Cold Case

Cold Case

by Linda Barnes

Narrated by C. J. Critt

Unabridged — 14 hours, 12 minutes

Cold Case

Cold Case

by Linda Barnes

Narrated by C. J. Critt

Unabridged — 14 hours, 12 minutes

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Overview

Best-selling author Linda Barnes' witty private eye, Carlotta Carlyle, approaches challenging assignments in proper Boston with savvy and compassion. In Cold Case, a decades-old missing person case turns red-hot, threatening Carlotta's composure and a Massachusetts political race. A mysterious client comes to Carlotta secretly with a wild tale: he has obtained parts of a recently written novel by Thea Janis, the literary sensation who disappeared 24 years ago. As soon as Carlotta begins to hunt for the author, her client calls off the search. But she accidentally discovers Thea's grave in a nearby cemetery-unearthing a tangle of lies and scandal that Boston's most prominent citizens will do anything to suppress. With her Edgar Award-winning talents, Linda Barnes creates suspenseful mysteries packed with well-crafted plot twists and stunning surprise endings. Narrator C.J. Critt perfectly voices blue-blooded socialites as well as quirky folk from the seamier side of town.

Editorial Reviews

Publishers Weekly - Publisher's Weekly

In less capable hands, a tale about a 14-year-old literary sensation who's been missing and presumed dead for 24 years would be hard to believe. But Barnes's writing is so confident and her characters so engrossing that readers will have no trouble suspending disbelief for her seventh Carlotta Carlyle adventure (after Hardware). Adam Mayhew shows up on PI Carlyle's Cambridge, Mass., doorstep with the first chapter of a manuscript that he says could only have been penned by Thea Janis, who disappeared so long ago. When her clothes were later found on a beach, Thea Janis was presumed to be a suicide. But Mayhew, a relative of the author, insists that the manuscript-which makes reference to the fall of the Berlin Wall-proves she is alive and writing. Carlyle's task is to find the writer-with nothing to go on except that the gardener who worked at the private school the girl attended disappeared at the same time. At first, the nimble-minded Carlyle is skeptical that the manuscript is by Janis. But the more she reads, the more captivated she becomes-by the writing and the writer. And when Mayhew tries to get the manuscript back again, she's sure something big is afoot. Janis, it turns out, was a pseudonym for Dorothy Cameron, who came from a high-profile family. In fact, her brother, Garnet Cameron, is currently running for governor of Massachusetts. Why is the Cameron family so desperate to get the new manuscript back and Carlyle out of their lives? There are some preposterous turns, including allusions to JFK and Castro, and recovered memory plays a large role. But the pages keep turning, and Carlyle's wry voice is a bracing counterpoint to the lifestyles of the rich and famous it describes. Major ad/promo. (Apr.)

Library Journal

Although she has several mystery series to her credit, Barnes seems to save her best stuff for her Carlotta Carlyle novels. Here, the detective and part-time cabby gets involved in a literary mystery.

From the Publisher

"With a stylish pro like Barnes doing the plotting, this chilling case won’t leave you cold.” —People
 
“An intricate, whodunit-and-why…Barnes is an adroit storyteller and she makes her large cast of interesting characters come alive.” – Chicago Tribune
 
“Absorbing . . . Barnes keeps readers flipping pages.” —Orlando Sentinel
 
“Barnes is a master storyteller, and her latest—in a series that just keeps getting better—is a riveting read that is at once poignant, funny, sad, suspenseful, and hopeful. A must for every mystery fan!” —Booklist
 
“A satisfying, complex tale.” —Entertainment Weekly

 

Product Details

BN ID: 2940171026585
Publisher: Recorded Books, LLC
Publication date: 10/26/2012
Series: Carlotta Carlyle Series , #7
Edition description: Unabridged

Read an Excerpt

As I marched toward the front door, I wondered what lies Vandenburg, the sleaze, had slipped by me, what half-truths he'd told.

What lies would this client try?

With a touch--hell, a wallop--of vanity, I consider myself an expert in the field of lies, a collector, if you will. I've seen liars as fresh and obvious as newborn babes; a quick twitch of the eye, a sudden glance at the floor immediately giving the game away. I've interviewed practiced, skilled liars, blessed with the impeccable timing of ace stand-up comics. I don't know why I recognize lies. Somebody will be shooting his mouth, and I'll feel or hear a change of tone, a shift of pace. Maybe it's instinct. Maybe I got so used to lies when I was a cop that I suspect everyone.

I'd rather trust people. Given the choice.

My potential client beamed a hundred-watt smile when I opened the door, bounding into the foyer like an overgrown puppy. Even if he'd been a much younger man I'd have found his outright enthusiasm strange, since the number of people pleased to visit a private investigator is noticeably fewer than the number eagerly anticipating gum surgery.

He'd seemed both agitated and exhilarated on the phone that afternoon, otherwise I wouldn't have agreed to a Sunday evening appointment. He'd mentioned a missing person, given his name with no hint of reluctance. I'd checked with the Boston police; there was no 3501, i.e., missing person file, currently devoted to anyone sharing a last name with Mr. Adam Mayhew. Which left a ton of possibilities. The person in question could have been reported as a 2633, the current code for a runaway child. Could have had a different last name.Hadn't been absent the required twenty-four hours. The missing individual might be considered a voluntary--a walkaway or runaway adult.

