Lily White in Detroit

Private investigator Lily White has a client with a faulty moral compass. When the client is arrested for murdering his wife and her alleged lover, Lily follows her intuition and her own leads. If she's wrong, she'll at least know she did her job.

Detroit police detective Derrick Paxton remembers Lily from another case. He understands she suffers from PTSD and thinks her judgment is impaired. He goes after her client and the evidence he needs to close the case. When Lily is kidnapped, the case takes an unexpected turn.

In a sometimes racially divided city, a black cop and a white PI work together to peel back every layer to find the truth. What they find leads them to each other, but do they have enough to bring the true criminals to justice?

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Lily White in Detroit

Private investigator Lily White has a client with a faulty moral compass. When the client is arrested for murdering his wife and her alleged lover, Lily follows her intuition and her own leads. If she's wrong, she'll at least know she did her job.

Detroit police detective Derrick Paxton remembers Lily from another case. He understands she suffers from PTSD and thinks her judgment is impaired. He goes after her client and the evidence he needs to close the case. When Lily is kidnapped, the case takes an unexpected turn.

In a sometimes racially divided city, a black cop and a white PI work together to peel back every layer to find the truth. What they find leads them to each other, but do they have enough to bring the true criminals to justice?

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Lily White in Detroit

Lily White in Detroit

by Cynthia Harrison
Lily White in Detroit

Lily White in Detroit

by Cynthia Harrison

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Overview

Private investigator Lily White has a client with a faulty moral compass. When the client is arrested for murdering his wife and her alleged lover, Lily follows her intuition and her own leads. If she's wrong, she'll at least know she did her job.

Detroit police detective Derrick Paxton remembers Lily from another case. He understands she suffers from PTSD and thinks her judgment is impaired. He goes after her client and the evidence he needs to close the case. When Lily is kidnapped, the case takes an unexpected turn.

In a sometimes racially divided city, a black cop and a white PI work together to peel back every layer to find the truth. What they find leads them to each other, but do they have enough to bring the true criminals to justice?


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781509221752
Publisher: Wild Rose Press
Publication date: 08/15/2018
Pages: 248
Product dimensions: 5.00(w) x 8.00(h) x 0.52(d)

Read an Excerpt

CHAPTER 1

Lily

I used to have a different name, a different life. Every day in Detroit, I lost another inch of my old identity and didn't miss it. It came back one night while I worked a routine case, staking out a woman from my SUV on a sweaty summer night. My video recorder rolled film as Roseann Heyl, accused adulteress, rang the front bell of the condo building where her supposed lover lived. I filmed Roseann waiting for him to buzz her inside. I was hoping they'd kiss before they disappeared into his condo.

Then I panned to Roseann's stalker. The stalker puzzled me, but my client, Jimmy Heyl, Roseann's husband, had been strangely unconcerned about that weird twist in the case. The stalker was very good. Roseann didn't appear to ever guess she was being followed. When I told Jimmy about Roseann's stalker, he would only say, "I'm paying you to videotape her screwing, not be her damn bodyguard." He had a point. Still, I couldn't help but move my camera back and forth between Roseann and the stalker. Where she went, he followed. There had to be a reason, but I'd tried pressing Jimmy for details and he told me to forget the stalker; he wanted a different film. I figured maybe Jimmy had two PIs working the case. Maybe that's how these things were done in Grosse Pointe, the high-class enclave where Jimmy and Roseann lived.

I wondered if I'd be able to get incriminating videotape tonight. So far, I had a collection of film where nothing happened. Nothing had happened when Roseann met Thomas Kennedy after work for drinks. Nothing happened, not a kiss or caress, when they chose a cozy spot in Greektown for dinner. Nothing for sure happened at her book club, an all-female gathering where Kennedy never appeared, although the stalker did.

At least two minutes had passed since I'd parked and started recording. If Thomas Kennedy was my boyfriend, I'd be pissed because he'd kept me waiting, but it was hard to tell Roseann's mood from this distance. She wasn't tapping her foot or hitting the buzzer again. She just stood there, and probably six feet behind her, just in front of a stand of leafy trees, her stalker stood there too.

