waist, pulling me back.

"Let go of me!"

"You can't go any farther." It was that fireman, Al.

"But what about a body? There's someone in there?"

He pulled me across the street, back to the square, and left me alone without answering my questions. No surprise there.

I watched as four silhouettes emerged from the building; they weren't running, but they moved efficiently toward the trucks.

"What's going on?" Vinny was back at my side.

"Sounds like they found a body."

"Inside?"

"Yeah."

"There wouldn't be anyone in there this morning."

"Don't they make their own bread? They do that pretty early."

Vinny shook his head. "When was the last time you ate at Prego?"

"I dunno. Six months ago?" So Prego was a little out of my price range. I could indulge only a couple of times a year.

"Their baker died a month ago, and Sal hasn't been able to find anyone he likes to replace him, so he's been getting bread at Benini's on Grand Avenue." He paused. "And anyway, Sal doesn't open on Thanksgiving."

Vinny's parents owned a pizza place on Wooster Street, just a couple of blocks away, so it wasn't a shocker that he would know all that. And because I pride myself on being antisocial in the neighborhood, it wasn't a shocker that I wouldn't be privy to any goings-on outside my own little cocoon up the street.

"I hope it's not Sal-the body, I mean," I said, thinking about the cheerful man with the hooked nose who gave my father his first job as a dishwasher way back when. If it was Sal Amato, my dad would be crushed. I didn't want to be the one who would have to call him in Vegas and tell him.

The look on Vinny's face told me he'd been wondering the same thing and dreading it, too. But before I could say anything, I heard a voice behind me. "Have you found out how it started?"

Dick Whitfield was like the cockroach that wouldn't go live in the little motel under my sink.

"Why the fuck are you here?"

Vinny's eyebrows shot up into his forehead, and I rolled my eyes at him. It's just too hard to try to explain to anyone that Dick needed to be kept in his place if I wanted to get any real work done. He was still a rookie reporter, even if he had proven himself a little useful the last time we'd worked together. Marty Thompson, the city editor, had wisely kept him away from me for the last month. But here he was again, breathing down my neck in my neck of the woods.

Dick looked like he was going to back down, but then: "Hey, we can work on something together again."

Vinny didn't turn away from me fast enough. I saw the smile, and I was going to remember it.

"Why don't you go home," I started to say, when an explosion crashed through the thick, icy air.

(Continues...)



Excerpted from Secondhand Smoke by Karen E. Olson Copyright © 2006 by Karen E. Olson. 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.

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