Possibly my client-to-be knew exactly where the missing person could be found. Quick case; low fee.

Which would be too bad, because the sixtyish gentleman currently shifting his weight from one foot to the other as though testing my wooden floorboards looked like he could donate megabucks to the worthy cause of my upkeep and not miss a single dollar. His shoes were Bally or a damned good imitation, slip-on tassel loafers with neither a too-new nor a too-used sheen. Well-maintained classics, indicating a man with more than one pair of shoes to his wardrobe. A man with quietly expensive taste and access to a good dry cleaning establishment. A formal soul, rigged out in full business attire on a shirtsleeves, sweat-hot evening.

No wedding band. Inconclusive. A class ring, the Harvard Veritas, common enough around here, worn with casual pride.

Hair silvering nicely, hairline receding. Height: five-nine, which made it easy for me, from my six-one vantage, to note that his crown was not yet thinning.

Fingernails buffed and filed. Hands well cared for. Prosperous. My kind of client. A lawyer? A professor? A respected businessman? The speed from phone call to initial appointment had curtailed my research.

"Mr. Mayhew?"

"Yes," he agreed cheerfully. "And you're Miss Carlyle".

He'd been eyeing me as carefully as I'd been observing him. I wondered what conclusions he'd drawn from my disheveled appearance.

If Paolina's unexpected package of cash hadn't arrived, if I'd skipped the Miami phone call, if said phone call hadn't taken such a daunting chunk of time, I might have attempted to dress for success. Worn a little makeup to accent my green--well, hazel, really, almost green--eyes, and belittle my thrice-broken nose. I'd have done battle with my tangled red curls.

I opened my mouth to utter polite excuses, realized that Mr. Mayhew didn't seem to expect them. I liked the way his level glance concentrated on my eyes, as though the measure of a woman were not in her clothes or her curves, but hidden in a secret compartment beyond all external gifts and curses.

I nodded him down the single step to my living room-cum-office.

"You may call me Adam," he said.

"Carlotta," I replied. I liked his lived-in, good-humored face--lines, pouches, bags, and all. His eyes were blue behind bifocal lenses, and seemed shy and oddly defenseless, as though the glass barrier were necessary for protection as well as visual acuity.

He toted a battered monogrammed briefcase of caramel-colored leather. Forty years ago, it might have been a college graduation gift.

"I've wanted to do this for so long," he said as he settled into the upright chair next to my desk.

"Excuse me," I said. "You've wanted to do what for so long? Visit a PI's office?"

If the guy was a flake I wanted him out. He didn't seem like a thrill-seeker. He seemed genuine. Sympathetic. So sympathetic I was tempted to tell him my troubles with Paolina and the drug money. I shook myself out of it.

"On the phone--" I began.

"Do you remember Thea Janis?" he said at the same time, glancing at me expectantly. "The writer."

"Writer" jogged my memory.

"It was a long time ago," I said, struggling to recall a faint whisper of ancient scandal relegated to some distant storage locker in my mind like so much cast-off furniture. "I remember reading her book."

"Not when it was published," he said. "You're too young."

"When I was fifteen, maybe sixteen." Over half a lifetime ago. My mother had bought it for me three months before she died. Did I still have it? The title hovered tantalizingly out of reach, a ripe fruit on a high branch.

"Thea was younger than that when she wrote it," he said. He could have uttered the words dismissively. Or flippantly. But he spoke with longing, with fervency and desire. Triumph, as he added, "She was fourteen. Imagine. Fourteen. The critics didn't know that, at first. Unqualified praise. When they learned the book had been penned by a child, a teenager, the bouquets turned a bit thorny, almost as if some critics felt they'd been duped, not given the real goods somehow. Jealousy. Nothing more than jealousy."

"Why do you say that?"

"She was the goods," he answered simply. "A prodigy. Nietzsche wrote like an adult at twelve. We find it more acceptable in music. Mozart."

"Thea Janis was a literary Mozart?"

"See? You can't keep the skepticism out of your voice. It's automatic. Cinematic prodigies, okay. Visual arts, okay, with reservations. We prefer the paintings of a Grandma Moses. We glorify poets and authors who begin careers in their fifties, or later. I wonder if it's endemic to the beast," he continued softly, almost as though he were speaking to himself, "a way in which humans maintain belief in their own potential: Someday I'll write a brilliant novel, paint a great picture...A way to keep the meaninglessness of life at bay."

"We seem to have wandered a bit from Thea Janis," I said.

"Excuse me. Please."

The thought washed over me like a wave of ice water.

"She's not the missing person you talked about on the phone, is she?" I asked.

"Yes," he said. "Of course it's Thea."

"But she's been missing for--"

"Twenty-four years," he said.

"Twenty-four years!" I echoed.

"Yes," he said, quite calmly. Twenty-four years, as if it were the same as twenty-four hours.

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