While taping this nothing scene, I puzzled out a way to get inside the Flatiron Building and into Thomas's condo for the money shot I'd been hired to record. I'd scanned the windows when I'd arrived a few minutes ago, and only three of the units had open blinds. I'd gotten my hands on an owner's directory a few days ago and knew which unit was Kennedy's. His blinds weren't open. I wasn't willing to do anything illegal like break into the building and then somehow steal into Kennedy's apartment. Unfortunately, these two did not frequent the kind of sleazy hotels whose gaping drapes allowed me, from a discreet distance, to film people caught in the act.

I decided somewhere in the third minute of filming that I was done with this type of case. Missing persons and insurance fraud only from now on. In the still sweaty night, a rustle of wind went through the trees, bringing me back to what I was filming. The stalker had raised a gun, elongated by a silencer, and I caught the flame from the shot, like a kitchen match striking in the dark.

The sound had not been entirely suppressed. What I'd mistaken for trees rustling in a stray breeze had been the weapon discharging. Horrified, I quickly panned to Roseann and saw her body hit the ground. I popped open the glove box and got out my Sig, but by the time I'd climbed out of the car and started running toward Roseann, the stalker was gone. Weapon in hand, I rushed to Roseann's side. I smelled blood before I saw it pooling around her hair. My eyes swept the trees. He was gone. I tucked the Sig into the waistband of my jean shorts, then dialed 9-1-1. I put the phone on speaker and set it down on the brick pavers as the emergency operator explained in a calm voice how to check for a pulse. I knelt beside Roseann and did as instructed. The skin on Roseann's neck behind her ear was smooth, still warm.

That was the moment I remembered kneeling down to another dead body, in another life, checking for a pulse, feeling nothing but still warm skin. It had been summer then, too.

"No pulse," I told the operator, whisking my fingers away just before the panic started. The episodes feel like I'm under flashing lights, then everything fades into fog. My doctor calls it a fugue state. I'm not sure which is worse, a terrifying attack of sheer panic or going into the know-nothing fog.

I'm not sure how I got back to my car. One minute I was kneeling next to a dead body, and the next, Detective Derrick Paxton knocked on the passenger side of my window. I came out of the fog, immediately panicked, my entire body jerking in a strong startle reflex. He waited a beat while I tried to collect all my flying parts with deep breaths.

I'm in PTSD recovery. I hadn't had a panic attack or popped a sedative for a couple of months, not since that first time I met Paxton. It must have been the position I'd been in tonight, kneeling over Roseann's dead body, that triggered everything.

"Lily." Paxton put a period after my name. I kept up the deep breathing as uniforms and EMS, an entire awful circus, rolled past us. I unlocked the passenger door, and Paxton slid in. "Who you working for?"

I took a breath. Then another. I held out my hand to show Paxton it was steady. I'd had to go through my PTSD story with him last time we'd met. He didn't look impressed with my supposed calm, just waited for an answer. Finally, I blurted, "What about client privilege?"

He didn't say anything, just waited for me to do the right thing. That got me more than if he'd insisted I tell him everything immediately.

"Jimmy Heyl," I admitted. Paxton would have heard of him. Jimmy was a big deal around town. Businessman with his own investment firm. Friend to public television and local charities. Supporter of the opera house and season-ticket holder to private boxes for viewing local sports teams. Paxton didn't ask anything else. I was grateful and surprised that he didn't request my video recorder. What had I done with it? Ah, right, I'd dropped it into the glove box when I'd pulled out my gun. I started to feel distant from myself, like looking out the wrong end of a telescope, but I pressed my hips into the back of my seat and felt the security of a warm gun. Even as I tried for composure, I struggled with the anger I felt about this relapse. I needed to give myself a break. After all, it had been a while since I'd seen a dead person.

Paxton asked if I'd witnessed the shooting, and I said yes. I showed him the direction where I'd seen the stalker. I admitted I hadn't seen which way he'd run. "He just sort of melted into the trees," I said.

From what seemed like a long way away, I heard him say, "I'll be tied up for a while here, but I'll need a full statement."

"Can we talk at my place instead of me coming down to the station?" I must have looked as bad as I felt, because he nodded, then got out of my car and went to do his job. I started the engine, and while I had had every intention of heading home when I said so to Paxton, driving calmed me. So I went to Corktown instead.

* * *

One thing I like about Detroit is it has neighborhoods. Famous ones like Greektown and Indian Village, but smaller ones too, like the Irish- infused Corktown. Jimmy's girlfriend, Abby, was the barkeep at the Old Shamrock, so I checked there first. Yes, Jimmy cheats, was cheating well before he suspected Roseann of doing the same. It's a dirty, double-standard world.

The place was quiet, empty but for the two of them, this not being St. Patrick's Day and fake Irishmen in short supply.

"I'm very sorry, but —" I didn't know how to tell someone his spouse was dead. I looked at Abby standing there. Should she hear this? "Bad news," I finally said.

"Can we get a little privacy, Abby?" Jimmy wasn't really asking. Abby vanished into the kitchen just off the bar. We had the room to ourselves. After I told him as gently as possible that Roseann had been murdered, Jimmy went behind the bar and poured himself a vodka. Neat.

"Been here long?" I had to ask. The whole stalker thing was falling into a new category for me, but I owed it to my client to figure out if he'd hired the hit man, or if maybe he was the stalker himself.

"Only all night." He poured another shot into his rocks glass, again omitting the rocks, and came out from behind the bar.

"Anybody else, other than Abby, in here tonight?"

"Yeah." Jimmy was a handsome guy, mid-forties, startling blue eyes, full head of dark hair. Right now, he looked stunned.

"Who, Jimmy? Who else was here?"

"Everybody." He glanced around the empty room, biceps bunching under his shirt. His blank face slowly rotated back to me. "Let me think." He drank the vodka and sat back down. "Abby," he yelled. When she came back in, it was clear from the way her eyes bugged out that she'd heard everything. "Give Ms. White here the names."

"Names?" Abby said, acting as if she hadn't heard a thing.

Jimmy just looked at her.

"Sorry, Jimmy," she said, lowering her eyelids. She had just turned to speak to me when Paxton walked in. Clever Jimmy sent me a quick text before the detective was fully in the door. I saw him type it, heard my phone ping. Jimmy gave me a look full of significance, but I didn't know what it meant. I'd read his text later.

Paxton, an immaculate dresser who wore well-cut suits with elegant ties like tonight's baby blue and navy pinstripe, pushed away the peanut shells that littered the floor with his highly buffed leather shoes. I wondered if he resisted an impulse to shake his foot loose from the debris. He flashed his badge at Jimmy. "You can go now, White." He didn't even spare me a glance, but his voice said he was pissed. "Go home this time."

"Should I call your lawyer?" I said to Jimmy, glancing at Paxton.

"No," they both answered.

Paxton wanted me out of the equation, and Jimmy thought his alibi was solid. Paxton would just have to get used to me sticking to my client until the job was done, and Jimmy's confidence about not needing a lawyer made me feel he probably wasn't the stalker-shooter. So did he hire a hit man or not? Maybe his text would tell me something.

I got in my SUV and checked the text from Jimmy. The time came up first. Close to closing time, which is two a.m. in Detroit. I touched the text app.

FIND STALKER

All caps. Jimmy took time to lock those caps in. The significance of his last look at me was now clear. He wanted me on the case in a totally different capacity. My hands wanted to tremble on the wheel of the SUV, but I wouldn't let fear consume me. I wanted to find the shadow man who'd murdered Roseann. I wanted to know why he'd done it, who'd hired him. I wanted to know if Roseann and Kennedy were really having an affair. After that, not before, I could close the case.

Worst thing that could happen? I suppose I could get myself killed, but I was half-dead already. I'd attempted a resurrection of sorts when I'd left my old life behind, but it hadn't worked. Not fully. Not if a murder could put me back in the grip of a panic I couldn't claw my way out of, like one of those nightmares where you're trying to move away from the monster but you're paralyzed. I spent several years dealing therapeutically with that panic. Back then, when I was in the grips of a panic so strong I thought it would stop my heart, sometimes I wished it would. But I'm better now. I have to be. With a panic attack, you only feel like you're dying. But I'm still alive. For now. And my job depends on me staying that way.

I didn't kid myself about my job being so special. Sometimes I found men who skipped out on child support. Sometimes I caught people cheating the system with false medical claims. It might be tiny compared to what Paxton did, but everyone needs a purpose, and mine was a grim determination to not let the bad guys win. This type of job came naturally to me. There'd been two bad guys in my past — one was in the grave and the other in prison. And I'd put them both there.

As usual, when even a hint of the past comes to mind, I pushed it away and thought about the current situation. Two things occurred to me: one, Jimmy was innocent. Two, he was guilty, but he thought sending me that text would convince the stupid girl detective of his innocence. Either way, I'd show him Lily White was made of stronger stuff.

As I tooled up Woodward Avenue, images from tonight's video unreeled in my head. My hands jumped on the wheel. Nervous tension traveled up my arms and into my neck and throat then shot down to my stomach. I needed a pill. I quickly pulled into the parking garage of the Iroquois Casino, the place that held the suite I called home these days. It sounds weird, living in a casino, but I feel safe here. I'm convinced my mother would say I was putting her money to good use. She would know this casino was my friendly neighborhood and my refuge. It's also where I met Paxton for the first time. But that's another story.

Once inside my room atop the casino, I popped a tab of anxiety medication, called room service, and ran a bath. As I soaked, I mentally filed through the dozens of cases I'd worked since obtaining my PI license. None had come to such deadly conclusions as the tragedy tonight, but I'd seen assault and witnessed domestic abuse more than once. There had been a knife fight early on, which made me believe some of the negative hype about the city. The knife incident triggered a strobe, and before I fogged out, I'd run down the street and into the Iroquois, where I reported the crime to the desk clerk and asked for a room in the same breath. Not that I was stupid enough to believe a hotel lock would keep me safe if someone wanted to do me harm, but I'd needed an immediate bolt hole and later found it suited me.

For example, tonight the soaking tub was perfect, the clean towels thick and warm, and the lavender spa products smelled nice. Lavender was supposed to relax.

I let the bubbles and the meds do their work until I heard room service knock.

I folded myself into the thick robe I grabbed from a hook in the bathroom. The robe covered me pretty much from head to toe, so I padded across the bedroom to the living area, opened the door, and allowed the waiter to roll in my dinner. He set everything on the little dining table next to the window. The window showed city lights still sparkling in the predawn sky. Nice view. It wasn't half so pretty in daylight.

The kitchen had layered fresh turkey and cheese on a toasted pretzel roll, with the exact amount of mayo I liked. They'd included a half bottle of Pinot Noir with the meal. I wasn't hungry, but I hadn't eaten all day and I wanted that wine. I tipped the waiter and closed the door behind him. Then, still in my robe, I ate with one hand while I copied the video to a thumb drive in hope Paxton wouldn't take my camera if I gave him the jump drive instead. I added the video to my external hard drive as extra insurance.

I knew Paxton would arrive soon, or he'd send one of his junior detectives, so after eating half my sandwich, I threw on jeans and a fresh top while I sipped the second glass of Pinot. I thought about popping another chill pill, but the first one plus the wine had dialed me down a few notches, and I didn't want to get dependent on benzos again. Also, I preferred not to be too relaxed when I talked to Paxton. I had to tell him about the stalking. I had to recount everything that had happened on this case so far, and then I had to be willing to hand over my camera. Maybe even my Sig.

He showed up an hour or so after I'd seen him in Corktown, double coffee shot in hand.

"Alibi hold up?" I handed him the thumb drive.

He didn't ask what it was — just stuck it in his pocket. He nodded in answer to my question. "For now," he said.

Then I told him everything. He took my camera and the Sig. Fine. I had a couple more firearms in a lockbox and more video equipment than a PI really needs. I was a videographer in my former failed attempt at an adult life. It's not as long a stretch as you might think from videographer to PI. Paxton let me keep my phone, something I hadn't even considered losing until he'd demanded to see the text Jimmy had sent me.

"Video show anything?" He wanted my take, which surprised me. I knew the film would reveal everything I could share and maybe more when he pored over it later with the crime technicians.

"Not much more than I told you." I'd gone over every detail, but I had to give him something else. I felt like I owed it to him. He hadn't said a word about me not revealing all this earlier, at the crime scene. "He's an excellent marksman."

"So sure it's a he?"

"Posture, build, body frame, gait ... all suggest a male shooter."

"Why didn't Heyl care about the stalker?"

(Continues…)


Excerpted from "Lily White in Detroit"
by .
Copyright © 2018 Cynthia Harrison.
Excerpted by permission of The Wild Rose Press, Inc..
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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